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Civil & Commercial Law — Money Recovery & Summary Suits

Money Recovery & Summary Suits — Fast-Track Recovery of Debt

Informational guide to the recovery of money in India — the fast-track summary procedure under Order XXXVII of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 for suits on bills of exchange, hundis, promissory notes and written contracts for a liquidated demand; how a defendant must obtain leave to defend within ten days of the summons for judgment; the presumptions in favour of the holder of a negotiable instrument under Sections 118(a) and 139 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881; compensation for breach under Section 73 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872; and the three-year limitation for money claims, with a fresh period running on a written acknowledgement under Section 18 of the Limitation Act, 1963 — as explained in IDBI Trusteeship Services v. Hubtown Ltd (2017) and B.L. Kashyap & Sons v. JMS Steels (2022). The firm's practice covers money-recovery, summary and commercial suits before the Delhi District Courts at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket and Dwarka, and the Delhi High Court.

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Last Updated: 17 June 2026 Content Verified: checked against India Code & reported judgments

How a Money-Recovery / Summary Suit Moves

A summary suit under Order XXXVII compresses the ordinary civil-suit timeline because the defendant cannot defend as of right — he must first obtain the court's leave to defend. The flow below traces a money claim from the first demand to execution of the decree.

1
Demand / Legal Notice
2
Plaint under Order XXXVII
3
Summons for Judgment
4
Leave to Defend (10 days)
5
Trial / Evidence (if leave granted)
6
Decree & Execution

What is Money Recovery & a Summary Suit?

"Money recovery" describes any civil proceeding to recover a sum of money — the price of goods sold, a friendly or business loan, an unpaid invoice, a dishonoured cheque or promissory note, or compensation for breach of contract. The law offers two broad routes. The ordinary money suit is the regular civil suit, available for any claim, in which the defendant files a written statement and contests as of right. The summary suit under Order XXXVII of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 is a faster track reserved for clear, document-based money claims.

The premise of Order XXXVII is simple: where liability is evident from a written instrument — a bill of exchange, a promissory note, a cheque, or a written contract for a fixed (liquidated) sum — there is no need for a full trial unless the defendant can show a real defence. The defendant must enter appearance and then apply for leave to defend; only if leave is granted does the suit proceed to trial. If no leave is sought, or it is refused, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment forthwith. This is what makes the summary suit a quicker remedy than the ordinary suit, while still protecting a defendant who has a genuine defence.

The recovery of money on negotiable instruments is reinforced by the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, which raises presumptions in favour of the holder under Sections 118(a) and 139, and by Section 73 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 for compensation on breach. The three-year limitation under the Limitation Act, 1963 governs when the suit must be filed.

Key Takeaways
  • A summary suit under Order XXXVII CPC is a fast-track route to recover a debt or liquidated (fixed, ascertainable) demand arising on a bill of exchange, hundi, promissory note, cheque, written contract, enactment or guarantee. Claims for unliquidated damages or sums needing assessment fall outside Order XXXVII and must go as an ordinary suit.
  • The defining feature is that the defendant cannot defend as of right — after being served with a summons for judgment, the defendant must apply for leave to defend under Rule 3. The plaint must specifically state it is filed under Order XXXVII and claim nothing outside it (Rule 2).
  • The standard for leave is settled by IDBI Trusteeship Services Ltd. v. Hubtown Ltd. (2016), which restated six principles superseding the older Mechelec test: a substantial defence likely to succeed → unconditional leave; triable issues → ordinarily unconditional leave; doubtful good faith / "plausible but improbable" → conditional leave (deposit or security); frivolous or sham defence → leave refused; and any admitted amount must be deposited as a condition of leave.
  • On a negotiable instrument the holder enjoys the statutory presumptions of consideration (Section 118) and that the instrument was for a debt (Section 139), which the defendant must rebut on a preponderance of probabilities (Rangappa v. Mohan, 2010; Kumar Exports, 2008).
  • Interest is governed by Section 34 CPC — pre-suit, pendente lite and post-decree interest at a reasonable rate — and damages for breach of a written contract rest on Sections 73 and 74 of the Contract Act.
  • Timing is critical: the limitation for a money claim is generally three years, but a signed written acknowledgement of liability (Section 18) or a part-payment (Section 19) before limitation expires restarts a fresh three-year period. High-value commercial claims also engage the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 (including pre-institution mediation).

