Overview
Corporate disputes are rarely just legal — they are battles for control, value and reputation among people who once trusted each other. K & K Associates represents companies, promoters, shareholders, directors, creditors and investors in proceedings under the Companies Act, 2013 and the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and the NCLAT.
From A-197, LGF, Defence Colony, New Delhi 110024 — within 3 km of Saket District Court, 12 km of the Delhi High Court (Sher Shah Road) and 8 km of the Supreme Court of India, we appear before the NCLT, New Delhi benches and the NCLAT, and coordinate matters before other benches across India through our local-counsel network.
We approach corporate litigation with a transactional mind — because the goal is usually not just to win an order, but to engineer an exit, a buy-out, a restructuring or a resolution that lets the business survive the fight. Strategy is built around the commercial endgame, not just the pleadings.
Companies Act Disputes
- Oppression and mismanagement petitions under Sections 241–242
- Shareholder, promoter and joint-venture disputes
- Board and management deadlock and removal of directors
- Class action and minority-shareholder protection
- Rectification of register of members under Section 59
- Compromise, arrangement and reduction of capital (Sections 230–232)
Insolvency Under the IBC
- Corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) — Sections 7, 9 and 10
- Acting for financial creditors, operational creditors and corporate debtors
- Claims, resolution plans and committee-of-creditors strategy
- Avoidance applications — preferential, undervalued and fraudulent transactions
- Personal guarantor insolvency and liquidation matters
NCLAT & Appellate Strategy
Adverse NCLT orders are appealed to the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), often with urgent stay applications. We prepare crisp appellate briefs, manage limitation strictly, and, where warranted, carry matters to the Supreme Court on substantial questions of law.
Prevention Through Better Documents
Many corporate disputes are seeded years earlier in loose shareholder agreements and articles. We advise on robust shareholders' agreements, articles, exit and tag/drag provisions, and deadlock mechanisms — so that if conflict comes, the rules of engagement already favour an orderly resolution.
Statutes & Regulations
Key laws governing this practice.
Who This Is For
Audiences we typically advise in this area.
- Minority shareholders facing oppression or exclusion
- Promoters and directors in control or deadlock disputes
- Operational and financial creditors pursuing insolvency
- Corporate debtors defending CIRP petitions
- Investors enforcing shareholder-agreement rights
Recent Outcomes
Anonymised matter highlights.
Minority Shareholder Buy-Out Secured
Acting for a minority shareholder excluded from management, filed an oppression and mismanagement petition that culminated in a tribunal-facilitated buy-out at a fair valuation.
Section 9 Petition Used to Trigger Settlement
Filed an operational-creditor petition under Section 9 of the IBC; the credible threat of CIRP brought the corporate debtor to a full settlement before admission.
Outcomes are matter-specific. Past results are not a guarantee of future performance.
Why K & K
Strategic differentiators in this practice.
- Litigation built around the commercial endgame, not just orders.
- Combined corporate-advisory and disputes bench on one desk.
- Disciplined limitation and appellate management before NCLAT.
- Experience acting for promoters, minorities and creditors alike.
- Preventive drafting to keep future disputes out of the tribunal.
Frequently Asked
Questions our clients ask first.
Serving Delhi NCR & Beyond
Our office at A-197, LGF, Defence Colony, New Delhi 110024 is the operating base for clients across Delhi NCR — Gurgaon, Noida, Faridabad, Ghaziabad — and pan-India through a vetted local-counsel network. We routinely appear at Saket, Patiala House, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Rohini and Dwarka District Courts; the Delhi High Court; and the Supreme Court of India.
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