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HomeHigh CourtPunjab and Haryana High CourtMinni Kumari vs State Of Haryana And Another on 5 February, 2026

Minni Kumari vs State Of Haryana And Another on 5 February, 2026


Punjab-Haryana High Court

Minni Kumari vs State Of Haryana And Another on 5 February, 2026

            IN THE HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB & HARYANA
                        AT CHANDIGARH


139




                                         CRM-M-3078-2026 (O&M).
                                         Reserved On:   21.01.2026.
                                         Pronounced On: 05.02.2026.
                                         Uploaded On:   17.02.2026.


Minni Kumari
                                                                   ...Petitioner(s)

                                    VERSUS


State of Haryana and another
                                                                  ...Respondent(s)


CORAM: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE VINOD S. BHARDWAJ


PRESENT: Mr. Ujwal Anand, Advocate for the petitioner(s).

                               *****

VINOD S. BHARDWAJ, J.

The instant petition has been filed under section 528 of the

Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 seeking setting aside of complaint

dated 14.01.2020 registered as NACT No. 13 of 2020 titled as Shri Ram

Transport Finance Co. Ltd. vs Minni Kumari filed by respondent no.2,

whereby proceedings under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,

1881 have been initiated against the petitioner as well as the summoning order

dated 01.02.2020 through which the petitioner has been summoned to appear

in the said case.

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FACTS

2. The gravamen of the Petitioner’s case is that the impugned

proceedings arise out of a misuse of security cheques obtained at the

time of extending a loan facility. As per the version set out in the

complaint, Respondent No. 2 company is engaged in the business of

financing and leasing. The Petitioner allegedly approached Respondent

No. 2 for availing a vehicle loan in respect of a vehicle bearing Model

ZT-35. In pursuance thereof, a loan agreement dated 01.10.2013 was

executed between the parties and a sum of Rs. 42,39,000/- was

disbursed to the Petitioner. It is further stated in the complaint that,

towards discharge of her liability, the Petitioner issued cheque bearing

No. 502209 dated 27.11.2019 for an amount of Rs. 25,38,877/- drawn

on HDFC Bank Limited, Vasundhara Branch, Ghaziabad, Uttar

Pradesh, in favour of Respondent No. 2. Upon presentation, the said

cheque was returned unpaid with the endorsement “insufficient funds”

vide return memo dated 05.12.2019. Consequent thereto, after sending

the legal notice, the instant complaint under Section 138 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 was filed and the summoning order

dated 01.02.2020 was issued.

ARGUMENTS FOR THE PETITIONER

3. Counsel for the petitioner contends that the petitioner’s husband

carries on business under the name and style of M/s Square

Construction Private Limited, a partnership firm comprising of her

husband – Manjot Kumar Singh and one Manoj Yaduvanshi as partners.

The said partnership firm purchased a Drilling Rig (ZT-35A) from

Rosewood Projects Private Limited vide invoice dated 06.03.2010 for

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consideration of Rs. 57,14,286/-. For the purchase of the said machine,

a loan was obtained from Respondent No. 2 in the year 2010, as the

equipment was required for the firm’s business operations. He submits

that at the time of availing the said loan, Respondent No. 2 obtained

several cheques as security from the partnership firm and further also

required the husband of the Petitioner to furnish blank cheques from his

personal account, which was a joint account held with the Petitioner. It

is submitted that the signatures of the Petitioner were also obtained on

certain blank documents forming part of the loan transaction and that

she was either made a guarantor or her signatures and cheques were

taken merely as security and she was never a borrower in her individual

capacity. Counsel contends that the petitioner had no role whatsoever

in the day-to-day affairs of the partnership firm and that the loan in

question was availed exclusively for the business of the firm and that

Respondent No. 2 neither furnished a copy of the loan agreement to the

partners nor annexed the same with the complaint.

4. He further contends that the husband of the Petitioner regularly

paid the monthly instalments and that a substantial portion of the loan

amount stood repaid. Towards the end of the year 2019, the partnership

firm suffered financial losses, whereupon the partners requested

Respondent No. 2 to repossess the machinery and adjust the outstanding

amount, a majority of the loan having already been paid. In the year

2020, owing to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the

nationwide lockdown imposed under the Disaster Management Act,

2005, the business operations of the firm came to a standstill. Upon

relaxation of the restrictions imposed by the Government, the

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partnership firm resumed operations and decided to return the vehicle

against which the loan had been availed. On 25.12.2022, the said

vehicle was handed back to Respondent No. 2 for adjustment and

waiver of the outstanding loan amount and a receipt acknowledging the

return of the vehicle was issued by Respondent No. 2.

