In this blog we will discuss the important topic that we are going to cover in CPC ,1908 at our various Blogs and YouTube Video.
the course shall comprise of following in five part
Note : this is important for various law exam like LLB , LLM and other General awareness.
(1)
Preliminary, Definitions, Suits of Civil Nature, Res Sub Judice, Res Judicata,
Foreign Judgment, Place of Suing
|
Topic |
Relevant
Section/Order |
Definition
/ Explanation |
|
Preliminary |
Sections 1–2 CPC |
CPC extends to the whole of
India (except J&K and Nagaland). · For
J&K: CPC does now apply
(or can be made to apply) because of the constitutional changes in 2019. ·
For Nagaland and the tribal areas: The
exception still remains (unless the state government opts in). |
|
Definitions |
Section 2 CPC |
Defines important terms like
“Decree” (S.2(2)), “Order” (S.2(14)), “Judgment” (S.2(9)), “Decree-holder”,
“Judgment-debtor”, etc. |
|
Suits of Civil Nature |
Section 9 CPC |
Civil courts have jurisdiction
over all suits of a civil nature unless expressly or impliedly barred.
Religious disputes involving civil rights also covered. |
|
Res Sub Judice |
Section 10 CPC |
No court shall try a suit that
is pending in another competent court between the same parties for the same
matter. Prevents multiplicity of proceedings. |
|
Res Judicata |
Section 11 CPC |
No court shall try a matter
that has been finally decided in a previous suit between the same parties by
a competent court. Ensures finality in litigation. |
|
Foreign Judgment |
Sections 13–14 CPC |
S.13: Foreign judgment
conclusive unless exceptions apply (fraud, lack of jurisdiction, etc.). S.14:
Presumption as to competence of foreign court. |
|
Place of Suing |
Sections 15–20 CPC |
S.15: Suit to be filed in
lowest grade competent court. S.16–19: Based on nature of property and cause
of action. S.20: Based on defendant’s residence/business. |
(2)
Parties to Suit, Frame of Suit, Pleadings, Plaint, Written Statement, Set-off,
Counterclaim, Indigent Persons, Special Suits
|
Topic |
Relevant
Section/Order |
Definition
/ Explanation |
|
Parties to Suit |
Order I CPC |
Deals with joinder, misjoinder,
and non-joinder of parties. Necessary and proper parties must be included. |
|
Frame of Suit |
Order II CPC |
Every suit must include the
whole claim arising from a cause of action (O.II R.2 bars splitting of
claims). |
|
Pleadings in General |
Order VI CPC |
Pleadings must contain only
material facts (not evidence). Purpose: to define issues between parties. |
|
Plaint |
Order VII CPC |
Document by which suit is
instituted. Must contain facts constituting cause of action, valuation, and
relief claimed. |
|
Written Statement |
Order VIII CPC |
Defendant’s reply to plaint.
Must specifically deny allegations; if not denied, deemed admitted. |
|
Set-off |
Order VIII Rule 6 CPC |
Defendant can claim amount
legally recoverable from plaintiff, reducing plaintiff’s claim. |
|
Counter-claim |
Order VIII Rules 6A–6G CPC |
Defendant may set up a
counter-claim for a cause of action accruing before filing of defence.
