This document contains the names, designations, and contact information for various judicial officers and their readers in the Shahdara District Court in Delhi. It lists 32 entries with the name of the judicial officer, their designation, the name of the reader assigned to them, the reader's mobile number, and a web link for video conferencing. The document appears to be providing a directory of sorts for the court personnel in Shahdara District Court.
The document discusses the legal concept of res gestae, or things done, which is an exception to the rule against hearsay evidence. Under res gestae, spontaneous statements made during or immediately after an event may be admissible in court. The document outlines several conditions and case law examples related to determining what statements can be considered part of res gestae, including the need for contemporaneity, spontaneity, and connection to the facts in issue. It also compares the common law approach to res gestae versus the definition under Malaysian law.
This document outlines the key distinctions and grounds for void and voidable marriages under Malaysian law. It discusses:
1) The differences between void and voidable marriages, such as the need for a decree and who can bring an action. Void marriages are invalid from the start, while voidable marriages can be annulled.
2) The jurisdiction of Malaysian courts to hear nullity petitions, which requires the marriage be registered in Malaysia or the parties reside in Malaysia.
3) The grounds for declaring a marriage void under Section 69, such as polygamy, underage parties, prohibited relationships, and same-sex marriages.
4) The grounds for annulling a marriage as void
A private caveat is an interim procedure that allows a person claiming a title or registrable interest in land to freeze the land title registration until their claim can be resolved. A private caveat is entered by the Registrar upon application showing the claimant's caveatable interest. It has the effect of prohibiting any dealings with the land, including transfers or mortgages, except with the caveator's consent. To enter a caveat, the claimant must have a potential legal claim to the land, such as under a contract of sale, gift, or trust, that could ultimately result in registration of their interest.
RPGT is a tax on gains made from the disposal of real property in Malaysia. It is levied on the difference between the disposal price and the acquisition price of the property. The tax rate is a fixed 5% for disposals made within 5 years of purchase, with no tax for disposals after 5 years. Exemptions are available for individuals' primary residences and for certain transactions like transfers between spouses. RPGT is administered by the Inland Revenue Board and applies to both residents and non-residents of Malaysia.
This document discusses insurable interest, which refers to an interest in an item or event that, if lost or damaged, would result in financial loss to the insured party. It provides definitions of insurable interest from various sources and outlines some key points:
- Insurable interest must exist at the time a policy is taken out for life and fire insurance, but only at the time of loss for marine insurance.
- Close relatives, owners, and those with contractual relationships like creditors/debtors typically have insurable interest in lives. Owners and those with pecuniary interests have insurable interest in property.
- Insurable interest prevents gambling by requiring the insured party to have actual risk of financial loss
The document outlines the various rights that an accused person is afforded under law. It discusses the rights of an accused person at different stages: at the time of arrest, during detention, during trial proceedings, and if convicted. Some key rights mentioned are the right to remain silent, to be informed of charges, to legal representation, against self-incrimination, to a fair and speedy trial, humane conditions of detention, communication with family/lawyers, and presumption of innocence.
The document discusses the legal concept of res gestae, or things done, which is an exception to the rule against hearsay evidence. Under res gestae, spontaneous statements made during or immediately after an event may be admissible in court. The document outlines several conditions and case law examples related to determining what statements can be considered part of res gestae, including the need for contemporaneity, spontaneity, and connection to the facts in issue. It also compares the common law approach to res gestae versus the definition under Malaysian law.
This document outlines the key distinctions and grounds for void and voidable marriages under Malaysian law. It discusses:
1) The differences between void and voidable marriages, such as the need for a decree and who can bring an action. Void marriages are invalid from the start, while voidable marriages can be annulled.
2) The jurisdiction of Malaysian courts to hear nullity petitions, which requires the marriage be registered in Malaysia or the parties reside in Malaysia.
3) The grounds for declaring a marriage void under Section 69, such as polygamy, underage parties, prohibited relationships, and same-sex marriages.
4) The grounds for annulling a marriage as void
A private caveat is an interim procedure that allows a person claiming a title or registrable interest in land to freeze the land title registration until their claim can be resolved. A private caveat is entered by the Registrar upon application showing the claimant's caveatable interest. It has the effect of prohibiting any dealings with the land, including transfers or mortgages, except with the caveator's consent. To enter a caveat, the claimant must have a potential legal claim to the land, such as under a contract of sale, gift, or trust, that could ultimately result in registration of their interest.
RPGT is a tax on gains made from the disposal of real property in Malaysia. It is levied on the difference between the disposal price and the acquisition price of the property. The tax rate is a fixed 5% for disposals made within 5 years of purchase, with no tax for disposals after 5 years. Exemptions are available for individuals' primary residences and for certain transactions like transfers between spouses. RPGT is administered by the Inland Revenue Board and applies to both residents and non-residents of Malaysia.
This document discusses insurable interest, which refers to an interest in an item or event that, if lost or damaged, would result in financial loss to the insured party. It provides definitions of insurable interest from various sources and outlines some key points:
- Insurable interest must exist at the time a policy is taken out for life and fire insurance, but only at the time of loss for marine insurance.
- Close relatives, owners, and those with contractual relationships like creditors/debtors typically have insurable interest in lives. Owners and those with pecuniary interests have insurable interest in property.
- Insurable interest prevents gambling by requiring the insured party to have actual risk of financial loss
The document outlines the various rights that an accused person is afforded under law. It discusses the rights of an accused person at different stages: at the time of arrest, during detention, during trial proceedings, and if convicted. Some key rights mentioned are the right to remain silent, to be informed of charges, to legal representation, against self-incrimination, to a fair and speedy trial, humane conditions of detention, communication with family/lawyers, and presumption of innocence.
