Eastern Eye (UK)

Man overcharge­d `20 by Indian Railways wins 22-year legal battle

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A LAWYER who won a 22-year court battle for compensati­on from Indian Railways after being overcharge­d `20 said last Friday (12) that his quest for justice was worth the effort.

Tungnath Chaturvedi bought two tickets from his hometown Mathura to Moradabad in 1999 and was charged `90 instead of `70, the price of the fare. He was given a receipt, but officials at the state rail monopoly repeatedly refused him a refund.

The two cities are fewer than 300 kilometres (185 miles) apart, but his journey to justice needed 120 hearings at the Mathura consumer court before five different judges over more than two decades before he was awarded compensati­on this month.

The case is a reflection of India’s sluggish judicial system, where litigants are often frustrated by delays and cases can run for years, if not decades, in overburden­ed courts that have a backlog of around 50 million cases.

The court awarded 66-year-old

Chaturvedi a refund of `20, plus interest at 12 per cent a year, and compensati­on of `15,000. But even as a lawyer representi­ng himself, his victory cost him hundreds of hours of effort, plus `20,000 in fees and other payments.

Family and friends tried to convince him to give up the fight over a token sum, but he persisted. “This wasn’t about money, but about my rights,” he insisted. “As a citizen, it’s my right to question the arbitrary and corrupt practices of the state or its machinery,” he said. “Sometimes the court would adjourn because someone was sick or had to attend a condolence meet.”

At one point, he cited a Supreme

Court precedent when Indian Railways claimed that the court did not have jurisdicti­on to hear the case.

“At times, I used to get frustrated over the court delays, but being a lawyer, I was determined to fight the case till the end,” Chaturvedi said. “More importantl­y, the truth has to be told.”

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