THE NEW INDIA ASSURANCE CO. LTD. Vs. ANAND SARUP RAMESH KUMAR
LAWS(P&H)-2016-1-211
HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB AND HARYANA
Decided on January 07,2016

THE NEW INDIA ASSURANCE CO. LTD. Appellant
VERSUS
Anand Sarup Ramesh Kumar Respondents

JUDGEMENT

K. Kannan, J. - (1.) Service is complete. None appears on behalf of the respondent. The revision by the insurer is on the liability cast by the Permanent Lok Adalat for theft/loss caused at a shop which was brought under "shopkeeper insurance". The liability included also the loss by accident or misfortune whilst the insured's money was in his hands or in the hands of his employees in transit, between any two places within a radius of fifteen miles from the insured's premises. In this case, the staff of the insured was tapped on his back when he was carrying money of the insured by some unknown person and tricked to keep down the bag in hand to turn and remove the dirt which was stated to be sticking to his shirt. The trickster ran away with the money contained in the bag. For a claim which was lodged by the insured reported on 29.12.2005 for the alleged loss caused on 6.12.2005, the insurance company pleaded that a loss during transit must be during an occasion when the amount was in the hands of the employee in transit and in this case it was not actually in his hands. The delayed notice itself was also against the terms of the policy and hence no amount is recoverable. The insured has not taken reasonable care in protecting the money.
(2.) I will reject all these contentions as legally not tenable. The amount in the hands of the employee in transit must include a situation of a person who keeps the article by his side for attending to a person who was distracting him and ought not to be given a literal meaning of money being held in the hand. This would defeat the very purpose of insurance, for, it was possible for an insurer to deny even the money held in the pocket, for, after all it was not a hand.
(3.) A want of care of what was pleaded must be a case of wanton negligence. Any theft/loss takes place by circumstances, where at least a minimum lack of care must have been prevalent. It is not as if a person was inviting some person to take the money and then making claim of loss. The money lost by the acts of the trickster, as happened in this case, ought not to be seen as want of due care, as contemplated in the policy.;


Click here to view full judgement.
Copyright © Regent Computronics Pvt.Ltd.