2025 INSC 399
SUPREME COURT
OF INDIA
(HON’BLE ABHAY S.
OKA, J. AND HON’BLE UJJAL BHUYAN, JJ.)
REKHA
SHARAD USHIR
Appellant
VERSUS
SAPTASHRUNGI
MAHILA NAGARI SAHKARI PATSANSTA LTD.
Respondent
Criminal Appeal No. 724 OF
2025-Decided on 26-03-2025
Dish of Chq
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)
JUDGMENT
Abhay S. Oka, J. :-
FACTUAL ASPECTS
1. The Appellant is the
accused in Criminal Case No. 648 of 2016 pending before the Judicial Magistrate
First Class, Kalwan (for short, 'the JMFC’). The complaint was filed by the
respondent before the JMFC alleging the commission of an offence punishable
under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (for short, 'the NI
Act') on the basis of the dishonour of a cheque, which was allegedly issued by
the appellant in favour of the respondent, a Credit Co-Operative Society.
2. It is alleged by the
respondent that the appellant had obtained a loan of Rs. 3,50,000/- from the
respondent on 3rd July 2006 through an overdraft facility. At the time of
obtaining the loan, she issued two security cheques bearing Nos. 010721 and
010722. Due to a default in repayment, the respondent deposited the first
cheque (No.010721) drawn on 10th February 2007 for the amount of Rs.3,75,976/-,
which was dishonoured. Following a legal demand notice from the respondent's
advocate, the respondent filed Criminal Case No. 135 of 2007 under Section 138
of the NI Act on 4th April 2007. The appellant paid the cheque amount before
the JMFC, Kalwan Court, on 23rd September 2016, following which the respondent
withdrew the prosecution, and the appellant was acquitted on the same date.
3. In the interregnum, the
appellant was allegedly granted another loan of Rs. 11,97,000/- on 25th July
2008 by the respondent. Due to an alleged default in repayment of the loan
amount and interest accrued thereon, the respondent deposited the second cheque
(No. 010722) drawn on 3rd October 2016 for the amount of Rs. 27,27,460/- which
was dishonoured on 14th October 2016. The respondent issued a legal notice
dated 11th November 2016, claiming that the cheque was issued
towards repayment of an overdraft facility of Rs.1 1,97,000/- allegedly taken
by the appellant on 25th July 2008.
4. While disputing the case
made out in the demand notice, through her advocate's reply on 28th November
2016, the appellant sought the supply of the loan documents from the respondent
to enable her to give a reply to the statutory notice. By writing another
letter through her advocate on 13th December 2016, she informed the advocate
for the respondent that the documents had not been supplied to her.
5. The respondent filed the
complaint bearing Criminal Case No. 648 of 2016 before JMFC, Kalwan, alleging
the commission of an offence punishable under Section 138 of the NI Act on 15th
December 2016 in relation to dishonoured Cheque No.010722. The JMFC issued the
process on 2nd March 2017. Challenging the issuance of process, the appellant
filed a Criminal Writ Petition No. 2316 of 2017 before the Hon’ble High Court
of Bombay, which was dismissed by the impugned order dated 18th December 2023.
The High Court found no infirmities in the order of the JMFC issuing process
and held that the contentions raised by the appellant could only be decided at
trial.
SUBMISSIONS
6. The learned counsel
appearing for the appellant submitted that she had already paid the first loan
of Rs. 3,88,077/- on 30th March 2007, and the said loan account was
subsequently closed. Yet, the respondent chose to prosecute her wrongly and was
forced to repay the entire loan again as she did not have the loan statement
then and could not prove her earlier payment. It was further contended that the
respondent, despite having full knowledge of the repayment, maliciously misused
the second security cheque (No. 010722) to initiate false proceedings by
depositing the said cheque within 10 days after the appellant had paid the
entire amount pertaining to the first loan. The learned counsel emphasized that
such an act amounted to a clear abuse of the process of law. The learned
counsel pointed out that while filing the complaint, the respondent suppressed
the most material letters dated 28th November 2016 and 13th December 2016
addressed by the advocate for the appellant to the advocate for the respondent
and the fact that the copies of the documents were demanded by the appellant
were not furnished by the respondent. Therefore, the complaint is an abuse of
the process of law.
7. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondent submitted that there exists a presumption under
Section 139 of the NI Act in favour of the cheque holder. Thus, it shall be
presumed that the respondent received the cheque for the discharge of debt by
the appellant, and this presumption can only be rebutted by adducing evidence
during the trial. He contended that the complaint contained all the essential
ingredients and that there was no suppression of material facts warranting
dismissal of the complaint. No provision of Chapter XVII of the NI Act mandates
the supply of the documents relied upon in the demand notice. Additionally, he
submitted that the replies of the appellant to the respondent dated 15th
November 2016 and 28th November 2016 were not material for establishing a prima
facie case for issuing the process. The counsel for the respondent also filed
an additional counter-affidavit, producing a letter dated 29th November 2016,
written by the appellant to the respondent, seeking copies of the statements of
various loan accounts maintained by her and her husband, which were duly
provided. It was submitted that the appellant acknowledged receipt of the same
by affixing her signature thereon. It was submitted that the appellant failed
to disclose the same in the memorandum of her Special Leave Petition.
