Under Common Law there was no right to claim damages in case of death. Right
to claim damages was however always recognized in case of personal injury. After
the advent of the rail and road transport, the Fatal Accidents Act of 1846 was
introduced in England and in case of death due to negligence the tort-feaser was
made liable to pay compensation to certain relatives. Over a period of time, the
law further developed and the Fatal Accidents Act was introduced in India in
1855.
The Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 was enacted to deal specifically with accidents
arising out of the use of Motor Vehicles. The Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 was
enacted to consolidate and amend the law relating to accidents arising from
motor vehicles. When a law is enacted to consolidate and amend the law, the
Legislature not only takes into consideration the law as it was existing but
also the law which was prevailing prior thereto.
This Act further aims at regularizing the use of Motor Vehicles and to
compensate victims who are injured or died in accident and family members and
dependants of the deceased victims. This Act has been further amended in the
year 1994. It is well settled that in case of motor accident claims, an endeavor
is made to put the claimants in the pre-accidental position.
The damages to be awarded are to be adequate in terms of money so that the
injured / claimants are put in the same position had they not suffered the loss
on account of wrong of the respondent, though, no amount of compensation can
restore the loss of limb or experience of pain or loss of life.
The Supreme Court, while enhancing compensation awarded to a young girl who
became 100% disabled due to an accident, reiterated some principles for grant of
compensation in motor accident claim cases.
The Bench comprising Justices L. Nageswara Rao & Deepak Gupta in Civil Appeal
No. 735 of 2020 (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (C) No.15504 OF 2019)
titled Kajal Vs Jagdish Chand & Ors., while enhancing the amount of
compensation observed that Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 requires determination of
payment of just compensation and it is the duty of the Court to ensure that she
is paid compensation which is just.
Referring to various judgments, the Court said:
It is impossible to equate human suffering and personal deprivation with money.
However, this is what the Act enjoins upon the courts to do. The Court has to
make a judicious attempt to award damages, so as to compensate the claimant for
the loss suffered by the victim. On the one hand, the compensation should not be
assessed very conservatively, but on the other hand, compensation should also
not be assessed in so liberal a fashion so as to make it a bounty to the
claimant.
The court while assessing the compensation should have regard to the degree of
deprivation and the loss caused by such deprivation. Such compensation is what
is termed as just compensation. The compensation or damages assessed for
personal injuries should be substantial to compensate the injured for the
deprivation suffered by the injured throughout his/her life. They should not be
just token damages.
In this case, the Court noted that some of the medical bills have been excluded
by the Courts below only on the ground that the name of the patient is not
written on the bill. Limiting the amount only to the bills which have been paid
in the name of the claimant only, would not be reasonable, the not written on
the bill. Limiting the amount only to the bills which have been paid in the name
of the claimant only, would not be reasonable, the Bench observed.
Reverting to the facts of the case, one young bright girl, leading a normal life
like any other child, met with an accident on 18th October, 2007, while
travelling on a tractor with her parents, when the tractor was hit by a truck
which was driven rashly. In the said accident, Kajal suffered serious injuries
resulting in damage to her brain. She was examined at the Post Graduate
Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh (PGI, Chandigarh for
short), for assessment of her disability. According to the said report, because
of head injury Kajal is left with a very low I.Q. and severe weakness in all her
four limbs, suffers from severe hysteria and severe urinary incontinence. Her
disability was assessed as 100%.
Kajal through her father filed a Claim Petition, under the Motor Vehicles Act,
1988. The Motor Accident Claims Tribunal awarded Rs. 11, 08, 501/-Â and held
that since there was violation of the terms and conditions of Policy, the
Insurance Company would pay the amount but would be entitled to recover the same
from the Owner. Not satisfied with the quantum of compensation, the claimant
approached the High Court by way of appeal under Section of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1988 when the amount of compensation was enhanced to Rs. 25, 78, 501/-
Multiplier Method For Determining Attendant Charges
While awarding attendant charges, the Bench observed that the multiplier system
should be followed not only for determining the compensation on account of loss
of income but also for determining the attendant charges etc.
It said:
The attendant charges have been awarded by the High Court @ Rs.2,500/Â per
month for 44 years, which works out to Rs.13,20,000/Â. Unfortunately, this
system is not a proper system. Multiplier system is used to balance out various
factors. When compensation is awarded in lump sum, various factors are taken
into consideration. When compensation is paid in lump sum, this Court has always
followed the multiplier system.
The multiplier system should be followed not only for determining the
compensation on account of loss of income but also for determining the attendant
charges etc. This system was recognised by this Court in Gobald Motor Service
Ltd. Vs R.M.K. Veluswami, AIR 1962 SC 1.
