The Law of Torts PDF
The Law of Torts PDF
The Law of Torts PDF
P.M. Bakshi
l6
Nilabati Beber, v State of Orissa (1993) 2 SCC 746.
"Common Cause v Union of India (1996) 8 SCALE 127, 130.
18
Newspaper report, 4 August 1999 (case of Captain Satish Sharma).
l9
Jaylaxmi Salt Works P. Ltd v State of Gujarat (1994) 4 SCC 1.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 593
Capacity of Parties
Two questions, drawn from the field of law of persons, as Roman
lawyers would call it, can arise in the context of the law of torts.
(a) Is the person suing in tort entitled so to sue?
(b) Is the person being sued in tort liable so to be sued?
20
Supra, note 1, reaffirmed in Charan Lai Sahu v Union of India AIR
1990 SC 1480.
21
(1968) LR 3 HL 330.
22
Supra, note 1 at 1099.
2i
Supra, note 20 at 1557.
24
Union Carbide Corporation v Union of India AIR 1990 SC 273 at
281.
2S
Indian Council for Enviro-Legal Action v Union of India (1996) 2
SCALE 44, 69.
2e
'Supra, note 1.
594 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
27
Scctions 83-6, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.
Kewal Pati v State of UP (1995) 2 SCALE 729.
29
Supra, note 16.
30
Law Commission of India, first report, 1956 on Liability of the State
in Tort.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 595
Act of State
At this stage, it may be proper to dispose of one topic analogous
to sovereign immunity, namely that of 'act of State' (though this
would involve a tangential discussion of some doctrines of
constitutional law).
According to classical doctrine 39 an act of State is an act of the
executive, i.e. the sovereign power of a country, that cannot be
challenged, controlled or interfered with by municipal courts. Its
sanction is not that of law, but that of sovereign power; and
whatever it may be, municipal courts must accept it as it is,
without question.
However, two qualifications should be noted:
(a) There can be no 'act of State' on the Indian soil, as regards
Indian citizens or aliens.
(b) There can be no 'act of State' outside India as regards Indian
citizens.
The English law doctrines as to acts of state have been
followed in India. 40 Of course (as pointed out above), the
immunity on the basis of act of State is not available in respect
of governmental action which is directed against a citizen of
India. 41
So far as Indian citizens and friendly aliens are concerned,
there has to be a legal remedy for every wrongful action of the
government. 42
43
Dias and Markesinis, Tort Law (1988) (Clarendon Press, Oxford) at
489, 521.
**Olga Tellis v Municipal Corporation of Bombay AIR 1986 SC 180.
*sRi#by v Chief Constable of Northampton (1985) 1 WLR 1242.
'"South West London Borough Council v Williams (1971) 1 Ch 734.
47
Ibid. at 744.
598 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
Vicarious Liability
'Vicarious liability' is a term referring to cases where one person
is held liable for tort committed by another person. It mainly
comprises two situations:
(a) Liability of a master for the torts of his servant, committed
in the course of his employment.
59
(1970) AC 166 (HL).
60
For example MPSRT Corporation v Sudlmkar AIR 1977 SC 1189; see
also supra, note 55 at 1634-5; National Insurance Corporation v
Swarnlata Das AIR 1996 SC 1259, 1261.
6l
Davies v Powell Duffiyn Associated Collieries Ltd (1942) AC 601 (HL)
at 612.
62
Supra, note 58 at 6.
602 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
n3
David Baker, Introduction to the Law of Tort 1985 (Law Book Co. of
Australia) at 206.
M
Sitaram Motilal Kalal v Santanu Prasad Jaishankar Bhatt AIR 1966
SC. 1697; State of Maharashtra v Kanchanmala Vijay Singh Shirke AIR
1995 SC 2499.
6
'State of Maharashtra v Kanchanmala Vijay Singh Shirke ibid.
""Ormond v Crossville Motor Services [1953] 2 All ER 753 (CA).
67
Pushpabai Pimhottam Udeshi v Ranjit Ginning & Pressing Co. AIR
1977 SC 1735.
THK LAW OF TORTS 603
and made false entries in the pass-book. The employee was not in
charge of the savings bank counter and the cheque and cash were
not handed over to the counter-clerk concerned. It was held that
the bank was not liable for the fraud of the employee. The
employee concerned had no actual or apparent authority to accept
the cheque, and the act was not in the course of his employment
and all that could be said was that 'the fact of his being an employee
of the bank' gave him an opportunity to commit the fraud.
It is often said that the law relating to liability of an employer
for wrongs committed by an independent contractor is puzzling.
