In the case of Trilok Chand &Anr. vs. Narinder Kumar &Ors., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh enhanced the compensation awarded to the parents of a 20-year-old road accident victim, correcting several legal errors made by the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT) regarding income assessment and the application of multipliers.
- Evidentiary Standards for Income
The Court reversed the Tribunal’s decision to fix the deceased’s monthly income at only Rs. 6,000 due to a lack of documentary proof. The Court established that:
- Oral vs. Documentary Evidence: The law does not hierarchically prioritize documents over credible oral testimony.
- Informal Sector Reality: It is unrealistic to expect formal employment records or tax filings from street-vending assistants. Since the oral evidence of an income of Rs. 9,000 per month survived cross-examination, the Court accepted it as the established base.
- Correct Multiplier and Dependency Calculations
The Court identified a significant error in the Tribunal’s use of a multiplier based on the age of the surviving parents.
- Baseline for Multiplier: Under settled law (notably Sarla Verma), the age of the deceased is the absolute baseline for choosing a multiplier. For a 20-year-old victim, the correct multiplier is 18, rather than the 13 applied by the Tribunal.
- Future Prospects: An additional 40% was added to the monthly income for future prospects, bringing the amount to Rs. 12,600.
- Personal Deductions: As the deceased was a bachelor, 50% was deducted for personal and living expenses, resulting in a monthly family contribution of Rs. 6,300.
- Adjustment of Conventional Heads and Interest
The Court restructured the compensation for conventional heads (funeral expenses, loss of estate, and consortium) to align with Supreme Court precedents like Pranay Sethi.
- Inflationary Revision: The Court applied a mandatory 10% upward revision for every three years that passed since the original template judgments were delivered.
- Interest Rate: To reflect prevailing banking trends, the interest rate on the total award was scaled down from 9% to 7.5% per annum.
Final Award
The High Court significantly increased the total compensation from the Tribunal’s initial award of Rs. 8,58,400 to Rs. 15,03,800. The liability to pay this amount remains with the insurance company.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 239
Trilok Chand &Anr. V. Narinder Kumar &Ors. (D.O.J. 18.05.2026)
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