5. Counsel submits that the Petitioner came to know of the criminal

proceedings instituted against her, only in the year 2025, when she

learnt of the complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments

Act, 1881 pending before the Court of the Judicial Magistrate First

Class, Samalkha, Panipat. Pursuant thereto, the Petitioner appeared

before the said Court on 11.09.2025 and was admitted to bail. It is

submitted that the petitioner was neither served with a legal notice as

contemplated under proviso (b) to Section 138 of the Negotiable

Instruments Act, 1881, nor was she aware of the filing of the complaint.

It is also contended that the complaint does not disclose as to how she

was personally liable or connected with the alleged transaction. Copies

of the paper book were obtained by her only on 08.12.2025 and that she

could not be served at the initial stage owing to the restrictions imposed

during the COVID-19 pandemic and she acquired knowledge of the

proceedings at a much later point in time.

6. Counsel vehemently contends that the Judicial Magistrate First

Class, Samalkha, Panipat, lacks the territorial jurisdiction to entertain

and proceed with the present complaint. It is submitted that the

complaint has been instituted by Respondent No. 2 before the learned

Judicial Magistrate First Class, Samalkha, Panipat, solely on the

premise that the cheque in question was presented at Samalkha.

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However, the law mandates that territorial jurisdiction in complaints

under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 vests with

the court within whose jurisdiction the bank branch of the payee, where

the cheque is presented for collection, is situated. In the present case,

the payee maintains its bank account with Standard Chartered Bank,

CMS, New Delhi, and not at Samalkha, Panipat.

7. It is argued that the cheque was presented with the banker of the

complainant, namely Standard Chartered Bank, Samalkha, District

Panipat, for encashment and was returned unpaid with the remark

“insufficient funds” vide bank return memo dated 05.12.2019. The

cheque in question as well as the return memo further demonstrate that

the cheque was drawn on a bank situated at New Delhi. The Petitioner

maintains her bank account with HDFC Bank at Ghaziabad, New Delhi,

while Respondent No. 2 maintains its account with Standard Chartered

Bank, CMS, New Delhi. Thus, in view of the aforesaid admitted facts

the territorial jurisdiction to entertain the complaint lies with the

competent court at New Delhi, where the payee maintains its bank

account and not with the learned Judicial Magistrate First Class,

Samalkha, Panipat, merely because the cheque was presented there.

Reliance in this regard is placed on the judgment of Hon’ble Supreme

Court in Prakash Chimanlal Sheth v. Jagruti Keyur Rajpopat (2025

INSC 897), decided on 25.07.2025, wherein it has been held that

jurisdiction is determined by the location of the bank branch of the

payee where the cheque is presented for collection. Counsel submits

that applying the said principle to the facts of the present case, the

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proceedings instituted before the Judicial Magistrate First Class,

Samalkha, Panipat, are liable to be held as without jurisdiction.

8. Counsel further contends that no vicarious criminal liability can

be fastened upon the Petitioner under Section 141 of the Negotiable

Instruments Act, 1881, inasmuch as the essential preconditions for

invoking the said provision are wholly absent in the present case.

Vicarious liability in criminal law does not arise merely on account of

an alleged civil liability; rather, it can be attracted only where the

company or partnership firm is the principal offender and the person

sought to be proceeded against is shown to be in charge of and

responsible for the conduct of the business of such entity at the relevant

time. It is submitted that the Petitioner is the wife of one Manjot Kumar

Singh, who is stated to be a partner of M/s Square Construction Private

Limited. The Petitioner is neither a partner of the said firm nor involved

in its day-to-day affairs or management. The vehicle/machinery in

question, for which the loan was availed, was purchased in the name of

the partnership firm and not in the individual name or capacity of the

Petitioner. The assertions made in the complaint and the statutory

demand notice, to the effect that the Petitioner approached Respondent

No. 2 for availing the loan, are ex facie false and misleading. In fact, it

was the partners of the firm who obtained the loan from Respondent

No. 2. It is submitted that, in the present proceedings, neither the

partnership firm nor its partners have been arrayed as accused. In the

absence of the firm being impleaded and prosecuted as the principal

offender, the question of fastening vicarious liability upon the Petitioner

does not arise. The Respondent No. 2 has deliberately chosen to

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implicate only the wife of one of the partners, while consciously

