Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 1, Cited by 20]

Supreme Court of India

Rajasthan State Road Transport ... vs Narain Shanker & Anr. Etc. Etc on 30 January, 1980

Equivalent citations: 1980 AIR 695, 1980 SCR (2) 866, AIR 1980 SUPREME COURT 695, 1980 (2) SCC 180, (1980) RAJ LR 395, 1980 2 SCC 189, 1980 UJ (SC) 325, (1980) WLN 62 (SC), (1980) ACJ 411, (1980) TAC 222

Author: V.R. Krishnaiyer

Bench: V.R. Krishnaiyer, R.S. Pathak

           PETITIONER:
RAJASTHAN STATE ROAD TRANSPORT CORPORATION, JAIPUR

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
NARAIN SHANKER & ANR. ETC. ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT30/01/1980

BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
PATHAK, R.S.

CITATION:
 1980 AIR  695		  1980 SCR  (2) 866
 1980 SCC  (2) 180


ACT:
     Motor Vehicles  Act 1939,	S. 110A	 and Constitution of
India  1950,   Article	41-Accident   claim-State  Transport
Corporation-Duty of.



HEADNOTE:
     The respondents  lost their  limbs in  a road  accident
while travelling  in a	bus belonging  to the  petitioner, a
nationalised transport	system. The  plea by the operator to
escape the liability for compensation was that the lights of
the bus accidentally failed, which resulted in the accident.
The Accidents Claims Tribunal negatived the plea and awarded
compensation in	 sums far  lower than  were claimed  by	 the
respondents.
     In the  special leave  petitions  to  this	 Court,	 the
petitioner contested the application of the principle of res
ipsa loquitur and the quantum of the claim.
     Dismissing the petitions,
^
     HELD: 1. (i) It was improper of the Corporation to have
tenaciously resisted the claim. [868 A]
     (ii) It  was right	 on the part of the Tribunal to have
raised a  rebuttable presumption  on  the  strength  of	 the
doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. [868 B]
     2. The  heads of  claim have been correctly appreciated
by the Tribunal and the awards have been moderate. [868 C]
     3. Instead	 of indulging  in  wasteful  litigation,  it
would have been more humane and just, if the Corporation had
hastened  compassionately  to  settle  the  claims  so	that
goodwill and public credibility could be improved. [867 H]
     4. The State has a paramount duty, apart from liability
for tort,  to make  effective provision	 for disablement  in
cases of  undeserved want-Article  41  of  the	Constitution
states so. [868 A]
     5.	 Nationalisation   of  road  transport	should	have
produced a better sense of social responsibility on the part
of the	management and drivers. One of the major purposes of
socialisation of  transport is	to inject a sense of safety,
accountability and  operational responsibility	which may be
absent in  the case of private undertakings whose motivation
is profit making regardless of risk  to life. [867 E-F]
     6.	 Common	 experience  on	 Indian	 high-ways  disclose
callousness and	 blunted consciousness on the part of public
corporations  which  acquire  a	 monopoly  under  the  Motor
Vehicles Act  in plying	 buses. It is a pity that State Road
Transport vehicles should become mobile menaces. [867 G]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition (Civil) Nos. 6698-6700 of 1979.

867

From the Judgment and Order dated 25-10-1978 of the Rajasthan High Court in D. B. Civil Misc. Appeal Nos. 195, 196 and 197 of 1978.

Soli J. Sorabjee Soli. Genl. and Sobhagmal Jain for the Petitioner.

M. N. Shroff for the Respondent.

The Order of the Court was delivered by KRISHNA IYER, J.-These three petitions for special leave relate to a road tragedy where many lost their limbs while travelling in a bus belonging to the nationalised transport system of Rajasthan. A flimsy plea was put forward by the operator to escape liability for compensation that the lights of the bus accidentally failed and thus the unfortunate episode occurred. Other embellishments were also set up for the purpose of exoneration. The Accidents Tribunal was not taken in and, having disbelieved the evidence, awarded compensation in sums far lower than were claimed by the victims.

Two contentions were raised and rightly over-ruled and they have been repeated in the Petition for special leave and we similarly reject them. The nature of the accident and the surrounding circumstances are such that the doctrine res ipsa loquitur was rightly invoked by the court. Indeed, the terrible accidents attributable to reckless driving and escalating year after year make our high-ways great hazards. One should have thought that nationalisation of road transport would have produced a better sense of social responsibility on the part of the management and the drivers. In fact, one of the major purposes of socialisation of transport is to inject a sense of safety, accountability and operational responsibility which may be absent in the case of private undertakings, whose motivation is profit making regardless of risk to life; but common experience on Indian high-ways discloses callousness and blunted consciousness on the part of public corporations which acquire a monopoly under the Motor Vehicles Act in plying buses. It is a thousand pities that our State Road Transport vehicles should become mobile menaces, and we should impress upon them the need to have greater reverence for human life representing, as they do, the value-set of the State itself.

In the present case, the State Corporation put forward a false plea and contested the application of the principle of res ipsa loquitur to avoid liability. It would have been more humane and just if, instead of indulging in wasteful litigation, the Corporation had hastened compassionately to settle the claims so that goodwill and public credibility could be improved. After all, the State has a paramount duty, apart 868 from liability for tort, to make effective provision for disablement in cases of undeserved want-Aritcle 41 of the Constitution states so. It was improper of the Corporation to have tenaciously resisted the claim. It was right on the part of the Tribunal to have raised a rebuttable presumption on the strength of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

The State Corporation has contested even the quantum of the claim. Indian life and limb cannot be treated as cheap, at least by State instrumentalities. The heads of claim have been correctly appreciated by the Tribunal and the awards have been moderate. Here again, the State Corporation should have sympathised with the victims of the tragic accident and generously adjusted the claims within a short period. What is needed is not callous litigation but greater attention to the efficiency of service, including insistence on competent, cautious and responsible driving.

We have had the advantage of Shri Soli J. Sorabjee, who represented the Corporation with a characteristic sense of fairness, but we are unable to desist from making the above observations which are induced by the hope that nationalised transport service will eventually establish their superiority over the private system and sensitively respond to the comforts of and avoid injury to the travelling public and the pedestrian users of our highways.

We dismiss the Special Leave Petitions.

N.V.K.					Petitions dismissed.
869