Consumer Protection Law
Consumer Protection Law
Consumer Protection Law
The product at hand is not the effort of the researcher alone. I would like to take this
opportunity to thank Dr. Aparna Singh for allowing me to take up a topic of my interest. Also,
I wish to express my gratitude for her valuable support, guidance and advice which has
helped me to complete this project. I would also like to thank the library staff for working
long hours to facilitate us with required material going a long way in quenching our thirst
for education. I would also like to thank my seniors for guiding me through tough times they
themselves have been through, and lastly I would like to thank my friends for keeping alive
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................ 4
Situating Anuradha Saha in the common law doctrine of stare decisis ...................... 17
CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................... 20
BIBLIOGRAPHY ........................................................................................................... 21
INTRODUCTION
Lately, Indian society is experiencing a growing awareness regarding patient's rights. This trend is
clearly discernible from the recent spurt in litigation concerning medical professional or establishment
liability, claiming redressal for the suffering caused due to medical negligence, vitiated consent, and
breach of confidentiality arising out of the doctor-patient relationship. The patient-centered initiative
of rights protection is required to be appreciated in the economic context of the rapid decline of State
spending and massive private investment in the sphere of the health care system and the Indian
Supreme Court's painstaking efforts to Constitutionalize a right to health as a fundamental right.
As of now, the adjudicating process with regard to medical professional liability, be it in a consumer
forum or a regular civil or criminal court, considers common law principles relating to negligence,
vitiated consent, and breach of confidentiality. However, it is equally essential to note that the
protection of patient's right shall not be at the cost of professional integrity and autonomy. There is
definitely a need for striking a delicate balance. Otherwise, the consequences would be inexplicable.
In the context of obtaining processes, there is a deserving need for a two-pronged approach. On one
hand, the desirable direction points towards identification of minimum reasonable standards in light of
the social, economical, and cultural context that would facilitate the adjudicators to decide issues of
professional liability on an objective basis. On the other hand, such identification enables the medical
professionals to internalize such standards in their day-to-day discharge of professional duties, which
would hopefully prevent to a large extent the scenario of protection of patient's rights in a litigative
atmosphere. In the long run, the present adversarial placement of doctor and the patient would
undergo a transformation to the advantage of the patient, doctor, and society at large.
October 24, 2013 was a historical day for the Indian judiciary - the Supreme Court delivered a
landmark judgment in the award of compensation in an important case on medical negligence, the
Anuradha Saha case1 which had been languishing in lower courts for over a decade. The
unprecedented compensation amounting to a whopping Rs. 11 crore is the highest quantum of
monetary damages ever awarded in India in a medical negligence case. Several questions have been
raised in retrospect about the significance of this decision and its future ramifications in the context of
the established doctrine of stare decisis.
The judgment on damages implicates the question of the relationship between tortious remedies and
the legal relief provided for by consumer protection law in India. Some of the key analytical points
raised by this relationship are the definition of who is a consumer; whether victims of mass torts and
1
Balram Prasad v. Kunal Saha (2014) 1 SCC 384, judgment of 24 October 2013 (hereinafter Anuradha Saha case)
injured patients of medical negligence cases are covered by this definition; and what the economic and
policy implications of this unprecedented ruling on exemplary damages may be.
This paper is divided into two parts. The first part will examine the definitional clauses of the
Consumer Protection Act 1986 and review its scope through case law to show the present position of
the law. The argument in the first part will pitch patients and victims of medical negligence cases
within the scope of the statute.
The second part will discuss the rationale behind the award of damages to the claimant in the
Anuradha Saha case and will focus mainly on the method of computation of damages adopted by the
apex court. The object of decoding the computation of damages will be to understand the precedential
value of the formula it creates. Using the calculation created by this case, the thesis of the paper will
be the articulation of the effects, in the common law doctrine of precedent or stare decisis, of applying
this case to future litigation on medical negligence in India. The paper will conclude by identifying the
implications of this judgment from a legal as well as policy perspective.
a. Who is a consumer?
According to Section 2(d) of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, a consumer means any person who -
(i) buys any goods for a consideration which has been paid or promised or partly paid and
partly promised, or under any system of deferred payment and includes any user of such
goods other than the person who buys such goods for consideration paid or promised or
partly paid or partly promised, or under any system of deferred payment when such use is
made with the approval of such person, but does not include a person who obtains such
goods for resale or for any commercial purpose; or,
(ii) hires or avails of any services for a consideration which has been paid or promised or
partly paid and partly promised, or under any system of deferred payment and includes
any beneficiary of such services other than the person who 'hires or avails of the services
for consideration paid or promised, or partly paid and partly promised, or under any
system of deferred payment, when such services are availed of with the approval of the
first mentioned person but does not include a person who avails of such services for any
commercial purposes2.
