Civil and Revenue Litigation

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Civil Court & Revenue Litigation

Land and property laws in India are deeply rooted in a complex matrix of central legislations and region-specific state enactments. Disputes involving immovable property, land titles, and inheritance can drag on for years if not managed with deep procedural expertise. Our firm provides robust legal representation across all levels of civil courts and revenue authorities, handling matters that range from routine property declarations to high-value real estate disputes and complex land ceiling litigations.

Our revenue litigation practice specializes in navigating the distinct and often labyrinthine hierarchy of Revenue Courts, including the Naib Tahsildar, Collector, Commissioner, and the Board of Revenue. We assist agriculturalists, real estate developers, and corporate houses in matters concerning land acquisition, mutated land records (Jamabandi), land conversion permissions, and challenges to arbitrary administrative orders. Ensuring that land titles are unencumbered and properly recorded forms the bedrock of our asset-protection strategy.

In the arena of civil courts, we regularly handle high-stakes partition suits, suits for specific performance, permanent injunctions, and landlord-tenant disputes under various state rent control acts. Our litigators are adept at formulating meticulous trial strategies, ensuring that pleadings are airtight, evidence is thoroughly marshalled, and cross-examinations are executed with precision. We recognize that property is often a client’s most foundational asset, and we treat its defense with the utmost gravity.

Furthermore, we offer strategic counsel to clients facing complex challenges under the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, as well as state-specific land ceiling laws. By combining deep historical knowledge of Indian property jurisprudence with modern litigation techniques, we secure our clients’ ancestral and commercial real estate interests against unlawful encroachments, administrative overreach, and title defects.

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