The litigation that ends a small business is almost always preventable. The chamber routinely sees founders, family-run firms and growing start-ups arrive with disputes that could have been pre-empted by a few inexpensive legal habits. The following five are the ones we recommend most often.
1. Choose the right legal structure — and document it
The first decision a founder makes is also the most under-analysed: should the business be a sole proprietorship, a partnership, a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) or a Private Limited Company? Each has very different consequences for liability, taxation and ease of fundraising.
- Sole proprietorship is simple and cheap, but the proprietor's personal assets are on the line for every business debt.
- Partnership firms under the Indian Partnership Act, 1932 are easy to form but the partners are jointly and severally liable — and unregistered firms cannot sue to enforce contracts.
- LLP under the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 offers the operational flexibility of a partnership with the limited-liability protection of a company.
- Private Limited Company under the Companies Act, 2013 offers the strongest liability protection and is essential for any business intending to raise institutional capital — but carries the highest compliance burden.
Whichever structure you choose, document it properly. A founders' agreement or shareholders' agreement should set out roles, vesting schedules, exit terms and dispute resolution from day one. The cost of drafting one when relationships are good is a fraction of the cost of resolving the dispute when they are not.
2. Put every commercial relationship in writing
Indian law recognises oral contracts, but enforcing them is a different matter. The strongest protection a small business has is a clearly drafted written contract — for every supplier, every client, every employee and every consultant.
The contracts that matter most:
- Customer contracts / terms of service — defining what is delivered, by when, on what payment terms and with what limits on liability.
- Supplier and vendor contracts — with clear specifications, delivery schedules and consequences for breach.
- Employment agreements — including confidentiality, non-solicitation and IP assignment clauses calibrated to be enforceable under Indian law (post-termination non-competes, in particular, are read narrowly by Indian courts).
- Consultant / freelancer agreements — distinguishing them from employees for tax and EPF purposes, and clearly assigning IP in the deliverables.
- NDAs — with anyone who sees confidential information before a contract is signed.
3. Register your intellectual property early
For a small business, intellectual property is often the single most valuable asset on the balance sheet — and the easiest to lose.
- Trademarks can be registered under the Trade Marks Act, 1999 in 45 different classes. The fees are modest and the protection lasts ten years (renewable indefinitely). The chamber routinely sees businesses that traded for years under a name they did not own — only to receive a cease-and-desist letter from a later registrant who did.
- Copyright subsists automatically in original work, but registration under the Copyright Act, 1957 provides strong evidentiary backing in any infringement proceeding.
- Patents protect inventions for 20 years under the Patents Act, 1970. Filing requires careful drafting and is best done with specialised counsel.
- Trade secrets have no formal registration but are protected through robust contractual confidentiality and access controls.
"The cheapest hour of legal time you will ever buy is the one spent registering your trademark. The most expensive is the one spent fighting a cease-and-desist after years of building a brand under someone else's mark."
4. Stay current with statutory compliance
Compliance is the area where small businesses most often cut corners — and where the consequences arrive years later, with interest. The non-negotiable list for most businesses includes:
- GST registration and returns if turnover exceeds the threshold (₹40 lakh for goods, ₹20 lakh for services in most states).
- Income tax — including timely advance tax payments and TDS deduction on payments to vendors and contractors.
- Provident fund and ESI registration once headcount thresholds are crossed (20 employees for EPF in most schemes, 10 for ESI).
- Shops and Establishments registration under the relevant state Act.
- Companies Act compliance for incorporated entities — annual returns, board meetings, director KYC, statutory registers.
- Sector-specific licences — FSSAI for food businesses, drug licences for pharma, NBFC registration for lending businesses, and so on.
The penalties for non-compliance compound. A missed GST return is a small problem at three months and a substantial one at three years.
5. Plan for disputes before they happen
Even with the best contracts and the best counsel, disputes happen. The businesses that survive them are the ones that planned for them.
- Every contract should have a governing law and jurisdiction clause, ideally favouring Delhi courts or another forum where you can effectively enforce.
- Consider an arbitration clause for higher-value commercial contracts — particularly where the counterparty is in a different state. The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (as amended) allows enforceable, confidential dispute resolution.
- For commercial disputes above ₹3 lakh, the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 mandates pre-institution mediation — plan for this and budget the time.
- Maintain a paper trail. Email is fine. WhatsApp, with care, is fine. Verbal modifications to written contracts are not.
The compounding effect of doing this well
Each of these five habits is small in isolation and unremarkable in form. But the businesses that practise all five have a striking advantage over those that don't — they are harder to sue successfully, easier to fund, and more attractive to acquire. The chamber's experience is that the cost of getting this right at the outset is between one and two months of professional fees. The cost of getting it wrong is usually the business itself.