Law of Torts
Law of Torts
Law of Torts
S. C. Thanvi*
Revised by Vishnu Konoorayar**
Introduction
The law of torts provides for pecuniary compensation for injuries to person
and property recoverable by the process of law. Swayed by the notion of
security, it co-relates wrongful act to the harm which it causes, and exhibits
different scales of evaluation at different levels for some kinds of harm call
for liability independent of one's fault while other kinds create liability only
for intentional or negligent wrong-doing. Ordinarily, it tries to shift the loss
from the 'victim' to the person who inflicted it on him, but at times, it looks
to a third party to shoulder liability, like social insurance for wrongs which
are inevitable incidents of modern social living like accidents on roads and in
industrial establishments.
Etymologically, in opposition to right or straight, tort signifies conduct
which is crooked, tortious, i.e. not straight or right. As a special branch of
law, tort has been defined variously by different writers by varying their
emphasis upon its constituent elements. Winfield puts the notion of duty in
the forefront when he says that "tortious liability arises out of breach of
duty primarily fixed by the law: this duty is towards persons generally and its
breach is redressible by an action for unliquidated damages". Salmond gives
preference to the idea of wrong and defines tort as a civil wrong for which
the remedy is a common law action for unliquidated damages and which is
not exclusively the breach of contract, or breach of trust or other equitable
obligations. All the definitions, more or less, emphasise three elements (1)
act or omission in violation of law (2) legal injury or legal damage (3) legal
remedy by way of unliquidated damages.
Tort differs from crime as it is redressed by compensation or damages
and not by punishment or fine though the same wrong may be a tort as well
as a crime concurrently. Tort differs from breach of contract as the rights
and duties arise, in case of contract, from the agreement and are enforceable
against the parties concerned. Breach of contract may be redressed by
liquidated damages. Tort, on the other hand, arises from a duty imposed on
:t
Formerly Dean, University of Jodhpur, Rajasthan.
** Asst. Research Professor, Indian Law Institute, New Delhi.
630 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
forms of action still rule from their graves. The o t h e r looks for
rationalization and optimism whereby judges can create new torts on the
basis of general theory. Looked at form the formalistic and procedural point
of view, law of tort is merely law of torts as judges rarely create new torts
but from a broader and dynamic viewpoint tort is only a general theory of
law of wrongs, and judges on the basis of this theory have been overcoming
difficulties from time to time providing remedies in novel cases. One theory
asserts circumscription, the other enlarges frontiers; one is sceptic and
records dissatisfaction for limited developments, in other gives contentment
and exudes optimism. But both are mere variations of attitude and chosen
methods of study of a lawyer on the one hand and of a student of law on
the other. The lawyer needs to emphasise more the formal branch but the
student or the theorist stresses the underlying general principles.
The main currents which are irrigating the area of torts are: (1) interest in
security (2) interest in freedom of action. Our interest in security requires
that a person who has suffered damage as a result of the activity of another
must be compensated by the latter irrespective of his fault, while the
p r o t e c t i o n of freedom of action dictates that the wrong-doer can be
compelled to pay only if his activity was intentionally wrongful or negligent.
Primitive law emphasized security, and liability was strict because the moral
quality of the agent was not considered. Owing to the moral influence of the
institution of the Church, intention became the basis of law of torts to a
great extent. Nineteenth-century England exhibited this moral advance
adequately and the notion was found suitable for the industrialists in the era
of industrial revolution. It was used to disown the responsibility for
industrial mishaps and accidents. But in the twentieth century, we are again
reverting to the notion of security, i.e., liability independent of mental fault,
because harm caused by man's failure to take care by exercising caution
cannot be completely avoided, because loss of life*and infliction of injury
have become an indispensable part of industrial life. It seems that industrial
activity or enterprise itself is responsible for them. In these circumstances,
some social scientists are proposing distribution of loss on society by means
of social or collective insurance discarding the doctrine of 'fault' in many
spheres of activity. The early law of tort was concerned with the protection
of landed interests through the action of trespass. It also gave protection
against personal injury, i.e.., injury to person as well as his reputation. This
was done to keep peace in society which was an avowed purpose of criminal
law. The urbanization and industrialization of a later period has shifted the
emphasis from conduct endangering interests in land to conduct which
causes injury, i.e., negligence which is a modern tort par excellence. Again, we
must broaden the concept of negligence to "comprise not only the character
632 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
of the wrongs but the character of the activity or situation or life as such."
Thus a wider perspective is needed.
After English traders set foot on Indian soil they were authorized to exercise
judicial powers to govern their servants, i.e., servants of the East India
Company according to the laws of England. By the Charter of 1726, both
common law and statute law of England, were introduced as they stood in
1726. By the Charter of 1774, the Supreme Court at Calcutta was established
and it applied English law to all persons residing within its jurisdiction.
O u t s i d e the Presidency t o w n , the personal law of the parties was
administered in matters like adoption, inheritance, succession, marriage and
religious endowments. In other cases, courts were required to apply the
doctrine of justice, equity and good conscience. In case of torts, the courts
tried to follow the rules of common law based on equity, justice and good
conscience. Any deviation from English law was made only where its
application was not considered proper.
After the establishment of High Courts by the Act of 1861, no major
change has taken place and even after India became independent, the status
quo has been maintained by providing for the continuance of existing law in
article 300 of the Constitution.
One of the important variations from English law of torts, we find in
'felonious torts'. In England, if a person injured by an act which amounts to
felony, the plaintiff is not allowed to sue in tort unless the felon is brought
before the court. Action in tort will not proceed but will be stayed in such a
case. The Madras High Court does not follow the common law rule while
Calcutta and Bombay High Courts do. In the moufussil, the common law
rule does not prevail and institution of criminal proceedings is not necessary
for bringing a civil suit though on the same facts a serious criminal offence
is also made out.
Joint tort-feasors
now is that a judgement recovered against one tort feasor, if unsatisfied does
not bar a subsequent action against any other tort-feasor irrespective of
whether he was a joint tort-feasor or one of the several tort-feasors causing
the same or indivisible damage. The second action is not limited to the sum
for which the judgement was given in the first action. But the plaintiff is
barred from going to the court if the judgement received in the first action
has been satisfied. The Supreme Court of India in Khushro S. Gandhi v.
N.A.Guzdar1 held that in order to release all the joint tort feasors the
plaintiff must have received full satisfaction.
Regarding the contribution between the wrong doers, the original rule in
England was known as the rule in Merryweather v. Nixon.2 It stated that in the
case of joint tort-feasors, the one tort-feasor who paid the full amount of
damages for the wrongful act could not claim contribution from the others.
The Law Reform (Married Women and Tort-feasors) Act, 1935,3 removed
this disability and allowed joint tort-feasors to recover contribution. The
Law Reform (Husband and Wife) Act, 1962, has further changed and law in
this regard to the effect that when a spouse sues a third person the latter can
claim contribution from the other spouse who was a joint tort-feasor.
Here again the practice of Indian courts varies, though modern trend
seems to be in favour of following the principle of the Law Reform (Married
Women and Tort-feasors) Act, 1935 of England; yet the common law rule
declared in Merryweather's case is invoked and contribution is disallowed
where parties knew of the court considered that they ought to have known
that they were committing a wrongful act. In Yagnanarayana v. Jagannadha
Rao* the High Court of Madras disallowed such contribution. Allahabad and
Nagpur High Courts have held that the rule in Merryweather's case does not
apply in India. In Baldeo Tewari v. Harbans Singh5 after discussing its earlier
decisions, the Patna High Court came to the conclusion that the doctrine of
non-contribution between joint tort-feasors is not completely ruled out.
Against the argument that the right to contribution is based on the principle
of justice and the burden should be borne by all the joint tort-feasors is in
conformity with the 'justice, equity and good conscience' the Kerala High
Court held that the doer of the act knew or is presumed to have known that
the act he committed was unlawful as constituting either a civil wrong or a
criminal offence, there is neither equity nor reason nor justice that he should
be entitled to claim contribution from the other tort feasors.6
It is urged that the law regarding felonious tort and joint tort feasors
needs to be modernized on the lines of English statutes either by the
Supreme Court or the Indian Parliament.
Foreign torts
In the matter of foreign torts, the principles of English law are that it is
triable in English Courts, provided that the wrong is actionable both in
England and the country where it is committed. The English courts have no
jurisdiction to try a case to recover damages for a trespass to land situated
abroad. In India this position is followed and an action for trespass or other
wrongs as to immovable property, committed outside India, does not lie in
the Indian courts. In case of personal wrongs or other wrongs as to movable
property an action will lie if the defendant resides in India provided that the
wrong complained of is illegal according to the law of the country where it
was committed and the law of India where the action is brought.
This maxim states that a personal right of action dies with the person.
