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Chhattisgarh High Court Holds Tractor-Trolley to be a Single Insured Unit: “Trolley Is Not a Self-Propelled Vehicle, No Separate Insurance Required” – Insurance company liable for payment of compensation

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Court’s Decision

The Chhattisgarh High Court dismissed the appeal filed by the insurance company and upheld the compensation award of ₹5,02,000 passed by the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal, Bhatapara, in favour of the claimants. The Court rejected the insurer’s contention that it should be exonerated from liability since the accident was caused by the trolley, which was not separately insured, holding that the tractor and trolley constituted a single vehicle and were jointly insured.

“The tractor and trolley should be seen as a single vehicle. In this situation, this court finds that there is no illegality or perversity in the award passed by the tribunal holding the appellant/insurance company liable for payment of compensation.”


Facts

On 26.04.2014, a motor accident occurred involving a tractor-trolley and a motorcycle. The deceased, Ganesh Babu Mani, was riding pillion on the motorcycle when he suffered a fatal head injury due to a collision with the tractor-trolley. A claim was filed under Section 166 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, by the parents of the deceased seeking compensation of ₹21,62,369. The Claims Tribunal awarded ₹5,02,000 with 9% interest per annum from the date of application.

The insurance company challenged the Tribunal’s order under Section 173 of the Motor Vehicles Act, asserting that since the trolley (which allegedly caused the fatal injury) was not insured, it could not be held liable for compensation.


Issues


Petitioner’s (Appellant/Insurance Company) Arguments

The appellant argued that:


Respondent’s Arguments

The respondents (owner and driver of the tractor-trolley) argued:


Analysis of the Law

The Court analyzed:


Precedent Analysis

  1. Dhondubai v. Hanmantappa Bandappa Gandigude, 2023 LiveLaw (SC) 725:
    • Distinguished as the deceased was not a third party but was riding in the trailer.
    • The Court exercised Article 142 to direct pay and recovery from the insurer.
  2. Liyakat Ali v. Smt. Chunni Devi (Allahabad HC, 16.07.2010, Order No. 600 of 2009):
    • Held that a trailer/trolley attached to a tractor is part of the tractor and does not need separate insurance.
  3. Saudan Singh v. Nanhi Devi & Ors (Allahabad HC, FAO No. 2952 of 2017, decided 02.02.2021):
    • Reaffirmed that no separate insurance was needed for a trolley attached to an insured tractor.

These precedents were applied to reinforce that the tractor-trolley should be treated as a single insured unit.


Court’s Reasoning

The Court held that:


Conclusion

The appeal filed by the insurer was dismissed, and the High Court affirmed the Tribunal’s award of compensation. The Court found no merit in the insurer’s claim for exoneration and reiterated that attached tractor-trolley combinations are to be treated as a single vehicle for insurance liability purposes.


Implications

This judgment reinforces that:

Also Read: Bombay High Court: Registrar Erred in Rejecting WR Trademark — “Prior International Use and Reputation Justified Advertisement Before Acceptance”

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