Bhagwatidin Gangadin
v.
Gheesalal Nathulal And Others
(High Court Of Madhya Pradesh)
Miscellaneous Appeal No. 161 Of 1974 | 02-04-1979
R.K. Vijayvargiya, J.
1. This appeal under section 110 (D) of the Motor Vehicles Act, is directed by the claimant-appellant against the award dated 16-3-74, passed by the Second Additional Member, Motor Accidents Claims Tribunal, Indore, in Claim Case No. 14 of 1971.
2. The claimant is the real brother of the deceased Rambharosey. Rambharosey was coming on a bicycle from Rao on the Bombay Agra Road. He was knocked down near Akashwani by motor truck No. RJE 2733, which was being driven rashly and negligently on the wrong side of the road. Rambharosey succumbed to his injuries on the same day, while he was being taken to the M.Y. Hospital. The truck was being driven by the respondent No. 2 Gheesalal. The truck was insured with the respondent No. 3 New India Assurance Company Limited, Indore. It was owned by the respondent No. 1, Bhagwansingh or respondents Nos. 4 and 5. The name of the respondent No. 1 was deleted by the appellant during the pendency of this appeal. The deceased was aged about 30 years at the time of the accident and he was earning Rs. 150 per month. The appellant claimed a sum of Rs. 60,000 as compensation on account of the death of his brother, Rambharosey. He alleged that there was no other legal representative and heir of the deceased. The respondent No. 2 denied that the accident was caused on account of his rash and negligent driving of the truck. The respondent No. 3 also denied the case of the petitioner. There were other pleas raised by the respondents, which do not survive now.
3. The Tribunal held that the accident was caused on account of the rash and negligent driving of respondent No 2. The Tribunal also held that the deceased was contributing a sum of Rs. 320 per year to the claimant. The deceased was a bachelor and was aged about 30 years. The Tribunal, considering the circumstances of the case and the fact that after the deceased was married, his contribution to his brother would be reduced ; held that the compensation awardable to the claimant would be Rs. 3,400 with interest at 6% per annum from the date of the application till realization. However, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the petitioner, as the brother of the deceased, was not entitled to get any compensation on the ground that a brother was not a representative of the deceased. The Tribunal, therefore, dismissed the petition of the claimant. The claimant has challenged the award of the Tribunal in this appeal.
4. The only point for consideration in this appeal, therefore, is whether the claimant, as the brother of the deceased, is entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased caused by the rash and negligent act of the respondent No. 2. The appellant contended that there being no nearer heir lett behind by the deceased Rambharosey, he was his legal representative being his only heir and was entitled to claim compensation. The respondents contended that the claimant as the brother of the deceased cannot be said to be dependent or the representative of the deceased and, therefore, he is not entitled to claim any compensation for the death of the deceased, under the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act.
5. The learned counsel for the respondent supported the view taken by the Tribunal and contended that the Claims Tribunal enquiring into a claim for compensation in respect of a fatal accident arising out of the use of a motor vehicle has to apply the law contained in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. He contended that the claimant, who is the brother of the deceased, was not a dependant under section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act and that the section recognises only the wife, husband, parents and children as beneficiaries and, therefore, the claimant was not entitled to claim compensation for the death of Rambharosey. He placed reliance upon the decisions in. Dewan Hari Chand & Others v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi and another A I R 1973 Del 67 P. B. Kadar & others v. Thatchamma & Others : A I R 1970 Ker 241, Mrs. Pushpa v. State of Jammu & Kashmir : 1977 AC J 375, Suman v. The General Manager, Madhya Pradesh State Road Transport & another : 1970 ACJ 280 and Balmukund v. Smt. Mustaqbai Misc. Appeal No. 10/74 decided on 17-11-1978 (1979 M P L J 13).
6. The learned counsel for the appellant contended that all claims for compensation arising out of the use of a motor vehicle are now governed by the provisions of sections 110 to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 and that under section 110-A of the said Act, a claim for compensation by the brother of the deceased is maintainable as his legal representative and the provisions of section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act will not come in the way. He placed reliance upon the decisions in Mohammad Habibullah & another v. K Seethammal : AIR 1967 Mad. 123 . The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao & Others : 1975 A C J 344, Megjibhai Khimji Vira and another v. Chaturbhai Taliabhai and others : 1977 A C J 253 and Kasturi Lal and another v. Prabhakar and another : 1970 A C J 1.
