United India Fire And General Insurance Co
v.
Machinery Manufacturers Corporation Ltd
(High Court Of Karnataka)
Miscellaneous First Appeal No. 2378 To 2381 Of 1984 | 06-02-1986
Venkatachala, J.
1. Common questions of law, which arise for our decision in these appeals under Section 30(1) of the Workmens Compensation Act, 1923 (for short the Act) are two. While one of them relates to the ambit of power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, the other relates to the scope and applicability of Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act.
2. Material facts, which have given rise to the said questions, are briefly these: The appellant in all these appeals, is the United India Fire and General Insurance Company Ltd., (for short the Insurance Company). One or the other of the respondents in each of these appeals, is an employer for purposes of the Act. The Insurance Company (insurer) issued an insurance policy called Workmens Compensation Policy to each employer. The operative portion of such policy read :
"NOW THIS POLICY WITNESSETH that if at any time during the period of insurance any employee in the Insureds immediate service shall sustain personal injury by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment by the Insured in the Business and if the Insured shall be liable to pay compensation for such injury either under the law(s) set out in the Schedule or at Common Law then subject to the terms exceptions and conditions contained herein or endorsed hereon the Company will indemnify the Insured against all sums for which the Insured shall be so liable and will in addition be responsible for all costs and expenses incurred with its consent in defending any claim for such compensation.
PROVIDED ALWAYS that in the event of any change in the law(s) or the substitution of other legislation therefore this Policy shall remain in force but the liability of the Company shall be limited to such sum as the Company would have been liable to pay if the law(s) had remained unaltered."
Each policy so Issued, it was agreed before us, was a special policy, which was intended to cover the liability of the employer to pay compensation under the Act for the personal injury sustained by his workman by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment for his business during the period of subsistence of that policy. It was also agreed that the appellant (Insurance Company) has been made, under each order under appeal, liable to make good to the person concerned, compensation which the employer was liable to pay under the Act respecting personal injury suffered by the workman by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment. But, the ambit of power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act to direct the Insurance Company (appellant) to pay the compensation liable to be paid by the employer under the Act, to the person entitled to it, and the liability to pay such compensation by the Insurance Company under the Insurance Policy issued by it, unless a contingency covered under Sub-section (1) of Section 14 had arisen, were disputed. This is how, two questions, adverted to at the outset, have arisen for our decision and we shall now proceed to deal with them.
3. Re: power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act--
Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act reads thus :
"(1) If any question arises in any proceedings under this Act as to the liability of any person to pay compensation (including any question as to whether a person injured is or is not a workman) or as to the amount of duration of compensation (including any question as to the nature of extent of disablement) the question shall, in default of agreement, be settled by a Commissioner."
From a perusal of the above provision, it becomes obvious that the power of the Commissioner thereunder extends to the settlement of any question arising in any proceedings under the Act as to the liability of any person to pay compensation. But, it was contended for the appellant (Insurance Company) by its Learned Counsel, Sri R. V. Vasantha Kumar, that the expression any person" used in the subsection cannot take within its ambit the Insurance Company liable to make good the compensation under the Workmens Compensation Policy issued covering the liability of the employer under the Act, to pay compensation for a personal injury sustained by his workmen. This contention, in our view, cannot be sustained for the reason which we shall presently state.
4. The employers liability to pay compensation in case of personal injury caused to a workman by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, arises under Section 3 of the Act. As to what amount of compensation is payable respecting a particular injury sustained by a workman has since been provided for under Section 4 of the Act read with Schedule-IV thereto, no room is left for doubt in the matter. That there should not be any delay in payment of such amount of compensation, is made explicit by the provision in Section 4A of the Act. Thus, it becomes clear that expeditious payment of amount of compensation liable to be paid by the employer under the Act, for the personal injury suffered by a workman, is a purpose sought to be achieved by Sections 4 and 4A of the Act in the interest of social security of the workman or his dependants. If the employer is entitled to recover the amount of compensation so payable to a workman or his dependants, as the case may be, from his insurer (Insurance Company) under an insurance policy taken by him, the question is whether such Insurance Company cannot be regarded as one falling within the expression "any person" under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act against whom liability for payment of compensation could also be fastened by the Commissioner holding proceedings thereunder. If due regard is given to the purpose ought to be achieved by the aforesaid provisions of the Act, the beneficial legislation, we cannot but think that the expression "any person" used in the sub-section takes within its ambit Insurance Company as well. Moreover, the expression "any person" used in Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, is intended by the legislature to take within its ambit the Insurance Company as well, becomes clear from the clue available in Section 24 of the Act, That Section reads :
"Any appearance, application or act required to be made or done by any person before or to a Commissioner (other than an appearance of a party which is required for the purpose of his examination as a witness) may be made or done on behalf of such person by a legal practitioner or by an official of an Insurance Company or a Trade Union or by an Inspector appointed under Sub-section (1) of Section 8 of the Factories Act, 1948 or under Mines Act, 1952, or by any other officer specified by the State Government in this behalf, authorised in writing by such person, or, with the permission of the Commissioner by any other person so authorised,"
(Underlining is ours)
The expressions in the above Section to which we have supplied emphasis, make us think that wherever the expression "any person" is used in the Act, the legislature has intended that that expression should take within its ambit an Insurance Company as well, if the context so permits.
