From Navan, Ashbourne and Dunboyne’s commuter belt to the farms and villages of rural Meath, the county’s urgent legal problems span both worlds: the boundary dispute where development meets farmland, the blocked lane that stops the herd moving, the unauthorised yard the neighbours have watched grow, the dismissal at the M3-corridor employer, the papers served with days to answer. The practice serves Meath from Ormond Quay - minutes from the Four Courts, where the urgent applications go - with out-of-hours availability.
Urgent Work for Meath
Meath’s urgent pattern is distinctive: agricultural and boundary emergencies where farmland, development land and commuter estates meet - trespass, contested boundaries and blocked rights of way with genuine livelihood stakes (machinery access, the herd’s movements, the silage window), handled with the firm’s dedicated farm practice behind the file; section 160 planning enforcement across a county where land use evolves faster than permissions - the extended yard, the repurposed shed, the creeping commercial use - both the objecting neighbour’s application and the farming or developing respondent’s defence; property and possession emergencies on development land; and the commuter economy’s full business spectrum - employment injunctions, springboard cases, company disputes. Rural urgency is real urgency: the quia timet sprint before the digger, the strong letter today, and delay avoided - because the court asked to stop works this week asks why you watched all season.
How the Practice Serves Meath
Meath clients get a practice that understands both of the county’s worlds: the agricultural grounding of the firm’s dedicated farm practice - the yard’s realities native rather than translated - and the corporate and employment depth the commuter economy needs, all backed by the Four Courts proximity that makes urgent applications logistically clean and a contentious history running since 1981. Consultations are phone-first for urgent matters with documents by email; the Mediation Diploma matters especially in Meath’s neighbour and farm-family disputes, where the parties share a parish long after the case ends.
Two Minutes Before You Call
The Injunction Type Finder maps your scenario to the remedy it typically involves, and the Injunction Readiness Check tests your urgency and evidence position — both free, both running entirely on your device.
Something Moving in Meath?
Urgent calls taken, including out of hours - one conversation maps the realistic position before anything is committed.
Call 01 5827148