eFiling in Indian District Courts From Registration to Final Submission
A Practical Handbook for Advocates, Litigants, and Court Staff
Part I: Understanding the Foundation
What eFiling Actually Means in the Indian Context
eFiling in Indian District Courts refers to the electronic submission of pleadings, applications, affidavits, and supporting documents through the centralized portal filing.ecourts.gov.in. Unlike simple email submissions or scanned document uploads, this is an integrated system that connects directly with the Court Information System (CIS) software used by registry staff
-
Your case details automatically populate the court’s case management database
-
Court fees calculate automatically based on state-specific schedules
-
Your documents undergo preliminary technical scrutiny before reaching human eyes
-
A unique tracking number generates immediately upon submission
The system serves four primary user categories: Advocates, Litigants in Person, Government Pleaders/Police Representatives, and Court Clerks handling physical filings converted to electronic format
Hardware and Software Prerequisites
| Component | Minimum Specification | Recommended Specification |
|---|---|---|
| Operating System | Windows 7 / Linux / macOS | Windows 10 or newer |
| Browser | Internet Explorer 11 | Google Chrome (latest) or Mozilla Firefox |
| Internet Speed | 2 Mbps stable connection | 5 Mbps or higher |
| Scanner | 200 DPI resolution | 300 DPI with auto-feeder |
| PDF Software | Adobe Acrobat Reader 11 | Adobe Acrobat Pro for optimization |
| Digital Signature | Class 2 or 3 DSC token | Class 3 DSC with eSign capability |
| Webcam | 720p resolution | 1080p for oath recording |
Critical technical notes: Documents must be in PDF format only, with individual file sizes not exceeding 25MB
. The system specifically rejects password-protected PDFs, encrypted files, or documents with embedded external links. Scanning resolution matters enormously—200 DPI is the absolute minimum, but 300 DPI ensures clarity when judges view documents on screen
Part II: Creating Your eFiling Identity
Step-by-Step Registration Process
-
State Bar Council enrollment number
-
Year of enrollment
-
Mobile number linked to your Bar Council records
-
Personal email address (institutional emails often face delivery issues)
-
Valid mobile number (mandatory for OTP verification)
-
Email address
-
Government ID proof (Aadhaar, PAN, Voter ID, or Passport)
-
Recent passport photograph (under 50KB, JPG format)
The Critical OTP Verification Stage
Upon selecting your registration type, the system sends a One-Time Password to your registered mobile number. This isn’t merely a formality—it establishes the primary authentication method for all future filings. If you don’t receive the OTP within 120 seconds, the system allows resending, but persistent failures indicate either network issues or an already-registered mobile number
Completing Your Profile
| Field Category | Specific Requirements | Common Mistakes |
|---|---|---|
| Identity | First name, Last name exactly as on ID proof | Using initials instead of full names |
| Contact | Primary mobile, alternate number | Using the same number for multiple registrations |
| Demographics | Gender, Date of Birth (DD/MM/YYYY format) | American date format (MM/DD/YYYY) |
| Address | Complete postal address with PIN code | Omitting PIN codes or using outdated addresses |
| Credentials | Password with 1 uppercase, 1 lowercase, 1 number, 1 special character, minimum 8 characters | Simple passwords that fail complexity checks |
| Verification | CAPTCHA code entry | Case-sensitive errors |
Upload your passport photograph and ID proof carefully. The system strictly enforces 5
Upload your passport photograph and ID proof carefully. The system strictly enforces 50KB size limits. Use image compression tools if necessary—blurry or oversized documents cause immediate rejection
Dashboard Navigation Fundamentals
-
Home: Return to main portal page
-
New Case: Initiate fresh litigation filing
-
Documents: File miscellaneous applications in existing cases
-
Deficit Court Fees: Pay additional fees when initial payment was insufficient
-
Reports: Access filing history and status tracking
-
Help: Video tutorials, FAQs, and user manuals
-
Drafts: Saved but unsubmitted filings
-
Pending Acceptance: Submitted but awaiting technical validation
-
Pending Scrutiny: Accepted technically but awaiting registry examination
-
Defective Cases: Flagged with objections requiring correction
-
eFiled Cases: Successfully registered matters with CNR numbers
Part III: Filing a New Case—The Complete Workflow
Stage 1: Jurisdiction and Case Type Selection
-
Pecuniary jurisdiction (value of suit)
-
Subject matter jurisdiction (civil/criminal/special statutes)
-
Geographical jurisdiction (location of parties or property)
| Civil Categories | Criminal Categories | Special Categories |
|---|---|---|
| Regular Civil Suit | Private Complaint | Family Court matters |
| Summary Suit | Criminal Revision | Commercial disputes |
| Commercial Suit | Bail Applications | Motor Accident Claims |
| Land Acquisition | Maintenance petitions | Consumer grievances |
| Intellectual Property | Domestic Violence cases | Labour disputes |
