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since 1985 practicing as advocate in both civil & criminal laws. This blog is only for information but not for legal opinions

Just for legal information but not form as legal opinion

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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Electronic Evidence — Call Detail Records — Mandat...

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Electronic Evidence — Call Detail Records — Mandat...: advocatemmmohan Criminal Law — Circumstantial Evidence — Requirement of Complete Chain of Circumstances — Failure of Prosecution Case — Acqu...

Criminal Law — Circumstantial Evidence — Requirement of Complete Chain of Circumstances — Failure of Prosecution Case — Acquittal

Penal Code / Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita — Sections 302/34 IPC [103(1)/3(5) BNS] — Section 201 IPC [Section 238 BNS] — Murder — Conviction based on circumstantial evidence — Sustainability.

Held, where prosecution case rests solely on circumstantial evidence, the circumstances relied upon must be fully established, conclusive in nature, and must form a complete chain excluding every hypothesis except the guilt of the accused — Failure to prove any link in the chain is fatal to prosecution. The governing principles laid down in Sharad Birdhichand Sarda v. State of Maharashtra reiterated. (Paras 27, 53)

Where the alleged circumstances relied upon by prosecution, namely recovery of currency notes, recovery of blood-stained shirt, and call detail records, were found unreliable and inadmissible, conviction cannot be sustained. (Paras 26, 53-55)

Conviction and sentence set aside — Accused acquitted. (Paras 55-56)


Recovery Evidence — Section 27 Evidence Act — Currency Notes — Doubtful Recovery — No Nexus with Crime

Recovery of currency notes allegedly received by accused for committing murder held not reliable where discrepancy existed regarding the exact amount recovered (₹46,000 in seizure memo but ₹46,145 counted in court). (Paras 29-32)

Further held, mere recovery of currency notes without proof of nexus with the crime cannot constitute an incriminating circumstance in a case based purely on circumstantial evidence. (Para 33)

Such recovery wrongly treated as incriminating by trial court. (Para 33)


Recovery of Blood-Stained Article — FSL Report — Chain of Custody — Failure of Link Evidence

Recovery of a blood-stained shirt allegedly worn by accused at the time of the incident held highly doubtful where the circumstances of concealment appeared improbable and unnatural. (Paras 34-35)

Forensic evidence becomes admissible only when prosecution establishes complete chain of custody of seized articles from the time of seizure till examination at FSL. (Para 36)

Where material discrepancies existed in malkhana records and testimony of witnesses regarding date of dispatch and handling of samples, chain of custody stood broken, rendering FSL report unreliable. (Paras 37-42)

Held, breach in chain of custody renders FSL report a worthless piece of evidence. (Para 44)

Even otherwise, mere matching of blood group on recovered article with that of deceased is insufficient to establish guilt in absence of other corroborative circumstances. (Paras 45-46)


Electronic Evidence — Call Detail Records — Mandatory Certificate — Section 65-B Evidence Act / Section 63 BSA

Electronic evidence in the form of call detail records is inadmissible unless accompanied by the mandatory certificate under Section 65-B(4) of the Evidence Act. (Paras 49-52)

Requirement of such certificate is mandatory and a condition precedent for admissibility, as reiterated in:

  • Anvar P.V. v. P.K. Basheer

  • Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash Kushanrao Gorantyal. (Paras 50-51)

In absence of the mandatory certificate, call detail records cannot be relied upon even if service provider employees were examined. (Para 52)


Circumstantial Evidence — Failure to Establish Unbroken Chain — Benefit of Doubt

Where all three alleged circumstances (recovery of money, recovery of shirt, and CDRs) were either unreliable or inadmissible, prosecution failed to establish a complete and coherent chain of circumstances pointing towards guilt. (Paras 53-54)

Consequently, conviction recorded by trial court and affirmed by High Court cannot stand. (Paras 54-55)


Result

Appeal allowed — Conviction and sentence set aside — Appellant acquitted and directed to be released forthwith if not required in any other case. (Paras 55-56)

