P.B. Kader and ors. Vs. Thatchamma and ors. - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citationsooperkanoon.com/718559
SubjectCivil
CourtKerala High Court
Decided OnMar-25-1969
Case NumberA.S. Nos. 404, 405 and 406 of 1966
Judge P.T. Raman Nayar, Ag. C.J. and; V.R. Krishna Iyer, J.
Reported inAIR1970Ker241
ActsCode of Civil Procedure (CPC) , 1908 - Order 32, Rule 6(2)
AppellantP.B. Kader and ors.
RespondentThatchamma and ors.
Appellant Advocate C.K. Sivasankara Panicker,; P.G.P. Panicker,; D.N. Potti
Respondent Advocate M.I. Joesph,; Jos Thomas, Advs. and;Govt. Pleader
Cases ReferredRamalingam Chettiyar v. Gokuldas Madavji and Co.
Excerpt:
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civil - compensation - order 32 rule 6 (2) of code of civil procedure, 1908 - plaintiffs are bread earner of petitioners family - defendant carried business of transportation - plaintiffs killed as result of negligence on part of employees of defendant - trial court overruled pleas of defendant and awarded damages - whether payment of compensation adequate - act contemplates not merely award of gross sum by way of compensation payable by defendant but its division among dependents proportioned to loss resulting from death of parties respectively - award of compensation not realistic and humane. - - all the three were the breadwinners of their poor families and on their death the dependants were cut adrift and so, they claimed compensation under the fatal accidents act, act 13 of 1855.....
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krishna iyer, j. 1. the parties to these appeals invite the court to evaluate life, which is priceless, by the negative device of assessing the loss inflicted by death on those who lived on the deceased's longevity. in this mundane world, even the irreparable can be repaired somewhat by money and the law computes compensation for loss of life as 'a hard matter of pounds, shillings and pence', based not on 'sentimental damage, bereavement or pain or suffering' but on 'a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit as of right or otherwise, from the continuance of the life'. 2. a stage carriage, belonging to the 1st defendant-company, was plying, with lethal rashness, on the vypeen-pallipuram road on the ill-starred day, the 12th december, 1959. this lovely island has but rugged roads and.....
Judgment:

Krishna Iyer, J.

1. The parties to these appeals invite the Court to evaluate life, which is priceless, by the negative device of assessing the loss inflicted by death on those who lived on the deceased's longevity. In this mundane world, even the irreparable can be repaired somewhat by money and the law computes compensation for loss of life as 'a hard matter of pounds, shillings and pence', based not on 'sentimental damage, bereavement or pain or suffering' but on 'a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit as of right or otherwise, from the continuance of the life'.

2. A stage carriage, belonging to the 1st defendant-company, was plying, with lethal rashness, on the Vypeen-Pallipuram road on the ill-starred day, the 12th December, 1959. This lovely island has but rugged roads and the working-class denizens, who make a livelihood by employment outside the island, depend largely on buses for their daily journeys. Three such workmen by name Ande Chouro, Joseph Sylvian and Pathrose Raphael, all employed in Volkart Bros., were on their way to their work-place in the morning that day. According to the plaintiffs, the 1st defendant's overloaded bus, propelled recklessly by its driver, barged against a 'waterpipe pillar,' turned turtle and, as a result, several persons sustained serious injuries of whom the three men later succumbed to their injuries and died. All the three were the breadwinners of their poor families and on their death the dependants were cut adrift and so, they claimed compensation under the Fatal Accidents Act, Act 13 of 1855 --for short, called the Act --by way of pauper suits, which were duly resisted by the owner of the bus, the 1st defendant company, both regarding culpability and quantum of compensation. The trial Court overruled the pleas of the defendant on both heads and decreed damages to each set of defendants in substantial sums of Rs. 13,110 in O.S. No. 20 of 1955 of the Principal Sub Court, Ernakulam (O.S. No. 46 of 1961 of the Sub Court, Cochin) (Chouro), of Rs. 21,040 in O.S. No. 21 of 1965 of the Principal Sub Court, Ernakulam O.S. No. 48 of 1961 of the Sub Court, Cochin (Sylvian) and of Rs. 23,001 in O.S. No. 22 of 1965 of the Principal Sub Court, Ernakulam (O.S. No. 47 of 1961 of the Sub Court, Cochin) (Raphael). The owner of the bus, held vicariously liable by the Court below, has come up in appeal challenging the decree, by raising contentions, frivolous and serious, in a desparate effort, may be, to escape all liability under the Act. The recklessness of the driving is matched only by the recklessness of his pleas about culpability. For instance, in his written statement, the mishap is blamed on the bad condition of the road and in the appeal memorandum an audacious but confessional contention of volenti non fit injuria is seen raised. The dangerous and treacherous state of Vypeen roads, it is pleaded, almost induces accidents. If that be so and perhaps it is Government is lucky that few people are conscious of their right to claim damages from it where the injury is reasonably occasioned by its misfeasance. However, such lamentable neglect of the maintainance of the highway must make a prudent motorist, driving in broad day light on a familiar route, more circumspect and it can never be an excuse for releasing him from legal duty to take care. The greater the danger, the greater the care, should be the guideline of the motorist. In this case, the evidence is clear, and the circumstances speak for themselves, that the 'fifth act' of the tragic drama which took the toll of three lives was brought about by the gross negligence of the driver. The defendant has taken up a ground in appeal that the plaintiffs should be non-suited on the principle of volenti non fit injuria. Scienti and therefore volenti may, perhaps, be the basis of the argument. In other words, the plea of the owner is that the reckless driving of his buses is so chronic and notorious that any one who steps into them must be deemed knowingly and willingly to be walking into a death-trapl Now that the plea has been unhesitatingly abandoned by counsel who realised the implication, I can only remark 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do'. This preposterous plea of the operator is perhaps bottomed upon the painful phenomena frequently found in Kerala of bad roads, absence of effective cautionary signals and safety measures, frequent and callous violation of traffic regulations and failure of concerned authorities to take prophylactic action against recurrence, at least after major road tragedies, thanks to the anaesthetised attitude of the public and government to road safety. But I have no doubt that the negligence of the defendant's driver is the causa causans of the accident under consideration.

