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1986 DIGILAW 501 (ALL)

KISHORI NANDAN SRIVASTAVA v. U. P. STATE ROAD TRANSPORT CORPORATION

1986-07-30

N.D.OJHA, R.R.MISRA

body1986
JUDGMENT : N.D. Ojha, J.—The appellants are the father and mother of one Rajiv Nandan Srivastava. According to the appellants on 6th August, 1981, at about 4.15 PM bus No. UPF 7062 of the respondent U.P. State Road Transport Corporation dashed against Rajiv Nandan Srivastava at Dohariaghat in the district of Azamgarh causing injuries to him to which he ultimately succumbed on the next day. A claim was made by the appellants for compensation in the sum of Rs. 1,47,000/- before the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal, Azamgarh. It was contested by the respondent inter alia on the ground that no accident took place by the respondent's bus as alleged by the appellants and that at all events the bus was not being driven either rashly or negligently at the time of the alleged accident and consequently the appellants were not entitled to any compensation. The amount of compensation claimed was also challenged. After taking into consideration the evidence produced by the parties the Tribunal recorded findings in favour of the appellants that the accident as alleged by them had taken place and that it was established that the driver of the bus was rash and negligent in driving the bus which resulted in the accident and ultimate death of Rajiv Nandan Srivastava. In regard to the quantum of compensation the case of the appellants was that at the time of the accident Rajiv Nandan Srivastava was employed in Sahara Saving Corporation, Golghar, Gorakhpur, and was earning Rs. 500/- per month as commission. The Tribunal came to the conclusion that the appellants had failed to prove that Rajiv Nandan Srivastava was employed and earning Rs. 500/- per month at the time of the accident. It however held that since the deceased was about 24 years of age at the time of the accident he could not sit idle and would have done something to earn his subsistance and help his parents in their old age by providing them some, money, a solatium in the sum of Rs. 10,000/-deserved to be allowed to the appellants. The Tribunal further allowed a sum of Rs. 6000/- for loss of love and affection, Rs. 5000/- for mental agony and Rs. 2000/- for treatment of the deceased and funeral expenses. The total amount thus came to Rs. 23000/- out of which after deducting Rs. 10,000/-deserved to be allowed to the appellants. The Tribunal further allowed a sum of Rs. 6000/- for loss of love and affection, Rs. 5000/- for mental agony and Rs. 2000/- for treatment of the deceased and funeral expenses. The total amount thus came to Rs. 23000/- out of which after deducting Rs. 3000/- in lieu of lump sum payment a decree for recovery of Rs. 20000/- as compensation was passed on 7th September, 1983. The present appeal has been filed against this award of the Tribunal with the prayer that the claim of the appellant for the sum of Rs. 1,47,000/- may be allowed in its entirety. No cross-objection has been filed on behalf of the respondent. 2. Counsel for the appellants has urged that on the evidence on record it has been established that the deceased was earning Rs. 500/- per month at the time of the accident and the Tribunal committed an error in taking a view to the contrary. Reliance in support of this submission has been placed on paper No. 20 Ka, a certificate issued by Akhilesh Tripathi as Secretary of Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. and the deposition of Ajai Singh, a witness produced by the appellants who stated that the aforesaid certificate had been signed by Akhilesh Tripathi, the Secretary of the company, in his presence and that he recognised the said signature. According to counsel for the appellants the Tribunal was wrong in marking the signature only as Ex 8 and not the document itself. It was urged that the certificate having been filed in original and the signature on the certificate having been proved as aforesaid the said document stood duly proved as contemplated by Sections 61 and 47 of the Evidence Act. Reliance was also placed on the deposition of appellant No. 1, father of deceased who stated that in the first month of his employment the deceased had earned a commission of Rs. 500/-. In this connection it may be pointed out that even if the appellant's case is accepted the deceased had worked with Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. only for about a month and the sum of Rs. 500/-said to have been received by him represents the entire income which the deceased had from his employment with Sahara Savings and Finance Ltd. 3. 