Restitution of conjugal rights a comparativestudySunit Kapoor
1. Restitution of conjugal rights (RCR) allows a spouse to petition a court to order the other spouse to resume living together if they have withdrawn from the marriage without reasonable cause.
2. The concept originated under British rule in India and was later codified under various personal laws like the Hindu Marriage Act.
3. Under these laws, RCR can be ordered if the petitioner proves withdrawal without cause, though reasonable excuses include cruelty, failure to perform marital duties, or non-payment of dowry under Muslim law. Constitutional challenges to RCR have been rejected by courts.
The following presentation tends to explain the concept of Summary proceedings under the Civil Procedure Code in India.It elaborates on the suits to which this order applies and the procedure to be followed therein.
The document discusses the Kerala Government Land Assignment Act of 1960 and related rules. It defines key terms like government land, land assignment, lease, and license. It outlines the historical context of land assignment laws and rules in Kerala. The Act gives power to the government to make rules regarding assigning government land, including eligibility, priority, procedures, forms, and conditions. Special rules exist for assigning land for various purposes like agriculture, industry, forests and more.
Included topics:
- Betrothal
- Marriage
- Dissolution
- Ancillary claims
- Parent and children
- Adoption
- Legitimacy
- Inheritance
Not included:
- Introduction to the Administration of Islamic law in Malaysia
- Polygamous marriage
The document appears to be a student project on actionable claims under Indian law. It includes:
1. A definition of actionable claim as "a claim to any debt, other than a debt secured by mortgage of immovable property or by hypothecation or pledge of moveable property, or to any beneficial interest in moveable property not in possession either actual or constructive, of the claimant, which the civil courts recognize as affording grounds of relief whether such debt or beneficial interest be existent, accruing or conditional or contingent."
2. A discussion of the conditions of an actionable claim, including that it must be an unsecured money debt or claim to a beneficial interest in movable property not
This file deals with the Section 60-64 of CPC,1908, which talks about the Attachment of property in execution proceedings.
I have tried to make it easier for the students to understand the concept.
In case of any query the undersigned can be reached by email, the address of which has been given in the third last slide.
The Legal Notice Format for the recovery of money is the formal communication, between the plaintiff and the defendant. Before we proceed with the legal actions, we gave e ultimatum to the other to resolve things first-hand without getting into a le lengthy legal battle.
The most common practice which prevents this among people is that we have money from friends and people with good relations.
But when it comes to returning the many issues and problem that arises to resolve this issue sometimes we must take a legal course of action.
The Specific Relief of Act 1877
The Law of Limitation Act, 1908
ARNAB KUMAR DAS
Port City International University,
Chittagong, Bangladesh.
SID: LLB 00305037
The maritime belt refers to the part of the sea under the jurisdiction of coastal states. It extends up to 12 nautical miles from shore, within which the coastal state can exercise sovereignty. Historically, the width of the maritime belt varied depending on the range of cannons, but international agreements in the 20th century standardized it at 12 miles. Within this zone, coastal nations have control over resources and activities as recognized under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
This document discusses hearsay evidence and exceptions to the hearsay rule. It begins by defining hearsay as out-of-court statements offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Hearsay is generally inadmissible due to issues with reliability. Exceptions allow certain hearsay statements, including dying declarations where the declarant is unavailable due to death. The document also discusses different forms of hearsay such as oral, written, and conduct, and exceptions like res gestae and statements of unavailable persons under Section 32 of the Evidence Act 1950. It concludes by mentioning the current issue of potentially abolishing the hearsay rule.
Bail is the release of an accused person from custody, on the condition that they will return for their trial or other legal proceedings. The purpose of bail is to ensure the presence of the accused at trial while also protecting their liberty prior to being proven guilty. Bail laws originated in ancient times and are now codified in the Indian Criminal Procedure Code. Bail can be granted for bailable offenses with sentences under 3 years or fines only. For more serious non-bailable offenses, courts consider various factors like evidence and witness tampering risk when deciding bail. The process involves applying to the court and potentially depositing an amount until the trial. Grant of bail is mandatory in certain circumstances like incomplete investigations or if the accused is
Section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act deals with transfers of property by an ostensible owner. It states that such a transfer will not be voidable if the transferee acted in good faith and took reasonable care to ensure the transferor had the power to transfer. However, this is now subject to the Benami Transactions Act of 1988, which considers property held under a benami transaction to be owned by the person providing the consideration. The Benami Act does not apply retroactively to cases already in progress when it was enacted. For benami transactions after the Act, section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act cannot be used as a defense.
Pre trial proceedings in criminal case by ghulam hamidzulfi799
The document summarizes the key stages in pre-trial criminal proceedings in Pakistan, including:
1) Occurrence of the crime and victim/complainant reporting to police.
2) Police investigation under the Criminal Procedure Code, including registering an FIR, collecting evidence, and diary entries.
3) Police having the accused arrested (if a cognizable offense) and producing them before a magistrate within 24 hours. The magistrate then has powers to remand the accused to police custody for up to 15 days for further investigation or send to judicial custody.
This document provides information and guidance for master trainers on monitoring election expenditures during Assembly elections in 2013. It discusses how money plays an important role in multi-party democracies but can also undermine fairness and inclusion. It outlines various illegal and illegitimate ways that cash can be distributed to influence voters. The document then describes the legal provisions around election expenditures and monitoring mechanisms like flying squads, video surveillance teams, and expenditure observers. It provides examples of how cash is transported and distributed to voters and discusses preventive methods like promoting ethical voting.
This document contains an application form for requesting information under the Right to Information Act.
The form requests the applicant's personal details such as name, address, and whether they belong to a below poverty line category. It also asks for details of the information being requested such as the subject matter, relevant time period, specific details of the information, and whether the information is needed by post or in person.
