Family law covers the legal relationships within a family: marriage and its breakdown, maintenance, custody and guardianship, adoption, succession, and protection from domestic violence. It is among the most personal areas of law, and the applicable rules often depend on the family’s personal law. Bisani Legal handles the full family bracket with discretion, from contested disputes to quiet, well-documented settlements.
You face a separation, divorce, or maintenance question and want it handled cleanly.
A custody or guardianship issue must be resolved in a child’s best interests.
You need to deal with succession, inheritance, or the division of family property.
You are adopting, or formalising guardianship of a child or dependent.
You face or need to respond to a domestic violence complaint.
You want family arrangements, settlements, wills, or family agreements, documented properly.
Statute | Key sections | What it governs |
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 | Section 13 (divorce); Section 13B (mutual consent); Sections 24 and 25 (maintenance) | Marriage, divorce, and maintenance for parties governed by Hindu law. |
Special Marriage Act, 1954 | Provisions on civil and inter-faith marriage and divorce | Civil marriage and dissolution independent of religion. |
Hindu Succession Act, 1956 | Provisions on intestate succession and coparcenary rights | Inheritance and succession under Hindu law, including daughters’ coparcenary rights. |
Guardians and Wards Act, 1890 and personal laws | Provisions on custody and guardianship | Custody and guardianship, decided on the welfare of the child. |
Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Provisions on protection, residence, and monetary relief | Civil protection against domestic violence. |
Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 | Maintenance provision (formerly Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973) | The general criminal-side maintenance remedy. |
(Verification note for handoff: the general maintenance remedy formerly at Section 125 of the CrPC is now under the BNSS. Confirm the exact BNSS section before citing a number, as the CrPC is repealed and secondary sources differ.)
Family disputes are resolved as much through judgment and temperament as through statute, so we calibrate the approach to the family and the goal. Where a separation can be dignified, we steer towards documented settlement, which spares everyone the cost and damage of a contested fight. Where succession or property is in issue, we work through the personal law and the records to establish entitlements clearly, because most inheritance disputes turn on documents that should have been organised long before the dispute. On custody and guardianship, we keep the child’s welfare central, because courts will. For our clients facing domestic violence, on either side, we act quickly and accurately on protection and residence, and we keep the response measured. We handle these matters with strict confidentiality and are honest about likely outcomes, because in family law false comfort is its own harm. Where a will or family arrangement can prevent a future dispute, we document it now.
Q1. Which law applies to my family matter?
It depends on your personal law and the statute in question. Marriage, succession, and adoption can each be governed by different rules.
Q2. How is maintenance decided?
Courts weigh the income, needs, and standard of living of both parties, rather than applying a fixed formula. It can arise under personal law and the general criminal-side remedy.
Q3. Do daughters have equal inheritance rights?
Under the Hindu Succession Act 1956, as amended, daughters have coparcenary rights equal to sons, subject to the specifics of the case.
Q4. How do courts decide custody?
On the welfare of the child as the paramount consideration, not on the parents’ relative strength.
Q5. How does adoption work legally?
Through the applicable adoption law and process for the family, with documentation that establishes the child’s legal status.
Q6. What protection does the Domestic Violence Act give?
Civil protection orders, residence rights, and monetary relief, available alongside other remedies.
Q7. Should I make a will?
Generally yes. A clear, valid will is the simplest way to prevent a succession dispute among heirs.
Q8. Can family disputes be mediated?
Yes, and courts encourage it. Mediation can resolve maintenance, custody, and property together with far less acrimony.
Q9. What is a family settlement?
A documented arrangement among family members resolving rights in property or assets, which can prevent litigation if drafted properly.
Q10. Can maintenance or custody orders be changed?
Yes, if circumstances change materially, on application to the court.
Related reading
Supreme Court of India Litigation: A Complete Guide
The Right to Privacy in India: From Puttaswamy to DPDP
Family law gives every member of a family real protection and puts children’s welfare first, and its strong preference for settlement means most disputes need not become wars. The advantage lies with the family that is prepared and well advised, and that documents arrangements before they are tested. Bisani Legal handles Bengaluru’s family matters with discretion and realism, aiming for resolution rather than a long fight wherever the facts allow.
The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. If you require guidance regarding a specific legal matter, you may schedule a consultation with Bisani Legal to discuss your circumstances and understand the legal options available to you.
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