Which Suits Qualify Under Order XXXVII

A summary suit is not available for every money claim. Order XXXVII Rule 1(2) confines the procedure to defined classes of suits where the demand is for a fixed, ascertainable sum arising from a written document. The cards below summarise what qualifies — and what does not.

Bills of Exchange, Hundis & Promissory Notes
Suits on negotiable instruments form the core of Order XXXVII. The instrument itself evidences the obligation to pay a certain sum, so a full trial is ordinarily unnecessary unless the defendant raises a substantial defence.
Dishonoured Cheques
A cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a banker (Section 6, NI Act). A civil summary suit may be filed to recover the amount of a dishonoured cheque, independent of, and in addition to, the criminal remedy under Section 138 of the NI Act.
Written Contract — Liquidated Demand
A suit to recover a debt or liquidated demand in money, payable with or without interest, arising on a written contract — where the sum is fixed or can be ascertained from the document without further assessment.
Enactment — Recoverable Sum
A suit to recover a debt or liquidated demand where the sum sought is recoverable under an enactment, and the recoverable amount is a fixed or debt-like sum rather than unliquidated damages.
Guarantee — for Such a Debt
A suit on a guarantee, where the claim against the principal is in respect of a debt or liquidated demand of the kind described above. The guarantee must relate to such an ascertained money claim.
NOT Covered — Unliquidated / Disputed Claims
Claims for unliquidated damages, mesne profits, or sums requiring judicial assessment do not fall under Order XXXVII and must be pursued as an ordinary suit. The plaint must also specifically aver that the suit is filed under Order XXXVII and claims no relief outside its scope (Rule 2).

Reliefs & Court Powers in a Money Suit

A money decree is not limited to the bare principal. Depending on the contract, the instrument and the statute, the court may award interest for distinct periods, costs, and protective orders, and may ultimately enforce the decree through execution. The table maps the principal reliefs and their statutory source.

Relief / PowerProvisionWhat the Court Does
Decree for the principal sumOrder XXXVII / CPCDecrees the ascertained money claim once leave is refused, or after trial where leave is granted.
Pre-suit & pendente-lite interestSection 34, CPCAwards interest on the principal from the date stated in the contract / instrument up to the suit, during the suit, and from decree to realisation, at a reasonable rate.
Contractual interestContract / instrumentGives effect to an agreed rate of interest where the contract or promissory note stipulates one, subject to the court's discretion.
Compensation for breachSection 73, Contract Act, 1872In a contract claim, awards compensation for loss naturally arising from the breach or within the parties' contemplation; not remote or indirect loss.
Attachment before judgmentOrder XXXVIII, CPCWhere the defendant is about to dispose of or remove property to defeat the decree, the court may order security or attachment before judgment.
Conditional leave / depositOrder XXXVII Rule 3May grant leave to defend on condition of depositing or securing the claimed (or admitted) amount in court.
Costs of the suitSection 35, CPCAwards costs to the successful party in the court's discretion.
Execution of the decreeOrder XXI, CPCEnforces the money decree by attachment and sale of property, arrest, garnishee, or other modes of execution.

Summary Suit (Order XXXVII) vs Ordinary Money Suit

The two routes to recover money differ chiefly in who controls the pace of the litigation. The table contrasts the summary suit with the ordinary civil suit on the points that matter most in practice.

FeatureSummary Suit — Order XXXVIIOrdinary Money Suit
ScopeNegotiable instruments and written contracts for a liquidated demand onlyAny money claim, including unliquidated damages and disputed accounts
Right to defendNot as of right — defendant must obtain leave to defendAs of right — defendant files a written statement
Defendant's first stepEnter appearance within the prescribed time; then apply for leave within 10 days of the summons for judgmentFile written statement (ordinarily within 30 days, extendable)
If no defence is shownPlaintiff entitled to judgment forthwithSuit proceeds to framing of issues and trial
Conditional termsCourt may require deposit / security as a condition of leaveNo equivalent pre-trial deposit condition
SpeedDesigned to be faster where liability is document-evidentGenerally longer; full trial in the ordinary course
Plaint requirementMust specifically state it is under Order XXXVII and claim nothing outside it (Rule 2)No such special averment required

Filing a Money-Recovery / Summary Suit — Step by Step

The steps below set out the ordinary course of a summary suit under Order XXXVII. The pivotal stage is the application for leave to defend, which decides whether the suit ends in an early decree or proceeds to a full trial.