In fairness to counsel for the appellant, it must be said that, at the time of arguments, he did but feebly challenge his client's liability. However, he rightly stressed his case that the quantum of compensation award-able under the Act was far less than the excessive award made by the trial Court and on this part of the case we found consideraable force in his submission.

3. All the three suits have been tried together and a common judgment has been delivered, since the claims spring from the same accident. But we find a curious and indefensible procedure in drawing up a common decree for all the three suits; each suit must have a separate decree and even where there is a joint trial there cannot be 11 joint decree. The Fatal Accidents Act, placed on the statute book as early as 1855, is a trifle archaic in form and somewhat obsolescent in content, but Courts are called upon to enforce the statute as it is. Under the Indian Act, which is largely modelled on the English statute of 1846, brothers and sisters are not entitled to rank as dependants, although in England, the mother country (I mean, of the statute), by Section 2 of the Fatal Accidents Act, 1959, brother, sister, uncle and aunt of the deceased and the issue of such relatives have been inducted into the area of statutory dependency. The other progressive amenaments to the English statute also have not been copied in our country. In one of the three suits we are concerned with viz., O.S. No. 22 of 1965, plaintiffs 3, 4 and 5 are the two brothers and sister of the deceased who, under the Indian Act, are not entitled to claim compensation. Again, the Fatal Accidents Act, 1855, states that 'every such action or suit shall be for benefit of the wife, husband, parent and child, if any, of the person whose death shall have been so caused, and shall be brought by and in the name of the executor, administrator or representative of the person deceased'. The Act also requires all the dependants to be named in the plaint. What happens, if all these dependants are not on record, although they are alive or the suit is brought by some but not for the benefit of the others also

Strictly speaking, the section visualises some sort of a representative action, but, where the suit is brought, not by the executor or administrator, but by some of the beneficiaries themselves, should the suit be dismissed because the others are not on record That would be taking an extremely technical view and therefore an objection in that form, taken in two suits where the parents are alive, but not impleaded (nor claim made on their behalf), has been rightly overruled by the trial Court, although that does not mean that the plaintiffs should get the benefit of the compensation which should have gone to the parents had they also claimed.

There was evidence led regarding funeral expenses, presumably on the footing that a claim could be put forward in that behalf; but the Indian Act does not provide for it, while the amended English Act provides for award of damages in respect of the funeral expenses of the deceased if such expenses have been incurred by the parties for whoso benefit the action is brought. In India the reasoning in Dalton v. S.E. Rly., (1858) 4 CB (N.S.) 296 still holds good that 'the subject-matter of the statute is compensation for injury by reason of the relative not being alive' which is a narrower concept than compensation for injury by reason of a relative's death. The former embraces only what the deceased had he lived, would have done for the dependant; the latter includes in addition to this what the dependant would do and does, reasonably and necessarily, for the deceased as a result of his death, such as a son's expenses of travelling thousands of miles by air to his father's funeral, or a wife's expenses dealing with personal correspondence of sympathy and condolence on her Husband's death' (Mayne's Damages, 12th Edition page 689, para 810).

4. We are, therefore, concerned only with assessing the amount of damages awardable to such of the plaintiffs as come within die scope of Section 1-A of the Act, measured by the loss occasioned to them by the death of the one on whom they depended, although a claim under Section 2 of the Act, available to the legal representatives by way of loss caused to the estate of the deceased, has not been put forward, by a serious omission in the pleading. Facts material to issue under Section 1-A are set out below:

A. S. No. 404 of 1966O. S. 20/1965 1. Name of the deceased:Ande Chouro -- Aged 452. Relatives specified in Section (1) (a)who figure as plaintiffs:1. Widow -- Thachamma -- aged 352. Son -- Antony -- aged 143. Daughter -- Thressia -- aged 124. Son -- Xavier -- aged 93. Relatives not specified in Sec. 1 (a)butfiguring as plaintiffs:Nil4. Relatives specified in Section 1 (a)but not figuring as plaintiffs:Father and mother of the deceased

4 (a). Relatives not specified in Section 1 (a) who were dependants of the deceased:2 Brothers and 2 sisters (P. W. 1page 4)5. The age of each relation who is plaintiff:1. Widow -- 35 years

2. Son -- 14 years

3. Daughter -- 12 years

4. Son -- 9 years6. The longevity in the region for persons of the respective ages of the relatives:1. Widow -- 35 years -- 30.03

