For nearly a decade, the Indian legal market has been dominated by a single narrative — that only corporate law firms grow, scale, and command influence. Arbitration, transactions, and large institutional retainers became the benchmarks of success. Family and matrimonial litigation, despite its complexity, remained largely underestimated.
PS Law Advocates & Solicitors (Preeti Singh & Associates) disrupted that assumption.
At a time when most firms were expanding boardrooms and corporate verticals, PS Law chose a path few were willing to take — exclusive specialisation in matrimonial and family law. The decision appeared unconventional then. Today, it defines the firm’s identity.
In a span of approximately ten years, PS Law has built a visible and unmistakable presence across three of India’s most premium legal districts — Lutyens’ Delhi at Babar Road, South Delhi’s Gulmohar Park, and Bandra West, Mumbai. The geography itself tells a story. Matrimonial litigation today is no longer confined to one courtroom or one city; it travels with wealth, mobility, and global families. The firm’s expansion reflects that reality with precision.
At the centre of this growth is Preeti Singh, Advocate-on-Record, Supreme Court of India. Known within legal circles as a formidable and fiery arguing counsel, Singh approaches matrimonial litigation with a mindset rarely associated with family courts — judicial discipline. An academician with a doctoral degree in law, her arguments often move beyond emotion into structured legal reasoning, particularly in areas of maintenance jurisprudence, privacy within marriage, and divorce as an issue of economic dignity rather than moral failure.
Several reported matters argued under her conduct are frequently cited by practitioners for reinforcing maintenance as a legal right, not charity; for asserting the right to residence of a daughter-in-law as enforceable household security; and for advancing privacy as an intrinsic component of matrimonial autonomy. These principles, once inconsistently applied, now form the backbone of modern family-court reasoning.
Supporting this framework is the firm’s co-founder, Dr. Sunklan Porwal, Advocate, widely regarded for his sharp, methodical, and strategically restrained approach. Where Singh dominates the courtroom through argument, Porwal operates through precision — managing structure, sequencing, and litigation control. Together, their partnership has produced a practice that balances intensity with discipline — a combination rarely sustained in matrimonial litigation.

What distinguishes PS Law is not scale, but focus.
While large firms chase volume through diversified verticals, PS Law has remained singularly committed to family law. That commitment has translated into trust among elite families, professionals, and high-net-worth individuals whose disputes involve layered asset structures, business interests, and sensitive personal information. For such clients, matrimonial litigation is not merely legal — it is reputational, financial, and generational.
Observers note that this preference is not aspirational branding but lived experience. Complex matrimonial disputes demand confidentiality, controlled disclosure, and long-term strategic oversight. PS Law’s growth has been organic — built not on advertising, but on outcomes, referrals, and credibility accumulated case by case.
In a legal environment where success is often measured by corporate billing and transaction size, PS Law Advocates & Solicitors has quietly demonstrated something different — that specialisation, conviction, and judicial depth can still build institutions.
Its rise stands as a reminder that Indian law is not shaped only in boardrooms and arbitration halls. Sometimes, the most consequential legal battles are fought where law meets life — and PS Law has chosen to stand precisely there.

