The Supreme Court initiated a suomotu writ petition after receiving an email from Shri B. B. Pathak, a retired District Judge, on 25th May 2024. The email highlighted that substantial amounts of compensation awarded under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (MV Act) and the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1923 (WC Act) were lying unclaimed with Motor Accident Claims Tribunals (MAC Tribunals) and Labour Courts across India. Data compiled by Ms. Vishakha, advocate-on-record and presented to the Court, revealed significant unclaimed sums, such as over Rs. 282 crores in Gujarat (MACT) and Rs. 459 crores in Bombay (MACT). The Court expressed deep concern that “many successful claimants have been deprived of compensation”.
Law Involved
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (MV Act): Specifically, Section 166, pertaining to applications for compensation, and Section 176, which grants State Governments the power to make rules for such applications and related procedures.
Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1923 (WC Act): Under which compensation amounts are also deposited.
Supreme Court’s Suo Motu Powers: The case was initiated by the Court on its own motion, reflecting its inherent jurisdiction to address systemic issues.
Rule-making power of High Courts: In the absence of specific State Government rules under Section 176 MV Act, High Courts have the authority to issue practice directions or rules.
ReasoningThe Court’s primary motivation was to find a solution to the “very disturbing” fact that a large number of successful claimants had not received their compensation3. It noted that while State Governments have rule-making power under Section 176 of the 1988 Act, and High Courts can issue practice directions in their absence, there was a need for a uniform and effective mechanism to ensure disbursement. The Court considered the recommendations of the amicus curiae, Ms. Meenakshi Arora, which incorporated best practices from various High Courts. The rationale behind the detailed directions was to:
Ensure complete claimant information is collected at the application stage to facilitate future disbursement.
Streamline the process of linking compensation with claimants’ bank accounts.
Ensure proper management and investment of deposited funds.
Establish a transparent monitoring system via a dashboard.
Initiate a proactive “massive drive” to locate and disburse funds to claimants who have not yet withdrawn their compensation.
HoldingThe Supreme Court issued a comprehensive set of binding directions to MAC Tribunals, Commissioners under the 1923 Act, High Courts, and State Governments to address the issue of unclaimed compensation:
- Mandatory Data Collection: All claim petitions under the 1988 Act must include the Aadhaar, PAN, and email IDs of the claimants (injured persons/owners or legal representatives of deceased) in addition to names and addresses.
- Bank Account Details for Disbursement: Tribunals are directed to obtain bank account details, including IFS Code and a cancelled cheque, from claimants entitled to compensation and ensure this information is kept updated.
- Direct Bank Transfers: MAC Tribunals may direct that compensation amounts be deposited directly into claimants’ bank accounts, especially in cases of consent awards.
- Verification of Accounts: Presiding Judges of MAC Tribunals are responsible for verifying bank certificates and the authenticity of the accounts.
- Investment of Deposited Amounts: Any compensation amount ordered to be deposited must be invested in fixed deposits with nationalized banks, with provisions for periodic renewal.
- Centralized Monitoring Dashboard: The Registrar (Computer/IT) of High Courts, with State Government assistance, shall create a digital dashboard to display detailed information on deposited compensation amounts, which must be regularly updated.
- Massive Claimants Tracing Drive: All High Courts are to issue administrative directions for a large-scale initiative, involving Legal Services Authorities and volunteers, to ascertain the whereabouts of claimants who have not yet collected their compensation.
- Compliance and Reporting: State Legal Services Authorities are required to monitor compliance and submit reports within four months.
- Binding Nature: These directions remain binding until the respective State Governments frame their own rules under Section 176 of the 1988 Act.
- Further Reporting: High Courts are to submit compliance reports to the Supreme Court by 30th July 2025, with the matter listed for further reporting on 18th August 2025.
In Re: Compensation Amounts Deposited With Motor Accident Claims Tribunals And Labour Courts
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 530: (DoJ 22-04-2025)