500/-said to have been received by him represents the entire income which the deceased had from his employment with Sahara Savings and Finance Ltd. 3. For the respondent it has on the other hand been urged by its counsel that even if it may be accepted that from the certificate referred to above and the deposition of appellant No. 1 it was established that the deceased had earned a commission of Rs. 500/- during the course of his employment of about one month with Sahara Savings and Finance P. Ltd. it could not be said that the deceased was employed on a monthly salary of Rs. 500/- per month which he was entitled to get every month. According to counsel for the respondent on the appellant's own case the deceased was working only on contract basis and was entitled to the commission for the work done by him. It was urged that the possibility that the deceased, even if the contract with Sahara Savings and Finance P. Ltd. continued, may not have been able to earn any commission during the subsistance of the contract and consequently Rs. 500/- per month could not be treated as the regular income of the deceased at the time of the accident. 4. Having heard counsel for the parties we are of opinion that even accepting the evidence produced by the appellants it is not possible to hold that the deceased was in the regular employment of Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. on a monthly salary of Rs. 500/-. Appellant No. 1 who is the father of the deceased has stated in his deposition that the deceased had started working with Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. from a month before his death and was working on commission. He had not been given any appointment letter and used to enroll members for Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. and that he was not in a position to tell as to what was the criteria of computing his commission. Even on the appellants' own case the duration of this contract had been for a period of about one month only at the time of the accident. Even on the appellants' own case the duration of this contract had been for a period of about one month only at the time of the accident. Keeping in view the nature of the work done by the deceased it is apparent that the commission which he would earned would have been of a fluctuating amount with the result that in some months he may have earned Rs. 500/- per month or even more but the possibility that in other months he may not have earned any commission at all or earned a commission less than Rs. 500/- was not ruled out is such it would not be expedient to determine the amount of compensation on the basis that the deceased was earning Rs. 500/- per month. In our opinion, however, it does not present any insurmountable difficulty in awarding just compensation to the appellants. 5. Relying on the decision of the Supreme Court in C.K. Subramania Iyer and Others Vs. T. Kunhikuttan Nair and Others, a Division Bench of this court in U.P. State Road Transport Corporation, Allahabad Vs. Km. Deepti and Others etc., held that it is not a condition precedent to the award of compensation that the deceased should have been actually earning money or money's worth or contributing to the support of the claimants heirs at or before the date of the death and that in order to claim compensation it is sufficient for the claimants to prove that they had a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit from the continuance of the life. In other words they can make out a case of prospective loss. In the case of Km. Deepti (supra) the deceased had obtained a Bachelor's degree in education and a certificate from a school had been produced to the effect that from April, 1977 to March, 1980 she had served as a teacher in the said institution drawing a salary of Rs. 400/- per month. However, at the time of the accident she was not in service. Her husband at the time of the accident was serving as a Major in the army and was getting although Rs. 2400/- as pay. It was held (hat since the husband was himself getting substantial salary for the upkeep of the family even if the deceased may not have been earning anything the family would have been decently supported. Her husband at the time of the accident was serving as a Major in the army and was getting although Rs. 2400/- as pay. It was held (hat since the husband was himself getting substantial salary for the upkeep of the family even if the deceased may not have been earning anything the family would have been decently supported. In this background it was pointed out that if the deceased had earned about Rs. 500/- per month she would not have any stress on her mind to spare the maximum for the support of her family and to impose some self restraint on her personal expenses. In these circumstances it was held that the deceased out of Rs. 500/- that she may have earned would have been spending at least Rs. 300/- per month on herself and would have been making the balance of Rs. 200/- available to her husband and daughters. In the instant case the Tribunal has pointed out that as was apparent from Ex. 1 the deceased had passed his High School Examination in 1974 and according to the deposition of his father appellant No. 1 he was studying in the Intermediate when he started working with the Sahara Saving and Finance P. Ltd. a month before the accident which occurred, as seen above, on 4th August, 1981. The Tribunal concluded that having passed his high school in 1974 and being still studying in Intermediate in 1981 it was apparent that