CIVIL LAW
We provide expert Civil lawyer in Delhi for all legal services related to advice, launching and defending all kinds of civil suits, civil injunction matters. Civil suits encompass a vast area of civil laws in India and almost all kinds of relief is sought by filing civil suits. Some of the important categories of civil suits are civil suit for permanent injunction, suit for mandatory injunction, suit for declaration, suit for rendition of accounts and various other kinds of civil suits. Your search for Civil lawyer in Delhi ends here and you can send a request for engaging very good Civil lawyer in Delhi for all such services.
We provides comprehensive legal services to our clients under litigation of civil laws including money recovery, recovery disputes, suits related to children, wards, guardianships, estate, property, custody, execution, claims, partitions and various petitions etc, under any law viz, law related to property, children, guardianship, recovery, marriage, succession, will, estate, probate, administration… etc, and before any courts, Tribunals, Commissions, Boards and other Judicial or Quasi-Judicial Authorities throughout India. These services include advising, drafting pleading and appearing in the courts, etc.
The primary difference between civil litigation and criminal cases is that in civil cases one or both of the parties is seeking money or another form of compensation rather than criminal charges. In general, the prosecution in criminal cases represents the state in which the trial is taking place, but in civil cases both parties represent themselves, with the assistance of a civil litigation attorney or legal council. These are some of the most common types of cases to appear in civil court.
CONTRACT DISPUTES
Contract disputes occur when one or more parties who signed a contract cannot or will not fulfill their obligations. Occasionally, this is due to a contract that is written in fuzzy terms that creates disparate expectations in the signers, but usually it is because one party overextends itself and doesn’t have the money or employees to fulfill their obligations.
PROPERTY DISPUTE
Property law involves disputes about property ownership and damages to one person’s property or real estate. There are many different types of property disputes that a civil litigation attorney may handle. One common one is property line disputes, in which one party alleges that a neighbor crossed the property line boundary between their two homes for building or planting.
TORTS
A tort is a civil case in which one party alleges that another caused them physical or emotional harm. Tort cases can take many different forms, and can relate to a person’s personal safety, safety of their property, and financial security. Common torts related to accident and injury include assault or battery cases, and negligence cases in which one party alleges that a caregiver did not do their assigned duty.
Class Action Cases
Class action cases are similar to tort cases, only the prosecution in these cases represents represents a group or class of people who have all been injured by the same thing. These are common in cases of defective products or exposure to hazardous materials in which the faulty item injured multiple people before it was recalled.
Complaints Against the City
Complaints against the city or federal government are generally settled out of court, but in the even that the government refuses to settle the complaints are generally tried as civil cases. These cases can be brought in any case where the plaintiff alleges that city law or policy has caused harm to its citizens.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act 2006 differs from the provision of the Penal Code - section 498A of the Indian Penal Code - in that it provides a broader definition of domestic violence.
Domestic violence is defined by Section 3 of the Act as “any act, omission or commission or conduct of the respondent shall constitute domestic violence in case it:
- harms or injures or endangers the health, safety, life, limb or well-being, whether mental or physical, of the aggrieved person or tends to do so and includes causing physical abuse, sexual abuse, verbal and emotional abuse and economic abuse; or
- harasses, harms, injures or endangers the aggrieved person with a view to coerce her or any other person related to her to meet any unlawful demand for any dowry or other property or valuable security; or
- has the effect of threatening the aggrieved person or any person related to her by any conduct mentioned in clause (a) or clause (b); or
- otherwise injures or causes harm, whether physical or mental, to the aggrieved person.”
The Act goes on, through the section Explanation 1, to define "physical abuse","sexual abuse", "verbal and emotional abuse" and "economic abuse".
While "economic abuse" includes deprivation of all or any economic or financial resources to which the victim is entitled under any law or custom whether payable under an order of a Court or otherwise or which the victim requires out of necessity including, but not limited to, household necessities for the aggrieved person and her children, if any, stridhan, property, jointly or separately owned by her, payment of rental related to the shared household and maintenance and disposal of household effects, any alienation of assets whether movable or immovable, valuables, shares, securities, bonds and the like or other property in which the victim has an interest or is entitled to use by virtue of the domestic prelationship or which may be reasonably required by the victim or her children or her sthridhan or any other property jointly or separately held by the victim and prohibition m restriction to continued access to resources or facilities which the victim is entitled to use or enjoy by virtue of the domestic relationship including access to the shared household, "physical abuse" means any act or conduct which is of such a nature as to cause bodily pain, harm or danger to life, limb, or health or impair the health or development of the victim and includes assault, criminal intimidation and criminal force.
DIVORCE LAW
First thing first- Indian law will make sure that you suffer a lot. Even if you win the in the end it will juice you up completely. So best idea is to divorce with mutual consent. If both parties agree for divorce then court grants them divorce in minimum 6 months.
Suppose you want divorce but she doesn't want to get separated then you have a very tough road ahead. Two things may happen now. One is that she genuinely don't want to leave you which is why she won't give you a divorce. Second thing which may happen is (and this happens in almost every case), that she would torture you by misusing the laws, and ultimately demand a hefty sum of money. This would screw you up. She can file a (fake) FIR very easily with the help of her lawyer and an FIR related to dowry is very dangerous. Thanks to the recent judgement by supreme court regarding such FIR, you may not get arrested but still it would make your life miserable. So what actually happens in the second situation is that you both will continue to fight for years, lawyer of both sides will make a good amount of money (mainly from you only) and after years and years of fighting whenever you both will agree for divorce, court will grant it to you after 6 months or so.
If you have made up your mind then i would suggest you to get a very good and reputed lawyer. Most important thing is that he should be trustworthy. Discuss your safety aspects with him. If he is genuinely a good lawyer and is not interested in exploiting you for your money then he will also suggest you to talk your wife through and get divorce by mutual consent; which is the perfect and ideal solution for your problem.