Sunday, March 1, 2026

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Cognizance — No Pre-Cognizance Summons under Secti...Cognizance — No Pre-Cognizance Summons under Section 223 BNSS. (Para 36(E)) Magistrate need not issue summons under Section 223 BNSS before taking cognizance; NI Act is special statute governed by Section 142. Ratio Decidendi: Pre-cognizance notice to accused is not mandatory in Section 138 complaints. Methods of Service of Summons — Mandatory Multi-Modal Mechanism. (Paras 36(A), 36(B), 36(I)) Service shall not be confined to ordinary modes. It must include: Dasti service by complainant in addition to court process. Electronic service under BNSS rules (email, mobile, messaging platforms). Affidavit verifying accused’s contact particulars at filing stage. Affidavit of service to be filed; false affidavit invites legal consequences. Post-service matters to be listed before physical courts to promote settlement. Ratio Decidendi: Multi-modal, technology-enabled and complainant-assisted service of summons is mandatory to prevent procedural delay in Section 138 cases.

ADVOCATEMMMOHAN: Cognizance — No Pre-Cognizance Summons under Secti...: advocatemmmohan Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 — Chapter XVII — Object and Interpretation. (Paras 11–14) The criminalisation of cheque dis...



advocatemmmohan

Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 — Chapter XVII — Object and Interpretation. (Paras 11–14)

The criminalisation of cheque dishonour was introduced to restore credibility of cheques as substitutes for cash and ensure financial discipline. Interpretation must advance this legislative intent and not dilute statutory presumptions.

Ratio Decidendi: Courts must construe Sections 138–148 NI Act in a manner that reinforces cheque credibility and avoids converting proceedings into ordinary civil recovery suits.


Sections 118 & 139 NI Act — Presumptions — Trigger and Burden of Rebuttal. (Paras 15–18)

Upon admission of signature/execution, presumptions of consideration and legally enforceable debt arise. Observations in Krishna Janardhan Bhat stand overruled by Rangappa v. Sri Mohan.

Ratio Decidendi: Admission of signature mandates drawing of statutory presumptions; accused bears initial burden to rebut by credible, probable defence.


Rebuttal — Financial Capacity — Evidentiary Standard. (Paras 22–24, 29)

Complainant need not initially prove financial capacity unless specifically challenged with material foundation. Non-reply to statutory notice strengthens complainant’s case.

Reliance on Tedhi Singh v. Narayan Dass Mahant and MMTC Ltd. v. Medchl Chemicals & Pharma (P) Ltd..

Ratio Decidendi: Burden shifts back to complainant only after accused discharges initial evidentiary onus.


Section 269SS Income Tax Act — Effect on Legally Enforceable Debt. (Paras 19–20)

Violation of Section 269SS attracts fiscal penalty under Section 271D but does not render the transaction void or unenforceable. Kerala High Court view set aside.

Ratio Decidendi: Breach of fiscal restriction on cash transactions does not negate enforceability under Section 138 NI Act nor rebut statutory presumption.


Revisional Jurisdiction — Limits of Interference. (Paras 27–28)

High Court cannot re-appreciate evidence and upset concurrent findings absent perversity.

Ratio Decidendi: Revisional jurisdiction is supervisory, not appellate; interference requires jurisdictional error or manifest perversity.


Blank Signed Cheque Defence. (Para 32)

Plea that cheque was issued blank for facilitating bank loan was rejected as implausible.

Ratio Decidendi: Bare plea of “security cheque” or “blank cheque” without supporting evidence does not rebut presumption under Sections 118 and 139.


Nature of Proceedings — Quasi-Criminal — Compensatory Character. (Paras 33–35)

Reiterating P. Mohanraj v. Shah Brothers Ispat Pvt. Ltd., proceedings are compensatory in substance; object is securing payment, not retribution.

Ratio Decidendi: Section 138 is a “civil sheep in criminal wolf’s clothing”; primary focus is monetary restitution.


Probation of Offenders Act — Applicability. (Para 35)

Benefit of Probation of Offenders Act, 1958 may be extended in appropriate Section 138 cases; contrary view disapproved.

Ratio Decidendi: Conviction under Section 138 does not automatically exclude reformative sentencing options.


