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          New Delhi, May 20 (IANS) Selling your secondhand two-wheeler or   car, but not fulfilling the legal norms of transfer to the new owner could make   you liable to pay for any accidents caused by the vehicle, the Delhi High Court   has ruled.
 In its judgment early this week, the court made the original   owner of the vehicle Mukesh Kumar equally liable to pay for damage that occurred   due to an accident involving its new buyer.
 |  Kumar's fault, said the court, was he did not legally transfer the documents of   ownership of the vehicle in the name of the buyer, O.M. Prakash. 
 "The   appellant (Mukesh Kumar) who was the registered owner of the offending vehicle   must be deemed to continue as the owner of the vehicle," Justice Reva Khetrapal   said in her judgement.
 
 "Accordingly, the owner and the third party are   equally liable for the compensation payable to the claimants."
 
 The court   was hearing the appeal filed by Kumar against the order passed by the Motor   Accidents Claims Tribunal (MACT) court here May 27, 2009.
 
 The road   accident involving the concerned vehicle had occurred on Feb 12, 2005, due to   rash and negligent driving. The widow of the man who died in the accident had   approached MACT seeking compensation of Rs.20 lakh.
 
 MACT agreed with her   argument for compensation to be used to fend for her two children, as the   accident had taken away the soul bread earner of the family.
 
 However, the   case took an interesting turn when the accused driver revealed that he was not   the owner of the vehicle, and that it belonged to Prakash from whom he had   borrowed it.
 
 Meanwhile, Prakash also disputed in court that he was not   the original owner of the vehicle, as it was still legally owned by   Kumar.
 
 MACT in its judgment ordered: "The insurance company shall pay the   awarded amount to the family in the first instance and thereafter recover the   same from the Kumar and Prakash."
 
 This particular judgment was disputed   by Kumar, who appealed against it in the high court, only to be slapped with the   new judgment making him equally liable.
 
 Dismissing Kumar's appeal,   Justice Khetrapal said: "Appellant failed in his duty of ensuring that the   ownership of the vehicle was transferred to Prakash in the records of the   registering authority and for this lapse on his part, he too must be held liable   to pay the compensation amount."
 
 
 
      
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