NI Act – IMPORTANT GUJARAT HIGH COURT CASE DIGEST (2024–2026)

IMPORTANT GUJARAT HIGH COURT CASE DIGEST (2024–2026)


1. Financial Capacity Must Be Proven if Challenged – Accused Successfully Rebut Presumption

Key Point: When accused raises a probable defence by challenging the financial capacity of the complainant, the complainant must prove means to lend and legally enforceable debt.
Held: Statutory presumption under Section 139 is rebuttable, and burden shifts back once a probable defence is shown.
👉 Accused succeeded in rebuttal; acquittal sustained.
(Case: Gujarat High Court, 14 Nov 2025)

📌 Practical Takeaway:
If defence questions financial means, mere possession of cheque + presumption is insufficient. Complainant must produce cogent proof of funds and documentation showing ability to lend.


2. Director’s Liability Under Section 141 Clarified (2025)

Issue: Whether a former director of a company can be held liable for cheque dishonour under NI Act Section 138/141 if not in charge at time of offence.
Held: Criminal liability arises only if the individual was in charge and responsible for the company’s operations at the time the offence was committed. Resignation years before the cheque issuance absolves director from liability.
(Case: Gujarat High Court, early 2025)

📌 Practical Note:
When charging directors, specific averments must show control and responsibility at the relevant time — otherwise, the liability may not attach despite relevance of Section 141.


3. Direction to Deposit 20% Amount Under Section 148 Is Discretionary, Not Absolute (Oct 2025)

Issue: Is the appellate court required to order deposit of minimum 20% compensation under Section 148 during appeal?
Held: The 20% deposit directive is not an absolute rule. The appellate court has judicial discretion to decide whether to order deposit in accordance with the facts of the case.
(Case: Mahadev Enterprise & Another v. State of Gujarat, 2025 GUJHC 58000)

📌 Practical Note for Appeals:
While Section 148 encourages deposit for interim relief to complainant, trial/appeal courts must exercise discretion judicially, considering fairness and circumstances — not mechanical compliance.


4. Appeal Conditions: Flexible Enforcement of Undertakings (Late 2025)

Issue: Suspension of sentence with conditions including amount deposit — can bail conditions be relaxed?
Held: Gujarat HC allowed temporary waiver of bail conditions for overseas travel where substantial deposit was already made and applicant demonstrated bona fides, but stressed undertakings must be kept in “letter and spirit”.
(Case: Gujarat High Court, close to 2026)

📌 Practical Note:
HC may balance liberty vs compliance — earlier payments and clean conduct can support flexibility, but obligations cannot be indefinitely postponed.


5. Limitation & Debt Validity – Presumption Does Not Cure Absence of Liability (2024)

Issue: When magistrate’s summons were quashed because debt was barred by limitation at time of issuance of cheque.
Held: Even with presumptions under Sections 118/139, if debt was time-barred and not enforceable, complaint is not maintainable.
(Case: Shreeji Prints Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Gujarat, 30 Apr 2024)

📌 Practical Note:
Presumption does not override factual defect: no legally enforceable debt = no Section 138 offence. Limitation must be checked at the stage of issuance.


6. Case Backlogs & Judicial Efficiency Measures (2025–2026)

Operational developments (practical but legally important context):

  • HC ordered setting up of additional cheque return courts due to over 4 lakh pending cases in Ahmedabad region to speed up NI Act matters.

  • Surat & Ahmedabad courts launched digital/online payment & settlement facilities (QR code on summons; SBI Collect) to expedite SI cases and enable compounding on spot.

  • These initiatives reflect procedural facilitation and early settlement promotion — important for daily practice.


📌 Practical DRILL for Trial/Appellate Lawyers

When Defence Challenges Financial Capacity
→ Produce bank statements, ITRs, ledger proofs.
→ Mere cheque + signatures not enough if defence has pointed out incapacity.

Director’s Liability
→ Clearly plead that the director was in charge at the time of offence (for Section 141) — absence of this detail aids defence.

Appeal Stage Deposit under Section 148
→ Argue equitable factors if seeking waiver/variation of deposit.
→ Must justify with credible reasons — indiscretion not permitted.

Limitation Defence
→ Always check date of issuance vis-à-vis cause of action and validity of debt — presumption does not validate stale debt.

Use of Digital/Online Settlement Tools
→ Advise clients early on cash settlement via QR code/SBI Collect to expedite compounding.


Contextual Court Practice Tip

In Gujarat courts, digital compliance and online payment mechanisms are now part of cheque bounce case procedure — including e-receipts treated as valid evidence when deposited during summons stage. This is a practical shift in court administration that lawyers should integrate into their case strategy

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