PROCEDURAL AND SYSTEMIC REFORMS


Cognizance — No Pre-Cognizance Summons under Section 223 BNSS. (Para 36(E))

Magistrate need not issue summons under Section 223 BNSS before taking cognizance; NI Act is special statute governed by Section 142.

Ratio Decidendi: Pre-cognizance notice to accused is not mandatory in Section 138 complaints.


Methods of Service of Summons — Mandatory Multi-Modal Mechanism. (Paras 36(A), 36(B), 36(I))

Service shall not be confined to ordinary modes. It must include:

Dasti service by complainant in addition to court process.
Electronic service under BNSS rules (email, mobile, messaging platforms).
Affidavit verifying accused’s contact particulars at filing stage.
Affidavit of service to be filed; false affidavit invites legal consequences.
Post-service matters to be listed before physical courts to promote settlement.

Ratio Decidendi: Multi-modal, technology-enabled and complainant-assisted service of summons is mandatory to prevent procedural delay in Section 138 cases.


Summary Trial — Admission Questions at Initial Stage. (Para 36(F))

Trial Courts may put structured admission questions under Section 251 CrPC / Section 274 BNSS regarding cheque, signature, liability and defence.

Ratio Decidendi: Early crystallisation of defence is essential to preserve summary nature of trial; conversion to summons trial requires recorded reasons.


Interim Compensation — Section 143A NI Act. (Para 36(H))

Trial Courts shall exercise power to order interim compensation at earliest appropriate stage.

Ratio Decidendi: Early interim compensation furthers compensatory objective and discourages dilatory defence.


Online Payment Mechanism — QR/UPI Settlement Framework. (Para 36(C))

District Courts to operationalise secure digital payment systems for direct payment of cheque amount at threshold stage.

Ratio Decidendi: Institutional facilitation of immediate payment promotes compounding and reduces pendency.


Monitoring and Dashboard Mechanism — Metropolitan Courts. (Para 36(K)–(L))

District Judges in Delhi, Mumbai, Calcutta to maintain dashboards tracking pendency, disposal, adjournments and settlement rates; High Courts to constitute monitoring committees.

Ratio Decidendi: Administrative oversight and data-driven monitoring are necessary to address systemic backlog in NI Act litigation.


Revised Compounding Scheme — Modification of Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H.. (Paras 37–38)

Before defence evidence — no cost.
After defence evidence, before judgment — 5%.
Before Sessions/High Court — 7.5%.
Before Supreme Court — 10%.

Ratio Decidendi: Reduced graded cost structure incentivises early compounding while preserving judicial efficiency.


Instalment-Based Compliance — Appellate Power. (Para 40)

Supreme Court restored conviction and directed payment of Rs.7,50,000/- in 15 EMIs.

Ratio Decidendi: Appellate courts may structure instalment-based restitution orders to achieve substantive compensatory justice.


Final Order

High Court acquittal set aside.
Concurrent conviction restored.
Payment directed in 15 monthly instalments.
Guidelines to be implemented nationwide by 01.11.2025.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 — Section 123 — Regularisation of occupation by members of SC/ST — Deeming fiction — Effect on private title. (Paras 2, 4.4–4.6, 8–10) The dispute concerned Plot No. 2362, Shamli, Muzaffarnagar. The appellants purchased the land in 1984 and obtained a declaration under Section 143 converting its use from agricultural to abadi. The private respondents, members of Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe community, were in occupation since 1976–1977 and had constructed houses prior to 30.06.1985. The Sub-Divisional Officer, acting under Section 123, directed recording of the occupants’ names. The High Court upheld the order, holding that Section 123(2) creates a statutory deeming fiction whereby land is deemed settled with eligible house-owners in possession as on 30.06.1985. Consent or lack thereof of the tenure-holder is immaterial. The Supreme Court affirmed that the purchase by the appellants was subject to the statutory rights available to occupants under Section 123. Ratio Decidendi: Where eligible persons belonging to SC/ST categories had constructed houses on land prior to 30.06.1985, Section 123 creates a statutory deeming settlement in their favour, and subsequent purchasers cannot defeat such statutory regularisation.