7. Section 110 (A) of the Motor Vehicles Act provides that an application for compensation arising out of an accident of the nature specified in subsection (1) of section 100 may be made where death has resulted from the accident by or any of the legal representatives of the deceased. The proviso to this section lays down that where all the legal representatives of the deceased have not joined, any such application for compensation shall be made on behalf of or for the benefit of all the legal representatives of the deceased and the legal representatives who have not so joined, shall be impleaded as respondents to the application.
8. The word Legal Representative has not been defined in the Motor Vehicles Act. The word legal representative has been defined in section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code, 1908 as follows: " Legal Representative means a person, who, in law, represents the estate of the deceased......................" The definition of the word Legal Representative as contained in Civil Procedure Code was known to the Parliament when it used the word Legal representative in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act. It would, therefore, be proper to construe the expression Legal representative as defined in Civil Procedure Code. In Kasturi Lal & another v. Prabhakar & another, a Division Bench of this Court held that the term Legal Representative must be construed in the context of section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code and further also in the context of the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act. In The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao & Others (supra) a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court has held that as the expression Legal Representative was not defined in the Act, the Court will be justified in relying upon the expression Legal Representative as defined in Civil Procedure Code. It is not in dispute that if the word Legal Representative is so construed, the appellant as the brother of the deceased, is his Legal Representative, because, there being no nearer heir of the deceased, he is a person, who in law, represents the estate of the deceased and, therefore, he has a right to make an application under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act.
9. However, it was contended by the learned counsel for the respondents that the provisions of sections 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act are merely adjectival or procedural in nature and they do not confer any substantive right on a person to claim compensation on account of the death of a person, and that the substantive right is conferred only by the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. According to the learned counsel, under section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, only the wife, husband, parents and children are entitled to claim compensation for the death of a person and the appellant, not being one of them, has no such right. This submission of the learned counsel for the respondents is not well founded. Section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act uses the word Representative and the word Representative as used in the said section, has been construed as being limited to the relations mentioned in that section limited to the relations mentioned in that section. The word Legal representative was defined in Civil Procedure Code, 1908. When the provisions of section 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act were inserted in the statute in the year 1956, the Parliament knew that by the Fatal Accidents Act, the right to claim compensation for the death of the deceased was conferred on his representative, which was construed to mean the relations mentioned in section 1-A of the said Act. The Parliament also in Civil Procedure Code, 1908, had a wider connotation. If in spite of this, the Parliament used the word Legal Representative in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, it would be reasonable to construe that the Parliament intended to confer the right to receive compensation for the death of the deceased also upon persons, who were not mentioned in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, and who came within the definition of the term Legal Representative, as defined in Civil Procedure Code. In Megjibhai Khimji Vira and another v. Chaturbhai Taliabhai and others (supra), a Division Bench of Gujarat High Court, after considering in detail the several conflicting decisions of the High Court, held that clause B of subsection 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act conferred a substantive right on all the legal representatives of the deceased victim to claim compensation from the wrong-doer and being a special provision providing for relief for accident arising out of the use of Motor Vehicles, it has the effect of overriding the provisions of section 1-A of the 1855 Act. In that case, the Gujarat High Court has held that the brother and the nephew of the deceased were entitled to claim compensation for the death of the victim as his Legal Representative. In The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao and others (supra), a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court has similarly held that the brother of the deceased was entitled to claim relief as a legal representative of the deceased. In Mohammad Habibullah & another v. K. Seethammal (supra), a Division Bench of the Madras High Court has held that a married sister of the victim, who was a bachelor and who died without leaving children, parents or any other nearer heir, was entitled to claim compensation as the legal representative of the deceased.