The form confirms if the applicant agrees to pay any fees, has deposited application fees if required, and whether the information is already publicly available from the authority. It includes acknowledgement sections for the receiving office to fill out.
- Trustees are usually appointed by the settlor or testator, and if none are appointed then the court will appoint one. The settlor may also appoint other people to appoint new trustees when needed.
- A minor or infant cannot be a trustee. When appointed, the property vests in the trustees until they die, retire, or are removed. Trusteeship terminates upon disclaimer, death, retirement, or removal of a trustee. The court also has powers to appoint or remove trustees if needed.
This extemporaneous slide show presentation features a compelling, comprehensive overview of injunctions as applied to common real property litigation disputes where monetary remedies presumably provide insufficient compensation; i.e. trespass violations.
The document discusses specific performance of contracts under Sections 21 and 22 of the Specific Relief Act 1877. Section 21 lists 8 types of contracts that cannot be specifically enforced, such as contracts where monetary damages are sufficient compensation, contracts that are too vague, or contracts exceeding the powers of trustees. Section 22 gives courts discretion to determine whether specific performance is appropriate based on judicial principles in each case, rather than being obligated to grant it.
This document provides URLs for virtual court proceedings through video conferencing for various courts at the South West District, Dwarka Courts Complex in Delhi. It lists 50 judicial officers with their court room numbers, contact details of readers, email IDs of courts, and WebEx meeting URLs for virtual court proceedings. The courts include District Courts, Additional District Courts, Assistant Sessions Courts, Metropolitan Magistrates Courts, and specialized courts like Commercial Courts, Family Courts, POCSO Courts, NDPS Courts, and MACT Courts.
MAHASABHA VOTERS FROM (ANDHRAPRADESH & TELANGANA).pdfIndra Shekar
This document contains a list of 68 registrations for members of the All India Veerashaiva Mahasabha election in Andhra Pradesh state. It includes the registration numbers, names, addresses and contact information of the members.
Restitution of conjugal rights a comparativestudySunit Kapoor
1. Restitution of conjugal rights (RCR) allows a spouse to petition a court to order the other spouse to resume living together if they have withdrawn from the marriage without reasonable cause.
2. The concept originated under British rule in India and was later codified under various personal laws like the Hindu Marriage Act.
3. Under these laws, RCR can be ordered if the petitioner proves withdrawal without cause, though reasonable excuses include cruelty, failure to perform marital duties, or non-payment of dowry under Muslim law. Constitutional challenges to RCR have been rejected by courts.
The following presentation tends to explain the concept of Summary proceedings under the Civil Procedure Code in India.It elaborates on the suits to which this order applies and the procedure to be followed therein.
The document discusses the Kerala Government Land Assignment Act of 1960 and related rules. It defines key terms like government land, land assignment, lease, and license. It outlines the historical context of land assignment laws and rules in Kerala. The Act gives power to the government to make rules regarding assigning government land, including eligibility, priority, procedures, forms, and conditions. Special rules exist for assigning land for various purposes like agriculture, industry, forests and more.
Included topics:
- Betrothal
- Marriage
- Dissolution
- Ancillary claims
- Parent and children
- Adoption
- Legitimacy
- Inheritance
Not included:
- Introduction to the Administration of Islamic law in Malaysia
- Polygamous marriage
The document appears to be a student project on actionable claims under Indian law. It includes:
1. A definition of actionable claim as "a claim to any debt, other than a debt secured by mortgage of immovable property or by hypothecation or pledge of moveable property, or to any beneficial interest in moveable property not in possession either actual or constructive, of the claimant, which the civil courts recognize as affording grounds of relief whether such debt or beneficial interest be existent, accruing or conditional or contingent."
2. A discussion of the conditions of an actionable claim, including that it must be an unsecured money debt or claim to a beneficial interest in movable property not
This file deals with the Section 60-64 of CPC,1908, which talks about the Attachment of property in execution proceedings.
I have tried to make it easier for the students to understand the concept.
In case of any query the undersigned can be reached by email, the address of which has been given in the third last slide.
The Legal Notice Format for the recovery of money is the formal communication, between the plaintiff and the defendant. Before we proceed with the legal actions, we gave e ultimatum to the other to resolve things first-hand without getting into a le lengthy legal battle.
The most common practice which prevents this among people is that we have money from friends and people with good relations.
But when it comes to returning the many issues and problem that arises to resolve this issue sometimes we must take a legal course of action.
The Specific Relief of Act 1877
The Law of Limitation Act, 1908
ARNAB KUMAR DAS
Port City International University,
Chittagong, Bangladesh.
SID: LLB 00305037
The maritime belt refers to the part of the sea under the jurisdiction of coastal states. It extends up to 12 nautical miles from shore, within which the coastal state can exercise sovereignty. Historically, the width of the maritime belt varied depending on the range of cannons, but international agreements in the 20th century standardized it at 12 miles. Within this zone, coastal nations have control over resources and activities as recognized under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
This document discusses hearsay evidence and exceptions to the hearsay rule. It begins by defining hearsay as out-of-court statements offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Hearsay is generally inadmissible due to issues with reliability. Exceptions allow certain hearsay statements, including dying declarations where the declarant is unavailable due to death. The document also discusses different forms of hearsay such as oral, written, and conduct, and exceptions like res gestae and statements of unavailable persons under Section 32 of the Evidence Act 1950. It concludes by mentioning the current issue of potentially abolishing the hearsay rule.
