Prayer for Relief / Demand for Relief
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Legal Terms Explained
Prayer for Relief / Demand for Relief
The prayer for relief — also called the demand for relief or demand for judgment — is the closing section of a complaint where the plaintiff tells the court exactly what they are asking for: money damages, an injunction, or other remedies. The name is old courtroom formality (the plaintiff "prays" the court for judgment), but the function is practical. It defines what winning the case would actually mean.
Where it shows up in a real filing
Picture a typical injury case. A client is hurt in a rear-end collision, the insurer's settlement offer is inadequate, and her attorney drafts a complaint — the document that opens the lawsuit. The complaint identifies the parties, alleges the facts of the crash, and states the causes of action (here, negligence). Then, after the final count, comes a paragraph that usually begins:
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff demands judgment against Defendant as follows...
That paragraph is the prayer for relief. In this case it might ask for:
- Compensatory damages — both special damages (the itemizable losses: medical bills, lost wages, vehicle damage) and general damages (pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life)
- Pre-judgment and post-judgment interest as allowed by law
- Costs of the suit
- Punitive damages, if the facts support them — say, a drunk or fleeing driver
- "Such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper"
That last catch-all line appears in nearly every complaint filed in America. It preserves the court's flexibility to award appropriate relief the drafter did not specifically list.
Why the wording matters
A few practical rules give this section real teeth:
- Default judgments are capped by the demand. Under the federal rules and most state equivalents, if the defendant never responds and defaults, the judgment cannot exceed what the prayer for relief demanded. A sloppy demand can literally cost the client money.
- Many states bar specific dollar figures in injury complaints. To prevent headline-grabbing demands ("Plaintiff sues for $50 million"), a number of jurisdictions prohibit pleading a precise amount of unliquidated damages, requiring instead language like "damages in excess of the jurisdictional minimum." Older lawyers still call the dollar-amount clause the ad damnum clause.
- The demand can affect where the case is heard. The amount demanded can determine whether a case meets a court's jurisdictional threshold — for example, the amount-in-controversy requirement for federal diversity jurisdiction.
What it does not do
The prayer for relief does not limit what a jury can award after a contested trial — in most jurisdictions, a plaintiff who proves greater damages than demanded can still recover them. It also is not evidence; the demand is the lawyer's ask, not proof of anything. Judges instruct juries to value the case on the evidence, not on the number in the pleading.
In short: the prayer for relief is two or three sentences that translate a client's losses into a formal request the court has power to grant. Drafting it carefully is one of the quiet skills of good lawyering.
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