Case Study: Overseas Pakistani Property Dispute in Karachi

Case Study  ·  Inheritance & Property Litigation

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

7+
Properties Recovered
0
Client Visits to Pakistan
100%
Legal Share Secured
SPA
Power of Attorney Basis
The Background

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.

The Challenge

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.

Our Legal Strategy

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.

The Outcome

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.

Key Takeaways for Overseas Pakistanis

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.

WhatsApp Us Now Book a Consultation

What Is an Addendum and Should You Sign It? Legal Guide for Karachi Apartment Buyers

Property Law · Pakistan

What Is an Addendum and Should You Sign It? Legal Guide for Karachi Apartment Buyers

Before you sign any addendum sent by your property developer, read this complete legal guide. Understanding what you are agreeing to — and what you are giving up — could save your investment.

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GNS Law Associates
Legal Team · Karachi  |  Updated June 2025  |  9 min read

🛑 Before you read further: If you have received an addendum from your developer and have been given a deadline, do NOT sign it until you have read this guide and consulted a lawyer. Signing even a seemingly minor addendum can permanently alter your legal rights.

What Is an Addendum in a Property Agreement?

In the context of a property sale, an addendum is a supplementary written document that a developer asks a buyer to sign. It is designed to modify, add to, or replace specific terms in the original sale agreement or booking form that was signed when you purchased or reserved your apartment.

An addendum is not the same as the original agreement. It is typically issued after the original agreement has been signed — often months or years later — and it requires your fresh signature to become legally effective.

📖 Legal definition: An addendum to a contract is only enforceable if it meets all the requirements of a valid contract under the Contract Act 1872 — including offer, acceptance, and most critically, free consent. Without your voluntary, informed signature, an addendum has no legal effect on the terms of your original agreement.

Addenda in Pakistan’s property market typically modify one or more of the following:

  • The total purchase price or per-square-foot rate
  • The payment schedule or instalment amounts
  • The expected possession or delivery date
  • Additional charges not in the original agreement
  • The developer’s liability for delays or defects
  • Dispute resolution mechanisms (such as replacing court jurisdiction with arbitration)
  • The specifications of the apartment (size, finishing, layout)

Why Developers Send Addenda — and Their Real Purpose

Developers typically justify sending addenda using one or more of these reasons:

  • Rising construction costs — inflation, increased material prices, higher labour costs
  • Currency devaluation — particularly relevant for imported materials
  • Regulatory changes — revised SBCA (Sindh Building Control Authority) requirements
  • Revised project specifications — changes to layout, size, or finishing
  • Extended completion timeline — delays requiring a new possession date

These explanations may be factually accurate. But they are irrelevant to your legal position unless your original agreement specifically allowed for such revisions.

Here is the reality: developers send addenda primarily to transfer commercial risk from themselves to the buyer. Rising costs are a business risk that the developer accepted when they signed the original agreement. An addendum is the developer’s attempt to make you absorb that risk retrospectively.

Key insight: A developer’s business difficulties — inflation, cost overruns, planning changes — do not give them the legal right to change the terms of your binding contract. If they could not complete the project profitably at the agreed price, that is a commercial risk they took on, not a burden they can legally pass to you.

What to Look for Before Signing Any Addendum

If you have received an addendum, you — or ideally your lawyer — should examine every clause for the following:

  • 🔍
    Price changes: Does the addendum increase the total price, the per-square-foot rate, or add any new charges? Compare every number to your original agreement line by line.
  • 🔍
    Payment schedule changes: Are instalment amounts, dates, or proportions being changed? A “minor revision” to the payment schedule can significantly increase your short-term financial burden.
  • 🔍
    Possession date extension: Is the addendum extending your possession date — and simultaneously removing your right to compensation for the original delay?
  • 🔍
    Waiver clauses: Does the addendum include language like “buyer waives all claims,” “buyer accepts revised terms as final,” or “buyer confirms no outstanding disputes”? These are the most dangerous clauses — they can erase existing legal claims you may have.
  • 🔍
    Jurisdiction change: Does the addendum change where disputes must be resolved — for example, moving from court jurisdiction to private arbitration? This can be disadvantageous for buyers.
  • 🔍
    Size or specification changes: Is the apartment’s carpet area, super area, floor, or finishing being revised — potentially downward — without a corresponding price reduction?
  • 🔍
    Liability limitation: Is the addendum capping the developer’s liability for delays, defects, or non-delivery at a lower amount than your actual investment?

