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Abhishek (Advocate)     01 October 2009

Judgement

Plese provide me the judgements for the following issue:

The Opposite Party has not served the bills on COmplainant against which the consumer complaint is filed, but Sec 7-B of Telegraph Rules restrict the jurisdiction of the consumer Forum to entertain such complaint.

I request all the forum members to help me out and provide me any judgement which overrides the above.

 

Regards,

Abhishek

 



Learning

 5 Replies

Raj Kumar Makkad (Adv P & H High Court Chandigarh)     02 October 2009

Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. & another versus Ravinder Kumar 2007 (1) CLT 661 (NC)

V.V.RAMDAS (Advocate)     02 October 2009

Dear Makked,

Thanks for providing such befitting citation to the problem of Abhishek but you might accrossed the recent decision of SC  that Sec 7-B of Telegraph Rules restrict the jurisdiction of the consumer Forum to entertain such complaint. So the decision of National Commission has got no meaning if the other side will use the Supreme Courts Ruling.

Abhishek (Advocate)     05 October 2009

Dear Mr. Makkad,

 

Thanks alot for the judgement, but let me know whether the Telegraph Act is covered to all the Telecom Companies or it is only for the BSNL and Postal Authorities. As i have not found the proper definition of Telegraph in the Act.

Please suggets and guide me on the issue.

 

Kind Regards,

Abhishek

V.T.Venkataram (Advocate and Consumer Activist)     06 October 2009

Please refer to the order of the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7687 OF 2004 ( General Manager, Telecom---Appellant Versus M. Krishnan & Anr---Respondent)passed on 1 September, 2009. I am a quotating the following passage grom the Judgement :- "In our opinion when there is a special remedy provided in Section 7-B of the Indian Telegraph Act regarding disputes in respect of telephone bills, then the remedy under the Consumer Protection Act is by implication barred" "It is well settled that the special law overrides the general law"

V.T.Venkataram (Advocate and Consumer Activist)     09 July 2010

 

It is well settled that the Consumer Protection Act provides an additional remedy. Section 3 says that its provisions shall be “in addition and not in derogation of the provisions of other laws”. This was why several consumer cases were being heard by the forums though there were special laws.

The present order goes against the precedents set by the Supreme Court itself. In Skypak Couriers vs Tata Chemicals (2000), it asserted that even if there existed arbitration clause in a contract, a complaint can be made before the consumer forum if there was deficiency in service. The three-judge bebch stated  that this was because the consumer law was an additional remedy open to the aggrieved person. The present telecom order was made by a two-judge bench, which was bound to follow the ruling of the larger bench.

In Fair Air Engineers vs NK Modi (1997), the court stated that the consumer forums should not relegate the complaining party to “cumbersome arbitration proceedings”. Parliament was aware of the provisions of the Arbitration Act, the Contract Act and the Civil Procedure Code remedies. Nonetheless the Consumer Protection Act provides an additional remedy, the court said.

It upheld the consumer’s right to move a forum even when the law provides for arbitration, in Thirumurgan Coop Credit Society vs M Lalitha. The Tamil Nadu co-operative law has a provision for arbitration in case of disputes. Even then the court emphasised that the consumer forum can hear disputes among the members of the co-op. In Sumatidevi vs Union of India (2004), an old woman travelling in an AC coach was robbed by an unruly mob at Nagpur. She moved the consumer forum, not the railway tribunal, for damages. The Supreme Court upheld the award of the consumer forum.

How difficult it is for a common man to fight giant monopolies can be understood from a recent case, Telecom vs Ajaib Singh. The phone connection of a 76-year-old man was cut on alleged non-payment of a huge bill. Though normally his bill was only Rs 160 a month, it jumped to Rs 20,000 for two months. He was complaining about ghost ringing on the phone, but it was not rectified; instead he got an inflated bill.

“It is a sordid saga of state monopoly,” the Punjab state consumer commission said in its judgment while awarding him Rs 15,000. The senior citizen had to go without a phone for ten years when his complaint was before the consumer forum. If he had asked the department to go for arbitration by a government nominee, it would have taken an extended life time to get a verdict, most likely against him.

“We cannot term this anything less than cruelty perpetrated against a common man,” the judgment said. There are numerous judgments in which wrong billings and disconnections were the staple theme and the consumer forums had come to the aid of the subscribers.

The question whether a two-judge bench can upset the law laid down by a larger bench in this case, is open to debate.


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