CONSIDERATION OF SUBMISSIONS
8. Section 138 of the NI Act
reads thus:
"138.
Dishonour of cheque for insufficiency, etc., of funds in the account.—Where any
cheque drawn by a person on an account maintained by him with a banker for
payment of any amount of money to another person from out of that account for
the discharge, in whole or in part, of any debt or other liability, is returned
by the bank unpaid, either because of the amount of money standing to the
credit of that account is insufficient to honour the cheque or that it exceeds
the amount arranged to be paid from that account by an agreement made with that
bank, such person shall be deemed to have committed an offence and shall,
without prejudice to any other provision of this Act, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine which may
extend to twice the amount of the cheque, or with both:
Provided
that nothing contained in this section shall apply unless—
(a) the
cheque has been presented to the bank within a period of six months from the
date on which it is drawn or within the period of its validity, whichever is
earlier;
(b) the
payee or the holder in due course of the cheque, as the case may be, makes a
demand for the payment of the said amount of money by giving a notice in
writing, to the drawer of the cheque, within thirty days of the receipt of
information by him from the bank regarding the return of the cheque as unpaid;
and
(c)
the drawer of such cheque fails to make the payment of the said amount of money
to the payee or as the case may be, to the holder in due course of the cheque
within fifteen days of the receipt of the said notice.
Explanation.—For
the purposes of this section, "debt or other liability" means a
legally enforceable debt or other liability."
9. A court of the Judicial
Magistrate can take cognizance of an offence punishable under Section 138 of
the NI Act based on a complaint filed under Section 200 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 (for short, 'the CrPC’). The corresponding provision under the
Bhartiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (for short, 'the BNSS') is Section 223.
After a complaint is filed under Section 200 of the CrPC, the learned
Magistrate is duty-bound to examine the complainant on oath and witnesses, if
any, present and reduce the substance of such examination into writing. What is
reduced into writing is required to be signed by the complainant and witnesses,
if any.
10. Recording the
complainant's statement on oath under Section 200 of the CrPC is not an empty
formality. The object of recording the complainant's statement and witnesses,
if any, is to ascertain the truth. The learned Magistrate is duty-bound to put
questions to the complainant to elicit the truth. The examination is necessary
to enable the Court to satisfy itself whether there are sufficient grounds to
proceed against the accused. After considering the complaint, the documents
produced along with the complaint, and the statements of the complainant and
witnesses, if any, the learned Magistrate has to apply his mind to ascertain
whether there is sufficient ground for proceeding against the accused. If he is
satisfied that there is sufficient ground to proceed against the accused, then
the learned Magistrate has to issue a process in terms of sub-Section (1) of
Section 204 of the CrPC. The corresponding provision under the BNSS is Section
227. Setting criminal law in motion is a serious matter. The accused faces
serious consequences in the sense that he has to defend himself in the trial.
11. It is settled law that a
litigant who, while filing proceedings in the court, suppresses material facts
or makes a false statement, cannot seek justice from the court. The facts
suppressed must be material and relevant to the controversy, which may have a
bearing on the decision making. Cases of those litigants who have no regard for
the truth and those who indulge in suppressing material facts need to be thrown
out of the court. In paragraph 5 of the decision of this Court in the case of
S.P. Chengalvaraya Naidu v. Jagannath & Ors. [(1994) 1 SCC 1], it is held thus:
"5.
The High Court, in our view, fell into patent error. The short question before
the High Court was whether in the facts and circumstances of this case,
Jagannath obtained the preliminary decree by playing fraud on the court. The
High Court, however, went haywire and made observations which are wholly
perverse. We do not agree with the High Court that "there is no legal duty
cast upon the plaintiff to come to court with a true case and prove it by true
evidence". The principle of "finality of litigation" cannot be
pressed to the extent of such an absurdity that it becomes an engine of fraud
in the hands of dishonest litigants. The courts of law are meant for imparting
justice between the parties. One who comes to the court, must come with clean
hands. We are constrained to say that more often than not, process of the court
is being abused. Property-grabbers, tax-evaders, bank-loan-dodgers and other
unscrupulous persons from all walks of life find the court-process a convenient
lever to retain the illegal gains indefinitely. We have no hesitation to say
that a person, who's case is based on falsehood, has no right to approach the
court. He can be summarily thrown out at any stage of the litigation."
(emphasis added)
12. Section 138 of the NI
Act has three conditions incorporated in clauses (a) to (c) of the proviso.
Firstly, the cheque has been presented to the bank within a period of six
months from the date on which it is drawn or within the period of its validity,
whichever is earlier. Secondly, if a cheque is returned by the bank unpaid, the
payee or the holder in due course must make a demand for payment of the amount
of money covered by the cheque by issuing a notice in writing within 30 days of
receipt of information from the bank regarding the return of the cheque as
unpaid. The third condition is that the drawer of the cheque must fail to make
payment of the amount covered by the cheque within 15 days of the receipt of
the notice.