The multiplier system factors in the inflation rate, the rate of interest
payable on the lump sum award, the longevity of the claimant, and also other
issues such as the uncertainties of life. Out of all the various alternative
methods, the multiplier method has been recognised as the most realistic and
reasonable method. It ensures better justice between the parties and thus
results in award of ‘just compensation’ within the meaning of the Act.
The Supreme Court of India has reaffirmed the multiplier method in various cases
like Municipal Corporation of Delhi Vs. Subhagwati 1966 ACJ 57;Â U. P.
State Road Transport Corporation & Ors, Vs Trilok Chandra & Ors., (1996) 4 SCC
362; Sandeep Khanuja Vs Atul Dande & Ors., (2017) 3 SCC 351. The
Supreme Court has also recognised that Schedule II of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1988 can be used as a guide for the multiplier to be applied in each case.
Liberal View While Assessing Compensation In Case Of 100% Disability
The Courts or the Tribunals, the Bench said, while assessing the compensation in
a case of 100% disability, especially where there is mental disability also,
should take a liberal view of the matter when awarding compensation. It added:
One factor which must be kept in mind while assessing the compensation in a
case like the present one is that the claim can be awarded only once. The
claimant cannot come back to court for enhancement of award at a later stage
praying that something extra has been spent.
Therefore, the courts or the tribunals assessing the compensation in a case of
100% disability, especially where there is mental disability also, should take a
liberal view of the matter when awarding compensation. While awarding this
amount we are not only taking the physical disability but also the mental
disability and various other factors. This child will remain bedÂridden for
life. Her mental age will be that of a nine month old child. Effectively, while
her body grows, she will remain a small baby.
We are dealing with a girl who will physically become a woman but will mentally
remain a 9 month old child. This girl will miss out playing with her friends.
She cannot communicate; she cannot enjoy the pleasures of life; she cannot even
be amused by watching cartoons or films; she will miss out the fun of childhood,
the excitement of youth; the pleasures of a marital life; she cannot have
children who she can love let alone grandchildren. She will have no pleasure.
Hers is a vegetable existence.
Guidelines To Ensure Victims Money Is Not Frittered Away
In this case, the High Court while enhancing the amount of compensation had
directed that the enhanced amount be paid to the appellant within 45 days. The
Court said that the following guidelines issued in General Manager, Kerala
State Road Transport Corporation, Trivandrum v. Susamma Thomas, 1994 SCC
(2) 176 should be followed by all the tribunals and High Courts to ensure that
the money of the victims is not frittered away.
The guidelines in this case were as follows:
Normally interest should be granted from the date of filing of the
petition
On awarding interest, the bench said:
Normally interest should be granted from the date of filing of the petition and
if in appeal enhancement is made the interest should again be from the date of
filing of the petition. It is only if the appeal is filed after an inordinate
delay by the claimants, or the decision of the case has been delayed on account
of negligence of the claimant, in such exceptional cases the interest may be
awarded from a later date. However, while doing so, the tribunals/High Courts
must give reasons why interest is not being paid from the date of filing of the
petition.
The principles with regard to determination of just compensation contemplated
under the Act are well settled. Injuries cause deprivation to the body which
entitles the claimant to claim damages. The damages may vary according to the
gravity of the injuries sustained by the claimant in an accident.
On account of the injuries, the claimant may suffer consequential losses such
as:
It is impossible to equate human suffering and personal deprivation with money.
However, this is what the Act enjoins upon the courts to do. The Court has to
make a judicious attempt to award damages, so as to compensate the claimant for
the loss suffered by the victim. On the one hand, the compensation should not be
assessed very conservatively, but on the other hand, compensation should also
not be assessed in so liberal a fashion so as to make it a bounty to the
claimant.
The Court while assessing the compensation should have regard to the degree of
deprivation and the loss caused by such deprivation. Such compensation is what
is termed as just compensation. The compensation or damages assessed for
personal injuries should be substantial to compensate the injured for the
deprivation suffered by the injured throughout his/her life. They should not be
just token damages.
There are numerous cases where the principles for grant of compensation have
been enunciated. In Phillips Vs. Western Railway Co. (1874) 4 QBD 406
Field, J., while emphasizing that damages must be full and adequate, held thus:
You cannot put the plaintiff back again into his original position, but you
must bring your reasonable common sense to bear, and you must always recollect
that this is the only occasion on which compensation can be given. The plaintiff
can never sue again for it. You have, therefore, now to give him compensation
once and for all.