According to Holdsworth, the maxim was originally introduced to prevent
actions, which had a penal nature, e.g., trespass and its brood from being
brought after the death of the wrong-doer against the w r o n g doer's
representatives. 7 He is of the opinion that the words of the maxim were
wrongly applied to cases of death of the injured party disabling legal
representatives of the person wronged from maintaining a suit at common
law for wrongs committed to the person wronged in his life-time, to trespass
to goods and land when damage was done in the life-time of the person
wronged and to causing death of the person wronged. According to Baker v.
Bolton,s the death of human being could not be complained of as an
actionable injury, for trespass could not be actionable in case of death of the
injured party. Trespass was said to be merged in felony, as in early history
the writ of trespass replaced the remedy of appeal in wrongs other than
felonies, though in practice it was available for felonies also. Thus the old
doctrine of merger of tort in felony continued in case of homicide but
disappeared in the case of other felonies.
In Baker v. Bolton it was held that if there was some intervening period
between the wrongful act and the death, damages could be recovered for
loss of society or services upto the moment of death. In Rose v. Ford9 it was
7. The Supreme Court of India has also made a similar observation in Official Liquidator
of Supreme Bank Ltd. v. P.A. Tendolkar (1973) 1 SCC 602 at p. 615.
8. (1808) 1 Camp. 493.
9. (1937) AC 826.
LAW OF TORTS 635
further held that if the injury was caused owing to the negligence of the
defendant the legal representatives could sue for damages for the benefit of
his estate for the "loss of deceased's expectation of life".
According to the common law rule there cannot be an action in tort
against executors or administrators of the deceased wrong-doer in cases of
trespass, false imprisonment, assault, battery, malicious prosecution, slander,
fraud and negligence. But it was held in Phillips v. Homfray10 that in cases
where property, or its proceeds, or value of property belonging to another
have been appropriated by the wrong-doer and added to his own estate or
moneys, the estate will be liable to the extent it has been augmented.
In England, the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1934
declared that all causes of action subsisting at the time of a person's death
will survive for or against his estate subject to an exception of defamation
(but if the damage is caused to deceased's p r o p e r t y the action will
survive). 11
T h e c o m b i n e d effect of the provisions of the Law Reform
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1934 as amended by the Law Reform
(Limitation of Actions) Act, 1954, is that an action against the deceased
person's estate cannot be maintained unless the proceedings are already
pending at the date of death, e.g., the writ has been actually issued, or the
suit has been filed within six months after the grant of probate or letters of
administration.
The Fatal Accidents Act 1976 (which consolidates the earlier Acts from
1846 to 1959) have further imposed liability against the wrong-doer for
financial loss suffered by dependants 12 of the deceased owing to his death
by a wrongful act, neglect, or default of the wrong doer. The Employers
Liability Act, 1883, makes provision for compensation for death, at the suit
of legal representatives of workmen. Compensation Acts from 1925 to 1943
allow compensation to the dependants of deceased workman, in cases where
the workmen dies of injury which, if he had survived, would have given a
claim for compensation. After 1982 the spouse of the deceased or the
parents if he was u n m a r r i e d may claim a fixed sum as damages for
bereavement. 13
In India, analogous legal enactments like the Indian Succession Act,
1865 (repealed and replaced by the Act of 1925), the Legal Representatives
Suits Act 1855, and the Fatal Accidents Act 1855 have been passed. Section
306 of the Indian Succession Act 1925, provides that all rights to prosecute
any action existing in favour of a deceased person survive to his executors
except in the case of (1) defamation, assaults (as defined in the Indian Penal
Code), and (2) personal injuries not causing the death of the party. The
confusion regarding the meaning of personal injury as to whether it is only
a physical injury or all 'injuries generally' was clarified by the Supreme Court
in M. Veerappa v. Evelyn Sequeira.I4 The court held that " Personal injuries"
does not mean " injuries to the body alone but all injuries to a person other
than those which cause death and the expression is to be read ejusdem generis
with the words 'defamation' and' assault' and not with assault alone. When
as a result of personal injury a person dies, the cause of death does not
abate. But death occured years after the injuries were received was held to
have been caused by injuries if they materially contributed to the death by
directly hastening or accelerating it and the chain of causation does not
break.15
The Supreme Court in various cases has held that the maxim do not
apply to actions based on contract or where the tort feasors estate had
benefited from the wrong done; to suits for eviction under the Rent Control
Acts; 16 and to Industrial disputes under sections 2A and 33C(2) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.17
In Dehradun M.E.T. Co. v. Hansrajn this 'barbarous' doctrine has
suffered adverse comments as it has led to inequitable results and because it
was realized that there was no need to apply the English doctrine when
courts were expected to administer rules of justice, equity and good
conscience. The legislature has enacted laws which continue to be deficient
and wanting in many respects. For example, the Legal Representatives' Suits
Act, 1855 covers only torts committed by the deceased person during the
year preceding his death, and the Succession Act prevents the application of
the maxim in cases of defamation, assaults and personal injuries not causing
the death of the party. Because of these exceptions the maxim has not been
abrogated completely. Further, legal representatives, other than executors
and administrators, are outside the section and certain classes of action are
expressly excluded from the operation of the section.
In every action for tort, certain defences are open to the defendant:
2. Inevitable accident
Inevitable accident is that happening which could not have been prevented
by the exercise of ordinary care and skill of a reasonable man.
3. Act of God
Accident which is purely the result of natural calamities and forces of nature
like storm, earthquake, land-slide, flood etc.
4. Statutory authority
5. Act of state
Proceedings Act, 1947. In India, this doctrine was mainly used as weapon to
secure annexation of territory by the East India Company, and to oust the
jurisdiction of municipal courts. Now that India is a free country and former
princely states have joined the Indian union and have become an integral
part of it, and citizens of these states have become Indian citizens, they can
file suits for claims and the government cannot defend itself by pleading the
doctrine of act of state. In Virendrasingh v. State ofU.P.19 the court held that
a grant of land made by a former Indian prince could not be resumed
without legislative sanction. The plea of act of state as a defence was of no
avail. Even in certain matters which are not justiciable according to article
363 of the Constitution, the plea of act of state was not allowed. Yet the
Supreme Court has declared that the doctrine proceeded on a just balance
between acquired rights of the private individuals and economic interests of
the community and hence refused to reject this doctrine. Subba Rao has
called for a halt to this doctrine in his dissenting opinion as it enforces the
imperialistic notion of 'might is right'. In UsmanAli Khan v. SagarmaP0 the
Supreme Court went to the extent of treating Privy Purse as a political
pension. In another case it put pre-merger covenants beyond the jurisdiction
of courts. This doctrine which ousts the jurisdiction of courts has no
rational basis either in international or. in constitutional law. Modern India
should break away from this common law fetter in the interest of justice and
fair development of law.
Apart from the defences mentioned above, there are certain acts done
by some persons which are not actionable and operate as complete
defences. Thus judicial officers, by virtue of the provisions contained in the
Judicial Officers' Protection Act 1850 of India are immune from liability for
any act done in the discharge of their judicial duties. Similarly persons and
bodies such as universities and colleges exercising quasi-judicial powers are
not liable if they observe the rules of natural justice and follow the particular
statutory or conventional rule. A public officer is not liable for any act done
by him in enforcement of any sentence or process of law or in maintenance
of peace provided he had lawful authority to do so. Persons exercising
parental or quasi parental authority to correct a child are not hable for use of
force or restraint provided they act in good faith and in reasonable and
moderate manner.
Indian law, on the whole, follows the English law of tort in the matter
of disabilities of parties to sue and be sued. However, mention may be made
of the capacity of married women to sue and be sued. At common law, in
England, the married women had certain disabilities to sue in torts as
husband and wife were considered as one person in the eye of the law.
Therefore, the wife could not sue her husband for a tort, nor could a
husband sue his wife. The Married Women's Property Act, 1882, introduced
an exception in favour of the wife under which the wife could sue her
husband in an action for the protection and security of her separate property
as if she were unmarried. Drastic change was introduced in England by the
Law Reform (Husband and Wife) Act, 1962, by which the common law
doctrine was abandoned and either spouse may now sue the other in the
same manner as if they were not married. As regards third persons the
common law rule obtaining in England was that a married woman could not
sue or be sued without joining her husband as a party. The law was altered
by the Law Reform (Married Women and Tort-feasors) Act, 1935, under
which she can now sue and be sued by third persons, as if she were zfeme
sole. The wife can sue the principal even if the husband committed a tort
against her as an agent.
In India, the common law rule that husband and wife constitute one
person in the eye of the law, does not prevail and married women can sue
and be sued. Hence a Hindu, a Sikh, a Jain, or a Muslim woman can sue or
be sued in respect of her separate property. Her husband need not be made
a party. As regards Christians the English common law is applied. This
anomaly was removed to an extent by the Married Women's Property Act,
1874 after which the married women to whom the Act applies can sue and
be sued alone. Article 14 of the Constitution embodies a guarantee against
arbitrariness and unreasonableness by the application of which marriage has
no effect on the rights and liabilities of either of the spouses in respect of
any tort committed by either of them or by a third party. Even though in
England spouses can sue each other for committing a tort, 2 1 in India, it
seems n e i t h e r spouse can sue the other for personal w r o n g s like
defamations, assault etc.