Of course, when the employer has intentionally or negligently
assigned the work to an independent contractor no difficulty
arises in imposing tortious liability on the employer. But other
situations create difficultiespartly because the policy reasons for
imposing liability on the employer are not clear.
The general principle is that the employer is not so liable.76
But statutory provisions, e.g., legislation relating to motor
vehicles, may lead to the court holding the owner of a car liable
in tort for injuries caused by an employee, not of the owner but
of the repairer.77 Incidentally, in this context, it is of interest to
note that in Australia, statutory provisions relating to compulsory
insurance place liability upon the owner of a car for its negligent
driving, by whomsoever it is driven and in any circumstances,
including even driving by a thief.78
Injunction
The main remedy (other than an award of damages) is the
injunction. An injunction is an order requiring the defendant to
desist from some wrongful course of conduct. In some areas
e.g., nuisance and economic tortinjunction is the dominant
remedy.88 This may be because the harm caused by such torts is
intensive in magnitude and recurrent in nature and (in case of
economic torts) wide in its geographical coverage.
In India, the power of the court to grant permanent injunction
is derived mainly from sections.38-42 of the Specific Relief Act,
1963 (SRA). The central concept underlying these provisions is
that of breach of obligationsi.e. a violation of a duty imposed
by law. In this sense the topic of injunction necessarily takes one
to various areas of substantive law; including, of course, the law
of torts.
Thus, to take a few examples at random, injunctions have been
sought or granted:
(a) to prevent interference with the plaintiff's possession and
business, after termination of agency;89
(b) to deal with cases of enforcement of bank guarantees; 90
(c) to prevent illegal recovery of taxes;91
(d) to adjust conflict of interests between private reputation and
freedom of the press;92
&s
Supra, note 36 at 798.
8<
'Common Cause v Union of India AIR 1996 SC 3081; Shivasagar
Tiwari v Union of India (1996) 7 SCALE 643; (1996) 8 SCALE 338.
i7
M.C. Mehta, supra, note 1.
88
W.H. Roger, Law of Tort (1989) at 219.
S9
Southern Roadways Ltd, Madurai v S.M. Krishnan AIR 1990 SC 673.
90
Svenska Handelsbanken v Indian Charge Chrome AIR 1994 SC 626.
9l
Municipal Corporation of Delhi v C.L. Batra JT (1994) 5 SC 241.
Reliance Pertothemitis Ltd v Proprietors of Indian Express Newspapers
Bombay, AIR 1989 SC 190.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 607
9i
Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council v Wickes Building Supplies Ltd
[1992] 3 All ER 717.
94
. Rajagopal v State of Tamil Nadu AIR 1995 SC 264.
95
'American Cyanamid v Ethicon [1975] 1 All ER 504 (HL).
608 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
It has been stated in the past that where the plaintiff is asserting a
right, he should show a strong prima facie case, at least, in support of
the right which he asserts. Now, however, the test appears to be,
whether there is a serious question to he tried.96
This modified approach seems to have been substantially
reflected in India in the following dicta of the. Supreme Court:
No injunction could be granted under Order XXXIX, rules 1 and 2 of
the Code, unless the plaintiffs establish that they had a prima facie
case, meaning thereby that there was a bona fide contention between
the parties or a serious question to be tried.97
It may also be mentioned that one of the Calcutta cases98 has
discussed at length the effect of the substituted test of 'serious
issue to be tried'.
96
Halsbury's Laws of Enghnd, 4th edn, vol. 24, para 955.
97
United Commercial Bank v Bank of India AIR 1981 SC 1426 at 1440.
9i
Damodar Valley Corporation v Haripada Das AIR 1978 Cal. 489.
"W.H. Roger, supra, note 88 at 130.
100
Balcer, Introduction to Torts (1985) at 27.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 609
m
Jq0inder Kumar r State of UP AIR 1994 SC 1349 at 1353.
102
Ibid. at 1354.
610 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
i03
Sewakmm Sobhsmi v R.K. Kamnjia (1981) 3 SCC 208 at 217.
l04
N.T. Times v Sullivan (1964) 376 US 254; see also Gertz v Robert
Welch (1974) 418 US 323.
l05
Supra, note 94 at 274.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 611
The Supreme Court of India had occasion in the past 106 to deal
with the extent of protection (from liability for defamation, etc.)
enjoyed by newspapers and others, for publication of parlia
mentary proceedings. However, the position in this regard is now
governed by article 361A of the Constitution, which is a self-
contained and comprehensive provision.
