A summary suit under Order 37 of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 lets you recover a fixed sum of money on a cheque, promissory note, written loan agreement or unpaid invoice, and the debtor cannot defend as of right, they must first ask the court for permission.
Short on time? Jump to step by step how an order 37 suit moves. The single biggest advantage is built into the law: if the defendant does not enter an appearance, the allegations in your plaint are deemed admitted and the court can pass a decree fast.
A summary suit is a fast civil recovery action for a debt or a liquidated demand, meaning a fixed, certain sum and not damages a judge must estimate. It runs under Order XXXVII of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908. The defendant has no automatic right to contest. They must apply for leave to defend, and the court grants it only if they show a genuine triable issue.
Use it when the amount owed is certain and backed by writing. A friend who borrowed money on a signed loan agreement or a promissory note. A buyer who signed a written contract and never paid. A dishonoured cheque. An accepted bill of exchange or hundi.
It is faster than an ordinary civil suit for one structural reason. In a normal suit, the defendant files a written statement and contests every point, and the case crawls through issues, evidence and arguments. In a summary suit, the defendant is locked out of that process unless the court lets them in. Order 37 Rule 2 says that if the defendant does not enter an appearance, the allegations in the plaint are deemed admitted, and the plaintiff is entitled to a decree.
This is a civil money remedy. It is not a substitute for a cheque-bounce criminal case. Read how a Section 138 cheque bounce notice and complaint works to see the difference, and note that the two can run in parallel.
Order XXXVII Rule 1(2) limits summary suits to two groups:
So the debt must be in writing and for a fixed amount. A casual verbal promise, or a vague WhatsApp message saying “I will repay you”, does not fit. A signed loan agreement, a promissory note, an accepted invoice or a written guarantee does.
Order 37 applies in High Courts, City Civil Courts, Courts of Small Causes, and other courts the High Court notifies.
Your plaint must say, in plain words, that the suit is filed under Order XXXVII, and carry the inscription that it is under Order XXXVII of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908. Attach the cheque, pronote, loan agreement or invoice you are suing on. File in the court that has jurisdiction over the amount and the place.
The court issues summons. From here, two ten-day clocks decide everything, so read the next two steps carefully.
Under Order 37 Rule 3, the defendant has 10 days from service of the summons to enter an appearance, in person or through a pleader, and give an address for service. If they do not appear in those 10 days, the plaint allegations are deemed admitted and you can move for a decree.
Once the defendant appears, you serve a summons for judgment, supported by an affidavit verifying the claim. It is returnable not less than 10 days from service.
This is the second clock. The defendant must apply for leave to defend within 10 days of service of the summons for judgment, disclosing by affidavit the facts of their defence. The court does not let them in automatically.
Order 37 Rule 3(5) sets the test: leave to defend shall not be refused unless the court is satisfied that the facts disclosed do not show a substantial defence, or that the defence is frivolous or vexatious.
The Supreme Court in Santosh Kumar v. Bhai Mool Singh, AIR 1958 SC 321, held that a defendant who raises a genuine, not sham, issue must be allowed to defend, because there is an obvious failure of justice if judgment is entered against someone who, if allowed to prove his case, cannot but succeed.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak lent ₹3,80,000 to a former business associate in Patna, on a promissory note both signed. The repayment date passed. The note was clear writing for a fixed sum, so his lawyer filed a summary suit under Order XXXVII rather than an ordinary suit.
Summons was served. The defendant entered appearance, but when the summons for judgment came, his leave-to-defend affidavit only claimed the signature “might be disputed”, with nothing to back it. The court treated it as a defence without substance and declined unconditional leave. Dr. Pathak also kept a separate Section 138 cheque-bounce complaint alive for a cheque the associate had given as security. The civil decree and the criminal pressure worked in parallel.
The figures here are illustrative. Court fees and timelines vary by state and by court load, so confirm the current fee schedule with your local civil court before filing.
Yes, by design. In an ordinary suit the defendant contests as of right, which drags the case through full pleadings and trial. In an Order 37 suit the defendant cannot defend unless the court grants leave, and if they never enter an appearance, the plaint is deemed admitted and a decree can follow quickly.
Only a debt or a liquidated, fixed-sum demand. It must come from a bill of exchange, hundi or promissory note, or from a written contract, an enactment fixing a money sum, or a guarantee for such a debt. Unliquidated damages do not qualify.
Two ten-day windows. First, 10 days from service of summons to enter an appearance. Then, after you serve a summons for judgment, 10 days from that service to apply for leave to defend by affidavit.
No. The defendant must apply for leave to defend. Under Order 37 Rule 3(5), leave is refused if the disclosed facts show no substantial defence, or if the defence is frivolous or vexatious. If part of the claim is admitted, leave may be conditional on depositing that amount.
Yes. The summary suit is a civil action for a money decree. A Section 138 case under the Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 is a criminal complaint to punish the drawer of a bounced cheque. They are separate remedies and can proceed at the same time.
Not on its own. The debt must rest on writing. A signed loan agreement or a promissory note qualifies. A purely verbal promise, or a casual message saying “I will repay”, does not fit Order 37 Rule 1(2), though you may still sue through an ordinary suit.
If the defendant does not enter an appearance within 10 days, Order 37 Rule 2 says the allegations in your plaint are deemed admitted. You can then apply for judgment, and the court can pass a decree in your favour.
A court with jurisdiction over the sum and the place, within the courts Order 37 covers, High Courts, City Civil Courts, Courts of Small Causes, and other courts the High Court notifies. The right forum depends on the amount and your state's setup, so confirm with the local civil court.
See Order 37 and Cheque Bounce and How to File RTI and Section 125 BNSS.