omitting the firm and the actual borrowers, thereby rendering the

complaint legally untenable. Sub-section (1) of Section 141 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, expressly provides that where an

offence under Section 138 is committed by a company, the company as

well as every person who, at the time the offence was committed, was

in charge of and responsible to the company for the conduct of its

business, shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence. While the

expression “every person” is undoubtedly wide, it is well settled that a

person who does not satisfy the twin requirements of being “in charge

of” and “responsible to the company for the conduct of its business”

cannot be proceeded against under Section 141 of the Act. In this

regard, reliance is placed on the judgment of National Small Industries

Corporation Limited v. Harmeet Singh Paintal and Another, (2010) 3

SCC 330, wherein the Supreme Court has held that specific averments

are mandatory in the complaint to disclose how and in what manner the

accused was in charge of and responsible for the conduct of the business

of the company or firm. Counsel contends that the complaint is

conspicuously silent as regards any specific role attributable to the

Petitioner in the affairs of the partnership firm. Neither any averment

has been made explaining the capacity in which the Petitioner is alleged

to have acted nor is there any assertion demonstrating that she was in

charge of or responsible for the conduct of the business of the firm at

the relevant time. Even the allegation that the machinery was purchased

by the Petitioner is factually incorrect and unsupported by any material.

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9. Counsel submits that merely because the Petitioner is alleged to

have stood as a guarantor for the loan transaction, or because her

signatures appear on the cheque drawn on a joint account held with her

husband, she cannot be subjected to criminal prosecution in isolation.

It is submitted that the liability arising under the Partnership Act, 1932

as well as the Indian Contract Act, 1872 is purely civil in nature. Such

civil liabilities cannot be elevated to criminal culpability and vicarious

criminal liability under Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,

1881 cannot be fastened upon the Petitioner. It is further submitted that

vicarious liability under sub-section (1) of Section 141 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act can be attracted only where the person

sought to be proceeded against was, at the relevant time, in overall

control of and responsible for the day-to-day affairs of the business of

the company or firm. In this context the Hon’ble Supreme Court, in

Standard Chartered Bank v. State of Maharashtra and Others, 2016

(2) RCR (Cri) 778 has held that a complaint under Section 138 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act is not maintainable in the absence of the

company being made a party to the proceedings. Applying the said

settled principle to the facts of the present case, the complaint filed by

Respondent No. 2, having been instituted without impleading the

partnership firm as an accused, is legally untenable.

10. Counsel contends that at the time of availing the loan facility,

Respondent No. 2 had obtained several cheques from the partnership

firm as security and had also procured cheques from the personal

account of the husband of the Petitioner, which was a joint account held

by the Petitioner and her husband. The cheque in question forms part of

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such security cheques. The Respondent No. 2 has misused the said

security cheques and the amount claimed in the demand notice is neither

legally due nor payable by the Petitioner, either in her individual

capacity or on behalf of the partnership firm. It is also submitted that

the demand notice itself is vitiated on account of containing false and

misleading assertions. The Respondent No. 2 has demanded a sum of

Rs. 25,38,877/-. However, the notice is conspicuously silent as to the

basis or computation of the said amount. Neither the demand notice nor

the complaint discloses any particulars or break-up explaining how the

said figure was arrived at or what amount, if any, was outstanding

against the partnership firm. He contends that in the absence of any

disclosure regarding the computation of the alleged liability renders the

demand vague and arbitrary. A demand notice under Section 138 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act must clearly specify the legally enforceable

debt or liability sought to be recovered. It is thus contended that the

initiation and continuation of the criminal proceedings against the

Petitioner are illegal and liable to be quashed.

CONCLUSION

11. I have heard the counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner and

have gone through the documents and judgments appended with the

present petition.

12. At the outset, it would be apposite to refer to the relevant

provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, which are extracted

hereinbelow: –

138. Dishonour of cheque for insufficiency, etc., of funds in the

account.–Where any cheque drawn by a person on an account

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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.

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xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx

141. Offences by companies.–(1) If the person committing an

offence under Section 138 is a company, every person who, at the

time the offence was committed, was in charge of, and was

responsible to the company for the conduct of the business of the

company, as well as the company, shall be deemed to be guilty of

the offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and

punished accordingly:

Provided that nothing contained in this sub-section shall render

any person liable to punishment if he proves that the offence was

committed without his knowledge, or that he had exercised all

due diligence to prevent the commission of such offence.