13. In the present case, a
statutory notice under Section 138 of the NI Act was issued by the advocate for
the respondent on 11th November 2016 to the appellant. The notice proceeds on
the footing that the respondent, a Co-operative Credit Society, is providing
financial assistance to its members and is also carrying on banking business.
The allegation in the notice served to the appellant is that the appellant was
a member of the credit society and had taken an overdraft facility from the
respondent in the sum of Rs. 11,97,000/-. Paragraph 1 of the notice
specifically relies upon the fact that the appellant has executed necessary
documents and that the appellant has agreed and acknowledged to make repayment
of the amount advanced with interest. Thereafter, the notice proceeds to
describe how the cheque issued by the appellant in the sum of Rs.27,27,460/-
was returned unpaid.
14. Within a few days of
receiving the notice, on 28th November 2016, the appellant replied to the
notice through her advocate in which it was mentioned that after receiving the
notice, a written application had been made by the applicant to the respondent
calling upon the respondent to provide documents relied upon in the notice. The
appellant stated that the said documents had not been provided and that she
would reply to the demand notice after receiving the documents. In the reply,
she denied the claim of the respondent. On 13th December 2016, the appellant's
advocate addressed a letter to the respondent reiterating that though the
appellant had demanded the documents from the respondent, the same had not been
provided. Thereafter, the respondent filed a complaint on 15th December 2016 before
JMFC, Kalwan. The statement of the respondent-complainant in the form of an
affidavit was filed on the same day.
15. It is pertinent to note
that in the counter to the present appeal, the respondent has not denied the
receipt of the letters dated 28th November 2016 and 13th December 2016. The
complaint and affidavit in support of the complaint only refer to the notice
dated 15th November 2016 issued by the advocate for the appellant to the
respondent. What is stated in the complaint reads thus:
[D] The
notice sent on the first address has been received on 15.11.2016. However, from
the second address, envelope has been returned on 15.11.2016 with the postal
remark as ‘left'."
However, the respondent
suppressed the letters dated 28th November 2016 and 13th December 2016 in the
complaint and its statement on oath. Now, by filing an additional affidavit, it
is contended by the respondent that certain documents were supplied to the
appellant. A copy of the application dated 29th November 2016,
submitted by the appellant to the respondent's manager, is placed on record
seeking loan account statements. Accordingly, certain account statements
bearing the appellant's signature have been produced. The signatures on the
account statements do not bear any date.
16. It is pertinent to note
that in the notice under Section 138 of the NI Act, in paragraph 1, the
respondent specifically relied upon documents executed by the appellant and the
acknowledgment of the loan made by the appellant. By a reply dated 28th November
2016, the appellant informed the respondent that by filing a written
application, the appellant had demanded certain documents, which had not been
provided. What is pertinent to note is that the respondent does not deny the
receipt of the reply dated 28th November 2016. No reply was sent by the
respondent pointing out that the documents were supplied. Even in the letter
dated 13th December 2016, the appellant made the same grievance regarding the
non-supply of the documents relied upon in the demand notice. Before filing the
complaint, the respondent failed to respond to the said letter.
17. A counter to this appeal
was filed by the respondent on 7th August 2024, in which it is not even a case
made out that requisite documents, as demanded by the appellant, were handed
over to her on 29th November 2016. A case was belatedly made out for the first
time by filing an additional affidavit on 9th January 2025 that statements of
loan account sought by the appellant were furnished to her and her signature
appears on the statements. As stated earlier, though it is claimed that the
appellant's signatures appear on the said documents acknowledging the receipt,
no date is mentioned below the signatures. In the additional affidavit, the
respondent alleged that by a letter dated 29th November 2016, the appellant had
called upon the respondent to provide the loan account statements of the six
loan accounts mentioned in the said letter. Therefore, the stand taken in
January 2025 that the statement of accounts was supplied on 29th November 2016
is clearly an afterthought.
18. The fact remains that 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.
19. 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. After
noticing the fact that notwithstanding service of two letters written by the
appellant, relied upon documents were not provided to the appellant, the
learned Magistrate could have dismissed the complaint by exercising power under
Section 203 of CrPC, as the appellant could not have replied to the statutory
notice without looking at the documents relied upon.
20. 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.
21. While filing a complaint
under Section 200 of CrPC and recording his statement on oath in support of the
complaint, as the complainant suppresses material facts and documents, he
cannot be allowed to set criminal law in motion based on the complaint. Setting
criminal law in motion by suppressing material facts and documents is nothing
but an abuse of the process of law.
22. Hence, the High Court
ought to have interfered and quashed the complaint. Accordingly, the impugned
order of the High Court is 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 are hereby quashed and
set aside.
23. We make it 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.
24. The appeal is,
accordingly, allowed.
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