Bail is the release of an accused person from custody, on the condition that they will return for their trial or other legal proceedings. The purpose of bail is to ensure the presence of the accused at trial while also protecting their liberty prior to being proven guilty. Bail laws originated in ancient times and are now codified in the Indian Criminal Procedure Code. Bail can be granted for bailable offenses with sentences under 3 years or fines only. For more serious non-bailable offenses, courts consider various factors like evidence and witness tampering risk when deciding bail. The process involves applying to the court and potentially depositing an amount until the trial. Grant of bail is mandatory in certain circumstances like incomplete investigations or if the accused is
Section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act deals with transfers of property by an ostensible owner. It states that such a transfer will not be voidable if the transferee acted in good faith and took reasonable care to ensure the transferor had the power to transfer. However, this is now subject to the Benami Transactions Act of 1988, which considers property held under a benami transaction to be owned by the person providing the consideration. The Benami Act does not apply retroactively to cases already in progress when it was enacted. For benami transactions after the Act, section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act cannot be used as a defense.
Pre trial proceedings in criminal case by ghulam hamidzulfi799
The document summarizes the key stages in pre-trial criminal proceedings in Pakistan, including:
1) Occurrence of the crime and victim/complainant reporting to police.
2) Police investigation under the Criminal Procedure Code, including registering an FIR, collecting evidence, and diary entries.
3) Police having the accused arrested (if a cognizable offense) and producing them before a magistrate within 24 hours. The magistrate then has powers to remand the accused to police custody for up to 15 days for further investigation or send to judicial custody.
This document provides information and guidance for master trainers on monitoring election expenditures during Assembly elections in 2013. It discusses how money plays an important role in multi-party democracies but can also undermine fairness and inclusion. It outlines various illegal and illegitimate ways that cash can be distributed to influence voters. The document then describes the legal provisions around election expenditures and monitoring mechanisms like flying squads, video surveillance teams, and expenditure observers. It provides examples of how cash is transported and distributed to voters and discusses preventive methods like promoting ethical voting.
This document contains an application form for requesting information under the Right to Information Act.
The form requests the applicant's personal details such as name, address, and whether they belong to a below poverty line category. It also asks for details of the information being requested such as the subject matter, relevant time period, specific details of the information, and whether the information is needed by post or in person.
The form confirms if the applicant agrees to pay any fees, has deposited application fees if required, and whether the information is already publicly available from the authority. It includes acknowledgement sections for the receiving office to fill out.
- Trustees are usually appointed by the settlor or testator, and if none are appointed then the court will appoint one. The settlor may also appoint other people to appoint new trustees when needed.
- A minor or infant cannot be a trustee. When appointed, the property vests in the trustees until they die, retire, or are removed. Trusteeship terminates upon disclaimer, death, retirement, or removal of a trustee. The court also has powers to appoint or remove trustees if needed.
This extemporaneous slide show presentation features a compelling, comprehensive overview of injunctions as applied to common real property litigation disputes where monetary remedies presumably provide insufficient compensation; i.e. trespass violations.
The document discusses specific performance of contracts under Sections 21 and 22 of the Specific Relief Act 1877. Section 21 lists 8 types of contracts that cannot be specifically enforced, such as contracts where monetary damages are sufficient compensation, contracts that are too vague, or contracts exceeding the powers of trustees. Section 22 gives courts discretion to determine whether specific performance is appropriate based on judicial principles in each case, rather than being obligated to grant it.
This document provides URLs for virtual court proceedings through video conferencing for various courts at the South West District, Dwarka Courts Complex in Delhi. It lists 50 judicial officers with their court room numbers, contact details of readers, email IDs of courts, and WebEx meeting URLs for virtual court proceedings. The courts include District Courts, Additional District Courts, Assistant Sessions Courts, Metropolitan Magistrates Courts, and specialized courts like Commercial Courts, Family Courts, POCSO Courts, NDPS Courts, and MACT Courts.
MAHASABHA VOTERS FROM (ANDHRAPRADESH & TELANGANA).pdfIndra Shekar
This document contains a list of 68 registrations for members of the All India Veerashaiva Mahasabha election in Andhra Pradesh state. It includes the registration numbers, names, addresses and contact information of the members.
This document contains a list of 107 candidates who qualified in the computer based examination for the skill test for the post of Stenographer Grade 'C'. It includes the roll number, name, father's name, mother's name, date of birth, and category codes of each candidate. The category codes are explained at the bottom, with 0=EWS, 1=SC, 2=ST, etc.
This document provides contact information for various candidates running for assembly seats in the 2022 Gujarat state elections, including their name, address, contact number and email. It includes over 150 candidates across many districts in Gujarat, listing the assembly seat number, name of seat and constituency details for each candidate. The candidates represent both reserved and general assembly constituencies from different political parties.
This document contains an alphabetical roll of advocates registered with the District Court of Mathura. It lists 59 advocates with their registration numbers, dates of enrollment, addresses, contact details and other information. The advocates' names are listed alphabetically from Aashish Pal to Ajay Kumar Bhardwaj along with basic personal details like father's name, date of birth, date of enrollment, complete address and contact numbers.
This document contains a list of tax return preparers with their identification numbers, names, contact details, and addresses. There are over 60 entries in the list with details for each preparer like mobile number, email, city, district, state, and pin code. The list is titled "TAX RETURN PREPARERS LIST AS ON 13th AUGUST, 2019".
This document provides contact details of Block Development Officers (BDOs) across 12 districts in Himachal Pradesh. It lists the name of each block, district, BDO name, mobile number, office phone number, and email address. There are a total of 110 blocks listed across the 12 districts. The districts listed are Bilaspur, Chamba, Hamirpur, Kangra, Kinnaur, Kullu, Lahaul & Spiti, Mandi, Shimla, Sirmaur, Solan, and Una.
1. The document contains information about 40 students in class VII-A, including their names, parents' names, dates of birth, gender, identification numbers, and addresses.
2. The students' personal details like name, parents' name, date of birth, gender, identification number (SR No, Aadhaar No) and address are listed in a table with 40 rows.