2. Son -- 14 years -- 43.01 at 15

3. Daughter -- 12 years -- 47.11 at 15

4. Son -- 9 years -- (about 50)7. The average income of the deceased:Rs. 1,552,01 gross per year9. The multiplier to be adopted and the circumstances relevant to fixing the multiplier:The evidence is that the deceased who was 45 years 'could have worked in Volkart Office upto his 60th year'Decrease in multiplier due to:1. for contingency of death of parties,2. daughter getting married,3. son getting employed and becoming independent of parents etc. A. S. No. 405 of 1966

O. S. 22/19651. Name of the deceased: Raphael -- aged 27 l2. Relatives specified in Section 1 (a) who figure as plaintiffs:1st Plaintiff: Father Pathrose -- aged 70

2nd Plaintiff Mother Rosa -- aged 573. Relatives not specified in Sec. 1 (a) but figuring as plaintiffs:3rd Plaintiff -- Brother Antony 4th Plaintiff -- Sister Divind5th Plaintiff -- Sister Annamma Ni4. Relatives specified in Section 1 (a) but not figuring as plaintiffs:Nil4(a). Relatives not specified in Sec. 1 (a) who were dependants of the deceased: 3rd, 4th and 5th plaintiffs (brother and sinters)5. The age of each relative who is plaintiff:1. Father -- Aged 702. Mother -- aged 573. Brother -- Aged 234. Sister -- aged 195. Sister -- aged 166. The longevity in the region for persons of the respective ages of the relativesFather -- aged 70 -- Nil died on 28-1-1968Mother -- aged 57 -- 14.34 at 607. The average income of the deceased: Rs. 1,424.34 gross per year9. The multiplier to be adopted and the circumstances relevant to fixing the multiplier: The evidence is that the deceased aged 27 could have worked up to 60thyear, i.e., 33 yearsDecrease in multiplier due to.:1. Contingency of the death of parties including the dependants,2. Deceased likely to get married,3. Benefit accrued to the dependants due to death of deceased(Plaintiffs 1 and 2 alone are entitled for damages)1st plaintiff died on 28-1-68, i.e., 8 yrs. after the death of his son. He wasaged 70.

Mother aged 57A. S. No. 406 of 1966

O. S. 21/19651. Name of the deceased: Sylvian -- aged 40 2. Relatives specified in Section 1 (a) who figure as plaintiffs:Plaintiffs

1. Widow Thressia -- aged 24

2. Son -- Joseph -- aged 6

3. Daughter Molly -- aged 4

4. Daughter Gracy -- aged 1

3. Relatives not specified in Section 1 (a) but figuring as plaintiffs:

Nil

4. Relatives specified in Section 1 (a)but not figuring as plaintiffs:

Mother of the deceased

4(a) Relatives not specified in Sec. 1 (a) who were dependants of the deceased:

One brother and 2 sisters who were residing with the deceased

5. The age of each relative who is plaintiff:

1. Widow -- aged 24

2. Son -- aged 6

3. Daughter -- aged 4

4. Daughter-- aged 1

6. The longevity in the region for persons of the respective agesof the relatives.

Widow -- - 24 years -- 38.11 at 25 died 28-3-1968 Son -- 6 years -- 50.80 at 5 Daughter -- 4 years 55.33 at 5

7. The average income of the deceased:

Daughter -- 1 year -- 55.78 Rs. 1, 679.12 Gross peryear.

9. The multiplier to be adopted and the circumstances relevant tofixing the multiplier:

As in the case of A. S. 404/66 taking into account the decrease inmultiplier.

1st Plaintiff widow died on 28-3-1968

2nd Plaintiff son, aged 6.

3rd Plaintiff daughter, aged 4.

4th Plaintiff daughter, aged 1.

5. How do we ascertain the loss of the pecuniary benefit arising from the relationship, which would have been derived from the continuance of the life and which may consist of money, property or services: in other words, the value of the dependency This amount would depend largely upon how long the deceased would have lived and earned, had he not been killed by the accident and how long the dependants would live; in other words, on how long the dependency would last What would the deceased have contributed, on an average, to the dependant's well-being over the years; in other words, what is the basic figure In a world where imponderable forces operate and unexpected changes occur, a peep into the future and prediction with precision of things dependant on varying human and social factors, may be cynically called an exercise in the art of pretense. In such an uncertain situation, Judges can only make intelligent guesses grounding themselves on existing realities, general probabilities and broad trends, making allowance for individual factors and freak possibilities. That is why the golden rule of 'reasonable expectations' has been accepted by Courts for want of a better. Standardised methods have also been devised for calculating the value of the dependency or the present value of the pecuniary benefit that the deceased would have conferred upon the dependant in the future. The annual value of the dependency is first arrived at, i.e., the basic figure, and this is multiplied by the number of years the dependency is expected to last, called the multiplier and the product is scaled down to reach the present value, because when a lump sum is being given, two considerations must weigh with us.