1
Demand and, Where Useful, a Legal Notice
A clear written demand for payment is good practice and is essential in some matters — for example, a statutory notice within 30 days of dishonour is a pre-condition to a Section 138 NI Act complaint. For a civil summary suit a formal notice is not a statutory bar, but a demand and any reply are useful evidence of the debt and the date of default.
2
File the Plaint under Order XXXVII Rule 2
The plaint must specifically state that the suit is filed under Order XXXVII and that no relief outside the scope of that Order is claimed, set out the instrument or written contract relied upon, and the ascertained sum with interest. It is filed in the court having pecuniary and territorial jurisdiction, with court fee and a valuation statement.
3
Service of Summons and Summons for Judgment
The defendant is served in the prescribed Order XXXVII form. After the defendant enters appearance, the plaintiff takes out a summons for judgment supported by an affidavit verifying the cause of action and the amount, stating that there is no defence to the suit (Rule 3).
4
Application for Leave to Defend (Within 10 Days)
Within ten days of service of the summons for judgment, the defendant may apply for leave to defend, disclosing by affidavit such facts as may entitle him to defend. Leave may be granted unconditionally or on terms (such as deposit of the claimed or admitted amount).
5
Court Decides the Leave Application
Leave is not to be refused unless the court is satisfied that the facts disclosed do not indicate a substantial defence, or that the defence is frivolous or vexatious (Rule 3(5)). Where the defendant raises triable issues showing a fair or reasonable defence, he is ordinarily entitled to unconditional leave — B.L. Kashyap & Sons v. JMS Steels (2022), following IDBI Trusteeship v. Hubtown (2017).
6
Judgment Forthwith, or Trial
If the defendant does not apply for leave, or leave is refused, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment forthwith. If leave is granted (with or without conditions), the suit proceeds like an ordinary suit — written statement, issues, evidence and arguments — before a decree is passed.
7
Decree and Execution
Once a money decree is passed, it is enforced through execution under Order XXI — by attachment and sale of property, garnishee against a debtor of the judgment-debtor, or other permissible modes — together with interest and costs as decreed.
Important Note
Two points decide most recovery matters. First, limitation: a money claim is ordinarily time-barred after three years, so preserve the claim with a signed acknowledgement of debt or a part-payment before it expires (Sections 18–19, Limitation Act), each of which restarts a fresh three-year clock. Second, leave to defend: under IDBI Trusteeship v. Hubtown (2016) the court will refuse leave or impose a deposit where the defence is frivolous or merely "plausible but improbable," and any admitted amount must be deposited before leave is granted — so a well-pleaded summary suit on a clean instrument or written contract is hard to stall. Draft the plaint strictly under Order XXXVII (Rule 2 averment) and claim only a liquidated sum; mixing in unliquidated damages can take the suit out of the summary track. For larger commercial claims, factor in the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, including mandatory pre-institution mediation where no urgent interim relief is sought.

Documents Commonly Required

The exact set depends on the nature of the claim. The following are commonly needed in a money-recovery or summary suit.

The written contract, agreement, invoice or work order evidencing the debt
The negotiable instrument relied upon — promissory note, bill of exchange or cheque
Bank return memo / cheque dishonour slip showing the reason for non-payment
Statement of account / ledger and the computation of principal and interest
The legal / demand notice, postal proof of dispatch and any reply received
Any written acknowledgement of the debt (relevant to limitation under Section 18)
Suit valuation statement and ad valorem court fee on the amount claimed
Identity / address proof of the parties, board resolution (for a company) and vakalatnama
Practical Tip
Before filing, assemble the documentary debt — the cheque/promissory note/invoice, the written contract or guarantee, the statement of account, and any signed acknowledgement or part-payment record that resets limitation. Send a clear demand notice first (and, for a dishonoured cheque, the statutory Section 138 NI Act notice within 30 days), then file the summary suit under Order XXXVII with the Rule 2 averment, claiming the principal plus Section 34 interest. Where the debtor may dissipate assets, move early for attachment before judgment under Order XXXVIII Rule 5. Watch the three-year limitation and the pecuniary and commercial-court thresholds for the correct forum. After decree, enforce promptly through execution under Order XXI (attachment, sale, garnishee, arrest). A cheque-bounce matter can run in parallel — criminal complaint under Section 138 plus civil recovery. Consult an advocate to choose between a summary suit, a Section 138 complaint, or both, and to draft the plaint so leave to defend is hard to obtain.

