Created byFuzzy Cloud

product2026-04-12Legal Desk AI

Quick Draft Now Knows a Petition from a Notice — And Drafts Each Correctly

There is a world of difference between a legal notice and a writ petition. One demands, the other pleads. One addresses a party directly, the other addresses a court. The format, the language, the structure — all different. A generic AI that does not understand this gives you a draft that reads like a memo when you needed a motion.

Quick Draft has been significantly updated to understand exactly this. It now knows what type of document you are asking for, formats it correctly from the ground up, and — if you have uploaded precedents to your SMRITI library — it drafts from your own case law rather than from generic knowledge.

The right structure, automatically

Describe the document you need and choose a document type. Quick Draft does the rest.

Court filings — petitions, plaints, applications, and written statements come back with the correct heading format, court details, party names in the right positions, and a properly framed prayer clause. You are not spending the first ten minutes reformatting before you can even read the substance.

Legal notices — notices under the CPC, consumer protection statutes, rent control laws, or general correspondence notices come with proper recitals, a clear statement of grievance, and the demand language that gives a notice its legal weight.

Agreements — contracts and memoranda come structured with recitals, operative clauses, representations, and a signature block. The skeleton is there; you fill in what only you know about the parties and the deal.

Legal opinions — formal opinions come with the matter summary, issues framed as questions of law, the legal analysis, and a conclusion — in the format a senior advocate would recognise and a client would trust.

You do not need to provide a template or paste in a precedent format. Quick Draft selects the appropriate structure based on the document type you choose.

Drafts grounded in your own precedents

If you have uploaded judgments, case papers, or precedent documents to your SMRITI library, you can now use them directly inside Quick Draft. Enable SMRITI when you run a draft and the AI searches your library before it begins writing. Citations and references in the output are pulled from your own uploaded case law — not from the AI's general training.

This matters because your practice has a specific character. The judgments you rely on, the courts you appear before, the line of precedents you have built your arguments around — these are yours. When Quick Draft draws from SMRITI, the output reflects your expertise, not a generic understanding of Indian law.

The sources used are shown below the draft, so you can trace every reference back to the document it came from.

From idea to usable draft in one step

Open Quick Draft from your workspace. Describe the document in plain language — "legal notice for recovery of unpaid rent under Transfer of Property Act, tenant has been in default for four months." Choose the document type. Enable SMRITI if you have uploaded relevant precedents. Hit generate.

What comes back is a structured, usable draft — not a rough outline you need to rebuild from scratch. The fastest path from a client instruction to a document you can actually work with.

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