In the judgment of Reliance General Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Jeewana Devi & Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh enhanced the compensation awarded to the mother of a deceased Assistant Engineer, ruling that the Motor Vehicles Act must be liberally construed to ensure “just compensation”. The Court corrected several errors made by the lower Tribunal, including the application of the wrong multiplier and the incorrect determination of the deceased’s age.
The Accident and Dispute over Involvement
The case stemmed from a 2011 road accident where Sandeep Chauhan, a 28-year-old Assistant Engineer, died after his motorcycle was hit by a rashly driven bus.
- Insurance Company’s Defense: The insurer argued that the offending vehicle was not identified in the initial FIR and was only impounded eight days later.
- Court’s Ruling on FIR Omissions: The Court held that the non-mention of a vehicle number in an FIR is not fatal if there is credible ocular (eyewitness) evidence. Since proceedings under the M.V. Act are summary in nature and decided on the preponderance of probability, the testimony of an eyewitness (PW-3) was sufficient to prove the accident.
Key Legal Principles Established
- Adverse Inference against the Driver: The driver of the bus failed to testify or deny the allegations on oath. The Court drew an adverse inference, concluding that his refusal to step into the witness box indicated that the defense’s stand was incorrect.
- Correct Multiplier and Age: The Tribunal had mistakenly applied a multiplier based on the mother’s (claimant’s) age. The High Court corrected this, ruling that the multiplier must be based on the age of the deceased. Since the deceased was 28 years old, a multiplier of 17 was applied.
- Future Prospects and Tax: As the deceased was a contractual employee in the public sector, the Court added 50% for future prospects to his monthly income of ₹18,000. It also recalculated the tax deductions, applying a 10% slab relevant to the year 2011.
Enhanced Compensation Calculation
The High Court significantly increased the total award from the Tribunal’s original ₹14.60 lakh to ₹27,22,600. The breakdown included:
- Loss of Contribution (Dependency): ₹26,31,600 (after 50% deduction for personal expenses as the deceased was a bachelor).
- Conventional Heads: Enhanced periodically by 10% every three years as per the Pranay Sethi precedent, resulting in ₹19,500 each for loss of estate and funeral expenses, and ₹52,000 for loss of consortium.
Final Mandate
The Insurance Company’s appeal was dismissed, and the claimant’s appeal for enhancement was allowed. The insurer was directed to deposit the enhanced amount with 7.5% interest within eight weeks.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 96
Reliance General Insurance Company Ltd. Jeewana Devi And Others (D.O. J. 18-03-2026)