U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 — Section 123 — Regularisation of occupation by members of SC/ST — Deeming fiction — Effect on private title. (Paras 2, 4.4–4.6, 8–10)

The dispute concerned Plot No. 2362, Shamli, Muzaffarnagar. The appellants purchased the land in 1984 and obtained a declaration under Section 143 converting its use from agricultural to abadi. The private respondents, members of Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe community, were in occupation since 1976–1977 and had constructed houses prior to 30.06.1985.

The Sub-Divisional Officer, acting under Section 123, directed recording of the occupants’ names. The High Court upheld the order, holding that Section 123(2) creates a statutory deeming fiction whereby land is deemed settled with eligible house-owners in possession as on 30.06.1985. Consent or lack thereof of the tenure-holder is immaterial.

The Supreme Court affirmed that the purchase by the appellants was subject to the statutory rights available to occupants under Section 123.

Ratio Decidendi: Where eligible persons belonging to SC/ST categories had constructed houses on land prior to 30.06.1985, Section 123 creates a statutory deeming settlement in their favour, and subsequent purchasers cannot defeat such statutory regularisation.


Section 143, U.P. Z.A. & L.R. Act — Conversion to non-agricultural use — Scope and limitation. (Paras 3, 4.3, 8–9)

The appellants relied on Section 143 declaration (conversion of land use) to contend that proceedings under Section 123 were inapplicable.

The Court noted that a declaration under Section 143 excludes application of Chapter VIII but does not oust Chapter VII containing Section 123. Further, the private respondents were not parties to Section 143 proceedings and were not bound thereby.

Ratio Decidendi: A declaration under Section 143 does not bar operation of Section 123, nor does it extinguish statutory regularisation rights of eligible occupants.


Nature of Possession — Consent immaterial — Legislative intent. (Paras 4.4–4.5)

The appellants admitted in pleadings that respondents were in possession and had constructed houses since 1976–1977.

The Court held that the legislative object of Section 123 is socio-economic protection. The deeming fiction operates irrespective of whether possession was permissive, forceful, or unauthorised.

Ratio Decidendi: For purposes of Section 123, the character of initial possession (authorised or unauthorised) is irrelevant once statutory conditions are satisfied before the cut-off date.


Jurisdiction of Civil Court — Effect of statutory regularisation — Pending suits. (Paras 4.6, 8–9)

The High Court, exercising jurisdiction under Article 227, quashed pending civil suits seeking eviction after holding that statutory settlement had already taken effect.

The Supreme Court declined interference, observing that the purchase was subject to statutory remedy available to occupants and that the appellants’ claim could not override statutory fiction.

Ratio Decidendi: Once statutory settlement under Section 123 operates, continuation of civil suits for eviction against statutorily recognised occupants is untenable.


Disposition

Civil Appeal dismissed. High Court judgment affirmed.


Special Leave Petition (C) Nos. 3822–3823 of 2023

Tagged with the Civil Appeal. In view of dismissal of the Civil Appeal and affirmation of statutory regularisation under Section 123, no ground for interference under Article 136 of the Constitution was made out.

SLPs dismissed.

Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 60(5) — Jurisdiction of NCLT — Challenge to attachment under Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 — Maintainability. (Paras 16, 20–20.8, 26) The question was whether provisional attachment and confirmation orders passed under the Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 (“Benami Act”) could be assailed before the NCLT/NCLAT by invoking Section 60(5) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (“IBC”). The Court held that the Benami Act is a complete and self-contained code with its own adjudicatory and appellate hierarchy. The NCLT, being a creature of statute under IBC, cannot sit in appeal over attachment or confiscation proceedings undertaken under a distinct public law enactment. Section 60(5) does not extend to reviewing sovereign actions undertaken under penal statutes. Permitting such adjudication would amount to elevating NCLT into a judicial review forum over statutory authorities under the Benami Act, which is impermissible. Ratio Decidendi: Orders of attachment and confiscation under the Benami Act cannot be challenged before NCLT/NCLAT under IBC; the exclusive remedy lies within the statutory framework of the Benami Act.

Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 60(5) — Jurisdiction of NCLT — Challenge to attachment under Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 — Maintainability. (Paras 16, 20–20.8, 26)

The question was whether provisional attachment and confirmation orders passed under the Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 (“Benami Act”) could be assailed before the NCLT/NCLAT by invoking Section 60(5) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (“IBC”).

The Court held that the Benami Act is a complete and self-contained code with its own adjudicatory and appellate hierarchy. The NCLT, being a creature of statute under IBC, cannot sit in appeal over attachment or confiscation proceedings undertaken under a distinct public law enactment.

Section 60(5) does not extend to reviewing sovereign actions undertaken under penal statutes. Permitting such adjudication would amount to elevating NCLT into a judicial review forum over statutory authorities under the Benami Act, which is impermissible.

Ratio Decidendi: Orders of attachment and confiscation under the Benami Act cannot be challenged before NCLT/NCLAT under IBC; the exclusive remedy lies within the statutory framework of the Benami Act.


Benami Act — Nature of proceedings — Sovereign, in rem, penal character — Vesting under Section 27. (Paras 17–17.6, 20.6–20.8)

The Benami Act, especially post-amendment, provides a structured mechanism: notice (Section 24), adjudication (Section 26), confiscation and vesting (Section 27), and appellate remedies (Sections 46–49).

Confiscation results in vesting of property in the Central Government free from encumbrances. Proceedings are in rem and operate in the public law domain, distinct from inter se civil disputes or debt recovery.

Ratio Decidendi: Attachment and confiscation under the Benami Act are sovereign statutory actions in rem, and once property vests under Section 27, it stands outside the insolvency estate and beyond IBC jurisdiction.


IBC — Section 36 — Liquidation estate — Beneficial ownership — Exclusion of benami property. (Paras 21–22)

Under Section 36, only assets beneficially owned by the corporate debtor form part of the liquidation estate. Property held benami is held in a fiduciary or representative capacity; beneficial ownership lies with the real owner.

Section 36(4)(a)(i) excludes assets held in trust for third parties. Once the Benami Adjudicating Authority determines that the corporate debtor is a benamidar, beneficial ownership is negated.

Ratio Decidendi: Property determined to be held benami does not form part of the liquidation estate under Section 36 of the IBC and cannot be distributed among creditors.


IBC — Section 14 (Moratorium) — Scope — Applicability to sovereign proceedings. (Paras 13.2, 24)

The moratorium under Section 14 protects the corporate debtor from creditor enforcement actions. It does not bar sovereign proceedings undertaken in public interest for confiscation of tainted property under penal statutes.

Benami proceedings are not debt recovery proceedings but statutory forfeiture actions.

Ratio Decidendi: Section 14 moratorium does not interdict attachment or confiscation proceedings initiated under the Benami Act.


IBC — Section 32A — Limited immunity — Event-based operation. (Para 23)

Section 32A operates only upon approval of a resolution plan or completion of liquidation sale to an unconnected third party. It does not cure defective title or legitimise benami property.

Ratio Decidendi: Section 32A does not prevent attachment or confiscation of benami property unless statutory conditions are fulfilled; it does not override independent findings under the Benami Act.


Conflict between Special Statutes — Harmonious construction — Dominant purpose test. (Paras 19–20.5)

Both the IBC and the Benami Act are special enactments. The Court applied principles governing conflicts between special statutes, emphasising harmonious construction and dominant purpose.

IBC governs insolvency resolution of lawfully owned assets. The Benami Act governs identification and confiscation of illegally held property. Each statute operates in its own field.

Ratio Decidendi: Where property is subject to sovereign confiscatory proceedings under the Benami Act, the IBC cannot be invoked to override or bypass the statutory mechanism; both statutes must operate within their respective spheres.


