In Anilkumar v. Praveen (Criminal Appeal of 2026, arising out of SLP (Crl.) Nos. 2786-2787 of 2025, 2026 INSC 452), the Supreme Court of India set aside a “wholly perverse and manifestly erroneous” judgment of the High Court of Karnataka (Dharwad Bench). The case originated from separate complaints filed by the appellant under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, regarding dishonored checks. The High Court had severely modified the respondent’s sentence by simply restricting it to the 50% fine amount already deposited, essentially wiping out the remaining liabilities and substantive sentence.
Rather than engaging in a protracted examination of the High Court’s legal flaws, the Supreme Court recorded a specific settlement undertaking given by the respondent-accused. The Court allowed the appeals and granted the respondent a strict deadline of August 31, 2026, to pay a sum of ₹45,00,000/- as a full and final settlement to the appellant. The Court explicitly warned that any failure to honor this payment would grant the appellant immediate liberty to apply for a revival of the appeals to consider sending the respondent straight to prison.
Details
1. Key Parties and Bench
- Appellant (Original Complainant): Anilkumar S/o Manohar Devadhar.
- Respondent (Accused): Praveen S/o Adivayya Hiremath.
- Bench: Hon’ble Justice Dipankar Datta and Hon’ble Justice Satish Chandra Sharma.
2. Factual Background and Dispute
- The Initial Action: The appellant filed separate criminal complaints against the respondent under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, following the dishonor of checks.
- High Court’s Modification: The respondent approached the High Court of Karnataka (Dharwad Bench) via two criminal revisional applications challenging his conviction.
- The Impugned Order: On January 27, 2025, the High Court disposed of the revision petitions and granted the respondent sweeping relief by modifying the appellate court’s sentence. It ordered that since the respondent had already deposited 50% of the fine amount before the High Court, his sentence would be restricted to that deposited amount alone.
3. Primary Legal Grievance
- The appellant challenged the common judgment of the High Court, contending that the unilateral restriction of the sentence to the 50% pre-deposited fine completely ignored the financial merits of the check bounce claims and was legally unsustainable.
4. Observations and Ruling of the Supreme Court
A. Disapproval of the High Court’s Approach
The Supreme Court expressed severe dissatisfaction with the High Court’s revisional order, explicitly characterizing the impugned judgment as “wholly perverse and manifestly erroneous”. The Bench noted that the High Court was “grossly wrong” in granting such an unmerited restriction of sentence to the respondent.
B. Avoidance of Merits via Mutual Settlement
Because a concrete settlement proposal emerged during the proceedings, the Supreme Court decided not to enter into a detailed multi-page discussion on the standard legal merits of the check bounce parameters.
C. Recording of the Undertaking
The respondent, through his learned counsel, offered a formal undertaking to pay a lumpsum amount of ₹45,00,000/- (Rupees forty-five lakh) to the appellant as a full and final settlement of all outstanding dues. Despite initial reluctance, the appellant’s counsel accepted the proposal upon instructions.
D. Enforcement and Conditional Penal Clause
The Court formally accepted and recorded this specific undertaking, granting the respondent a strict timeline until August 31, 2026, to clear the entire ₹45,00,000/- balance. The Court expressed its hope that the respondent would honor this commitment without forcing the appellant back into litigation.
To ensure absolute compliance, the Court inserted a strict default clause: if the respondent fails to pay the amount by the specified August deadline, the appellant is given full liberty to move an application for the immediate revival of these criminal appeals. Upon such revival, the Supreme Court noted it would consider “the desirability to send the respondent to prison straight away”.
5. Final Order
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals and formally set aside the perverse judgment and order of the Karnataka High Court. All pending individual applications were disposed of accordingly.
2026 INSC 452
Anilkumar S/O Manohar Devadhar V. Praveen S/O Adivayya Hiremath (D.O.J. 13.04.2026)




