Filing Deadlines under CPC and CrPC: What Every Advocate Must Know
Substantive law wins arguments, but procedural law wins cases. The Civil Procedure Code and the Criminal Procedure Code are full of quiet time limits — for filing a written statement, for preferring an appeal, for moving a revision — and missing one can end a matter before its merits are ever heard.
Civil deadlines that catch people out
On the civil side, the deadline most often missed is the written statement. Courts have grown firm about the time allowed to file it, and a defendant who delays risks losing the right to defend. Appeals and applications for review or revision carry their own periods, each running from a specific event.
- Written statement — within the period the court allows, increasingly strict
- Appeals — counted from the decree, excluding certified-copy time
- Review and revision — each with its own limitation period
- Execution — within the time prescribed for the decree
Criminal timelines
On the criminal side, timelines around bail, appeals and revisions demand the same discipline. The stakes — a person’s liberty — make a missed date even harder to justify. Here, more than anywhere, a reliable system for tracking the next step is not a convenience but a duty.
“A brilliant defence filed out of time is a brilliant defence the court will never read.”
How Legal Diary helps
Legal Diary includes a Filing Deadlines calculator built around CPC and CrPC procedural periods. Enter the triggering date and the step, and the app returns the deadline and adds it to your calendar with reminders — so procedure protects your client instead of tripping them.
Never miss a procedural deadline again — start your free Legal Diary trial today.
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