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Litigation Practice9 min read

Stages of Civil Litigation in Indian Courts

Winning a case is a marathon, not a sprint. Understand the lifecycle of a civil suit: from summons and written statements to evidence, arguments, judgment, and the final execution of the decree.

MyAdvoMate Legal Team

MyAdvoMate editorial desk

Jan 30, 2026221 words
Stages of Civil Litigation in Indian Courts

Why this matters

Winning a case is a marathon, not a sprint. Understand the lifecycle of a civil suit: from summons and written statements to evidence, arguments, judgment, and the final execution of the decree.

Winning a civil case involves more than just being right; it involves patience through a structured procedural journey. Understanding the stages of a civil suit helps clients manage expectations and lawyers plan strategy.

1. Pre-Trial Stage

  • Filing & Summons: The case enters the system, and notice is sent to the opposite party.
  • Written Statement (WS): The Defendant must file their defense within 30 days (extendable to 90/120 days). If they fail, the court may proceed 'ex-parte'.
  • Replication: The Plaintiff replies to the WS (optional but common).
  • Admission/Denial of Documents: Both sides accept or deny the genuineness of each other's documents.
  • Framing of Issues: The court decides the specific points of dispute to be adjudicated.

2. Evidence Stage (The Core)

  • Plaintiff's Evidence (PE): The Plaintiff examines their witnesses. The Defendant cross-examines them.
  • Defendant's Evidence (DE): The Defendant brings their witnesses for cross-examination by the Plaintiff.

3. Argument Stage

After evidence, both lawyers present final arguments, summarizing provisions of law and connecting them to the proven facts.

4. Judgment and Decree

The court pronounces the 'Judgment' (reasoning) and draws up the 'Decree' (formal operational order). The winner is the 'Decree Holder', and the loser is the 'Judgment Debtor'.

5. Execution

A decree is just paper until executed. If the loser doesn't comply, you file an 'Execution Petition' to attach assets or compel performance.

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