10. The learned counsel for the respondents placed reliance upon the decision in Dewan hari Chand and others v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi and another (supra) and contended that only the heirs mentioned in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act are entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased. In that case, this question did not really arise for consideration because the claim was made by the father and three brothers of the deceased. Under the provisions of the Hindu Succession Act, the father was the heir of the deceased in entry No. 1 of clause 2 of the Schedule to the said Act. The brothers would be the heirs of the deceased in entry No. 2 of class-2 of the schedule and the father being the nearer heir shall be preferred to the brothers, who were in second entry and, therefore, in the presence of the father, the brothers would not be the legal representatives of the deceased. In the circumstances, the father alone was rightly held entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased. The decision in P. B. Kedar and others v. Thatchamma and others (supra) is also not helpful to the respondents, because in that case, the provisions of section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act have not been considered by the said High Court and further in that case, in the presence of nearer heirs, the brothers could not be said to be legal representatives of the deceased. The decision in Mrs. Pushpa v. State of Jammu & Kashmir (supra) relied upon by the learned counsel for the respondents is also not helpful because in that case also, there were nearer heirs and the brother, therefore, could not be said to be legal representative of the deceased. The learned counsel has also placed reliance upon a Division Bench decision of this Court in Suman v. The General Manager, Madhya Pradesh State Road Transport & another (supra). The point involved in that case was quite different. In that case, the widow of the deceased only submitted an application under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act and the children of the deceased were not made parties to the proceedings. It was, therefore, contended by the respondents that the loss sustained by the children should not be taken into consideration because they were not parties to the petition. Negativing this contention of the respondents, it was held that the claim under section 110-A of the Act, being representative in character, it is essentially on behalf of all the representatives of the deceased. In this connection, reference was made to section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. This case, therefore, does not help the respondents. Reference was also made by the learned counsel for the respondents to the decision of a Division Bench of this Court in Kamla Devi & Others v. Kishan Chand & Others 1970 A C 310. In that case, construing the provisions of section 110-B of the Motor Vehicles Act, it was held that the said section does not create any new basis for assessing compensation and the amount of compensation has to be determined according to the substantive law of liability as provided in Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. The provisions of section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act were not involved in that case and this Court had no occasion to consider the same.
11. The learned counsel for the respondents also placed reliance upon my decision in Balmukund v. Smt. Mustaqbai. In that case, the claim was made by the father, brother and sister of the deceased. It was held that in presence of the father, the brother and sister have no right to claim compensation and the father was entitled to the whole of the compensation. This case, therefore, does not help the respondents, because in the presence of the father, the brother and sister were not the legal representatives of the deceased.
12. There is another aspect, which requires consideration. The provisions of sections 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act were inserted to provide cheap and speedy remedy to the persons, who had suffered loss on account of the accident. The provisions, being benevolent, call for a liberal and broad interpretation so that the real purpose of enacting sections 110-A to 110-F is achieved. It is well settled that if the provisions of a welfare legislation are capable of two interpretations, the interpretation, which furthers the policy of the Act and is more beneficial to the persons for whose interest the law has been made, should be preferred. Therefore, if the Parliament has thought it fit not to use the word representative, as was used in the Fatal Accidents Act, but has used, the word Legal Representative, in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, full effect has to be given to the legislative intent. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the category of persons, who are entitled to claim compensation on account of the death of the deceased person, cannot be restricted to the relations specified in section 1A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855 and I agree with the views taken by the Madras, Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat High Courts in the decisions referred to above that all the legal representatives of a deceased as defined by section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code are entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, if they have suffered any loss on account of the death of the deceased. In the present case, it is common ground that the appellant being the brother of the deceased, was his legal representative, because the deceased was not survived by any other nearer heir. The appellant, therefore, is entitled to claim compensation on account of the death of the deceased from the respondents.
13. On consideration of the evidence, adduced by the parties, I am of the opinion that the Tribunal has rightly held that the accident was caused on account of the rash and negligent act of the respondent No. 2 in driving the truck and, therefore, the respondents are liable to pay compensation to the appellant. I am also of the opinion that the amount of compensation assessed by the Tribunal cannot be said to be too low or too excessive requiring intereference by this Court in appeal.
14. As a result of the discussion aforesaid, this appeal is allowed, the award of the Tribunal is set aside and it is directed that the respondents shall pay to the appellant a sum of Rs. 3,400 as compensation with interest at 6% per annum from the date of the application till realization. There shall be no order as to costs of this appeal.
1. This appeal under section 110 (D) of the Motor Vehicles Act, is directed by the claimant-appellant against the award dated 16-3-74, passed by the Second Additional Member, Motor Accidents Claims Tribunal, Indore, in Claim Case No. 14 of 1971.
