Karthikninja963

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • Karthikninja963
    Participant
      K
      Karthikninja963
      PARTICIPANT
      April 29, 2025 at 2:44 am
      Glad it worked. It is the only effective solution.

      Karthikninja963
      Participant
        K
        Karthikninja963
        PARTICIPANT
        April 27, 2025 at 1:27 am
        β€”β€”NALβ€”β€”
        I faced a similar situation and my approach may seem counterintuitive and unpalatable but it worked for me. My tenant took loan from some loan app and gave my number as reference without my consent and then defaulted on the said loan. The agents started abusing me from the very first call they made to me and then started threatening about sending goons to my flat (where tenant resided). At first I tried ignoring calls but they would call incessantly. So I changed my approach. For the next few days I made it a point to receive each and every call even while I was in office. And in every call for each abuse they hurled at me I hurled 10 back at them. These were some of my most creative abuses in Delhi style. I would go to the washroom in my office to take the call and abuse the agent (if he abused me first). Once he even called me from his personal number. I saved that number and would call him between 10:30 pm – midnight for multiple days and then abuse him. This went on for 10-15 days but then the calls stopped. I suggest you take this approach

        Karthikninja963
        Participant
          K
          Karthikninja963
          PARTICIPANT
          March 12, 2025 at 8:31 am
          NAL
          I have fighting a similar case where my maternal grandfather gifted most of his land to my mother’s elder sister. It is similar to your condition since in your case too land has been registered in your elder brother’s name. I am sorry to say but if your father did not inherit the land, instead bought it on his own and then registered in your elder brother’s name then not much can be done if your brother was more than 18 years old when property was transferred in his name. But if it was ancestral land then your father was just a coparcener of the property and had no right to give the entire property to your brother only. You have a fair shot of partition in the second case. Unfortunately if you fall under the first category, you can bring your brother to the negotiating table by telling him that you would file a partition suit on the entire land and even make your Bua and sisters as codefendants (since they are on your side) and this will tangle up all his property for the next 10-15 years. This would soften him up. Fair warning though, my case has been going on for 20 years now. We are in the final argument stage but even after getting the judgement, it would take years to get it executed. So just threaten a partition suit but be very cautious before filing it.

        Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)