Case Law
Subject : Civil Law - Code of Civil Procedure
Shimla, Himachal Pradesh - In a significant ruling on procedural law, the Himachal Pradesh High Court has dismissed appeals by the National Insurance Company Ltd. (NIC), holding that an appellant cannot be permitted to introduce additional evidence at the appellate stage to fill gaps in their case that resulted from their own lack of due diligence during trial court proceedings. Justice Vivek Singh Thakur , while deciding two related appeals, underscored the strict conditions under Order 41 Rule 27 of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC).
The case originates from a tragic motor vehicle accident on May 15, 2010, where a Mazda vehicle fell into a gorge, leading to the deaths of the driver,
NIC challenged the MACT's awards before the High Court, primarily arguing that the driver,
To prove this, NIC filed an application under Order 41 Rule 27 CPC to submit new evidence at the appeal stage—a verification report allegedly obtained from the District Transport Officer, Thoubal, Manipur.
The claimants (respondents) vehemently opposed this application, arguing that NIC had ample opportunity to present this evidence before the MACT but failed to do so. They contended that the insurer was now attempting to patch up weaknesses in its case after receiving an unfavorable verdict.
Justice Vivek Singh Thakur conducted a thorough examination of the law governing the admission of additional evidence in appeals. Citing a series of Supreme Court judgments, including Union of India vs. Ibrahim Uddin and N. Kamalam v. Ayyasamy , the Court reiterated the established principles:
The provision under Order 41 Rule 27 CPC is an exception, not a right, and must be used sparingly.
Additional evidence cannot be admitted to allow a party to fill lacunae or weaknesses in its case.
A crucial condition for admitting new evidence is that the party must establish that, "notwithstanding the exercise of due diligence, such evidence was not within his knowledge or could not... be produced by him" during the trial.
The Court then applied these principles to the facts, noting a clear lack of diligence by the insurance company. The judgment highlights a pivotal excerpt from the trial court records:
"Perusal of this document depicts that application was sent on 3.7.2012 and submitted on 5.7.2012 whereupon alleged report of
DTO was supplied on 5.7.2012. Therefore, after production of driving licence dated 23.6.2012, but before the next date fixed for recording of evidence... on which date, a witness was also examined on behalf of Insurance Company, the Insurance Company was in possession of documents now proposed to be led in additional evidence."
The Court observed that despite possessing the alleged verification report from July 5, 2012, NIC proceeded with the trial, examined another witness on July 20, 2012, and then voluntarily closed its evidence without making any attempt to submit the report or request more time.
"For laxity and callous attitude on behalf of Insurance Company, the Company has to suffer," the Court stated, adding, "It is a fit case where due diligence, which is an essential ingredient to allow application under Order 41 Rule 27 CPC... is lacking."
Concluding that the insurer had miserably failed to discharge its onus to prove a breach of policy conditions and had not exercised due diligence, the High Court dismissed the application to admit additional evidence. Consequently, with no other grounds of appeal being pressed, the appeals against the MACT's compensation awards were also dismissed.
This judgment serves as a strong reminder to litigants that they must present their entire case diligently at the trial stage. The appellate process is not an opportunity to rectify self-inflicted procedural lapses or introduce evidence that could have been presented earlier.
#MVAct #CPC #AdditionalEvidence
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