5. We may here state that a Division Bench of this Court in Shri Ram Mining Co. v. The Assistant Commissioner and Commissioner for Workmens Compensation ILR 1981 (Kar) 208 on a reading of Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, has interpreted it thus :
"Thus, on reading Section 19(1), it becomes clear that the jurisdiction of the Commissioner under the Act is not confined only against the employer. It clearly contemplates the liability of any person to pay compensation."
Hence, we are clearly of the view that the power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act to settle or adjudicate upon the liability of any person to pay compensation thereunder, extends to the settlement or adjudication of Insurance Companys liability under a Workmans Compensation Policy issued by it, to pay compensation for the personal injury sustained by a workman, liable to be made good by his employer-insured.
6. Re : Scope and applicability of Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act--
Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act reads thus :
"(1) Where any employer has entered into a contract with any insurers in respect of any workman, then in the event of the employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or scheme of arrangement with his creditors or, if the employer is a company, in the event of the company having commenced to be wound up, the rights of the employer against the insurers as respects that liability shall, notwithstanding anything in any law for the time being in force relating to insolvency or the winding up of companies, be transferred to and vest in the workman, and upon any such transfer the insurers shall have the same rights and remedies and be subject to the same liability as if they were the employer, so, however, that the insurers shall not be under any greater liability to the workman than they would have been under to the employer,"
The Learned Counsel for the appellant (Insurance Company) wanted us to construe the above sub-section as one which makes the Insurance Company liable for the compensation payable by the employer under the Act for the personal injury sustained by a workman, out of and in the Course of his employment, in the event of the employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or a scheme of arrangement or the employer, if is company on the commencement of its winding up, and not otherwise. We find it rather difficult to accede to this contention.
7. From a reading of the above sub-section, one could see that it provides for transferring and vesting in the workman the rights and remedies which an employer may have against the insurer under a contract of insurance for the benefit of such workman, in the event of such employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or scheme of arrangement with his creditors or, if the employer is a company, in the event of the company having commenced to be wound up, notwithstanding anything in any law for the time being in force relating to insolvency or the winding up of companies. It has to be remembered that under the law relating to insolvency or the winding up of a company, when a person becomes insolvent or the winding up of a company has commenced, all the rights and remedies of such person or company enforceable against a third party under a contract, stand transferred to and vest in the Official Receiver or official assignee in the one case and Official Liquidator in the other. It is only to overcome such untoward consequence which may prove detrimental to the interest of workman, that a provision, as found in Section 14 of the Act, is made and nothing else. To construe such a provision as one which takes away the right of the insured-employer to obtain indemnity under a contract of insurance, unless he becomes insolvent or makes a composition or a scheme of arrangement with his creditors or if the employer-insured is a company, unless its winding-up commences, is to read something into the provision which is alien to it. We, therefore, hold that the provision in Section 14 does not enable the Insurance Company (appellant) to avoid its liability under a contract of insurance issued specially for covering the employers liability to a workman under the Workmens Compensation Act, to avoid such liability on the ground that the insured employer has not become insolvent, or made a composition or a scheme of arrangement with his creditors or being a company, the proceeding relating to its winding up has not commenced. Thus, both the contentions urged on behalf of the appellant fail.
8. In the result, we dismiss these appeals, however, without costs.
1. Common questions of law, which arise for our decision in these appeals under Section 30(1) of the Workmens Compensation Act, 1923 (for short the Act) are two. While one of them relates to the ambit of power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, the other relates to the scope and applicability of Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act.
