The Yehoshua Diamant Law Firm is well experienced in appearing before all courts,including the civil, administrative, high, and supreme courts. Moreover, the legal team regularly appears before planning and taxation bodies, provincial and national planning & zoning committees, appeals committees, and others. Under this framework, the firm represents clients in civil litigation procedures relating to real estate issues: ownership rights to land, contractual relations, monetary claims, legal feuds relating to changes in a land's purpose, broadening planning permission, real estate taxation, entitlement to compensation for violation of the real estate assets, and coping with different objecting elements.
Amongst the largest and most significant cases the firm has ever handled, is the winning case against the Ministry of Housing, in which our client filed a lawsuit demanding refunds for the construction of infrastructure for development. This was the first and only win in such a case to this day. Another key matter was the successful delay of expropriation of land and building a road over lands of landowners that have owned the ground for a decade. Additionally, we have represented hundreds of landowners in central Israel in their claims against the state of Israel, due to a change in the designation of their lands that would be turned into a national park and rural landscape, an action which immediately removes any possibility and opportunity to build over such lands.
Amongst the largest and most significant cases the firm has ever handled, is the winning case against the Ministry of Housing, in which our client filed a lawsuit demanding refunds for the construction of infrastructure for development. This was the first and only win in such a case to this day. Another key matter was the successful delay of expropriation of land and building a road over lands of landowners that have owned the ground for a decade. Additionally, we have represented hundreds of landowners in central Israel in their claims against the state of Israel, due to a change in the designation of their lands that would be turned into a national park and rural landscape, an action which immediately removes any possibility and opportunity to build over such lands.