Legal advice against borrower

Community Forums Legal Advice India Legal advice against borrower

Viewing 2 reply threads
  • Author
    Posts
    • #43717 Reply
      User_37dd3bba
      Participant
        U
        User_37dd3bba
        PARTICIPANT
        March 2, 2025 at 5:54 am
        Hello, I need legal advice regarding a loan my mother gave to a tailor in our locality around three years ago.

        She used to run a small boutique and needed a cloth cutter. A tailor from a nearby shop used to cut fabric at a per-piece rate. He initially borrowed β‚Ή5,000 twice (each time for a month) at an interest rate of 5% per month and repaid both times.

        Later, he asked for β‚Ή20,000 at the same interest rate, promising to repay the principal once his bank loan was approved while continuing to pay monthly interest. He also provided a blank cheque as assurance. He paid interest for about six months and then stopped.

        Since then, despite multiple reminders, he kept making excuses and eventually stopped responding to calls. My mother has shut down the boutique, and he has neither returned the principal nor resumed interest payments.

        Given that we have a blank cheque from him, what legal options do we have to recover the money? Can we take action under any applicable law? Any advice on how to proceed would be greatly appreciated.

        Thanks in advance.

      • #43719 Reply
        Quickseeker5384
        Participant
          Q
          Quickseeker5384
          PARTICIPANT
          March 2, 2025 at 6:10 am
          You need to sew him.

          But seriously, a bounced check is a crime. Speak with a lawyer on the procedure. I believe when you try cash it, and it gets declined – you can take the borrower to court, with the additional paperwork that you have.

          But also in reality, the money is not worth the hassle. Any legal remedy costs money.

          • #43721 Reply
            User_37dd3bba
            Participant
              U
              User_37dd3bba
              OP
              March 2, 2025 at 6:24 am
              Can I just fill in the amount on the blank cheque and deposit it if I don’t have any written proof of lending? What are the risks?

              • #43722 Reply
                Quickseeker5384
                Participant
                  Q
                  Quickseeker5384
                  PARTICIPANT
                  March 2, 2025 at 6:26 am
                  The account is probably empty. Did you match the signature? Is there a date? Is there an expiry on the cheque?

                  The account holder may have already reported the cheque as stolen. If you don’t have any documents to prove you are owed money. You may not have a legal recourse this route, but worth trying to cash the cheque.

              • #43720 Reply
                Rapidchirag6412
                Participant
                  R
                  Rapidchirag6412
                  PARTICIPANT
                  March 2, 2025 at 7:24 am
                  I see what you did there ( Ν‘Β° ΝœΚ– Ν‘Β°)

              • #43718 Reply
                Ashishmaster940
                Participant
                  A
                  Ashishmaster940
                  PARTICIPANT
                  March 9, 2025 at 4:38 am
                  Post dated cheques are only valid for 3 months. Get a new one from him.Β 

              Viewing 2 reply threads
              Reply To: Reply #43721 in Legal advice against borrower
              Your information:




              Cancel