Last updated: May 2026.

An injunction request usually requires a clear factual timeline, possession record, title or right-based documents, evidence of threat or interference, and an explanation of urgency. The court route depends on facts, documents, limitation, jurisdiction and the relief requested.
Before sending an enquiry, arrange the dispute date-wise and identify what immediate harm is feared: dispossession, construction, alienation, obstruction, boundary interference, damage to property or violation of an existing order.
In many property disputes, parties use the word injunction for different reliefs. One case may seek protection from dispossession, another may seek restraint against construction, another may seek status quo, and another may seek protection from transfer or third-party creation. The documents should match the exact relief requested.
Title And Right Papers
- Sale deed, gift deed, partition deed or agreement.
- Mutation, khata, khesra, jamabandi or revenue papers.
- Municipal, tax or utility records.
- Map, survey, boundary or site plan documents.
Possession Proof
- Photographs and videos showing possession.
- Electricity, water, rent or maintenance records.
- Local authority, police or administrative complaint.
- Witness details or possession chronology.
Threat And Dispute Record
- Notices, replies and correspondence.
- Messages showing obstruction or threat.
- Construction, encroachment or damage photographs.
- Existing case papers or orders, if any.
A civil injunction file should usually explain three practical points: the right claimed, the present possession or legal interest, and the immediate harm that may occur if urgent protection is not considered. These points are assessed through pleadings, documents, local facts and the applicable civil procedure.
If a previous proceeding exists, collect plaints, written statements, interim applications, orders, compromise petitions, execution records and appeal or revision papers. A new injunction request should not ignore earlier litigation between the same parties or concerning the same property.
If the dispute involves family property, co-sharers, tenancy, boundary, construction, easement, sale agreement or revenue records, keep those facts separate in the first note. The remedy and forum may differ depending on the nature of the right asserted.
A useful first enquiry may include property location, parties, ownership or possession basis, date of dispute, current possession status, nature of threat, documents available, whether police or authority complaint exists, and whether urgent interim relief is needed.
Where possible, include a simple property identifier: village, ward, plot, khata, flat number, apartment name, boundary description or municipal reference. If photographs are shared, mention the date and what each image is intended to show.
Related resources: property and civil suits practice page, property dispute lawyer in Patna, document checklists, and the case enquiry guide.
This article is for general legal information and enquiry preparation. It is not legal advice, does not create an advocate-client relationship, and does not guarantee any outcome. Property litigation strategy depends on facts, documents, limitation, possession, jurisdiction and formal consultation.
References / Sources
- Relevant title records, possession documents, site material, notices, civil pleadings and urgent-relief facts should be checked with the property record.
- This article is a general informational note and should be read with the actual documents, dates, forum rules and limitation position.