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How a Retired Teacher Won His Property Dispute Using ShreeKundli's Muhurat and Prashna Features

| | 7 min read
Name Baldev Singh
Age 60
City Amritsar, Punjab
Occupation Retired Schoolteacher

Three Feet That Became Eighteen Months of War

Baldev Singh's house on the outskirts of Amritsar has been in his family since 1978, when his father — a sub-inspector in the Punjab Police — built it on a quarter-acre plot near the Golden Temple road. Baldev grew up there, raised his two sons there, and retired from Government Senior Secondary School No. 4 there in 2023 after thirty-two years of teaching mathematics. The house was more than property. It was his father's legacy.

In early 2024, his neighbor — a younger man who had purchased the adjacent plot five years earlier — began construction on a boundary wall. Baldev watched from his rooftop as the wall went up. Something looked wrong. He pulled out his original survey documents and measured. The wall was three feet inside his property line. Three feet does not sound like much until you realize it consumed his entire side garden — the strip where his wife grew tulsi and where his grandchildren played on Sunday visits.

Baldev approached the neighbor politely. Then firmly. Then through the local panchayat. Then through a mutual acquaintance. Nothing worked. The neighbor produced a survey document of his own — one that Baldev was certain had been manipulated. Eighteen months of arguments, four panchayat meetings, two shouting matches in the street, and a relationship between neighbors that deteriorated into complete silence.

A Son's Suggestion and a Prashna Question

Baldev's younger son Harpreet, a software engineer in Chandigarh, had started using ShreeKundli after a colleague recommended it. He knew his father was losing sleep over the dispute. "Papa, you have been fighting for eighteen months. Try asking the chart one question before you spend money on a lawyer."

Baldev was a man of science — he had taught algebra and trigonometry for three decades. But he was also Punjabi, raised in a household where Gurbani and planetary awareness coexisted without contradiction. He sat at his son's laptop and opened Prashna. He typed the question that had consumed him: "Will I win this property dispute?"

Prashna Chart Analysis

6th Lord (Enemies/Litigation): Weak and combust — the opponent's position is unsustainable and legally fragile.
4th Lord (Property/Home): Strong and well-placed — the querent's claim on the property is solid and supported.
Jupiter's Aspect: On the 4th house — divine protection over ancestral property. Favorable for legal proceedings initiated on a Thursday during Jupiter Hora.

The Prashna chart could not have been clearer. The 6th lord — representing enemies and litigation — was weak and combust, suggesting the opponent's position was fundamentally unsustainable. The 4th lord — representing property, home, and land — was strong and dignified, indicating that the querent's property claim was well-founded and protected. Jupiter's benefic aspect on the 4th house added a layer of what Vedic astrologers call "divine favor in matters of ancestral wealth."

"I am a maths teacher. I do not believe in things without evidence. But the Prashna chart described my situation better than any lawyer had. My property position strong, my enemy's position weak. That was exactly the legal reality — I had the original survey, he had a questionable copy."
— Baldev Singh

Finding the Right Day to Fight

Encouraged by the Prashna result, Baldev decided to file a formal legal complaint. But Harpreet suggested one more step: using ShreeKundli's Muhurat Finder to select the optimal date for sending the legal notice. The Muhurat feature analyzed upcoming dates and identified a Thursday — Jupiter's day — during Jupiter Hora in the morning, with the Moon in a favorable nakshatra, as the strongest window for initiating legal proceedings related to property.

Baldev hired a lawyer in Amritsar — a retired judge's son who came recommended by a fellow teacher. Together, they drafted a legal notice citing the original 1978 survey documents, municipal records, and a fresh survey from a licensed government surveyor that Baldev had commissioned. The notice was sent on the recommended Thursday, by registered post, at 9:40 AM during Jupiter Hora.

"My lawyer looked at me strangely when I insisted on Thursday morning specifically," Baldev recalls with a slight smile. "I told him — I have calculated the variables. He thought I meant legal variables. I meant planetary ones."

The Wall Came Down Before the First Hearing

The legal notice was received by the neighbor the following Monday. Within two weeks, the neighbor's own lawyer apparently advised him that his survey document would not withstand scrutiny in court, especially against original government-stamped records from 1978 and a fresh independent survey. The legal exposure was significant — not just demolition costs but potential charges of document fraud.

Three weeks after the notice was sent, Baldev woke to the sound of hammering. He walked to his window and watched as a crew of four laborers dismantled the encroaching wall, brick by brick. The neighbor supervised silently. No conversation, no acknowledgment, no apology. But the wall came down. Every inch of it. Before a single court date was set.

Baldev's wife replanted the tulsi garden the following weekend. His grandchildren played there the Sunday after.

"Eighteen months of talking achieved nothing. One legal notice, sent on the right day, resolved everything in three weeks. I have taught thousands of students that timing matters in mathematics. Now I know it matters in life too."
— Baldev Singh

Disclaimer: This is a real user story shared with consent. Names and identifying details have been changed for privacy. Astrological guidance is for informational purposes and should complement, not replace, professional legal counsel. Individual results may vary. ShreeKundli does not guarantee specific life outcomes.