AI research companion for Indian advocates

Precedent that actually fits your facts.

Describe your matter in plain facts. Nyayaverse finds the Supreme Court judgments whose facts and holdings genuinely match — explains why each one helps — and keeps your precedents and notes ready for drafting.

Research assistance, not legal advice. Always verify the judgment.

Sharma — bail matter

Rahil v. State

2025 INSC 858

on point

Wazir Khan v. State

2023 INSC 674

on point

Raju v. State of Raj.

2022 INSC 983

related
Convicted on circumstantial evidence; HC reversed an acquittal.
Closest is Rahil v. State (2025 INSC 858) — same posture: acquittal → HC reversal, chain of circumstances incomplete. Use it to argue the standard for reversing an acquittal…
Indian Supreme Court corpus Fact-matched + reasoned IPC ↔ BNS aware Grounded in real judgments

A research associate that has read the file

Built for how advocates actually work — facts in, reasoned precedent out.

01

Fact-matched search

Not keyword soup — semantic + full-text retrieval over real judgments, ranked by how the facts and holdings align.

02

Reasoning, per case

Every precedent comes with a one-line 'why it fits' — on-point cases surfaced, irrelevant ones dropped.

03

Click-through citations

Cite a case in the answer and jump straight to that order in the side panel.

04

Workspaces & saved cases

A workspace per matter. Star cases, add notes, keep everything ready for the brief.

05

Old ↔ new code aware

IPC↔BNS and CrPC↔BNSS bridged, so you find precedent across both regimes.

06

Drafting (coming soon)

Turn your saved precedents and notes into a research note or draft — reusing this corpus.

Three steps

Step 1

Describe your matter

State the facts and the relief you're after — plain language.

Step 2

Get reasoned precedents

The agent finds fact-matched judgments and explains how each helps.

Step 3

Save & draft

Star the useful ones with notes; carry them into your brief.

Find the precedent that fits.

Start a matter and let Nyayaverse do the reading.

Get started — it's free