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Understanding how to obtain an interim injunction in India is critical for any business facing an imminent threat of irreparable commercial harm, whether that is misappropriation of trade secrets, dissipation of assets, or a counterparty acting in breach of an exclusivity agreement. An interim (also called temporary or interlocutory) injunction is a court order that preserves the status quo between parties while the main suit is decided, and it is governed principally by Order 39, Rules 1–3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) and reinforced by the court’s inherent powers under Section 151 CPC.
This guide sets out the complete interim injunction procedure in India, eligibility tests, emergency injunction steps, required documents, realistic timelines, indicative costs, and key 2026 procedural developments, so that in‑house counsel, general counsel, founders and project directors can move decisively when the clock is running.
An interim injunction is a discretionary equitable remedy. The court restrains a party from performing a specific act (prohibitory injunction) or, less commonly, compels a party to perform one (mandatory injunction) on an interlocutory basis, meaning the order operates until the court disposes of the underlying suit or varies the order. The statutory architecture rests on three pillars:
Commercial parties most frequently seek interim injunctions to protect intellectual property rights, enforce non‑compete and confidentiality obligations, prevent asset stripping ahead of an arbitral award, or restrain a counterparty from acting on a disputed contract. The process applies equally to companies incorporated in India and to foreign entities that satisfy jurisdictional requirements. Where circumstances demand immediate relief without notice to the respondent, the court may grant an ex‑parte or ad‑interim injunction, which remains in force until the next listed hearing date.
Indian courts assess every injunction application against a well‑established three‑part test derived from Supreme Court jurisprudence. All three limbs must be satisfied; weakness in any one can be fatal to the application.
The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie case, a plausible claim that, on the face of the evidence, raises a substantial question to be tried. In a contract dispute this typically means producing the signed agreement and evidence of breach. In an IP matter it means showing ownership of the right (registration certificate, assignment deed or evidence of prior use) and a credible allegation of infringement. The court does not conduct a mini‑trial; it looks for a genuine, non‑frivolous cause of action.
The court weighs comparative hardship: would the applicant suffer greater inconvenience if the injunction were refused than the respondent would suffer if it were granted? For instance, where a former employee threatens to use proprietary source code at a competitor, the balance ordinarily favours restraint because the applicant’s competitive advantage may be permanently eroded, while the respondent can be compensated in damages if the injunction later proves unwarranted.
The applicant must show that the harm, if left unrestrained, cannot be adequately remedied by an award of damages at trial. Loss of unique intellectual property, destruction of goodwill built over decades, or dissipation of the only pool of assets against which a decree could be enforced are classic examples. Purely monetary losses that can be quantified and recovered usually do not qualify, unless the respondent’s solvency is in question.
Standing is broad: any plaintiff (or counter‑claimant in a cross‑suit) may apply. Corporate applicants must file a board resolution authorising the litigation. Note that mandatory injunctions, orders requiring the respondent to take positive action, attract stricter scrutiny and are granted only in clear cases where refusal would cause extreme hardship.
The following table maps each emergency injunction step, the responsible party, and the typical duration. Timelines are indicative and vary by court and jurisdiction.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 0. Urgent triage and evidence lock, collect key documents; identify injunction objective | In‑house counsel + litigation team | 0–24 hours |
| 1. Draft application, affidavit/witness statement and evidence bundle | Litigation counsel | 24–72 hours |
| 2. File application (ex‑parte/ad‑interim if necessary) at appropriate court | Litigation counsel / filing clerk | Day 1–3 from readiness |
| 3. If ex‑parte order granted, serve order and application on respondent | Process server / counsel | Serve within period directed by court (state practice varies) |
| 4. Matter listed for inter‑partes hearing (vacation/urgent list) | Court registry | Typically 7–21 days from ex‑parte order |
| 5. Inter‑partes hearing and order on interlocutory application | Court | Often within 2–6 weeks of first listing |
| 6. Enforcement if respondent disobeys the injunction | Applicant counsel / court enforcement | Immediately after order; contempt proceedings if needed |
Before counsel drafts a single page, the in‑house team must secure the evidence that will underpin the application. Practical steps include:
This triage should be completed within 24 hours. The quality of evidence at this stage directly determines the strength of the prima facie case presented to the court.
The injunction application must contain several essential components:
The supporting affidavit must be sworn by a person with direct knowledge of the facts (typically a director, officer or authorised representative of the applicant). Attach an indexed exhibit bundle with contracts, correspondence, IP certificates, and any forensic or valuation reports.
File the suit and injunction application at the court with territorial and pecuniary jurisdiction over the dispute. In commercial matters above the specified value, Commercial Courts established under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 have exclusive jurisdiction. Where both a High Court and a district‑level Commercial Court have jurisdiction, strategic considerations, listing speed, judicial expertise, enforcement efficiency, may favour one forum over the other.
If circumstances justify proceeding without notice (risk of evidence destruction, imminent asset flight), apply for ex‑parte ad‑interim relief. The court may hear the application on the same day or the next working day under urgent‑cause listing procedures. Counsel should be prepared to make oral submissions immediately upon filing.
Once an ex‑parte order is made, the applicant bears the obligation to serve the order and the application on the respondent within the period directed by the court. Service may be effected through court process servers, private process‑serving agencies, registered post, or courier, the method must comply with local High Court rules. Failure to serve promptly can result in vacation of the ex‑parte order. Prepare a service affidavit documenting the date, mode and recipient of service, and file it with the court before the return date.
