The Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum, Ahmedabad City, deciding on a complaint filed by Consumer Education and Research Society (CERS) and Deepak Kanayalal Khatwani, has directed ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company Limited, Mumbai, to credit in Khatwani’s savings bank account Rs. 19,049.08 within two months from the date of the order.

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The company should also pay him 7 per cent interest on the amount from the date of its debit from his SB account to its credit to that account. The company shall also refund to him Rs. 2,210, illegally recovered from him, with 7 per cent interest from the date of recovery until payment.

The Forum has also directed Healthcops, ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company Ltd., Mumbai, and ICICI Bank Ltd. Credit Card Division, Ahmedabad, to pay Khatwani, jointly and severally, Rs. 2,000 each for mental agony, i.e. Rs. 6,000, and Rs. 2,000 towards cost.

ICICI Bank, Ahmedabad, had issued a credit card to Khatwani in February 2005. He used it occasionally, made regular payments and there had been no complaints up to February 2007.

On 16 February 2007, Khatwani was telephonically informed that, he being “a valuable ICICI credit card holder, ICICI Lombard General Insurance Co. Ltd. was offering him, through the bank, a healthcare policy free for two years, after which it would be chargeable. He accepted the offer and received a health policy from Healthcops (ICICI Lombard General Insurance). The policy mentioned, among other things, the sum insured as Rs. 3,00,000 and the period of insurance from 22 February 2007 to 21 February 2008.

But, contrary to the terms of the offer of two years’ free policy, Khatwani received an ICICI Credit Card statement dated 21 May 2007 from ICICI Bank Ltd. showing the total amount due as Rs. 2,728.55 and reflecting EMI interest, EMI principal, service tax, late payment fee, etc.

Khatwani wrote to Healthcops, ICICI Lombard General Insurance Co. Ltd. and ICICI Bank, requesting them to confirm that the policy was free for two years, clear his credit card bills or cancel his health policy, and to clear his credit card dues. Subsequent to the request, the company cancelled the policy.

What followed this letter was a seemingly unending repetition of the opposite parties’ sending monthly statements and Khatwani receiving and protesing them, as the “dues” mounted, inclusive of late payment fees, interest, etc.

After a few months, the opposite parties took recourse to yet another dubious and unfair means; Khatwani started getting repeated phone calls, marked by an abusive, vulgar, uncultured language and threats of dire consequences and heavy penalty. Even an agent was sent to Khatwani’s house in his absence and a female member in the house was made to pay Rs. 2,210.

Khatwani gave a legal notice to the opposite parties on 24 November 2007. Instead of replying to the notice, they issued monthly statements from November 2007 to February 2008, showing the total amount due as Rs. 17,117.40 (as per the February 2008 statement).

Khatwani approached Consumer Education and Research Society which took up the matter with the opposite parties.

Meanwhile, ignoring Khatwani’s legal notice, ICICI Bank slapped on him its notice on “unpaid outstanding dues of Rs. 17,117.40” in respect of his credit card. It called upon him to pay the amount within seven days. On failure to do so, the amount would be recovered from his savings account by exercising their right of banker’s lien.

Eventually, Khatwani received a statement of transactions in his savings account for the period 1 to 30 April 2008, reflecting the withdrawal of Rs. 19,049.08 by debiting his savings account exercising the banker’s lien as threatened in the bank’s notice.

On 30 July 2008, CERS and Khatwani complained to the Forum which issued its order on 30 December 2010.

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