If a customer's account credit exceeds their claimed income, Channel Banks will freeze their account. Consumers are becoming irate, and the Allahabad High Court heard one such case.
The Allahabad High Court's Lucknow Bench has expressed concern about banks blocking client accounts without good cause. According to the Court, a bank shouldn't act like an investigative body since it functions as a trustee.
Indian Overseas Bank was fined ₹50,000 by a Division Bench consisting of Justices Shekhar B. Saraf and Awadhesh Kumar Chaudhary. A customer's account was locked by the bank without good reason. The bank was mandated by the court to reimburse the account holder for this sum within four weeks.
The lawsuit concerns M/s S.A. Enterprises, a business that sells fish farming equipment. A petition was filed by the business against the bank. According to the suit, on January 16, 2026, RTGS credited ₹23 lakh to the company's account.
This transaction was viewed as suspicious by the bank, which froze the account. The bank said that the company had only reported an annual income of ₹5.76 lakh at the time the account was opened. The bank blocked the account as a result, invoking the Prevention of Money Laundering Act. The High Court pointed out that no cybercrime report was the reason the account was frozen.
The bank behaved as an investigative agency and took independent action. The Court made it quite plain that banks are not allowed to determine the source of cash on their own. An order from the Central Bureau of Investigation, the Police, or the Enforcement Directorate is required in order to freeze an account.
Additionally, the Court stated that the practice of freezing accounts without a valid justification is concerning. Such acts have the potential to halt corporate operations and harm account holders' reputations.

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