Everything an Indian lawyer needs, on one desk.
Nyaya bundles two products that have spent twenty years in different windows. On the left, the AI workspace that drafts, reviews, researches and translates. On the right, the practice manager that knows your client, your matter, and your next hearing. They are built to talk to each other.
From a one-line brief to a filing-ready notice.
Tell Nyaya the facts in plain English or Hindi. It produces the notice, plaint, reply, or contract — formatted, sectioned, and footnoted with the exact provision of the Act it relied on. You stay the lawyer. The boilerplate stops being yours.
- 01Templates for every High Court and most district court formats
- 02Clause libraries for sale, lease, employment, NDA, MoU, JV
- 03Bilingual drafts — English and Devanagari side-by-side
- 04Inline citations to BNS, BNSS, BSA, IPC, CrPC, CPC, ToPA, NIA
Tenant defaulted three months. Lease registered 14 March 2022, monthly rent ₹38,000, premises Bandra W. Want a 15-day notice to quit under Section 106 ToPA.
Notice under Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882
To Mr. Anil Verma, take notice that you are a tenant in respect of Flat 4B, Shanti Apartments, Bandra (West), Mumbai under a lease deed dated 14th March 2022. The lessor, my client Smt. Meera Sharma, hereby determines the said tenancy and calls upon you to vacate and hand over peaceful and vacant possession of the said premises on the expiry of fifteen days from receipt hereof, in accordance with the provisions of Section 106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882…
A suit for the cheque amount itself sounds in Article 35 of the Schedule to the Limitation Act, 1963 — three years from the date the cause of action arose, i.e. the date the cheque was returned dishonoured.
The criminal complaint under Section 138 NI Act, by contrast, must be filed within one month from the expiry of fifteen days from receipt of statutory notice (s. 142(1)(b)).
- 01Limitation Act 1963Sch. Art. 35
- 02Negotiable Instruments Act 1881s. 138, 142
- 03Dashrath Rupsingh Rathod v. State of Maharashtra(2014) 9 SCC 129
- 04MSR Leathers v. S. Palaniappan(2013) 1 SCC 177
Every Indian Act, at the speed of thought.
Ask in plain English: “What is the limitation period for a suit on a dishonoured cheque?” — get an answer rooted in Section 138 NI Act, Article 35 of the Limitation Act, and the Dashrath Rupsingh Rathod line of authority. Every answer carries its citations. None of them are made up.
- 01Whole-corpus search across 60+ Central Acts and major Rules
- 02Headnotes and ratio extraction from judgment PDFs you upload
- 03Section-text and amendment-history grounding — no hallucinated provisions
- 04Cross-reference graph: pull every section that cites the one you’re reading
Red-flag the contract before it’s yours to defend.
Drop a 60-page MSA. Nyaya finds the indemnity that was widened, the LD cap that was deleted, the IP assignment that was flipped — and proposes the redline you would have written, with the page-and-clause locator.
- 01Side-by-side redline of any DOCX or PDF
- 02Severity scoring against your firm’s house playbook
- 03Indemnity, LD, governing law, IP, exclusivity — auto-flagged
- 04Export Word with track-changes baked in
9.2 Indemnification. Service Provider shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Customer and its affiliates, directors, officers, employees, agents and successors from and against any and all claims, actions, losses, damages, liabilities, costs and expenses (including legal fees on a full indemnity basis)…
11.1 Cap. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the aggregate liability of either party shall not exceed fees paid in the preceding 12 months [deleted].
Scope expanded to affiliates & full-indemnity costs. Suggest reverting to direct losses to Customer, capped at fees.
Clause 11.1 reverts liability to common law. Restore 12-month cap.
Now Singapore. Confirm with client; consider Mumbai with arb at MCIA.
The case file, finally kept.
Spreadsheets and folders are how matters get lost. Nyaya gives every matter a home — clients, hearings, documents, time, and money — without ever leaving the workspace where you draft.
- Next hearing
- Tue 13 May, 11:00
- Opp. counsel
- Adv. Mehta
- Documents
- 14
- Unbilled
- ₹68,400
- Open matters
- 3
- GSTIN
- —
- Last invoice
- Apr 28 · paid
- Notes
- 5
- Mon 12 May
- Filing — IBC NCLT Mumbai
- Tue 13 May
- Hearing — Sharma v. Verma
- Wed 14 May
- Mediation — Kohli
- Fri 16 May
- Reply due — GST AAR
Try Nyaya for an evening. It will earn its keep by morning.
Free to start. No credit card. Cancel from the dashboard with a single click.