Red Flags — Clauses That Should Make You Refuse

These are the clauses that most commonly cause serious, irreversible harm to buyers who sign addenda without legal review:

  • 🚨
    “The buyer waives all existing claims and disputes against the developer.” This clause — or any variation of it — would eliminate any legal claims you currently have or may have in future. Signing this can cost you your entire legal case.
  • 🚨
    “The buyer accepts the revised price as the final agreed consideration.” This replaces your original price with a higher amount and closes off your right to challenge the increase.
  • 🚨
    “The buyer acknowledges that possession has been delayed due to circumstances beyond the developer’s control and waives any claim for compensation.” This eliminates your right to damages for delay.
  • 🚨
    “All disputes shall be resolved through arbitration.” Arbitration clauses may remove your right to sue in civil court and force you into a private process that can be expensive and less buyer-friendly.
  • 🚨
    “By signing this addendum, the buyer confirms full satisfaction with the current state of the project.” This is a sweeping satisfaction clause that can be used to deny future defect or quality complaints.
  • 🚨
    Any clause you do not fully understand. If the language is complex, technical, or unclear — stop. Have a lawyer translate it into plain terms before you sign anything.

What Happens if You Do Not Sign the Addendum?

This is the question most buyers worry about — and the answer is more reassuring than most people expect.

If you do not sign the addendum, your original sale agreement remains fully in force. You continue to have all the rights you had when you first signed. Your payment obligations, possession rights, and legal remedies remain exactly as they were.

Developers often imply — or explicitly threaten — that not signing will result in cancellation of your booking. This is typically a pressure tactic rather than a legal reality.

For a developer to lawfully cancel your booking, they would generally need to:

  • Show that you have breached the original agreement — for example, by failing to make scheduled payments
  • Follow the dispute resolution process outlined in your original agreement
  • Issue proper legal notice before any cancellation

Simply refusing to sign an addendum is not a breach of your original agreement. If a developer attempts to cancel your booking for this reason, that cancellation may itself be an unlawful act — and your lawyer can apply for a court injunction to stop it.

Bottom line: Your signature is valuable. It modifies a binding contract. Never give it under pressure, under a deadline, or without legal review. The developer needs your signature far more than you need to give it.

Already Signed an Addendum Under Pressure? What to Do

If you have already signed an addendum — perhaps under threat of cancellation, under a tight deadline, or before you understood the full implications — this does not necessarily mean all your rights are permanently lost.

Under the Contract Act 1872 of Pakistan, a contract or contractual amendment entered into as a result of:

  • Coercion (Section 15) — threatening to cancel your booking unless you sign
  • Undue influence (Section 16) — using a position of power over you
  • Fraud or misrepresentation (Sections 17–18) — providing false information to induce your signature
  • Mistake (Sections 20–22) — you were fundamentally mistaken about what you were agreeing to

…is voidable at your option. This means you may be able to have the addendum set aside by a court and revert to the terms of your original agreement.

Act quickly. The ability to challenge a voidable contract is not unlimited in time. If you believe you signed an addendum under duress or misrepresentation, consult a lawyer as soon as possible. The longer you wait, the harder it may become to challenge.

Step-by-Step: What to Do When You Receive an Addendum

  1. Do not sign — even temporarily

    There is no such thing as “signing just to show willingness.” Any signature on a legal document has potential consequences. Set it aside and take time to assess.

