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R Trivedi (advocate.dma@gmail.com)     04 July 2012

Discussion on s.138

It is my humble opinion that accused are being taken for ride under this S.139. Despite some good judgement by various High Courts, unfortunately the lower courts along with the defense lawyers are not appreciating the true interpretation of S.139. I will try to clarify the position as follows..

 

-- S.8 defines Holder and S.58 talks of possessor, so basically a possesor of a cheque need not be the holder of the cheque. The Holder is the possessor with consideration due.

 

-- S.139 gives presumption to the holder not to the possessor.

 

-- S.139 gives presumpion with respect to type of liability, not with respect to  amount of liability.

 

-- S.138 talks of drawn (or execution).

 

-- Mere signature on the cheque is not the proof of drawing a document.

 

--S.46 (Delivery) talks of completion of drawn on delivery.

 

-- S.20 is not applicable to cheques, so a blank cheque is not a cheque at all when issued.

 

 

So in nutshell, complainant can be made to answer despite S.139:

 

1. The date on which he received the cheque ?

2. Proof of execution of cheque ?

3. Proof with respect to liability amount.

 

If it can be proved that cheque (non PDC) was delivered 6 months prior to date of presentation, no conviction, If cheque execution was denied and complainant fails to prove, no conviction, if the liability amount is questioned with some evidence (court may not sill accept blind denial on this) that it is questionable, then also no conviction.

 

Mostly complainant gives some cock & bull story about liability like friendly loan etc and courts still convict stating that accused could not rebut the presumption. 

 

Request more views so that this another menace like 498A act, can be brought to the notice. 

 



Learning

 4 Replies

LAXMINARAYAN - Sr Advocate. ( solve problems in criminal cases. lawproblems@gmail.com)     05 July 2012

it is not the mistake of lower courts but guilt complex and lethargy of the accused. Iniial time is wasted in taking dates by taking services of juniors and when the matter comes for hearing courts do not allow tor raise technical issues.

LAXMINARAYAN - Sr Advocate. ( solve problems in criminal cases. lawproblems@gmail.com)     05 July 2012

it is not the mistake of lower courts but guilt complex and lethargy of the accused. Iniial time is wasted in taking dates by taking services of juniors and when the matter comes for hearing courts do not allow tor raise technical issues.

Curious Sam (Self)     18 July 2012

Dear Mr. Trivedi,

You say:

If it can be proved that cheque (non PDC) was delivered 6 months prior to date of presentation, no conviction

What if the complainant says he collected a PDC cheque 2.5 years in advance when he gave a friendly loan, but the date is not in the handwriting of the drawer. In fact, payee name and amount is also not in the handwriting of the drawer. No proof of multi lakh friendly loan presented either.

R Trivedi (advocate.dma@gmail.com)     19 July 2012

Foremost question is how the complainant got the cheque in his hand ??

 

So your evidence should match with the plea of delivery of cheque.


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