In a significant ruling that revisits the delicate boundary between civil banking disputes and criminal prosecution, the Supreme Court has quashed criminal proceedings for cheating and forgery initiated against borrowers after a loan dispute had already been resolved through a compromise settlement approved by the Debts Recovery Tribunal (DRT). The judgment is likely to have far-reaching implications for banking litigation, debt recovery mechanisms, and the growing tendency to invoke criminal law in commercial disputes.
A Bench comprising Justice B.V. Nagarathna and Justice Ujjal Bhuyan held that allowing criminal prosecution to continue after a judicially recognised settlement of the loan account would amount to an abuse of the process of law. The Court observed that once a bank voluntarily enters into a negotiated settlement, accepts the agreed amount, issues a no-dues certificate, and secures closure of recovery proceedings before the DRT, it cannot subsequently seek to resurrect the dispute through criminal proceedings unless exceptional circumstances justify such action.
The case arose from credit facilities extended by UCO Bank to Raipur-based M/s Mohan Traders. Between 2006 and 2009, the borrowers obtained enhanced credit facilities from the bank. The account was subsequently declared a non-performing asset in 2010. Years later, allegations surfaced that the borrowers had allegedly secured enhanced loan limits through forged audit reports and by concealing liabilities owed to another financial institution. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) eventually registered a case invoking offences under Sections 420 and 471 of the Indian Penal Code relating to cheating and use of forged documents.
What transformed the case from a routine banking prosecution into a legally significant dispute was the sequence of events that followed. During proceedings before the DRT, the parties entered into a compromise settlement in 2015. The settlement was formally approved by the bank and recorded before the DRT. After receiving the agreed settlement amount, the bank issued a no-dues certificate, and the recovery proceedings were dismissed. Notably, the settlement documents reportedly recorded that legal audits had not revealed irregularities or documentation lapses in the loan transaction. Yet, more than two years later, the bank lodged a complaint that triggered criminal proceedings.
The Supreme Court found this chronology impossible to ignore. The Court noted that despite allegedly suspecting fraud as early as 2013, the bank did not immediately pursue criminal remedies. Instead, it consciously chose the path of negotiated settlement and obtained the benefits flowing from that compromise. Having accepted the settlement and brought recovery proceedings to an end, the bank’s subsequent attempt to pursue criminal prosecution raised serious concerns regarding procedural fairness and consistency.
The judgment is particularly important because it does not merely rest on the existence of a settlement. Rather, the Court places emphasis on the institutional sanctity of settlements endorsed by judicial forums such as the DRT. According to the Bench, permitting criminal proceedings in such circumstances would undermine confidence in negotiated dispute resolution mechanisms. Commercial entities would become reluctant to enter settlements if there remained a lingering possibility that criminal liability could later be revived despite full compliance with agreed terms.
The Court’s reasoning reflects a broader judicial policy that increasingly favours settlement of commercial disputes as part of economic governance. India’s legal system has, over the last decade, invested heavily in mechanisms designed to reduce commercial litigation burdens, including arbitration reforms, insolvency processes, mediation initiatives, and strengthened recovery tribunals. The Supreme Court appears to recognise that if settlements cease to provide legal finality, the effectiveness of these mechanisms could be substantially weakened.
Yet the ruling also raises complex questions about the relationship between civil liability and criminal wrongdoing. Indian courts have repeatedly emphasised that the existence of a civil dispute does not automatically eliminate criminal culpability. Where fraud, forgery, corruption or deliberate deception are involved, criminal law serves interests that extend beyond private recovery of money. Economic offences frequently affect public institutions, financial systems, and broader societal interests. This principle has been reaffirmed in several recent decisions where courts have refused to quash criminal proceedings merely because parties arrived at a one-time settlement.
It is precisely this tension that makes the present judgment noteworthy. The Court does not declare that settlement always extinguishes criminal liability. Instead, it evaluates the specific factual matrix before it. The Bench relied heavily on the absence of contemporaneous allegations during the settlement process, the bank’s own acknowledgment regarding lack of documentation irregularities, and the judicial approval granted by the DRT. The judgment therefore turns not merely on compromise but on the conduct of the prosecuting institution itself.
The Court also invoked its earlier decision in K. Bharthi Devi v. State of Telangana, where criminal proceedings arising out of a settled banking dispute were similarly quashed. Reiterating established principles, the Bench observed that criminal cases possessing an overwhelmingly civil character, particularly those arising from commercial transactions, may warrant quashing where parties have resolved their disputes and the possibility of conviction appears remote.
From a jurisprudential standpoint, the ruling contributes to an evolving debate over the criminalisation of commercial disputes in India. Banks and financial institutions increasingly face criticism for employing criminal proceedings as a recovery strategy after civil remedies fail to yield desired results. Conversely, investigative agencies argue that sophisticated financial fraud often masquerades as ordinary contractual disputes, making criminal prosecution indispensable. The challenge for courts lies in distinguishing genuine economic crimes from cases where criminal law is deployed primarily as leverage in debt recovery battles.
The Supreme Court’s observations suggest a growing concern about the misuse of criminal processes as instruments of pressure in matters fundamentally rooted in commercial disagreements. By describing continuation of prosecution as an abuse of process in the peculiar facts of the case, the Court sends a message that criminal law cannot be casually superimposed upon disputes that have already been comprehensively settled through legally recognised mechanisms.
However, the judgment should not be interpreted as creating blanket immunity for borrowers who settle loan accounts. Courts have repeatedly distinguished ordinary commercial defaults from cases involving large-scale fraud, forged documentation, conspiracy, corruption, or diversion of public funds. In several recent banking fraud matters, the Supreme Court has maintained that settlements cannot erase criminal liability where broader public interests are implicated.
Ultimately, the ruling reflects a nuanced judicial attempt to preserve two competing values. On one hand lies the need to protect the integrity and finality of court-approved settlements. On the other lies the obligation to ensure that genuine economic offences do not escape scrutiny merely through repayment or compromise. The Court’s intervention in the present case appears driven by the view that criminal prosecution cannot be permitted to survive as a residual weapon once a bank has consciously chosen settlement, accepted its benefits, and represented before a judicial forum that the dispute stands resolved.
In an era where commercial litigation increasingly overlaps with criminal enforcement, the judgment may become an important precedent for determining when prosecution serves the interests of justice and when it merely prolongs a dispute that the law has already brought to an end. It reinforces a fundamental principle of procedural fairness: parties who obtain closure through a judicially sanctioned settlement must ordinarily be entitled to rely upon that closure, unless compelling circumstances demand otherwise.

