All of us are keen to earn more ! ~ most likely you have a ‘safe deposit locker’ with a
bank … depending on the valuables that you have – as one’s riches increase, one
is forced to chose renting a bigger sized one (may be some require a room
and not a box !) ~ and ever wondered
whether the terminology ‘rent a locker’ is right ? A safe deposit box, (not a
safety deposit box) - is an individually secured container, usually held
within a larger safe or bank vault. Safe deposit boxes are generally located in
banks, post offices or other institutions. Safe deposit boxes are used to store
valuable possessions, (Gold, silver, diamond ornaments ….) precious
metals, currency, marketable securities, important documents such as wills,
property deeds, - things that need protection from theft, fire, flood,
tampering, or other perils.
Typically, upon applying, Bank allots a locker and
charges rent for the same. The box which is either affixed to a wall or
is a row of such boxes made of strong iron – can be opened only with combination
keys. The Bank official first opens with a key – and then – in the two
keyholes, one key held by the person and the other in the possession of
official are used to open ….the official would leave the room – ensuring total
privacy – the box can be locked by the owner – but reopening can be done
only by combined use of both the keys. You may find slightly differential
arrangement in Star hotels, resorts and cruise ships …. (here the locker inside
the room can be opened by a combination of numbers which the guest can select)
Though the banks collect ‘rent’ – ‘safe deposit charges’
(earlier they used to insist on Fixed deposits being kept) – RBI circular
clarifies that therelationship between the bank and the locker hirer is in
the nature of a 'bailor and bailee' and not 'landlord and tenant'. The
bank at all point of time, has no knowledge of the contents of the locker and
the bank is required to exercise due care and necessary precaution for the
protection of the lockers provided to the customer.
In the past, there have been instances of fire – remember
the devastating fire at State Bank ofIndiaat
Beach road, Chennai in a century old
structure – built by Bank of Madras in 1897. All big banks including nationalised and
private banks take a comprehensive bank cover that includes the head office as
well as the branch network, lockers are not covered under such policies. “As
banks don't know the contents of the locker, they don't have an insurable
interest” ~ Simply put: if there is a
fire accident or a burglary, you get zero protection as a customer.
Ok – Safe is safe but not when a loss occurs is what it
means !!! ~ the recent Chennai floods made another revelation !
A recent article in
Times of India states that - If you thought bank lockers are safe, think again.
A State Bank Of India customer (name withheld) was in peril when he had to go
with a hairdryer to the Ashok Nagar branch to check on his locker. … because
the branch was submerged and the
customer’s vault was situated in the last row, touching the ground. The CGM of
SBI was quoted as saying that the customer did not lose anything and added that
services like ATMs and lockers were impacted, making bankers rethink locker
safety.
While banks protect
their assets against the perils of Fire, Earthquake, flood,Storm and allied
perils – such policies provide cover for employees, furniture and electronic
equipment like computers; lockers are however left out because of the ambiguity
of the content. While it is apparent
that those who have rented lockers will have to negotiate insurance on their
own – there would be practical problems galore.
Many customers would not be too willing to disclose the valuables in
their possession; Insurers would ask for valuation of jewelry and can have
trouble in assessing the loss as also establishment of loss itself.
What Chennai rains
taught is the fact that most bank lockers in the city are either located on the
ground floor or the basement which make them vulnerable to floods. “The old
locker structures are heavy and difficult to shift ,” a senior official from
Indian Overseas Bank said. Officials also state that most bank branches in the
city are located in the ground or mezzanine floors. After the recent torrential rains, many parts
of the city were under water for more than a couple of days – in some places
there was inundation and water seepage into the lockers as well.
Though
the lockers are strong and fire-proof, they are not water-proof … the water brought
along filth and slush ~ damaging the contents, especially the documents kept
inside the cupboards. Even the Gold,
Silver and other bullion kept inside may require cleaning !
Another
trouble for the already troubled Chennai resident !!
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
11th Dec
2015