The compensation packet is not what the dependant gets if his prop were alive. Had he been alive, he would have given various small sums over the months and the years and to-pay the aggregate in one lump is to help the dependant benefit by the death! Similarly, there are contingencies which might cut off the benefit prematurely. The formula works this way in practice. Estimate the average income of the deceased (I am ignoring the cases where the deceased has not begun to earn, although in such cases prospective earning and therefore prospective loss can be taken into account), take the various expenditure factors affecting the individual, from the point of view of his own habits, family circumstances and social conditions and derive, after appropriate deductions, the normal contribution that the deceased was making, about the time of the accident, in favour of the dependant in a year. This is the basic datum viz., the annual value of the dependency. This is not very scientific because this annual figure may vary from time to time and for a number of reasons but effect is given to these uncertainties while choosing the multiplier, as is the practice in the English Courts. The defence of this forensic procedure is not that it is the most rational but that it is the most practical in drawing up the balance-sheet based on a maze of factors.

A familier quotation in this branch of the law is to be found in Lord Wright's speech in Davies v. Powell Duffryn Collieries, 1942 AC 601, dealing with the case of the death of a working husband. He said:

'The starting point is the amount of wages which the deceased was earning, the ascertainment of which to some extent may depend on the regularity of his employment. Then there is an estimate of how much was required or expended for his own personal and living expenses. The balance will give a datum or basic figure which will generally be turned into a lump sum by taking a certain number of years' purchase. That sum, however, has to be taxed down by having due regard to uncertainties, for instance, that the widow might have again married and thus ceased to be dependant, and other like matters of speculation and doubt.'

The expectation of life, not merely of the deceased, but also of the dependant, is a matter to be taken into account, particularly when we are dealing with aged parents as dependants, for e.g., in O.S. No. 48 of 1961. Bad health certainly may affect expectation of a particular life; hazardous employment of another and so on. Fortunately, in this case we are not called upon to consider these variables as no evidence has been led on those lines. Similarly, the prospect of marriage of the deceased or the dependant has an important impact on the issue. Unmarried Raphael, the deceased, was just 27, an extremely marriageable age. The widow of Sylvian was in her twenties, still a vernal age when the prospect of a re-marriage is not pale. Among the many matters urged on this part of the case, there is one which has been the subject of much debate. The widow of Chouro had actually died when the appeal in this Court was pending and so counsel for the appellant contended that we are not in order in assuming a notional longevity for her, confronted as we were with the stark fact of her death. Not so important; yet Raphael's aged father also died during the pendency of the appeal. The argument is that the dependency snaps when the beneficiary dies and when that has happened, speculation about it is silenced. But the matter is not that easy of solution. Damages begin to run from the time of the death of the victim of the fatal accident and are, therefore, normally assessed in relation to the facts then existing. Yet, subsequent events surely must be taken into account when they throw light on the actualities of the case, and the latest data should be made available to the Court at the time of the trial. Logically, therefore, if one of the contingencies that would end the dependency, namely, the death of the dependant, has materialised before the trial, this must be taken into account and damages assessed accordingly.

Scott, L. J., observed in Williamson v. Thornycroft, 1940-2 KB 658:

'It is quite true that the measure of damages has to be assessed as at that date (i.e., the husband's death), but Courts in assessing damages are entitled to inform their minds of circumstances which have arisen since the cause of action accrued and throw light upon the reality of the case. It seems to me wholly wrong to say that where a death which involves the liability of a third party has occurred, as in the case, some years before the assessment of damages by the Court, the Court ought to shut its eyes to the fact that one dependant has had only a short tenure of life before death put an end to her dependence.'

Subsequent events may either augment or cut down the quantum of damages, but it is a moot point when they can be taken note of and if so, subject to what restrictions and conditions.

6. Every material event which affects the result of an action and occurs before the Courts take final leave of the lis should be taken into account, if the unreality gap between forensic findings and the facts of life is to be narrowed down and if dispensing justice is not to be confused with the cult of the occult. What would you think of a system of justice, when a Court deliberates at length, hears long arguments, takes considerable evidence and holds that a plaintiff-claimant will have another fifty years' span of life even if an hour before this judicial astrology is articulated, the plaintiff dies of heart failure in the Court hall Justice is blind I venture to suggest that justice is not, and ought not to be, blind to up-to-date facts, and Judges must see with their eyes and discern with their mind's eye to arrive at the truth. But there is another side to the question. On principle, a Court grants relief as on the date of the plaint and, strictly speaking, even events occurring up to the close of the trial may be considered only in exceptional cases. For, a perfect administration of justice gives a decree at least immediately the two parties appear in Court and all further protraction is often blamable on the 'law's delays'; similarly, it is quite conceivable that if the plaintiff has demanded only a prudent sum a sensible defendant may admit the claim.

And so, if a decree is passed on a reasonable estimate made by the plaintiff of the expectation of his life, the defendant consents to it and files no appeal, and some days later the claimant dies, can the defendant get the award of compensation upset on that ground or has he to accept it as a decree of fate what if the man lives longer If the decree can be amended on this ground, can it be done years later or on the score that other similar material factors have altered That would be introducing hobgoblins into the administration of law and un-doing finality of decisions for every Such illustrations bring home the necessity for drawing the line somewhere and the futility of endeavouring to avoid injustice by looking into later happenings --apart from procedural complications of pleading and evidence. But, all things considered, the compelling logic of Scott, L.J., persuades me to include in the judicial algebra all things that occur, beyond the control of the parties, up to the close of the trial. But, comes the argument, then why not events subsequent to the first Court's decree but precedent to the disposal of the appeal Can we not classify the death of a dependant in a fatal accident case as of such special significance as to pass the barrier of exclusion of events subsequent to the trial I am disposed to say 'yes'.

