Vicarious Liability of State
Vicarious Liability of State
Vicarious Liability of State
US
LIABILITY
OF STATE
Submitted by: Zaheen
Roll no: 118/14
BA LLB, Sec: B
Submitted to: Ms. Anju Berwal
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Index
List of cases
Introduction
Position in England
Article 300 of Constitution of India
P & O Steam Navigation Co. vs. Secretary of State
Vidyawati case
Kasturi Lal case
Sovereign and Non-sovereign functions
Uncertainty of Present position in India
v./vs. versus
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Abbreviations used....
co. company
ltd. limited
A.I.R. All India Reporter
S.C. Supreme Court
U.P. Uttar Pradesh
A.P. Andhra Pradesh
J. & K. Jammu and Kashmir
1. Peninsular
and
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List of cases
Oriental
Steam
Navigation
Company
v.
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Introduction
ii.
iii.
iv.
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POSITION IN ENGLAND
In common law, the crown could not be sued in tort either for wrong authorized by it
or committed by its servants in course of employment. Moreover no action could lie
against the head of the department or other superior officials for the act of their
subordinates for relationship between them was not master and servant but of
fellow servants. The individual wrongdoer was personally liable and he could not
take defence of orders of Crown, or state necessity. The immunity of the Crown from
liability did not exempt the servant from liability. The result was that, whereas an
ordinary master was liable vicariously for the wrong done by his servant, the
government was not liable for a tort committed by its servant. 1
The maxim of the common law was the King can do no wrong 2 and, therefore, no
action in tort was possible against the crown either for wrongs which has expressly
authorized or for wrongs committed by its servants in the course of their
employment.3 The actual wrongdoer acting on behalf of the Crown did not enjoy this
exemption but while he personally could be sued, his superior officers could not, for
he would not be their servant, but like them the servant of the Crown.45
With the increase in the functions of the state, the crown became one of the
largest employers of labour in the country. Under these circumstances, the rule of
immunity for the Crown became highly incompatible with the demands of justice. To
overcome the shortcomings of the prevailing law and to ensure justice, various
devices were found out. The Parliament intervened by enacting the Crown
Proceeding Act, 1947, which into force on January 1, 1948. Hence the very citadel
of the absolute rule of sovereign has now been blown up. Section 2(1) provides as
follows-Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Crown shall be subject to all those
liabilities in tort to which, if it were a private person of full age and capacity, it
would be subject in respect of torts committed by its servants or agents, subject to
other provisions in this Act. As already pointed out, the law applicable to India with
respect to torts committed by a servant of the Government was very much in
1 R.K. Bangia at 132
2 Hale, P.C. Vol. 1 at 43
3 Canterburry (Viscount) v. Att. Gen., 1842, 1 Ph. 305.
4 Bainbridge v. P.M.G., 1906, 1 K.B. 178.
5 Law of torts by Sinha at 98
advance of the Common law, before the enactment of the Crown Proceeding Act,
1947, which has revolutionised the law in England, also.
Act of 1935
Even when the Government of India Act, 1935, was enacted, (replacing the Act of
1915), the same legal position was continued by section 176(1) of the Act which read
as follows:
The Federation may sue or be sued by the name of the Federation of India and a
Provincial Government may sue or be sued by the name of Province, and, without
prejudice to the subsequent provisions of this Chapter, may, subject to any
provisions which may be made by an Act of the Federal or a Province legislature
enacted by virtue of powers conferred on that legislature by this Act, sue or be sued
in relation to their respective affairs in the like cases as the Secretary of State in
Council might have sued if this Act had not been passed.
Act of 1915
This very provision was practically contained in section 32 of the Government of
India Act, 1915. Sub-sections (1) and (2) of that section read as follows:
(1)
The Secretary of State in Council may sue and be sued by the name of the
Every person shall have the same remedies against the Secretary of State in
Council as he might have had against the East India Company, if the Government of
India Act 1858 and this Act have not been passed.
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Resultant position
Thus, Article 300 of the Constitution practically takes us back to the Act of 1858,
which, in its turn, leads us to a consideration of the nature and extent of the
liability of the East India Company.
A consideration of the pre- Constitution cases begins with judgement of the
Supreme Court of Calcutta in the case.
10
that the Government had made a contract with him for the issue of a licence for the
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sale ganja and had committed breach of contract. The High Court held as under:
i.
ii.
Even if there was breach of contract, the act was done in exercise of sovereign
power and, therefore it was not actionable. The High Court expressly followed
the P & O ruling.