3. The addresses provided for the students range from villages and towns in Pilibhit district of Uttar Pradesh to other locations in Uttar Pradesh.
Lifting the Corporate Veil. Power Point Presentationseri bangash
"Lifting the Corporate Veil" is a legal concept that refers to the judicial act of disregarding the separate legal personality of a corporation or limited liability company (LLC). Normally, a corporation is considered a legal entity separate from its shareholders or members, meaning that the personal assets of shareholders or members are protected from the liabilities of the corporation. However, there are certain situations where courts may decide to "pierce" or "lift" the corporate veil, holding shareholders or members personally liable for the debts or actions of the corporation.
Here are some common scenarios in which courts might lift the corporate veil:
Fraud or Illegality: If shareholders or members use the corporate structure to perpetrate fraud, evade legal obligations, or engage in illegal activities, courts may disregard the corporate entity and hold those individuals personally liable.
Undercapitalization: If a corporation is formed with insufficient capital to conduct its intended business and meet its foreseeable liabilities, and this lack of capitalization results in harm to creditors or other parties, courts may lift the corporate veil to hold shareholders or members liable.
Failure to Observe Corporate Formalities: Corporations and LLCs are required to observe certain formalities, such as holding regular meetings, maintaining separate financial records, and avoiding commingling of personal and corporate assets. If these formalities are not observed and the corporate structure is used as a mere façade, courts may disregard the corporate entity.
Alter Ego: If there is such a unity of interest and ownership between the corporation and its shareholders or members that the separate personalities of the corporation and the individuals no longer exist, courts may treat the corporation as the alter ego of its owners and hold them personally liable.
Group Enterprises: In some cases, where multiple corporations are closely related or form part of a single economic unit, courts may pierce the corporate veil to achieve equity, particularly if one corporation's actions harm creditors or other stakeholders and the corporate structure is being used to shield culpable parties from liability.
Receivership and liquidation Accounts
Being a Paper Presented at Business Recovery and Insolvency Practitioners Association of Nigeria (BRIPAN) on Friday, August 18, 2023.
Business law for the students of undergraduate level. The presentation contains the summary of all the chapters under the syllabus of State University, Contract Act, Sale of Goods Act, Negotiable Instrument Act, Partnership Act, Limited Liability Act, Consumer Protection Act.
What are the common challenges faced by women lawyers working in the legal pr...lawyersonia
The legal profession, which has historically been male-dominated, has experienced a significant increase in the number of women entering the field over the past few decades. Despite this progress, women lawyers continue to encounter various challenges as they strive for top positions.
Synopsis On Annual General Meeting/Extra Ordinary General Meeting With Ordinary And Special Businesses And Ordinary And Special Resolutions with Companies (Postal Ballot) Regulations, 2018
Genocide in International Criminal Law.pptxMasoudZamani13
Excited to share insights from my recent presentation on genocide! 💡 In light of ongoing debates, it's crucial to delve into the nuances of this grave crime.
Sangyun Lee, 'Why Korea's Merger Control Occasionally Fails: A Public Choice ...Sangyun Lee
Presentation slides for a session held on June 4, 2024, at Kyoto University. This presentation is based on the presenter’s recent paper, coauthored with Hwang Lee, Professor, Korea University, with the same title, published in the Journal of Business Administration & Law, Volume 34, No. 2 (April 2024). The paper, written in Korean, is available at <https://shorturl.at/GCWcI>.
Guide on the use of Artificial Intelligence-based tools by lawyers and law fi...Massimo Talia
This guide aims to provide information on how lawyers will be able to use the opportunities provided by AI tools and how such tools could help the business processes of small firms. Its objective is to provide lawyers with some background to understand what they can and cannot realistically expect from these products. This guide aims to give a reference point for small law practices in the EU
against which they can evaluate those classes of AI applications that are probably the most relevant for them.
Matthew Professional CV experienced Government LiaisonMattGardner52
As an experienced Government Liaison, I have demonstrated expertise in Corporate Governance. My skill set includes senior-level management in Contract Management, Legal Support, and Diplomatic Relations. I have also gained proficiency as a Corporate Liaison, utilizing my strong background in accounting, finance, and legal, with a Bachelor's degree (B.A.) from California State University. My Administrative Skills further strengthen my ability to contribute to the growth and success of any organization.
Defending Weapons Offence Charges: Role of Mississauga Criminal Defence LawyersHarpreetSaini48
Discover how Mississauga criminal defence lawyers defend clients facing weapon offence charges with expert legal guidance and courtroom representation.
To know more visit: https://www.saini-law.com/
10. 22 Sh. Ajeet Narayan MM Ms. Rajni A Kumar 9818362774 readermm02shahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readermm02shahdara
23 Sh. Bharat Aggarwal MM Sh. Rajiv Kr. Ojha 8178849354 readermm05shahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readermm05shahdara
24 Sh. Mayank Mittal MM Sh. Jai Narain Sharma 7838208496 readermm06shahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readermm06shahdara
25 Ms. Shruti Sharma CIVIL JUDGE Ms. Rajni Jakhmola 9818600546 readercjshahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readercjshd
26 Sh. Fahad Uddin MM Sh. Ashwani Kumar 9818534255 readermm04shahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readermm04shahdara
27 Ms. Deepakshi Rana MM(Mahila Court-03) Ms. Yogita Rani 8800093551 readermc03shahdara@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readermc03shahdara
28 Ms. Ruby Neeraj Kumar MM NI Act Digital Court Sh. Harindra Sharma nishahdara1@gmail.com https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/nishahdara1
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
11. Vc Link of
South West District
(Dwarka Court)
Regards
AVADH PRATAP SINGH (Advocate)
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
12. Page No. 1/6
URL(s) FOR COURTS AT SOUTH WEST DISTRICT, DWARKA COURTS COMPLEX,
DELHI,FORCOURTPROCEEDINGS THROUGH VIDEO CONFERENCING
S.No. Name of the Judicial Officer &
Designation
Court
Room
No.
