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2005 DIGILAW 334 (HP)

NEW INDIA ASSURANCE CO. LTD. v. LACHHMI DEVI

2005-09-09

DEEPAK GUPTA

body2005
JUDGMENT Deepak Gupta, J. (Oral) - This appeal by the Insurance Company is directed against the award of the learned Motor Accident Claims Tribunal, Una in M.A.C. Case No. 37 of 1997, decided on 30.5.2000. 2. The facts necessary for the decision of the case are that deceased Chhaju Ram was a truck operator and business man. He was a partner of firm M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram. Sita Ram is the father of Chhaju Ram. Deceased Chhaju Ram along with Satish Kumar and Rajinder Kumar was travelling in a truck bearing registration No. HP-40-2311 which met with an accident. The truck went off the road. Chhaju Ram died on the spot. Lachhmi Devi, mother of Chhaju Ram, and wife of Sita Ram and Smt. Bhagwati Devi, widow of Chhaju Ram filed a claim petition in which M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram was impleaded as respondent No. 1. Sita Ram was shown to be the owner of M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram. The appellant Insurance Company was impleaded as respondent no.2. 3. This claim petition was contested by the Insurance Company. A specific defence was taken that Chhaju Ram was the partner of M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram and was one of the insured persons and as such application on his behalf was not maintainable. In this behalf reference may be made to preliminary objections No. 2, 3 and 4 of the petition filed before the learned Motor Accident Claims Tribunal which reads as under :- "2. That as per the provisions of Section 147 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and as per terms and conditions of insurance policy the insurance is a contract between the parties and the insurer is liable to indemnify the insured to the amount of liability incurred by him in respect of death bodily injuries or the property damage to the third party. But in the instant case Chhaju Ram who is partner of M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram and is one of the insured alleged to have been died in the Motor Vehicle Accident and the applicants are the heirs of the insured, hence the present application is not maintainable in the eyes of law and deserves to be- dismissed on this ground alone. 3. 3. That as the deceased was not a third party in any sense of the word, hence the present application is not maintainable before the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal and deserves to be dismissed. 4. That under Chapter XII of Motor Vehicle Act, 1988 the jurisdiction of the Tribunal is limited to try the claim application of third party and pass an award against the driver, owner of the vehicle and under the contract of indemnification against the Insurance Company under Section 149 of Motor Vehicle Act within the limit of compulsory insurance envisaged under Section 147 of the Act. In the instant case the partner of the insured firm alleged to have been died, therefore, this Honble Tribunal has no jurisdiction to try or pass an award against the respondent Insurance Company under Section 149 of the Motor Vehicles Act, hence the replying respondent Insurance Company be discharged and the claim application be dismissed. 4. From the evidence led on record, it is clear that the truck belonged to M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram. It is also clear that Sita Ram Chhaju Ram was a partnership firm of which Chhaju Ram was a partner. In fact Bhagwati Devi claimant appearing as PW-1 clearly stated that Chhaju Ram was a partner of M/s. Sita Ram Chhaju Ram and that the truck was owned by the firm. It stands proved on record that the firm had only two partners, Chhaju Ram and Sita Ram. Sita Ram not care to step into the witness box to counter these allegations. Despite the said objection having been raised specifically as is apparent from the preliminary objections quoted hereinabove, the learned Motor Accident Claims Tribunal glossed over this objection and held that there is nothing to show how the application for compensation is not maintainable. The learned Tribunal has not dealt with this objection with the seriousness that it required. No law was considered on this important aspect of the case. 5. The most important question to be decided is whether a petition could be maintained with regard to death of a person who was a co-owner and one of the insured persons covered by the policy. Mr. K.D. Sood, Advocate, urged that since the deceased himself was co-owner of the truck, no claim qua his death could be filed before the Tribunal. Mr. K.D. Sood, Advocate, urged that since the deceased himself was co-owner of the truck, no claim qua his death could be filed before the Tribunal. As far as the question with regard to the claim regarding the death of deceased Chhaju Ram, one of the co-owner is concerned, the question stands squarely covered by the judgment of the Apex Court in Dhanraj v. New India Assurance co. Ltd. and another, 2004(8) SCC 553, wherein the Apex Court held as follows:- "8. Thus, an insurance policy covers the liability incurred by the insured in respect of death of or bodily injury to any person (including an owner of the goods or his authorized representative) carried in the vehicle or damage to any property of a third party caused by or arising out of the use of the vehicle. Section 147 does not require an Insurance Company to assume risk for death or bodily injury to the owner of the vehicle." 6. This Court in FAO No: 328 of 1995 titled United India Insurance Company Ltd. v. Smt. Chander Prabha Bhatt and others, decided on 28.3.2005 : 2005(2) Cur. L.J. (H.P.) 139 has held as follows:- "What is the purpose of an insurance policy which is compulsorily required under the Motor Vehicles Act ? The purpose clearly is that if any third party suffers damage due to an accident with a vehicle, it should be able to claim, compensation from the Insurance Company. The intention of the legislature was that the injured party might find it very difficult to recover the amounts from the owner of the vehicle and, therefore, insurance was made compulsory so that the claimants could get their claims from the Companies. However, the Act does not require that the policy necessarily cover risk to the owner himself. Another important question which arises is - can an insurance policy which is basically meant for covering risk to third parties be required to cover the loss to the owner himself ? The owner in the present case has died. Supposing he was the injured, could he have filed a claim petition against himself? Obviously not. A person cannot be both the plaintiff and the defendant. The Insurance Company is to indemnify the owner for damages which he is liable to pay. The owner in the present case has died. Supposing he was the injured, could he have filed a claim petition against himself? Obviously not. A person cannot be both the plaintiff and the defendant. The Insurance Company is to indemnify the owner for damages which he is liable to pay. Therefore, it is quite obvious that the insured or his legal heirs cannot file a petition against the Insurance Company directly. There must be first an award against the insured and only then the Insurance Company is liable. This is obvious from the scheme of the Act and especially Section 149 of the Act which provides that the Insurance Company has to satisfy judgments passed against the insured." 7. Mr. Anup Rattan has contended that in this case Chhaju Ram was not the sole owner of the truck. According to him since both, the deceased and Sita Ram were the owners, the present claim petition was maintainable. In my view the fact that Chhaju Ram was a co-owner and not the sole owner of. the truck, will not make any difference. The law which has been laid down by the Apex Court is that the Motor Vehicles Act does not require the Insurance Company to compulsorily cover the risk to the insured person who is owner of the vehicle. Whether the insured is a co-owner or sole owner will make no difference. The Tribunal, therefore, gravely erred in entertaining the claim petition regarding the death of the insured person. 8. In view of the above discussion the appeal filed by the Insurance Company is allowed and the award passed by the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal, Una in M.A.C. Petition No. 37 of 1997, decided on 30.5.2000 is set aside and the original claim petition dismissed as not maintainable. 9. The appeal is disposed of in the aforesaid terms with no order as to costs.