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Summary and Analysis of Lokesh B vs Suryanarayana Raju & Anr. (Civil Appeal Nos. _____ of 2025)

1. Heading of the Judgment

Lokesh B vs Suryanarayana Raju & Another
(Supreme Court of India, Civil Appellate Jurisdiction)
Citation: (2025) INSC 939

2. Related Laws and Precedents

The judgment relies on:

  • Motor Vehicles Act, 1988: Compensation principles for accident victims.

  • Precedents:
    Santosh Devi v. National Insurance Co. Ltd. (2012): Recognized future prospects for self-employed victims.
    Pranay Sethi v. National Insurance Co. Ltd. (2017): Affirmed 40% future prospects for self-employed persons aged 40 or below.

3. Basic Case Details

  • Parties:
    Appellant: Lokesh B (38-year-old tailor injured in a road accident).
    Respondents: Lorry owner (Suryanarayana Raju) and insurer (Shriram General Insurance Co. Ltd.).

  • Accident (19 November 2016):
    Lokesh’s car collided with a stationary lorry parked without indicators on Peenya Flyover, Bengaluru.
    Injuries: Skull fractures, brain hemorrhage, optic nerve damage (causing visual impairment), and bilateral wrist fractures.

  • Lower Courts’ Decisions:
    Tribunal (2018): Awarded ₹13.60 lakhs after deducting 20% for contributory negligence.
    High Court (2021): Reduced compensation to ₹13.44 lakhs by excluding future prospects and underestimating disability.

4. Explanation of the Judgment

Core Issues

  1. Whether the High Court erred in excluding future prospects for a self-employed victim.

  2. Whether the disability assessment (35%) was arbitrary against medical evidence.

Supreme Court’s Ruling

  1. Future Prospects Rightfully Included:
    The High Court wrongly denied future prospects despite precedents (Santosh DeviPranay Sethi) mandating it for self-employed victims.
    Calculation:
    Monthly income: ₹9,500 (accepted by both parties).
    40% future prospects added: ₹9,500 + ₹3,800 = ₹13,300/month.

  2. Disability Percentage Revised to 41.77%:
    Medical evidence from NIMHANS (PW-3) proved 41.77% neuro-cognitive disability using standardized tests.
    The Tribunal and High Court arbitrarily adopted 35% without justification.
    Court’s View: Functional disability must align with unimpeached medical evidence.

Revised Compensation Breakdown

  • Loss of Future Earnings:
    Annual income: ₹13,300 × 12 = ₹1,59,600.
    With 41.77% disability and multiplier of 15 (age 38): ₹1,59,600 × 15 × 41.77% = ₹9,99,974.

  • Other Heads (Unchanged from High Court):
    Medical expenses: ₹8,18,140.
    Pain and suffering: ₹75,000.
    Attendant/conveyance: ₹20,000.
    Loss of income during treatment: ₹38,000.
    Loss of amenities: ₹1,25,000.

  • Total: ₹20,76,114.

  • Less 20% contributory negligence: ₹16,60,891 payable.

Final Order

  • Compensation enhanced from ₹13.44 lakhs to ₹16.60 lakhs.

  • Insurer directed to deposit balance within 6 weeks.

  • Interest: 6% per annum from claim petition date.

Key Legal Principles Reaffirmed

  1. Self-Employed Victims Entitled to Future Prospects:
    Economic potential must be factored into compensation (Pranay Sethi).

  2. Medical Evidence Prevails:
    Courts cannot arbitrarily override uncontroverted disability assessments.

  3. Contributory Negligence:
    Deduction upheld (20%) as appellant did not challenge this finding.

Significance:
The judgment ensures accident victims receive just compensation by strictly applying precedents and medical evidence, preventing arbitrary reductions.

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