Damages
The idea of damage is an important constituent of tort. Damage, in order to
be actionable, must not be remote and must not be due to independent act
of third party. Further damage is not co-extensive with the loss suffered. At
times, the damages allowed can be contemptuous or meagre because the
court thinks that the action should not have been brought. Courts can also
allow mere nominal damages where it appears that the plaintiff has not
suffered substantial loss and wants merely to vindicate his legal rights.
Substantial damages are allowed in order to compensate the plaintiff for the
w r o n g suffered. Such damages correspond t o a fair and reasonable
compensation for the injury. Exemplary damages are excessive and
vindictive. They are awarded when the object of the court is to deter the
wrongdoer as well as to warn the public. The Supreme Court 2 2 said that
"the amount awarded must not be niggardly since the law values life and
limb in a free society in generous scales". The sum awarded must be fair and
reasonable by accepted legal standards.
Damages claimed by the plaintiff may be general which are assessed by
the court and are presumed by law. Special damages are claims for expenses
actually incurred or some loss actually suffered. Many torts are not
actionable if special damage is not suffered. Some of the major areas in
which damages are awarded by the Indian courts in t o r t are m o t o r
accidents,23 medical negligence,24 constitutional torts 25 etc.
The characteristic remedy in the law of torts is damages but the plaintiff
may also demand restitution and can pray for injunction. There are also
extra-judicial remedies. They are private or self-defence, recaption of goods,
re-entry, abatement of nuisance, distress and distress damage feasant.
Discharge of torts
Classification of torts
All torts can be classified into three broad categories: (1) malfeasance or
wrongs which are unlawful acts and are actionable per se and do not require
proof of negligence; (2) misfeasance or improper way of doing the acts
which cause damage. This happens when one's action is the result of
negligence; (3) Non-feasance or wrongs of omission. A suit does not lie for
them unless statute imposes a duty to perform the act in question.
According to Pollock, the law of torts deals mainly with three types of
wrongs: (1) personal wrongs, (2) wrongs to possession and property and (3)
22. General manager, Kerala State Road Transport Corporation v. Mrs. Susamma Thomas AIR
1994 SC 1631, p.1632.
23. Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
24. See cases like Dr. Jacob George v. State ofKerala (1994) 3 SCC 430 and State o/Haryana
v. Santra AIR 2000 SC 1888.
25. See cases like Rudul Shah v. State of Bihar AIR 1983 SC 1086; Bhim Singh v. State of
J&K AIR 1986 SC 494; Nilabeti Behra v. State ofOrrissa AIR 1993 SC 1960 etc.
LAW OF TORTS 641
wrongs both to person and property. Personal wrongs are essentially wrongs
affecting safety and freedom and person and include assault, battery, wrongs
against family relations like seduction and enticing away of servant, wrongs
affecting reputation like defamation, malicious prosecution etc. The general
characteristics of these wrongs is that they are either willful or wanton
wrongs. The act is either intended to do harm or is done with reckless
indifference.
Wrongs against property include trespass to land and goods, conversion,
infringement of copyright or trade mark etc. It will be seen that in wrongs
against property the mental element of deliberation or reckless indifference
is not important. Neither the intention to violate nor the knowledge of the
wrongdoer that he is violating other's right is necessary. Thus wrongful
dealings with another's goods makes one liable even though he was acting
under a reasonable belief that he had lawful authority.
Wrongs against both property and person include nuisance, negligence
and breach of absolute duties imposed on the occupiers of land etc. Here the
liability arises from the ancient rules of common law or from the modern
development of the t o r t of negligence. In these t o r t s wilfulness or
recklessness is not always necessary. In cases of absolute duties the
wrongdoer is liable even when he took absolute care.
The maxim Qui facit per alium facit per se states that he who does an act
through another is deemed in law to do it himself. But the important phrase
is "act through another" and if there is no connection of "through" one
cannot be held liable for the act of another. Liability can also arise by
ratification or abetment of special relationship. The liability arises out of a
special relationship like master and servant; owner and independent
contractor; and also exists in cases of principal and agent, company and
directors, firm and partners. How far one is liable is a question of law as well
as fact. It does not mean that an agent is liable to any one. The principal can
recover money he has paid as damages for the wrongful act of his agent. In
the case of partners, The Partnership Act, 1870 of England and the Indian
Partnership Act, 1932 make them liable jointly and severally if the firm is
Hable.
The doctrine of vicarious liability centres on the relationship of master
and servant though it has been extended to other relationships. The master
is liable for only those acts, which are committed by the servant during the
course of employment.
Ever since the reception of common law in India, the doctrine of sovereign
642 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
powers has not been congenial to Indian conditions. This is borne out by
the diverse trends of judicial decisions on the point of vicarious liability of
state for torts of its servants. In England, the passing of Crown Proceedings
Act of 1947 has reduced this doctrine to a historical curiosity and has
equated the state with a private employer in a large measure. But Indian
legislatures, right from the Act of 1858 to 1935, carried forward the previous
state of law and the Indian Constitution, by article 300, has permitted the
continuance of the same legal regime.
The discord in judicial attitude is due to the anomalous status of East
India Company in legal theory. In law, the East India Company could not be
called sovereign, as they were mere traders and not conquerors. Practically,
the company functioned like a sovereign. This dubious position of the East
India Company is underlined in the P. and O. Steam Navigation Company
case26 which is considered the basic authority on the point. Barnes Peacock,
C.J., here failed to be logical when, on the one hand, he admitted that the
East India Company had not been a sovereign body and, on the other, he
expressed the view that there were no good reasons why the doctrine of
sovereign immunity should not apply in India. The learned Chief Justice
came to the conclusion that the East India Company was not liable for acts
done in the exercise of sovereign powers, but it was liable for acts which
were not done in the exercise of sovereign powers. Accordingly, he held that
injury to the horse of a carriage caused by workmen of the company
employed in the government dockyard made the company liable because the
repairing of ships belonged to the category of non-sovereign acts.
Sinha C. J., in State ofRajasthan v. Vidyawati27 felt no difficulty in
holding that the driver of a government jeep who negligently knocked down
a pedestrian while driving back from the workshop made the state liable in
tort vicariously. He also expressed the view that the law applicable to India
in respect of torts committed by a servant was very much in advance of
common law even before the enactment of Crown Proceedings Act of 1947,
of England, and since the time of the East India Company, government has
been liable in tort and the doctrine of sovereign i m m u n i t y was not
applicable to India. Further, adoption of this feudalistic doctrine ran counter
to the republican character of the Indian state and its adherence to the
notions of socialistic pattern of society and the welfare state.
In kasturilal and Ralia Ram v. State ofUttar Pradesh2* where gold seized
from the appellants was misappropriated by a head constable of police, in
charge of the malkhana, who fled away to Pakistan with it, it was held that
26. P&O. Steam Navigation Company v. The Secretary ofStatefor India-in Council (1861) 5
Bom. H. C. Appendix p.l.
27. (1963) 1 SCJ 307: AIR 1962 SC 933.
28. AIR 1965 SC 1039.
LAW OF TORTS 643
powers given to the police to arrest, to search and seize property are
conferred on specific officers by statute and in the last analysis are sovereign
powers and, therefore, state was not liable in tort. Gajendragadkar C.J. in
this case, relied on the distinction made by Barnes Peacock C.J. between acts
done in exercise of sovereign powers and acts done in exercise of non-
sovereign powers. In Kasturilal's case a clear instance of distinction between
sovereign acts and non-sovereign acts was discernible because police
establishment clearly pertained to the sovereign functions of the state. On
this basis, in State v. Tulsiram,29 the state was held not liable for wrong
warrants issued by the judicial officer, as judicial act belongs to the category
of sovereign powers.
But Vidyawati's case belongs to the category of marginal cases. It is
theoretically very difficult to distinguish sovereign functions from non-
sovereign functions. In Union of India v. SugrabaP0 transporting a machine
from a military workshop to the school of artillery was held not to be in the
exercise of sovereign powers. The State was held not liable for wrong
warrants issued by the judicial officer, as judicial act belongs to the category
of sovereign powers. Similarly, in Satyawati Devi v. Union ofIndiaiX the use of
an air force vehicle in carrying hockey and basketball teams was held not to
be in the exercise of sovereign powers. Again, in Smt.Jasso's case32 a military
truck carrying coal from a depot to army general headquarters building was
not considered an act in exercise of sovereign powers; while supplying meals
to military personnel on duty was held a sovereign act in Union of India v.