2
Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
It has been held that the services rendered for consideration by medical practitioner, hospitals and
nursing homes fall within the scope of Section 2(d)3.
According to Section 2(g) of the Act, deficiency means any fault, imperfection, shortcoming or
inadequacy in the quality, nature and manner of performance which is required to be maintained by
or under any law for the time being in force or has been undertaken to be performed by a person in
pursuance of a contract or otherwise in relation to any service.
Thus, when a qualified medical practitioner4 negligently causes injuries to the patient, he may come
under the understanding of deficiency of service or medical negligence. In medical negligence
cases, in which doctors have negligently, or through no wrongdoing by the patient or consumer
concerned, left foreign matter in the body during operation5 or when they have carelessly administered
wrong treatment to patients resulting in injuries or death 6 they have been held liable to pay
compensation to the claimants.
Another pertinent question which arises is whether the kin of a deceased patient (victim of medical
negligence) can claim compensation since he is not a direct consumer himself. It has been held that
the kin of the deceased is entitled to invoke the redressal machinery provided under the Act 7.
Though the definition of consumer in the Act does not explicitly include legal representatives, case
law does8. The judicial reasoning adopted in such cases of gross negligence in which the consumer
(patient) dies, is usually that the family of the deceased will be left with no remedy if a hard-headed
view or a literal reading of the text of the provision is adopted; courts tend to apply well-established
jurisprudential principles of equity and good conscience so that he provisions of social welfare
legislation can be followed to give force to the spirit of consumer protection legislation and bring
justice to the aggrieved consumer.
The delay in delivery of justice is a major problem plaguing India 9. It has been observed10 in several
cases11 that compensation took over a decade and even then was inadequate.
3
Indian Medical Association v. V.P. Shanta and Ors 1996 AIR 550.
4
Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 1 WLR 582.
5
Aparna Dutta v Apollo Hospital Enterprises Ltd and Ors., AIR 2000 Mad 340.
6
V. Kishan Rao v. Nikhil Super Speciality Hospital and Anr. 2011ACJ500.
7
Cosmopolitan Hospitals and Anr v. Vasantha P Nair1 (1992) CPJ 302 (NC) echoing Salmond on Jurisprudence(1930) -
The rights which a dead man leaves behind him vest in his representative. They pass to some person whom the dead man
or the law on his behalf has appointed to represent him in the world of the living.
8
L. H. LaRue, Hohfeldian Rights and Fundamental Rights, The University of Toronto Law Journal, Vol. 35, No. 1, pp. 86-
93 (1985).
9
Pendency of cases are gigantic problems: SC Judge, Daily News & Analysis, Times of India, 12 October 2011.
10
Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (2011) 14 SCC 481
11
Union Corporation v. Union of India, 1995 Supp. (4) SCC 59
However, in India, medical negligence cases rarely hold in favour of the aggrieved claimant and even
when held in favour of the claimant, the damages awarded are not adequate12. The reason behind this
is that the burden of proof in such cases is on the plaintiff.
Apart from the inequality of arms that the law creates through this burden of proof, the unholy web of
connections in the medical industry in India make it extraordinarily difficult to pin liability on those
responsible because of the extremely technical nature of the suit 13. In most cases, a medical experts
verification is required and to safeguard the mutual interests of the profession, the experts by and large
rarely testify in favour of the claimant.
However this may be changing. It has recently been held that in prima facie cases of medical
negligence, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitor is to be followed and the verification by a medical expert
is not required in such cases14. Expert opinion is required only in complicated cases in which the
Consumer Forum feels that it is required and the facts are not such that they can be deciphered by the
members of the Fora. In apparent cases of medical negligence the principle of res ipsa loquitur applies
and the plaintiff does not have to prove anything further, this is in consonance with the principle of
evidence15 intended to aid a plaintiff to recover compensation who for no fault of his is unable to
provide evidence as to how the wrong occurred.
Negligence is simply the failure to exercise due care. The three ingredients of negligence are as
follows:
1. The defendant owes a duty of care to the plaintiff.
2. The defendant has breached this duty of care.
3. The plaintiff has suffered an injury due to this breach.
Medical negligence is no different. It is only that in a medical negligence case, most often, the doctor
is the defendant.
It is well known that a doctor owes a duty of care to his patient. This duty can either be a contractual
duty or a duty arising out of tort law. In some cases, however, though a doctor-patient relationship is
not established, the courts have imposed a duty upon the doctor. In the words of the Supreme Court
every doctor, at the governmental hospital or elsewhere, has a professional obligation to extend his
12
Supra note 8,9
13
Tackling Corruption In Indian Medicine, The Lancet, Volume 382, Issue 9905, Pages e23 - e24, 16 November 2013
14
V. Kishan Rao v. Nikhil Super Speciality Hospital and Anr. 2011ACJ 500
15
Indian Evidence Act 1872
services with due expertise for protecting life16. These cases are however, clearly restricted to
situations where there is danger to the life of the person. Impliedly, therefore, in other circumstances
the doctor does not owe a duty.
