Summary Civil Suits U/O 37 of CPC
A summary civil suit is a special and faster procedure under Order 37 of the Code of Civil Procedure, designed for clear financial claims where the defendant has no substantial or plausible defence.
When do we file a Summary Civil Suit?
A summary civil suit is generally filed to recover a loan, debt, interest, or liquidated amount based on written documents. It is useful where the plaintiff has a strong documentary claim and the defendant’s defence appears weak, vague, or only delaying in nature.
Ground for Filing
Filed for recovery of money, loan, interest, or dues where the claim is supported by clear documents.
Parties Involved
The plaintiff is usually the lender or creditor, and the defendant is the borrower or debtor.
Summons Issued
Summons is issued to the defendant in the prescribed form under Appendix B of the CPC.
10-Day Timeline
The defendant must enter appearance within 10 days from the date of service of summons.
How a Summary Suit Proceeds
Order 37 creates a stricter procedural path. The defendant cannot defend the suit as a matter of right; they must first seek leave of the court.
Filing of Summary Suit
The plaintiff files the suit on the basis of a written contract, debt, negotiable instrument, or other recognized financial liability.
Service of Summons
Summons is served on the defendant, requiring appearance within the prescribed period.
Defendant’s Appearance
If the defendant appears within time, the matter proceeds to summons for judgment. If the defendant fails to appear, the plaintiff may become entitled to judgment.
Leave to Defend
The defendant must apply for leave to defend and disclose a genuine, plausible, and triable defence by affidavit.
Judicial Scrutiny
The court examines whether the defence is real or merely frivolous, vague, or intended to delay recovery.
Final Order or Trial
Leave may be refused, granted unconditionally, or granted subject to conditions such as deposit of amount.
If the Defendant Does Not Appear
- The court may treat the claim as effectively undefended.
- The defendant loses the opportunity to seek leave to defend.
- The plaintiff may obtain judgment without a full trial.
- The decree becomes enforceable like an ordinary decree.
If the Defendant Appears
- The defendant must file notice of appearance.
- The plaintiff may then seek summons for judgment.
- The defendant must apply for leave to defend.
- The court examines whether there is a genuine triable issue.
Leave to Defend is the Heart of Order 37
In an ordinary civil suit, the defendant normally has a right to file a written statement. In a summary suit, the defendant must first satisfy the court that there is a real and substantial defence. This is what makes Order 37 a powerful remedy for clear documentary claims.
Strategic Advantages of Summary Suits
Expedited Resolution
Summary suits move faster because the defendant cannot delay the matter through routine defences.
Lower Litigation Cost
Shorter procedure may reduce avoidable hearings and procedural delays.
Burden on Defendant
The defendant must show a legally acceptable defence before being allowed to contest.
Effective Debt Recovery
Useful for recovery of loans, dues, and admitted documentary liabilities.
Watch: Summary Civil Suits U/O 37 of CPC
Watch this lecture to understand the complete procedure of Summary Civil Suits under Order 37 CPC, including summons, appearance, leave to defend, judgment, and practical use in debt recovery matters.
Download Summary Civil Suit Notes
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