There is common misconception as to whether a 'Post-dated cheque' is a cheque in
the eyes of law particularly under the NI Act and if a postdated cheque is
legally not a cheque then when does it become a 'cheque'. Moreover, there is
also confusion as to which date should be reckoned with for the purpose of
invocation of Section 138 of the NI Act- the date of writing/handing over of
cheque or the date inscribed on the cheque. However, the Apex Court has finally
settled the issues & declared the law in this regard which is being discussed
below.
Before deliberating on the subject, it would be relevant to reproduce Section 5
& 6 of The Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, which read as under:
Section 5: "Bill of exchange":
A "bill of exchange" is an instrument in writing
containing an unconditional order, signed by the maker, directing a certain
person to pay a certain sum of money only to, or to the order of, a certain
person or to the bearer of the instrument.
Section 6 "Cheque":
A "cheque" is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker
and not expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand and it includes the
electronic image of a truncated cheque and a cheque in the electronic form.
Explanation I: For the purposes of this section, the expressions:
- a cheque in the electronic form" means a cheque drawn in electronic form by
using any computer resource and signed in a secure system with digital signature
(with or without biometrics signature) and asymmetric crypto system or with
electronic signature, as the case may be;
- a truncated cheque means a cheque which is truncated during the course of a
clearing cycle, either by the clearing house or by the bank whether paying or
receiving payment, immediately on generation of an electronic image for
transmission, substituting the further physical movement of the cheque in
writing.
Explanation II: For the purposes of this section, the expression "clearing
house" means the clearing house managed by the Reserve Bank of India or a
clearing house recognised as such by the Reserve Bank of India.
Explanation III: For the purposes of this section, the expressions "asymmetric
crypto system", "computer resource", "digital signature", "electronic form" and
"electronic signature" shall have the same meanings respectively assigned to
them in the Information Technology Act, 2000.
It is necessary to understand as to what is a post-dated cheque. In simple
words, a post-dated cheque is a form of a cheque drawn with a future date
written on it. In other words a post-dated cheque is one which is drawn with a
date which is after the date on which cheque was written.
It would be trite to refer to the Apex Court judgment in the case of
Anil
Kumar Sawhney vs. Gulshan Rai, 1993 (4) SCC 424, wherein the Court observed
thus:
12. Sections 5 and 6 of the Act define "Bill of Exchange" and "Cheque". A "Bill
of Exchange" is a negotiable instrument in writing containing an instruction to
a third party to pay a stated sum of money at a designated future date or on
demand. A "cheque" on the other hand is a bill of exchange drawn on a bank by
the holder of an account payable on demand. Thus a "cheque" under Section 6 of
the Act is also a bill of exchange but it is drawn on a banker and is payable on
demand. It is thus obvious that a bill of exchange even through drawn on a
banker, if it is not payable on demand, it is not a cheque.
A "post-dated cheque" is only a bill of exchange when it is written or drawn, it
becomes a "cheque" when it is payable on demand. The post-dated cheque is not
payable till the date which is shown on the face of the said document. It will
only become cheque on the date shown on it and prior to that it remains a bill
of exchange under Section 5 of the Act. As a bill of exchange a post-dated
cheque remains negotiable but it will not become a "cheque" till the date when
it becomes "payable on demand".
13. It is clear from Section 19 that a "cheque" is an instrument which is
payable on demand. A post-dated cheque, which is not payable on demand till a
particular date, is not a cheque in the eyes of law till the date it becomes
payable on demand."
It would be apropos to refer to Halsburys Laws of England, 4th Edition (Reissue)
Volume 3(1), at page 143, wherein the procedure to be adopted by the bank in
relation to post-dated cheque has been enumerated which reads thus:-
"Post-dated cheques are not invalid, but the banker should not pay such a cheque
if presented before the date it bears. If, therefore, a cheque dated on a Sunday
is presented on the previous business day, it should be returned with the answer
`post dated. A post-dated cheque, however, if presented at or after its
ostensible date, should be paid though the banker knows it to be post-dated, and
even if it has been presented before the date and refused payment."
In Chalmers & Guest on Bills of Exchange, Cheques and Promissory Notes, 15th
Edition, at page 74, the concept of `post- dated cheques has been explained as
under:- Post-dated cheques. Cheques are often issued post-dated, that is to say,
bearing a date later than that on which they are in fact issued. The purpose of
issuing a post- dated cheque is to prevent the drawee banker from paying the
cheque to the payee or a holder before the date written on the cheque.
It is clear that the instrument is a cheque once the date written on it arrives.
But its status is unclear prior to that date. It is arguable that, between the
date of its issue and the date written on the cheque, it is not payable on
demand and so cannot be a cheque but an instrument of a different kind.
The view has been express that:
`so far as regards its practical effect, a post- dated cheque is the same thing
as a bill of exchange at so many days date as intervene between the day of
delivering the cheque and the date marked upon the cheque. It has also been
stated that the effect of issuing a post-dated cheque is equivalent to giving a
promissory note not payable until the date written on the cheque.
In Thomsons Dictionary of Banking, 12th Edition, at page 463 `post-dated has
been defined as follows: Post-dated. A cheque which is dated subsequent to the
actual date on which it is drawn, and which is issued before the date it bears,
is called a post-dated cheque.