The duty owed by a doctor towards his patient, in the words of the Supreme Court is to bring to his
task a reasonable degree of skill and knowledge and to exercise a reasonable degree of care 17. The
doctor, in other words, does not have to adhere to the highest or sink to the lowest degree of care and
competence in the light of the circumstance. A doctor, therefore, does not have to ensure that every
patient who comes to him is cured. He has to only ensure that he confers a reasonable degree of care
and competence.
Reasonable degree of care and skill means that the degree of care and competence that an ordinary
competent member of the profession who professes to have those skills would exercise in the
circumstance in question. At this stage, it may be necessary to note the distinction between the
standard of care and the degree of care. The standard of care is a constant and remains the same in all
cases. It is the requirement that the conduct of the doctor be reasonable and need not necessarily
conform to the highest degree of care or the lowest degree of care possible. The degree of care is a
variable and depends on the circumstance. It is used to refer to what actually amounts to
reasonableness in a given situation.
Thus, though the same standard of care is expected from a generalist and a specialist, the degree of
care would be different. In other words, both are expected to take reasonable care but what amounts to
reasonable care with regard to the specialist differs from what amount of reasonable care is standard
for the generalist. In fact, the law expects the specialist to exercise the ordinary skill of this speciality
and not of any ordinary doctor. Though the courts have accepted the need to impose a higher degree
of duty on a specialist, they have refused to lower it in the case of a novice.
Another question that arises is with regard to the knowledge that is expected from a doctor. Should it
include the latest developments in the field, hence require constant updating or is it enough to follow
what has been traditionally followed? It has been recognized by the courts that what amounts to
reasonableness changes with time. The standard, as stated clearly herein before requires that the
doctor possess reasonable knowledge.
16
Parmanand Kataria v. Union of India, AIR 1989 SC 2039.
17
Laxman v. Trimback, AIR 1969 SC 128.
Hence, we can conclude that a doctor has to constantly update his knowledge to meet the standard
expected of him. Furthermore, since only reasonable knowledge is required, it may not be necessary
for him to be aware of all the developments that have taken place.
We have, until now, examined the duty of a doctor in so far as treating a patient is concerned or in
diagnosing the ailment. Doctors are, however, imposed with a duty to take the consent of a
person/patient before performing acts like surgical operations and in some cases treatment as well. To
summarize, any act that requires contact with the patient has to be consented by the patient. A duty of
care is imposed on the doctors in taking the patient's consent. Naturally, a question arises as to what is
this duty of care. As per the judicial pronouncements, this duty is to disclose all such information as
would be relevant or necessary for the patient to make a decision. Therefore, the duty does not extend
to disclosing all possible information in this regard. Furthermore, this duty does not extend to warning
a patient of all the normal attendant risks of an operation. The standard of care required of a doctor
while obtaining consent is again that of a reasonable doctor, as in other cases.
The liability of a doctor arises not when the patient has suffered any injury, but when the injury has
resulted due to the conduct of the doctor, which has fallen below that of reasonable care. In other
words, the doctor is not liable for every injury suffered by a patient. He is liable for only those that are
a consequence of a breach of his duty. Hence, once the existence of a duty has been established, the
plaintiff must still prove the breach of duty and the causation. In case there is no breach or the breach
did not cause the damage, the doctor will not be liable. In order to show the breach of duty, the burden
on the plaintiff would be to first show what is considered as reasonable under those circumstances and
then that the conduct of the doctor was below this degree. It must be noted that it is not sufficient to
prove a breach, to merely show that there exists a body of opinion which goes against the
practice/conduct of the doctor.
With regard to causation, the court has held that it must be shown that of all the possible reasons for
the injury, the breach of duty of the doctor was the most probable cause. It is not sufficient to show
that the breach of duty is merely one of the probable causes. Hence, if the possible causes of an injury
are the negligence of a third party, an accident, or a breach of duty care of the doctor, then it must be
established that the breach of duty of care of the doctor was the most probable cause of the injury to
discharge the burden of proof on the plaintiff.
Normally, the liability arises only when the plaintiff is able to discharge the burden on him of proving
negligence. However, in some cases like a swab left over the abdomen of a patient or the leg
amputated instead of being put in a cast to treat the fracture, the principle of res ipsa loquitur
(meaning thereby the thing speaks for itself) might come into play. The following are the necessary
conditions of this principle.
