Company-law and insolvency disputes move fast and have unforgiving timelines. PKP Advocates appears before the NCLT Bengaluru Bench and NCLAT in insolvency, oppression & mismanagement, and corporate restructuring matters — for both creditors and corporates.
Services under nclt / nclat.
- Section 7, 9, 10 IBC petitions (creditor & debtor side)
- Resolution plan vetting and CoC representation
- Oppression & mismanagement under Sec 241/242
- Mergers, demergers and scheme of arrangement
- Class action and minority shareholder disputes
- NCLAT appeals and Supreme Court SLPs
Insolvency (IBC) Matters
Section 7 (financial creditor), Section 9 (operational creditor) and Section 10 (corporate debtor) petitions. CoC strategy, resolution plan review, avoidance applications and liquidation matters.
Oppression & Mismanagement
Sections 241 / 242 / 244 petitions for minority shareholders, including interim relief, investigation under Section 213, and class action under Section 245.
Schemes & Restructuring
Mergers, demergers, capital reduction, and compromise / arrangement schemes under Sections 230–232. Drafting, filing and hearing representation.
Appeals & Higher Forums
NCLAT appeals on questions of law, and Supreme Court Special Leave Petitions in coordination with senior counsel where required.
How a nclt / nclat engagement works.
- 01
Case feasibility review
We assess limitation, jurisdiction, and admissibility before any petition is drafted. Many NCLT matters fail on threshold issues.
- 02
Petition drafting
Detailed pleadings with evidence annexures, financial statements, and statutory compliances. Quality of drafting often decides outcomes.
- 03
Hearing representation
Appearance before NCLT Bengaluru Bench / NCLAT, including urgent stay and interim applications.
- 04
Order implementation
Execution of orders, follow-up applications, and where required, appellate proceedings.
The PKP Advocates difference.
NCLT/NCLAT practice rewards lawyers who combine corporate-law fluency with sharp courtroom drafting. Our IT-consulting background also helps when matters involve technology companies, IP-heavy debtors, or digital evidence.
Frequently asked questions.
I am an operational creditor. Can I file a Section 9 petition for unpaid dues?+
Yes — provided the default exceeds the threshold (currently ₹1 crore), there is no pre-existing dispute, and limitation is not barred. We do a feasibility check before filing.
What is the cost and timeline for an NCLT petition?+
It varies by matter type. Insolvency admissions typically take 3–9 months; oppression matters longer. We give a written estimate after reviewing your documents — pricing is on a contact-for-quote basis.
Can NCLT orders be challenged?+
Yes. Appeals lie to NCLAT within 30–45 days depending on the order, and from NCLAT to the Supreme Court on a question of law.
Do you represent both companies and creditors?+
Yes. We act for financial creditors, operational creditors, corporate debtors, resolution applicants, and minority shareholders — but never on conflicting sides of the same matter.