Harbansingbi} and in Secretary of State v. Cockcrafi3* maintenance of roads,
particularly, military roads, was held to be a sovereign function. In these
decisions their logic fails to convince us.
The Vidyawati case almost discarded the doctrine of sovereign immunity
but Kasturilal's case has again given it a firm footing. In the light of modern
theory and practice of statecraft it is as difficult as it is futile to distinguish
between sovereign and non-sovereign acts. Even though the Kasturilal rule is
yet to be overruled its authority has been undermined and much of its
efficacy as a binding precedent has been eroded. 35 In State of Gujarat v.
Memon Md,3b and Smt Basava Kom Dyamogonda Patil v. State of Mysore17 the
court held to the effect that the seizure of the property by a government
servant is a clear entrustment of property to the government and the
property must be returned to the original owner after the necessity to retain
it ceases. But in spite of these decisions the Gauhati High Court in State of
Assam v. Nizamuddin AhmediS reiterated the KasturiM rule. This absence of
policy shows a confused judicial mind in India. In France, the state can be
held responsible even in the absence of fault. The German Civil Code also
has gone beyond the principle of the fault of the state. English Law has
equated state with private employer by the Crown Proceedings Act to a
great extent.
Friedman has rightly pointed out that "a bad legal theory has been
perpetrated that has obscured the understanding of greatly changed
functions and methods of modern government" and has wrongly preserved
the misconceived legal criterion of distinction between governmental and
proprietary functions.
The law of tort has, from time to time, succumbed to the doctrine of
freedom of contract and it is only by legislation that it has been able to
regain its independence. By the doctrine of common employment which was
enunciated by Lord Abinger in Priestley v. Fowler?'* the employer, at the
outset of the industrial era, could disown the responsibility for the harm
caused by one employee to another employee in an industrial establishment.
The doctrine of 'course of employment' was not made applicable here but it
was thought that there was an implied contract of servants to take risks of
the negligence of one's fellow-servants. The master could not be held
responsible in the absence of express contract to indemnify the employee in
such a case. It was said that employment being a contract, the parties were
not bound by the general law in this regard and their liability in matters
within the field of contractual relations could not be deemed to arise outside
the terms of contract.
Ever-increasing industrial accidents and mishaps forced the legislators
to throw overboard the doctrine of common employment. But this was
done by piece meal legislation. The Employer's Liability Act of 1880
provided a number of exceptions to the application of the doctrine. The
Law Reform (Personal Injuries) Act, 1948 finally abolished the doctrine.
In India, there was no legislative interference till 1938. Even with the
passing of the Employer's Liability Act of 1938 it was not finally buried. The
doctrine was applied by Allahabad and Calcutta High Courts. Nagpur and
Bombay High Courts have held that the doctrine of common employment
did not apply. Stone, J., in a Nagpur case observed that the rule was an
unsafe guide and there was no justification for following it when the English
law has disowned it. The Privy Council in Governor General in Council v.
Constance Zena Wells40 held the view that the doctrine was applicable in India
t h o u g h in a limited sense. H o w e v e r , by the Employer Liability
(Amendment) Act, 1951, a new section, 3A, has been inserted by which the
doctrine has been completely set at rest. The provisions of the Personal
Injuries (Compensation Insurance) Act, 1963, impose on employers a
liability to pay compensation to a workman who has sustained personal
injuries and provide for insurance of employees against such eventuality.
Wrongs to Person
Trespass to person
Trespass, which got its start in England with the writ of trespass in the 13 lh
Century, is the parent of many torts developed there from through 'trespass
on the case'. At first, trespass was a direct and forcible injury to person, land
or goods. Intention was a necessary element of the wrong, but intention
meant committing the wrong voluntarily. The wrong was intentional even if
the wrongdoer did not know that the property belonged to another. But it
was not trespass where a man was forced into the land of another. 'Force'
was merely a phrase of pleading which was later dropped but the word
'direct' retained its importance and distinguished 'trespass' from 'trespass on
the case'. When the damage was indirect or consequential, action could be
brought only on case as action of trespass dealt with only direct injuries.
After the abolition of forms of action when the procedural differences
became immaterial, the wrongs which developed from trespass acquired
their separate names, and trespass proper held a limited field in the law of
tort i.e. trespass to person, to land and to goods.
Battery
The idea of security of person, i.e., freedom from every kind of violence and
bodily injury, is at the root of trespass to person which has three aspects;
battery, assault and false imprisonment. Battery consists of touching another
person hostilely or against his will, however, slightly. If the violence is so
severe as to deprive a person of any member of his body or of any sense
serviceable to him in a fight, it amounts to mayhem. The damages, in that
case, will be greater than those awarded in case of battery. Battery
corresponds to 'use of criminal force' according to section 350 of the Indian
Penal Code. As no bodily harm is necessary, even slight touching of another
in anger is battery. The law here does not distinguish between different
degrees of violence because it wants to prohibit it at the very first stage. The
use of force may be direct, as in the case of slapping or pushing, or indirect,
when some object is brought into contact with the defendant, as in the case
of setting a dog, throwing something, spitting on face etc., and includes
applying force to some object which is already in physical contact with the
plaintiff, as is in the case of overturning the carriage in which plaintiff is
seated, upsetting ladder, on which one is standing, whipping the horse one
is riding upon etc. What is necessary is that the wrongful act must involve
physical contact. So throwing of water does not constitute battery if water
does not fall upon the plaintiff. The other element to constitute battery is
hostile intent. Force must be intentional and without any lawful justification.
Accordingly, pushing of another in a crowd is no battery if it is not
deliberate; nor will accidental touch be considered wrongful; but a mere tap
given on the shoulder to effect arrest is battery when the arrest is unlawful.
For the same reason, causing another to be medically examined against his
will constitutes battery as much as a forcible removal of a spectator from the
theatre.
Assault
41. Arthur Underhill, A Summary ofthe Law of Torts, 9th ed., 1911.
42. AIR 1932 All 524.
LAW OF TORTS 647
False imprisonment
As civilized man considers his honour and reputation more valuable than
even his physical safety he is ready to put his life at stake for them. Injuries
to these, more often than not, endanger the placid pace of life and every
legal system has, of necessity, to deal with them. Hindu law punished the
defamer but never thought of compensating the defamed person as the
Roman and English law did. In England, defamation was concerned with
spiritual matters to be dealt with by the church at first, but w i t h
centralization of justice in the 12 th century together with the waning
influence of the church, common law courts began to treat it as a mundane
matter remediable by the ordinary courts. With the invention of the printing
press and the arrival of the radio which enlarged the power of the word to
disturb social order as well as to interfere with private rights, defamation
emerged as one of the most important violations of rights under civil as well
as criminal law.
The tort of defamation is committed by publication of a false statement,
which lowers a man's reputation and esteem in the judgment of right-
thinking members of society, or it causes others to avoid his company.
Publication or communication of the false statement must be made to a
third person, other than the husband or wife of the author of the false
statement. Every repetition of such statement is itself defamation afresh. It
is obvious that the third person, to w h o m defamatory statement is
published, must know the import and significance of such statement.
Further the victim of defamation must know that the statement refers to
him.
Defamation in permanent form is called 'libel' and includes written
statement, typed or lithographed material, raised letters, pictures,
photograph, cinema film, caricature, statue, effigy, wax model etc. Slander is
defamation in transitory form, which may be exemplified by verbal speech,
nod, wink, shake of head, smile, hissing and finger language of the deaf and
the d u m b and so on. By section 166 of the Broadcasting Act 1996 of
England, broadcasting, both radio and television are treated as libel if it is
meant for general reception. In 'libel', according to the English law, plaintiff
need not prove special damage as it is defamation per se but in case of
slander, with some important exceptions, the plaintiff must prove special
damage. This difference, though illogical, is attributable to the peculiar
historical development, for civil libel is the legacy of the Star Chamber
where it was not necessary to prove special damage. Libel, which was
LAW OF TORTS 651
punished as criminal wrong, was also actionable per se whereas slander was
taken over by the King's Court from ecclesiastical courts and was actionable
on the case where proof of special damage was needed.
If words are not defamatory in their natural meaning, as they are
understood, but are so in their special sense or in their latent or secondary
meaning, it is the duty of the plaintiff to aver so by including an explanatory
clause in the plaint to that effect. In the absence of such averment the
plaintiff is not allowed to lead evidence on the point.
In India, libel and slander are both criminal wrongs. Slander, as tort, is
actionable per se in the same way as libel is. The English rule, which treats
slander actionable only on proof of special damage, is not grounded in
reason and equity and is only the creation of historical development. As the
same historical factors did not operate in India, slander is here actionable per
se. This looks reasonable in the light of the fact that slander, in India, is a
criminal wrong also, whereas in England it is only a civil wrong. In the
presidency towns, where English law as it stood in 1726 was applied, the
English rule made its way. The High Court of Calcutta accordingly held that
in the city of Calcutta an imputation of unchastity was not actionable per se.
