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Lawyers Collective is a pressure group which opposed opening of liaison offices of foreign law firms in India, it filed a writ petition before Bombay High Court. It claimed that even for non litigious legal issues like ‘drafting documents, reviewing and providing comments on documents, conducting negotiations and advising clients on international standards and customary practice relating to the client’s transaction etc.’ one needs to comply with the Bar Council regulations and the Advocates Act 1961.
The main issue framed by the Court was whether liaison offices in India could carry on the practise in non litigious matters without being enrolled as Advocates under the 1961 Act? To answer this question the Court looked at the width of jurisdiction of Advocates Act and meaning & purpose of ‘non litigious matters’. Section 29 of the Advocates Act which lays down who can practice law in India it is stated that advocates are the only class of persons ‘entitled to practise the profession of law’. Also section 33 of the Advocates Act 1961 lays out the field of practise of advocates which is ‘Except as otherwise provided in this Act or in any other law for the time being in force, no person shall, on or after the appointed day, be entitled to practise in any Court or before any authority or person unless he is enrolled as an advocate under this Act.’ So the case hung on the issue as to whether the expression ‘practise in any Court or before any authority or person’ would include non litigious legal matters or it would fall under the bracket of ‘practise the profession of law’.