106
C.K. Daphtary v O.P. Gupta AIR 1971 SC 1132; Dr.Jagdish Chandra
Ghosh v Hari Sudan AIR 1961 SC 613.
m
Hari Krishan and State ofHaryana v Sukhbir Singh AIR 1988 SC
2127 at 2131.
l0S
Delhi Domestic Working Women's Forum v Union of India (1995) 1
SCC 14.
612 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
lm
Bodhisatva Gautam v Subhra Chakrabarty AIR 1996 SC 922.
u0
Venkatesh v State of Tamil Nadu AIR 1993 SC 1230.
11
Jacob George v State of Kerala (1994) 3 SCC 430.
ul
Visbaka v State of Rajasthan AIR 1997 SC 3011.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 613
law is mainly dealt with in the SRA. Under that Act a person in
possession of immoveable property, if dispossessed, is entitled to
recover his possession: on the strength of his title (section 5, of
the Act); or even without the proof of title, on the strength of his
prior peaceful possession (section 6). 1 1 3
While possession is not yet lost, the person in possession can
exercise the right of self-defence (under the head of defence of
property, under sections 96-106 of the IPC), provided the person
committing trespass by the act of dispossession is thereby guilty
of an offence (sections 441-6 IPC). Third party's title (Jus tertii)
is no defence.114
As regards the remedy given by section 6 of the SRA, it is well
settled that even a tenant whose tenancy has come to an end, if
forcibly evicted can sue his landlord for possession. However,
right to expel a trespasser cannot be exercised, once the trespasser
has acquired possession. 115
Apart from seeking restoration of possession, the plaintiff who
has been wrongfully dispossessed would like to recover damages,
for the period during which he had been dispossessed. The Indian
statute law has given its own name to the amount that can be so
claimed, namely, 'mesne profits (see section 2(12), Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908). As regards the quantum that can be recovered,
the plaintiff can recover the profits which the defendant actually
received or might have received with ordinary diligence (together
with the interest thereon), but not the value of improvements
made by the defendants. 116
In India, the law of torts and the law of easements are often
dealt with together. Easements are not concerned with possession
but with the enjoyment of immoveable property. It becomes
appurtenant to land by some specific method of acquisition (and
is not a natural right). Infringement of an easementary right may
justify a suit for injunction, or damages, or both. 117 In England,
n3
Somnath Berman v Dr. S.P. Raju AIR 1970 SC 846.
n
*Teshwant Singh v Jagdish Singh AIR 1968 SC 620.
ns
Krishna Ram MahaU v Shoba Venkata Rao AIR 1989 SC 2097 at
2100.
U6
Fateh Chtmd v Balkrishan Dass AIR 1963 SC 1405; Mahant Narayan
Dassji v Tmipathi Depasthanam AIR 1965 SC 1231.
u
*Supra, note 10 at 1885.
614 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
ns
Paine & Co. v St. Neots Gas Co. [1939] 3 All ER 812 at 823.
U9
State of Bihar v Subodh Gopal Bose AIR 1968 SC 281; P. Rudrayya i
V. Venkayya AIR 1961 SC 1821.
120
Ibid.
ul
Dhian Singh v Onion of India AIR 1958 SC 274 at 278.
122
Ibid.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 615
goods that can be claimed (in the event of non-return) is the value
as on the date of judgement. 123
Deceit
In order to sustain an action of deceit, there must be proof of
fraud and nothing short of that will suffice.124 Non-disclosure,
when there is no duty to speak, is not fraud.125
Deceit (fraud) as a tort has not figured in any judgement of the
Supreme Court of India, so far. But it would be of interest to refer
to one of its judgements, 126 which arose out of a writ petition. A
candidate for admission to an examination had not mentioned (in
his application form) that he was short of attendance. The
deficiency was not detected at that time. But it was detected later
and his result was withdrawn. The student filed a writ petition
against the University, which resisted it on the ground that the
student had been guilty of fraud. The Supreme Court rejected this
plea and directed the University to publish the result.
Ui
Rosenthal v Alderton and Sons Lid (1946) 1 KB 374.
n
*Derry v Peek (1889) 14 App Cas 337 at 374, 375, 370.
U5
Ward v Hobbs (1878) 4 App Cas 13 at 26.
y26
Sri Krishna v Kurukshetra University AIR 1976 SC 376.
127
Winfield and Jolowicz, Tort, 12th edn, page 380 relied on in
Bhanwarlal v Dhahraj AIR 1973 Raj 212 at 216; Ushahen v Bhagya
Laxmi Chitra Mandir AIR 1978 Guj 13.
ni
Janki Prasad v Karamat Husain (1931) ILR 53 All 836; Dhannalal
v Chittar Singh AIR 1959 MP 240 at 243; Ram Lai v Mustafabad O &
CG Factory AIR 1968 Punj 399 at 402.
