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Arbitration2026-01-08

One Reference Doc, One Line, One Almost-Perfect Draft

AC

A civil and arbitration advocate

India

Key Result

Full draft on the first attempt

A lawyer and new mother of twins needed an arbitration claim statement drafted fast. With a reference document and a single-line instruction, Maya delivered a near-accurate draft on the first attempt.

Life With Newborn Twins and a Full Practice

She had returned to practice after maternity leave with two infants at home. Anyone who has managed twins in their first few months knows: time is not a resource — it is a rationed commodity.

Her client needed a claim statement for an arbitration matter. Normally, drafting such a document from scratch — reviewing the dispute background, structuring the claims, citing the applicable clauses of the arbitration agreement, framing the relief sought — would take most of a working day.

She did not have most of a working day.

The One-Line Request

She opened Legal Desk AI's Quick Draft tool, uploaded the reference agreement and the background correspondence as context documents, and typed a single line describing what she needed:

"Draft a claim statement for arbitration based on breach of the attached supply agreement, claiming damages and seeking interest."

She hit submit and went to attend to her children.

What Came Back

The draft that returned was structured, formal, and largely accurate. It had picked up the correct clause numbers from the agreement, framed the breach correctly, and structured the relief in the standard format used in Indian arbitration proceedings.

"I was expecting to do a significant redraft. Instead I spent maybe 20 minutes reviewing and inserting a few specific facts. The bones were all there — and they were right."

The final claim statement went to the opposing party the same evening.

Why This Matters Beyond Convenience

This story isn't just about a busy lawyer saving time. It's about what becomes possible when drafting is no longer the bottleneck.

A lawyer at a different life stage — with more time, fewer constraints — would still have spent hours on this document. The tool doesn't produce a better draft because the lawyer has less time. It produces a good draft because the underlying AI understands arbitration structure, legal language, and how to read a reference document.

The time saving was the headline. The accuracy was the real story.

One Note on Workflow

She was clear that the reference document mattered significantly. Uploading the actual agreement — not just describing the dispute in words — gave the tool the specifics it needed to produce something usable rather than generic.

"Give it context and it gives you something you can use. Ask it to draft in the abstract and you'll get something abstract back. That's true of any tool — or any junior associate, honestly."

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