(1.) The appeal is against the dismissal of the petition for a claim for injuries suffered in a motor accident. The accident had taken place on 04.07.2010 at about 8:30 PM when the claimant was said to be travelling in a scooter and dashed against a tractor by the rash and negligent driving of the tractor that belonged to the PWD Department. The vehicle had no registration number and the trolly attached to it also had no registration number. The claimant had taken to the hospital and he was not in a fit state to give statement on the following day on 05.07.2010. The police recorded a statement of the claimant giving the name of the driver, which according to him, had been given to him by one of his friends. The driver gave evidence at the time of trial that there was no scope for the vehicle to go to the particular place where the accident had taken place and that at the relevant time on 04.07.2010, the vehicle was very much lying parked in the office of PWD. The logbook for the tractor was also produced to vouch for the truth of the contention of the driver.
(2.) The Tribunal reasoned that if the whole case was to be anchored on an information obtained by the plaintiff about the identity of the driver and the vehicle and that information was through a third party, the non-examination of the person, who supplied that information, was material. The whole weight of the case of the petitioner was that a criminal case had been registered against the driver of the PWD and that itself was a proof of the involvement of the vehicle.
(3.) I must observe that the quality of evidence is too shaky to merely rely on the fact of registration of complaint as establishing the involvement of the vehicle as well. The Tribunal has correctly reasoned that the non-examination of the person, who had supplied information about the name of the driver was material. I do not find any error for interference.