Furniture Seller Duped of ₹2.1 Crore in Nagpur Fraud Case
Misuse of Power of Attorney Exposes Risks in Furniture Business Transactions
Local Industry News | The Furniture Times India | March 2026
A shocking fraud case from Nagpur, India, has highlighted serious vulnerabilities in business transactions within the furniture industry. A 60-year-old furniture seller was allegedly cheated out of ₹2.1 crore, raising concerns about legal safeguards, documentation, and trust in business dealings.
The Case: What Happened?
According to reports, three brothers from Mauda—Ramanakar, Madhukar, and Srinivas Korpati—have been accused of defrauding furniture businessman Sanjay Jaiswal.
The victim had previously granted the accused a power of attorney to handle land-related registration and administrative work. However:
- The power of attorney was later officially revoked
- Despite this, the accused allegedly misused the cancelled authority
- They proceeded to sell agricultural land co-owned by the victim
- The transaction reportedly generated ₹2.1 crore, which was unlawfully taken
The fraud came to light when the victim noticed a newspaper advertisement related to the property transaction.
Authorities have since registered a case against the accused.
Legal Breakdown: Where It Went Wrong
This case exposes critical gaps in business and legal safeguards:
1. Misuse of Cancelled Power of Attorney
Even after revocation, the document was allegedly used fraudulently.
2. Lack of Real-Time Verification
There was no immediate system to:
- verify active legal authority
- prevent unauthorized transactions
3. Trust-Based Dealings
The arrangement relied heavily on trust rather than strict oversight.
Industry Impact: Why This Matters
While this is a legal dispute, its implications extend into the broader furniture industry:
1. Business Owners Are Exposed
Furniture entrepreneurs often:
- invest in land
- engage in partnerships
- rely on intermediaries
This creates potential risk zones.
2. Informal Structures Increase Risk
Many small and mid-sized furniture businesses operate with:
- limited legal frameworks
- informal agreements
Making them vulnerable to fraud.
3. Reputation & Financial Damage
Losses of this scale can:
- destroy businesses
- disrupt supply chains
- impact employees and stakeholders
A Deeper Insight: The Hidden Risk Layer
The furniture industry is not just about products and logistics.
It also involves:
- property ownership
- contracts
- supplier agreements
- financial transactions
Insight:
Weak legal control = high business risk
🚨 Warning for Furniture Entrepreneurs
This case serves as a strong reminder:
Must-Follow Safeguards
✔ Always verify legal documents regularly
✔ Avoid giving unrestricted power of attorney
✔ Use legal oversight for all transactions
✔ Track ownership and agreements digitally
Prevention is far cheaper than loss.
Bigger Picture: Trust vs Systems
This incident reflects a larger industry shift:
OLD MODEL:
- trust-based transactions
- manual documentation
NEW MODEL:
- digital verification
- legal automation
- transparent systems
The industry must move toward structured, secure ecosystems
Future Solution: Platform-Based Protection
Platforms like FISE can play a role in the future by enabling:
- verified supplier and partner networks
- transaction transparency
- digital documentation systems
Reducing fraud risk across the ecosystem.
Final Insight
This is not just a fraud case.
It is a wake-up call for the furniture industry
As businesses scale globally, legal security must scale with them.
FINAL POWER LINE
“In business, trust is important — but systems protect wealth.”