1. Complete control rests with the doctor.
2. It is the general experience of mankind that the accident in question does not happen without
negligence. This principle is often misunderstood as a rule of evidence, which it is not. It is a
principle in the law of torts. When this principle is applied, the burden is on the
doctor/defendant to explain how the incident could have occurred without negligence. In the
absence of any such explanation, liability of the doctor arises.
Normally, a doctor is held liable for only his acts (other than cases of vicarious liability). However, in
some cases, a doctor can be held liable for the acts of another person which injures the patient. The
need for such a liability may arise when the person committing the act may not owe a duty of care at
all to the patient or that in committing the act he has not breached any duty. A typical example of a
case where such a situation may arise is in the case of a surgery. If a junior doctor is involved as part
of the team, then his duty, as far as the exercise of the specialist skill is concerned, is to seek the
advice or help of a senior doctor. He will have discharged his duty once he does this and will not be
liable even if he actually commits the act which causes the injury. In such a case, it is the duty of the
senior doctor to have advised him properly. If he did not do so, then he would be the one responsible
for the injury caused to the patient, though he did not commit the act.
A doctor is not necessarily liable in all cases where a patient has suffered an injury. This may either be
due to the fact that he has a valid defense or that he has not breached the duty of care. Error of
judgment can either be a mere error of judgment or error of judgment due to negligence. Only in the
case of the former, it has been recognized by the courts as not being a breach of the duty of care. It can
be described as the recognition in law of the human fallibility in all spheres of life. A mere error of
judgment occurs when a doctor makes a decision that turns out to be wrong. It is situation in which
only in retrospect can we say there was an error. At the time when the decision was made, it did not
seem wrong. If, however, due consideration of all the factors was not taken, then it would amount to
an error of judgment due to negligence.
JUDICIAL INTERPRETATION OF MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE
LIABILITY
By and large the following legal issues have been addressed and responded to by different forums and
Courts in India.
From the time of Lord Denning until now it has been held in several judgments that a charge of
professional negligence against the medical professional stood on a different footing from a charge of
negligence against the driver of a motor car. The burden of proof is correspondingly greater on the
person who alleges negligence against a doctor. It is a known fact that with the best skill in the world,
things sometimes went wrong in medical treatment or surgical operation. A doctor was not to be held
negligent simply because something went wrong.
The National Commission as well as the Apex Court in catena of decisions has held that the doctor is
not liable for negligence because of someone else of better skill or knowledge would have prescribed
a different treatment or operated in a different way. He is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in
accordance with the practice accepted as proper by a reasonable body of medical professionals. The
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Dr. Laxman Balkrishna vs. Dr. Trimbak, AIR 1969 SC 128, has
held the above view that is still considered to be a landmark judgment for deciding a case of
negligence. In the case of Indian Medical Association vs. Santha, the Apex Court has decided that the
skill of a medical practitioner differs from doctor to doctor and it is incumbent upon the Complainant
to prove that a doctor was negligent in the line of treatment that resulted in the life of the patient.
Therefore, a Judge can find a doctor guilty only when it is proved that he has fallen short of the
standard of reasonable medical care.
The principle of Res-Ipsa-Loquitur has not been generally followed by the Consumer Courts in India
including the National Commission or even by the Apex Court in deciding the case under this Act. In
catena of decisions, it has been held that it is for the Complainant to prove the negligence or
deficiency in service by adducing expert evidence or opinion and this fact is to be proved beyond all
reasonable doubts. Mere allegation of negligence will be of no help to the Complainant.18
18
Smt. Savitri Singh v. Dr. Ranbir PD. Singh and others. 2004;(1) CPJ 25 (Bihar)
What Constitutes Medical Negligence?
Failure of an operation and side effects are not negligence. The term negligence is defined as the
absence or lack of care that a reasonable person should have taken in the circumstances of the case. In
the allegation of negligence in a case of wrist drop, the following observations were made. Nothing
has been mentioned in the complaint or in the grounds of appeal about the type of care desired from
the doctor in which he failed. It is not said anywhere what type of negligence was done during the
course of the operation. Nerves may be cut down at the time of operation and mere cutting of a nerve
does not amount to negligence. It is not said that it has been deliberately done.