A post-dated cheque should not be paid before the date appearing thereon A
cheque presented for payment before the date has arrived should be returned
marked `post-dated'. F.E. Perry in The law and practice relating to banking: 1,
at pages 137 & 138 has dealt with `post-dated cheque as under:-
"A cheque must not be postdated, that is, dated after the day on which it is
presented for payment to the drawee branch. Postdated cheques present far more
difficulties to the banker than antedated cheques: they are practical
difficulties rather than legal ones.
But a cheque is generally postdated because the drawer does not expect to have
the funds to meet it until that date arrives. It is a mandate to the banker to
the effect that it should not be paid before that date arrives."
It would be beneficial to refer to a 3 member larger bench in
Ashok Yeshwant
Badave vs Surendra Madhavrao Nighojakar & Anr. AIR 2001 SC 1315, wherein the
Apex Court approving the dictum of Anil Kumar Sawhney (supra) observed that a
postdated cheque for purpose of clause (a) of the provision to section 138 has
to be considered to have been drawn on the date it bears.
On the basis of Sections 5 and 6 of the Act, it was observed that "post-dated
cheque is only a bill of exchange when it is written or drawn, it becomes a
cheque when it is payable on demand. The post-dated cheque is not payable till
the date which is shown on the face of the document. It will only become cheque
on the date shown on it and prior to that it remains a bill of exchange under
Section 5 of the Act. As a bill of exchange a post-dated cheque remains
negotiable but it will not become a cheque till the date when it becomes payable
on demand.
It would be appropriate to refer to the Apex Court judgment in
Jiwanlal
Achariya vs. Rameshwarlal Agarwalla, AIR 1967 SC 1118 wherein the Court held
as under:
"From a bare perusal of Sections 5 & 6 of the Act it would appear that bill of
exchange is a negotiable instrument in writing containing an instruction to a
third party to pay a stated sum of money at a designated future date or on
demand. On the other hand, a cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a bank by the
holder of an account payable on demand. Under Section 6 of the Act a cheque is
also a bill of exchange but it is drawn on a banker and payable on demand.
A bill of exchange even though drawn on a banker, if it is not payable on
demand, it is not a cheque. A `post-dated cheque is not payable till the date
which is shown thereon arrives and will become cheque on the said date and prior
to that date the same remains bill of exchange.
For prosecuting a person for an offence under Section 138 of the Act, it is
inevitable that the cheque is presented to the banker within a period of six
months from the date on which it is drawn or within the period of its validity
whichever is earlier. When a post-dated cheque is written or drawn, it is only a
bill of exchange and so long the same remains a bill of exchange, the provisions
of Section 138 are not applicable to the said instrument.
The post-dated cheque becomes a cheque within the meaning of Section 138 of the
Act on the date which is written thereon and the 6 months period has to be
reckoned for the purposes of proviso (a) to Section 138 of the Act from the said
date."
It would be befitting to refer to Madras High Court judgment in
N. Sivalingam
And Another vs A.V. Chandraiyer [1996] 86 COMPCAS 167(MAD), wherein the
Court observed thus:
"It is the cheque drawn which has to be presented to the bank within the period
specified therein. When a post-dated cheque is written or drawn, it is only a
bill of exchange and as such the provisions of section 138(a) are not applicable
to the said instrument. The post-dated cheque becomes a cheque under the Act on
the date which is written on the said cheque and the six month period has to be
reckoned for the purposes of section 138(a) from the said date. One of the main
Ingredients of the offence under section 138 of the Act is the return of the
cheque by the bank unpaid.
Till the time the cheque is returned by the bank unpaid, no offence under
section 138 is made out. A post-dated cheque cannot be presented before the
bank, and as such the question of its retum would not arise. It is only when the
post-dated cheque becomes a "cheque", with effect from the date shown on the
face of the said cheque, that the provisions of section 138 come into play.
The net result is that a post-dated cheque remains a bill of exchange till the
date written on it. With effect from the date shown on the face of the sale
cheque it becomes a "cheque" under the Act and the provisions of section 138(a)
would squarely be attracted. In the present case, the post-dated cheques were
drawn on March 12, 1990, but they became 'cheques' only on April 22, 1990, and
April 28, 1990, the dates shown therein.
The period of six months, therefore, has to be reckoned from the date mentioned
on the face of the cheques. As the apex court has pointed out, section 138 has
to be construed with reference to context. If the object of bringing section 138
of the Act on the statute has to be fulfilled, then the only interpretation
which can be give to clause (a) of the proviso to section 138 of the Act is that
a post-dated cheque shall be deemed to have been drawn on the date it bears."
Summing up, it transpires that a postdated cheque will not be honoured by the
Bank if presented before the date mentioned on it. Since it is not paid on
demand, it is certainly not a cheque. Therefore, until the date written on it
arrives, it has no effect whatsoever.
Thus, if a post-dated cheque is dishonoured with a remark that it is post-dated,
it does not fall within the ambit of Section 138 of the NI Act as a post-dated
cheque is not payable till the date which is shown on the face of the said
document and it will only become cheque on the date shown on it and prior to
that it remains a bill of exchange under Section 5 of the NI Act.
Written By: Inder Chand Jain
Ph no: 8279945021, Email:
[email protected]
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