2. The claimant is the real brother of the deceased Rambharosey. Rambharosey was coming on a bicycle from Rao on the Bombay Agra Road. He was knocked down near Akashwani by motor truck No. RJE 2733, which was being driven rashly and negligently on the wrong side of the road. Rambharosey succumbed to his injuries on the same day, while he was being taken to the M.Y. Hospital. The truck was being driven by the respondent No. 2 Gheesalal. The truck was insured with the respondent No. 3 New India Assurance Company Limited, Indore. It was owned by the respondent No. 1, Bhagwansingh or respondents Nos. 4 and 5. The name of the respondent No. 1 was deleted by the appellant during the pendency of this appeal. The deceased was aged about 30 years at the time of the accident and he was earning Rs. 150 per month. The appellant claimed a sum of Rs. 60,000 as compensation on account of the death of his brother, Rambharosey. He alleged that there was no other legal representative and heir of the deceased. The respondent No. 2 denied that the accident was caused on account of his rash and negligent driving of the truck. The respondent No. 3 also denied the case of the petitioner. There were other pleas raised by the respondents, which do not survive now.
3. The Tribunal held that the accident was caused on account of the rash and negligent driving of respondent No 2. The Tribunal also held that the deceased was contributing a sum of Rs. 320 per year to the claimant. The deceased was a bachelor and was aged about 30 years. The Tribunal, considering the circumstances of the case and the fact that after the deceased was married, his contribution to his brother would be reduced ; held that the compensation awardable to the claimant would be Rs. 3,400 with interest at 6% per annum from the date of the application till realization. However, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the petitioner, as the brother of the deceased, was not entitled to get any compensation on the ground that a brother was not a representative of the deceased. The Tribunal, therefore, dismissed the petition of the claimant. The claimant has challenged the award of the Tribunal in this appeal.
4. The only point for consideration in this appeal, therefore, is whether the claimant, as the brother of the deceased, is entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased caused by the rash and negligent act of the respondent No. 2. The appellant contended that there being no nearer heir lett behind by the deceased Rambharosey, he was his legal representative being his only heir and was entitled to claim compensation. The respondents contended that the claimant as the brother of the deceased cannot be said to be dependent or the representative of the deceased and, therefore, he is not entitled to claim any compensation for the death of the deceased, under the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act.
5. The learned counsel for the respondent supported the view taken by the Tribunal and contended that the Claims Tribunal enquiring into a claim for compensation in respect of a fatal accident arising out of the use of a motor vehicle has to apply the law contained in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. He contended that the claimant, who is the brother of the deceased, was not a dependant under section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act and that the section recognises only the wife, husband, parents and children as beneficiaries and, therefore, the claimant was not entitled to claim compensation for the death of Rambharosey. He placed reliance upon the decisions in. Dewan Hari Chand & Others v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi and another A I R 1973 Del 67 P. B. Kadar & others v. Thatchamma & Others : A I R 1970 Ker 241, Mrs. Pushpa v. State of Jammu & Kashmir : 1977 AC J 375, Suman v. The General Manager, Madhya Pradesh State Road Transport & another : 1970 ACJ 280 and Balmukund v. Smt. Mustaqbai Misc. Appeal No. 10/74 decided on 17-11-1978 (1979 M P L J 13).
6. The learned counsel for the appellant contended that all claims for compensation arising out of the use of a motor vehicle are now governed by the provisions of sections 110 to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 and that under section 110-A of the said Act, a claim for compensation by the brother of the deceased is maintainable as his legal representative and the provisions of section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act will not come in the way. He placed reliance upon the decisions in Mohammad Habibullah & another v. K Seethammal : AIR 1967 Mad. 123 . The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao & Others : 1975 A C J 344, Megjibhai Khimji Vira and another v. Chaturbhai Taliabhai and others : 1977 A C J 253 and Kasturi Lal and another v. Prabhakar and another : 1970 A C J 1.
7. Section 110 (A) of the Motor Vehicles Act provides that an application for compensation arising out of an accident of the nature specified in subsection (1) of section 100 may be made where death has resulted from the accident by or any of the legal representatives of the deceased. The proviso to this section lays down that where all the legal representatives of the deceased have not joined, any such application for compensation shall be made on behalf of or for the benefit of all the legal representatives of the deceased and the legal representatives who have not so joined, shall be impleaded as respondents to the application.