To the contrary it is also not said that the nerves were cut in the operation and it was not cut at the
time of the accident. No expert evidence whatsoever has been produced. Only the report of the Chief
Medical Officer of Haridwar has been produced wherein it said that the patient is a case of post-
traumatic wrist drop. It is not said that it is due to any operation or the negligence of the doctor. The
mere allegation will not make out a case of negligence, unless it is proved by reliable evidence and is
supported by expert evidence. It is true that the operation has been performed. It is also true that the
Complainant has many expenses but unless the negligence of the doctor is proved, she is not entitled
to any compensation.19
It is now a settled principle of law that a medical practitioner will bring to his task a reasonable degree
of skill and knowledge and must exercise a reasonable degree of care. Neither the very highest nor the
very lowest degree of care and competence judged in the light of circumstances in each case is what
the law requires. Judged from this yardstick, post-operative infection or shortening of the leg was not
due to any negligence or deficiency in service on the part of the opposite party Appellant. Deficiency
in service thus cannot be fastened on the opposite party.20
In a case that led to visual impairment as a side effect, the following observations were made. The
literature with regard to lariago clearly mentioned that the side effect of this medicine if taken for a
longer duration can effect eyesight but this is not a fact in this case. Besides, there is no expert
evidence on record to show that use of this medicine caused damage to the patient's eyesight.
Even for argument's sake, if it is accepted that this medicine caused damage to the patient's eyesight,
if the Respondent-doctor is one who has advised his patient to use this medicine after an examination
in which he found the patient to be suffering from malaria, in that case as well the doctor-Respondent
cannot be held guilty of negligence or deficient in his service. However, as stated above in this case
the medicine has been used by the patient in low doses for a few days and there is no expert evidence
19
Smt. Vimlesh Dixit v. Dr. R.K. Singhal. 2004;(I) CPJ 123 (Uttaranchal)
20
Dr. Kamta Prasad Singh v. Nagina Prasad. 2000;(III) CPJ 283 (WB)
to show that the use of medicine has affected his eyesight. Therefore, the Complainant-Appellant has
failed to prove that the Respondent was negligent and deficient in his duty as a doctor.21
It has been held in different judgments by the National Commission and by the Hon'ble Supreme
Court that a charge of professional negligence against a doctor stood on a different footing from a
charge of negligence against a driver of a vehicle. The burden of proof is correspondingly greater on
the person who alleges negligence against a doctor. It is a known fact that even with a doctor with the
best skills, things sometimes go wrong during medical treatment or in a surgery. A doctor is not to be
held negligent simply because something went wrong.
It is an admitted fact that the Complainant's eyesight was not restored after the operation was
conducted by the Appellant but on this ground alone a doctor can not be held negligent because even
after adopting all necessary precautions and care the result of the operation may not be satisfactory
since it depends on various other factors. The contention of the Appellant was that the patient was
suffering from diabetes and blood pressure and in many such cases eyesight is not restored after the
operation however carefully it is done. In this case, there is nothing on record to show that something
went wrong due to an act of the Appellant-doctor. There is no evidence to come to the conclusion that
the Appellant fell below the standard of a reasonably competent practitioner in their field, so much so
that their conduct might be deserving of censure. The Appellant cannot be liable for negligence
because someone else of better skill or knowledge would have prescribed a different method of
operation in different way.
The evidence suggests that the Appellant has performed the operation and acted in accordance with
the practice regularly accepted and adopted by him in this hospital and several patients are regularly
treated for their eye problems. The Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Dr. Laxman Balkrishna vs.
Dr. Triambak, AIR 1969 Supreme Court page 128 has held the above view and this view has been
further confirmed in the case of the Indian Medical Association vs. Santha. The Apex Court and the
National Commission has held that the skill of a medical practitioner differs from doctor to doctor and
it is an incumbent upon the Complainant to prove that the Appellant was negligent in the line of
treatment that resulted in the loss of eyesight. A Judge can find a doctor guilty only when it is proved
that he has fallen short of a standard of reasonable medical care.
The fact and circumstances of the case before us show that the Appellant has attended to the patient
with due care, skill, and diligence. Simply because the patient's eyesight was not restored
satisfactorily, this account alone is not grounds for holding the doctor guilty of negligence and
deficient in his duty. It is settled law that it is for the Complainant to prove the negligence or
21
Ajay Kumar v. Dr. Devendra Nath. 2004;(II) CPJ 482
deficiency in service by adducing expert evidence or opinion and this fact is to be proved beyond all
reasonable doubt. Mere allegation of negligence will be of no help to the Complainant.22
The following cases of alleged medical negligence provide an insight into how the final decision is
reached by the judicial bodies. All medical negligence cases concern various questions of fact, when
we say burden of proving negligence lies on the Complainant, it means he has the task of convincing
the court that his version of the facts is the correct one. No expert opinion has been produced by the
Complainant to contradict the report of the Board of Doctors. The appeal of the Complainant was
dismissed with costs as No expert opinion has been produced by him.23 In a case of an improper
union of the patella, no expert has been produced by the Complainant to prove negligence of the
opposite party. Thus, it cannot be said with exactness that treatment of the Complainant by the
opposite party was against the norms prescribed under the medical jurisprudence or that the opposite
party in any way was negligent or deficient in the performance of his duties.24
Allegation of medical negligence is a serious issue and it is for the person who sets up the case to
prove negligence based on material on record or by way of evidence. The complaint of medical
negligence was dismissed because the applicant failed to establish and prove any instance of medical
negligence.25 Merely because the operation did not succeed, the doctor cannot be said to be
negligent and the appeal of the doctor was allowed.26 A mere allegation will not make a case of
negligence unless it is proved by reliable evidence and is supported by expert evidence and the
appeal was dismissed.