Treated as cross-suit. |
|
Suits by Indigent Persons |
Order XXXIII CPC |
Allows persons unable to pay
court fees to sue as indigent persons. Court inquires into indigency before
allowing. |
|
Suits in Particular Cases |
Orders XXX–XXXII CPC |
Includes suits by/against
minors (O.XXXII), partnerships (O.XXX), corporations (O.XXIX), etc. |
(3)
Summons, Discovery, Appearance, Witnesses, Execution of Decrees
|
Topic |
Relevant
Section/Order |
Definition
/ Explanation |
|
Issue of Summons |
Order V CPC |
Notice issued by court directing
defendant to appear and answer claim. Ensures proper service before hearing. |
|
Discovery and Inspection |
Order XI CPC |
Parties may obtain discovery by
interrogatories and inspection of documents. Purpose: to ascertain truth. |
|
Appearance of Parties |
Order IX CPC |
Regulates appearance and
consequences of non-appearance. May lead to dismissal or ex parte
decree. |
|
Summoning and Attendance of
Witnesses |
Order XVI CPC |
Provides procedure for
summoning witnesses and ensuring attendance for evidence. |
|
Execution of Decrees |
Sections 36–74 & Order XXI
CPC |
Provides detailed procedure for
execution of decrees by attachment, sale, arrest, or appointment of receiver. |
(4)
Incidental and Supplemental Proceedings
|
Topic |
Relevant
Section/Order |
Definition
/ Explanation |
|
Commissions |
Sections 75–78 & Order XXVI
CPC |
Court may issue commissions for
local investigation, examination of witnesses, or accounts. |
|
Letter of Request |
Section 77 CPC |
Court may issue letters of
request for examination of witnesses residing abroad. |
|
Arrest before Judgment |
Order XXXVIII Rule 1–4 CPC |
Prevents defendant from
absconding to defeat decree. |
|
Attachment before Judgment |
Order XXXVIII Rule 5–13 CPC |
Allows court to attach
defendant’s property before judgment to secure plaintiff’s claim. |
|
Temporary Injunctions |
Order XXXIX Rules 1–2 CPC |
Interim relief to restrain a
party from doing certain acts until final judgment. |
|
Interlocutory Orders |
Section 94 CPC |
Court may make interlocutory
orders to prevent ends of justice from being defeated. |
|
Receiver |
Order XL CPC |
Court may appoint receiver to
manage property during pendency of litigation. |
|
Appeals |
Sections 96–112 & Orders
XLI–XLV CPC |
Provide right and procedure for
appeal from decrees and orders. |
|
References |
Section 113 & Order XLVI
CPC |
Subordinate court may refer a
question of law to High Court. |
|
Review |
Section 114 & Order XLVII
CPC |
Court may review its own
judgment on grounds of error, new evidence, or sufficient cause. |
|
Revision |
Section 115 CPC |
High Court’s power to revise
jurisdictional errors by subordinate courts. |
|
Restitution |
Section 144 CPC |
Parties entitled to restoration
of benefits lost due to reversal or modification of decree. |
|
Caveat |
Section 148A CPC |
Right of a person to be
notified before any interim order is passed against him. |
|
Inherent Powers of Court |
Section 151 CPC |
Courts possess inherent power
to make orders necessary to meet ends of justice or prevent abuse of process. |
(5)
Limitation (Limitation Act, 1963)
|
Topic |
Relevant
Section |
Definition
/ Explanation |
|
Limitation of Suits, Appeals,
Applications |
Section 3 |
Every suit, appeal, or
application made after prescribed period shall be dismissed. |
|
Period of Limitation |
Schedule of Limitation Act |
Specifies limitation for
different kinds of suits (e.g., 3 years for contracts, 12 years for immovable
property). |
|
Continuous Running of Time |
Section 9 |
Once time begins to run, it
continues unless stopped by disability or acknowledgment. |
|
Sufficient Cause for Delay |
Section 5 |
Delay may be condoned if
sufficient cause is shown (applies to appeals and applications). |
|
Legal Disability |
Sections 6–8 |
If person entitled to sue is a
minor, insane, or an idiot, limitation suspended until disability ceases. |
|
Computation and Exclusion of
Time |
Sections 12–14 |
Excludes time for obtaining
copies or for bona fide proceedings in wrong forum. |
|
Effect of Death, Fraud,
Acknowledgment |
Sections 16–19 |
Death before right accrues
affects computation; fraud or acknowledgment can extend limitation. |
|
Acquisition by Possession
(Adverse Possession) |
Article 65, Schedule |
Possession of immovable
property for 12 years without interruption leads to ownership. ✅ It’s true if the possession meets all
the criteria for adverse
possession. |
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