Key Reference Points — Money Recovery

⏱ Key Reference Points — Money Recovery & Summary Suits
Bill of exchange / promissory note — Arts. 35-363 years from when the bill / note falls due
Goods sold / money lent — Arts. 18-193 years from delivery / from the loan
Breach of contract / residuary — Art. 1133 years from accrual of the right to sue
Written acknowledgement of debt — Section 18Fresh 3-year period from acknowledgement
Part-payment of debt — Section 19Fresh period from date of part-payment
Condonation of suit limitationSection 5 does not apply to suits
Leave to defend — Order XXXVII Rule 3(5)Within 10 days of summons for judgment
Cheque dishonour — criminal (Section 138)Complaint within 1 month of cause of action
NI presumptions — Ss. 118(a), 139Reverse onus, rebuttable on preponderance
InterestContractual / Section 34 CPC
Court feeAd valorem on the amount claimed
ForumCivil / commercial court with jurisdiction

Relevant Statutes

The summary procedure and the recovery of money rest mainly on four statutes — the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Order XXXVII), the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, the Indian Contract Act, 1872 and the Limitation Act, 1963. The verbatim text of the central provisions is set out below.

📖 Relevant Section — O.XXXVII R.1(2) (CPC, 1908, Order XXXVII Rule 1(2)) +
Order XXXVII, Rule 1(2) — Classes of suits to which the Order applies.—Subject to the provisions of sub-rule (1), the Order applies to the following classes of suits, namely:— (a) suits upon bills of exchange, hundies and promissory notes; (b) suits in which the plaintiff seeks only to recover a debt or liquidated demand in money payable by the defendant, with or without interest, arising — (i) on a written contract; or (ii) on an enactment, where the sum sought to be recovered is a fixed sum of money or in the nature of a debt other than a penalty; or (iii) on a guarantee, where the claim against the principal is in respect of a debt or liquidated demand only.

This rule fixes the gateway to the summary procedure: the claim must be for a fixed, ascertainable sum arising from a negotiable instrument, a written contract, an enactment, or a guarantee for such a debt. Claims for unliquidated damages or sums requiring assessment fall outside Order XXXVII and must be brought as an ordinary suit. — Order XXXVII, Rule 1(2), Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908), First Schedule. Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in).
📖 Relevant Section — S.4 (NI Act, 1881, Section 4) +
4. "Promissory note".—A "promissory note" is an instrument in writing (not being a bank-note or a currency-note) containing an unconditional undertaking, signed by the maker, to pay a certain sum of money only to, or to the order of, a certain person, or to the bearer of the instrument.

A promissory note, like a bill of exchange (Section 5) and a cheque (Section 6, a bill of exchange drawn on a banker), is a negotiable instrument. In a suit on such an instrument the holder enjoys the statutory presumptions under Sections 118(a) and 139 — that the instrument was made for consideration and, for a cheque, that it was issued in discharge of a debt or liability — which the defendant must rebut on a preponderance of probabilities. — Section 4, Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (Act 26 of 1881). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in).
📖 Relevant Section — S.73 (Contract Act, 1872, Section 73) +
73. Compensation for loss or damage caused by breach of contract.—When a contract has been broken, the party who suffers by such breach is entitled to receive, from the party who has broken the contract, compensation for any loss or damage caused to him thereby, which naturally arose in the usual course of things from such breach, or which the parties knew, when they made the contract, to be likely to result from the breach of it. Such compensation is not to be given for any remote and indirect loss or damage sustained by reason of the breach.

