Sometimes you cannot wait for a regular lawsuit that can take months. Think of an impending eviction, an urgent labor dispute, or a ban that you need immediately. In such situations, you or the other party can start a summary proceedings.
In this article, we explain what summary proceedings are, when you can use them, how the procedure works, and what the consequences of a judgment are.
What is a summary proceeding?
A summary proceeding is an urgent procedure before the interim relief judge. The judge makes a quick, provisional judgment to solve the most pressing issue.
Characteristics:
Speed: usually a verdict within 2 to 6 weeks.
Urgency: the case cannot wait for a regular procedure.
Provisional measure: the judgment is not definitive, but it applies immediately.
When can you start summary proceedings?
Summary proceedings can be used in a variety of situations, for example:
Housing: impending eviction, shutdown of gas, water or light.
Labor: wage claim, too swift threat of dismissal, non-competition clause.
Consumer law: delivery of a product or service urgently needed.
Family law: visitation rights with children, return to parent.
Prohibitions: a publication ban, stopping of works or actions.
👉 Condition: there must be urgency.
How does the procedure work in summary proceedings?
Draft a summons
Your lawyer issues a summons in which the urgent request is stated.Hearing before the interim relief judge
A verbal treatment at the court follows within a few weeks.Judgment (verdict)
The judge usually makes a judgment within 2 weeks. This is called the summary judgment.Enforceability
The verdict is provisionally enforceable: it applies immediately, even if the loser appeals.
What are the consequences of a summary judgment?
The verdict applies immediately, but is provisional.
For a definitive ruling, a substantive procedure must follow.
Yet it is often decisive because parties adhere to it.
Examples from practice
Example 1 (labor): An employee was wrongly not paid any more wages. In summary proceedings, wage payment was immediately awarded.
Example 2 (rent): A tenant received a summary eviction proceeding. With defense, we were able to enforce a delay and a payment arrangement.
Example 3 (media): A person demanded a publication ban in summary proceedings because of defamation. The judge rejected the request because freedom of the press weighed more heavily.
Checklist: start summary proceedings or defend
📄 Is there really an urgency?
📑 Collect evidence (contracts, letters, emails).
⏳ Engage a lawyer quickly: the deadlines are short.
⚖️ Decide whether summary proceedings are enough or whether a substantive procedure is needed.
📝 Prepare for a verbal treatment at the court.
Common mistakes
Thinking that summary proceedings give a definitive ruling.
Not demonstrating urgency: the judge will then dismiss it.
Engaging legal assistance too late, resulting in a lack of preparation.
Expecting that summary proceedings will always solve all problems.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. What does a summary proceeding cost?
You pay court fees and attorney fees. Often the costs are lower than with long procedures.
2. Do I always need a lawyer?
In most cases yes, especially for civil cases.
3. How quickly do I get a ruling?
Usually within 2 weeks after the hearing.
4. Can I appeal against a summary judgment?
Yes, you can. But the ruling remains valid until the court decides otherwise.
5. Is a summary proceeding binding?
The verdict is provisional. The ruling in a substantive procedure can turn out differently.
Why Arslan Lawyers?
Experienced in conducting summary proceedings and defense
Quick and strategic approach to urgent matters
Knowledge of employment law, tenancy law, family law, and civil matters
Often achieve quick and effective results
Conclusion
Summary proceedings are the way to quickly get clarity on urgent matters. The verdict is provisional, but immediately enforceable. Always engage a lawyer in time to increase your chances and conduct a good defense.