Name of the Reader Mobile No.
of the
Reader
Virtual Court URL(s)*
1. Mr. NarottamKaushal,
Ld. Principal District & Sessions
Judge, South West
611 Mr. Mohan Gaur 8076791061
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/PDSJRoom611
2. Mr. Harish Dudani,
District Judge -01
(Commercial Court)
603 Mr. Raj Kumar 8285493004
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/DJ01CommercialRoom603
3. Mr. Rakesh Syal
Judge In-charge Mediation
3rd floor
Admn.
Block
Ms. Usha Gogia 9811498561
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/JudgeInchargeMediationCentre
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/JudgeInchargeMediationCentre01
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/JudgeInchargeMediationCentre02
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/JudgeInchargeMediationCentre03
4. Dr. Vijay Kumar Dahiya, Addl.
District Judge-01
608 Mr. Lal Singh Bisht 9810048256
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ADJ01Room608
5. Mr. Sachin Jain,
Addl. District Judge-02
605 Mr. Lok Shankar 9540365616
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ADJ02Room605
6. Dr. Jagminder Singh
Addl. District Judge-03
602 Mr. Raj Kishore Ray 9560753456
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ADJ03Room602
AVADH
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13. Page No. 2/6
7. Mr. Ajay Goel,
Addl. District Judge-04
606 Mr. Gopal Gupta 7011849257
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ADJ04Room606
8. Ms. Gomati Manocha, Addl.
District Judge-05
604 Ms. Niyat Rani 9582343155
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ADJ05Room604
9. Mr. Lokesh Kumar Sharma ASJ
(SFTC)
607 Ms. NeerjaManak 9868432674
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJSFTCRoom607
10. Mr. SushilAnujTyagi
ASJ(FTSC)(RC)
501 Mr. Lalit Gulati 9560621772
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJFTSCRCRoom501
11 Mr. Murari Prasad Singh,
Addl. Sessions Judge (Electricity)
616 Mr. Robinson 9654348575
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJElectricityRoom616
12. Ms. PurvaSareen,
Addl. Sessions Judge-01 (POCSO)
503 Mr. Pradeep Kumar 9868210882 https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJ01POCSORoom503
13. Mr. Pitamber Dutt,
Addl. Sessions Judge-02
615 Mr. Sanjeev Kumar 8826804844
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJ02Room615
14. Mr. MohinderVirat,
Addl. Sessions Judge-03
609 Ms. KiranPuri 9810246045
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJ03Room609
15. Mr. Vishal Gogne,
Addl. Sessions Judge-04
515 Ms. Usha Sharma 9868494459
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJ04Room515
16. Mr. Sunil Beniwal,
Addl. Sessions Judge-05
511 Ms. Nidhi Lamba 9999498512
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJ05Room511
17. Mr. DheerajMor,
ASJ(FTSC)(POCSO)-01
03 Mr. Rajeev Saini 9810072398
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJFTSCPOCSO01Room03
18. Mr. Vikrant Vaid,
ASJ(FTSC)(POCSO)-02
04 Ms. Anju Rani 9968269441
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJFTSCPOCSO02Room04
AVADH
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14. Page No. 3/6
19. Mr. NavjeetBudhiraja,
ASJ(FTSC)(POCSO)-03
502 Mr. Narender Hooda 9968237954
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASJFTSCPOCSO03Room502
20. Mr. Deepak Wason,
Special Judge, NDPS
610 Mr. Sunil Sharma 9990476268
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/SpecialJudgeNDPSRoom610
21. Dr. Sumedh Kumar Sethi,
PO(MACT)-01
614 Mr. Narender Prasad 9650059295
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/POMACT01Room614
22. Ms. NiyayBindu,
PO(MACT)-02
613 Ms. Archana Sharma 9899939069
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/POMACT02Room613
23. Mr. Vinod Kumar Meena,
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate
08 Mr. GopalGosain 9136657137
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/CMMRoom08
24. Mr. Vikram,
Addl. Chief Metropolitan Magistrate
210 Ms. KaminiBala 9555044062
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ACMMRoom210
25. Mr. Harvinder Singh,
Senior Civil Judge cum Rent
Controller
207 Ms. RajniManoj Das 8527935378
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/SCJRCRoom207
26 Ms. RichaGusainSolanki
JSCC/Addl.Senior Civil Judge/
Guardian Judge
209 Ms. ParvinderKaur 9868538602
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ASCJGJRoom209
27. Mr. Siddhartha Malik,
Admn. Civil Judge/CCJ/
Addl. Rent Controller
201 Mr. Tilak Raj 9891043282
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/ACJARCCCJRoom201
28. Mr. Divyam Lila,
Civil Judge-01
208 Ms. KiranGuddu 8826726214
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/CivilJudge01Room208
29. Ms. BhartiBeniwal
Civil Judge - 02
205 Mr. Arun Kumar 9999550575
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/CivilJudge02Room205
30. Ms. Vaishali Singh
Civil Judge - 03
204 Sh. DamayantiNayak 8130059986
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/CivilJudge03Room204
AVADH
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15. Page No. 4/6
31. Mr. Paras Dalal,
Metropolitan Magistrate-01
13 Ms. KusumPathak 8076135666
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM01Room13
32. Mr. Ashish Kumar Meena,
Metropolitan Magistrate-02
10 Mr. BhaskerTiwari 9868053019
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM02Room10
33. Ms. Paridhi Gupta,
Metropolitan Magistrate-03
11 Mr. Naveen Kumar
Ajmeria
9968252403
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM03Room11
34. Mr. AnujBahal,
Metropolitan Magistrate-04
12 Mr. Anup Singh 7703896338
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM04Room12
35. Mr. Deepak Vats,
Metropolitan Magistrate-05
09 Mr. KrishanPawar 8882426347
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM05Room09
36. Mr. Pranat Kumar Joshi,
Metropolitan Magistrate-06
14 Mr. Pradeep Kumar
Gupta
9911120092
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM06Room14
37. Mr. DevChaudhary,
Metropolitan Magistrate-07
06 Mr. Sudhir Kumar 7011882637