616 FIFTY YEARS OF THE SUPREME COURT
U9
Ratlam Municipality v Vardhi Chand AIR 1980 SC 1622.
l30
See EM. Bakshi, Procedural Options in Environmental Law Indian
Law Institute (1993).
THK LAW OF TORTS 617
Negligence
Negligence as a tort is a complex concept. As was observed by
Lord Wright, "in strict legal analysis, negligence means more than
heedless or careless conduct, whether in omission or commission.
It properly connotes the complex concept of duty, breach of duty
and damage thereby suffered by the person to whom the duty was
owing 1 . 132
The component of 'duty1 itself implies that there is a person
who owes the duty and that there is another person to whom the
duty is owed. Illustrative of this is a Supreme Court judge
ment, 133 in which, as a result of the collapse of the Clock Tower
situated opposite the Town Hall in Chandni Chowk, Delhi, a
number of persons were killed. The Clock Tower belonged to,
and was controlled, by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi. It
was held that the Corporation was under a duty to take care. As
regards want of care, that was established on the basis of the
doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. ' .
To whom is the duty owed? The answer isto all persons
generally. (This is implicit in the very concept of tort.) Here
again, one can take a Supreme Court case,13 by way of illus
tration (even though it relates to a criminal prosecution). In a
prosecution against the appellant under section 304 IPC, for
causing the death of a visitor, by fixing naked and charged electric
wires, the defence was taken that the visitor was a trespasser. The
plea was rejected. The court held that though the occupier is not
bound to take reasonable care to protect trespassers, he cannot set
up a naked wire
Assuming that there is a duty to take care, the next question is:
in what circumstances can the duty be said to have been broken?
Subject to certain important exceptions the general rule is that a
person must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which,
he can reasonably foresee, would be likely to injure his 'neighbour'.
The standard of care is vividly illustrated by a bunch of
judgements 135 relating to medical personnel; and the proposition
that emerges is thisA medical practitioner, when consulted by a
patient, owes to the patient die following duties:
(a) A duty of care, in deciding whether to undertake the case.
(b) A duty of care, in deciding what treatment to give.
(c) A duty of care in administering the treatment.
His duty is to bring to his task a reasonable degree of skill and
knowledge and to exercise a reasonable degree of care. The fact that
medical practitioners are subject to the disciplinary control of the
Medical Council, does not affect this common-law duty of care.137
Contributory negligence is also often discussed in the context
of negligence. However, there is no contributory negligence,
where the act of the victim, alleged to constitute contributory
negligence, is itself the result of a damage created by the tort
feasor himself.138
The practical question that arises is this: How does one prove
negligence? Here the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur often comes to
the assistance of the plaintiff. And one finds in judgements of the
Supreme Court, several illustrations of the relevance of this
doctrine. 139 For example, where a canal was in the management
of the state of Punjab and, because of its negligence, a breach
occurred in the canal, flooding the lands of the plaintiff (a
cultivator), it was held that res ipsa loquitur applied and the breach
itself was prima facie proof of negligence.
i35
A.H. Khodwa v State of Maharashtra (1996) ACJ 505 (SC);
Narasimha Rao v Jayaprakash AIR 1990 AP 207.
l36
Supra, note 14.
m
IMA v VP. Santha AIR 1996 SC 550.
iis
Shyam Sunder v State of Rajasthan AIR 1974 SC 890.
119
Supra, note 133 at 1752; Basthi Kasim Saheb v Mysore SRT.
Corporation AIR 1991 SC 487.
H
htate of Punjab v Modern Cultivators (1964) 2 SCJ 796.
T H E LAW OF TORTS 619
Conclusion
In the light of this brief survey of Supreme Court rulings on tort,
some brief observations may be made as to the general approach
of the court.
The first aspect that strikes one is the fact that not every
species of tort is represented in the case-law. Accidents of
litigation seem to account for this. Secondly, in respect of such
cases as have reached the Supreme Court, the court has usually
shown a bold and progressive approach, realizing that a person
suffering an injury expects compensation by the wrongdoer.
Thirdly, in some cases, constitutional provisions dominate the
scene, so that traditional principles of tort law recede into the
background. If one may resort to a metaphor, constitutional law,
as the big brother, leads its younger brother step-by-step,
sometimes striking a new path, at other times marking a halting
approach, but always overshadowing the younger brother. Finally,
one may be permitted to observe, that in regard to a controversy
which begins in the Supreme Court itself (as in public interest
litigation or in other writ petitions) an important juristic problem
arises. The court is deprived of the benefit of detailed arguments