At the inter‑partes hearing, the respondent will typically file a reply affidavit opposing the injunction. The applicant should be prepared to:
If the court confirms the injunction, the order will ordinarily remain in force until the disposal of the suit or until further order. If the respondent disobeys, the applicant may initiate contempt proceedings under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, which can result in fines or imprisonment.
The table below lists every document typically needed when filing for interim relief. Assemble these before approaching counsel to accelerate the drafting timeline. The documents needed for an injunction application vary slightly by jurisdiction, but the core bundle is consistent across Indian courts.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Plaint / cause of action summary | Court‑format plaint setting out the cause of action, or a standalone summary if the application is filed alongside the plaint; signed by counsel. |
| Application for interim injunction (including relief sought) | Interlocutory application under Order 39 CPC (or Section 151 CPC); specify each prohibitory or mandatory order requested. |
| Affidavit / witness statement | Sworn by a person with direct knowledge; notarised or verified as required by local rules; attach an exhibits index. |
| Documentary evidence bundle | Contracts, invoices, emails, IP registration certificates, forensic reports, originals or certified copies in chronological order with exhibit numbering. |
| Undertaking as to damages / security | Draft undertaking to compensate the respondent if the injunction is later set aside; state the proposed amount or formula. |
| Court fee receipt | Fee amount varies by state; verify against the applicable state court fee schedule before filing. |
| Service affidavit / proof of service pack | Required after ex‑parte orders; document date, mode and recipient of service. |
| Power of attorney / board resolution | Corporate applicants must produce a board resolution authorising litigation and appointing counsel; notarise or register as required. |
| Inventory / preservation bond | For asset‑preservation or freezing orders; include a valuation schedule and proposed bond amount. |
Organise the evidence bundle into three tiers: primary documents (the contract or IP right at the centre of the dispute), contemporaneous evidence (emails, minutes, logs showing breach or harm), and third‑party records (expert valuations, forensic reports, regulatory filings). This hierarchy helps the court quickly assess the strength of the prima facie case. Where possible, provide a concise chronology as a cover sheet to the exhibit bundle, courts dealing with heavy lists appreciate brevity.
Commercial disputes in India can take several years to reach final trial. The interlocutory injunction timeline is therefore designed to deliver fast, interim protection while the main suit progresses. The practical milestones are as follows:
Jurisdictional variation is significant. Commercial Courts in metropolitan centres such as Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru generally list urgent matters faster than district courts in smaller cities. During court vacations, a vacation bench may hear genuinely urgent applications, but listing slots are limited. Industry observers expect that stricter case‑management timelines introduced in recent years will continue to compress these windows, making early preparation even more critical.
Budgeting for interim relief requires factoring in several cost categories. The table below provides indicative ranges; all figures should be verified against the relevant state court fee schedule and current market rates for legal counsel.
| Item | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (injunction application) | INR 500 – INR 50,000+ | Varies by state and relief value; check the applicable state court fee schedule. |
| Urgent counsel retainer | INR 1,00,000 – INR 15,00,000+ | Depends on firm, complexity, and need for immediate filings; higher in High Court original‑side matters. |
| Process serving and urgent listing | INR 2,000 – INR 25,000 | Private process servers and courier cost more than court process servers but are faster. |
| Expert valuation / forensic costs | INR 50,000 – INR 10,00,000+ | Required where asset valuation or digital forensic preservation underpins the application. |
| Undertaking / security (if ordered) | Amount as directed by court | Court may accept a bank guarantee or fixed deposit in lieu of cash deposit. |
| Enforcement (contempt / seizure) | INR 10,000 – INR 2,00,000+ | Additional legal fees and enforcement expenses if the respondent disobeys the order. |
Corporate applicants should build a contingency of 15–25 per cent above the initial estimate to cover adjournments, additional hearings, and any court‑directed increase in security. Where the matter involves cross‑border elements, service abroad, evidence from foreign jurisdictions, costs can escalate materially.
The most significant procedural development affecting how to obtain an interim injunction in India in 2026 is the increasing institutional push towards pre‑litigation mediation and conciliation. The Mediation Act, 2023 (which came into effect in stages from 2024 onward) and subsequent High Court practice directions encourage, and in some categories of commercial disputes, require, parties to attempt mediation before or shortly after commencing suit.
For injunction applicants, the practical question is whether a mediation obligation delays the filing of urgent interim relief. The likely practical effect is that it does not, provided the applicant can demonstrate genuine urgency. Courts have consistently recognised that the right to seek interim protection cannot be defeated by a mandatory mediation step where irreparable harm is imminent. The Mediation Act itself contains exceptions for urgent interim or interlocutory relief. Industry observers expect courts to continue granting ex‑parte ad‑interim orders where the applicant shows a credible risk of harm that mediation cannot address within the relevant timeframe.
In parallel, Commercial Courts are enforcing tighter case‑management schedules, including strict timelines for filing reply affidavits, completing arguments, and disposing of interlocutory applications. The combined effect is a procedural environment that rewards preparedness: applicants who arrive with a complete evidence bundle, a well‑drafted application, and a clear urgency narrative are more likely to secure relief quickly, while those relying on adjournments and piecemeal filings face increasing judicial resistance.
Even well‑resourced applicants lose injunction applications because of avoidable procedural and strategic errors. The most frequent pitfalls include:
Avoiding these pitfalls is often the difference between obtaining relief on the first hearing and losing weeks to adjournments and re‑filings. Where the dispute involves cross‑border elements or particularly complex facts, engaging specialist commercial litigation counsel early, ideally before the triggering event crystallises, materially improves the prospects of success. You can find a commercial litigation lawyer in India through the Global Law Experts directory to discuss your specific situation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Amit Mishra at Svarniti Law Offices, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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