Widow Wins Big: Delhi Commission Slaps Insurer with ₹20L Payout, Rejects '' Defense
In a consumer-friendly ruling, the —led by President Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal and Member Bimla Kumari —has overturned a lower court's dismissal and ordered to pay ₹20 lakh to Ms. Sunita Kain , widow of the late Brahm Singh Kain. The commission found the insurer's repudiation of a death claim baseless, citing flawed investigations, unproven pre-existing conditions, and procedural lapses. This decision reinforces protections for policyholders in group credit life plans tied to loans.
From Loan Protection to Claim Heartbreak
Brahm Singh Kain, aged around 50, took a one-time premium payment of ₹56,011 for a India First Group Credit Life Plan (Policy No. G0000091) on , linked to a ₹20 lakh loan from . The policy aimed to cover the outstanding loan upon his death. Tragically, Kain passed away on , from stomach pain. Sunita submitted all required documents promptly, but the insurer repudiated the claim on —213 days later—alleging non-disclosure of diabetes (Type 2) and chronic kidney disease predating the policy.
The sided with the insurer in , citing precedent on material non-disclosure. Sunita appealed, arguing the investigation was hearsay-ridden, no medical exams were done pre-policy, terms weren't supplied, and repudiation violated timelines (30-90 days max).
Insurer's Stand: 'Fraud by Omission'
India First claimed Kain signed a member form on , falsely denying past illnesses despite alleged treatment from March 2012 for kidney issues and insulin-dependent diabetes. They invoked under , arguing true disclosure would have led to rejection. An investigation allegedly uncovered suppression, justifying voiding the policy. In reply to the appeal, they accused Sunita of and sought dismissal.
Sunita countered that no concrete medical records proved conditions, the report contradicted itself (kidney ailment confirmed verbally, yet "no medical history found"), and common ailments like diabetes weren't "pre-existing" without hospitalization nexus.
Bench Dissects Precedents: Burden on Insurers, Not Insured
Drawing from a treasure trove of rulings, the commission flipped the script. It leaned on its own 2008 decision in , defining narrowly: serious conditions requiring recent hospitalization/operation, not manageable lifestyle issues like diabetes or hypertension. cases like Tarlok Chand v. New India Assurance (2001) and National Insurance v. Rai Narain (2008) placed the onus on insurers to prove ailments, especially sans medical exams.
Key highlights included 's Hari Om Agarwal v. Oriental Insurance (2007), deeming lifestyle diseases probabilistic, not automatic exclusions, and 's Sunil Kumar Sharma v. TATA AIG (2021) and Neelam Chopra v. LIC (2018), stressing no total disentitlement without death nexus. The bench noted India First issued the policy to a 50-plus man without tests—common for such ages—then couldn't renege. No proof of policy terms delivery invoked Bharat Watch Company v. National Insurance (SC, 2019), barring reliance on unseen exclusions. The 213-day delay breached norms, signaling .
Key Observations Straight from the Judgment
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On lifestyle diseases :
"From the aforesaid settled law, it is clear that the common lifestyle disease like diabetes and hypertension, cannot be treated as pre-existing diseases, therefore, cannot be a ground of repudiation of the claim by Insurance companies."
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Insurer's proof burden :
"The fact that the onus to prove that insured was suffering from is on the Insurance Company..."
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Flawed probe :
"A perusal of the investigation report makes it clear that the report suffers from inherent contradictions and major flaws... on the basis of ."
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No death link :
"Suppression of any information relating to if it has not resulted in death or has no direct relationship to cause of death, would not completely disentitle the claimant for the claim."
( Neelam Chopra cited) -
Self-inflicted wrong :
"The Respondent cannot be allowed to take benefit of its own wrong at this belated stage and cannot repudiate the Appellant's claim on the grounds that she had a pre-existing illness."
As recapped in legal news summaries, this underscores how insurers can't wield vague probes against genuine claimants.
Justice Served: Payout with Interest and Costs
The appeal succeeded: India First must pay ₹20,00,000 (sum assured) plus 6% interest from (repudiation date). Additional awards: ₹1 lakh for mental agony and ₹50,000 litigation costs, payable within two months—or face 9% penalty.
This sets a precedent for group policies: insurers bear heavier proof loads on disclosures, especially lifestyle issues, absent exams or death causation. Policyholders gain leverage against delays and unseen terms, potentially easing claims in India's booming insurance sector.