The case originated from a Motor Accident Claim (Case No. 125 of 2009) following the death of Mr. Prayank Chand in a vehicular accident on 27.02.2009.
The Motor Vehicle Claims Tribunal (MVCT), Tinsukia, awarded a total sum of Rs. 11,82,000/- on 11.11.2011.
The compensation was disbursed on 21.04.2015: Rs. 1,00,000/- to the appellant (Urmila Chand, the mother of the deceased), Rs. 6,26,000/- to Respondent No. 1 (Sonu Chand, the daughter-in-law), and Rs. 3,00,000/- each for the minor children (Respondent Nos. 2 and 3) to be kept in fixed deposits. The appellant voluntarily accepted and encashed her cheque.
The appellant later harboured grievances regarding the disbursement. After filing an application under the Right to Information (RTI) Act, she filed a review petition against the disbursement order dated 21.04.2015.
The MVCT dismissed this review petition on 12.01.2018 because it was barred by limitation, having been filed with a delay of 6 months and 22 days. The appellant’s explanation of having undergone surgery was not substantiated.
The Gauhati High Court refused to exercise its supervisory jurisdiction and dismissed the Civil Revision Petition, which challenged the MVCT’s dismissal of the review petition.
The present appeal is filed by Urmila Chand against the High Court’s judgment and order.
Law Involved:
Limitation Period: The central legal issue was the failure to file the review petition within the statutory limitation period, and the High Court’s refusal to condone the significant delay.
Supervisory Jurisdiction: The High Court’s power to exercise supervisory jurisdiction over lower tribunals, which it declined in this case.
Doctrine of Approbate and Reprobate: The principle that a person cannot simultaneously accept the benefits of an order and then challenge it; the High Court noted the appellant could not “resile from her own conduct”.
Right to Information (RTI) Act: Used by the appellant, but viewed by the court as a potential “ploy” to justify delay rather than a genuine pursuit of information for a timely challenge.
Principles of Succession Law: The appellant’s counsel argued that the initial apportionment of compensation was contrary to these principles, particularly concerning the mother’s status as a Class 1 legal heir.
Reasoning:
Unexplained Delay: Both the Tribunal and the High Court found that the appellant’s review petition was significantly delayed and that her explanation for the delay (surgery) was unsubstantiated. The High Court explicitly stated that the Tribunal did not err in not condoning the delay.
Appellant’s Inconsistent Conduct: The courts emphasised that the appellant had jointly applied for disbursement, signed the order sheet on 21.04.2015 confirming receipt, and encashed the Rs. 1,00,000/- cheque without any protest or demur. Her review petition was deemed an “afterthought”.
Lack of Genuine Grievance: The High Court noted that the appellant did not raise any grievance at the time of disbursement. Her claim of being unaware of the order’s contents was considered “unacceptable” and possibly “vitiated by fraud,” given her active participation.
Abuse of Process: The High Court inferred that the RTI application was a “ploy to create a story to cover up for the laches and delay”. The appellant was found to have acted with “open eyes, overtly and consciously” and could not be permitted to “resile from her own conduct” or “approbate and reprobate”.
Justified Dismissal: The High Court concluded there was no satisfactory explanation for the delay, and the factual circumstances surrounding the appellant’s conduct justified the dismissal of her review application.
Holding:
The Supreme Court of India, presided over by N.V. Anjaria, J., and Atul S. Chandurkar, J., dismissed the Civil Appeal.
The Court thereby upheld the judgment and order of the Gauhati High Court, which had correctly refused to exercise its supervisory jurisdiction and dismissed the Civil Revision Petition.
The Supreme Court found no error in the High Court’s reasoning regarding the appellant’s conduct and the lack of a satisfactory explanation for the delay in filing the review application.
Urmila Chand Vs Sonu Chand and Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1072: (Doj 03-09-2025)




