Land Litigation: This refers to legal disputes involving land, such as boundary disputes, ownership disputes, disputes over title, and disputes arising from land transactions.
- Declaratory Suit: A declaratory suit is filed to obtain a declaration from the court regarding the legal rights or status of the parties involved, without seeking any consequential relief.
- Cancellation of Deed: This involves seeking the annulment or cancellation of a deed or document, typically due to fraud, misrepresentation, coercion, or other legal grounds.
- Rectification of Instrument: This involves seeking correction or rectification of errors in a legal document or instrument, such as a deed or contract, to accurately reflect the true intentions of the parties involved.
- Perpetual Injunction: A perpetual injunction is a court order restraining a party from performing a certain act or continuing a certain activity permanently.
- Partition Suit: A partition suit is filed to divide jointly-owned property among co-owners, typically when they cannot agree on the division of the property voluntarily.
- Rescission of Contract: Rescission of contract refers to the cancellation or annulment of a contract by a court, typically due to a breach of contract, fraud, mistake, or other legal grounds.
- Specific Performance of Contract: This involves seeking a court order requiring a party to perform its obligations under a contract, usually when monetary damages are inadequate to remedy the breach.
- Recovery of Khas Possession: This refers to a legal action to recover physical possession of property from a person who wrongfully occupies it without any right or title.
- Eviction of Tenant: This involves legal proceedings to remove a tenant from leased or rented property, typically due to non-payment of rent, breach of lease terms, or expiry of lease agreement.
- Suit for Easement: A suit for easement is filed to establish or enforce rights related to the use of another person's property, such as rights of way, rights of access, or rights to light and air.
- Money Suit: A money suit is filed to recover a debt or monetary claim from another party, typically involving the payment of a sum of money.
- Pre-emption Case: This involves asserting a right to purchase property before it is sold to a third party, typically based on a pre-existing legal or customary right of pre-emption.
- Pre-Emption under Mohammedan Law: This refers to the pre-emptive right granted to certain heirs or relatives under Islamic law to purchase specific property before it is sold to others.
- Vested Property Release Case: This involves legal proceedings to release or recover property that has vested with the government or another authority, often due to historical land reforms or acquisitions.
- Land Survey Tribunals Case: These cases involve disputes related to land surveys conducted by government authorities, typically concerning land boundaries, classifications, or ownership.
- Mandatory Injunction: A mandatory injunction is a court order requiring a party to perform a specific act or refrain from failing to perform a duty.
- Miscellaneous Case: This category includes various types of cases that do not fit into specific legal categories and may involve diverse legal issues or remedies.
- Arbitration Suit: This involves disputes that are resolved through arbitration, where parties agree to submit their dispute to an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators for a binding decision outside of the court system.
- Succession Cases: These cases pertain to the distribution of a deceased person's estate among their heirs or beneficiaries, typically involving issues related to wills, inheritance, and estate administration.
Family Suit: A family suit pertains to legal matters involving familial relationships, such as inheritance disputes, guardianship issues, or disputes over family property.
Court: Family Court, usually presided over by an Assistant Judge or Senior Assistant Judge.
- Dissolution of Marriage: This involves legal proceedings to terminate a marriage, commonly referred to as divorce.
Court: Family Court, typically presided over by an Assistant Judge or Senior Assistant Judge. - Dower: Dower refers to the payment or property that a husband gives to his wife as a marriage gift or security.
Court: Family Court, Assistant Judge, or Senior Assistant Judge. - Maintenance: Maintenance involves providing financial support to a spouse, children, or dependent family members.
Court: Family Court, Assistant Judge, or Senior Assistant Judge. - Guardianship: Guardianship cases involve determining who has legal authority over a minor child or incapacitated adult.
Court: Family Court, Assistant Judge, or Senior Assistant Judge. - Restitution of Conjugal Right: This is a legal action to compel a spouse to return to the marital home and resume marital cohabitation.
Court: Family Court, Assistant Judge, or Senior Assistant Judge.
Office Related Cases: These cases typically involve disputes or legal issues related to employment, such as wrongful termination, disciplinary actions, or labor disputes.
Court: Labor Court or Industrial Tribunal, depending on the nature of the case.
- Declaratory Suit: A declaratory suit seeks a court declaration of the legal rights or status of the parties involved, without seeking any consequential relief.
Court: Civil Court, typically presided over by an Assistant Judge, Senior Assistant Judge, or Joint District Judge. - Mandatory Injunction: This involves seeking a court order requiring a party to perform a specific act.
Court: Civil Court, typically presided over by an Assistant Judge, Senior Assistant Judge, or Joint District Judge. - Perpetual Injunction: A perpetual injunction is a court order restraining a party from performing a certain act or continuing a certain activity permanently.
Court: Civil Court, typically presided over by an Assistant Judge, Senior Assistant Judge, or Joint District Judge. - Election Tribunal Cases: These cases pertain to disputes arising from elections, such as challenges to election results or allegations of electoral misconduct.
Court: Election Tribunal designated by the Election Commission, usually presided over by a District Judge or a retired High Court Judge. - Rescission of Contract: Rescission involves the cancellation or annulment of a contract by a court.
Court: Civil Court, typically presided over by an Assistant Judge, Senior Assistant Judge, or Joint District Judge.
Which Court to Go?
For Litigation affecting property and office
- Suit Valuation: 1- up to TK. 2,00,000/- Assistant Judge
- Suit Valuation: 2,00,001- 4,00,000/- Senior Assistant Judge
- Suit Valuation: 4,00,001- Unlimited – Joint District Judge
Family Suit
Family Court- usually an Assistant Judge/ Senior Assistant Judge
Succession Case:
Succession cases involve legal matters related to the distribution of a deceased person's estate among their heirs or beneficiaries, including issues related to wills, inheritance, and estate administration.
Joint District Judge having jurisdiction
Arbitration Case:
Arbitration cases involve disputes that are resolved through arbitration, where parties agree to submit their dispute to an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators for a binding decision outside of the court system.
Joint District Judge having jurisdiction
The appropriate court for each type of case varies based on the nature of the dispute and the valuation of the suit, with different levels of courts having jurisdiction over cases with varying monetary values.
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