Disposition

  1. Appeals dismissed.

  2. Costs of ₹5 lakhs imposed in each appeal.

  3. Amount to be deposited with the Supreme Court Advocates on Record Association within four weeks

Contract of Guarantee — Sections 133 and 139 — Indian Contract Act, 1872 — Overdrawing beyond sanctioned limit without surety’s consent — Extent of discharge. (Paras 3–4.4, 7–7.4) The principal debtor was sanctioned a cash-credit facility of ₹4,00,000/-. The sureties executed guarantees limited to this amount. Subsequently, the bank permitted withdrawals far exceeding the sanctioned limit without the sureties’ consent. The High Court held that the sureties must either be liable for the entire outstanding amount or not liable at all. The Supreme Court reversed this view. Under Section 133, any variance in the terms of the contract between the creditor and the principal debtor, made without the surety’s consent, discharges the surety only in respect of transactions subsequent to the variance. The discharge is not absolute. Ratio Decidendi: Where a creditor permits overdrawing beyond the sanctioned limit without the surety’s consent, the surety stands discharged only qua the excess amount constituting variance; liability continues to the extent originally guaranteed.

Contract of Guarantee — Sections 133 and 139 — Indian Contract Act, 1872 — Overdrawing beyond sanctioned limit without surety’s consent — Extent of discharge. (Paras 3–4.4, 7–7.4)

The principal debtor was sanctioned a cash-credit facility of ₹4,00,000/-. The sureties executed guarantees limited to this amount. Subsequently, the bank permitted withdrawals far exceeding the sanctioned limit without the sureties’ consent.

The High Court held that the sureties must either be liable for the entire outstanding amount or not liable at all. The Supreme Court reversed this view.

Under Section 133, any variance in the terms of the contract between the creditor and the principal debtor, made without the surety’s consent, discharges the surety only in respect of transactions subsequent to the variance. The discharge is not absolute.

Ratio Decidendi: Where a creditor permits overdrawing beyond the sanctioned limit without the surety’s consent, the surety stands discharged only qua the excess amount constituting variance; liability continues to the extent originally guaranteed.


Section 139 — Discharge by impairment of surety’s eventual remedy — Inapplicability in absence of prejudice to subrogation rights. (Paras 4.8–4.10, 6.1, 7.1)

Section 139 requires (i) an act inconsistent with the surety’s rights or omission of duty by the creditor, and (ii) impairment of the surety’s eventual remedy against the principal debtor.

Although permitting excess withdrawals may affect the surety’s contractual exposure, there was no impairment of the surety’s eventual remedy against the principal debtor. The surety retained full rights of recovery upon payment.

Ratio Decidendi: Mere variance in contractual exposure does not attract Section 139 unless the creditor’s act or omission impairs the surety’s eventual remedy against the principal debtor; absence of such impairment excludes discharge under Section 139.


Liability of Surety — Co-extensive nature — Subject to contractual limit. (Paras 4.1, 5.2, 5.3)

The liability of a surety is co-extensive with that of the principal debtor unless otherwise provided in the contract (Section 128). However, co-extensiveness operates within the limits of the guarantee.

The surety cannot be made liable beyond the scope of the guarantee. The creditor is not required to first exhaust remedies against the principal debtor before proceeding against the surety.

Ratio Decidendi: Co-extensive liability does not enlarge the quantum of guarantee; it operates only within the contractual limits to which the surety consented.


Material Variation — Consent of Surety — Necessity. (Paras 4.4–4.6)

A surety cannot be bound to altered obligations without consent. Material variation of the principal contract without consent discharges the surety to the extent of the variation. Consent must be proved by the creditor seeking enforcement.

Ratio Decidendi: Any material variation in the underlying contract, without the surety’s consent, releases the surety from liability for transactions subsequent to such variation.


Error of High Court — “All or Nothing” Approach Rejected. (Paras 7, 7.3)

The High Court erred in holding that the surety must be liable either for the entire outstanding sum or not at all. Section 133 expressly contemplates partial discharge limited to subsequent transactions after variance.

Ratio Decidendi: The statute mandates bifurcation of liability where variance occurs; an “all or nothing” approach is contrary to Section 133.


Operative Conclusion

  1. Appeal allowed.

  2. Judgment of the High Court of Gujarat dated 25.06.2008 set aside.

  3. Sureties (Respondent Nos. 1 and 2) held liable only to the extent of ₹4,00,000/- with applicable interest — being the originally sanctioned amount guaranteed.

  4. Sureties not liable for excess amounts withdrawn beyond the sanctioned limit.

  5. Parties to bear their respective costs.