National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) bench, presided by Justice J M Malik, asked LIC to pay the amount to Zeenath's family members, whose insurance claim was denied by the company after she died of cancer on the ground that she had withheld material information on her health.
LIC had rejected the claim contending that Mangalore resident Zeenath had died due to bipolar mood disorder and she had not disclosed the illness in her policy form.
"It will be unfortunate, if the insurance companies try to repudiate genuine death claims on such technical and flimsy grounds. Most of the innocent insured will be victims and the beneficiaries will be deprived of fruits of life insurance.
"Therefore, we are of the considered view that deceased, an illiterate woman, did not suppress any material fact with any fraudulent intention. There is no nexus at all between bipolar mood disorder and carcinoma of larynx (cancer).
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"It is exploitation of policy holders. The consumers are literally under fear or dilemma that, whether, after death, the beneficiaries ever certainly get any fruits from LIC," the bench, also comprising its member S M Kantikar, said.