Rejection of Plaint — A Fundamental Element in Disposal of Suit is a concise, practice-oriented commentary that dissects the statutory and judicial framework for rejecting plaints under civil procedure. Beginning with the text and legislative history of relevant provisions (including Order VII and allied rules), the book offers clause-by-clause explanations, doctrinal analysis and a curated selection of leading judgments that define when courts may or must reject a plaint. Practical sections address common grounds — absence of cause of action, misjoinder/non-joinder, non-joinder of necessary parties, barred by law (including limitation and res judicata), lack of locus standi, and jurisdictional incompetence — illustrating how each ground has been applied across landmark decisions. The author supplies specimen orders, drafting templates for applications and oppositions, redline examples, and a practitioner’s checklist to reduce error and accelerate case disposal. Special chapters cover appellate treatment of plaint-rejection, interplay with summary judgments and summary disposal mechanisms, and tactical use of rejection in case management. Designed to bridge theory and courtroom practice, this volume helps lawyers draft precise pleadings, anticipate objections, and advise clients with confidence.






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