[Provided further that where a person is nominated as a Director

of a company by virtue of his holding any office or employment

in the Central Government or State Government or a financial

corporation owned or controlled by the Central Government or

the State Government, as the case may be, he shall not be liable

for prosecution under this chapter.]

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), where

any offence under this Act has been committed by a company and

it is proved that the offence has been committed with the consent

or connivance of, or is attributable to, any neglect on the part of,

any director, manager, secretary or other officer of the company,

such director, manager, secretary or other officer shall also be

deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be

proceeded against and punished accordingly.

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Explanation.–For the purposes of this section, —

(a) “company” means any body corporate and includes a
firm or other association of individuals; and

(b) “director”, in relation to a firm, means a partner in the
firm.”

xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx

142. Cognizance of offences.–[(1)] Notwithstanding anything

contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of

1974),–

(a) no court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable

under Section 138 except upon a complaint, in writing, made by

the payee or, as the case may be, the holder in due course of the

cheque;

(b) such complaint is made within one month of the date on which

the cause of action arises under clause (c) of the proviso to

Section 138:

[Provided that the cognizance of a complaint may be taken by the

Court after the prescribed period, if the complainant satisfies the

Court that he had sufficient cause for not making a complaint

within such period.]

(c) no court inferior to that of a Metropolitan Magistrate or a

Judicial Magistrate of the first class shall try any offence

punishable under Section 138.]

[(2) The offence under Section 138 shall be inquired into and

tried only by a court within whose local jurisdiction,–

(a) if the cheque is delivered for collection through an account,

the branch of the bank where the payee or holder in due course,

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as the case may be, maintains the account, is situated; or

(b) if the cheque is presented for payment by the payee or holder

in due course, otherwise through an account, the branch of the

drawee bank where the drawer maintains the account, is

situated.

13. Section 142(2)(a) of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, governs the

question of territorial jurisdiction in prosecutions under Section 138 where

the cheque is delivered for collection through an account. The provision

lays down that the offence shall be inquired into and tried only by a court

within whose local jurisdiction the branch of the bank where the payee or

holder in due course maintains the account is situated, provided the cheque

is delivered for collection through that account.

14. At the outset, it is necessary to delineate the character of the defect

arising from non-compliance with Section 142(2)(a) of the Negotiable

Instruments Act. The provision regulates territorial jurisdiction and

identifies the particular court within whose local limits the complaint under

Section 138 is to be inquired into and tried. It does not concern the inherent

subject-matter jurisdiction of the criminal court. The offence under Section

138 remains triable by a Judicial Magistrate First Class or a Metropolitan

Magistrate, as the case may be. Thus, in the present case, the court which

has taken cognizance is not a court lacking competence to try offences

under the Act; rather, it is a court which may have, at best, erroneously

assumed territorial jurisdiction. The same may, pave way for other

remedies in law, if so advised, but do not make out a case for quashing.

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15. At this juncture, it would also be necessary to make a reference to

Section 460 and Section 462 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973,

which is extracted hereunder for ready reference:

460. Irregularities which do not vitiate proceedings.–If any

Magistrate not empowered by law to do any of the following

things, namely:–

(a) to issue a search-warrant under section 94;

xxx xxx xxx

(e) to take cognizance of an offence under clause (a) or clause

(b) of sub-section (1) of section 190;

(f) to make over a case under sub-section (2) of section 192;

xxx xxx xxx

462. Proceedings in wrong place.–No finding, sentence or

order of any Criminal Court shall be set aside merely on the

ground that the inquiry, trial or other proceedings in the course

of which it was arrived at or passed, took place in a wrong

sessions division, district, sub-division or other local area,

unless it appears that such error has in fact occasioned a failure

of justice.

16. A perusal of the above reflects that Section 460 lays down an important

principle of criminal procedure i.e. not every mistake committed by a

judicial officer should automatically nullify the entire proceeding. The law

recognizes that certain errors, if committed in good faith, ought not to result

in the collapse of the process.