So long as there is a comprehensive legal proceeding pending, e.g., an appeal, in which the subject-matter of compensation is legitimately available for judicial scrutiny, light on the decisive facts, beyond the manipulation of parties, may be received and reliefs moulded accordingly. If no appeal is pending, you can't recall the verdict or seek review on account of later events. This may itself lead to anomalies. But our imperfect instruments have pragmatic limits in the search for perfection! The view I have taken can be justified by traditional judicial thought also, For brevity's sake, I shall refer to but one Full Bench decision of the Kerala High Court, reported in Cannanore District Motor Transport Employees Co-operative Society Ltd. v. Malabar Public Conveyance, 1962 Ker LT 446 = (AIR 1962 Ker 341) (FB).

The learned Chief Justice observed in that case --which was one relating to the grant of a permit to one among many competing applicants, under the Motor Vehicles Act, having regard to development between the disposal by the R.T.A. and the hearing of the appeal by the S.T.A.T.

'If the duty of the State Transport Appellate Tribunal is to decide --as we think it is --whether the Regional Transport Authority was wrong or not, it must naturally follow that the appellate decision must be on the basis of the facts and circumstances which formed the foundation of the order under appeal.

An appeal, no doubt, is in the nature of a rehearing. But that does not mean that it is in the nature of a fresh trial, with freedom to the parties to press into service every event that has occurred since the decision under appeal. All that an appellate power spells is a power to consider on the merits the decision of a lower Court or tribunal.

There is of course a type of subsequent events which a Court of appeal has to take into account in moulding the relief to be granted: the death of a party, a change of law, AIR 1941 FC 5, a judgment in rem AIR 1957 SC 875. This is a restricted category, and all that we need say is that neither a qualification obtained on the basis of a permit subsequently set aside in appeal nor one acquired by an applicant's endeavours during the interval between the decision of the Regional Transport Authority and the hearing before the State Transport Appellate Tribunal should be taken into account as a subsequent event which is material for the disposal of an appeal.'

The rule is that subsequent events cannot be considered at the appellate stage, since an appeal, though a continuation of the suit for purposes of hearing the entire matter, is not a continuation of the trial where fresh evidence can also be introduced. There are certain exceptions engrafted upon this rule, as pointed out by My Lord the Chief Justice. Such subsequent events must possess a decisive bearing on the issues in the case, must have occurred independently of the exertions of parties and must be such as would stultify the decree if not taken into account. I am inclined to the view that the death of a principal or sole dependant has a deadly effect on the compensation claimable in many cases and in such cases Courts will be in order in having due regard to them while deciding the appeal, provided the pleadings are got amended, the opposite party afforded an opportunity to answer and other procedural prescriptions complied with.

7. In the present case, this legal controversy cannot loom large, because where there are many dependants, all below the poverty line, as in this case, one or two deaths among them may not affect the gross sum set apart by the wage-earner for the family upkeep and, therefore, the compensation payable by the defendant, although inter se shares may be changed. In O.S. No. 48 of 1961 the death of the wife may be a material circumstance to reduce the budgetary provisions which the deceased would have made for the circle of dependants, but even this should not be exaggerated because he would have had to bring in some elderly lady to look after the children and incur extra expenditure on several small items which the presence of the wife might have obviated. Nor has any amendment of the pleading been sought at the appellate stage so as to enable the Court to rely on the circumstance of death of the 1st plaintiff and the opposite party to rebut the intensity of its impact on the complex of compensation factors. Moreover, she died only after 10 years after Sylvian's death and we are adopting not a much greater multiplier. The case of the 1st plaintiff in O.S. No. 22 of 1965 (Raphael's father) is no better because the multiplier adopted by us more or less accords with his death and neither party can have a grievance.

8. The table furnished earlier gives us approximately a gross annual income of Rupees 1,552/- for Chauro, Rs. 1,679/- for Sylvian and of Rs. 1,425/- for Raphael. There are many factors, material and minute, which affect the fixing up of the annual value of the dependency. While the learned Subordinate Judge has palpably erred in the matter of computation, the deduction he made on account of what would have been spent on the deceased himself being only the cost of transport and 'outside meals' on working days, there is a broad fairness in adopting as the basic figure Rs. 800/- in the case of Chouro, Rs. 850/- in the case of Sylvian and of Rs. 800/- in the case of Raphael. While neither counsel wanted it to be understood that they accepted these figures they did not call them unfair, having due regard to the many factors which cannot be very clearly articulated but can certainly be felt and appreciated and were thoroughly examined at the hearing before us.

9. The real controversy rages round fixing the multiplier. A great deal of argument and reference to precedents has been our pleasure to listen to, but I am not much the wiser for all that because, essentially, this is a question which has to be resolved on the specific facts and circumstances of each case, the broad guidelines of judicial pronouncements being helpful only to a limited degree. In Waldon v. War Office, 1 956-1 WLR 51 Singleton, L. J., observed:

