Pre-Litigation Lok Adalat: How to Apply - citizen guide 2026

You are owed money on a bounced cheque or a small loan, but a full court case would cost years and a fortune. A pre-litigation Lok Adalat lets you settle the dispute before any suit is filed, for no court fee, and the settlement it records is treated as a civil court decree that the other side cannot appeal.

Quick answer: A pre-litigation Lok Adalat is a free settlement forum under the Legal Services Authorities Act 1987. You apply to your District Legal Services Authority, which notifies the other party, and if both agree, the settlement becomes an award. Under Section 21 the award is deemed a civil court decree, is final and binding, and no appeal lies against it.

What a pre-litigation Lok Adalat is

A Lok Adalat is a people's court that settles disputes by agreement rather than a contested trial. The pre-litigation form deals with matters before any case is filed in a regular court. A trained panel helps the parties reach a settlement, which is then recorded as a binding award, saving both sides the time and cost of litigation.

The governing law is the Legal Services Authorities Act 1987, run through the National, State, District, and Taluk Legal Services Authorities. The features that make it powerful are:

  1. Award is a civil decree: under Section 21, every award of a Lok Adalat is deemed to be a decree of a civil court, is final and binding on all parties, and no appeal lies against it in any court.
  2. No court fee, and refund of fee paid: there is no court fee for a matter taken up directly in a Lok Adalat. If a case already filed in court is settled in a Lok Adalat, the court fee paid is refunded.
  3. Settlement by consent: in an ordinary Lok Adalat the parties must agree. The panel cannot impose a decision; it helps you reach one.
  4. Permanent Lok Adalats for public utilities: under Section 22B, Permanent Lok Adalats handle disputes about public utility services such as transport, postal, and electricity, and can even decide the matter on merits up to a set value if the parties do not settle.

Matters commonly settled include cheque bounce claims, bank and loan recovery, money disputes, motor accident compensation, and many civil and compoundable matters, all by consent. The National Legal Services Authority also holds National Lok Adalats on fixed dates where lakhs of cases are settled in a single day.

RTI angle: Legal Services Authorities are public authorities under the Right to Information Act 2005. If your application or a settled award is not moving, an RTI to your District Legal Services Authority asking for the status of your application, the next Lok Adalat date, or the despatch of your award copy is a clean way to push the file.

Step-by-step: how to apply to a pre-litigation Lok Adalat

  1. Identify your District Legal Services Authority, usually located in the district court complex, or the Taluk Legal Services Committee.
  2. Prepare a simple application stating the dispute, the parties, the amount or relief sought, and your willingness to settle.
  3. Attach your supporting papers: the cheque and return memo, the loan or agreement, statements, and correspondence.
  4. Submit the application to the District Legal Services Authority, which registers it and issues notice to the other party.
  5. Attend the conciliation sitting, where the panel helps both sides discuss terms and reach a settlement.
  6. If you agree, the terms are recorded as an award, which is signed and given to both parties.
  7. Keep the award copy safe. It is enforceable as a civil court decree, and you can execute it if the other side defaults.

Documents required

  • A short application describing the dispute and the settlement you seek
  • Identity and address proof of the applicant
  • Evidence of the claim: cheque and return memo, loan or agreement, invoices
  • Statements, notices, and correspondence with the other party
  • Contact details of the opposite party for the notice
  • Any earlier case number, if a matter is already pending and you want it referred

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Thinking it is only for pending cases. The pre-litigation route lets you settle before any suit is filed, often the cheapest stage.
  • Expecting an imposed verdict. An ordinary Lok Adalat settles by consent. If the other side refuses entirely, you may still need a regular case.
  • Treating the award lightly. The award is a final civil decree with no appeal. Read and agree to the terms carefully before signing.
  • Skipping documents. Without the cheque, agreement, or proof, the panel cannot help structure a fair settlement.
  • Missing the Lok Adalat date. National Lok Adalats are held on fixed dates. Track your District Legal Services Authority calendar so your matter is listed.

Real-life example: Rakesh Kumar of Patna was owed ₹85,000 on a cheque that bounced. Instead of filing a case at once, he applied to the District Legal Services Authority for a pre-litigation Lok Adalat. The Authority issued notice to the other party, and at the conciliation sitting both agreed on a repayment in two instalments. The terms were recorded as an award, enforceable as a civil decree. Rakesh paid no court fee, and when one instalment was missed, he was able to execute the award.

Frequently asked questions

What kinds of disputes can a Lok Adalat settle?

Lok Adalats settle cheque bounce claims, bank and loan recovery, money disputes, motor accident compensation, and many civil and compoundable matters, all by consent of the parties. Permanent Lok Adalats also handle public utility service disputes.

Is a Lok Adalat award binding, and can it be appealed?

Yes, it is binding. Under Section 21 of the Legal Services Authorities Act 1987, the award is deemed a decree of a civil court, is final and binding on all parties, and no appeal lies against it in any court.

Do I have to pay court fee in a Lok Adalat?

No. There is no court fee for a matter taken up directly in a Lok Adalat. If a case already filed in court is settled there, the court fee you paid earlier is refunded to you.

How do I apply before filing a case?

Apply to your District Legal Services Authority with a short application describing the dispute and your willingness to settle. The Authority registers it and issues notice to the other party for a conciliation sitting.

What if the other party refuses to settle?

In an ordinary Lok Adalat the settlement is by consent, so if the other side refuses entirely, no award is made and you may pursue a regular court case. A Permanent Lok Adalat for public utilities can, however, decide certain disputes on merits.

Can I get a pending court case settled in a Lok Adalat?

Yes. A pending case can be referred to a Lok Adalat, often at a National Lok Adalat date. If it settles, the award is binding and the court fee you paid is refunded.

How do I enforce a Lok Adalat award if it is broken?

Because the award is deemed a civil court decree, you can execute it like any decree if the other party defaults, without filing a fresh suit on the same dispute.

Sources

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