Chambers Saket Court · Delhi High Court · Supreme Court of India

Matrimonial work that is difficult to do well — requiring legal precision, emotional intelligence and respect for what comes after the order.

Indian matrimonial law is plural by design — the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, the Special Marriage Act, 1954, the Indian Christian Marriage Act, 1872, the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936 and the personal law of Muslim parties each occupy their own ground. The chamber advises across all of them, with careful attention to the conflict-of-laws issues that arise in inter-faith and overseas matters.

The chamber's approach is to begin with a clear written opinion on prospects and risk, agree the strategy in writing with the client, and then execute — with regular briefings and full visibility throughout. Fees are quoted transparently after the initial consultation, with phased and milestone-based billing available where appropriate.

  • Multi-religionPractice
  • Dignity-firstApproach
  • Mediation-readyStrategy
Services Offered

What the chamber handles in this area.

01

Mutual Consent Divorce

Petitions under section 13B of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955; section 28 of the Special Marriage Act, 1954; and the parallel provisions in personal law statutes.

02

Contested Divorce

Drafting and trial advocacy in petitions on grounds of cruelty, desertion, adultery, conversion and irretrievable breakdown.

03

Alimony & Maintenance

Section 125 BNSS (formerly s.125 CrPC) maintenance, interim maintenance under s.24 of the Hindu Marriage Act, and maintenance under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005.

04

Asset & Property Division

Drafting and contesting partition of matrimonial property, joint accounts, investments, locker contents and overseas holdings.

05

Domestic Violence Proceedings

Representation in petitions under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 — including residence, monetary and protection orders.

06

Inter-Faith & NRI Divorces

Special Marriage Act and inter-faith divorce, plus jurisdictional and recognition issues for divorce decrees passed in foreign courts.

Get in Touch

Speak with the Chamber.

For consultations, second opinions or urgent assistance, the chamber welcomes enquiries by phone, email or our secure form. Conversations are confidential.

Request Consultation +91 98104 93071