No, the insurer cannot simply refuse your motor-accident compensation because the vehicle was running outside its permit or route conditions. Under the law and a clear 2025 Supreme Court ruling, the insurer must pay the victim or the dependents first, and may then recover that money from the vehicle owner if a genuine breach of the policy is proved. The permit problem is a fight between the insurer and the owner. It is not a reason to leave an injured person or a grieving family with nothing.
This is called the pay and recover principle, and it is one of the most useful things an accident victim in India can know.
Picture a common situation. A bus or a goods carrier is permitted to ply on one route, but on the day of the accident it had strayed onto a road or into a town it had no permit for. It hits a motorcycle. Someone is killed or badly injured. The family files a claim. The insurance company writes back saying: the vehicle was outside its permit, the policy condition was breached, so we are not liable.
Here is what actually happens when this reaches a court or tribunal:
The logic is simple. Compulsory third-party motor insurance exists to protect innocent road users, not to give insurers a technical exit. A pedestrian or another driver hurt in a crash has no way of knowing whether the offending vehicle had the right permit. Punishing the victim for the owner's paperwork failure would defeat the whole purpose of the Motor Vehicles Act.
The leading recent authority is K. Nagendra v. The New India Assurance Co. Ltd. and Others, 2025 INSC 1270 (also reported as 2025 LiveLaw (SC) 1044), decided by the Supreme Court of India in October 2025.
In that case a bus collided with a motorcycle and the rider died. The bus did not have a permit to enter the area where the accident happened. The insurer argued it should not be liable because of this permit breach. The Karnataka High Court applied pay and recover, and the Supreme Court upheld that approach.
The Court held that denying the victim or the dependents compensation simply because the accident took place outside the bounds of the permit would be “offensive to the sense of justice.” The Court balanced two interests: protecting the innocent victim, and being fair to the insurer. It resolved this by directing the insurer to compensate the claimant, while preserving the insurer's right to recover that amount from the vehicle owner who breached the policy condition.
In plain terms, the Supreme Court confirmed that a technical permit or route violation cannot be used to override the social-justice purpose of motor insurance. The victim is paid first. The owner pays it back.
If an insurer is trying to refuse your claim on a permit or route breach, here is the practical path.
Take a simple illustration with a named person. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak is riding his scooter home in the evening when a goods truck, permitted only for a different route, swerves into his lane and hits him. He suffers a fractured leg and months off work. His medical bills and lost income come to a sizeable sum.
He files his claim before the MACT against the truck driver, the truck owner and the insurer. The insurer files a written statement: the truck was off its permitted route, the policy condition was breached, the insurer denies liability.
Dr. Pathak's counsel does not get distracted by the permit dispute. He proves the accident, the injury and the loss, and he cites the pay and recover principle and K. Nagendra. The Tribunal accepts that there may be a permit breach, but holds that this is a matter between insurer and owner. It directs the insurer to pay Dr. Pathak the full assessed compensation first, and grants the insurer liberty to recover that amount from the truck owner. Dr. Pathak is paid without being forced to chase an individual owner who may have no money. The insurer pursues the owner separately. That is pay and recover working exactly as intended.
No, not against you as a third-party victim. A permit or route breach is a dispute between the insurer and the owner. Under the pay and recover principle confirmed in K. Nagendra v. New India Assurance, 2025 INSC 1270, the insurer must pay you first and then recover from the owner.
It means the insurer satisfies your compensation award even though there is a policy breach, and is then given liberty by the Tribunal or court to recover that same amount from the vehicle owner who caused the breach. You are paid first. The internal dispute is settled afterwards.
K. Nagendra v. The New India Assurance Co. Ltd. and Others, 2025 INSC 1270, also reported as 2025 LiveLaw (SC) 1044, decided by the Supreme Court in October 2025. The Court held that denying a victim compensation merely because the accident fell outside the permit would be offensive to the sense of justice.
You file before the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT) that has jurisdiction over the place of the accident, your residence, or where the respondent is. See our guide on how to file a MACT petition for the full procedure.
In a death case it is based on the deceased's income, age and the multiplier method, with added conventional heads. In an injury case it covers medical costs, loss of income and disability. Our explainer on the multiplier method walks through the calculation.
No. The whole point of pay and recover is that you do not have to. The insurer pays you, and the burden of recovering from the owner shifts to the insurer, which is far better placed to do so.
A permit-breach refusal is one of several rejections that the law does not allow to stand against a victim. Read our guide on what to do when a motor insurance claim is rejected, and remember that compensation can also stand even when, for example, employer group insurance is not deducted from the award.
For a complete walkthrough of asserting your rights and drafting effective applications, see The RTI Playbook.