Section 73 is the foundation of a money claim founded on breach of contract. It compensates loss flowing naturally from the breach, or within the parties' contemplation at the time of contracting, but excludes remote or indirect loss. It works alongside Section 74, which deals with a sum named in the contract as payable on breach (liquidated damages). — Section 73, Indian Contract Act, 1872 (Act 9 of 1872). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in); text verified at indiankanoon.org/doc/339747.
📖 Relevant Section — S.18 (Limitation Act, 1963, Section 18) +
18. Effect of acknowledgment in writing.—(1) Where, before the expiration of the prescribed period for a suit or application in respect of any property or right, an acknowledgment of liability in respect of such property or right has been made in writing signed by the party against whom such property or right is claimed, or by any person through whom he derives his title or liability, a fresh period of limitation shall be computed from the time when the acknowledgment was so signed.

Section 18 is the lifeline of a debt claim: a signed written acknowledgement made before limitation expires restarts the three-year clock from the date of acknowledgement. What constitutes a valid acknowledgement of liability is explained in Khan Bahadur Shapoor Fredoom Mazda v. Durga Prasad Chamaria (1961). Section 19 makes similar provision for part-payment of the debt. — Section 18(1), Limitation Act, 1963 (Act 36 of 1963). Source: India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/1565; text verified at indiankanoon.org/doc/85586.
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 — Order XXXVII (Rules 1–7)
Order XXXVII lays down the summary procedure. Rule 1(2) fixes the classes of suits — bills of exchange, hundis and promissory notes, and written contracts, enactments or guarantees for a liquidated demand. Rule 2: the plaint must specifically state it is filed under Order XXXVII. Rule 3: summons for judgment, and leave to defend within ten days; Rule 3(5) — leave is not to be refused unless the disclosed facts show no substantial defence or the defence is frivolous or vexatious. Section 34 governs interest and Order XXI governs execution of the decree.
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Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 — Sections 4–6, 118, 138–139
S.4 defines a promissory note, S.5 a bill of exchange and S.6 a cheque. S.118(a): a negotiable instrument is presumed to have been made for consideration. S.139: a cheque is presumed to have been issued in discharge of a debt or liability (a reverse-onus, rebuttable presumption). S.138 provides the parallel criminal remedy for dishonour; the 2018 amendment added S.143A (interim compensation) and S.148 (appeal deposit).
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Indian Contract Act, 1872 — Sections 73–74, 25(3)
S.73: compensation for loss or damage naturally arising from a breach, or within the parties' contemplation at the time of contracting — not remote or indirect loss. S.74: where a sum is named in the contract as payable on breach (liquidated damages), the party is entitled to reasonable compensation not exceeding that sum. S.25(3): a written, signed promise to pay a debt barred by limitation is a valid contract.
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Limitation Act, 1963 — Articles 18–19, 35–36, 113; Sections 18–19
Articles 35–36 (bills / promissory notes) and Articles 18–19 (price of goods sold / money lent) prescribe three years; Article 113 is the residuary three-year period from accrual of the right to sue. Section 18: a signed written acknowledgement of liability starts a fresh period; Section 19: part-payment starts a fresh period. Section 5 (condonation of delay) does not apply to suits.
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Landmark & Recent Judgments

The decisions below set out the principles that govern leave to defend in a summary suit, the presumptions on a negotiable instrument, and the effect of acknowledgement on limitation. Several of the negotiable-instrument cases arose in Section 138 proceedings, but the Sections 118(a) and 139 presumptions they explain apply equally to a civil suit on a cheque or promissory note. Each link opens the verified judgment on Indian Kanoon.

