SEP 8
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has said nursing homes without an intensive care
unit facility can't carry out surgeries on a patient as absence of an ICU posed
danger to the patient's life. A bench of Justices Adarsh Kumar Goeland U U Lalit gave the ruling on a petition filed by Bijoy
Kumar Sinha who lost his wife due to alleged
medical negligence of Dr Biswanath Das who conducted a hysterectomy surgery at Kolkata's
Ashutosh Nursing Home in Kolkata. The nursing home did not have an ICU facility.
The Supreme Court's ruling has implications for beleaguered homebuyers of Jaypee Infratech projects.
The Supreme Court's ruling has implications for beleaguered homebuyers of Jaypee Infratech projects.
The
petitioner, Bijoy Kumar Sinha, died while fighting a lengthy 23-year-long
litigation over his wife's death, in consumer forums before his son Soumik
pursued the case to get justice for his mother in the Supreme Court. The SC said that the Consumer Protection Act was an
additional remedy, thereby indicating that proceedings against a realtor under
the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 wouldn't bar recourse to parallel
action in consumer forums. This will boost hopes of all homebuyers facing
harassment at the hands of truant realtors. A bench of Justices Adarsh
Kumar Goel and U U Lalit said,
"Provisions of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, are in addition to and
not in derogation of any other law. Thus, the Act provides for additional
remedies. The authorities under the Act exercise quasi-judicial powers. The
award of damages (in the case filed by Sinha) is aimed at bringing about
qualitative change in the attitude of service providers." While absolving Dr Biswanath Das of
medical negligence for deciding to perform surgery on Sinha's wife, the court
awarded a compensation of Rs 5 lakh to Soumik. This ruling means that even if a
realtor has been proceeded against under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code,
people won't be barred from taking recourse to consumer forums to claim relief
for deficient services. The apex court said though an alternative dispute
redressal mechanism for settlement of disputes outside courts was applicable
only to civil cases, "there is no reason to exclude its applicability to
consumer fora". "It will be open to the national commission and the
state commissions to coordinate with the national legal services authority and
state legal services authorities for settlement of disputes by resorting to
alternative dispute redressal mechanism," the Supreme Court said.
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