This c o m m o n law rule was, however, abrogated in England by the
enactment of the Slander of Women Act, 1891. The High Courts of Bombay
and Madras asserting themselves as courts of equity while administering
equity, justice and good conscience did not endorse this view and never
considered that the English rule was introduced there. Again, when adultery
is classified as a criminal wrong in India it was only proper if its imputation
was made actionable in India. Further, it would have been absurd to allow
man to recover for imputation of adultery (as it is an offence against the
husband) and disentitle the woman from doing so.
Indian decisions relating to slander mainly cover four types of cases,
viz., cases of vulgar abuse, imputation of unchastity, imputation of crime and
aspersions on caste.
The majority of Indian courts have held that verbal abuse is not
actionable but the Bombay High Court in Kashiram v. Bhadui2 has laid down
that vulgar abuse is actionable per se. This lone ruling has not been followed
by other courts which see a clear distinction between abusive language
causing insult by uttering 'sala', 'haramzada', 'soor', 'baperbeta', and other
abusive words which are defamatory in the sense that they expose the man
to ridicule or humiliation. If one tells of a woman what she is not legally
married wife and has been turned out from various places, it clearly amounts
Defences
53. For example see Reynolds v. Times Newspapers (1999) 4 All ER 609, p. 614 (HL).
LAW OF TORTS 653
been followed to its full extent. Similarly, the Calcutta High Court has
deviated from the rule of common law that statements made in affidavits
and pleadings are absolutely privileged and has held in Giribala Dassi v Pran
Krisbto Ghosb,54 that if the statement in the affidavit is wholly irrelevant to
the inquiry to which the affidavit is related, it will make the person hable in
defamation. In another case, the High Court similarly held that defamatory
statements made in pleadings are not absolutely privileged. In a later case,
Mookerjee J., of Calcutta High Court made the observation that in civil suits
parties ought to enjoy the same privilege as under the English law.
Next only to malicious prosecution and negligence, defamation is the
popular resort of tort litigants in India.
payee, it was held that it was no defence for an action for deceit that the
postman had other means of knowledge available to him.
According to the Companies Act, 1956, in India p r o m o t e r s of
companies are liable for false statement in prospectus in a number of
instances.
As fraud is a criminal wrong also resort to this tort has a very low
frequency in India.
Malicious prosecution
The tort of malicious prosecution has the highest frequency in Indian tort
litigation, and from 1914 to 1965, the cases of malicious prosecution came
to 184, while the total number of tort cases was 613. This tort, which covers
more than 25% of tort litigation, got established in England in its modern
form in 1699 in Savile v. Roberts57 and is accredited to Holt, J.
According to Underhill, 58 the tort of malicious prosecution consists in
"instituting unsuccessful criminal proceedings maliciously and without
reasonable or probable cause," which causes actual damage to the party
prosecuted, as a natural consequence of the prosecution complained of. The
damage is the gist of the offence but it may also be presumed and need not
be proved. This tort balances two competing principles, namely, the
freedom that every person should have in bringing criminals to justice and
the need for restraining false accusations against innocent persons. Though
the tort arises out of unsuccessful criminal proceedings, and does not apply
to malicious civil proceedings it is committed the moment the defendant has
launched criminal proceedings against the plaintiff, i.e., when the defendant
has set in motion judicial process against the plaintiff and was actively
instrumental in bringing about the criminal proceedings.
The plaintiff need not prove that he was acquitted but he has to prove
that the proceedings terminated in his favour. If proceedings are ex-parte it
will not be treated as terminating in his favour. The phrase 'absence of
reasonable and probable cause' has reference to the mind of a discreet man,
and if the defendant takes care to have adequate information of facts,
honestly believes in the truth of his allegation, and facts are such that aprima
facie case is made out, it would certainly be inferred that defendant's conduct
is reasonable. It is quite obvious that the action for malicious prosecution
cannot succeed if criminal proceedings are pending. For the success of the
action, there should be either acquittal or dismissal of the complaint. In
answer to the question who is the prosecutor, the Indian courts look to the
whole circumstances of the case and conduct of the complainant before and
after making the charge; taking notice of the persons who took active part in
the prosecution and did pairvi by producing witnesses and doing all things
necessary for the success for the prosecution, even going to the extent of
influencing the police after lodging the complaint etc. If the defendant does
nothing more than giving information to the police of theft at his shop,
laying suspicion upon the plaintiff, and does not take active part in the
proceedings, he cannot be called the prosecutor.
As regards the question of suffering damage, the courts have to see
whether proceedings have reached a stage at which damage to plaintiff
begins to result. Some action, by judicial authority, must take place either by
way of issuing summons or issuing warrant of arrest. If the plaintiff is
produced in the court twice and is being taken to jail publicly it has been
held that the case has reached the stage where action for malicious
prosecution would lie. If the complaint is not followed by any issue of
process or notice, it does not amount to malicious prosecution. Further, if
the person complained against voluntarily incurs the risk of attending the
inquiry, arising out of the complaint, the complainant is not liable for
consequences.
As regards the meaning of 'malice' in India, it has been construed as an
improper or indirect motive, i.e., some motive other than a desire to
vindicate public justice or private right. Malice need not be a feeling of
enmity, spite or ill will or spirit of vengeance but it can be any improper
purpose which motivates the prosecutor, such as to gain a private collateral
advantage. Mere indignation or anger does not negative the existence of the
proper purpose because securing prosecution of offenders is a rightful
purpose. If charge is false to the knowledge of the complainant he will be
liable. Recently in Bank of India v. Lekshmi DasS9 the Court reiterated the
Indian position that in malice absence of a probable and reasonable cause must
be proved.
The law of maintenance and champerty was not made applicable to India
even in presidency towns. Here people did not make commerce of litigation
and it was not considered a public evil and something contrary to public
policy. But if the agreement is unconscionable for the parties and inequitable
for the borrower, and if it is not made with good and bonafide object of
assisting a just claim for which reasonable compensation is only demanded
but motive for indulgence is to harass or to gamble, it amounts to a tort.
Bad motive must be proved to make it actionable. Therefore, it is the duty
of the court to decide whether maintenance is merely for acquisition of
some interest, or resorted to as an instrument of disturbing the peace of
Conspiracy
Nervous shock
An action in tort also lies for nervous shock and bodily illness caused by it.
The reason is that the control and functioning of body depends upon
nervous system and the shock to nervous system may render a person
incapable to perform ordinary functions and as such it can be equated with
bodily injury. But when bodily illness or disorder does not follow the
nervous shock, it is not actionable.
The tort of nervous shock covers two classes of cases: (1) intentional
wrongdoing; and (2) negligence on the part of the defendant. Law holds the
wrong doer liable if his wrong comes under the former class, but as regards
the second category of offenders, the trend of authority is to the effect that
a mere on-looker on or near the road cannot complain of shock when he
sees the accident from a safe distance without any possibility of harm to
himself. It is expected that persons of normal sensitiveness will endure noise
and collision or a sight of injury to others.
The first case of 'nervous shock' was reported to have taken place in
England, in 1888, when one Miss Cpultas 62 claimed damages on account of
nervous shock she received owing to the opening of railway gates by the
level crossing keeper negligently. She escaped death by inches when the train
thundered in. As a result of shock to her nerves she fell seriously ill. The
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council disallowed damages particularly
because they did not want to establish a new precedent. It was also not
possible for them to establish a connection between the shock and the
resultant physical injury, as knowledge on the subject in those times was
deficient. Subsequently, in 1897, with the decision in Wilkinson v. Downton,65
the English courts refused to follow the Coultas case and started awarding
damages. Since then nervous shock has established itself as a tort.
In India, the t o r t of nervous shock has been recognized and is
actionable, if it is caused by fear, though there may not be actual physical
impact. The action arises out of breach of ordinary duty to take reasonable
care to avoid inflicting injuries followed by damage. In Halligua v. Mohan
Sundaram,64 the plaintiff who was travelling in the defendant's taxi became
u n c o n s c i o u s w h e n it collided with the t r a m car. After regaining
consciousness, she found herself bleeding badly from the nose and mouth
and could not stretch her hands and her finders became stiff. It was held
that bodily injury is not only that which is externally visible but includes
shock to nervous system by which a person is rendered incapable to pursue
ordinary activities of life, and action will lie if such injury is directly
attributable to negligence.
All emotional excitements and disturbances are not actionable. In Deep
Chand v. Manak CbancP5 it was held that mental worry is not actionable. It is
too trivial to be considered an injury in the legal sense. In Governor General in
Trespass was once a synonym a tort, but today it is related more to land. It
occupies a fourth position in Indian tort-litigation. Trespass is wrongful
interference with land which is in the possession of the plaintiff. The act
which constitutes trespass is wrongful entry on the land in the possession of
the plaintiff or remaining on such land, or placing any object on it or
throwing any object on it or constructing a projection in air space over the
land of another, or doing anything on it without lawful justification.
