In Pratap Singh vs. HDFC Bank Ltd. &Anr., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh ruled that the primary objective of the penal provisions under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act is compensatory and economic rather than strictly retributive. The Court established that once an accused deposits an amount matching or exceeding the face value of a dishonoured cheque during the trial, the explicit consent of the complainant-bank for compounding becomes immaterial. Exercising its inherent powers under Section 528 of the BNSS, the Court held that continuing a criminal trial after the underlying financial default has been rectified would constitute an abuse of the process of law and serve no fruitful public purpose.
- Factual Background
The respondent-bank initiated criminal proceedings under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act after a cheque for Rs. 3,80,000, issued by the petitioner to regularize an irregular loan account, was dishonoured due to insufficient funds. During the pendency of the trial, the petitioner-accused deposited a total of Rs. 3,90,000 in two installments (Rs. 2,40,000 and Rs. 1,50,000).
- The Compounding Dispute
Following the deposits, the accused applied for compounding of the offence under Section 147 of the Act. The bank opposed the application on two grounds:
- Lack of Specificity: The bank argued the money was “sucked” into the general outstanding loan account—where a larger liability of over Rs. 6,10,000 remained—rather than being paid specifically to discharge the dishonoured cheque.
- Necessity of Consent: The bank contended that an accused cannot compel compounding without the unambiguous consent of the complainant. The Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM) rejected the application solely because the bank refused to consent to the compromise.
- Nature and Object of Section 138
The High Court disagreed with the trial court’s rigid approach, clarifying that Section 138 is a civil sheep in a criminal wolf’s clothing. The Court noted that since the cheque was originally issued to regularize the loan, a subsequent deposit exceeding the cheque’s value during the trial must be legally construed as a discharge of that specific cheque liability. Once the financial “wrong” is righted, the criminal machinery should not be used to settle broader civil loan disputes.
- Inherent Powers under Section 528 BNSS
The petitioner sought relief under Section 528 of the BNSS (the successor to Section 482 CrPC), which preserves the High Court’s inherent power to prevent the harassment or persecution of litigants. The Court applied a rigorous “four-step test” to determine if quashing was appropriate:
- The material (proof of payment) was of sterling and impeccable quality.
- The payment effectively overruled the factual basis of the accusation.
- The fact of the deposit was unrefuted by the bank.
- Continuing the trial would result in a waste of precious judicial time and an abuse of process.
- Final Ruling and Directions
The High Court allowed the petition, quashing both the criminal complaint and the CJM’s order. However, to balance the equities, the Court issued the following directives:
- Compounding: The offence was deemed compounded despite the bank’s resistance.
- Litigation Costs: To compensate the bank for being dragged into litigation, the Court imposed costs of Rs. 25,000 on the petitioner, payable within six weeks.
- Civil Remedy: The Court clarified that the bank remains at liberty to recover the remaining outstanding loan balance through appropriate civil legal channels.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 321
Pratap Singh V. Hdfc Bank Ltd. &Anr. (D.O.J. 07.05.2026)
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