  2. Read the addendum fully — all clauses, all pages

    Look specifically for waiver clauses, price changes, possession date extensions, and jurisdiction changes. Highlight anything you do not understand.

  3. Compare it to your original agreement

    Place the addendum next to your original sale agreement and identify every term that is being changed, added, or removed. Make a written list.

  4. Preserve all communications

    Screenshot or save all WhatsApp messages, emails, letters, and notices from your developer relating to the addendum. These are potential evidence if a dispute arises.

  5. Consult a property lawyer immediately

    Share the addendum, original agreement, and payment history with a lawyer. Ask them: (a) what you would be giving up by signing, (b) whether the developer has the right to demand this, and (c) what your legal options are.

  6. Respond formally in writing

    Do not respond verbally or through WhatsApp messages. Your lawyer can draft a formal written response — or a legal notice — that protects your position on the record.

  7. If threatened, seek immediate legal protection

    If the developer threatens cancellation, your lawyer can apply for an interim injunction from the Karachi civil courts to freeze the status quo while your case is assessed. This can be filed urgently.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an addendum the same as a new sale agreement?

No. An addendum modifies specific terms of the original agreement while the original remains in force for all other terms. However, if an addendum is comprehensive enough, it can effectively replace the original agreement — which is precisely why comprehensive addenda require the most careful legal review.

Can I negotiate the terms of an addendum?

Yes, absolutely. An addendum is a proposal from the developer. Like any contract negotiation, you can counter-propose, request removal of specific clauses, or propose alternative terms. Your lawyer can assist in this negotiation in writing, which creates a formal paper trail.

What if the addendum is sent via WhatsApp or email — is it still legally significant?

A WhatsApp message or email containing an addendum does not become legally binding unless you sign it. However, your written responses to such messages — including anything that could be construed as agreement or acceptance — could be used by the developer. Always have a lawyer review your responses before you send them.

The developer says they sent the addendum to “all buyers” — does that change my position?

No. The fact that an addendum was sent to multiple buyers does not give it greater legal force. Each buyer’s agreement is an individual contract. You are not bound by what other buyers choose to do. Your rights are determined by your own agreement, not by collective action by the developer.

Can I speak to a lawyer before the addendum deadline?

Yes — and you should. GNS Law Associates offers consultation via phone and WhatsApp for time-sensitive situations. We can review your addendum and give you a clear legal position often within the same day. Call or WhatsApp us on 03072924764.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every property dispute is fact-specific. Contact GNS Law Associates for advice tailored to your individual situation.

Received an Addendum? Don’t Sign Without Legal Advice.

Our Karachi-based property lawyers can review your addendum and original agreement, and tell you exactly what you would be giving up — before you decide anything.

💬 WhatsApp a Lawyer Now
📞 Call 03072924764

Or read our full guide: Property Dispute Lawyer Karachi →

Can a Property Developer Increase the Price After Agreement in Pakistan?

Property Law · Pakistan

Can a Property Developer Increase the Price After Agreement in Pakistan?

Everything Karachi apartment buyers and investors need to know about their legal rights when a developer demands extra payment beyond the original agreed price.

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GNS Law Associates
Legal Team · Karachi  |  Updated June 2025  |  8 min read

Short Answer: No — a property developer in Pakistan cannot legally increase the agreed purchase price without your written consent. The original signed agreement is a binding contract. Any unilateral demand for extra payment may be legally challenged, and you are not obligated to pay it.

If you have bought an apartment in Karachi and recently received a notice, letter, or addendum asking you to pay more than what you originally agreed to, you are not alone. This has become one of the most common complaints our legal team receives from property buyers across Karachi.

Developers cite inflation, rising construction costs, exchange rate fluctuations, and revised project specifications as justification for these increases. But the critical legal question is not why the developer is asking — it is whether they have the legal right to demand it.

The answer, in most cases, is no.

