Live
- Strict measures in Place for AP SSC examinations
- Kancha Gachibowli land: Activists launch campaign to preserve urban lung space
- GHMC proposes euthanasia for aggressive strays
- Over 6 lakh Olive Ridleys turn up at Gahirmatha
- Two women journos held for ‘defaming’ CM
- 25 lakh ‘Lakhpati Didis’ in next 5 years: Patra
- Villagers come together against illegal mining
- NALCO holds Customers’ Meet
- Notorious criminal injured in encounter
- Food safety officials inspect mangoes at Mozamjahi mkt
MCD asked to pay ₹10L damages to youth’s kin


The Delhi High Court has directed the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) to pay a Rs 10 lakh compensation to the family of a 17-year-old youth who was crushed to death after a concrete block fell on him from a flat owned by the civic body.
New Delhi : The Delhi High Court has directed the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) to pay a Rs 10 lakh compensation to the family of a 17-year-old youth who was crushed to death after a concrete block fell on him from a flat owned by the civic body. The high court said the responsibility for proper maintenance of the premises rested upon the MCD which was duty bound to maintain it in such a way that it would not endanger the lives of passersby or individuals entering the space.
“It is conclusively established that the death of the deceased was caused due to the falling of the slab / lantern / block of concrete in the quarters owned by the MCD. “Therefore, the responsibility to ensure that proper maintenance of the premises unequivocally rested upon the MCD, which is predominantly cast with a bounden duty to maintain and repair constructions in dangerous conditions in the territorial limits of Delhi,” Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav said.
The court directed the MCD to pay Rs 10 lakh to the family members of Sonu, who died in July 2007, when he was returning home and a concrete slab fell on him from a flat owned by the civic agency. “Furthermore, the MCD also had a duty to maintain the premises in a manner that would not endanger the lives of passersby or individuals entering the premises,” the court said, adding that the negligence of MCD in failing to adequately maintain the premises is manifestly evident from the record. The counsel for the family claimed that the quarters were in a “dangerous condition” about which the MCD was aware.

© 2025 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com