8. The word Legal Representative has not been defined in the Motor Vehicles Act. The word legal representative has been defined in section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code, 1908 as follows: " Legal Representative means a person, who, in law, represents the estate of the deceased......................" The definition of the word Legal Representative as contained in Civil Procedure Code was known to the Parliament when it used the word Legal representative in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act. It would, therefore, be proper to construe the expression Legal representative as defined in Civil Procedure Code. In Kasturi Lal & another v. Prabhakar & another, a Division Bench of this Court held that the term Legal Representative must be construed in the context of section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code and further also in the context of the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act. In The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao & Others (supra) a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court has held that as the expression Legal Representative was not defined in the Act, the Court will be justified in relying upon the expression Legal Representative as defined in Civil Procedure Code. It is not in dispute that if the word Legal Representative is so construed, the appellant as the brother of the deceased, is his Legal Representative, because, there being no nearer heir of the deceased, he is a person, who in law, represents the estate of the deceased and, therefore, he has a right to make an application under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act.
9. However, it was contended by the learned counsel for the respondents that the provisions of sections 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act are merely adjectival or procedural in nature and they do not confer any substantive right on a person to claim compensation on account of the death of a person, and that the substantive right is conferred only by the provisions of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. According to the learned counsel, under section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, only the wife, husband, parents and children are entitled to claim compensation for the death of a person and the appellant, not being one of them, has no such right. This submission of the learned counsel for the respondents is not well founded. Section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act uses the word Representative and the word Representative as used in the said section, has been construed as being limited to the relations mentioned in that section limited to the relations mentioned in that section. The word Legal representative was defined in Civil Procedure Code, 1908. When the provisions of section 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act were inserted in the statute in the year 1956, the Parliament knew that by the Fatal Accidents Act, the right to claim compensation for the death of the deceased was conferred on his representative, which was construed to mean the relations mentioned in section 1-A of the said Act. The Parliament also in Civil Procedure Code, 1908, had a wider connotation. If in spite of this, the Parliament used the word Legal Representative in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, it would be reasonable to construe that the Parliament intended to confer the right to receive compensation for the death of the deceased also upon persons, who were not mentioned in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, and who came within the definition of the term Legal Representative, as defined in Civil Procedure Code. In Megjibhai Khimji Vira and another v. Chaturbhai Taliabhai and others (supra), a Division Bench of Gujarat High Court, after considering in detail the several conflicting decisions of the High Court, held that clause B of subsection 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act conferred a substantive right on all the legal representatives of the deceased victim to claim compensation from the wrong-doer and being a special provision providing for relief for accident arising out of the use of Motor Vehicles, it has the effect of overriding the provisions of section 1-A of the 1855 Act. In that case, the Gujarat High Court has held that the brother and the nephew of the deceased were entitled to claim compensation for the death of the victim as his Legal Representative. In The Vanguard Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Challu Hanumantha Rao and others (supra), a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court has similarly held that the brother of the deceased was entitled to claim relief as a legal representative of the deceased. In Mohammad Habibullah & another v. K. Seethammal (supra), a Division Bench of the Madras High Court has held that a married sister of the victim, who was a bachelor and who died without leaving children, parents or any other nearer heir, was entitled to claim compensation as the legal representative of the deceased.
