How a US-Based Pakistani Woman Recovered Her Share in 7 Inherited Properties in Karachi — Without Leaving America
From a contested succession petition to a preliminary decree, court-supervised sale, and full distribution of shares — handled entirely through a Special Power of Attorney by GNS Law Associates.
Lead Counsel: Abdul Shakoor, Advocate High Court
An Heir in America. An Estate in Karachi. Brothers in Possession.
Our client, a Pakistani woman settled in the United States, approached GNS Law Associates after the death of her father, who left behind seven immoveable properties in Karachi along with other assets. As a daughter, she was a legal heir under Islamic law of inheritance — but the estate was entirely in the possession and control of her brothers in Pakistan.
Like thousands of overseas Pakistanis, she faced the same painful equation: a rightful share on paper, no practical access to it, and no realistic way to spend months in Pakistan pursuing litigation in person.
“Distance should never mean disinheritance. Pakistani law gives every legal heir — including daughters living abroad — an enforceable right to their share.”
Her instructions to us were clear: secure her lawful inheritance, do it properly through the courts, and do it without requiring her physical presence in Pakistan.
Hidden Assets, Hostile Co-Heirs, and an Ocean in Between
This was not a simple paperwork matter. The case presented three distinct hurdles:
1. Representation from abroad. The client could not appear before the courts in Karachi. Every step — filing, hearings, evidence, execution — had to be carried out through a properly attested Special Power of Attorney (SPA).
2. An incomplete picture of the estate. The client knew of seven properties, but suspected the estate was larger. The full extent of her late father’s assets — including bank accounts and additional immoveable properties — was known only to the brothers in possession.
3. Contested proceedings. The brothers were unlikely to concede her share voluntarily. Any succession proceeding would almost certainly be opposed, turning a routine application into full-fledged litigation.
From Succession Petition to Preliminary Decree: Step by Step
1. Special Power of Attorney — Executed in the USA
We guided the client in executing a Special Power of Attorney in the United States, attested through the Pakistani Consulate and authenticated for use before the courts in Pakistan. This single document became the legal foundation of the entire case, authorising our advocates to act on her behalf at every stage.
2. Filing the SMA in the District Court, Karachi
On her behalf, we filed a Succession Miscellaneous Application (SMA) in the District Court at Karachi for the grant of letters of administration over her late father’s estate, placing the known seven properties before the court.
3. Objections by the Brothers — A Turning Point
The brothers appeared and filed objections to the SMA. But contesting the petition came at a cost to them: in doing so, they were compelled to disclose additional assets of the deceased — other immoveable properties and bank accounts in their possession that the client had never been formally told about. What was intended to block her claim instead expanded it.
4. Conversion of the SMA into a Civil Suit
Since the matter had become contentious, the Honourable Court converted the SMA into a regular civil suit, directing the parties to lead evidence. The suit was transferred to the concerned Senior Civil Judge, Karachi for trial.
5. Evidence, Trial, and Preliminary Decree
Through the trial, our lead counsel Abdul Shakoor, Advocate High Court, placed on record the documentary chain of title, the legal heirship of our client, and the full inventory of the estate — including the assets disclosed by the brothers themselves. After proper proceedings, the court passed a preliminary decree, determining each legal heir’s share in the estate in accordance with Islamic law of inheritance.
6. Sale of Properties and Distribution of Shares
Pursuant to the decree, all the properties were sold to third-party purchasers, and the sale proceeds were distributed among all legal heirs according to their respective shares. Our client received her complete lawful entitlement — and the matter was successfully disposed of.
Full Share. Full Estate. Zero Trips to Pakistan.
Complete Inheritance Secured
The client received her entire legal share — not just from the seven known properties, but from the additional properties and bank accounts uncovered during the proceedings.
Estate Fully Surfaced
Assets concealed within the family were brought on the court record, ensuring the distribution covered the true estate of the deceased, not a partial version of it.
Court-Supervised Closure
Sale to third parties and distribution under the decree gave every heir a clean, final, and legally protected settlement — with no room for future disputes over the same assets.
Handled Entirely from the USA
From the first filing to the final distribution, the client never had to travel to Pakistan. Her Special Power of Attorney, and our advocacy, did the work.
What This Case Teaches Every Heir Living Abroad
You do not need to be in Pakistan to claim your inheritance. A properly attested Special Power of Attorney allows experienced counsel to pursue your case from filing to final distribution.
Daughters and sisters have enforceable shares. Possession by brothers does not equal ownership. Pakistani courts consistently protect the shares of female heirs under Islamic law of inheritance.
Litigation can reveal hidden assets. When co-heirs contest succession proceedings, they are often compelled to disclose assets in their possession — sometimes enlarging the estate the claimant knew about.
A contested SMA is not the end — it is a path. When objections are filed, the court converts the application into a suit, evidence is recorded, and a decree determines every heir’s share with finality.
Court-supervised sale and distribution delivers real money, not paper rights. The process ends with each heir actually receiving their share — the ultimate objective of inheritance litigation.
Note: Client details have been anonymised to protect confidentiality. Every case turns on its own facts; past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. This case study is for general information and does not constitute legal advice.
Living Abroad with an Inheritance Dispute in Karachi?
GNS Law Associates, led by Abdul Shakoor, Advocate High Court, represents overseas Pakistanis in succession, property, and inheritance matters across Karachi’s courts — entirely through power of attorney. Tell us about your case and we will map out your legal options.
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