Limitation Periods for Banking Documents

Limitation periods for legal documents in banking are governed by the Limitation Act, 1963, primarily under Articles 31-43 for negotiable instruments and related contracts. These periods start from specific events like due dates or demands, with extensions possible via acknowledgments or payments under Section 18-19. Banks must track these to enforce recovery suits timely.

Key Documents Table

Document TypeLimitation PeriodStarting Point
Demand Promissory Note3 yearsDate of the note
Usance Promissory Note3 yearsWhen the note falls due
Bill of Exchange (payable at sight or presentation)3 yearsWhen the bill is presented​
Usance Bill of Exchange3 yearsDue date​
Cheque (civil recovery suit)3 yearsDate of the cheque (Article 35)
Money Lent (Loan Agreement)3 yearsWhen the loan is made
Guarantee (Surety Bond)3 yearsWhen surety pays creditor (vs principal); when pays excess (vs co-surety)
Single Bond (specified payment day)3 yearsDay specified
Single Bond (no specified day)3 yearsDate of execution

Extensions and Exceptions

Acknowledgments in writing or part payments signed by the debtor reset the 3-year clock from that date. For bank guarantees, enforcement may align with contract terms but cannot shorten Limitation Act periods below statutory minima. Cheque bounce complaints under NI Act Section 138 have separate timelines: present cheque within 3-6 months validity, notice within 30 days of dishonor, complaint within 1 month of notice expiry.

Banking Recovery Notes

Loan recovery suits often use the last acknowledged payment or default date as the start, typically 3 years. Revival requires fresh documents for new limitation. Mortgages securing loans have 12-30 years for immovable property enforcement. Consult legal experts for case-specific application, as courts interpret based on facts.​

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