Personal Finance

Supreme Court: Dependent Mother Cannot Be Denied Motor Accident Compensation Just Because Family Gets Ex-Gratia Aid

The Supreme Court examined the Haryana rules and the Family Pension Scheme, 1964. It found that where the deceased employee is survived by a widow and child, the parents are not eligible for financial assistance under the state scheme

AI
Dependent Mother, Motor Accident Compensation. & Supreme Court Photo: AI
info_icon
summry logo

Summary of this article

  • Supreme Court restores motor accident compensation for dependent mother

  • Ex-gratia assistance deduction cannot erase independent compensation claim

  • Compensation enhanced from Rs 7.70 lakh to Rs 19.01 lakh

  • Motor Vehicles Act protects dependents excluded from welfare schemes

A dependent mother who is not eligible to receive ex-gratia assistance under a state government scheme cannot be deprived of her separate share in motor accident compensation, the Supreme Court (SC) has held.

The ruling came in a case involving the family of Haryana Police constable Sachin Kumar, who died in a road accident in 2012. His widow, minor daughter, mother, and father had approached the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal seeking compensation under the Motor Vehicles Act.

The Tribunal awarded compensation of Rs 37.30 lakh. However, the deceased’s father was not treated as a dependent because he was a retired government employee and was already drawing a pension.

1 June 2026

Get the latest issue of Outlook Money

amazon

The dispute later reached the Punjab and Haryana High Court (HC) after the insurer challenged the award. The HC took note of the Haryana Compassionate Assistance to the Dependents of Deceased Government Employees Rules, 2006. Under these rules, the family was entitled to financial assistance equivalent to the deceased employee’s last drawn salary for 15 years.

Relying on an earlier SC ruling, the HC deducted Rs 29.21 lakh, which was payable under the state scheme, from the compensation amount. This brought down the final compensation to Rs 7.70 lakh, according to a recent report by LiveLaw.in.

Why The Mother’s Claim Became Important

Before the SC, the family argued that the compassionate assistance scheme was a welfare measure and that its deduction had caused serious hardship. A key argument was also raised on behalf of the deceased’s mother.

The family said the mother was not entitled to any benefit under the Haryana state scheme. Therefore, her independent share in motor accident compensation could not be wiped out merely because other family members were receiving financial assistance.

A three-judge bench of Justice Vikram Nath, Justice Sandeep Mehta, and Justice Vijay Bishnoi examined the issue. The Court agreed with the principle that where a family receives financial assistance equivalent to pay and allowances under the 2006 Rules, that amount has to be deducted from compensation under the head of loss of dependency. The purpose is to prevent double benefit for the same financial loss.

However, the Court also noted that this principle could not be applied mechanically in a way that extinguishes the claim of a person who never received any benefit under the government scheme.

Court Says Deduction Cannot Erase Independent Legal Injury

The SC examined the Haryana rules and the Family Pension Scheme, 1964. It found that where the deceased employee is survived by a widow and child, the parents are not eligible for financial assistance under the state scheme.

This meant that Sachin Kumar’s mother had not received any ex-gratia payment under the 2006 Rules. The Court said her legal injury as a dependent parent remained separate and could not be ignored.

The Court held that denying her compensation would unfairly benefit the insurance company. It said that negating the mother’s claim, when she was entitled to one-third share of the total compensation, would amount to illegal enrichment of the insurer at the cost of a dependent parent.

The SC therefore awarded the mother one-third share of the loss of dependency compensation. This came to Rs 11.30 lakh.

As a result, the total compensation payable to the claimants was enhanced from Rs 7.70 lakh to Rs 19.01 lakh. The Court also directed that interest would be paid as awarded by the Tribunal and affirmed by the HC. The insurer and other respondents were asked to make the payment within eight weeks.

What This Means For Families Seeking Accident Compensation

The ruling is significant for families of deceased government employees who may receive some form of state financial assistance after a death. The SC has again recognised that such assistance may be deducted from motor accident compensation when both cover the same financial loss.

At the same time, the judgment makes an important distinction. A dependent who is not eligible for, and does not receive, any benefit under the state scheme cannot lose their separate claim under the Motor Vehicles Act.

For accident claimants, the decision underlines the need to look closely at who actually received the ex-gratia benefit and who did not. Compensation cannot be reduced in a way that leaves an excluded dependent without relief.

In this case, the mother’s claim survived because she had suffered an independent loss due to the death of her son, but was not covered by the Haryana compassionate assistance scheme. The SC made it clear that the insurer could not use the deduction principle to deny her share altogether.

FAQs

Can ex-gratia assistance be deducted from motor accident compensation?

Yes. If the family receives state financial assistance for the same loss of dependency, it can be deducted to avoid double benefit.

Can a dependent mother still get compensation if she is not covered by the state scheme?

Yes. The Supreme Court said her independent share cannot be erased if she is not eligible for, or does not receive, the ex-gratia benefit.

What did the Supreme Court award in this case?

The Court enhanced the compensation from Rs 7.70 lakh to Rs 19.01 lakh and recognised the mother’s one-third share in the loss of dependency amount.