If a bank takes your cheque for collection and then sits on it until the cheque crosses its validity date, that delay is the bank's fault, not yours. The Supreme Court held on 15 April 2026 that this is a deficiency in service and the bank must compensate you. A cheque is valid for three months from its date, and a collecting bank is your agent: it must present the instrument within that window.
Quick answer: When a bank lets a cheque become stale or time-barred through its own delay, you are entitled to compensation for deficiency in service under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019. In Canara Bank v. Kavita Chowdhary, 2026 INSC 363 (15 April 2026), the Supreme Court confirmed the bank was liable. It did, however, reduce the compensation from 10 percent to 6 percent of the cheque value plus 6 percent interest per year. File your claim before the District or State Consumer Commission.
A cheque in India is valid for three months from the date written on it. After that it is stale and the paying bank will not honour it. If you handed the cheque to your bank in time but the bank delayed presenting it until validity expired, the loss flows from the bank's failure to act as a diligent agent, not from your conduct. That gap is the deficiency you can claim against.
A collecting bank acts as the agent of its customer. The Supreme Court in Canara Bank v. Kavita Chowdhary, 2026 INSC 363 put it directly: “A bank receiving cheques for collection acts as an agent of the customer and is under an obligation to exercise due diligence in presenting the instruments within the prescribed validity period.” When the bank fails that duty and the cheque goes stale, it is liable for deficiency in service under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.
The remedy is a consumer complaint. Deficiency in service is defined in Section 2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, and complaints are filed before the District, State or National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission depending on the value of the claim. You do not need to prove the bank acted in bad faith; you only need to show the service fell short and you suffered loss. The The RTI Playbook explains how to use an RTI request alongside a consumer claim to extract the bank's internal records and timeline.
This is the real pattern the Supreme Court ruled on, simplified:
In the actual case the National Consumer Commission found this was deficiency in service and awarded the complainants 10 percent of the cheque value. On the bank's appeal, the Supreme Court agreed the bank was at fault but held that 6 percent of ₹1,06,10,768 to each complainant, plus 6 percent interest per year from the date of complaint, was the reasonable figure. So the liability stands; only the size of the award was trimmed.
Three points decide most cases like yours:
Bench: Justices B.V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan. The judgment is final; the bank's appeal was allowed only on the amount, while the finding of deficiency was upheld.
In Canara Bank v. Kavita Chowdhary, 2026 INSC 363, decided 15 April 2026, two cheques worth ₹1,06,10,768 deposited for collection on 29 May 2018 were returned the next day during a bank strike and never re-presented before they expired in early June 2018. The National Consumer Commission held the bank liable and awarded 10 percent of the cheque value. The Supreme Court, per Justices B.V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan, upheld the deficiency finding but reduced the award to 6 percent of ₹1,06,10,768 to each complainant, with 6 percent interest per year from the date of complaint.
A cheque is valid for three months from the date written on it. After that the paying bank treats it as stale and will not clear it. If your bank caused that expiry by delaying presentation, the loss is on the bank.
Yes. In Canara Bank v. Kavita Chowdhary, 2026 INSC 363, the Supreme Court held that a collecting bank is the customer's agent and must present the cheque within its validity. Failing that is deficiency in service and the bank must compensate the customer.
There is no fixed rate. In the Canara Bank case the Supreme Court fixed compensation at 6 percent of the cheque value plus 6 percent interest per year, reducing the Consumer Commission's 10 percent. Expect fair compensation for your actual loss, not a windfall.
You can use both. Approach the RBI Banking Ombudsman first if the branch does not resolve your complaint within 30 days. For a binding compensation order, file before the District, State or National Consumer Commission by the value of your claim.
No. A cheque bounce for insufficient funds is a criminal-civil matter under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. A cheque that goes stale because the bank delayed presenting it is a consumer matter about deficiency in service.
If the bank is public sector, an RTI request can obtain the deposit and presentation dates, strike notices and internal notings that prove the delay was the bank's fault. That paper trail strengthens a consumer complaint.