The commission cannot constitute itself into an expert body and contradict the statement of the
doctor unless there is something contrary on the record by way of an expert opinion or there is any
medical treatise on which reliance could be based and the Revision petition of the doctor was
allowed. In another case, an X-ray report indicated a small opacity that similar to an opaque shadow
that becomes visible for many causes other than a calculus. It could not be assumed that still stone
existed in the right kidney that had not been operated upon. Under the circumstances, we do not think
that any case of negligence has been made by the Complainant. This petition is, therefore, allowed.27
The Commission cannot constitute itself into an expert body and contradict the statement of the doctor
unless there is something contrary on the record by way of an expert opinion or there is any medical
22
Dr. Akhil Kumar Jain v. Lallan Prasad. 2004;(II) CPJ 504
23
Amar Singh v. Frances Newton Hospital and Anr. 2001;(I) CPJ 8
24
Id
25
Mam Chand v. Dr. GS Mangat of Mangat Hospital. 2004;(I) CPJ 79 (NC)
26
Dr. (Smt) Kumud Garg v. Raja Bhatia. 2004;(I) CPJ 369
27
Dr. Harkanwaljit Singh Saini v. Gurbax Singh and Anr. 2003;(I) CPJ 153 (NC)
treatise on which reliance could be based.28 In this case there was a false allegation of urinary stone
not being removed as shown by a shadow in the xray The burden of proving the negligent act or
wrong diagnosis was on the Complainant and the appeal was dismissed in another case of alleged
medical negligence as no expert evidence was produced.29
The case discussed below is not a case of apparent negligence on the part of the surgeon in conducting
the operation, but about the quality of the plate used for fixing the bone. In the present case, the
Complainant has not produced any expert witnesses to prove that there was any fault in the
performance of the operations. Fixation of the bones by using plates is one of the recognized modes of
treatment in the case of fracture of the bones. If the opposite party has adopted the aforesaid method,
though subsequently the plate broke, negligence cannot be attributed to the doctor. This is not a case
where the wounds of the operation were infected or any other complication arose. Breaking of the
plate approximately 6 months after it was placed cannot be attributed towards a negligent act of the
doctor in performing the operation. The District Forum rightly held that the Complainant had failed to
prove his case.30 There is nothing on the record to suggest that there has been any negligence and/or
deficiency in service on the part of the Appellant except the oral submission of the
Respondent/Complainant.
In such cases, before coming to a positive finding, there must be expert evidence on record as has
been held both by the National Commission as well as the Apex Court.31 As per the settled law, the
onus to prove that there was negligence deficiency in service on the part of the opposite parties,
while diagnosing and treating the Complainant, lay heavily on the Complainant. In the given facts, the
Complainant has failed to discharge the onus that was on him. The complaint was dismissed as the
Complainant failed to discharge the onus to prove negligence or deficiency in service.32
In medical negligence cases, it is for the patient to establish his case against the medical professional
and not for the medical professional to prove that he acted with sufficient care and skill. Refer to the
decision of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in the case of Smt. Sudha Gupta and Ors. vs. State of
M.P. and Ors., 1999 (2) MPLJ 259.
The National commission has also taken the same view observing that a mishap during operation
cannot be said to be deficiency or negligence in medical services. Negligence has to be established
and cannot be presumed. Refer to the decision of the National Commission in the case of Kanhiya
Kumar Singhvs. Park Medicare and Research Centre, III (1999) CPJ 9 (NC) (2000) NCJ (NC) 12.
A similar view has been taken by the MRTP Commission in the case of P.K. Pandey vs. Sufai
Nursing Home, I (1999) CPJ 65 (MRTP) 2000 NCJ (MRTP) 268. Followed by this, refer to the
28
Dr. Karkanwaljit Singh Saini v. Gurbax Singh and another. 2003;(I) CPJ 153 (NC)
29
Ns Sahota v. New Ruby Hospital and Ors. 2000;(II) CPJ 345
30
Sardool Singh v. Muni Lal Chopra and another. 1999;(I) CPJ 64 (Punjab)
31
Dr. Manjit Singh Sandhu v. Uday Kant Thakur and others. 2002;(III) CPJ 242.
