The appellant, Rekha Sharad Ushir, was accused by the respondent, SaptashrungiMahila Nagari SahkariPatsansta Ltd., a credit co-operative society, of an offence under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (NI Act). The core issue revolves around a second security cheque (No. 010722), with the appellant claiming she had previously repaid a loan and that the respondent maliciously misused the cheque and suppressed material information, including her requests for loan documents. Conversely, the respondent asserted a presumption of debt under Section 139 of the NI Act and denied suppressing facts. The court ultimately quashed the complaint, finding that the respondent had suppressed crucial documents and information from the Magistrate, constituting an abuse of legal process.
Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, Section 138, 139 – Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 200, 204(1) – Bhartiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, Section 223, 227 – Dishonour of Cheque – Suppression of material facts – Issuance of process – Challenge as to – Suppression material facts in complaint – In the complaint, the respondent has suppressed the reply dated 28th November 2016 and the letter dated 13th December 2016 sent by the appellant’s advocate – These two documents have also been suppressed in the statement on oath – The respondent made out a false case that the appellant did not reply to the demand notice – Moreover, the case that the documents as demanded were supplied is not pleaded in the complaint and statement under Section 200 of CrPC – Held that if these two letters were disclosed in the complaint, the learned Magistrate while recording the statement under Section 200 of CrPC, could have always questioned the respondent on the supply of documents to the appellant – What is important is that in the reply dated 28th November 2016, the appellant had reserved her right to give a reply to the demand notice after receiving the documents – It was the respondent’s duty to supply documents to the appellant or her advocate to enable the appellant to properly reply to the demand notice – At least, the inspection of documents could have been provided to the appellant – Thus, this was a case where very material documents in the form of two letters addressed by the appellant were suppressed in the complaint and the statement on oath under Section 200 – In the statement on oath, the respondent-complainant vaguely referred to a ‘false notice reply’, but a copy of the reply was not produced by the respondent along with the complaint – Setting criminal law in motion by suppressing material facts and documents is nothing but an abuse of the process of law – Held that the High Court ought to have interfered and quashed the complaint – Accordingly, the impugned order of the High Court liable to be set aside – The complaint bearing S.C. No. 648 of 2016 pending in the court of the learned Judicial Magistrate First Class at Kalwan and the order of cognizance dated 2nd March 2017 liable to be quashed and set aside – Made clear that the other remedies of the respondent to file proceedings for recovery of the amount allegedly due and payable by the appellant in accordance with law will remain open.
(Para 18 to 23)
Rekha Sharad Ushir V. Saptashrungi Mahila Nagari Sahkari Patsansta Ltd.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 399: (DoJ 26-03-2025)




