Illegal Money Lending in India: Rights Against Loan Sharks
By Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran | 19 Law Chambers, Visakhapatnam | Banking Law
Private moneylenders — operating outside the banking system and charging astronomical interest rates have devastated families across rural and semi-urban Andhra Pradesh for generations. Furthermore, illegal moneylenders use threatening tactics, confiscate land documents, and coerce borrowers into signing blank papers. However, Indian law specifically regulates moneylending and violations give borrowers strong legal protections. Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran at 19 Law Chambers guides borrowers facing moneylender harassment across Andhra Pradesh.
Legal Framework for Moneylending in Andhra Pradesh
Andhra Pradesh (Regulation of Money Lending) Act: Every money lender in Andhra Pradesh must be registered with the local authority. Furthermore, registered moneylenders must: charge interest within the prescribed maximum rates, maintain proper account books, issue receipts for every payment, and not charge compound interest beyond permitted limits. Consequently, an unregistered moneylender operating in AP is committing a criminal offence under the Act regardless of whether you repay or not.
Interest Rate Limits: The AP Moneylenders Act prescribes maximum interest rates. Specifically, charging above these rates is illegal and the excess interest charged is not legally recoverable. Moreover, courts regularly invalidate agreements charging usurious interest rates. Consequently, even if you signed an agreement showing a very high interest rate courts can reduce it to the prescribed maximum.
RBI Regulations on Loan Apps: Illegal loan apps operating without RBI registration are specifically prohibited. Furthermore, RBI has published guidelines requiring all digital lending apps to be registered and to follow fair practices. Read: Bank Loan Harassment India.
Common Illegal Moneylender Practices — All Violate the Law
Confiscating Original Documents: Moneylenders who take your land pattas, Aadhaar cards, property documents, or blank signed papers as “security” commit criminal offences. Specifically, retention of someone else’s documents without legal authority is criminal misappropriation under Section 403 IPC. Consequently, file a police complaint immediately for recovery of documents.
Charging Excessive Interest: Interest rates above the AP Moneylenders Act maximum particularly compound interest on unpaid interest are specifically unenforceable. Furthermore, courts regularly recompute loan amounts after removing illegal excess interest. Consequently, you may owe significantly less than the moneylender claims after proper legal accounting.
Physical Threats and Harassment: Moneylenders who threaten borrowers, visit their homes with goons, or publicly humiliate borrowers commit criminal offences under Sections 506 (criminal intimidation) and 504 IPC. Moreover, harassment campaigns against borrowers are also actionable under the AP Money Lenders Act. Consequently, document every instance of harassment and file police complaints immediately.
Forcing Sale of Property at Undervalue: A moneylender who pressures you to sell your property at below-market price to repay a loan using threats or undue influence commits criminal extortion under Section 384 IPC. Furthermore, any property transaction signed under duress is voidable in civil court. Consequently, immediately challenge any property transfer made under moneylender coercion.
How to Protect Yourself Against Illegal Moneylenders
Step 1 — File Police Complaint Immediately File a detailed FIR at the local police station describing every threatening incident. Specifically, mention: Section 506 IPC (criminal intimidation), Section 403 IPC (misappropriation — for confiscated documents), and the relevant sections of the AP Moneylenders Act. Furthermore, request police to accompany you to the moneylender’s premises for recovery of your documents. Read: How to File FIR India.
Step 2 — File Complaint Under AP Moneylenders Act File a complaint with the District Collector or the Registrar of Moneylenders about: the moneylender’s lack of registration, excessive interest charges, and coercive practices. Furthermore, the District Collector has powers to prosecute unregistered moneylenders and recover confiscated documents. Consequently, administrative complaints create regulatory pressure alongside police action.
Step 3 — Challenge the Debt Amount in Civil Court File a civil suit seeking: declaration that the interest rate is usurious and illegal, recomputation of the actual debt after removing illegal interest, recovery of excess payments already made, and return of all documents held by the moneylender. Furthermore, simultaneously apply for an injunction preventing the moneylender from harassing you or your family during the case. Consequently, courts regularly grant these injunctions within days of filing in moneylender harassment cases.
Step 4 — File RTI for Moneylender’s Registration Status File an RTI application with the District Collector’s office seeking: whether the specific moneylender is registered under the AP Moneylenders Act, the maximum permitted interest rate for their registration category, and any prior complaints against them. Read: Right to Information RTI India. Consequently, RTI-obtained proof of non-registration significantly strengthens your legal position.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: I signed blank papers for my moneylender. Now he claims I owe Rs 10 lakh when I originally borrowed Rs 2 lakh. What can I do?
File a police complaint immediately for criminal breach of trust using blank signed papers to fill in false debt amounts is criminal forgery. Furthermore, file a civil suit to cancel the forged document and challenge the inflated debt. Moreover, the moneylender’s possession and use of blank signed papers is itself a criminal offence. Consequently, do not wait file immediately before the moneylender creates additional documents.
Q: The moneylender has my original land documents and won’t return them until I pay. What are my rights?
File a police complaint for criminal misappropriation of your documents Section 403 IPC. Furthermore, simultaneously file a civil suit for mandatory injunction directing return of documents. Moreover, approach the Tahsildar with your land documents issue the Tahsildar can initiate suo motu action against someone holding other people’s land documents. Consequently, your land documents cannot be legally used to block your property rights.
Q: Can a moneylender legally take my property if I default?
No — a moneylender can only recover debts through civil court. Specifically, they must file a civil money suit, obtain a decree, and execute the decree through court attachment proceedings. Consequently, any direct seizure of property by a moneylender without a court order is criminal extortion and theft. Free legal aid: NALSA — nalsa.gov.in | Free Legal Aid in AP.
Also read: Loan Default Rights India | Gold Loan Dispute India | Best Lawyers in Vizag
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