Summary and Analysis of Bansal Milk Chilling Centre Vs. Rana Milk Food Private Ltd. & Anr.,(Criminal Appeal No. [ ] of 2025)
1. Heading of the Judgment
Bansal Milk Chilling Centre vs. Rana Milk Food Private Ltd. & Anr.
(Supreme Court of India, Criminal Appeal No. [ ] of 2025)
2. Relevant Laws and Sections
Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881:
Section 138: Penalizes dishonor of cheques due to insufficient funds.Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC):
Section 200: Procedure for magistrate to examine complainant.
Section 216: Magistrate’s power to alter charges during trial.
Section 217: Recall of witnesses after charge alteration.
Section 482: High Court’s inherent power to quash proceedings.Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023:
Sections 239-240 (Equivalent to CrPC Sections 216-217).
3. Basic Case Details
Parties:
Appellant: Bansal Milk Chilling Centre (supplier of goods).
Respondents: Rana Milk Food Pvt. Ltd. (purchaser) & its director.Dispute:
Respondents issued 3 cheques (₹14 lakhs) for payment of goods described as "Desi Ghee (milk products)" in the complaint.
Cheques dishonored due to insufficient funds (April 2022).Legal Journey:
Trial Court (02.09.2023): Allowed appellant’s amendment to correct "Desi Ghee (milk products)" to "milk" (typographical error).
High Court: Quashed amendment, stating it "changed the nature of the complaint" and was linked to GST evasion.
Supreme Court Appeal: Challenged High Court’s order.
4. Explanation of the Judgment
Core Issue
"Can a complaint under Section 138 NI Act be amended after cognizance is taken, and if so, under what conditions?"
Court’s Analysis
Amendment Jurisprudence (Precedents):
S.R. Sukumar vs. S. Sunaad Raghuram (2015):
"Amendments allowed to cure curable infirmities if no prejudice to accused."
U.P. Pollution Control Board vs. Modi Distillery (1987):
"Technical flaws in complaints can be amended to prevent travesty of justice."
Kunapareddy vs. Kunapareddy Swarna Kumari (2016):
"Courts have power to allow amendments in criminal cases."Key Findings:
Nature of Amendment:
Changing "Desi Ghee (milk products)" to "milk" was a typographical error (not altering complaint’s essence).
No evidence of GST evasion intent; GST irrelevant to Section 138 proceedings.
Stage of Trial:
Amendment sought before cross-examination of complainant – no prejudice to respondents.
Prejudice Test:
"Amendment permissible if it doesn’t prejudice accused or change complaint’s core character."High Court’s Error:
Incorrectly held amendment "changed the complaint’s nature."
Erroneously considered GST implications (outside NI Act scope).
Decision
Appeal Allowed:
High Court’s order set aside; Trial Court’s amendment order restored.Directions:
"Trial Court to proceed expeditiously. Parties may seek witness recall if needed."
Legal Principles Reinforced
Procedural Flexibility:
"Procedure is a handmaiden of justice – technicalities must not defeat substantive rights."Amendment Test:
"Amendments allowed if: (1) Curable infirmity, (2) No prejudice, (3) Early stage of trial."
Outcome
Amendment Valid: Complaint corrected to reflect supply of "milk" (not Desi Ghee).
Trial to Resume: Respondents to face trial for cheque dishonor.