2. Material facts, which have given rise to the said questions, are briefly these: The appellant in all these appeals, is the United India Fire and General Insurance Company Ltd., (for short the Insurance Company). One or the other of the respondents in each of these appeals, is an employer for purposes of the Act. The Insurance Company (insurer) issued an insurance policy called Workmens Compensation Policy to each employer. The operative portion of such policy read :
"NOW THIS POLICY WITNESSETH that if at any time during the period of insurance any employee in the Insureds immediate service shall sustain personal injury by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment by the Insured in the Business and if the Insured shall be liable to pay compensation for such injury either under the law(s) set out in the Schedule or at Common Law then subject to the terms exceptions and conditions contained herein or endorsed hereon the Company will indemnify the Insured against all sums for which the Insured shall be so liable and will in addition be responsible for all costs and expenses incurred with its consent in defending any claim for such compensation.
PROVIDED ALWAYS that in the event of any change in the law(s) or the substitution of other legislation therefore this Policy shall remain in force but the liability of the Company shall be limited to such sum as the Company would have been liable to pay if the law(s) had remained unaltered."
Each policy so Issued, it was agreed before us, was a special policy, which was intended to cover the liability of the employer to pay compensation under the Act for the personal injury sustained by his workman by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment for his business during the period of subsistence of that policy. It was also agreed that the appellant (Insurance Company) has been made, under each order under appeal, liable to make good to the person concerned, compensation which the employer was liable to pay under the Act respecting personal injury suffered by the workman by accident or disease arising out of and in the course of his employment. But, the ambit of power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act to direct the Insurance Company (appellant) to pay the compensation liable to be paid by the employer under the Act, to the person entitled to it, and the liability to pay such compensation by the Insurance Company under the Insurance Policy issued by it, unless a contingency covered under Sub-section (1) of Section 14 had arisen, were disputed. This is how, two questions, adverted to at the outset, have arisen for our decision and we shall now proceed to deal with them.
3. Re: power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act--
Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act reads thus :
"(1) If any question arises in any proceedings under this Act as to the liability of any person to pay compensation (including any question as to whether a person injured is or is not a workman) or as to the amount of duration of compensation (including any question as to the nature of extent of disablement) the question shall, in default of agreement, be settled by a Commissioner."
From a perusal of the above provision, it becomes obvious that the power of the Commissioner thereunder extends to the settlement of any question arising in any proceedings under the Act as to the liability of any person to pay compensation. But, it was contended for the appellant (Insurance Company) by its Learned Counsel, Sri R. V. Vasantha Kumar, that the expression any person" used in the subsection cannot take within its ambit the Insurance Company liable to make good the compensation under the Workmens Compensation Policy issued covering the liability of the employer under the Act, to pay compensation for a personal injury sustained by his workmen. This contention, in our view, cannot be sustained for the reason which we shall presently state.
4. The employers liability to pay compensation in case of personal injury caused to a workman by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, arises under Section 3 of the Act. As to what amount of compensation is payable respecting a particular injury sustained by a workman has since been provided for under Section 4 of the Act read with Schedule-IV thereto, no room is left for doubt in the matter. That there should not be any delay in payment of such amount of compensation, is made explicit by the provision in Section 4A of the Act. Thus, it becomes clear that expeditious payment of amount of compensation liable to be paid by the employer under the Act, for the personal injury suffered by a workman, is a purpose sought to be achieved by Sections 4 and 4A of the Act in the interest of social security of the workman or his dependants. If the employer is entitled to recover the amount of compensation so payable to a workman or his dependants, as the case may be, from his insurer (Insurance Company) under an insurance policy taken by him, the question is whether such Insurance Company cannot be regarded as one falling within the expression "any person" under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act against whom liability for payment of compensation could also be fastened by the Commissioner holding proceedings thereunder. If due regard is given to the purpose ought to be achieved by the aforesaid provisions of the Act, the beneficial legislation, we cannot but think that the expression "any person" used in the sub-section takes within its ambit Insurance Company as well. Moreover, the expression "any person" used in Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, is intended by the legislature to take within its ambit the Insurance Company as well, becomes clear from the clue available in Section 24 of the Act, That Section reads :
"Any appearance, application or act required to be made or done by any person before or to a Commissioner (other than an appearance of a party which is required for the purpose of his examination as a witness) may be made or done on behalf of such person by a legal practitioner or by an official of an Insurance Company or a Trade Union or by an Inspector appointed under Sub-section (1) of Section 8 of the Factories Act, 1948 or under Mines Act, 1952, or by any other officer specified by the State Government in this behalf, authorised in writing by such person, or, with the permission of the Commissioner by any other person so authorised,"
(Underlining is ours)
The expressions in the above Section to which we have supplied emphasis, make us think that wherever the expression "any person" is used in the Act, the legislature has intended that that expression should take within its ambit an Insurance Company as well, if the context so permits.