'One point of law is raised, Mr. Gerald Gardincr .......... asked that he might be allowed to refer the judge to decisions of other judges and of this Court in cases of a like nature in order to give some guidance as to the amount of damages which should be awarded. Mr. Roger Whnn, ........ objected to any such material being placed before the judge, and the judge, ....... gave judgment upon that question. He said -that Mr. Gardiner had referred him to the decision of this Court in Rushton v. National Coal Board, 1953-1 QB 495 and in particular to certain words of Birkett, L.J. Llyod Jacob, J., said: 'As I understand the language, it is in main directed to a consideration of those cases in the Court of Appeal, and, indeed, the language of Birkett, L.J., in which he says 'when, therefore, a particular matter comes for review one of the questions is, how does this accord with the general run of assessments made over the years in comparable cases ?', is to my mind apt to indicate the practice in the Court of Appeal itself ........ The Judge's decision is in these words; 'I do decide that in the circumstances it would not be right for me to permit Mr. Gardiner to refer to the quantum of damages awarded in similar cases. If I am wrong about that, he will be able to get the matter put right hereafter.' .......... The decision of the Court of Appeal to which reference was made drew attention to the desirability of approaching, as far as possible, something in the nature of a standard in certain classes of injury so as to help judges of first instance as much as possible. No one knows what is the right sum of damages in any particular case, and no two cases are alike ...... I do not consider that a Judge is bound to hear such evidence fof compensation awarded in other comparable cases). If counsel on one side or the other tenders such evidence or such material, it is for the Judge to say whether, in his discretion, he thinks it will be of help to him or not ......

'The danger of such material is that it is apt to take the mind of the tribunal from the particular facts of the case on which it is to give a decision. It would not be right that a claim for damages for personal injuries should open by counsel for the plaintiff saying: 'My Lord, I have here fifteen decisions of Judges in the last five years upon an injury like this one,' say the loss of a leg; and for counsel on the other side to say: 'I have twenty-five similar decisions,' the one quoting the high ones and the other quoting the low ones. That would not be of help to any Judge. A Judge in assessing damages draws upon his own experience. Where does he get that experience From knowledge of other Judges decisions as to amount; from knowledge of what is said in this Court and in the House of Lords; and from his ordinary experience in life. It would not be wrong for counsel appearing in such a case to say to a Judge: 'I have here the report of a decision in the Court of Appeal on an appeal on damages in a case very like this one; and I have another case, a decision of Mr. Justice X, a case again very like this one. Would your Lordship like to have them The Judge could not be wrong if he said: 'Yes, I should like that information, I should like to know what the Court of Appeal said and I should like to know how Mr. Justice X dealt with this subject, for it is one of which no one has great experience.'

In this context, I may also notice the observations of the Punjab High Court in Dr. Kama Saran v. Shrimati Shakuntala Rai, AIR 1961 Punj 400. At page 463 their Lordships have observed:

'It may, however, not be forgotten that no case is exactly like another, nor is it possible to extract from decided cases any precise principle of law on this point. The 'question of negligence in the present case is, as it is in all cases, essentially one of fact, and it must not be confused by importing into it. as principle of law, the reasoning applied in other cases for determining the issue of negligence on other sets or facts. The circumstances of each case are almost always peculiar and unique, with the result that the conclusion in one case can hardly constitute a safe or helpful illuminating guide for another.'

10. A judge in a compensation case cannot be led by the nose by other holdings but he may permit himself to be guided by the expression of the wisdom and experience of his compeers.

11. Two rulings of the Supreme Court reported in AIR 1962 SC 1 and AIR 1966 SC 1750 and a host of High Court rulings have been pressed before us by counsel. The multiplier in each case is different from the other for obvious reasons; and circumstances, such as, fall in money value, loss of society of the husband or wife, have been taken note of in some cases. It is difficult to derive direct benefit from these rulings; for, there exists no fool-proof formula regarding compensation. I can only observe --and that does not make any one the wiser --that the Court should be realistic and have due regard to the risks and the prospects and those other vicissitudes and changes hidden by the thick veil of time. But all these 'mystic may-bes' must he in the background only, while 'beaten-track' probabilities of the work-a-day world must occupy the foreground of the judicial mind. I have attempted to arrive at a figure avoiding exaggerations on either side and come to the conclusion that in the case of Chouro a multiplier of 10 (ten) and in the case of Sylvian a multiplier of 12 (twelve) may be adopted safely. So far as Raphael is concerned, the old age of his parents is a weighty factor depressing the multiplier and the great likelihood of his marrying shortly, had he been alive, also works in the same direction. A multiplier of ten will be fair to the aged parents in his case. Chouro had around 1.5 years of working life while Sylvian had about 20. Life might snap before this, for many chancy reasons. They may be thrown out of employment. Working capacity may be impaired due to ill-health. The rupee may lose its purchasing power with inflationary trends. Among their present dependants, the sons may begin to earn and daughters marry, ceasing to depend or depend to the same extent. The lay-out on the family includes the expenses on the parents which have not been claimed in O.S. 20 of 1965 (Chouro) and to a lesser extent, on the brothers and sisters, who cannot claim, and these entail a deduction. O.S. 21 of 1965 also shows similar features. Chouro's family burden is slightly heavier than Sylvian's and the reduction in the multiplier induced by the factor of some members attaining self-dependence is greater in Chouro's case. Sylvian's widow, still in her twenties, might well re-marry, unlike Chouro's middle-aged widow. In the case of Raphael, his youth leaves a long working life ahead; but his parents, the only dependants figuring as claimants, are perilously near exit, going by longevity forecasts -- one has died by now -- and he himself might marry and spend much more on his spouse and children and much less on his parents. In the case of Raphael it has been mentioned by the Court below that there was some property belonging to him which would be inherited by the claimants in the present suit and that income should be deducted when working out the annual value of the dependency. Technically that is correct, but all things considered, there are many factors which might push up the value of the dependency in future and we do not have details about the improvements in the property so as to ascertain the period during which the income would be available. Being negligible even otherwise, I am inclined to ignore it in arriving at the basic figure. Many other plus and minus factors have to be looked into, acturial operations figured out and movements up and down made on the mental vernier of the Judge, before reaching a multiplier, the nearest to a safe approximation of reasonable expectations, crystallising vaporous possibilities. The intangible ana complex mechanics of quantifying compensation demands personalised prediction in each individual case and cannot be substituted by wooden rules of thumb to which the learned Subordinate Judge has succumbed. We cannot but take exception to the curious but artificial calculations he has made. After all, as Hegde, J., recently observed, in a different context:

