Business Standard

Claim can’t be rejected on mere suspicion

- JEHANGIR B GAI The writer is a consumer activist

Oswal Plastic Industries had taken a fire and special perils policy from New India Assurance to cover its industrial establishm­ent. The policy was issued on June 27, 2009. The sum insured was increased to ~2.5 crore from July 2, 2009.

A fire occurred on October 17, 2009 in which four machines and some raw materials got damaged. The insurer was intimated, and a claim for ~1,34,07,836 was lodged. The surveyor assessed the loss at ~29,17,500 on reinstatem­ent basis, and ~12,60,000 as the depreciate­d value.

The claim was repudiated on the ground that the insured machine had been shifted and relocated. The insurer also suspected that the fire was not accidental as the site of relocation did not have any power supply. The insurer also disputed the ensdorseme­nt enhancing the sum insured.

The insured filed a complaint before the Punjab State Commission. Even though the insurer contested the case, the State Commission allowed the complaint and ordered the claim to be settled for

~29,17,500, along with 9 per cent interest, payment of 1 lakh as compensati­on for harassment, and ~11,000 as litigation expenses.

The insurer appealed against this order. It argued that the fire must have been caused deliberate­ly. The insured countered that even though the cause of the fire could not be determined, neither the surveyor nor the investigat­or had concluded that it was caused intentiona­lly. So the claim ought not to be rejected merely because the cause could not be determined.

In its order of February 20, 2019 delivered by Prem Narain, the National Commission held that the insurer cannot allege foul play when the surveyor as well as the investigat­or had ruled it out. The Commission also observed that the sum insured was increased subsequent to the shifting of the machines. At the time of enhancemen­t of coverage, it was the duty of the insurance company to check where the machines were being located. Since this was not done, the Commission held that the insurer would not be entitled to raise this objection after the claim was lodged.

Since the machines were lying unconnecte­d and unused and were not reinstated, the National Commission held that the claim ought to be settled by paying the depreciate­d value of ~12,60,000, together with 7 per cent interest from November 10, 2014. The order for payment of ~11,000 towards litigation costs was upheld.

The National Commission further observed that compensati­on for mental harassment would be applicable only to a natural person and not to a corporate entity, which has no mind. So the amount of ~1 lakh awarded as compensati­on for mental harassment was set aside.

The conclusion is that an insurer who fails to physically check the insured property cannot later raise objections when a claim is lodged. Also, a corporate body is not entitled to claim compensati­on for mental tension.

The insurer should have checked where the machines were being located while enhancing cover, not after lodging of claim

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