Trespass is mainly a wrong against possession, and is available at times
against the owner himself. N o special damage need be proved, but in the
absence of actual damage the plaintiff is likely to get only nominal damages.
In England, the landlord who has delivered the possession of land to his
tenant cannot sue in trespass unless it is injurious to his reversionary
interest. The principle is based on the ground that the landlord has parted
with his interest during the term of tenancy. This rule is not applicable in
India, at least in cases of tenures because tenures here, in many cases, are of
partnership and the landlord shares the produce with the cultivators.
According to English law, entry under the process of law is not trespass. But
in India, if a nazir or sheriff opens a defendant's house to execute civil
process against his person or goods when the outer door is closed or locked
it may amount to trespass. This is true even when the defendant is evading
such execution. This privilege only extends to a man's dwelling house or
outer house or any office annexed to the dwelling houses but not to the
building which is at some distance from dwelling house and is not a part of
it, not does it apply to his workshop. In English law the extra-judicial
remedy of distress damage feasant is available, i.e., the right of retaining the
thing that caused damage till the defendant pays compensation. It is
doubtful if there is any right in the nature of distress damage feasant
available in India. But according to the Cattle Trespass Act, cattle can be
impounded if they have committed trespass. There is also an action for
waste, i.e., doing some lasting damage to freehold, for example, damaging
and destroying houses, gardens, trees, or other corporeal hereditaments,
which causes loss to a person who has remainder or reversionary right in
them and thereby causing loss to his inheritance. In India a tenant who is a
permanent lessee cannot cause excavation which results in substantial
damage to the property leased. But if one is a grantee of the permanent
tenure of an agricultural land, he has all the right with regard to the
underground, unless there is express reservation to the contrary. The actions
of waste are generally brought against Hindu widows who have only life
interest in their husbands' property. But with the adoption of the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956, a Hindu widow has right of inheritance and as such
these actions can no longer be maintained.
In England the right of 'undisturbed privacy' has not been recognized
by law. A new window, overlooking the grounds of another, may cause
annoyance to the neighbour and may also diminish the value of that
property. But English law does not consider it an injury. In India the right of
privacy can be acquired by custom or permission though it cannot be
created by prescription. It is grounded in the oriental custom of secluding
women. The Indian Easement Act also gives recognition to such a right. In
England, the right of ferry across the river is purely a creation of royal grant
or prescription. In India, it is treated as immovable property.
In Sri Iswar Gopaljew v. Globe Theatres Ltd.69 it was held that an action
for trespass cannot be assigned and such an owner cannot bring an action
for trespass committed before he became the owner. In Dadabbai Narsidas v.
Sub-Collector, Broach70 Melvil, J., pointed out that in an action for wrongful
ejectment, English law will direct the defendant to prove title, if plaintiff can
show undisturbed and peaceable possession. But English rule should not be
extended to India. The law in India requires that in an action of ejectment,
the plaintiff should always prove title. The reason is that the law of India
gives remedy which is not available in England when one is disposed. It was
held by the High Court of Bombay in Bandu v. Naba71 that a rightful owner
who dispossesses another cannot be treated as a trespasser except as
provided by section 9 of the Specific Relief Act, 1877. It was held in Lillu v.
Anhaji72 that possession actually taken by a person having a right to it is not
the less effective as perfecting his title by reason of an irregularity in taking
it. Subsequent ouster will give rise to a new cause of action. In Hillaya
Sabbaya v. Narayanappa it was laid down that the true owner of property has
a right to retain possession even when he obtained it from a trespasser by
unlawful means.
Trespass to goods
Negligence
The tort of negligence has been called the modern tort par excellence and is
the major source of tort litigation in India and elsewhere. Only malicious
prosecution surpasses it in the quantum of cases which have reached High
Court level in this country.
Negligence, according to Underhill, 7 3 consists in omission to do
something which a prudent and reasonable man would do, or doing
something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do, and is
actionable whenever, as between the plaintiff and the defendant, there is a
duty cast upon the latter not to be negligent and there is a breach of this
duty which causes damages to the plaintiff. In its subjective sense,
negligence is absence of intention, in its objective sense it is an act in
contravention of duty to take care towards somebody. In practice, both
these aspects coincide. Even though the existence of a duty situation is
decided on the basis of existing precedents, it is now well accepted that new
duty situations can be recognised due to the continuing influence of social,
economical and political considerations. 74
Thus in Donoghue v. Stevenson75 a broader concept of duty has been laid
down. In has been observed "you must take reasonable care to avoid acts or
omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your
neighbour". Neighbour is one who is affected by the negligent act. He is one
who must be in contemplation when the mind is directed to the negligent
act. This proposition is the high watermark in the extension of the duty to
take care. However, courts are conscious of its dangers and in King v.
Phillips76 it was held that the taxi-driver did not own any duty of care to the
plaintiff, who was standing some 80 yards away in a building, to avoid
causing nervous shock to her by seeing the probable danger to her child
being run over by his taxi.
Damage caused by negligent act must not be remote. The test applied
was the test of directness. If the act of the defendant was negligent, the
consequences of the act having direct or physical connection would not be
considered remote. This was so held in Re Polemis and Furness etc. Co.77
However, in Overseas Tankship (U.K.) Ltd. v. Morts Dock & Engineering Co.
Ltd.,78 the re Polemis decision was adjudged as bad law by the Privy Council
and the test of directness was rejected. It was held that the damage of the
kind was not foreseeable by a reasonable man and, therefore, damage was
held to be remote. Here the test of foreseeability79 was applied. In Doughty
73. Arthur Underhill, A Summary of the Law of Torts, 9th ed., 1911, p. 167.
74. Jay Laxmi Salt Works (P) Ltd. v. State of Gujarat JT 1994(3) SC 492, p. 502.
75. (1932) A C 562.
76. (1953) I. QB 429.
77. (1921) KB 560.
78. (1961) A C 388.
79. The duty of forseebality was expanded in cases like Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v. Heller
and partners Ltd. (1964) AC 465 (HL) and Home Office v. Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd (1970) 2
All ER 294 (HL).
662 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
v. Turner Manufacturing Co. ltd.,w the principle laid down by In re Polemis was
disapproved.
The standard of care applied is that of a reasonable and prudent man.
This is a question of fact to be adjudged by the court, looking t o the
circumstances of the case, and different kinds of duties can be imposed
upon different classes of persons.
If a person brings on his land and collects and keeps there anything likely to
cause mischief if it escapes, he must keep it at his peril and, if he does not
do so, is prima facie answerable for all, the damage which is the natural
consequence of its escape. This rule was laid down in Rylands v. Fletcher,n
where water collected in reservoir escaped\into the mines of the defendant
and caused damage even t h o u g h there was n e i t h e r willfulness n o r
negligence. This is called the rule of strict liability. The Rylands v. Fletcher rule
is being enlarged every day. It is not only limited to water but has covered
gas, electricity, vibration, sewage, explosives, noxious gas, heaps of soils,
dangerous animals, yew tress etc. In A. G. v. Corke*2 it was applied to
human being also. The Court of Appeal in Perry v. Kendricks Transport?3 was
of the view that it applied both to personal injuries and damage to property.
Ryhnds v. Fletcher in the case of land, and Donoghue v. Stevenson, in other cases,
have stretched the law so much towards social responsibility that counter
currents of learned opinions have started against it and exceptions have
been recognized. The strict liability rule has been accepted by Indian courts,
but in many cases, it has not been applied specially in cases where irrigation
tanks are maintained either by custom or under statutory authority. In
Bomanji Mancherjee v. Mohammed Ali Hazi Ismail the rule was held to be
inapplicable, as in that case water escaped from a house which consisted of
floors one above the other and some of which were let out. There,
accumulation of water was thought to be necessary and water was stored for
natural purposes. This exemplifies one of the exceptions to the rule as the
rule applies only to non-natural use of land. In Dhanal Soorma v. Rangoon
Indian Telegraph Association*5 where the employee of the company died of
electrocution owing to the defect in electric installation although reasonable
steps were taken to mend the defect, it was observed by the court that the
time had come to consider the bringing of electricity u p o n land as
reasonable because of its domestic and other uses. As such the court did not
follow the Rylands v. Fletcher rule. In East India Distilleries v. P. F. Mathiasib
the facts were that fire broke out accidentally because of alcohol storage by
the lessee. Negligence could not be proved against the lessee. Here also the
rule of strict liability was not followed..At same time the Supreme Court of
India to meet the ends of social justice had even gone to extent of applying
the rule of strict liability to a case of motor vehicle accident.87
In M. C. Mehta v. Union of India" a more stringent rule of strict liability
was laid down by the Supreme Court where any of the exceptions available
to strict liability is not applicable. The court called this duty as absolute and
non-delegable. When this rule of liability was applied court could order
exemplary damages and larger and more prosperous the enterprise, the
greater must be the compensation payable. Even though doubt was raised as
to whether this rule was an obiter89 by the Supreme Court it was later
clarified to be a ratio in Indian Council ofEnviro Legal Action v. Union of India?0
The M.C. Mehta rule was later applied in Jay Laxmi Salt Works Ltd. v. State of
Gujarat91 in which case the court did not base its reasoning that this was a
non natural use of land but awarded compensation for violation of public
duty and negligence.
