The Finance Minister further said that since item-wise valuation or insurance is not possible, a standardized compensation framework is put in place to compensate for loss of items kept in bank lockers. In case of seeking different coverage, the details of the goods will have to be made public, which is not permitted under banking rules.
According to bank locker rules, if the contents kept in the locker go missing due to negligence of the bank, fraud by the employee, fire, theft, dacoity, burglary and robbery etc. then the bank has to pay compensation to the locker holder, which will be 100 times of the annual fee being charged by the bank for the locker.
For example, if a bank is charging Rs 5,000 per year for a locker, then it will have to pay a compensation of Rs 5,00,000 to the customer in case of damage to the locker due to the above reasons.
It is legal to keep jewellery, loan documents, property documents, birth-marriage certificates, insurance policies, savings bonds and other confidential documents in a bank locker.
At the same time, it is illegal to keep cash, weapons, drugs, explosives, perishable and radioactive items and items considered dangerous in a bank locker.
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