Bombay High Court delivers strong verdict against Tata AIG in a case that left a widow battling not just grief, but also the looming threat of losing her home.
The Case at a Glance
On 3 September 2025, Justice Sandeep V. Marne of the Bombay High Court upheld an Insurance Ombudsman’s award directing Tata AIG General Insurance Co. Ltd. to pay ₹27 lakh to the widow of a borrower whose housing loan was bundled with a compulsory insurance policy.
The verdict exposes the darker side of loan-linked insurance products, where borrowers often have no choice but to accept policies dictated by lenders and insurers, only to find claims rejected on technical grounds when tragedy strikes.
A Dream Home, A Mandatory Insurance Policy
In 2017, Vishal Suryabhan Raut, a school teacher, and his wife Gauri purchased a flat in Sonadevi Residency, Bhiwandi, with a housing loan of ₹27 lakh from India Infoline Housing Finance Ltd (IIFL).
But the loan came with a catch: they were forced to buy a Tata AIG “Group Credit Secure Insurance Policy”, costing ₹84,767. The premium was debited straight from the loan amount and paid by IIFL to Tata AIG. The couple never received the policy document — it remained an internal arrangement between the bank and the insurer.
The promise was simple: if tragedy struck, the insurance would repay the loan, sparing the family from financial ruin.
Tragedy Strikes in 2021
In April 2021, Raut suddenly fell ill. Initially treated in Vapi, Gujarat, he was shifted to Bhiwandi, where he died within minutes of a sudden cardiac arrest on 15 April 2021.
His widow, already devastated, filed an insurance claim to cover the outstanding loan. That’s when her nightmare deepened.
The Medical Report Tug-of-War
Tata AIG repudiated the claim in October 2021, arguing there was no proof of critical illness as defined in the policy. Their panel doctor, Dr. C.H. Asrani, reviewed the papers and declared the cause of death to be sepsis and septicemia, not a heart attack.
But the treating doctor, Dr. Rashmin Jain of Shree Saish Hospital, certified that Raut had indeed died of a massive cardiac arrest. The death occurred so swiftly that there was no time to conduct ECGs or detailed tests.
The widow was left caught between two medical opinions — one based on treating the patient in real time, the other on paperwork.
Ombudsman Intervenes
Left with no option, the widow approached the Insurance Ombudsman, Pune, who in November 2022 directed Tata AIG to pay the claim. The Ombudsman held that technicalities and the lack of ECG reports could not erase the fact that a sudden cardiac arrest had killed the insured.
Bank as Insurance Agent
The Court went further — criticising not just the insurer, but also IIFL Housing Finance. Justice Marne observed that IIFL acted as an insurance agent, bundling the policy into the loan package and leaving the borrower no real choice.
The Court highlighted the business arrangement between lender and insurer, where the bank deducted the premium upfront and directly credited it to the insurance company. For the borrower, this created a clear expectation: if death occurred, the insurance would clear the loan.
Instead, after Raut’s death, the widow not only faced a rejected claim but also a SARFAESI Act notice from IIFL, threatening to auction her flat for non-repayment.
HC’s Observations: Policy Ambiguity & Family Protection
Justice Marne tore into the insurer’s stand:
- The policy promised loan protection but denied coverage on a narrow technicality.
- If a borrower survived a heart attack, he would get ₹27 lakh while still able to pay EMIs. But if he died instantly, the family got nothing.
- This interpretation was “absurd”, defeating the very purpose of a loan-linked insurance.
The Court applied the principle of contra proferentem, which holds that ambiguous terms in insurance contracts must be interpreted in favour of the insured.
The Verdict
Dismissing Tata AIG’s writ petition, the Court upheld the Ombudsman’s order and directed the insurer to pay the full ₹27 lakh claim within 4 weeks, with interest at bank rate + 2% from the date of claim repudiation.
Justice Marne wrote that if insurers were allowed to wriggle out on such grounds, widows would not only lose their husbands but also their homes, while insurers profit from hefty premiums.
A Message to Homebuyers and Insurers
This judgment sends a strong signal: loan-linked insurance is meant to protect families, not exploit fine print loopholes.
For homebuyers, it’s a reassurance that courts will hold insurers accountable. For insurers and banks, it’s a warning — you cannot force policies onto borrowers and then abandon families in their darkest hour.