Draft a professional legal notice in minutes — cheque bounce, eviction, recovery, and more
A legal notice is a formal written communication sent to a person or entity under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) and various Indian statutes, informing them of your grievance and intention to pursue legal action. It serves as a formal record that the aggrieved party attempted to resolve the matter before approaching the court. Under Indian law, legal notices are governed by different statutes depending on the nature of the dispute — Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act for cheque bounce, Section 80 CPC for government suits, and various state-specific Rent Control Acts for eviction matters.
| Notice Type | Applicable Law | Response Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Cheque Bounce Demand Notice | Section 138, NI Act 1881 | 15 days |
| Tenant Eviction Notice | State Rent Control Acts, Transfer of Property Act | 15-30 days |
| Money Recovery Notice | CPC, Indian Contract Act | 15-30 days |
| Property Dispute Notice | Transfer of Property Act, Specific Relief Act | 30 days |
| Salary Non-Payment Notice | Payment of Wages Act, 1936 | 15 days |
| Defamation Notice | Section 356 BNS (earlier Section 499 IPC) | 15 days |
| General Legal Notice | CPC, specific statute | 15-30 days |
| Situation | Mandatory? |
|---|---|
| Cheque Bounce (Section 138 NI Act) | Mandatory — case cannot proceed without it |
| Suit Against Government (Section 80 CPC) | Mandatory — 2 months' notice required |
| Eviction | Required under most state Rent Control Acts |
| Consumer Complaint | Not mandatory, but advisable |
| Money Recovery | Not mandatory, but strengthens the case |
| Defamation | Not mandatory, but shows bona fide intent |
Yes for cheque bounce cases (Section 138 NI Act requires a 30-day demand notice), eviction under most state Rent Control Acts, and suits against the government (Section 80 CPC requires 2 months' notice). For other civil suits, it is not mandatory but courts view it favorably as showing bona fide intent to resolve the dispute.
Print the legal notice on plain paper (no stamp paper needed). Visit a post office and send via Registered Post with Acknowledgment Due (RPAD). Keep the postal receipt and the green AD card when returned. Speed Post is also accepted by courts. UPC (Under Postal Certificate) is less reliable as evidence.
If drafted using LawCentral AI's free generator, the only cost is postal charges (approximately Rs. 30-50 for RPAD). If drafted through a lawyer, fees range from Rs. 1,000 to Rs. 10,000+ depending on complexity and city. No stamp paper is required for a legal notice.
Under Section 138 of the NI Act, the demand notice must be sent within 30 days of receiving the cheque return memo from the bank. The recipient then has 15 days to make payment. If unpaid, a criminal complaint must be filed within 30 days after the 15-day period expires.
Yes, there is no legal requirement for a legal notice to be sent through an advocate. Any person can draft and send a notice themselves. However, a notice sent through a lawyer on their letterhead is considered more serious and carries greater weight.
If the recipient does not reply within the deadline (typically 15-30 days), it may be deemed an admission of the claims. The sender can then proceed to file a civil suit, criminal complaint, or other appropriate legal proceedings. The notice and non-response serve as evidence of the sender's attempt at amicable resolution.
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