Mr.Arun Sugla,
Please click on the following link. Similar question was answered by our Learned Friends in this very forum sometime back. Some Citations are also available. However, the validity of cheque at that time was six months, which has been reduced to three months but the legal point will not change.
https://www.lawyersclubindia.com/forum/Presentation-of-cheque-6-months-21038.asp#.VA43_mO82Ul
I wish to inform Mr. Arun Sugla, you have not handled the matter properly. When the cheque was returned to you with reason "Stopped for payment", did you contact the Drawer of the cheque? Are you sure that there is no business dispute regarding the quality of goods supplied to the drawner of cheque or some other business dispute between you and the Drawer of the Cheque because of which the Drawer of the cheque gave Stop payment instructions to his bank and you kept quite till the last day? This is because, after the introduction of Section 138 provisions, Bankers cannot return a cheque, "payment stopped by Drawer" when there is no balance. The drawer of a cheque can give stop payment instructions only when his account is showing sufficient balance to pass the cheque in question. By this, we can presume that the Drawer's account was having sufficient balance on the day the cheque was presented for the first time and the payment was stopped for some other reason. Hence, you should have contacted business associate to whom you supplied goods. If you had contacted him immediately, the reason for his action would have come to light and and enquiry with the paying bank would have revealed whether the account was having sufficient balance. If the paying bank returned the cheque with the reason "Payment Stopped by Drawer" even when there is no sufficient balance in the account to pass the cheque in question, such paying bank is not in order in accepting stop payment instructions from the Drawer and citing the reason for cheque return "Payment Stopped by Drawer" as reason for cheque return.
Instead of taking "proper" action you have slept over your right and for reasons best known to you presented the cheque on the last day of validity, which happens to be a Sunday on which day Banks do not work, in which case, it is not known how you presented the cheque in the collecting bank counter. If you dropped the cheque in some drop box maintained by the Bank for cheques to be collected, it is not a proper presenting by you while bank has no obligation to clear the box and present cheques on a Sunday as no clearing operations take place. There will be a point to ponder, if the account of the drawer of the cheques is in the same Bank and you dropped the cheque on the last day of validity. However, the question of proof of presenting on the last day of validity will arise. RBI had long back issued instructions to all banks to facilitate issue of acknowledgement even when a cheque is dropped into a drop box. In your case whether the bank introduced such system and you are holding any acknowledgement for having presented the cheque on the last day of validity which happens to be a SUNDAY.
I am of the view that if the cheque is presented on the counters of Collecting Bank even on the last day of validity of cheque, it is their duty to present it to paying bank immediately on the next possible opportunity to the paying bank. If the collecting bank and paying bank are one and the same (ie. Drawer of cheque also is having account in the same bank), the Paying/Collecting Bank can debit the cheque to the drawer of the cheque on the next working day, when they have sufficient proof that the cheque was dropped into the drop box on the last day of the validity and was not presented subsequent to it. In your case, the fact of whether you have an acknowledgement for having presented the cheque on the last day of validity, is not revealed or not available in your question.