The duty of care is also different to different persons who come upon
the premises; to trespassers, the occupiers need not exercise reasonable care.
The occupier must avoid creating danger to the safety of trespassers. Traps
should not be laid to punish intruders in a cruel manner, nor any act done in
reckless disregard of the presence of the trespasser. Licensee is a person
who enters on premises by virtue of permission by the occupier. It is the
duty of the occupier to keep the premises free form traps for licensees. As
regards invitees, occupiers cannot be negligent and must exercise reasonable
care to keep the premises safe for them. Invitee is a person who enters on
land for some purpose in which he has common interest with the inviter.
These concepts received formulation in 1867. According to Lord Denning,
the law relating to invitees and licensees was in swamps and he pleaded for
the abolition of distinctions as regards duty of occupier towards invitees and
licensees. To him, it seems strange that "a householder should owe a higher
duty to a tradesman or canvasser who comes to receive orders than to one
who comes as a guest whom he invites to dinner". According to him there
should be the imposition of a general duty on the occupier to take care
irrespective of the fact whether the person who enters on land is an invitee
or a licensee.
In England the Occupiers Liability Act, 1957 has abolished the
distinction between an invitee and a licensee which existed under the
common law rules. The Act lays down that an occupier of premises owes
the same duty of care to all his lawful visitors to see that the visitors will be
reasonably safe in using the premises.
In India, the law about licensees and invitees has been considered at par
with English Law, and Indian judges have been making fine distinctions
between the duties of occupiers of land towards licensees, invitees and
trespassers. In Cherubin Gregory v. State of Bihar*2 the appellant left naked
electric wire across the passage of his latrine without giving any warning to
prevent entry of intruders. Mst. Madilen who managed to go into the latrine
happened to touch it, received a shock, and died soon after. It was
contended that the deceased was a trespasser and the electric light, at some
distance, at daybreak constituted warning. It was observed that a trespasser
was not to be considered an outlaw and the occupier has no right to inflict
injury upon him by indirectly doing something on land the effect of which,
to his knowledge, is likely to cause harm to a trespasser. In England, setting
of spring guns to shoot trespassers is wrongful and makes one liable for
damages. There is a little difference between spring guns and naked live wire
in the present case. An occupier is not allowed to do wilfully acts with
deliberate intention to cause harm.
The duty of care varies according to the nature of the w o r k and
profession. An innkeeper of a common inn is bound to provide for lodging
and entertainment at a reasonable rate if he has accommodation. He must
guard goods with due diligence. In India, the liability is governed by the
Indian Contract Act. The Hotel Proprietary Act, 1956 of England retains the
rule of absolute liability. A doctor must use care as it is expected of him.
Solicitors are liable if they are negligent in their work. If children commit
trespass, the duty of occupier is not to injure them intentionally and lay
traps for them. A railway company is bound to keep gates closed with trains
pass along. They are liable if they fail to do so or if they invite persons to
cross railway lines. In case of dangerous goods like explosive materials, the
liabily is absolute while in case of domestic fire one is not liable without
proof of negligence. According to the statute of 1774 of England there is
not liability in case of accidental fire. In India there is so such corresponding
statute. Persons dealing with poisonous drugs are bound to exercise more
than ordinary care. Gas companies are bound to exercise more than
ordinary care. Persons who install or use dangerous machinery are obliged
under many legislative acts to observe proper precautions. Directors of
companies are bound to show more than ordinary care towards their
shareholders. Common carriers are liable for loss or injury to goods even
when there was no negligence except in cases where the loss was caused by
act of God or King's enemies or inherent defects in the goods carried. The
manufacturer of an article of food, medicine etc. is liable to the ultimate
purchaser to take reasonable care that the goods sold are free from defects.
As regards dangerous animals the liability is absolute in the case of
those which are dangerous by nature; but as regards those which are not
dangerous, the owner is liable when he knows their vicious nature. An
owner is liable for their trespass and damage caused consequently. Owners
of dogs and cats are not responsible for fleeting trespass. In Ganda Singh v.
Chunilal Shah93 the defendant was held liable for the injury caused by his
horse which was known to him to be vicious though no negligence was
proved. Elephants have been considered to be dangerous in some cases but
in others they were held out to be dangerous in view of their employment in
many tasks in this country.
The defences which may be relied upon by the defendant in an action
for negligence are:
1. He may deny that he owed any duty to the plaintiff;
2. He may deny that he has failed to take such care as a reasonable
person would take;
3. He may plead contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.
Contributory negligence is negligence oh the part of the plaintiff and is
an act or omission which constitutes negligence. In such a case, in common
law, if plaintiff's negligence was proved, he was not allowed to recover any
damages. But the party who had the last opportunity to avoid the harm,
accident or mishap, by taking ordinary care, could be held liable for loss.
Therefore, a defendant cannot take the plea of contributory negligence of
plaintiff successfully if he had the last opportunity to avoid the harm.
According to this rule, the party whose negligence was earlier in point of
time, altogether escaped the responsibility and the other whose negligence
was subsequent, was held liable even though the resulting damage was a
consequence of negligence of both the parties. It was in effect a device to
render ineffective the defence of contributory negligence and was evolved
by the judges for that p u r p o s e . N o w , in England the Law Reform
(Contributory Negligence) Act, 1945, has made it possible to split the blame
and to apportion damages accordingly. There is now no need to look to the
last o p p o r t u n i t y which has given rise to 'verbal refinements, logical
chopping, and pointless microscopical research'. Though it has practically
been thrown out from the field of English law by the passing of the Law
Nuisance
The word nuisance is a French word and conveys the generic idea of harm
as the word tort conveys. But it has a special meaning in English law. It has
civil as well as criminal aspects. As a criminal wrong, common or public
nuisance was punishable from early times. As civil redress the assize of
nuisance and an action on the case for nuisance were available to people as
a general remedy for different kinds of injuries when no other suitable
remedy was available.
Nuisance, according to Winfield, is an unlawful interference with one's
use or enjoyment of land or of some right over or in connection with it.
Examples of nuisance are disturbing noise, bad smelling fumes, polluting
water, overhanging trees, vibrations, sparks, etc. Whether there is in fact
nuisance or not has to be judged from the point of view of time, place, and
other circumstances. Malice, as an improper motive, cannot turn a lawful act
into an unlawful one. But the doing of something which may, on the very
face of it, be treated as nuisance for it endangers or disturbs normal
conditions of social living, that is, where it violates the principle of live and
let live may amount to malice. Public nuisance dealt by criminal law is not
actionable in tort unless the damage suffered by the plaintiff is a "particular
damage other than and beyond the general inconvenience and injury
suffered by the public." Private nuisance is a wrong against a private person
exclusively. The action of nuisance being a wrong to property as well as to
person is available only to the occupier of the property. Further, nuisance
must not be momentary but must continue for some time and there must be
some give and take in the affairs of life; hence an accidental injury is not
nuisance.
Nuisance basically is an interference with the comfort of occupiers of
land but every interference is not actionable nuisance if the conduct of the
defendant is not unreasonable. Some minor discomforts which are parts of
the social life in crowded cities, have to be endured, and looking to
circumstances of time, place and persons they may not be regarded as
nuisance by courts. When personal discomfort is caused by the conduct of
the defendant court can afford to take a lenient view of the matter, but if
loss to property is caused by the conduct of the defendant, the court is not
likely to take a lenient view. Further, the standard of comfort varies from
place to place and one is not expected to be hyper-sensitive to smells, noise
and other inconveniences.
Nuisance is of two kinds: Public Nuisance and Private Nuisance. A
person is guilty of public nuisance who does any act, or is guilty of n illegal
omission, which causes any common injury, danger or annoyance, to the
public or to the people in general who dwell, or occupy property, in the
vicinity, or which must necessarily cause injury, obstruction, danger or
annoyance to persons who may have occasion to use any public right. In
India under section 91 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908, the Advocate
General, or two or more persons having obtained the consent in writing of
the Advocate General, may institute a suit though no special damage has
been caused, for a declaration and injunction or for any other relief. Private
nuisance is the using or authorising the use of ones property or of any thing
under ones control, so as to injuriously affect an owner or occupier of
property by physically injuring his property or affecting its enjoyment by
interfering materially with his health, comfort and convenience. The specific
remedy for private nuisance is damages. In the alternative, or in addition,
injunction can be asked for. The defendant has also the extra-judicial
remedy of abatement of nuisance by himself.