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM07Room06
38. Ms. Alka Singh
Metropolitan Magistrate-08
309 Ms. NirmalKumari 8860985097
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM08Room309
39. Ms. BhartiGarg
Metropolitan Magistrate-09
314 Ms. Manjeet Yadav 9310673733
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM09Room314
40. Ms. ApoorvaRana
Metropolitan Magistrate-10
316 Mr. Naveen Kumar 9891388198 https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM10Room316
41. Ms. NeetikaKapoor
Metropolitan Magistrate-11
05 Ms. SunitaSaxena 9818832925
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM11Room05
42. Ms. Surbhi
Metropolitan Magistrate-12
07 Mr. Parvinder Singh 8851819127
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM12Room07
AVADH
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17. Page No. 6/6
54. Ms. DeekshaSethi
Metropolitan Magistrate-06
(NI ACT)
216 Mr. Raj Kr. Dhingra 8287075016
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM06NIActRoom216
55. Mr. Kapil Gupta,
Metropolitan Magistrate-07
(NI ACT)
214 Ms. NeerajBisht 8851107735
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM07NIActRoom214
56. Ms. AnuradhaSonkar,
Metropolitan Magistrate-08
(NI ACT)
215 Ms. MeenaVerma 9968079126
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM08NIActRoom215
57. Mr. Mridul Gupta
Metropolitan Magistrate-09
(NI ACT)
302 Ms. SarojBala 7678642307
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM09NIActRoom302
58. Ms. Jyoti Nain
Metropolitan Magistrate-10
(NI ACT)
301 Mr. Sunil Kumar 9990246279
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MM10NIActRoom301
The URL(s) can be accessed by clicking on the same and/or by pressing Ctrl+Click and/or Copy/Paste the link in your web browser.
DIGITALCOURTS (NI-ACT), SOUTH - WEST
S.
No.
NAME OF JUDICIAL
OFFICER ALONGWITH
DESIGNATION
NAME OF THE
READER
MOB. NO. EMAIL ID OF THE
COURT
MEETING URL
1. Mr. Sahil Gupta,
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-01
Ms. Jyoti Grover 9319833539 nisouthwest1@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt01
2. Mr. Vaibhav Kumar
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-02
Mr. Harminder Singh 9871170771 nisouthwest2@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt02
3. Mr. Nidhish Kumar Meena
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-03
Ms. Manisha 9818420546 nisouthwest3@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt03
AVADH
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18. Page No. 7/6
4. Ms. ShipraDhankhar
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-04
Sh. PuneetSangwan 9871581563 nisouthwest04@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt04
5. Mr. Umang Joshi
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-05
Ms. Padmini 9958133907 nisouthwest5@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt05
6. Mr. ManujKaushal
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-06
Ms. Meenakshi 9599028363 nisouthwest6@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt06
7. Ms. NehaSaini
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-07
Ms. Geeta Snehi 8130510581 nisouthwest7@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt07
8. Mr. GauravGoyal
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-08
Ms. ReenaDevikar 7291826592 nisouthwest8@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt08
9. Ms. EbbaniAggarwal
MM (NI-Act)Digital Court-09
Mr. Raman Kumar 9868931061 nisouthwest9@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdwarka.webex.com/meet/MMNIActDigitalCourt09
TheURL(s)canbeaccessedbyclickingonthesameand/orbypressingCtrl+Clickand/orCopy/Pastethelinkinyourweb browser.
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
28. FAMILY COURTS JUDGES URL’s
Name of the
Judicial Officer
Name of
the Staff
Mobile No e-mail ID Cisco Meeting
ID
Cisco Video Conferencing URL
1 Ms. Shail Jain,
Principal Judge,
Family Court,
Central, Tis
Hazari Courts,
Delhi
Lalit
Kumar
9818747344 ddc.pjfc.central@gmail.com 176 961 7132 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/ddc.pjfc.central
2 Ms. Bhupesh
Kumar, Family
Court, Central,
Tis Hazari
Courts, Delhi
Sanjay
Bakshi
9911181566 familycourt.central.109thc@
gmail.com
1765478553 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/familycourt.central.10
9thc
DIGITAL COURTS JUDGES URL’S
1 Ms. Akriti
Mahendru, MM (NI
ACT) DIGITAL
COURT - 01,
CENTRAL
Ms. Mahesh
Chand, JA
7011655241 nicentral1@gmail.com 1769819878 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/nicentral1
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
29. 2 MS. AKANSHA
GAUTAM, MM (NI
ACT) DIGITAL
COURT - 02,
CENTRAL
Sh. Rajesh
Saini, JA
7840007826 nicentral2@gmail.com 1765968438 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/nicentral2
3 MS. PREETI
RAJORIA, MM (NI
ACT) DIGITAL
COURT - 03,
CENTRAL
Sh. Balraj, JA 9871709031 nicentral3@gmail.com 1764147017 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/nicentral3
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
30. Vc Link of
West District
(Tis Hazari Court)
Regards
AVADH PRATAP SINGH (Advocate)
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
31. LINK TO CONNECT COURT IN COURT HEARINGS THROUGH VIDEO CONFERENCING
Name of the
Judicial Officer
Designation Name of the Staff Mobile No e-mail ID Cisco Meeting
ID
Cisco Video Conferencing URL
1. Sh. Dharmesh
Sharma
Ld. Principal
District &
Session Judge
(West)
Sh. Rajender
Yadav
9599112883 readerdjwest@gmail.com 1762281360 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readerdjwest
2. Dr. Archana Sinha Ld. ASJ – 06
(POCSO)
Sh. Harish 9968075799 readerasj06west@gmail.com 1767865110 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readerasj06west
3. Ms. Renu
Bhatnagar
Ld. PR. Judge,
Family Court
Sh. Sunil Dutt
Kaushik
8468824577 ddc.pjfc.west@gmail.com 1765966654 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/ddc.pjfc.west
4. Ms. Illa Rawat Ld. APJ Family
Court
SH. Chetan Kumar 8586940329 reader02apjfamilycourt@gmail.