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17. Clause (e) of Section 460 specifically deals with cases where a

Magistrate, who is not legally empowered to take cognizance of an offence

under clause (a) or clause (b) of Section 190(1), nevertheless takes

cognizance erroneously but in good faith. The section clearly provides if a

Magistrate mistakenly assumes jurisdiction and takes cognizance under

Section 190(1)(a) or (b), but does so honestly and without mala fides, the

proceedings are protected and do not automatically become void. This

provision is further strengthened by Section 462 of the CrPC, which lays

down that no finding, sentence or order shall be set aside merely because

the proceedings were conducted in the wrong territorial area, unless it is

shown that such error has in fact resulted in a failure of justice.

18. In Purshottam Jethanand v. The State of Kutch, AIR 1954 SC 700,

the Hon’ble Supreme Court held that where a Magistrate, though not

empowered, takes cognizance of an offence under Section 190(1)(a) or (b)

of the Code of Criminal Procedure, such defect does not ipso facto vitiate

the proceedings. It was observed that the irregularity stands cured by virtue

of Section 529 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1868 (corresponding to

Section 460 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973), provided that the

act was done in good faith and no prejudice has been caused to the accused.

It was further held that even if an objection is raised regarding the

Magistrate’s competence at a later stage, the defect would be deemed cured

if the Magistrate had bona fide assumed the existence of such power while

taking cognizance and no failure of justice has resulted therefrom.

19. Thus, for Section 460(e) to apply, three essential conditions must be

satisfied: first, the act in question must fall within the category mentioned

in the provision, such as taking cognizance under Section 190(1)(a) or (b);

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second, the Magistrate must have acted erroneously, meaning that he did

not in fact possess the legal authority to take cognizance; and third, the act

must have been done in good faith. If these requirements are fulfilled, the

defect is treated as curable.

20. Further, in Willie (William) Slaney v. State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR

1956 SC 116, a Constitution Bench of the Hon’ble Supreme Court

elucidated the scope of Section 529 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,

1898 (corresponding to Section 460 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,

1973) and held that in cases falling within the ambit of the said provision,

the irregularities enumerated therein do not vitiate the proceedings and the

question of prejudice becomes immaterial. It was observed as under: –

14. We now proceed to examine the relevant Sections of the

Code, Chapter 45 deals generally with irregular proceedings.

There are certain irregularities which do not vitiate the

proceedings. They are set out in Section 529. No question of

prejudice arises in this class of case because the section states

categorically that they shall not vitiate the proceedings. Certain

other irregularities are treated as vital and there the proceedings

are void irrespective of prejudice. These are set out in Section

530. A third class is dealt with in Sections 531, 532, 533, 535,

536(2) and 537. There, broadly speaking, the question is whether

the error has caused prejudice to the accused or, as some of the

sections put it, has occasioned a failure of justice. The examples

we have given are illustrative and not exhaustive. What we are

seeking to demonstrate is that the Code has carefully classified

certain kinds of error and expressly indicates how they are to be

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dealt with. In every such case the Court is bound to give effect to

the express commands of the legislature: there is no scope for

further speculation. The only class of case in which the Courts

are free to reach a decision is that for which no express provision

is made.

21. Now, adverting to the facts of the present case, it is evident that JMIC,

Samalkha took cognizance of the offence under Section 190(1)(a) of the

Code and proceeded to issue summons, even though he was not empowered

to do so in view of Section 142(2)(a) of the Negotiable Instruments Act.

However, I am of the opinion that such an error squarely falls within the

scope of Section 460(1)(e) of the CrPC. The defect relates to the act of

taking cognizance under Section 190(1)(a) and provided it was done in

good faith, it constitutes a curable irregularity rather than a nullity.

22. The next contention advanced on behalf of the Petitioner that no

vicarious criminal liability can be fastened upon her under Section 141 of

the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 is wholly untenable and is liable to

be rejected at the threshold. The submission proceeds on a fundamentally

flawed premise that the Petitioner is sought to be prosecuted merely by

reason of her matrimonial relationship with one of the partners of the firm

or on account of a civil liability emanating from a loan transaction. The

record, however, unmistakably demonstrates that the prosecution is

founded not on any derivative or remote liability, but on the Petitioner’s

own conscious and voluntary act of issuing and signing the cheque in

question. The averments contained in the complaint read thus: –

“2. That the accused had approached the complainant at its
Branch office at Charkhi Dadri (Haryana) for financial

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assistance of a vehicle Model ZT-35 and requested to approve
loan for vehicle and on the requests of the accused, the
complainant agreed for financial assistance to the accused. The
complainant agreed to give loan to the accused and an loan &
Guarantee agreement was executed between the complainant
and the accused on 01/10/2013 vide Loan Cum Hypothecation
Agreement bearing No. SEF054310010001 and the complainant
disbursed a loan amount of Rs. 42,39,000/- as vehicle loan to the
accused.