32
Director, Rajiv Gandhi Cancer Institute and Research Centre and Ors. 2003;(I) CPJ 305 (Delhi)
Commission in Vaqar Mohammed Khan and Anr. vs. Dr. S. K. Tandon, II (2000) CPJ 169.33 Both the
lower Fora have held that there is no evidence brought on record by the Complainant to show that
there was any negligence by the Respondent while implanting the lens in the eye of the Complainant
resulting in a persistent problem in the left eye.34
The Complainant does not examine any expert on the subject to establish his allegation of negligence
on the part of the doctor. Unfortunate though the incident is, the Complainant needs to establish
negligence on the part of the doctor to succeed in a case like this. We may observe that there is hardly
any cogent material to substantiate the allegation contained in the petition of Complainant. Under the
circumstances, we cannot but hold that the Complainant has failed to prove the allegations against the
opposite parties.35 As held by the National Commission in Sethuraman Subramaniam Iyer vs. Triveni
Nursing Home and anr., 1998 CTJ7, in the absence of such evidence regarding the cause of death and
absence of any expert medical evidence, the Complainants have failed to prove negligence on the part
of the opposite parties.36
In order to decide whether negligence is established in any particular case, the alleged act, omission,
or course of conduct that is the subject of the complaint must be judged not by ideal standards nor in
the abstract but against the background of the circumstances in which the treatment in question was
given. The true test for establishing negligence on the part of a doctor is as to whether he has been
proven guilty of such failure as no doctor with ordinary skills would be guilty of if acting with
reasonable care.
Merely because a medical procedure fails, it cannot be stated that the medical practitioner is guilty of
negligence unless it is proved that the medical practitioner did not act with sufficient care and skill
and the burden of proving this rests upon the person who asserts it. The duty of a medical practitioner
arises from the fact that he does something to a human being that is likely to cause physical damage
unless it is not done with proper care and skill. There is no question of warranty, undertaking, or
profession of a skill. The standard of care and skill to satisfy the duty in tort is that of the ordinary
competent medical practitioner exercising an ordinary degree of professional skill. As per the law, a
defendant charged with negligence can clear himself if he shows that he acted in accordance with the
general and approved practice. It is not required in the discharge of his duty of care that he should use
the highest degree of skill, since this may never be acquired. Even a deviation from normal
professional practice is not necessary in all cases evident of negligence.37
33
Marble City Hospital and Research Centre and Ors. v. V.R. Soni. 2004;(II) CPJ 102 (MP)
34
Inderjeet Singh v. Dr. Jagdeep Singh. 2004;(III) CPJ 20 (NC)
35
Nirmalendu Paul v. Dr. P.K. Bakshi and anr. 2000;(III) CPJ 79
36
Surinder Kumar (Laddi) and anr. V. Dr. Santosh Menon and Ors. 2000;(III) CPJ 517.
37
Rajinder Singh v. Batra Hospital and Medical Research Centre and Anr. 2000;(III) CPJ 558
THE JUDGMENT ON COMPENSATION IN THE ANURADHA
SAHA CASE
Anuradha Saha, a child psychologist from USA had come to Kolkata on a vacation with her husband
Kunal Saha. What started out as an idyllic vacation quickly turned into a nightmare when Anuradha
complained of skin rashes and tragically lost her life one month later after going through a series of
unfortunate events which caused immense mental and physical agony to the couple. Her death was
preceded by a wrong diagnosis, wrong and possibly lethal treatment, drug overdose and deficiency in
medical service.
Finally when her condition deteriorated she was moved from Kolkata to one of Indias largest
hospitals, in Mumbai, where she was diagnosed with an extremely rare disease Toxic Epidermal
Necrolysis (TEN) which is contracted by less than one in a million people. Soon after, she died in
Mumbai on May 28th 199838. Her husband Kunal Saha soon filed criminal and civil charges against
the doctors and hospital responsible, and after the criminal suit was dismissed, represented her in a
lengthy and tough civil suit for 15 years which finally ended with the Supreme Courts order to award
compensation to the claimant in excess of Rs.11 crore including interest.
The compensation was warranted by the exceptionally challenging nature of tortious litigation
involving medical negligence but was the quantum rational? What judicial precedents will it set for
the future? The calculation of damages in this case sows seeds of confusion for future litigations of
similar nature.
This unprecedented amount was calculated by taking into account various factors especially the
economic factors. The mode of calculation of damages adopted by the apex court was the Multiplier
Method39, where the income of the victim is multiplied by the number of years of working capacity
left. In this case, the annual income of the deceased was $30,000 which was multiplied by 30 years
which was argued to be her minimum working capacity. Earlier precedents show that the annual net
income of the victim was multiplied by 10-18 years even if the victims earning capacity was higher
because when the patient comes for treatment he is already in a compromising state. In the present
case, it was expected that the victim would have worked for at least 30 years more had not her life
38
The Anuradha Saha Case and Medical Error in India, Vol - XLVIII No. 47, Economic and Political Weekly (November
2013).
