Published on: August 18, 2025
SUPREME COURT ON CIVIL VS. CRIMINAL CASES
SUPREME COURT ON CIVIL VS. CRIMINAL CASES
NEWS
- In August 2025, the Supreme Court (SC) twice stepped in where High Courts (HCs) allowed criminal proceedings in civil disputes.
- Case 1 (Rajasthan HC): SC set aside an order denying pre-arrest bail in a plywood payment dispute. The Bench held: “No criminal breach of trust arises from a sale transaction.”
- Case 2 (Allahabad HC): A judge allowed criminal proceedings in a business transaction dispute. SC called it a “mockery of justice” and briefly barred him from hearing criminal cases. The directive was later withdrawn.
HIGHLIGHTS
Civil vs. Criminal Law: Key Distinctions
- Civil Law: Resolves disputes between individuals/organisations. Aim: remedy, not punishment. Outcomes include damages (monetary compensation) or injunctions (specific orders).
- Examples: property disputes, breach of contract, divorce, custody.
- Parties: Plaintiff vs. Defendant.
- Burden of Proof: Preponderance of probabilities.
- Criminal Law: Deals with offences against the state/society. Aim: punishment and deterrence.
- Examples: theft, cheating, assault, murder.
- Parties: State (prosecutor) vs. Accused.
- Burden of Proof: Beyond reasonable doubt.
Overlap of Civil & Criminal Proceedings
- Some disputes can trigger both civil and criminal action (e.g., breach of contract + cheating).
- SC clarified: criminal intent must exist prior to a business transaction to justify parallel proceedings.
Timelines & Judicial Data
- Civil cases often take longer. NJDG (Aug 2025) data:
- Criminal trials disposed within a year: 70.17%
- Civil suits resolved within a year: 37.91%
- Average durations:
- Civil suits: 4.91 years
- Execution petitions: 3.97 years
- Criminal sessions cases: 4.65 years
- Magisterial cases: 2.45 years
- Bail applications: 6.12 months
Expert Views
- Delays in civil cases often due to preliminary stages (notices/summons) and out-of-court settlement attempts.
- Tracking case timelines is complex as appeals reset the count.