After case type selection, choose your signing method: Aadhaar-based eSign or Digital Signature Certificate (DSC). This choice affects the final submission process
Stage 2: Party Details Entry
-
Individual or Organization selection
-
Complete name (no abbreviations)
-
Father’s/Husband’s name (for individuals)
-
Age and occupation
-
Full address with landmark and PIN code
-
Mobile number and email (for eService notifications)
-
Same fields as above
-
Additional field for legal representative details if known
Stage 3: Legal Provisions and Subordinate Court Information
| Required Field | Data Source | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|
| Subordinate Court Name | Dropdown selection | Cross-referenced with court database |
| Case Registration Number | Original case CNR or filing number | Format validation |
| Type of Case | As classified in lower court | Category matching |
| Judge’s Name | Presiding officer who passed impugned order | Spelling accuracy crucial |
| Date of Impugned Decision | DD/MM/YYYY format | Cannot be future date |
| Copy Applied Date | When certified copy was requested | Must precede filing date |
| Copy Ready Date | When certified copy was obtained | Validates limitation period |
Stage 4: Document Upload Protocol
-
Plaint/Complaint/Petition (the main pleading)
-
Affidavit in support (if required by specific case type)
-
Vakalatnama (if filed by advocate, though system allows separate eFiling)
-
Identity proofs of parties
-
Address proofs
-
Cause of action documents (agreements, correspondence, notices)
-
Valuation documents (for court fee calculation)
-
Power of Attorney (if any)
Technical Specifications for Uploads:
| Parameter | Requirement | Best Practice |
|---|---|---|
| File Format | PDF only | Convert Word documents using “Save as PDF” not print-to-PDF |
| Resolution | 200 DPI minimum | 300 DPI for clarity |
| File Size | 25MB per document | Compress using PDF optimization tools |
| Color Mode | Grayscale acceptable | Black & white for text, color for photographs only |
| Page Size | A4 standard | Legal size documents must be resized |
| Orientation | Portrait preferred | Landscape pages rotate for consistency |
CaseType_PartyName_DocumentType_Date.pdf Example: CivilSuit_RamSharma_Plaint_15022026.pdf-
Remove all track changes, comments, and annotations from source documents
-
Ensure no password protection or encryption
-
Verify all pages are legible when zoomed to 100%
-
Check that scanned signatures are dark and clear
-
Confirm page numbers are sequential and visible
Stage 5: Court Fee Calculation and Payment
-
Net Banking (all major banks)
-
Credit/Debit Cards (Visa, MasterCard, RuPay)
-
UPI (Google Pay, PhonePe, PayTM)
-
Challan generation for offline payment (where state rules permit)
Critical Note: Save the payment receipt PDF immediately. The system sometimes experiences lag in payment confirmation, and the receipt is your only proof of timely filing. For deficit fee payments later, the same gateway opens through the “Deficit Court Fees” tab
.
Stage 6: Affirmation and Final Submission
Before submission, the system requires an affirmation—essentially a digital oath stating that information provided is true to the best of your knowledge. The eFiling 3.0 portal introduced in-system video recording for this oath
:
-
System prompts for Aadhaar number
-
OTP sent to Aadhaar-registered mobile
-
Enter OTP to electronically sign the affirmation
-
No additional hardware required
-
Insert DSC token into USB port
-
Enter DSC PIN when prompted
-
System detects certificate and applies signature
-
Requires token drivers installed and browser compatibility
-
Party names spellings
-
Address completeness
-
Act and section citations
-
Document sequence and page counts
-
Court fee amount
-
eFiling Number: Temporary tracking ID
-
Transaction ID: For payment verification
-
Date and Time Stamp: Establishes filing date for limitation purposes
Part IV: Post-Submission Procedures
Understanding Scrutiny Stages
-
File format verification
-
Virus scanning
-
Metadata validation
-
Payment confirmation Timeline: Immediate to 24 hours
-
Jurisdictional correctness
-
Limitation compliance
-
Court fee adequacy
-
Document completeness
-
Procedural compliance
Phase 3: Defect Communication (If Applicable) If objections arise, they appear in your Dashboard under “Defective Cases” with specific remarks:
| Common Defect Types | Resolution Method | Prevention Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdictional error | Withdraw and refile in correct court | Double-check territorial jurisdiction before filing |
| Insufficient court fee | Pay deficit through portal | Use court fee calculator twice |
| Illegible documents | Rescan and reupload | Verify 300 DPI scanning |
| Party name discrepancy | Correct and resubmit | Copy names exactly from ID proofs |
| Missing verification | Add affidavit and reupload | Checklist all required documents |
| Limitation expired | Explain delay with application | Verify dates carefully |
The online defect correction process is one of eFiling’s greatest advantages. Unlike physical filing where you might discover defects days later through clerks, the portal shows objections immediately with specific instructions
.