39
Deterrence and Damages: The Multiplier Principle and Its Alternatives, Michigan Law Review, Vol. 97, No. 7 (1999).
been cut short by medical negligence, and hence the value of the multiplier is rational without being
confined to arbitrary limits set by precedents.
40
Jordan Wilder Connors, Treating like Sub decisions Alike: The Scope of Stare Decisis as Applied to Judicial
Methodology, Columbia Law Review, Vol. 108, No. 3, pp. 681-715 (2008).
c. Cascading effect on Indian policy
This judgment on damages may thus trigger a series of adverse consequences by sending a
warning signal to the medical community; practitioners may become apprehensive and over
cautious while treating their patients in fear of incurring huge losses if something goes wrong.
It may also lead to the practice of defensive medicine in India which occurs when the
diagnostic treatment of the patient does not prioritize recovery of the patient but rather treats
the patient with the view to safeguard the doctor from medical negligence litigation. This will
lead to a situation akin to policy paralysis in the Indian bureaucracy. Well intentioned doctors
may become averse to taking small risks while treating patients which would result in
degradation of medical services in India affecting the lives of millions of patients. Ironically,
this in itself could successfully paralyse the position that India enjoys as an affordable
healthcare destination internationally!
The mathematical formula created in the judgment on compensation will also send an alert to
insurance companies; this may well create an excessive burden on patients all over the country in
terms of medical insurance costs. In the light of the award, doctors will naturally look to insure
themselves against potential liability; the extra cost would trickle down to the lowest common
denominator, i.e. the patient who will, once again, suffer.
CONCLUSION
Hard cases make bad law41 is a common legal adage which means that an extreme case is a poor basis
for making a general law to be used in less extreme or ordinary cases. The present case is prima facie
a hard case, partly due to the extremely rare nature of the disease and partly due to the quantum of
damages awarded. Therefore, according to the maxim, if this case is allowed to be a precedent, it
would act as a poor precedent for future litigation as the facts and circumstances of this case are
exceptional in nature. In an interesting economic segue, a hypothetical presents itself thus: had the
Supreme Court passed its judgment a decade earlier, the award for damages would have been
significantly lesser in comparison, this is due to the devaluation of the Indian Rupee against the U.S.
Dollar!42 The deceaseds net annual income was measured in dollars which were converted into
rupees for the purpose of compensation. Therefore, the delay in justice has resulted in a significant
increase in compensation.
The Anuradha Saha case after 15 years of hard litigation battles has finally come to an end. But this
case will not be forgotten as it will be debated and deliberated on for years to come as a landmark
judgment in the area of Consumer Protection law and Medical Negligence in India and also the
repercussions on public policy.
But this case is an exception and invokes the question of whether money is power and plays a role in
the administration of justice in India. All over the country there are thousands of such cases where
medical practitioners unscrupulously indulge in professional malpractices and escape all liabilities
either because the patient/ kin of the patient is too poor to enter into what is doomed to be, by the
same power of precedent, a protracted and often one sided legal battle. This case has created history
by sending a signal to the entire medical community at large that impunity for the tort of medical
negligence is unacceptable; medical practitioners do indeed come within the definition of a service
provider and a patient is a consumer and is entitled to get relief for medical negligence.
41
Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214 (1944), following Winterbottom v Wright (1842) 10 M&W 109.
42
See for analysis on the devaluation of the rupee and its implications on policy http://
www.indiastat.com/article/59/nikhil/full%20text.pdf
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Statutes referred:
Cases referred:
1. Jordan Wilder Connors, Treating like Sub decisions Alike: The Scope of Stare Decisis as
Applied to Judicial Methodology, Columbia Law Review, Vol. 108, No. 3, pp. 681-715
(2008).
2. Deterrence and Damages: The Multiplier Principle and Its Alternatives, Michigan Law
Review, Vol. 97, No. 7 (1999).
3. The Anuradha Saha Case and Medical Error in India, Vol - XLVIII No. 47, Economic and
Political Weekly (November 2013).
4. Tackling Corruption In Indian Medicine, The Lancet, Volume 382, Issue 9905, Pages e23 -
e24, 16 November 2013
5. L. H. LaRue, Hohfeldian Rights and Fundamental Rights, The University of Toronto Law
Journal, Vol. 35, No. 1, pp. 86-93 (1985).
1. See for analysis on the devaluation of the rupee and its implications on policy http://
www.indiastat.com/article/59/nikhil/full%20text.pdf
2. Pendency of cases are gigantic problems: SC Judge, Daily News & Analysis, Times of
India, 12 October 2011