One of the authorities for this point of view is the case of The Secretary of State
for India in Council vs. Hari Bhanji10, wherein the position was explained in the
following way:
The act of State of which the municipal courts of Britih India are debarred
from taking cognizance, are acts done in the exercise of sovereign powers which do
not profess to be justified by municipal law Where an act complained of is
professedly done under the sanction of municipal law, and in the exercise of powers
conferred by that law, the fact that it is done by the sovereign powers is not an act
which could possibly be done by a private individual, does not oust the jurisdiction
of the civil court.
The Law Commission of India, in its First Report in 1956, has discussed the
whole question and according to its view, the law was correctly laid down in Hari
Bhanjis case.11
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11
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12
In Shyam Sunder vs. the State of Rajasthan 16, the Supreme Court e the driver of
a truck engaged in a famine relief work is negligent, the State will be liable for the
same, as famine relief work is not a sovereign function of the State. It is a work
which can be undertaken by private individuals.17
13
being used by the students in their procession, got damaged. In an action by the
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owner of the loudspeaker against the State to recover compensation for damage to
the loudspeaker, it was held that maintaining law and order including quelling of
riot is a sovereign function, and the State is not liable for any damage caused in the
exercise of that function.
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14
In Kasturi Lal Ralia Ram Jam v. State of U.P. 20, the Supreme Court also refused
to hold the State liable for the act done by its servants in the exercise of statutory
duties. In this case, a partner of the firm of jewellers in Amritsar, Kasturi Lal Ralia
Ram Jam, happened to go to Meerut (in U.P.) reaching there by a train in the
midnight. He was carrying a lot of gold and silver with him. The police constables,
on the round in the market through which he was passing, suspected that he was in
the possession of stolen property. He was taken to the police station. He, with his
belongings, was kept in the police custody under the provisions of the Cr. P.C. Next
day, he was released on bail and sometime thereafter the silver was returned to him.
The gold was kept in the police Malkhana, and the same was then misappropriated
by the Head Constable, Mohammad Amir, who thereafter fled to Pakistan. The
plaintiff brought an action against the State of U.P. claiming either the return of the
103 tolas of gold, or compensation of Rs. 11.000/- in lieu thereof.21
It was found that the police officers failed to observe the provisions of the U.P.
Police Regulations in taking care of the gold seized, The Supreme Court held that
since the negligence of the police officers was in the exercise of statutory powers
which can also be characterised as sovereign powers, the State was not liable for the
same.
According to Gajendragadkar, C.J.: In the present case, the act of negligence
was committed by police officers while dealing with the property of Ralia Ram which
they had seized in exercise of their statutory powers. Now, the .power to arrest a
person, to search him, and to seize property found with him, are powers conferred
on the specified officers by statute and in the last analysis they are powers which
can be properly characterised as sovereign powers, and so, there is no difficulty in
holding that the act which gave rise to the present claim for damages has been
committed the employees of the respondent during the course of its employment;
but the employment in question being of the category which can claim the special
characteristic of sovereign power, the claim cannot be sustained, and so we
20 Supra 12
21 Supra 11 at 147
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inevitably hark back to what Chief Justice Peacock decided in 1861 and hold that
The position was thus, stated by the Supreme Court in Kasturi Lal v. State
of U.P.23: If the tortious act is committed by a public servant and it gives rise to a
claim for damages, the question to ask is, Was the tortious act committed by the
public servant in discharge of statutory functions which are preferable to, and
ultimately based on, the delegation of the sovereign powers of the State of such
public servant? If the answer is in the affirmative action for damages for loss caused
by such tortious act will not lie. On the other hand, if the tortious act has been
committed by a public servant in discharge of duties assigned to him, not by virtue
of the delegation of any sovereign power, an action for damages would lie. The act of
the public servant committed by him during the course of his employment is, in this
category of cases, an act of servant who might have been employed by a private
individual for the same purpose.24
16
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17
pleading that the detention was for medical treatment of the mental imbalance of
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the petitioner. The Supreme Court ordered the payment of compensation of Rs.
30,000 (as an interim measure) in addition to the payment of Rs. 5,000, which had
already been made by the State of Bihar. It was also stated that the said order of
compensation did not preclude the petitioner from bringing a suit to claim
appropriate damages from the State and its erring officials.31
18
in nature. Therefore, they are not amenable to jurisdiction of ordinary civil court. No
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suit under Civil Procedure Code would lie in respect of it. The State is immune for
being sued, as the jurisdiction of the courts in such matters is impliedly barred.