5. We may here state that a Division Bench of this Court in Shri Ram Mining Co. v. The Assistant Commissioner and Commissioner for Workmens Compensation ILR 1981 (Kar) 208 on a reading of Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act, has interpreted it thus :
"Thus, on reading Section 19(1), it becomes clear that the jurisdiction of the Commissioner under the Act is not confined only against the employer. It clearly contemplates the liability of any person to pay compensation."
Hence, we are clearly of the view that the power of the Commissioner under Sub-section (1) of Section 19 of the Act to settle or adjudicate upon the liability of any person to pay compensation thereunder, extends to the settlement or adjudication of Insurance Companys liability under a Workmans Compensation Policy issued by it, to pay compensation for the personal injury sustained by a workman, liable to be made good by his employer-insured.
6. Re : Scope and applicability of Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act--
Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act reads thus :
"(1) Where any employer has entered into a contract with any insurers in respect of any workman, then in the event of the employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or scheme of arrangement with his creditors or, if the employer is a company, in the event of the company having commenced to be wound up, the rights of the employer against the insurers as respects that liability shall, notwithstanding anything in any law for the time being in force relating to insolvency or the winding up of companies, be transferred to and vest in the workman, and upon any such transfer the insurers shall have the same rights and remedies and be subject to the same liability as if they were the employer, so, however, that the insurers shall not be under any greater liability to the workman than they would have been under to the employer,"
The Learned Counsel for the appellant (Insurance Company) wanted us to construe the above sub-section as one which makes the Insurance Company liable for the compensation payable by the employer under the Act for the personal injury sustained by a workman, out of and in the Course of his employment, in the event of the employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or a scheme of arrangement or the employer, if is company on the commencement of its winding up, and not otherwise. We find it rather difficult to accede to this contention.
7. From a reading of the above sub-section, one could see that it provides for transferring and vesting in the workman the rights and remedies which an employer may have against the insurer under a contract of insurance for the benefit of such workman, in the event of such employer becoming insolvent or making a composition or scheme of arrangement with his creditors or, if the employer is a company, in the event of the company having commenced to be wound up, notwithstanding anything in any law for the time being in force relating to insolvency or the winding up of companies. It has to be remembered that under the law relating to insolvency or the winding up of a company, when a person becomes insolvent or the winding up of a company has commenced, all the rights and remedies of such person or company enforceable against a third party under a contract, stand transferred to and vest in the Official Receiver or official assignee in the one case and Official Liquidator in the other. It is only to overcome such untoward consequence which may prove detrimental to the interest of workman, that a provision, as found in Section 14 of the Act, is made and nothing else. To construe such a provision as one which takes away the right of the insured-employer to obtain indemnity under a contract of insurance, unless he becomes insolvent or makes a composition or a scheme of arrangement with his creditors or if the employer-insured is a company, unless its winding-up commences, is to read something into the provision which is alien to it. We, therefore, hold that the provision in Section 14 does not enable the Insurance Company (appellant) to avoid its liability under a contract of insurance issued specially for covering the employers liability to a workman under the Workmens Compensation Act, to avoid such liability on the ground that the insured employer has not become insolvent, or made a composition or a scheme of arrangement with his creditors or being a company, the proceeding relating to its winding up has not commenced. Thus, both the contentions urged on behalf of the appellant fail.
8. In the result, we dismiss these appeals, however, without costs.
Advocates List
For Petitioner : R.V. VAsantha Kumar, Adv.For Respondent : KingPatridge, A.C. Narendra, P. NatarajanS. Srishaila, Advs.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE JUSTICE VENKATACHALA
HON'BLE JUSTICE MURLIDHER RAO, JJ.
Eq Citation
1986 ACJ 1079
1986 ILR KAR 1773
1986 (2) KARLJ 67
LQ/KarHC/1986/78
HeadNote
1923 Act — Ss. 19(1), 14 and 4A — Power of Commissioner under S. 19(1) to settle or adjudicate upon liability of any person to pay compensation — Scope of — Held, it extends to settlement or adjudication of Insurance Company's liability under a Workmen's Compensation Policy issued by it, to pay compensation for personal injury sustained by a workman, liable to be made good by his employer-insured — Words and Phrases — 'Any person' — Meaning of
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