The Appellant (Shree Nagani Silk Mills Pvt. Ltd.) was the original complainant, lodging separate complaints under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act (N.I. Act) against L.D. Industries Ltd. (accused company) and others.
The complaints alleged that the accused company issued cheques for supplies made by the complainant, which were subsequently dishonoured due to “insufficient funds”.
Notices were served, but the amount was not paid, leading to the complaints.
Upon being summoned, the accused company claimed it had been declared ‘SICK’ by the Board of Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) under the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985 (SICA).
The accused company argued that a legal embargo was imposed on the disposal of its assets, and proceedings under Section 138 N.I. Act were not sustainable.
The learned Magistrate dismissed the application seeking to recall the processes. However, the revisional court allowed the revision, and the High Court of Judicature at Bombay set aside the Magistrate’s order, effectively discharging the accused and quashing the criminal proceedings against them via impugned order(s) dated 5.10.2023.
Law Involved
Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881:
Section 138: Deals with dishonour of cheques for insufficiency of funds.
Section 141: Addresses offences by companies.
Section 118(b): Pertains to the presumption regarding the date on a cheque.
Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985 (SICA):
Section 22: Provisions for suspension of legal proceedings, contracts, etc..
Section 22A: Directs a sick industrial company not to dispose of assets without Board’s consent.
Relevant legal precedents cited:
Adalat Prasad vs. Rooplal Jindal
In Re: Expeditious Trial of Cases under Section 138 of NI Act, 1881
Kusum Ingots & Alloys Ltd. vs. M/s. Pennar Peterson Securities Ltd. and others.
Reasoning
The Supreme Court considered the following points:
The High Court misconstrued the law laid down in Kusum Ingots and Adalat Prasad.
Section 22 of SICA does not create any legal impediment for instituting and proceeding with a criminal case on allegations of an offence under Section 138 of the N.I. Act against a company or its Directors.
A restraint order under Section 22A of SICA is not absolute; it applies to the disposal of assets but does not necessarily bar proceedings under Section 138 N.I. Act. In this case, the restraint order was issued on 21.08.2000, while the cheques in question were issued in 2001 for day-to-day operations. The court noted that current assets could be drawn upon for day-to-day operations.
The submission that the cheques were post-dated was rebutted by the presumption under Section 118(b) of N.I. Act that a cheque bearing a certain date was made on that date. Evidence would be required to rebut this presumption.
The primary objective of Section 138 N.I. Act is to ensure credibility of business transactions involving cheques. A criminal complaint for dishonour of cheques is distinct from civil remedies for recovery of money, which might be restrained by a BIFR order.
The High Court erred in interfering with the order of the learned Magistrate and in not correcting the mistake committed by the revisional court. The power to recall the summoning order does not exist where the Magistrate had rejected the recall application.
Holding
The Supreme Court allowed the appeals, setting aside the impugned judgment(s) and order(s) of the High Court dated 5.10.2023.
This effectively means the criminal proceedings under Section 138 read with Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act are to continue against the accused company and its Directors.
Shree Nagani Silk Mills Pvt. Lmt. Vs L.D. Industries Ltd. & Ors.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1064 (DoJ 02-09-2025)