He has done no wrong, he has suffered a wrong at the hands of the defendants and
you must take care to give him full fair compensation for that which he has
suffered. Besides, the Tribunals should always remember that the measures of
damages in all these cases should be such as to enable even a tort-feasor to
say that he had amply atoned for his misadventure.
In the case of Mediana, [1900] AC 113, Lord Halsbury held:
Of course the whole region of inquiry into damages is one of extreme
difficulty. You very often cannot even lay down any principle upon which you can
give damages; nevertheless, it is remitted to the jury, or those who stand in
place of the jury, to consider what compensation in money shall be given for
what is a wrongful act.
Take the most familiar and ordinary case: how is anybody to measure pain and
suffering in moneys counted?
Nobody can suggest that you can by any arithmetical calculation establish what
is the exact amount of money which would represent such a thing as the pain and
suffering which a person has undergone by reason of an accident.
In truth, I think it would be very arguable to say that a person would be
entitled to no damages for such thing. What manly mind cares about pain and
suffering that is past? But, nevertheless, the law recognizes that as a topic
upon which damages may be given.
The following observations of Lord Morris in his speech in H. West & Son
Ltd. Vs. Shephard, 1963 2 WLR 1359 , are very pertinent:
Money may be awarded so that something tangible may be procured to replace
something else of the like nature which has been destroyed or lost. But money
cannot renew a physical frame that has been battered and shattered. All that
Judges and courts can do is to award sums which must be regarded as giving
reasonable compensation.
In the process there must be the endeavour to secure some uniformity in the
general method of approach. By common assent awards must be reasonable and must
be assessed with moderation. Furthermore, it is eminently desirable that so far
as possible comparable injuries should be compensated by comparable awards.
In the same case Lord Devlin observed that the proper approach to the problem
was to adopt a test as to what contemporary society would deem to be a fair sum,
such as would allow the wrongdoer to hold up his head among his neighbours and
say with their approval that he has done the fair thing, which should be kept
in mind by the court in determining compensation in personal injury cases.
Lord Denning while speaking for the Court of Appeal in the case of Ward Vs.
James, (1965) 1 All ER 563 laid down the following three basic principles
to be followed in such like cases:
The assessment of damages in personal injury cases raises great difficulties. It
is not easy to convert the physical and mental loss into monetary terms. There
has to be a measure of calculated guess work and conjecture. An assessment, as
best as can, in the circumstances, should be made.
In McGregor’s Treatise on Damages, 14th Edn., Para 1157, referring to heads
of damages in personal injury actions states:
The person physically injured may recover both for his pecuniary losses and
his nonÂpecuniary losses. Of these the pecuniary losses themselves comprise two
separate items, viz., the loss of earnings and other gains which the plaintiff
would have made had he not been injured and the medical and other expenses to
which he is put as a result of the injury, and the courts have subÂdivided the
nonÂpecuniary losses into three categories, viz., pain and suffering, loss of
amenities of life and loss of expectation of life.
In M/S Concord of India Insurance Co. Ltd. Vs. Nirmala Devi & Ors, 1980 ACJ
55 (SC), the Honble Supreme Court of India held:
2....The determination of the quantum must be liberal, not niggardly since
the law values life and limb in a free country in generous scales.
In R.. D. Hattangadi Vs. Pest Control (India) Pvt. Ltd., (1995) 1 SCC
551, dealing with the different heads of compensation in injury cases the
Supreme Court held thus:
9. Broadly speaking, while fixing the amount of compensation payable to a
victim of an accident, the damages have to be assessed separately as pecuniary
damages and special damages. Pecuniary damages are those which the victim has
actually incurred and which are capable of being calculated in terms of money;
whereas non  pecuniary damages are those which are incapable of being assessed
by arithmetical calculations.
In order to appreciate two concepts pecuniary damages may include expenses
incurred by the claimant
(i) damages for mental and physical shock, pain and suffering already
suffered or likely to be suffered in the future;
(ii) damages to compensate for the loss of amenities of life which may include a
variety of matters, i.e., on account of injury the claimant may not be able to
walk, run or sit;
(iii) damages for loss of expectation of life, i.e. on account of injury the
normal longevity of the person concerned is shortened;
(iv) inconvenience, hardship, discomfort, disappointment, frustration and mental
stress in life.
In Raj Kumar Vs. Ajay Kumar and Others, (2011) 1 SCC 343, the Supreme
Court laid down the heads under which compensation is to be awarded for personal
injuries.
