Your insurer rejects your claim because you did not file a survey report that, by the policy wording, had to be lodged before an event that had not yet happened, or submit a document that did not exist in time. You could not have met that condition no matter what you did. Can the insurer still deny the claim on that ground? No. The Supreme Court held in 2025 that a policy condition impossible to perform cannot be used to defeat an otherwise valid claim.
This is one of the most useful rulings for ordinary policyholders in recent years, because insurers often bury such conditions deep in the fine print and then quote them to escape paying.
If a condition in your insurance policy was impossible to perform within the policy period, the insurer cannot treat it as a condition precedent and cannot rely on it to repudiate your claim. The rule comes from the Supreme Court judgment in Sohom Shipping Pvt. Ltd v. The New India Assurance Co. Ltd, neutral citation 2025 INSC 453, decided on 7 April 2025.
Note carefully what the rule does and does not say. It protects you when a condition was genuinely impossible to meet. It does not wipe out every exclusion or every condition in a policy. Material conditions that you could have met still bind you.
The dispute arose from a marine hull and cargo policy. The policy carried a condition that the voyage had to commence and complete before the monsoon set in. Given the route involved, the Court found there was no permutation in which the policyholder could have actually fulfilled that condition. Strict compliance would have made any claim impossible from the start.
The Court held that because the condition could not be performed, it could not stand as a condition precedent to the insurer's liability. It treated the condition as impliedly waived because of its non-material nature, and ruled that the insurer could not rely on it to reject the claim. The matter was sent back to determine how much was payable, so the judgment fixes the principle rather than any amount.
The case turned on a marine policy, but the principle is general. The same logic protects a health, motor, or life policyholder faced with a condition that simply could not be met in time.
A rejection letter is not the last word. Several common grounds are weaker than they look.
If your rejection rests on any of these, you have a real basis to contest it. Keep every document, the rejection letter, and the policy schedule together before you start.
Work through these steps in order. Each one builds the paper trail you will need at the next stage.
You do not need a lawyer for the grievance, Bima Bharosa, or Ombudsman stages. Use a clear written complaint and attach proof.
Kashvi Pathak holds a marine transit policy on a consignment moving by road. Her insurer rejects the claim because she did not file a surveyor's certificate within a window that, on the policy wording, closed before the goods were even dispatched. She could not possibly have met that timeline. She writes to the grievance cell quoting the clause, gets no relief, and lodges a Bima Bharosa complaint. When that stalls, she files before the Insurance Ombudsman, citing the impossible-condition principle from the 2025 Supreme Court ruling. The Ombudsman agrees the condition could not have been performed and directs the insurer to process the claim. The figures here are illustrative, but the route is exactly the one the law now supports.
No. It applies only where the condition relied on was impossible to perform. Insurers can still reject claims for genuine, material reasons such as exclusions you could have observed or real non-disclosure.
Not directly. The 2025 ruling is specifically about conditions that could not be performed at all. A difficult but possible condition is a different question, though a non-material breach may still be challengeable.
Sohom Shipping Pvt. Ltd v. The New India Assurance Co. Ltd, neutral citation 2025 INSC 453, decided 7 April 2025 by the Supreme Court of India.
No. The Court fixed the principle and sent the matter back to determine how much is payable. So the judgment establishes your right to contest an impossible condition, not a fixed amount.
Start with the insurer's grievance cell, then the IRDAI portal Bima Bharosa, then the Insurance Ombudsman for personal policies within the monetary limit, and finally the consumer commission.
Yes. The Ombudsman process is free for the complainant, and its award is binding on the insurer for personal-line disputes within the prescribed monetary limit.
The case arose from a marine policy, but the principle is general. Any policyholder facing a condition that was impossible to meet within the policy period can rely on the same reasoning.