N. Vijay Kumar (appellant) was convicted under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (N.I. Act) by the High Court of Karnataka, which reversed an earlier acquittal by the Trial Court. The case stemmed from a hand loan of Rs.20,00,000/- (twenty lakh rupees) allegedly extended by Vishwanath Rao N. (respondent/complainant) to the appellant for a Kannada feature film. The appellant issued a cheque dated 14th October 2008, which was dishonoured on 20th October 2008 due to insufficient funds. A statutory legal notice was issued, demanding repayment, to which the appellant replied on 7th November 2008, denying liability.
The appellant contended that the cheque was a security instrument for a smaller loan of Rs.3,50,000/- for a film produced in 2003, which was settled in a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) dated 29th March 2008 for Rs.5,50,000/-3. He claimed to have handed over two blank signed cheques as security and later lodged a police complaint on 24th July 2008, reporting their loss after being informed they were misplaced [3, 16(d)].
The Trial Court acquitted the appellant, finding that he had successfully rebutted the presumption under Section 139 of the N.I. Act4. However, the High Court reversed this acquittal, leading to the current appeal.
Law Involved The primary laws involved are Sections 138 and 139 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881.
Section 138 N.I. Act: Deals with the dishonour of cheques for insufficiency of funds.
Section 118(a) N.I. Act: Creates a presumption that every negotiable instrument was made or drawn for consideration.
Section 139 N.I. Act: Creates a presumption that the holder of a cheque received it for the discharge, in whole or in part, of any debt or other liability.
These presumptions are rebuttable, meaning they can be disproved by the accused58. The standard of proof required from the accused to rebut these presumptions is that of “preponderance of probabilities,” not proof beyond a reasonable doubt6…. The accused can rely on the complainant’s evidence, material produced during the trial, or the circumstances of the case to rebut the presumption.
Reasoning The Supreme Court determined that the High Court erred in overturning the Trial Court’s acquittal115. The court reiterated that while presumptions under Sections 118 and 139 of the N.I. Act exist, they are rebuttable, and the burden shifts to the accused to raise a probable defence by a “preponderance of probabilities”58. This does not require the accused to prove their defence beyond reasonable doubt8….
The Supreme Court highlighted several critical points supporting the Trial Court’s decision:
The complainant’s own testimony contained significant contradictions regarding the exact loan amount and its purpose, casting doubt on the existence of the Rs.20 lakh loan416.
The High Court failed to consider the police complaint lodged by the accused in July 2008 regarding the loss of the cheques, which was a crucial piece of evidence [3, 16(d)].
The High Court did not properly appreciate the inconsistencies in the complainant’s evidence, particularly concerning the amount received and the signature on a relevant document16.
The circumstances, such as the lack of formal documentation for a large loan between friendly parties, were overlooked by the High Court1317.
The Trial Court correctly found that the accused successfully raised a probable defence and rebutted the presumptions under the N.I. Act, thereby shifting the burden back to the complainant to prove the debt, which they failed to do4….
The Supreme Court concluded that the Trial Court’s assessment of the evidence was sound, and the High Court’s reversal was unjustified15.
Holding The Supreme Court set aside the judgment of the High Court and restored the order of acquittal passed by the Trial Court. The amount previously deposited by the appellant in the Registry of the Supreme Court, along with accrued interest, is to be released back to the appellant.
N. Vijay Kumar V. Vishwanath Rao N.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 537: (DoJ 22-04-2025)




