CHEQUE
BOUNCING OFFENCE TO BE PROSECUTED AT PLACE OF ORIGIN: SC
The Supreme Court
ruled that the case of bounced cheque has to be initiated at the place where
the branch of the bank on which the cheque was drawn is located.
NEW DELHI: Recovering
money if a cheque bounces will now be a lot more tedious and costly.
In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court has changed the ground rule under Section 138 of Negotiable Instruments Act to prosecute a person who had presented the cheque which bounced for insufficiency of funds.
Earlier, a case under Section 138 could be initiated by the holder of the cheque at his place of business or residence. But, a bench of justices TS Thakur, Vikramjit Sen and C Nagappan ruled that the case has to be initiated at the place where the branch of the bank on which the cheque was drawn is located.
This means, if a man from Delhi gave a cheque drawn on a Delhi bank for buying something in Chennai and it bounced for insufficiency of funds, then the aggrieved person will have to travel all the way from Chennai to Delhi to initiate prosecution under Section 138.
TOI illustralion.
In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court has changed the ground rule under Section 138 of Negotiable Instruments Act to prosecute a person who had presented the cheque which bounced for insufficiency of funds.
Earlier, a case under Section 138 could be initiated by the holder of the cheque at his place of business or residence. But, a bench of justices TS Thakur, Vikramjit Sen and C Nagappan ruled that the case has to be initiated at the place where the branch of the bank on which the cheque was drawn is located.
This means, if a man from Delhi gave a cheque drawn on a Delhi bank for buying something in Chennai and it bounced for insufficiency of funds, then the aggrieved person will have to travel all the way from Chennai to Delhi to initiate prosecution under Section 138.
TOI illustralion.
And the judgment would apply retrospectively. This means, lakhs of cases pending in various courts across the country would witness a interstate transfer of cheque bouncing cases.
Writing the judgment
for the 3-judge bench, Justice Sen said: "We are quite alive to the
magnitude of the impact that the present decision shall have to possibly lakhs
of cases pending in various courts spanning across the country." However,
the court said that in those cases where recording of evidence has started
after issuance of summons to the accused, would continue to be tried at the
place they were instituted.
"To clarify,
regardless of whether evidence has been led before the Magistrate at the
pre-summoning stage, either by affidavit or by oral statement, the complaint
will be maintainable only at the place where the cheque stands
dishonoured," the bench said.
The bench said: "In this analysis, we hold that the place, situs or venue of judicial inquiry and trial of the offence must logically be restricted to where the drawee bank is located."
"An
interpretation should not be imparted to Section 138 which will render it as a
device of harassment, that is, by sending notices (about the bouncing of cheque
under Section 138) from a place which has no casual connection with the
transaction itself, and/or by presenting cheques at any of the banks where the
payee may have an account," the bench said.
"It is also now
manifest that traders and businessmen have become reckless and incautious in
extending credit where they would heretofore have been extremely hesitant,
solely because of the availability of redress by criminal proceedings,"
the bench said referring to the rapid increase in institution of cases under Section
138 of NI Act after it was made a criminal offence.
"Today's reality
is that every magistracy is inundated with prosecutions under Section 138 of
the NI Act, so much so that the burden is becoming unbearable and detrimental
to the disposal of other equally pressing litigation," the court said.
The court said for
filing a criminal case under Section 138 NI Act, the holder of the cheque must
have to travel to the place where the branch of the bank on which the cheque
was drawn is located. In the alternative, he could institute a case under
Section 420 (cheating) at the place of his residence or where he ordinarily
carries out business.
"If the
payee succeeds in establishing that the inducement for accepting a cheque which
subsequently bounced had occurred where he resides or ordinarily transacts
business, he will not have to suffer the travails of journeying to the place
where the cheque has been dishonoured," it said.
"All remedies
under the IPC and Cr.P.C are available to such a payee if he chooses to pursue
this course of action, rather than a complaint under Section 138 of NI Act. And
of course, he can file a suit for recovery wherever the cause of action arises
dependent on his choosing," the court said.
http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/imgs1.aspx?filename=41801http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/imgs1.aspx?filename=41801
No comments:
Post a Comment