The court proceeds further, as under:
but there the immunity ends. No civilised system can permit an executive to play
with the people of its country and claim that it is entitled to act in any manner, as it
is sovereign. The concept of public interest has changed with structural change in
the society. No legal or political system today can place the State above (the law) as it
is unjust and unfair for a citizen to be deprived of his property illegally by negligent
act of the officers of the State without any remedy. From sincerity, efficiency and
dignity of the State as a juristic person, propounded in the nineteenth century as
sound sociological basis for State immunity, the circle has gone around and the
emphasis now is more on liberty, equality and the rule of law. The modern social
thinking of progressive societies and the judicial approach is to do away with
archaic State protection and place the State or the government on par with any
other juristic legal entity. Any watertight compartmentalisation of the functions of
the State as sovereign and non-sovereign or governmental or non-governmental is
not sound. It is contrary to modern jurisprudential thinking. The need of the staeto
have extraordinary powers cannot be doubted. But, with the conceptual change of
statutory power being statutory duty for the sake f society and the people, the claim
ofa common man or ordinary citizen cannot be thrown out, merely because it was
done by an officer of the State; duty of its officials and right of the citizens are
required to be reconciled, so that the rule of law in a Welfare State is not shaken.
The court emphasised the element of welfare state in these words:
in a welfare state functions of the state are not only defence of the country or
administration of justice or maintaining law and order, but it extends to regulating
and controlling the activity of the people in almost every sphere, educational,
commercial, social, economic, political, and even marital. The demarcating line
between sovereign and non sovereign powers, for which no rational basis survives,
has largely disappeared. Therefore barring functions such as administration of
justice, maintenance of law and order and repression of crime etc. Which are among
the primary and inalienable functions of a constitutional government, the state
cannot claim any immunity.
The court linked together state and the officers:
19
The determination of vicarious liability of the State being linked with the negligence
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of its officers, if they can be sued personally for which there is no dearth of
authority and the law misfeasance in discharge of public duty having marched
ahead, there is no rational for the proposition that even if the officer is liable the
State cannot be sued.
20
the Houses of Parliament was placed before the Lok Sabha in 1969. It has not yet
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become the law. The Bill seeks to define the liability of the Government towards
third parties for the wrongs of its servants, agents and independent contractors
employed by it.
In N. Nagendra Rao & Co. v. State of A.P. 33, the Supreme Court considered
the question of vicarious liability of the Government for the negligence of its
servants, it noted the earlier Supreme Court decisions in Vidyawatis34 and Kasturi
Lals35 cases, recommendations of the Law Commission in its First Report for
statutorily recognizing the liability of the State as had been done in England
through the Crown Proceedings Act, 1947 and in U.S.A. through the Federal Torts
Claims Act, 1946. It therefore, held that the doctrine of sovereign immunity has no
relevance in the present day.
It is unfortunate that the recommendation of the Law Commission made long
back in 1956, and the suggestions made by the Supreme Court, have not yet been
given effect to. The unsatisfactory state of affairs in this regard is against social
justice in a welfare State. It is hoped that the Act regarding State liability will be
passed without much further delay. In the absence of such legislation, it will be in
consonance with social justice demanded by the changed conditions and the
concept of welfare State that the courts will follow the recent decisions of the
Supreme Court rather than Kasturi Lal.
33 Supra 32
34 Supra 12
35 Supra 14
WEBSITES
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BIBLOGRAPHY
21
www.wikipedia.org
www.scribd.com
www.legalserviceindia.com
www.manupatra.com
www.indiankanoon.com
Dictionary
Blacks legal dictionary
Books
Law of Torts by R.K. Bangia
Law of torts by Justice G.P. Singh
Law of Tort by P.S.A. Pillai
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idjuewjs
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The Crown
There is no remedy against the crown for a tort. For any violation by the crown of
the rights of subjects the appropriate remedy, if there is one at all, is not an action
but a petition of right. This remedy, however, is limited in its scope, and is not
available in cases of tort. The crown cannot be charged with negligence, fraud or
other forms of tortuous wrongdoings, nor is it responsible for the acts of its agents
and servants. The rule is subject to the following qualifications:a) A petition of right will lie against the Crown for the recovery of damages for
the breach of contract; and not the less so, it is presumed, because that
breach of contract is also a tort.
b) A petition of right will lie against the Crown for the specific restitution of
property wrongfully detained in the possession of the Crown; or for the value
of such property, when the Crown has had the benefit of it and specific
restitution is impossible.
The only cases, it has been said, in which the petition of the right is open to
the subject are where the land or goods or money of a subject have found their way
into the possession of the Crown, and the purpose of the petition is to obtain
restitution, or if restitution cannot be given, compensation in money; or where the
claim arises out of contract, as for goods supplied to the Crown or to the public
service
Law of torts- Sinha
The law on this topic has been greatly changed by the Crown Proceedings Act,
1947 which came into force on January 1, 1948. It applies to torts committed on or
after February 13, 1947 (Section 12).
Section 2(1) provides as follows-Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
Crown shall be subject to all those liabilities in tort to which, if it were a private
person of full age and capacity, it would be subject:
23