Ex Post Chambers is the personal practice of an enrolled advocate. It is not a firm. It does not take on volume work, and it does not maintain a roster of associates. What it offers is direct, considered advocacy — the enrolled advocate appears in the matter.
Briefs are accepted selectively. This is a deliberate constraint. It exists to protect the quality of representation that each matter receives. A chambers that takes every brief is not a chambers — it is a production line.
Ex Post does not offer general legal advice, corporate compliance work, or documentation services. For advisory work, see Ex Ante Consult.
"The value of advocacy is not volume. It is the advocate's presence of mind in the matter before them."
The chambers takes briefs in five areas of law. Each reflects the advocate's training and continued practice. Matters outside these areas are not accepted.
Writ petitions, fundamental rights enforcement, constitutional interpretation, and challenges to legislative competence. The Constitution is not a static document — its provisions require continued engagement with the courts that interpret them. Ex Post brings considered constitutional argument to High Courts and the Supreme Court.
Civil suits, injunction applications, execution proceedings, and writ jurisdiction under Articles 226 and 32. Civil procedure is often underestimated. A matter that fails at the threshold on procedural grounds has failed entirely. Ex Post approaches civil procedure with the same care it brings to substantive law.
Bail applications, anticipatory bail, criminal trials, and revision petitions. Criminal matters require speed and precision in equal measure. Ex Post takes criminal briefs where the matter presents a genuine legal question — not as a volume criminal practice.
PIL before High Courts and the Supreme Court on matters of genuine public interest. PIL is an instrument that must be used with restraint and responsibility. Ex Post takes PIL briefs that are grounded in articulable legal injury and are not in the nature of personal grievance dressed as public cause.
Domestic arbitration proceedings, enforcement of awards, and court proceedings arising from arbitral disputes under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act. Arbitration briefs are accepted selectively, particularly in disputes involving contractual and commercial questions with a constitutional or statutory law dimension.
Every matter begins with a conference — not a consultation, but a structured exchange. The advocate reads the papers before the meeting. The conference is for questions, not for the advocate to read documents in the presence of the client.
Before any matter proceeds, the legal question is stated in writing. If the question cannot be stated clearly, the matter is not ready to proceed. Many disputes are resolved at this stage — not because they lack merit, but because they lack a clear legal question.
Pleadings are drafted from principle. Not from precedent alone — from the principle that the precedent stands for. A brief that restates what courts have said, without engaging with why they said it, is a brief that has not been thought through.
Ex Post Chambers appears in the matter. The advocate who conferences with you is the advocate who argues. This is not common. It should be.
Ex Post Chambers is not a full-service law firm. It does not maintain a panel of associates, offer documentation services, or take on compliance and advisory work. It is not structured to handle high volumes of identical matters.
If you are looking for a law firm to manage all your legal work, Ex Post is not the right fit. If you have a matter that requires an advocate to think through a legal question carefully and argue it in court, this is the chambers.
Ex Post Chambers does not accept enquiries through forms or social media. Contact is by email only. Matters are reviewed before any conference is scheduled.
Include a brief statement of the matter in your email. The advocate reads all enquiries personally. Conferences are not scheduled until the matter has been reviewed.
Typically within 48 working hours.