Bhatt and Joshi Associates supports clients in CIRP, liquidation, oppression and mismanagement and other corporate disputes before NCLT and NCLAT. The firm drafts and prosecutes applications, claims and resolutions plans with a detail-oriented approach. It coordinates closely with financial and operational creditors, insolvency professionals and management teams. Bhatt and Joshi Associates is often engaged for complex, multi-party NCLT matters requiring both litigation skill and commercial insight.
We uphold the highest ethical standards in every case we handle
We understand the personal nature of legal matters and treat each client with care
Our commitment to superior legal representation drives everything we do
Your needs and goals are at the center of our legal strategy
Proven track record of successful case outcomes
Board-certified attorneys with specialized knowledge
24/7 emergency consultation and support
Millions recovered for our clients
+91 98243 23743
aaditya@bhattandjoshiassociates.com
No. 311, Grace Business Park B/h. Kargil Petrol Pump, Epic Hospital Road, Sangeet Cross Road, behind Kargil Petrol Pump, Sola, Sagar, Ahmedabad, Gujarat 380060
An NCLT Advocate represents companies, directors, creditors, homebuyers, and insolvency professionals before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) in matters under the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC) and Companies Act, including CIRP, liquidation, oppression & mismanagement, and corporate disputes.
Key matters include insolvency applications (Sections 7, 9 & 10), CIRP proceedings, resolution plan approvals, liquidation, director disqualification, shareholder disputes, oppression & mismanagement cases, mergers & amalgamations, and compounding of offences.
Insolvency applications can be filed by Financial Creditors, Operational Creditors, or the Corporate Debtor itself. Each category has specific documentation and procedural requirements under the Code.
Required documents include loan agreements, invoices, demand notices, financial statements, board resolutions, proof of default, correspondence, and statutory filings. For company law disputes, additional shareholder or board documents may be needed.
The IBC mandates a time-bound process of 180 days, extendable to 330 days in exceptional cases. However, timelines depend on complexity, litigation, and availability of the resolution plan.
Yes. Orders of the NCLT can be appealed before the NCLAT (National Company Law Appellate Tribunal), and further appeals may lie with the Supreme Court, but only on questions of law.
The advocate prepares filings, presents arguments, assists in CIRP-related compliances, represents stakeholders during CoC discussions (where applicable), challenges illegal transactions, and helps ensure statutory timelines under the IBC are met.