6. The heads under which compensation is awarded in personal injury cases are
the following:
Pecuniary damages (Special damages)
In routine personal injury cases, compensation will be awarded only under heads
(i), (ii) (a) and (iv). It is only in serious cases of injury, where there is
specific medical evidence corroborating the evidence of the claimant, that
compensation will be granted under any of the heads (ii)(b), (iii), (v) and (vi)
relating to loss of future earnings on account of permanent disability, future
medical expenses, loss of amenities (and/or loss of prospects of marriage) and
loss of expectation of life.â€
In K. Suresh Vs. New India Assurance Company Ltd. & Ors., (2012) 12 SCC
274, the Supreme Court held as follows:
“2...There cannot be actual compensation for anguish of the heart or for mental
tribulations. The quint essentiality lies in the pragmatic computation of the
loss sustained which has to be in the realm of realistic approximation.
Therefore, Section 168 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (for brevity ‘the Act’)
stipulates that there should be grant of just compensation. Thus, it
becomes a challenge for a court of law to determine “just compensationâ€
which is neither a bonanza nor a windfall, and simultaneously, should not be a
pittance.
The Tribunal has power to award the compensation above the amount claimed, so as
to award compensation which was just. In this regard the following observations
of the Supreme Court in State of Haryana Vs. Jasbir Kaur, (2003) 7
S.C.C. 484 are worth noting:
7. It has to be kept in view that the Tribunal constituted under the Act as
provided in Section 168 is required to make an award determining the amount of
compensation which is to be in the real sense damages which in turn appears to
it to be just and reasonable. It has to be borne in mind that
compensation for loss of limbs or life can hardly be weighed in golden scales.
But at the same time it has to be borne in mind that the compensation is not
expected to be a windfall for the victim. Statutory provisions clearly indicate
that the compensation must be just and it cannot be a bonanza; not a source of
profit; but the same should not be a pittance.
The courts and tribunals have a duty to weigh the various factors and quantify
the amount of compensation, which should be just. What would be just
compensation is a vexed question. There can be no golden rule applicable to all
cases for measuring the value of human life or a limb. Measure of damages cannot
be arrived at by precise mathematical calculations. It would depend upon the
particular facts and circumstances, and attending peculiar or special features,
if any. Every method or mode adopted for assessing compensation has to be
considered in the background of just compensation which is the pivotal
consideration.
Though by use of the expression which appears to it to be just a wide
discretion is vested in the Tribunal, the determination has to be rational, to
be done by a judicious approach and not the outcome of whims, wild guesses and
arbitrariness. The expression just denotes equitability, fairness and
reasonableness, and non-arbitrary. if it is not so it cannot be just. (See
Helen C. Rebello v. Maharashtra SRTC (1999(1) SCC 90)â€
The Motor Accidents Claims Tribunal should not be a silent spectator when
medical evidence is tendered in regard to the injuries and their effect, in
particular the extent of permanent disability. Sections 168 and 169 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1988 make it evident that the Tribunal does not function as a
neutral umpire as in a civil suit, but as an active explorer and seeker of truth
who is required to `hold an enquiry into the claim for determining the
`just compensation. The Tribunal should therefore take an active role to
ascertain the true and correct position so that it can assess the `just
compensation.
While dealing with personal injury cases, the Tribunal should preferably equip
itself with a Medical Dictionary and a Handbook for evaluation of permanent
physical impairment (for example the Manual for Evaluation of Permanent Physical
Impairment for Orthopedic Surgeons, prepared by American Academy of Orthopedic
Surgeons or its Indian equivalent or other authorized texts) for understanding
the medical evidence and assessing the physical and functional disability.
The Tribunal may also keep in view the First Schedule to the
Workmens Compensation, 1923 which gives some indication about the extent of
permanent disability in different types of injuries, in the case of workmen. If
a Doctor giving evidence uses technical medical terms, the Tribunal should
instruct him to state in addition, in simple non-medical terms, the nature and
the effect of the injury.
If a doctor gives evidence about the percentage of permanent disability, the
Tribunal has to seek clarification as to whether such percentage of disability
is the functional disability with reference to the whole body or whether it is
only with reference to a limb.
If the percentage of permanent disability is stated with reference to a limb,
the Tribunal will have to seek the doctors opinion as to whether it is possible
to deduce the corresponding functional permanent disability with reference to
the whole body and if so the percentage. Purpose of social welfare legislation
is to find out ways and means to help the sufferer in all possible fields.
The Bench accordingly enhanced the amount of compensation to Rs. 62, 27, 000/-
in favour of the claimant/appellant.
Written By: Dinesh Singh Chauhan, Advocate, High Court of Judicature,
J&K, Jammu.
Email: [email protected], [email protected]Â
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