A cheque is a negotiable instrument in India and is normally valid for three
months from its date. Cheque bouncing is one of the most common offences in the
country, with over 40 lakh pending cases in the Supreme Court. A cheque is said
to be bounced when the payment stated on it is not made and it is dishonoured.
A cheque can bounce for several reasons, which include insufficiency of
funds, mismatch in signature, stale cheques, post dated cheques or if there are
corrections in the cheque without authentication. The bank collects a penalty
from the defaulter when a cheque bounces.
The important point here is that when a cheque bounces, it is a criminal
offence in India. Therefore under the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, the
person who had issued the bounced cheque is punishable by heavy fine and jail
term also.
What is the legal remedy you have if you have been issued a cheque
which gets bounced?
Almost every bank gives a ‘cheque return memo’ along with the returned
cheque stating the reason for the bounce. If you hold the cheque, you need to
inform this to the drawer and ask if you can re-present it to the bank within
the 3 months period. If cheque is dishonoured even the second time, then you
can take legal action. As a first step, you can send a legal notice to the
defaulter within a period of 30 days from receiving the cheque return memo. The
notice should contain all necessary facts of the matter, including the details
of the first time the cheque was dishonoured. The defaulter needs to make a
fresh payment within a period of 15 days from the receipt of this notice.
However, if he still doesn’t make the payment within this time period, then you
can file a complaint in the magistrate court. This case should be filed within
a maximum period of 1 month from the date of expiry of the 15 days time period.
Remember that the complaint should be filed within the time frame specific.
If this is not done, then the case will become time barred and will not be
entertained. When your case comes for hearing, the defaulter can be punished
with a jail term for two years and/or a penalty which can be upto twice the
cheque amount. The defaulter can appeal against the order within a period of 1
month of judgement.
Case 1: Bouncing of a rent cheque: In India, it is common
practice for the landlord to take post dated cheques from the tenant. In case a
rent cheque bounces, the landlord can follow the above procedure to recover the
dues from the tenant. Sometimes, it may so happen that the tenant does not have
the funds simply because the landlord did not drop the cheque at the expected
time. Therefore, the landlord is bound to first inform the tenant and only then
proceed with the legal process. There may be another case when the tenant
wishes to set off an amount from a particular month’s rent towards some expense
he incurred on behalf of the landlord, which the latter refuses to pay. If
there is a cheque bounce because of this, the criminal case will continue
against the tenant till he is able to establish that there was a legitimate set
off.
Case 2: Bouncing of an EMI payment: When a cheque meant for
an EMI payment on a loan is dishonoured, the bank can also file a case against
the defaulter. However, banks do not do this as the first step. Firstly, hefty
penalties, loan default charges and cheque bounce charges are levied. These
keep building up for every month of default and added to the EMI amount. Also,
the defaulter’s credit rating gets affected with every default he makes. In
case of secured loans, banks also have the security as collateral. If the
borrower does not make payments even after repeated reminders, the bank can
give sufficient notice and auction the security to recover the dues.
Case 3: Bouncing of a cheque in a business transaction: If
you receive a cheque from a business debtor and this gets bounced, then you
should follow the above procedure to recover dues. In case of bounced cheques
in business transactions, the added penalty would be the loss of face in
business circles, affecting your reputation and business deals.
Considering the huge number of pending bounced cheque cases in the courts,
the Government is mulling to amend the Negotiable Instruments Act which will
restrict the payee from taking the defaulted person to court. According to news
reports, such a person who has defaulted in making the payment will not face
jail term and the cases will be handled only through arbitration and settlement
by Lok Adalats. This proposal has come under criticism from the common man, as
it is believed that this will only increase cases of payment default. A more
stringent and rigorous punishment should be put in place to reduce instances of
bounced cheques in the country.
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