The Asian Age

No HC relief to man whose family was run over by train

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Delhi high court has refused to grant compensati­on to a man, whose five family members, including two minors, were run over by a train in 2010.

The man, in his plea, claimed that his wife, son, daughter- in- law and two grand children had boarded an Electric Multiple Unit ( EMU) train from Faridabad’s New Town railway station to travel to Delhi on January 13, 2010 and the victims fell down from the moving train on a platform when the driver applied a sudden brake.

The plea alleged that after a minute, a Rajdhani Express train coming from the opposite side crushed them five persons to death. The court said it was of the view that the five deceased persons were not bonafide passengers of the EMU train.

“Assuming that the five persons were travelling in the EMU train, all the five persons cannot fall together upon a jerk. The averment of jerk at the railway station is not believable as all trains slow down at the platform,” Justice J. R. Midha said.

The court said that deceased persons could not have fallen on the adjoining track, which was about eight feet away and the Rajdhani Express train on the adjoining track came after more than three hours. It said the pleas were filed on false averments and not entitled to any compensati­on and dismissed the appeals against the Railway Claims Tribunal’s order.

The court said there was no infirmity in the tribunal’s orders, which had also dismissed the pleas seeking compensati­on from the railways. The man had claimed that the victims were bonafide passengers and were holding valid tickets, which were lost during the mishap.

The counsel for railways claimed that the victims were not bonafide passengers of any train and their claims were false and if they were travelling by the EMU, they could not have been run over by the Rajdhani Express, which came three hours later.

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