3. That as per Loan Agreement dated 01/10/2013, the accused
had agreed to repay the above said loan amount to the
complainant in equated monthly installments.

4. That the accused has running loan account the complainant
and the accused for discharging his aforesaid legal loan liability
issued and handed over a cheque bearing No. 502209 dated
27/11/2019 for Rs. 25,38,877/- drawn on HDFC Bank Ltd.,
Branch Vasundhara Ghaziabad, UP-201012 in favour of the
complainant as a part payment with assurance that the said
encashed on its presentation.

5. That as per assurance of the accused, the complainant
presented the said cheque with its banker i.e. Standard Charted
Bank, Samalkha, Distt. Panipat-132101 for encashment but the
returned back unpaid by banker of the accused with the remark,
“Insufficient Funds” vide Bank return memo dated 05/12/2019.”

23. It is evident from the allegations levelled in the complaint that the

petitioner is not only a co-borrower in the loan account for purchase of

machinery, even though for the partnership firm, she is also the guarantor

and had issued the cheques in such capacity, from the joint account with

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her husband who is not only a borrower but also a partner in the partnership

firm.

24. It is also undisputed that the cheque in question was drawn from a joint

bank account maintained by the Petitioner along with her husband and that

the said cheque bears the signature of the Petitioner. The liability sought to

be enforced through the complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable

Instruments Act does not flow from the internal arrangements of the

partnership firm or from the inter se rights and obligations of the partners,

but from the statutory consequences attached to the issuance of a cheque

which, upon presentation, has been dishonoured. The moment the

Petitioner affixed her signature on a cheque drawn on a joint account as a

guarantor and co-borrower, towards discharge of a liability, she assumed

direct and personal statutory responsibility for the payment represented

thereby. Such liability cannot be diluted on a plea that the Petitioner was

not involved in the day-to-day affairs of the partnership firm. A person who

signs and issues a cheque, even if as a guarantor/co-borrower of a loan is

directly liable under Section 138 of the Act, irrespective of whether the

underlying transaction pertains to a partnership firm or was on account of

a personal obligation.

25. Further, under the Indian Contract Act, 1872, the liability of a guarantor

is co-extensive with that of the principal debtor, unless otherwise provided

by the contract. A person who undertakes such liability cannot evade

responsibility by subsequently characterising the same as purely “civil” in

nature, when the statutory ingredients of a criminal offence under Section

138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act stand prima facie satisfied. The

offence under Section 138 is a distinct statutory offence, and the civil

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character of the underlying transaction neither effaces nor eclipses the

criminal accountability that arises upon the dishonour of a cheque issued

towards a legally enforceable debt or liability. The relevant provisions of

the Contract Act, 1872, are extracted as under:

126. “Contract of guarantee”, “surety”, “principal debtor” and

“creditor”.–A “contract of guarantee” is a contract to perform the

promise, or discharge the liability, of a third person in case of his

default. The person who gives the guarantee is called the “surety”;

the person in respect of whose default the guarantee is given is

called the “principal debtor”, and the person to whom the

guarantee is given is called the “creditor”. A guarantee may be

either oral or written.

127. Consideration for guarantee.–Anything done, or any promise

made, for the benefit of the principal debtor, may be a sufficient

consideration to the surety for giving the guarantee.

128. Surety’s liability.–The liability of the surety is co-extensive

with that of the principal debtor, unless it is otherwise provided by

the contract.

26. Viewed thus, the attempt of the Petitioner to avoid liability by invoking

the doctrine of absence of vicarious liability is clearly misconceived. The

Petitioner’s accountability in the present case flows directly from her status

as a surety and have issued a cheque in discharge of liability of principal

debtor by issuing a cheque from the joint account and being signatory to

the cheque, coupled with the obligations imposed by the Negotiable

Instruments Act. The contention raised on her behalf is, therefore, devoid

of merit and cannot be sustained.

