Arjun Baljee vs State Of Rajasthan on 27 May, 2025

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Rajasthan High Court – Jodhpur

Arjun Baljee vs State Of Rajasthan on 27 May, 2025

Author: Farjand Ali

Bench: Farjand Ali

[2025:RJ-JD:25574]

      HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE FOR RAJASTHAN AT
                          JODHPUR
            S.B. Criminal Misc(Pet.) No. 1810/2024

Arjun Baljee S/o Shri Chander Baljee, Aged About 45 Years,
Presently R/o 130/1, 4Th Main Road,defence Colony, Banglore.
                                                                    ----Petitioner
                                    Versus
1.       State Of Rajasthan, Through Pp
2.       M/s Hotel Rajputana Palace, Through Its Repesentive
         Narendra Chouhan S/o Shri Padam Singh Chouhan R/o
         19, Shanti Vihar, Panch Batti Chouraha Ratnada, Jodhpur.
                                                                 ----Respondents



For Petitioner(s)         :     Mr. Madhav Mitra,Ld. Senior Counsel
                                assisted by Mr. Rishabh Khandelwal
For Respondent(s)         :     Mr. Vineet Jain ,Ld. Senior Advocate
                                assisted by Mr. Jog Singh Bhati
                                Mr. N.S. Chandawat, Dy.G.A.



                HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE FARJAND ALI

Order

Reportable
Order Reserved On : 10/03/2025
Order Pronounced On : 27/05/2025

1. The instant criminal misc. petition under Section 482 of the

Cr.P.C. has been preferred by the petitioner being aggrieved by

the order dated 24.01.2014 passed by the Mahanagar Magistrate

(NI Act No. 9, Jodhpur) in Criminal Complaint No. 331/2024

present No. 8144/2015 and the criminal complaint qua the

petitioner filed by the respondent No.2 before the Court of Special

Judicial Magistrate NI Act Cases No.9 presently pending before

Mahanagar Magistrate No.1, Jodhpur City under Section 138 of NI

Act,1881.

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2. Briefly stating the facts of the case are that the petitioner, an

erstwhile Director of Peppermint Hospitality India Pvt. Ltd., has

approached this Court aggrieved by the order dated 24.01.2014

passed by the Learned Magistrate, whereby cognizance was taken

under Section 138 of the NI Act and summons were issued against

him. The petitioner had resigned from the company on

16.11.2021, as evidenced by Form DIR-12 filed with the Registrar

of Companies. The complaint submitted by the respondent-

complainant alleges that the company executed a lease deed

dated 21.07.2010 for certain premises and issued Cheque No.

676527 dated 01.06.2013 for Rs. 87,50,738/- towards alleged

outstanding lease rent, which was dishonoured due to insufficiency

of funds in the account of company.

3. Heard learned counsels for the parties and learned Public

Prosecutor as well as perused the material available on record.

4. Upon a careful perusal of the record and the submissions

made by the learned counsel for the petitioner, this Court finds

merit in the contention that the impugned criminal complaint and

the cognizance order dated 24.01.2014, insofar as they pertain to

the petitioner, are not sustainable in the eyes of law. It is an

admitted fact position that the petitioner was not arrayed as an

accused in the original complaint under Section 138 of the NI Act

and that the said complaint was filed solely against the company,

M/s Peppermint Hospitality India Pvt. Ltd. It is further evident that

the cheque in question was issued from the bank account of the

company and not from the personal account of the petitioner. As

such, the petitioner cannot be regarded as the “drawer” of the

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cheque within the meaning of Section 7 read with Section 138 of

the NI Act.

5. The legal position, as laid down by Hon’ble the Supreme

Court in Aneeta Hada v. Godfather Travels and Tours Pvt.

Ltd. reported in (2012) 5 SCC 661, is that in a prosecution under

Section 138 read with Section 141 of the NI Act, it is imperative to

arraign the company, the principal offender as an accused. It was

also held that vicarious liability of a person under Section 141 can

arise only when the company is prosecuted and that such person

must be specifically impleaded as an accused.

6. This Court also takes note of the fact that Section 141(1) of

the NI Act mandates that the person sought to be made

vicariously liable must be in charge of and responsible to the

company for the conduct of its business at the relevant time.

Section 141(2) further requires proof that the offence was

committed with the consent or connivance of, or is attributable to

the negligence of, such person. However, these statutory

safeguards cannot be invoked or tested unless the person is first

arrained as an accused in the complaint and he is given

opportunity to contest the case. Moreover, the petitioner has

placed on record Form DIR-12 reflecting his resignation as

Director of the company on 16.11.2021, which remains

undisputed. The complaint and the process issued predate his

resignation, but crucially, no attempt was made to implead him in

his personal or official capacity in the original proceedings. This

procedural lapse strikes at the root of maintainability of the

criminal complaint. In light of the expiry of the limitation period

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prescribed under Sections 138 and 142 of the N.I. Act, the

petitioner cannot now be impleaded as an accused at this belated

stage. Even a notice mandated under the law before launching the

prosecution was not served upon him.

