We specialize in handling a wide range of legal matters, including:
Civil Cases:
Monetary matters such as recovery of loans against pronotes, cheques, negotiable instruments, mortgage of immovable properties, and hand loans, along with defense in such cases. Contract matters including enforcing contracts, specific performance, rescinding contracts, damages suits, recovery of possession of immovable and movable property, perpetual and mandatory injunction suits, declaration suits, suits on accounts, partnership disputes, boundary disputes, suits involving companies and firms, rent control petitions for eviction, suits involving trusts, minors, guardian petitions, probate of wills, succession certificates, and rectification suits.
Family Matters:
Divorce, maintenance, return of gold ornaments, permanent alimony, custody of children, restitution of conjugal rights, domestic violence, and dowry cases.
Other Matters:
Consumer cases, land acquisition cases, building tax matters, matters before revenue authorities (RDO), cases before district collectors, arbitration, electricity matters, motor accident cases, criminal cases, family and matrimonial cases, money disputes including pronotes, cheques, mortgages, property disputes like recovery of possession, declaration, injunction, boundary disputes, specific performance of contracts, probate of wills, legal opinions, termination of leases, eviction of tenants, partition suits, trust suits, permission to sell, mortgage of minor child’s rights in property, and family disputes including divorce, maintenance, domestic violence cases, and recovery of gold ornaments.
We specialize in documentation and registration services, offering expertise in:
Documentation and Registration
Monetary matters such as recovery of loans against pronotes, cheques, negotiable instruments, mortgage of immovable properties, and hand loans, along with defense in such cases. Contract matters including enforcing contracts, specific performance, rescinding contracts, damages suits, recovery of possession of immovable and movable property, perpetual and mandatory injunction suits, declaration suits, suits on accounts, partnership disputes, boundary disputes, suits involving companies and firms, rent control petitions for eviction, suits involving trusts, minors, guardian petitions, probate of wills, succession certificates, and rectification suits.
Birth Certificate:
To register the birth of a person that was missed:
- First, you need to get a certificate from the local Panchayat or Municipality confirming that the birth was not previously registered. To do this, fill out an application form provided by the authority. You’ll also need to provide proof of the birth date, like a school certificate or an affidavit (a sworn statement on a Rs.100/- stamp paper) from an older family member. This affidavit should state the date of birth, place of birth, and names of the parents.
- Once you have this certificate stating the birth was not registered, submit another application to the Revenue Divisional Officer (RDO). This application should be on plain white paper and include a court fee. Use Form No.1 and ask the RDO to excuse the delay and register the birth. Attach the school certificate or affidavit as evidence again.
- The RDO will then ask the Tahsildar to investigate by contacting the village officer. After reviewing the report and verifying the facts, the RDO may decide to excuse the delay and instruct the authorities to register the birth.
- Once the birth is registered, you can apply to get the birth certificate from the concerned authority. This entire process may take about a year, but staying in touch with the authorities can speed things up.
To add the person’s name to the birth register, follow these steps.
In some cases while registering the birth of a person the name would not have been given as the baby is not named at that time. To include the name after the prescribed time application has to be given along with evidence in the form of school certificate which has the name of the parents along with affidavit.
How to change your name legally in India? (3 easy steps)
You may like to change your name after marriage (especially for women), due to astrological or numerological reasons or anything or you are locally famous in your nickname than your Official/Original name which warrants to change your name specially when you start up a new venture. Here are three simple steps to change your name.
Step 1 – Affidavit
Go to you local Notary and make an affidavit regarding change of your name. You have to mention therein your specific reason for changing your name. This affidavit can be used for changing your first or last name and also using the same, you can completely change your name (both first and last name, for example from Nidhi Kandeth to Tushara Baburaj).
Step 2
Give a paper publication in 2 Local newspapers. You can choose any 2 local newspapers for publishing it.
Step 3 – Gazette Notification 2
Get your name published in the Official Gazette of your state. Once your statement is published in the official Gazette, you name change process comes to an end, and now you can enjoy your new name.
Make a few copies of the Gazette Notification and carefully preserve it for a lifetime.