'The Judges are not computers. In assessing the value to be attached to oral evidence, they are bound to call into aid their experience of life. As Judges of fact, it was open to the appellate Judges to test the evidence placed before them on the basis of probabilities.' (C.A. No. 667 of 1965 decided on July 23, 1968).

As I mentioned earlier, there are two ways in which the present value of the dependency can be worked out; either you fix (he multiplier, disregarding the fact of lump sum payment now, and then, with reference to the relevant annuity tables, read down that figure into the present value; or alternatively, you reduce the multiplier, having in mind the thought that a lump sum is being paid now in the place of staggered payments over the years. Courts in England have leaned towards the latter method, and in arriving at the multipliers mentioned above I have adopted the same course.

12. A minor point. Section 1-A speaks of 'child' as a qualifying dependant. It was' argued that a child ceases to be one on. attaining 18 years of age and so in calculating the benefit of a son or daughter, one must stop at 18, the age of majority. I disagree. In this context, child merely means offspring, being correlative to parent. We should not confuse between child and infant or child and minor. The accent is on the biological bond and not the tender years. It may well be that in our socio-economic conditions a child may begin to earn only in his twenties, while in the U.S.A. or the Scandinavian countries many teenagers cease to be dependants.

13. Interest has been decreed by the trial Court from the date of the institution of the suit. Counsel for the appellant contended that interest should not be allowed in claims for unliquidated damages till the date of quantification i.e.. till the date of the decree. In this case, the suits have been pending for a long time and the arithmetical impact of the submission is obvious but Section 34 of the Civil Procedure Code governs the situation. This question was considered in a ruling reported in Ramalingam Chettiyar v. Gokuldas Madavji and Co., 51 Mad LJ 243 = (AIR 1926 Mad 1021).

'I see no reason why a successful party should be made to suffer because his claim is not decided soon after the filing of his plaint. When he files his plaint he puts the matter in the hands of the Court for decision. If it be held that the plaintiff cannot get interest from the date of his filing his plaint, it is equivalent to saying that the plaintiff must be deprived of the fruits of his success to the extent of losing interest from day to day during the pendency of his suit on the sum that he was entitled to at the date of his going to Court. The date of instituting the suit is the date upon which the rights of parties are ordinarily determined, and when the decree fixes the amount of damages due I think that they may be taken as fixed as on the date of the suit, and interest allowed upon that sum.'

Mr. Justice Venkatasubba Rao, J., observed on the same question:

'It is however contended for the defendant that if at the time of the suit the damages were unliquidated, interest cannot be awarded under the section. No distinction is made in the section between an ascertained sum of money and unliquidated damages. As a question of construction. I find it difficult to accept the suggestion that the word 'money' in the section should be understood in the limited sense of an ascertained sum. The expression 'decree for the payment of money' is very general and to give it due effect, it must be construed as including a claim to unliquidated damages .......... The mere fact that the decree is for the payment of damages cannot by itself be a bar to the plaintiff being awarded interest'.

I adopt this view and award interest to the plaintiffs from the date of the suit at 6% per annum on the claim decreed.

14. The action having been instituted by paupers, the Court should calculate the amount of court-fees which would have been paid by the plaintiff if he had not been permitted to sue as a pauper; such amount shall be recoverable by the State Government from any party ordered by the decree to pay the same. Had the plaintiff brought the suit in the ordinary course, he would have had to pay Court-fee on the full amount claimed in the plaint. However, it is surprising that the Subordinate Judge has ordered the plaintiffs to pay Court-fee 'on the amount decreed' and not on the amount claimed. This is patently wrong, Another obvious error in the costs portion of the decree consists in awarding costs to the State Insurance Department, the 'why' of which no one could explain at the bar and which the Government Pleader himself neither could nor did support. The direction regarding court-fee has not been challenged before us by any party and it is not part of the subject-matter in appeal and so we leave it as it is. The direction regarding costs to the insurer has been challenged and has to be cancelled. We do so.

15. Another anomaly or self-contradiction in the judgment of the trial Court deserves mention before closing the judgment. In one part of the judgment i.e., at the close of paragraph 8 the learned Subordinate Judge rightly observed:

'It is therefore clear that the plaintiffs have sought their remedies only under Section 1-A in the plaint and they cannot at this stage assert any claim under Section 2.'

