There remains a doubt in the minds of many including the
insurers practicing the compulsory motor insurance for years whether it is open
to the insurer to prefer an appeal against the award of the Motor Accidents
Claims Tribunal (MACT) questioning
the quantum of the compensation as well as regards the negligence of the
offending vehicle where an insured has not preferred an appeal under Section
173 of MV Act, 1988 against an award given by the MACT. In effect a motor
accident claim is a tortuous claim directed against the tortfeasors who are the
insured and the driver of the vehicle and the insurer comes to the scene as a
result of statutory liability created under Motor Vehicle Act (M.V. Act). Insurers
take the liability of insured that may arise by use of motor vehicle in public
road. The case is always between the claimant and the insured and only these
two parties can be aggrieved of any award pronounced by Court or Tribunal. The
insurers have to compensate the liability awarded against the vehicle owners.
The legislature has ensured by enacting Section 149 of the Act that the victims
of motor vehicle accident are fully compensated and protected. Insurers as such
cannot escape from its liability either by including exclusionary clauses in
insurance contract or by finding new ways that Legislation does not want to
permit them.
Over the years it has become the practice that the owners of
the vehicle do not contest the case or they at the most file the written
statement and do not argue or challenge it by leading evidences because they
know that even if any award is passed against them, their insurers will satisfy
the award. It becomes very difficult for the insurers to fight these cases but
the beneficial legislation enacted with a view to confer the benefits to the
road accident victims do not intend to favour insurers simply because
tortfeasors are not contesting their cases. In most of the cases the insurers
are not able to argue with sufficient evidence in trial court to prove their
case and are not able to convince the judiciary on income and negligence aspect
and huge awards are passed against the vehicle owners that insurers has to
satisfy without any legal recourse. The M V Act provides for unlimited
liability against bodily injuries for road accident victims unlike victims in
industrial accidents or rail or air accidents. From time to time insurers have
knocked the legal doors to get some relief and to avail the right of appeal on
the understanding that section 173 of the MV Act gives a right of appeal to any person aggrieved by
an award of Trial Court but the courts have been consistent in their approach except a contrary view taken on
the issue of maintainability of appeal at the instance of insurers in United
India Vs Bhushan Sachdeva and Others in 2002. The double bench of Supreme Court held in this case
that as the insured has failed to contest the claim and in that view of the
matter, the insurer could be a person aggrieved. The Court viewed in this case
that insurers that deal with public fund can fall within the ambit of any person aggrieved by
an award of a claim tribunal as used in section 173 of the MV Act. The larger
bench of Supreme Court in Nicholleta Rohtagi case however set this decision
aside.
The three-bench decision of Supreme Court in Nicolletta
Rohtagi and Others now makes it very clear that the right of appeal on motor compensation is not
an inherent right or common law right, but it is a statutory right. The law
provides that an appeal can be filed only on limited grounds and these grounds
cannot be enlarged on any premise other than those enumerated in Section 149
(2) of Motor Vehicle Act of 1988. Thus, in common law, an insurer is not
permitted to contest a claim of claimant on merits i.e. offending vehicle was
not negligent or there was contributory negligence. The insurer could contest
the claim only on statutory defences specified for in the statute and not on
any other ground, which is available to an insured. Insurers cannot even raise
the breach of any policy condition, which do not find place in Sub section 2 of
Section 149 of MV Act. If insurer were permitted to contest the claim on other
grounds it would mean adding more grounds of contest to the insurer than what
the statute has specifically provided for. If the Parliament had intended to
include the breach of other conditions of the policy as a defence, it could
have easily provided any breach of policy conditions in section 149(2).
The Parliament enacted the MV Act in consonance with the
hardships faced by the victims of the motor vehicle accidents. Legislature
insisted and made it incumbent on the user of a motor vehicle to be armed with
an insurance policy covering third party risks, which is in conformity with the
provisions enacted by the Legislature. It
is so provided in order to ensure that the injured victims of automobile
accidents or the dependants of the victim of fatal accidents are really
compensated in terms of money and not in terms of promise.