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27. The next contention advanced on behalf of the Petitioner that the

complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 is

vitiated for want of impleadment of the partnership firm as an accused is

misconceived and devoid of merit. The argument rests on an erroneous

mixing of vicarious liability under Section 141 of the Act with direct

liability arising under Section 138 thereof. The present proceedings are not

founded upon the principle of vicarious liability alone, but upon the

Petitioner’s own act of issuing and signing the cheque which has admittedly

been dishonoured. It is well settled that the sine qua non for the offence

under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act is the drawing of a

cheque by a person on an account maintained by her, the presentation of

such cheque for discharge of a legally enforceable debt or liability and its

subsequent dishonour. Where the accused is herself the drawer and

signatory of the cheque, criminal liability under Section 138 is direct and

personal. In such a situation, the absence of the partnership firm as an

accused does not render the complaint legally untenable.

28. The mandate of Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881,

comes in play when the offence is committed by the Company/Firm. The

expression “offence” used under Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments

Act, 1881 is in the context of dishonour of the cheque and not ‘non-payment

of liability.’ While the default is non-payment of borrowed amount is

undisputedly by the partnership firm, however, the Negotiable Instruments

Act, 1881, only has to consider about who is the drawer of the cheque and

whether such cheque was drawn in discharge of a legally enforceable

liability or not. Once the above test is satisfied, the drawer of cheque

renders himself liable to be prosecuted. The petitioner being surety,

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becomes liable to discharge liability enforceable against the principal

debtor.

29. The submission that the Petitioner is sought to be prosecuted merely

because she stood as a guarantor or because her signatures appear on a

cheque drawn on a joint account cannot be accepted as a legally sustainable

defence. The act of signing of a loan agreement or a co-borrower and

signing a cheque from personal account as a surety is not a passive or

mechanical act. It is a conscious representation to the payee that the drawer

stands as a surety and undertakes to honour the payment. Once the cheque

is dishonoured, the statutory consequences under Section 138 follow,

subject to proof at trial. The Petitioner cannot avoid prosecution by

claiming that the underlying transaction was connected to a partnership

firm or that her liability was only civil in nature.

30. The reliance placed on the Partnership Act, 1932 and the Indian

Contract Act, 1872 to contend that the liability is purely civil is equally

misplaced. It is trite in law that while the underlying transaction may give

rise to civil rights and consequences inter se amongst the petitioners, the

partners and contracting parties, the dishonour of a cheque issued towards

discharge of such liability attracts an independent statutory offence under

Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. The criminality arises not

from the partnership arrangement or the contract of guarantee, but from the

dishonour of the cheque upon presentation. The enforceability of the civil

rights inter se amongst parties and other partners does not eclipse the

criminal liability statutorily engrafted under the Act.

31. The argument based upon Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments

Act is also misconceived. Section 141 comes into play where the company

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or firm commits the offence but liability is sought to be extended

vicariously to persons in charge of and responsible for the conduct of its

business. In the present case, the Petitioner is not sought to be prosecuted

as a person connected with the firm for an offence by the firm, but as the

drawer and signatory of the cheque itself. Consequently, the requirement

of impleading the firm as a principal accused does not arise in the facts of

the present case.

32. The reliance placed on the decision of the Supreme Court is also clearly

distinguishable. The said decisions dealt with the prosecution of officers of

a company on the basis of vicarious liability, in the absence of the company

being arrayed as an accused even though cheques had been issued for the

Company. The ratio of the said judgments has no application to a case

where the accused is herself the drawer of the cheque and is sought to be

prosecuted for her own act under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments

Act.

33. In view of the foregoing discussion, I am of the opinion that the non-

impleadment of the partnership firm does not render the complaint against

the Petitioner unsustainable. The contention raised on behalf of the

Petitioner is, therefore, rejected.

34. The next contention advanced on behalf of the Petitioner assailing the

statutory demand notice issued under proviso (b) to Section 138 of the

Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 is equally devoid of merit and cannot be

accepted. Upon a perusal of the record and the settled legal position, this

Court finds no substance in the plea that the complaint is vitiated either on

account of non-service of notice or due to any alleged defect in its contents.

At the outset, it must be emphasised that the issuance of a demand notice

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under proviso (b) to Section 138 is a condition precedent for launching

prosecution. What is required is that the notice be sent to the correct address

of the drawer by registered post or other recognised modes. Once such

dispatch is established, the presumption of due service arises by virtue of

Section 27 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 and Section 114 of the Indian

Evidence Act, 1872, unless the contrary is proved. In the present case, the

record reflects that the demand notice was duly dispatched to the address

of the Petitioner as disclosed in the loan documents and the complaint. The

mere allegation of an incorrect pin code, without anything more is

insufficient to rebut the statutory presumption of service.

