Bhatt and Joshi Associates has built a strong arbitration practice for commercial, construction and shareholder disputes. The firm represents clients in institutional and ad hoc arbitrations from initial strategy through enforcement or challenge of awards. Its lawyers combine procedural expertise with sector understanding to keep disputes efficient, confidential and cost-effective. Companies rely on Bhatt and Joshi Associates to turn complex conflicts into pragmatic arbitration solutions.
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 Arbitration Lawyer represents businesses in resolving commercial disputes outside court. They draft arbitration clauses, file claims, appear before arbitral tribunals, negotiate settlements, and enforce or challenge arbitral awards in court.
Typical cases include contract breaches, partnership disputes, shareholder conflicts, supply-chain disputes, construction disputes, intellectual property matters, franchise disputes, and cross-border commercial disagreements.
Arbitration is faster, confidential, less formal, and allows parties to choose expert arbitrators. It also avoids lengthy court delays and often results in more predictable outcomes.
The process includes notice of arbitration, appointment of arbitrators, submission of claims and defenses, hearings, evidence presentation, tribunal deliberation, and issuance of the arbitral award. The award can be enforced or challenged in court.
Yes, but only on limited grounds such as fraud, bias, violation of natural justice, or lack of jurisdiction. Courts do not reassess the merits of the dispute. Challenges must follow the Arbitration and Conciliation Act timelines.
Key documents include the arbitration agreement, contract documents, correspondence showing the dispute, invoices, payment records, and supporting evidence. Your lawyer prepares the notice of arbitration and statement of claim.
Yes. International arbitration often follows institutional rules like ICC, SIAC, or LCIA, uses foreign seat laws, and involves cross-border enforcement under the New York Convention. Domestic arbitration follows Indian procedural rules and timelines.