For the aforesaid reasons if an insurer is to file an appeal
the challenge in appeal should necessarily confine to only those specified
defences which are based on the conditions of the policy and that are available
to insurers U/S 149(2). This sub-section
provides that an insurer to whom notice of bringing of proceedings is given
shall defend such an action if
A.
There has been breach of a specified policy condition
namely:
i.
A condition excluding the use of vehicle
a)
For hire or reward when vehicle is on the date of the
contract of insurance a vehicle not covered by a permit to ply for hire or
reward or
b)
For organised racing and speed testing or
c)
For a purpose not allowed by the permit under which the
vehicle is used, where the vehicle is a transport vehicle, or
d)
Without side car being attached where the vehicle is a motor
cycle; or
ii.
A condition excluding driving by a named person or persons
or by any person who is not duly licensed, or by any person who has been
disqualified for holding or obtaining a licence during the period of
disqualification; or
iii.
A condition excluding liability for injury caused or
contributed by conditions of war, civil war, riot or civil commotion or
B.
The policy is void on the grounds that it was obtained by
the non-disclosure of a material fact, which was false in some material
particular.
No insurers can avoid his liability to any person entitled
to the benefit of any judgment or award for reasons other than referred above
and they can’t mock the courts to appeal against the awards on merits of the
case however if in the course of an inquiry of a claim the Tribunal is
satisfied that there
is collusion between the claimant and insured and the insured fails to contest the claim than the
Tribunal for reasons to be recorded in writing, direct the insurer shall be
impleaded as a party to the proceedings and the insurer so impleaded shall
thereupon have, without prejudice to the provisions contained in Sec 149(2) the
right to contest the claim on all or any of the grounds that are available to
the person against whom the claim has been made. This right is available to
insurers under section 170 of the MV Act but
to avail this an application should be moved before the Tribunal and on that
there should be a reasoned order in writing by the Tribunal. This was
observed by Apex Court in Shankarayya and Others Vs United India where it was
held that only if
the condition precedent mentioned in section 170 are found to be satisfied and
for that purpose the insurance company has to obtain an order in writing from the
Tribunal and which should be a reasoned order by the Tribunal. Unless this
procedure is followed, the insurance company cannot have a wider defence on
merits.
Insurers in past have tried to make a joint appeal along
with owner of vehicle and driver to fight the case on merits but failed in
their attempt as in Narendra Kumar and another Vs Yarenissa it was held that
insurers couldn’t join such appeals. The double bench of Supreme Court in
Chinnama George and others Vs K.K.Raju and others reconfirmed this decision.
The point for right of appeal is now very clear. Insurers
have limited statutory defenses to contest with otherwise the case is between
the tortfeasors and the claimants. If there is collusion between the person
making the claim and the person against whom the claim is made or when the
person against whom the claim is made has failed to contest the claim then
insurers had a case but even in such a situation they have to bring these facts
to the notice of the Trial Court. They should move an application in writing
through their advocates before the Tribunal stating these facts. Such application necessarily
has to be bona fide and filed at the stage when the insured is required to lead
his evidence. If permission is granted in writing by a
reasoned order the case is open to the insurers to file an appeal against an
award on merits, if aggrieved. In any case where an application for permission
is erroneously rejected the insurer can challenge only that part of the order
while filing appeal on grounds specified in Sec 149(2).
The
insurer cannot mock the law by way of appeal even in case when fraud has been
committed to claim the compensation. The right course in case where the compensation has been
obtained by fraud is to apply for rectification of the award.
The M.V. Act impress that insurers can never be the
aggrieved party to an award unless there is collusion between the insured and
the claimant. They are bound by the contractual obligation to meet the
statutory liability of the insured. This Beneficial Legislation does not permit
them to put fine prints in their contractual document to avoid this liability.
The intention of the legislation is to provide quick relief to the victims of
road accident and once the case against tortfeasor and the claimant has been
pronounced none other then them should come between the claimant and the law.
Insurers have sufficient time from the time a claim is reported till it is
closed to lead evidences to find out the income, dependency and age of the
victim suffering bodily injuries and if they are not able to lead material
evidences before the trial court they should not feel aggrieved if they are not
permitted to prove those factors in higher court.
Vinay Verma
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