35. The plea that the cheque in question was a “security cheque” and that

its alleged misuse vitiates the demand notice is also untenable. It is now

well settled by the Supreme Court in the judgment of Sripati Singh v. State

of Jharkhand, (2022) 18 SCC 614 that even a cheque issued as security, if

presented towards a subsisting legally enforceable debt or liability and

dishonoured, attracts the rigours of Section 138 of the Negotiable

Instruments Act. The characterisation of the cheque as a security cheque

does not, by itself, render the demand notice invalid or non est. The relevant

extract thereof reads thus :

21. A cheque issued as security pursuant to a financial transaction

cannot be considered as a worthless piece of paper under every

circumstance. “Security” in its true sense is the state of being safe and

the security given for a loan is something given as a pledge of payment.

It is given, deposited or pledged to make certain the fulfilment of an

obligation to which the parties to the transaction are bound. If in a

transaction, a loan is advanced and the borrower agrees to repay the

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amount in a specified time-frame and issues a cheque as security to

secure such repayment; if the loan amount is not repaid in any other

form before the due date or if there is no other understanding or

agreement between the parties to defer the payment of amount, the

cheque which is issued as security would mature for presentation and

the drawee of the cheque would be entitled to present the same. On such

presentation, if the same is dishonoured, the consequences

contemplated under Section 138 and the other provisions of the NI Act

would flow.

22. When a cheque is issued and is treated as “security” towards

repayment of an amount with a time period being stipulated for

repayment, all that it ensures is that such cheque which is issued as

“security” cannot be presented prior to the loan or the instalment

maturing for repayment towards which such cheque is issued as

security. Further, the borrower would have the option of repaying the

loan amount or such financial liability in any other form and in that

manner if the amount of loan due and payable has been discharged

within the agreed period, the cheque issued as security cannot

thereafter be presented. Therefore, the prior discharge of the loan or

there being an altered situation due to which there would be

understanding between the parties is a sine qua non to not present the

cheque which was issued as security. These are only the defences that

would be available to the drawer of the cheque in a proceeding initiated

under Section 138 of the NI Act. Therefore, there cannot be a hard-and-

fast rule that a cheque which is issued as security can never be

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presented by the drawee of the cheque. If such is the understanding a

cheque would also be reduced to an “on demand promissory note” and

in all circumstances, it would only be a civil litigation to recover the

amount, which is not the intention of the statute. When a cheque is

issued even though as “security” the consequence flowing therefrom is

also known to the drawer of the cheque and in the circumstance stated

above if the cheque is presented and dishonoured, the holder of the

cheque/drawee would have the option of initiating the civil proceedings

for recovery or the criminal proceedings for punishment in the fact

situation, but in any event, it is not for the drawer of the cheque to

dictate terms with regard to the nature of litigation.

(Emphasis supplied)

36. The argument that the amount claimed in the demand notice is not

legally due or that the Respondent No. 2 failed to furnish a detailed break-

up or computation of the sum of Rs. 25,38,877/-, also fails to impress this

Court. The statutory requirement under proviso (b) to Section 138 is that

the notice must make a demand for payment of the cheque amount within

the prescribed period. So long as the notice clearly demands payment of the

amount covered by the dishonoured cheque, the requirement of law stands

satisfied. Legal presumption which flows from an instrument is that the

amount mentioned therein is acknowledged as payable. Even though such

presumption is rebuttable, however, the said stage has not come. The

burden is to be discharged during trial and merely a prima facie case is

required to be shown for summoning of an accused. The liability that had

crystallised on the date of presentation of the cheque is a matter of evidence

and cannot be adjudicated at this stage. Any dispute with regard to the

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correctness or quantum of liability is a matter to be adjudicated during trial

and does not render the notice invalid. At the stage of considering the

maintainability of the complaint, the Court is only required to see whether

the foundational requirements of Section 138 have been prima facie

complied with, which, in the present case, stand duly satisfied.

37. Consequently, the initiation and continuation of the criminal

proceedings against the Petitioner cannot be faulted on the ground of any

alleged defect in the statutory demand notice, and no case for interference

is made out.

38. In view of the above, the instant petition is dismissed.

39. Ordered Accordingly.

40. All pending misc. applications, if any, stand disposed of.




February 05, 2026.                              (VINOD S. BHARDWAJ)
raj arora                                                JUDGE
          Whether speaking/reasoned             : Yes/No
          Whether reportable                    : Yes/No




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