What civil cases are

Civil suits resolve private disputes between parties — about property, contracts, money, family arrangements, succession, tort and the like — under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC). Relief can be in the form of declaration, injunction, possession, partition, specific performance, recovery of money or damages. The pecuniary jurisdiction in Rajasthan splits matters between the Civil Judge (Junior Division), Civil Judge (Senior Division) and the District Judge.

Key forums in Kota

At the District Court Complex, Civil Lines, Kota: Civil Judge Junior Division for suits of lower pecuniary value; Civil Judge Senior Division for mid-value matters; District Judge for higher-value suits and original-jurisdiction matters like succession certificates and probate. First appeals lie before the District Judge or the High Court (depending on value); second appeals on substantial questions of law lie before the Rajasthan High Court under Section 100 CPC.

Stages of a civil suit

(i) Plaint filing with court fee and process fee; (ii) service of summons under Order V CPC; (iii) written statement within 30/90 days under Order VIII; (iv) framing of issues under Order XIV; (v) discovery, inspection and admission/denial of documents (Order XI/XII); (vi) plaintiff’s evidence; (vii) defendant’s evidence; (viii) arguments; (ix) judgment and decree; (x) execution under Order XXI. Pre-trial mediation under Section 12-A of the Commercial Courts Act is now mandatory for commercial disputes above the prescribed value.

Interim reliefs you should know about

Order XXXIX Rule 1 & 2 — temporary injunction; Order XXXVIII Rule 5 — attachment before judgment; Order XXVI Rule 9 — local commissioner; Order VII Rule 11 — rejection of plaint; Section 151 CPC — inherent powers. The grant of injunction follows the three-fold test — prima facie case, balance of convenience and irreparable injury — laid down in Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad Singh (1992).

Costs, court fees and limitation

Court fees in Rajasthan are governed by the Rajasthan Court Fees and Suits Valuation Act, 1961 and the value of the suit. Limitation is generally 3 years (Article 113), 12 years for possession (Article 65) and 30 years for redemption of mortgage (Article 61). Limitation, valuation and territorial jurisdiction are the three most common ways a defendant gets a suit dismissed at threshold.