7. From a bare perusal of the cheque in question, it is evident that

the petitioner has merely appended his signature as an authorised

signatory on behalf of the company and not in his individual

capacity as the “drawer” or as a Director operating in his personal

domain. A scrutiny of the complaint further reveals a conspicuous

absence of foundational or categorical averments attributing any

direct role, act, or omission on the part of the petitioner either in

the issuance of the cheque or in the conduct of the company’s

business affairs at the material time. This omission is fatal in the

context of fastening vicarious liability under Section 141 of the NI

Act, which mandates specific allegations demonstrating that the

person sought to be prosecuted was in charge of and responsible

for the conduct of the business of the company at the time of

commission of the offence. The complaint is bereft of any such

allegations against the petitioner. Additionally, a closer inspection

of the cheque discloses that it bears the signatures of two

individuals and was drawn on the account maintained in the name

of “Peppermint Hospitality India Pvt. Ltd.”. The nomenclature

explicitly inscribed on the face of the cheque unmistakably

indicates that it was issued not in an individual capacity but by

authorised signatories for and on behalf of the corporate entity.

The presence of dual signatures on the cheque further reinforces

that the instrument was executed in official capacity and in

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representation of the company, thereby negating any inference of

personal liability. Notably, there is complete silence in the

pleadings and record as to the identity of the second signatory.

Neither the complainant nor the company has elucidated or

clarified the authorship of the second signature, which casts a

further shadow on the prosecutorial clarity and evidentiary

robustness required to sustain criminal liability against the

petitioner. In absence of specific attribution or imputation of

culpable conduct and in view of the procedural and substantive

infirmities delineated above, the invocation of criminal process

against the petitioner is manifestly unwarranted and amounts to

an abuse of the process of law.

8.It is also imperative to underscore that in a prosecution under

Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, the accrual of a

legally sustainable cause of action is not instantaneous, but rather

contingent upon the culmination of a specific sequence of

statutory events. These essential preconditions are as follows: (a)

presentation of the cheque to the bank within the period of 3

months from date on which it was drawn or within its validity

period, whichever is earlier ; (b) dishonour of the cheque either on

account of insufficiency of funds or because it exceeds the

arrangement made with the drawer’s bank; (c) issuance of a

statutory notice in writing by the payee or holder in due course to

the drawer, demanding payment of the cheque amount within

thirty days from the date of receipt of information regarding such

dishonour from the bank; and (d) failure of the drawer to make

payment of the cheque amount to the payee within fifteen days of

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receiving the notice. Only upon the confluence of these events

does the cause of action under Section 138 of the NI Act

crystallise. In the facts of the present case, the cheque in

question was dishonoured on 04.06.2023, and the complainant

received intimation of the same from the bank on 05.06.2023.

Thus, by necessary implication, the chain of events giving rise to a

cause of action could not have commenced prior to 05.06.2023.

Significantly, it stands undisputed on record that the petitioner

had already ceased to be a Director of the company as of

16.11.2021, much prior to the occurrence of any of these

determinative events. Therefore, on the date of accrual of cause of

action, the petitioner was neither in control nor in management of

the affairs of the company and could not, by any stretch of legal

reasoning, be imputed with constructive or vicarious liability. The

very substratum for proceeding against the petitioner is thus

legally extinguished. The absence of any foundational material or

statutory compliance requisite for his prosecution under Sections

138 and 141 of the Act renders the criminal complaint wholly

misconceived insofar as it concerns the petitioner. In this legal

context, there exists no tenable ground for continuation of

proceedings against him, and the attempt to prosecute the

petitioner at this belated juncture appears to be a clear misuse of

the criminal process.

9. Merely stating that the petitioner was a Director or had signed

the cheque, without any further particulars, does not suffice to

invoke criminal liability. It is a well-settled proposition of law, as

held by Hon’ble the Supreme Court in S.M.S. Pharmaceuticals

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Ltd. v. Neeta Bhalla, AIR 2005 SC 3512, that for the purpose

of Section 141, it is not sufficient to merely state that the accused

was a Director of the company, but specific averments must be

made to show that the accused was in charge of and responsible

for the conduct of the company’s business at the relevant time. In

the absence of any such allegation, the complaint as filed does not

disclose any cause of action against the petitioner. This renders

the very initiation of criminal proceedings against him

unsustainable in law and amounts to an abuse of the process of

court. It further bears emphasis that the learned Magistrate, while

taking cognizance of the matter, did not appear to have before

him the complete and relevant material necessary for a judicious

determination of the petitioner’s liability. A careful perusal of the

cause title and the averments contained in the complaint ought to

have prompted the Magistrate to verify whether the petitioner was

impleaded in a legally tenable capacity–as a signatory or as a

Director of the company–and whether the complaint contained

categorical assertions that he was in charge of and responsible for

the conduct of the company’s business at the relevant time. In the

absence of such judicial scrutiny, the cognizance appears to have

been taken in a mechanical and perfunctory manner. Furthermore,

the record unambiguously reflects that the petitioner had tendered

his resignation from the directorship well before the accrual of the

cause of action in favour of the complainant. In such

circumstances, the exercise of inherent powers under Section 482

Cr.P.C. becomes not only justified but essential to prevent the

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perpetuation of manifest injustice and the misuse of the coercive

machinery of criminal law.

10. In view of the above discussion, the instant petition deserves

to be and is hereby allowed. The order dated 24.01.2014 passed

by the Mahanagar Magistrate (NI Act No. 9, Jodhpur) in Criminal

Complaint No. 331/2024 present No. 8144/2015 and the criminal

complaint qua the petitioner filed by the respondent No.2 before

the Court of Special Judicial Magistrate NI Act Cases No.9

presently pending before Mahanagar Magistrate No.1, Jodhpur

City under Section 138 of NI Act,1881 are quashed and set aside.

11. Stay petition stands disposed of.

(FARJAND ALI),J
202-Mamta/-

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