1 Recent (2022) — Grant of Leave is the Rule, Denial the Exception B.L. Kashyap & Sons Ltd. v. JMS Steels & Power Corporation Supreme Court of India | 2022 INSC 60 : 2022 LiveLaw (SC) 59 | Decided: 18.01.2022 | Dinesh Maheshwari, J.
In a money-recovery summary suit, the Court cautioned against treating denial of leave as the norm. Applying the modulated IDBI Trusteeship framework, it held that even where the defendant raises triable issues indicating a fair or reasonable defence — though not positively good — he is ordinarily entitled to unconditional leave to defend, unless there is a strong reason to deny it. Refusal of leave is the exception, not the rule.
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2 Recent (2022) — Cheque Must Represent the Debt Due on Maturity Dashrathbhai Trikambhai Patel v. Hitesh Mahendrabhai Patel Supreme Court of India | AIR 2022 SC 4961 | Decided: 11.10.2022 | Dr. D.Y. Chandrachud, J.
For an offence under Section 138, the dishonoured cheque must represent a legally enforceable debt on the date of maturity or presentation. Where the drawer pays part of the sum after the cheque is drawn, that part-payment must be endorsed on the cheque (Section 56). If the cheque is then presented for the full amount without endorsing the part-payment, no Section 138 offence is made out — a reminder that the figure on the instrument and the actual debt must align.
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3 Recent (2022) — Complainant's Financial Capacity Tedhi Singh v. Narayan Dass Mahant Supreme Court of India | (2022) 6 SCC 735 : 2022 INSC 272 | Decided: 07.03.2022 | K.M. Joseph, J.
The Court held that, in a cheque matter, the complainant is not obliged at the outset to lead evidence of his financial capacity to advance the loan unless the accused sets up that case in his reply to the statutory notice. The accused may still demonstrate, by independent material or cross-examination, that the complainant lacked the capacity — but the initial burden does not rest on the complainant. The standard for rebutting the Section 139 presumption remains preponderance of probabilities.
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4 Recent (2019) — Presumption Applies to a Blank / Post-Dated Cheque Bir Singh v. Mukesh Kumar Supreme Court of India | (2019) 4 SCC 197 | Decided: 06.02.2019 | Indira Banerjee, J.
The Court held that once the drawer's signature on a cheque is admitted, the presumptions under Sections 118(a) and 139 arise, even if the cheque was given blank or as a post-dated cheque; a person who signs a cheque and hands it over remains liable unless he discharges the onus of rebutting the presumption. A post-dated cheque or a cheque filled in by the payee does not, by itself, absolve the drawer.
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5 Landmark (2017) — Leave to Defend Restated After the 1976 Amendment IDBI Trusteeship Services Ltd. v. Hubtown Ltd. Supreme Court of India | (2017) 1 SCC 568 | Decided: 15.11.2016 | R.F. Nariman, J.
The Court reconsidered the Mechelec principles in light of the amended Order XXXVII Rule 3 and laid down a graded framework: a substantial defence likely to succeed earns unconditional leave; triable issues indicating a fair or reasonable defence ordinarily earn unconditional leave; a plausible but doubtful defence may attract conditional leave (deposit / security); a defence that is frivolous or vexatious, or where the defendant only raises a triable issue on a part admitted to be due, may lead to refusal or conditional leave. This is now the leading statement of the law on leave to defend.
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6 Landmark (2010) — Section 139 Presumption Includes the Debt Rangappa v. Sri Mohan Supreme Court of India | (2010) 11 SCC 441 | Decided: 07.05.2010 | (3-Judge Bench)
A three-Judge Bench settled that the presumption under Section 139 of the NI Act is a reverse-onus clause and extends to the existence of a legally enforceable debt or liability, not merely to the issuance of the cheque. Once execution of the cheque is admitted, the court must presume it was issued in discharge of a debt. The presumption is rebuttable: the accused may discharge the onus on a preponderance of probabilities, relying even on the materials brought by the complainant, without necessarily entering the witness box.
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7 Landmark (2009) — Presumptions Are Rebuttable; Bare Denial Insufficient Kumar Exports v. Sharma Carpets Supreme Court of India | (2009) 2 SCC 513 | Decided: 16.12.2008 | J.M. Panchal, J.
The Court explained the working of the presumptions under Sections 118(a) and 139. The holder is presumed entitled, but the presumption is rebuttable. To rebut it, the defendant need not prove his defence beyond reasonable doubt; he may raise a probable defence on a preponderance of probabilities, by direct evidence or by pointing to the complainant's own materials. A bare denial of consideration or debt, however, is not enough to shift the burden back to the plaintiff.
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8 Recent (2008) — Summary Suit on Cheque & Promissory Note Neebha Kapoor v. Jayantilal Khandwala Supreme Court of India | Civil Appeal No. 573 of 2008 | Decided: 22.01.2008 | S.B. Sinha, J.
A summary suit was filed to recover money advanced by cheque, against a promissory note executed by the defendants. Considering the grant of unconditional leave to defend, the Court reiterated that where the defence raises a triable issue — a genuine question of fact or law that needs adjudication — the defendant is ordinarily entitled to leave to defend, and the court should not pre-judge the merits at that stage.
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9 Landmark (1976) — Leave to Defend: The Original Principles Mechelec Engineers & Manufacturers v. Basic Equipment Corporation Supreme Court of India | (1976) 4 SCC 687 : AIR 1977 SC 577 | Decided: 01.11.1976 | M.H. Beg, J.
Arising from a summary suit on a dishonoured cheque, the Court restated the principles (drawn from Kiranmoyee Dassi) for granting or refusing leave to defend under Order XXXVII: where the defendant raises a triable issue or a fair, bona fide or reasonable defence, he should ordinarily get leave; where the defence is illusory, sham or practically moonshine, the court may grant leave only on condition of deposit or security. These propositions were later modulated by IDBI Trusteeship (2017) to reflect the 1976 amendment to Order XXXVII Rule 3, but Mechelec remains the starting point.
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10 Landmark (1961) — What Counts as an Acknowledgement of Debt Khan Bahadur Shapoor Fredoom Mazda v. Durga Prasad Chamaria Supreme Court of India | AIR 1961 SC 1236 : [1962] 1 SCR 140 | Decided: 01.03.1961 | P.B. Gajendragadkar, J.
The leading authority on acknowledgement of liability. The Court held that an acknowledgement under the Limitation Act (then Section 19 of the 1908 Act, now Section 18 of the 1963 Act) need not contain an express promise to pay or admit the exact amount; it is enough that the writing, read in its setting, admits a subsisting jural relationship of debtor and creditor and indicates that the relationship is intended to continue. A valid acknowledgement made before limitation expires starts a fresh period of limitation.
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Recent Developments & Trends