com
1766041453 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/reader02apjfamilyco
urt
5. Sh. Dinesh Bhatt Ld. DJ. Comm –
01
Sh. Ajeet Kumar 9560015497 readerdjcomm01west@gmail.co
m
1764409487 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readerdjcomm01wes
t
6. SH. Gurdeep
singh
Ld. DJ. Comm –
02
Sh. Tulsi Ram
Acharya
9818234571 readerdjcomm02west@gmail.co
m
1761826852 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readerdjcomm02wes
t
7. Sh. Umed Singh Ld. ADJ-02 Sh. Sanjay 9990389718
readeradj02west@gmail.com
1769086780
https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readeradj02west
8. Ms. Poonam
Chaudhary
Ld. PO-MACT –
02
Sh. Bharat Kumar 9958598049 mact2westthc@gmail.com 1767167414 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/mact2westthc
9. Sh. Raj Kumar
Tripathi
Ld. Judge-
Family Court
Sh. Manoj 9873265179 readerjfcwest@gmail.com 1769815322 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/readerjfcwest
10. Sh. Lal Singh Ld. ASJ-05 Sh. Khyali Ram 9555067032 asj05west@gmail.com 1761674350 https://districtcourtdelhi.webex.com/meet/asj05west
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
57. 36
Ms. Swati
Sharma, MM- 10
Ms. Savita
Garva 9971163257 mm10sed@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mm10s
ed
37
Ms. Shikha
Chahal, MM
- 11
Ms. Geeta
Dubey 9871582433
mmelevense@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mmeleve
nse
38
Ms. Samiksha
Gupta, MM
(MAHILA
COURT)-01
Mr.
Mukesh
Mandal
9968893620 mahilacourt01sed@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mahilacourt
01sed
39
Ms. Shilpi
Singh, MM
(MAHILA
COURT)-02
Mr. Atul
Dev
8076861894
mmmahilacourt02sed@gmail.co
m
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mmmahilacou
rt02sed
40
Ms. Archana
Beniwal, MM
(MAHILA
COURT)-03
Mr.
Gaurav
Attree
7838689477 mahilacourt03saket@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mahilacourt0
3saket
41
Sh. Bhanu
Pratap Singh, M
M (NI ACT)01
Sh. D.P.
Shukral
9582182078
mm01niactsed@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mm01niac
tsed
42
Ms. Twinkle
Chawla, MM
(NI ACT)-02
Ms.
Neelima
Saini 9958080292
mmni2southeast@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mmni2sout
heast
43
Ms. Aditi Rao,
M M (NI ACT)03
Mr. Bhim 9910547666
mm03.niact.se@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mm03.nia
ct.se
44
Sh. Ankit
Mittal, MM (NI
ACT)-04
Mr.
Rakesh
Kumar 9718295524
mm04.niact.se@gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelhi.webe
x.com/meet/mm04.nia
ct.se
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
58. DIGITAL COURTS (NI-ACT), SOUTH-EAST
S.
N
o.
Name of the
Judicial
Officer
alongwith
Designation
Name of the
Reader Mobile No. Email ID of the Court
Cisco Webex Link
45
Ms.
Sonam
Singh ,
MM (NI-
Act)
Digital Court-
01
Sh. Brijesh Kumar
Sharma, JA
9811072263 nisoutheast1@gmail.com
https://districtcourt
delhi.webex.com/m
eet/nisoutheast1
46
Ms. Akanksha
Garg, MM
(NI-Act)
Digital Court-
02
Sh. Sudhakar, JA
9811269154 nisoutheast2@gmail.com
https://districtcourtde
lhi.webex.com/meet/
nisoutheast2
47
Sh. Raghav
Sharma, MM
(NI-Act)
Digital Court-
03
Sh. Yogesh, JA
9911805305
nisoutheast3@gmail.com
https://districtcourt
delhi.webex.com/m
eet/nisoutheast3
FAMILY COURTS, SOUTH-EAST
S.
N
o.
Name of the
Judicial
Officer
alongwith
Designation
Name of the
Reader Mobile No. Email ID of the Court
Cisco Webex
Link
48
Ms. Madhu
Jain, Principal
Judge, Family
Court
Sh. Rajesh Tiwari 9278783514
familycourtsfilingsoutheast@
gmail.com
https://districtcourtdelh
i.webex.com/meet/fa
milycourtsfilingsouthe
ast
49
Sh. Sandeep
Yadav, Judge,
Family Court Sh. Nandan
7838047423
fcsecourt04@gmail.com https://district
courtdelhi.we
bex.com/meet
/fcsecourt04
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH
59. Vc Link of
New Delhi District
(Patiala House
Court)
Regards
AVADH PRATAP SINGH (Advocate)
AVADH
PRATAP
SINGH