Practice Areas

Legal Practice Areas

From individual disputes to high-stakes commercial litigation — represented with strategy, preparation and clarity across Civil, Criminal, Commercial, Family and Tax matters.

01

Property & Recovery Disputes

Scope: Property disputes, recovery suits, declaratory and injunction matters, specific performance and tenancy issues.

Approach: Detailed case study, strong pleadings and a focus on early interim relief where appropriate.

Common Questions

Most civil suits take 18–36 months at the trial level. Interim relief (injunction, status quo) can usually be sought in the first few hearings.

Yes — secondary evidence, certified copies and affidavits can support the claim. We assess the documentary position before filing.

02

Criminal Defense & Bail

Scope: Bail and anticipatory bail, FIR quashing, white-collar matters, cheque bounce (NI Act §138) and trial defence.

Approach: Discreet, prepared and aggressive where it counts — built on careful evidence analysis.

Common Questions

Anticipatory bail applications can typically be drafted and filed within 24–48 hours, depending on the facts and supporting documents.

Yes — under Section 482 CrPC / 528 BNSS the High Court may quash an FIR where allegations are baseless, civil in nature or arise from settlement.

03

Commercial & Contract Disputes

Scope: Contractual breaches, shareholder and partnership disputes, recovery, commercial arbitration and cross-border issues.

Approach: Commercially-aware strategy that weighs litigation against settlement and ADR options.

Common Questions

It depends on the contract clause, value, urgency and confidentiality needs. We assess both routes before committing.

Yes, foreign arbitral awards from Convention countries are enforceable under Part II of the Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996.

04

Family & Matrimonial Matters

Scope: Divorce (mutual & contested), maintenance, child custody, domestic violence, succession and matrimonial property.

Approach: Sensitive, confidential handling with a focus on dignified, sustainable outcomes.

Common Questions

Typically 6–12 months including the statutory cooling-off period, which courts may waive in suitable cases.

The welfare of the child is the paramount consideration. Courts assess age, preference, financial capacity and emotional bond.

05

Tax & GST Litigation

Scope: Income tax assessments and appeals, GST disputes, CIT(A), ITAT and tribunal representation.

Approach: Technical precision and procedural rigor — paired with practical settlement advice.

Common Questions

Generally 30 days from the order before CIT(A); 60 days before ITAT. Condonation of delay is possible with sufficient cause.

Yes — most GST notices (ASMT-10, DRC-01A) can be addressed at the reply stage with proper documentation, avoiding adjudication.

Not sure which area fits your matter?

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