The Delhi High Court dismissed a revision petition filed by the petitioner against his conviction under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881. The Court declined to condone a 603-day delay in filing the petition, noting that the petitioner’s explanation regarding his former counsel was unsubstantiated and did not constitute “sufficient cause”. Furthermore, the Court found the petition to be meritless, as the petitioner failed to rebut the statutory presumptions under the NI Act due to his inconsistent and improbable defence.
Factual Background
- The Dispute: The respondent alleged that in December 2016, he advanced a friendly cash loan of ₹2,55,000 to the petitioner, which remained unpaid. The petitioner issued a cheque for this amount, which was subsequently dishonoured due to “Funds Insufficient”.
- Procedural History: Following the dishonour, a complaint was instituted in 2017. The Trial Court convicted the petitioner in 2023, and the Appellate Court dismissed his appeal in August 2024.
Key Issues and Findings
- Condonation of Delay: The petitioner sought to condone a 603-day delay, claiming his former counsel failed to file the petition despite assurances. The Court rejected this, stating the claim was “wholly unsubstantiated” as there was no affidavit from the counsel, no fee receipts, and no prior complaints lodged against the counsel. The Court emphasized that a litigant cannot shift blame to counsel without credible, documented proof.
- Merits of the Conviction: The Court found the petitioner’s defence to be “ever changing and untenable”.
- The petitioner provided inconsistent accounts across different stages of the trial, including changing the identity of the lender, the recipient of repayments, and the number of cheques allegedly misused.
- The petitioner’s bank passbook (Ex. DW1/1) contradicted his claims, as it showed a loan from a third party but failed to provide evidence of repayment.
- The petitioner never filed any police complaints regarding the alleged misuse of his cheques, which the Court deemed “wholly inconsistent” with his defence.
- Legal Presumptions: The Court upheld the Trial Court’s findings, noting that once the signature and issuance of the cheque were admitted, the statutory presumptions under Sections 118(a) and 139 of the NI Act shifted the burden of proof to the petitioner, which he failed to discharge.
Final Order
- Dismissal: Both the application for condonation of delay and the revision petition were dismissed.
- Compliance: The petitioner is directed to surrender before the Trial Court on 30th July 2026 to serve his six-month sentence.
2026 DHC 5632
Sushil Prasad Verma v. Naresh Kumar (D.O.J. 15.07.2026)




