Constitutional Law

Protect your fundamental rights

When your fundamental rights are violated by the state or its agencies, constitutional law provides powerful remedies. Our lawyers file writ petitions in High Courts and the Supreme Court to protect your rights.

Our Scope

What we handle.

Writ petitions in High Courts (Article 226)
Supreme Court petitions (Article 32) for fundamental rights
Habeas corpus for illegal detention
Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filing
Government policy and administrative action challenges
Rights violations by police and state agencies
Service law and government employment disputes
Reservation and educational institution disputes
Freedom of speech and press freedom cases
Citizenship and passport-related cases

Who We Serve

Who needs this service?

Fundamental Rights Victims

Challenge state action violating your right to life, equality, or speech

Illegally Detained Individuals

Secure immediate release through habeas corpus petitions

Government Employees

Challenge wrongful transfers, suspensions, and service condition violations

Social Causes

File PILs on issues of public importance affecting communities

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

A writ petition is filed in the High Court (Article 226) or Supreme Court (Article 32) when a fundamental right is violated or when there is no other adequate legal remedy. Common writs: habeas corpus (illegal detention), mandamus (compel government action), certiorari (quash illegal orders), and prohibition (stop proceedings).

Urgent matters like habeas corpus can be listed for hearing within 24–48 hours. Regular writ petitions take 6 months to 3 years for final disposal. Interim orders (stays) can often be obtained at the first hearing, providing immediate protection.

Yes. PILs can be filed by any citizen on behalf of the public for issues like environmental pollution, road safety, prisoner rights, or government inaction. The Supreme Court and High Courts entertain PILs where public interest demands court intervention.

You have the right to: know grounds of arrest, meet a lawyer immediately, be produced before a magistrate within 24 hours (excluding travel time), not be subjected to third-degree methods. A habeas corpus petition can secure your release if detention is illegal.

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