2022 — Pro-Defendant Clarification
Grant of Leave is the Ordinary Rule
In B.L. Kashyap & Sons v. JMS Steels the Court underscored that denying leave is the exception; a fair or reasonable triable defence ordinarily earns unconditional leave, guarding against summary decrees where a genuine contest exists.
2010 onward — Presumption Settled
Reverse Onus on the Drawer
Following Rangappa, and reaffirmed in Bir Singh and Tedhi Singh, it is settled that the Section 139 presumption extends to the existence of the debt and shifts a rebuttable onus to the drawer, strengthening the holder's position in both civil and criminal proceedings on a cheque.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a summary suit?

A summary suit is a civil suit filed under Order XXXVII of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 for the speedy recovery of a debt or liquidated demand arising on a negotiable instrument (bill of exchange, hundi, promissory note or cheque) or a written contract. Its distinguishing feature is that the defendant cannot defend as of right — he must first obtain the court's leave to defend.

How is a summary suit different from an ordinary money suit?

In an ordinary suit the defendant files a written statement and contests as of right, and the suit proceeds to a full trial. In a summary suit the defendant must apply for leave to defend within ten days of the summons for judgment; if he does not, or leave is refused, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment forthwith. The summary route is confined to document-based liquidated claims, while an ordinary suit can be filed for any claim, including unliquidated damages.

Which claims can be filed as a summary suit?

Order XXXVII Rule 1(2) applies to suits on bills of exchange, hundis and promissory notes, and to suits to recover a debt or liquidated demand arising on a written contract, on an enactment (where the sum is fixed or debt-like), or on a guarantee for such a debt. Claims for unliquidated damages or sums needing assessment do not qualify and must be filed as an ordinary suit.

Can I file a summary suit to recover money on a dishonoured cheque?

Yes. A cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a banker, so a civil summary suit may be filed to recover its amount. This civil recovery is separate from, and can run in parallel with, the criminal complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881. The two remedies serve different purposes — recovery of the money and penal accountability.

What is "leave to defend" and how long do I have to apply?

Leave to defend is the court's permission to a defendant to contest a summary suit. The defendant must apply within ten days of service of the summons for judgment, disclosing by affidavit facts that entitle him to defend. The court may grant leave unconditionally, or on terms such as depositing or securing the claimed amount, or refuse it.