What Pakistani Law Says About Price Changes in Property Agreements

Property sale agreements in Pakistan are governed primarily by three statutes:

  • The Contract Act 1872 — governs the formation, validity, and enforceability of contracts
  • The Transfer of Property Act 1882 — governs the rights and obligations in property transactions
  • The Specific Relief Act 1877 — provides remedies including specific performance when a party breaches a contract

Under these laws, a sale agreement between a buyer and a developer is a bilateral contract. Both parties are bound by the terms agreed at the time of signing. Neither party can unilaterally alter those terms — including the price — without the written consent of the other party.

This is not a technicality or a loophole. It is the foundational principle of Pakistani contract law, established in the Contract Act 1872 and consistently upheld by Pakistani courts including the Sindh High Court.

📖 Section 2(e) of the Contract Act 1872 defines a contract as “an agreement enforceable by law.” Once both parties have signed an agreement with an agreed price, that price becomes a legally enforceable term. Changing it requires a new agreement — with fresh, free, and informed consent from both parties.

The Contract Act 1872 — Consent and Coercion

Perhaps the most important legal protection for buyers is found in the provisions about free consent in the Contract Act 1872.

Under Sections 13–22 of the Contract Act 1872, consent is only legally valid when it is:

  • Free — not obtained by coercion, undue influence, fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake
  • Informed — the party understands what they are agreeing to
  • Voluntary — not the result of pressure, threats, or force

This matters enormously for buyers facing developer price increases, because developers often accompany their demands with threats: “Sign this addendum or we will cancel your booking and forfeit your paid amount.”

That is coercion. And under Section 15 of the Contract Act 1872, a contract — or an amendment to a contract — entered into as a result of coercion is voidable at the option of the aggrieved party. That means you can have it set aside by a court.

⚠️ Important: If you have already signed an addendum under pressure, this does not necessarily mean you have permanently lost your rights. If your consent was obtained through coercion or threats, a lawyer can potentially challenge the validity of that addendum in court. Act quickly — do not delay.

What Is an Addendum and Is It Binding?

An addendum is a supplementary document that a developer asks you to sign to modify terms in your original sale agreement. Developers use addenda to:

  • Increase the total price or per-square-foot rate
  • Revise the payment schedule
  • Extend the delivery date
  • Add new charges (development charges, utility connection fees, etc.)
  • Reduce the developer’s liability for delays

Here is the critical point: an addendum is only legally binding if you sign it voluntarily, with full understanding of its contents, and without being subject to threats or undue pressure.

An unsigned addendum has no legal effect whatsoever on your original agreement. You are under no legal obligation to sign it.

Rule of thumb: Never sign any document sent by your developer without having a lawyer review it first. Even if the developer imposes a “deadline,” that deadline has no legal power to force your signature. The original agreement remains valid and enforceable whether or not you sign the addendum.

Common Scenarios Karachi Apartment Buyers Face

Based on the cases our legal team handles in Karachi, these are the most common situations:

Scenario 1: Mid-Construction Price Increase

You booked an apartment at an agreed price with a fixed payment plan. After one or two years of instalments, the developer sends a notice saying the price has increased due to “rising construction costs” and you must pay additional amounts.

Legal position: Your original agreement price is fixed and binding. The developer cannot unilaterally revise it. You may refuse to pay the additional amount and demand delivery at the original price.

Scenario 2: Addendum With Cancellation Threat

The developer sends an addendum with a deadline: sign by a certain date or your booking will be cancelled and your paid instalments forfeited.

Legal position: This is a coercive threat. The developer typically has no legal right to cancel your booking unilaterally if you have been making payments as per the original schedule. A lawyer can file for an injunction to prevent cancellation and challenge the addendum.

Scenario 3: Hidden Development Charges

At the time of possession or near completion, the developer presents a list of additional charges — development charges, utility connection fees, generator backup fees — not mentioned in the original agreement.

Legal position: Charges not stipulated in the original agreement are generally not legally enforceable. You may dispute them through a legal notice.