10. The learned counsel for the respondents placed reliance upon the decision in Dewan hari Chand and others v. Municipal Corporation of Delhi and another (supra) and contended that only the heirs mentioned in section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act are entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased. In that case, this question did not really arise for consideration because the claim was made by the father and three brothers of the deceased. Under the provisions of the Hindu Succession Act, the father was the heir of the deceased in entry No. 1 of clause 2 of the Schedule to the said Act. The brothers would be the heirs of the deceased in entry No. 2 of class-2 of the schedule and the father being the nearer heir shall be preferred to the brothers, who were in second entry and, therefore, in the presence of the father, the brothers would not be the legal representatives of the deceased. In the circumstances, the father alone was rightly held entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased. The decision in P. B. Kedar and others v. Thatchamma and others (supra) is also not helpful to the respondents, because in that case, the provisions of section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act have not been considered by the said High Court and further in that case, in the presence of nearer heirs, the brothers could not be said to be legal representatives of the deceased. The decision in Mrs. Pushpa v. State of Jammu & Kashmir (supra) relied upon by the learned counsel for the respondents is also not helpful because in that case also, there were nearer heirs and the brother, therefore, could not be said to be legal representative of the deceased. The learned counsel has also placed reliance upon a Division Bench decision of this Court in Suman v. The General Manager, Madhya Pradesh State Road Transport & another (supra). The point involved in that case was quite different. In that case, the widow of the deceased only submitted an application under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act and the children of the deceased were not made parties to the proceedings. It was, therefore, contended by the respondents that the loss sustained by the children should not be taken into consideration because they were not parties to the petition. Negativing this contention of the respondents, it was held that the claim under section 110-A of the Act, being representative in character, it is essentially on behalf of all the representatives of the deceased. In this connection, reference was made to section 1-A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. This case, therefore, does not help the respondents. Reference was also made by the learned counsel for the respondents to the decision of a Division Bench of this Court in Kamla Devi & Others v. Kishan Chand & Others 1970 A C 310. In that case, construing the provisions of section 110-B of the Motor Vehicles Act, it was held that the said section does not create any new basis for assessing compensation and the amount of compensation has to be determined according to the substantive law of liability as provided in Fatal Accidents Act, 1855. The provisions of section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act were not involved in that case and this Court had no occasion to consider the same.
11. The learned counsel for the respondents also placed reliance upon my decision in Balmukund v. Smt. Mustaqbai. In that case, the claim was made by the father, brother and sister of the deceased. It was held that in presence of the father, the brother and sister have no right to claim compensation and the father was entitled to the whole of the compensation. This case, therefore, does not help the respondents, because in the presence of the father, the brother and sister were not the legal representatives of the deceased.
12. There is another aspect, which requires consideration. The provisions of sections 110-A to 110-F of the Motor Vehicles Act were inserted to provide cheap and speedy remedy to the persons, who had suffered loss on account of the accident. The provisions, being benevolent, call for a liberal and broad interpretation so that the real purpose of enacting sections 110-A to 110-F is achieved. It is well settled that if the provisions of a welfare legislation are capable of two interpretations, the interpretation, which furthers the policy of the Act and is more beneficial to the persons for whose interest the law has been made, should be preferred. Therefore, if the Parliament has thought it fit not to use the word representative, as was used in the Fatal Accidents Act, but has used, the word Legal Representative, in section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, full effect has to be given to the legislative intent. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the category of persons, who are entitled to claim compensation on account of the death of the deceased person, cannot be restricted to the relations specified in section 1A of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855 and I agree with the views taken by the Madras, Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat High Courts in the decisions referred to above that all the legal representatives of a deceased as defined by section 2(11) of Civil Procedure Code are entitled to claim compensation for the death of the deceased under section 110-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, if they have suffered any loss on account of the death of the deceased. In the present case, it is common ground that the appellant being the brother of the deceased, was his legal representative, because the deceased was not survived by any other nearer heir. The appellant, therefore, is entitled to claim compensation on account of the death of the deceased from the respondents.
13. On consideration of the evidence, adduced by the parties, I am of the opinion that the Tribunal has rightly held that the accident was caused on account of the rash and negligent act of the respondent No. 2 in driving the truck and, therefore, the respondents are liable to pay compensation to the appellant. I am also of the opinion that the amount of compensation assessed by the Tribunal cannot be said to be too low or too excessive requiring intereference by this Court in appeal.
14. As a result of the discussion aforesaid, this appeal is allowed, the award of the Tribunal is set aside and it is directed that the respondents shall pay to the appellant a sum of Rs. 3,400 as compensation with interest at 6% per annum from the date of the application till realization. There shall be no order as to costs of this appeal.
Advocates List
For Petitioner : H.S. RajpalFor Respondent : N.C. Behal
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
R.K. Vijayvargiya, J.
Eq Citation
1980 MPLJ 95
LQ/MPHC/1979/89
HeadNote
Tort Law — Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 — Ss. 110-A to 110-F — Compensation — Entitlement to claim — Brother of deceased, who was not survived by any nearer heir, held, entitled to claim compensation under S. 110-A — Words and Phrases — “Legal Representative” — Civil Procedure Code, S. 2(11) — Words and Phrases — “Representative” .
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