the deceased was not a promising boy and could not earn a sufficient amount. In this connection it may also be pointed out that the deceased at the time of his death was 24 years of age and does not seem to have married inasmuch as he was still a student of Intermediate and had started working with Sahara Savings and Finance Private Ltd. for about a month. In case the deceased had continued in his employment he would have got himself married and would have been called upon to shoulder the responsibility of his wife and children and naturally could not spare major portion of his income for the use of the appellants. Appellant No. 1, the father of the deceased, has stated in his deposition that he is in employment and that he was able to maintain himself in the pay which he was getting. Appellant No. 1, the father of the deceased, has stated in his deposition that he is in employment and that he was able to maintain himself in the pay which he was getting. In this background we are of opinion that as was done in the case of Km. Deepti (supra) it would be just in the instant case also to take the view that the deceased would not have been able to make available more than a sum of Rs. 200/- per month to the appellants out of his prospective earning. 6. Coming to the question of amount of compensation to be awarded to the appellants we may refer to the decision of another Division Bench of this court in Smt. Krishna Kumari Gupta and Others Vs. Gur Buxeesh Singh and Others,. In paragraph 7 of the said decision it was held: There is actually no compensation for the loss of human life in an accident, courts have adopted various methods for awarding compensation in such a manner that the immediate family members of the deceased may have sufficient financial security. From a catena of decisions of the Supreme Court and the High Courts two discernible methods are noticed. The first consists of calculating the amount which the deceased was spending on the members of his family who were dependent on him and multiplying the same by the number of years the deceased was to be in employment. The amount would inveriably be a large amount. The courts, therefore, adopted a further principle that in view of the lump sum of payment it would be reduced by 20 to 33.33 per cent. The discretion was with the court as to what extent the figure would be reduced. The other method is that instead of finding out how many years the deceased would have continued in service i.e. till the age of superannuation, uses a multiplier to the annual amount which the deceased was spending towards the upkeeps of the members of the family excluding expenses made on himself. The figure which has been used as a multiplier has been near about the Figure 16. This is a method by which the annual expenses on the family is multiplied by 16 to arrive at a figure which is not subject to any deduction. These two methods are being adopted by various courts in this matter. 7. The figure which has been used as a multiplier has been near about the Figure 16. This is a method by which the annual expenses on the family is multiplied by 16 to arrive at a figure which is not subject to any deduction. These two methods are being adopted by various courts in this matter. 7. In that case the amount of compensation was determined by taking recourse to applying the method of multiplying the annual amount which wag being contributed to the family by the deceased by 16. We are of opinion that on the facts of the instant case also the method of determining the compensation by applying the multiple of 16 to the annual amount which the deceased may have paid to the appellants will meet the ends of justice. We have already held that the deceased may have been able to mere available at best Rs. 200/- per month to the appellants out of his prospective income. The annual amount by 16 the amount of compensation comes to Rs. 38,400/-. This sum shall stand substituted for the sum of Rs. 10000/- awarded by the Tribunal as solatium and to this sum of Rs. 38400/- shall be added the sum of Rs. 13000/- awarded to the Tribunal towards loss of love and affection, mental agony and expenses for treatment of the deceased and incurred in his funeral. The total sum thus would come to Rs. 51,400/-. 8. Before parting with the case we may point out that it was urged by counsel for the respondent that in a claim for compensation under the Motor Vehicles Act no amount could be awarded for love and affection and for mental agony. Since no cross-objection has been filed by the respondent as already pointed out above we do not find it expedient to go into this submission. 9. In the result this appeal succeeds in part and is allowed to this extent that in place of Rs. 20000/- awarded by the Tribunal as compensation, the appellants shall be entitled to recover a sum of Rs. 51,400/- as compensation from the respondent and decree is passed accordingly. The appellants will also get interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of filing the claim petition till the date of the recovery. They shall also* get proportionate costs of this appeal.