The law on nuisance has not undergone any major change. Both the
notions of annoyance and harm are still vague. The doctrine of volenti non fit
injuria does not apply to one's going and residing at noisy locality. That the
nuisance is caused in the public interest is no good defence. In the field of
private nuisance some developments have taken place. In Seleigh-Denfield v.
668 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
O'Callaghan96 it has been laid down that nuisance arising at the premises
where the defendant had power to control, makes him liable even though he
does not create the nuisance provided he had knowledge or means of
knowledge and power to prevent. It has also been held in the Elevenist
Syndicate case.,97 that employer would be liable for nuisance caused through
the act for which independent contractor has been employed to perform
that act or work. In cases of highway nuisance, usually the highway
authorities are not liable for non-feasance but the United Kingdom High
Way Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1951, has introduced liability even for
the failure to maintain a highway. Mukherjee, J., has urged that such
legislation should also be passed in India looking to the deteriorated
condition of highways in this country.
Tort-litigation in India, in relation to nuisance, has not been as much as
it has been in the case of malicious prosecution, negligence and defamation
but is enough to emphasise its importance. Injanki Prasad v. Karavat
Hussain,98 the right to worship and take out processions was considered not
to be absolute. It was held that it was subject to the order of public
authorities, and limitations could be imposed by civil courts on the exercise
of such right on the ground of preventing nuisance. In Municipal Committees
o/Saugor v. Nilkanth" it was observed, that though establishment or
maintenance of slaughter houses for butcher's meat is per se an offensive
trade, it depends mainly on the place in which it is located. Injawand Singh v.
Mahomed Din100 it was held that plaintiffs were entitled to obtain injunctions
and defendants had no independent right to blow conches or beat drums
especially when, it was done maliciously with the sole purpose of annoying
the plaintiffs in their religious observances and ceremonies. In Dhannalal v.
Thakur Chittor Singh Mehtab Singh101 it was held that abnormal noise
produced by floor mill materially impaired the physical comfort of the
occupants of B's house and as such amounted to nuisance.
Epilogue
The English common law of torts, with its feudalistic, medieval lineage has
been bodily lifted from its native soil and transplanted in India. Its doctrines
or crown immunities and privileges, priority of crown debts, protection
against actions in tort and contract have been applied to Indian conditions
by judges whose knowledge was confined chiefly to the common law.
As the law of torts started on the course of its journey from a purely
agricultural society where land and its tenures were the bases of social
organization, tort-litigation revolved round immovable property and its
possession. In spite of the industrial revolution people "steeped in traditions
of landlord-society looked with suspicion at the new industrial society". The
rule in Rylands v. Fletcher looks askance at the non-natural user of land to
include ordinary use of land or such use as is proper for the general benefit
of the community.
Similarly, with changing concept of state and its functions, the relation
of law and state needed re-statement. In Great Britain Crown Proceedings
Act, 1947, has made advances according to the changed conditions in the
area of governmental liability due to increased trading activity of the state. In
India, the law on governmental liability is striking varying and discordant
notes in the absence of legislative action. It is desirable that judges should
forsake the old and exotic theories and evolve doctrines based upon utility
and public policy.
Lord Denning has shown the balance sheet of the law of torts. As
regards personal injuries the law has undergone 'radical metamorphosis'; (1)
contributory negligence has sought recognition and blame-worthy plaintiffs
can now recover damages though damages may be reduced in proportion to
their fault; (2) the doctrine of common employment has ceased to protect
the employer; (3) the joint tort-feasor has no right to recover contribution;
(4) doctrine of last opportunity has lost all its importance.
In hospital cases vicarious liability is seeking its justification in the
theory of "part and parcel" of organization and the control test is going
progressively to the background. Lord Denning has recommended the
abolition of artificial distinction between invitees and licensees and has
proposed the imposition of duty to exercise reasonable care towards them.
Risks of injury in industrial activity is borne out by national insurance. The
Workmen's Compensation Acts are putting the contractual theory more and
more in the background. The area of personal wrongs has been widened by
concepts and approaches like infringement of privacy.
Much of the law of torts is stagnant and is in shallow waters. As yet a
wife in England cannot sue for any injury to husband which deprives her of
his society. The parent is not allowed to sue for the injury suffered by the
child if it is so young that it cannot perform any service to the parent. In
cases of malicious prosecution, useless controversy is waged about malice in
law and malice in fact. In defamation, problem of classification is presented
because of new means of communication. Doctrine of special damage of
slander and libel per se engenders more confusion than in ministers to utility
as this distinction is due to historical development and is not warranted by
reason. The tort of conspiracy has lost all its usefulness, when people in
order to further their economic interests are allowed to combine and form
670 INDIAN LEGAL SYSTEM
unions. The old tort of deceit has re-established itself in company law
jurisprudence, where deceit misleading prospectus has become a t o n and is
potent enough to seek new extension. According to Holmes, in the law of
torts, mental element of intention is still the governing principle in various
forms of liability and the law of torts still abounds in moral phraseology.
The received English law, and more especially law of torts, has not fared
well with the Indian conditions of life, and as such it has not been able to
sent its roots deep into the recesses of the Indian soil.
Various factors are responsible for hampering its luxuriant growth.
Cultural factors: Spirituality has been the dominant note of Indian culture.
'Dharma' has for its objective the attainment of temporal welfare through
spiritual well-being. In India, high regard is paid to 'duty which puts the
concept of 'rights' in the shade. In the absence of any assertion of right, the
violation of duty could only draw objective penal sanctions. Here the
negative mental element of negligence finds difficulty in securing
recognition. Negligence which is the typical modern tort was not recognized
by the Dharamasastras. Further the wrongs of trespass to person, conversion,
defamation and other injuries to family relationship did not made people
liable in civil action. Such heritage as that of English law where injuries were
classified and priced was not available to Indian juristic thinkers. It was the
duty of the king to award damages but the aggrieved party had not right to
demand them. Damages were awarded only when there was actual damage.
N o n physical harm was not recognized for the purpose of awarding
damages. Obviously, damages were ordinary and compensatory. The
category of vindictive or exemplary damages could not be built into the
structure of tort. The doctrine of injury without damage could not have
been formulated.
This explains why the Indian mind is more attuned to criminal redress,
and filing of civil action for assault, battery, mayhem, false imprisonment,
etc., rarely finds favour with Indian litigants today when those acts are
already punishable as crimes. The tort of malicious prosecution, which is
only a mode of revenge for criminal prosecution is resorted io by the
victorious party as the spoils of victory and the largest number of cases of
torts are those of malicious prosecution where the plaintiff wants n^erely to
teach a lesson rather than to repaid his injury.
N o w the Indian mind in this industrial age is dislodging itself slowly
from its habitual abode and the tort of negligence is likely t o surpass
malicious prosecution in the context of a m u l t i t u d e of industrial
establishments and ever increasing road and rail traffic with their high
accident potential.
Psychology of fear: Again courts have been identified with the power of
government which had vested in invaders and as such these institutions
LAW OF TORTS 671
could not inspire much confidence but scare people through fear. The
greater part of the people take pride in the fact that they never saw the
threshold of a law court. They are very slow in realizing that the court is an
effective third party which can give redress to their wrongs and is potent
enough to award them damages for wrongful condue towards them. Many
disputes which would have developed the legal doctrine in torts are settled
out of court because of this psychology of fear.
Nature of civil and criminal redress: The difference in the nature of civil
and criminal redress is also responsible for paucity of cases in torts. In
cognizable offences the party has simply to lodge first information report
and the police prosecute the offenders generally. Private complaints in
criminal cases are few in number. Similarly, people are reluctant to file civil
suits where the cost of litigation has to be borne by them. Before the
Britishers established their courts or remodeled old ones, administration of
justice was free, i.e., courts did not charge court-fee for dispensing justice.
The court fee was imposed by the British government in India and this
mode of justice has proved a costly affair as many honest litigants were
dissuaded by this measure and litigation because a game of the prosperous
few. The fifth Law Commission has already drawn attention to this state of
things. Also owing to rampant poverty in the country neither can the
litigants demand adequate compensation nor is the court inclined to award
substantial damages.
Lack of reporting: According to Ayer, all types of tort are in plentiful
occurrence in India; but these cases are rarely reported; first, they are settled
out of court and secondly many cases are decided in lower courts and for
want of records of these decisions we infer that there is scarcity of tort
litigation in India. Many of these cases are finally determined in lower court
and do not reach the High Courts level. Among the limited number which
go to the High Court only some are actually reported. O n this analysis, the
lack of tort litigation is only so in appearance and not in reality.
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