Case Registration and CNR Generation
-
Case Number: As per court’s numbering system (e.g., “CS/45/2026” for Civil Suit 45 of 2026)
-
CNR (Case Number Record): 16-digit unique national identifier
-
Judge Assignment: Automatic allocation based on roster system
-
Cause List Inclusion: Case appears in daily/weekly lists
Part V: Filing Miscellaneous Documents
-
Application (Order XXXIX CPC, Section 151 CPC, etc.)
-
Affidavit
-
Written Statement
-
Replication
-
Rejoinder
-
Additional documents
Part VI: Advanced Features and Portfolio Management
The “My Partners” Functionality
eFiling 3.0 introduced collaboration features allowing senior advocates to add juniors, clerks, or co-counsel as “partners” to their account
. This enables:
-
Shared access to case portfolios
-
Delegated filing permissions
-
Activity tracking by team members
-
Centralized document repositories
Portfolio and Planner Tools
The Portfolio section functions as your digital case diary:
| Feature | Utility | Access Path |
|---|---|---|
| Case Tracker | Real-time status of all filed cases | Dashboard → My Cases → eFiled Cases |
| Document Repository | All uploaded documents organized by case | Individual case view → Documents tab |
| Hearing Alerts | SMS/Email notifications for listed dates | Profile Settings → Notification Preferences |
| Cause List Search | Check if your case appears in daily lists | ecourts.gov.in → Cause List |
| Order Copies | Download passed orders (where digitized) | Case status → Orders tab |
ePayment and Financial Tracking
-
eFiled Court Fees: All payments made during initial filing
-
eFiled Deficit Court Fees: Additional payments for corrections
-
Payment Receipts: Downloadable PDFs for accounting
-
Refund Status: For excess payments or rejected filings
Part VII: Practical Challenges and Solutions
Technical Issues and Workarounds
Server Overload: Peak hours (10 AM to 4 PM) often see slow response times. Solution: File early morning (6-8 AM) or late evening (8-10 PM)
.
When Physical Filing Remains Necessary
-
Urgent matters when servers are down (with court permission)
-
Documents exceeding size limits that can’t be reasonably split
-
Cases in courts not yet fully integrated into eFiling 3.0
-
Certain sensitive matters where judges order physical file maintenance
The Standard Operating Procedures issued by High Courts typically allow “online + physical” hybrid filing for such situations—you file online when possible, then visit the filing section with a printout if technical failures persist
.
Part VIII: Security, Ethics, and Best Practices
Data Protection Measures
-
SSL Encryption: All data transmission uses 256-bit encryption
-
Password Complexity: Mandatory strong password policies
-
Session Timeouts: Automatic logout after inactivity
-
Audit Trails: Every action logged with timestamp and IP address
-
Never share login credentials—if juniors need access, use “My Partners” feature
-
Log out after each session, especially on shared computers
-
Verify website URL carefully—phishing sites mimic the portal design
-
Report suspicious emails claiming to be from eFiling support
Ethical Considerations
Conclusion: The Digital Transformation of Justice
, eFiling is transitioning from “alternative method” to “primary method” of court access. The SOPs formulated by the High-level Committee ensure that whether you file in Gujarat or Guwahati, the process remains consistent
For the justice system to truly serve its purpose, the machinery must function efficiently. eFiling is that machinery’s modernization—and understanding it thoroughly is now an essential skill for everyone who seeks justice through India’s courts.
-
Primary Portal: https://filing.ecourts.gov.in
-
eCourts Main Website: https://ecourts.gov.in
-
User Manual: Available in Help section after login
-
Technical Support: eFiling Resource Centres at each Court Complex (9 AM to 7 PM IST)
For More Update Visit Home Click Here
-
Verify current procedures with official court websites (filing.ecourts.gov.in, ecourts.gov.in)
-
Consult practicing advocates or court staff for case-specific guidance
-
Refer to latest Standard Operating Procedures issued by respective High Courts
