Court’s Discretion over Expert Opinion: High Court Upholds Rejection of Handwriting Comparison in Cheque Case
In the judgment of Rajinder Singh v. Prashant Sharma, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed a petition by an accused seeking a handwriting expert’s comparison of signatures in a cheque dishonor case. The Court ruled that expert opinion is not mandatory, as courts are legally competent to compare signatures themselves, and the application appeared to be a tactic to delay the trial.
The Dispute: Alleged Security Cheques and Settlement
The case originated from a complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. The complainant alleged that the petitioner (accused) issued cheques to return earnest money paid for a flat purchase. The accused raised a multi-layered defense:
- Investment, Not Purchase: He claimed the money was for stock market investments, not a flat.
- Security Cheques: He asserted that he had provided “security cheques” which the complainant misused after the account was settled.
- Previous Payment: He pointed to a ₹1,50,000 cheque from May 2013 as proof of a settled account.
During the trial, the accused moved an application under Sections 45 and 73 of the Indian Evidence Act to have a handwriting expert compare the complainant’s signatures on various defense exhibits with his admitted signatures on court documents.
Key Legal and Factual Findings
The High Court affirmed the trial court’s rejection of the application based on the following reasons:
- Lack of Relevance: The cheque at the center of the criminal complaint was dated February 12, 2014, while the documents the accused sought to examine pertained to May 2013. The Court found no logical connection between a 2013 payment of ₹1.5 lakh and a 2014 liability involving a cheque for ₹10 lakh.
- Shifting Defense: In his statement under Section 313 of the CrPC, the accused originally admitted to giving the complainant a blank security cheque. The Court viewed his subsequent request for expert comparison—made after the recording of evidence—as an inconsistent “afterthought” intended to prolong the proceedings.
- Competence of the Court: Justice Sandeep Sharma highlighted that under Section 73 of the Evidence Act, the court is fully authorized to compare disputed signatures with admitted ones. Sending signatures for expert examination is a discretionary power, not a mandatory requirement in every dispute.
- Protection Against Self-Incrimination: The Court noted that a complainant cannot be compelled to provide evidence against themselves to assist the accused’s defense in such a manner.
Final Ruling
The High Court concluded that the application lacked a bona fide purpose and proximity to the actual dispute. Finding no illegality in the trial court’s order, the petition was dismissed.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 81
Rajinder Singh V. Prashant Sharma (D.O. J. 12-03-2026)