On what basis does the court grant or refuse leave to defend?

Under Rule 3(5), leave is not to 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. As explained in IDBI Trusteeship v. Hubtown (2017) and B.L. Kashyap v. JMS Steels (2022), a substantial defence earns unconditional leave; a fair or reasonable triable defence ordinarily earns unconditional leave; a doubtful defence may attract conditional leave; and a sham or moonshine defence may lead to refusal.

What happens if leave to defend is refused?

If the defendant does not apply for leave, or the application is refused, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment forthwith on the claim. Where leave is granted on condition of a deposit and the defendant fails to comply, the consequence can again be a decree. A defendant who is genuinely aggrieved may pursue the remedies available against such an order in accordance with law.

What is the limitation period to recover money?

Most money claims carry a three-year limitation under the Limitation Act, 1963 — for a bill of exchange or promissory note, three years from when it falls due (Articles 35-36); for the price of goods sold or money lent, three years from delivery or from the loan; and for breach of contract or a residuary money claim, three years from when the right to sue accrues (Article 113). The exact starting point depends on the facts.

Can a written acknowledgement extend the limitation?

Yes. Under Section 18 of the Limitation Act, 1963, a signed written acknowledgement of liability made before limitation expires starts a fresh three-year period from the date of acknowledgement. Section 19 makes similar provision for part-payment of the debt. What amounts to a valid acknowledgement is explained in Shapoor Fredoom Mazda v. Durga Prasad Chamaria (1961).

Can I claim interest in a money suit?

Yes. Where the contract or instrument stipulates a rate, the court may give effect to it. Independently, Section 34 of the Code of Civil Procedure allows the court to award interest for the period before the suit, during the suit (pendente lite), and from the date of decree to realisation, at a rate it considers reasonable.

Which court hears a money-recovery suit in Delhi?

A money suit is filed in the civil court having pecuniary jurisdiction over the amount claimed and territorial jurisdiction over the place where the cause of action arose or the defendant resides or works. In Delhi, depending on the value and nature of the claim, this may be the District Courts (Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket or Dwarka), the commercial courts for commercial disputes above the specified value, or the Delhi High Court. The firm's practice covers these forums.

Test Your Knowledge — Money Recovery & Summary Suits Quiz

⚖️ Money Recovery & Summary Suits

Key Legal Terms

Summary Suit
A suit under Order XXXVII CPC for speedy recovery of a debt or liquidated demand, in which the defendant must obtain leave to defend before contesting.
Leave to Defend
The court's permission allowing a defendant in a summary suit to contest the claim; it may be unconditional, conditional (on deposit / security), or refused.
Liquidated Demand
A claim for a fixed, ascertainable sum of money — known from the document itself or calculable without judicial assessment — as opposed to unliquidated damages.
Negotiable Instrument
A written instrument whose ownership can be transferred by delivery or endorsement — a promissory note, bill of exchange or cheque under the NI Act, 1881.
Promissory Note
An unconditional written undertaking, signed by the maker, to pay a certain sum to, or to the order of, a certain person or the bearer (Section 4, NI Act).
Bill of Exchange / Cheque
An order in writing directing payment of a certain sum; a cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a banker and payable on demand (Sections 5 and 6, NI Act).
Section 139 Presumption
A reverse-onus presumption that a cheque was issued in discharge of a debt or liability; rebuttable by the drawer on a preponderance of probabilities.
Acknowledgement (Section 18)
A signed written admission of liability that, if made before limitation expires, starts a fresh three-year period from the date of acknowledgement.
Summons for Judgment
The plaintiff's application in a summary suit, supported by affidavit, asserting there is no defence; on its service the defendant's ten-day window to seek leave begins.
Execution (Order XXI)
The process of enforcing a money decree — by attachment and sale of property, garnishee, arrest, or other modes permitted by the Code.
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This is an informational guide and is reviewed periodically against the official sources cited above. If any provision appears outdated or an inadvertent error is noticed, it may be pointed out using the contact details on this page so that the content can be reviewed and corrected. Readers should verify the current statutory text and case law from authentic sources before relying on it.

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