Somewhat curiously, what he said in paragraph 8 swam out of his ken as he reached paragraph 10, for he concludes:

'Taking all these facts into consideration,considering the pain and sufferings and mental agnoy the deceased persons had till their .death and the loss of expectations of lifeand considering the age of the persons, itseems to me that it will be reasonable tofix Rs. l,000/- on this account to the plaintiff in each of the suits.' _We find that the Subordinate Judge wasright in paragraph 8 and wrong in paragraph. 10. And what is stranger still, allthe three plaints allege not the pain and suffering of the deceased which alone are compensable under Section 2 of the Act but 'thegreat mental pain and shock due to thistragedy' to the plaintiffs for which there isno remedy except words of sympathy. Theobservation of the lower Court in paragraph 10 that 'the plaintiffs have claimed inall these cases a further amount of Rs. 5000/-for the value of pain and suffering for eachparty under Section 2 of the Act' is eitherambiguous or a misreading of the averments.We disallow the award of Rs. 1,000/- each,made by the trial Court under the head provided for in Section 2 of the Act.

16. The Act contemplates not merely the award of a gross sum by way of compensation payable by the defendant, but also its division among the dependants 'proportioned to the loss resulting from such death to the parties respectively'. An unhappy feature of this case, relevant to the present aspect, needs mention. The parents of Chouro are alive and are entitled under Section 1-A of the Act to some compensation but are neither impleaded nor represented in the circle of beneficiaries on whose behalf the present action has been brought. While, in the circumstances of this case, this factor does not make any material change in the quantum of compensation payable by. the defendant to the widow and children, there is the melancholy thought that it must have been ignorance or financial inability that has kept them back from putting forward their claim, emphasising the need not merely for legal, aid to the poor but also for education of the backward sections of the people in their right, systematically, through some competent professional agency.

17. In O.S. No 46 of 1961 the claimants are only the widow and her three young children, and having due regard to the needs of the education for the sons and the daughter and the provision for marriage of the latter, it may be just to apportion the total amount awarded among the 4 plaintiffs equally. Three of the plaintiffs are minors and Order 32, Rule 6 (2) requires the guardian or next friend to furnish security sufficient to protect the property of the minors. But, under the proviso to Sub-rule (2) where the next friend or guardian happens to be the parent, the Court may dispense with security. Considering that the 3 children are living with the mother, have to be sent to school and maintained by her and since the prospects of her re-marrying are remote, we think it reasonable to dispense with security in this case and direct that the 1st plaintiff be allowed to withdraw the money awarded to the plaintiffs 2 to 4 without conditions, but to be used only on them.

18. Sylvian's dependants, again, consist of the widow and three tiny kids. Unfortunately, the three children are orphans, now that the widow has also died. Having due regard to the totality of the circumstances of the case it is fair to award equal shares to the widow and each of the three children. They are stated to be under the care and protection of the grand-mother who has other children i.e., the brothers of Sylvian. We do not think it proper to allow this old lady to withdraw the money of the children who, by the way, will be entitled to their mother's share also, without some kind of security. We consider it sufficient safeguard if the grand-mother and the priest of the Parish to which the plaintiffs are attached, give personal bonds, undertaking to account for the sums withdrawn, to the Court. If the priest declines, some other alternative safeguard should be insisted on by the Court. It may be in the interests of the minors to have the amount invested profitably in some landed property. The executing Court also can take proper steps in this behalf under Order 21, Rule 15 (2) of the Civil Procedure Code, when the decree is sought to be executed. No further directions are deemed necessary by us.

19. The suit is decreed in each of the above cases in the following manner, with proportionate costs here and in the Court below. In O.S. No. 46 of 1961 of the Cochin Sub Court (renumbered as O.S. No, 20 of 1965 of the Ernakulam Sub-Court) (by Chouro's dependants) there will be a decree for Rs. 10,000A with interest at 6% from date of suit and proportionate costs. In O.S. No. 48 of 1961 of the Cochin Sub-Court (renumbered as O.S. No. 21 of 1965 of the Ernakulam Sub-Court) (by Svlvian's defendants) there will be a decree for Rs. 10,000/- with 6% interest from the date of suit and proportionate costs, and in O.S. No. 47 of 1961 of the Cochin Sub-Court (renumbered as O.S. No. 22 of 1965 of the Ernakulam Sub-Court) (by Raphael's dependants) there will be a decree for Rs. 8,000/-with 6% interest from the date of suit and proportionate costs. This sum should be divided between the father and mother (Plaintiffs 1 and 2) in equal shares. The father's needs are more, but the mother's life is likely to be longer and hence the justification for the equal division. The State Insurance Department, under Section 95 (2) (b) of the Motor Vehicles Act, is bound to pay a maximum of Rs. 2,000/- per passenger killed and this has already been deposited in deduction of the decree passed, it is sad that an Indian life should be so devalued by an Indian law as to costs only Rs. 2,000/-, apart from the fact that the value of the Indian rupee has been eroded and Indian life has become dearer since the time the statute was enacted, and the consciousness of the comforts and amenities of life in the Indian community has arisen, it would have been quite appropriate to revise this fossil figure of Rs. 2,000/- per individual, involved in an accident, to make it more realistic and humane, but that is a matter for the legislature; and the observation that I have made is calculated to remind the law-makers that humanism is the basis of law and justice,

20. The appeals are allowed to the extent set out above.

Raman Nayar, Ag. C.J.

21. I have read the Judgment prepared by my learned brother and I unreservedly agree with the conclusions reached by him and with the reasoning germane thereto.