Scenario 4: Revised Payment Plan

The developer sends an addendum revising your payment schedule — asking for higher instalments or changing the instalment dates.

Legal position: Your original payment plan is a contractual obligation on both sides. You are entitled to continue paying on the original schedule. The developer cannot penalise you for following the terms you originally agreed to.

Your Legal Rights as a Property Buyer in Pakistan

SituationYour RightLegal Basis
Developer demands higher priceRight to refuse and demand original priceContract Act 1872, S.2(e)
Developer sends addendumRight to refuse to sign — unsigned addendum has no effectContract Act 1872, S.13
Threats of cancellationRight to file injunction preventing cancellationSpecific Relief Act 1877
Developer breaches original termsRight to file suit for specific performanceSpecific Relief Act 1877, S.12
Hidden charges demandedRight to dispute via legal noticeContract Act 1872, S.2(e)
Investment at riskRight to file recovery suit with damagesTransfer of Property Act 1882

What to Do If Your Developer Has Increased the Price

If you have received a price increase demand or an addendum from your developer, here is exactly what you should do — in order:

  1. Do not sign anything. Even if there is a deadline, your signature is not legally required. The deadline has no legal force over your decision.
  2. Preserve all documents. Save every notice, email, WhatsApp message, and letter received from the developer. Screenshot everything. These are your evidence.
  3. Locate your original agreement. Find your booking form, original sale agreement, and all payment receipts. Your lawyer will need these.
  4. Consult a property lawyer immediately. A lawyer will review your original agreement, assess the legal validity of the addendum or price demand, and advise on your strongest course of action.
  5. Send a formal legal notice. In many cases, a professionally drafted legal notice from a law firm is enough to make the developer back down — particularly when it references the relevant statutes and threatens filing of suit.
  6. File for injunction if cancellation is threatened. If your developer has threatened to cancel your booking, your lawyer can apply to the Karachi civil courts for an interim injunction preventing cancellation while your case proceeds.

💬 The sooner you act, the stronger your position. Evidence deteriorates, deadlines pass, and legal rights can be weakened by delay. If you received a demand or addendum, contact a lawyer today — not after the deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the developer forfeit my paid instalments if I refuse to sign?

Not without legal justification. If you have been making payments in accordance with the original agreement, the developer generally has no right to forfeit your paid amount simply because you refused to sign an addendum. An unjustified forfeiture can be challenged in court.

What if the original agreement has a price escalation clause?

Some agreements include an escalation clause that permits the developer to revise pricing under certain conditions. If your agreement contains such a clause, a lawyer must review whether the clause is legally enforceable, whether its conditions have actually been met, and whether the amount demanded is within those conditions. Escalation clauses are often drafted broadly and may not withstand judicial scrutiny.

Can I get a refund if I do not want to proceed?

If the developer is in breach of the original agreement — by demanding more than agreed, failing to deliver on time, or changing terms unilaterally — you may be entitled to rescission of the contract and recovery of your paid amount, potentially with damages. A lawyer can assess whether rescission or specific performance is the better remedy for your situation.

Can multiple buyers take collective action?

Yes. If several buyers in the same project have received the same addendum or price increase demand, collective legal action is possible and often more effective. It also significantly reduces per-person legal costs. Contact us to discuss collective proceedings.

How long does a property dispute case take in Karachi?

Injunction applications can be heard within days to weeks, providing fast interim relief. Full civil suits for specific performance or recovery take longer — typically 1–3 years. However, in many cases, a strongly worded legal notice resolves the dispute before it reaches the filing stage.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every property dispute is fact-specific. Contact GNS Law Associates for advice tailored to your individual situation.

Received a Price Increase Demand or Addendum?

Our Karachi-based legal team can review your agreement and advise you on your exact legal position — before you make any decision.

💬 WhatsApp a Lawyer Now
📞 Call 03072924764

Or read our main guide: Property Dispute Lawyer Karachi →