Yi Yangchun
Verified NEWProfile
Yi Yangchun is a Chinese lawyer at Sichuan Shulu Law Firm in Luzhou, Sichuan Province. He specializes in construction and engineering law, property disputes, and debt and credit dispute resolution. His practice focuses on real estate litigation, construction contracts, and commercial debt recovery for both individual and corporate clients.
With deep knowledge of Chinese property law and construction regulations, Mr. Yi handles cases involving land use rights disputes, real estate development conflicts, construction contract breach claims, and engineering payment disputes. The PRC Civil Code's Book on Property Rights governs the legal framework for land use rights, which are the fundamental basis for real estate development in China. Under Chinese law, all land is owned by the state (urban) or collectives (rural). Developers and individuals obtain land use rights for fixed periods: 70 years for residential, 50 years for industrial, and 40 years for commercial use. The grant of land use rights is typically through bid, auction, or listing processes conducted by local government land bureaus. Mr. Yi represents clients in disputes involving land use right grants, transfers, mortgages, and expropriation compensation.
In construction and engineering law, he handles contract disputes arising from construction projects, including contractor payment claims, project delay claims, and construction defect disputes. Construction contracts in China are governed by the Civil Code's contract provisions and must comply with the Construction Law and relevant regulations. The contractor must hold the appropriate qualification grade for the project type and scale. Subcontracting is permitted but may not exceed the scope allowed by regulation, and the main contractor remains liable to the project owner for the subcontractor's work. Mr. Yi helps contractors enforce their payment rights through statutory priority claims and litigation, and assists project owners in pursuing claims for defective work or delays. His understanding of the local Luzhou legal environment and Sichuan real estate market enables him to provide practical, results-oriented legal counsel to clients ranging from individual property owners to large construction enterprises. He also represents clients in commercial debt recovery matters, helping businesses and individuals recover outstanding amounts through negotiation, mediation, and litigation. Mr. Yi is committed to protecting clients' property rights and commercial interests through diligent case preparation and strategic legal advocacy.
Practice Focus for Yi Yangchun
Yi Yangchun advises foreign individuals and companies on China-related legal matters with an emphasis on clear process, bilingual documentation, and enforceable outcomes. The following sections expand the professional methodology used across active mandates.
Professional Approach
I build every engagement around a clear scope, a written strategy, and measurable milestones. Clients receive plain-language risk maps, document checklists, and decision trees before major steps are taken. I coordinate with translators, notaries, and local counsel when cross-border evidence or bilingual filings are required, and I keep privilege and confidentiality controls explicit from day one.
Communication is scheduled and documented. Status notes summarize what changed, what remains open, and what decision is needed from the client. I prefer early settlement pathways when they protect value, and I prepare litigation or arbitration files as if trial were inevitable so negotiation leverage stays real.
Working With Foreign Clients
Foreign individuals and companies often face unfamiliar filing windows, authority practices, and cultural expectations in Chinese proceedings. I translate those constraints into practical timelines, identify which facts must be proven with original seals versus certified copies, and design bilingual work products that remain usable in both home-country and PRC forums.
Where board approvals, power of attorney chains, or apostille/legalization steps are required, I sequence them so substantive work is not stalled. I also flag immigration, employment, and regulatory knock-on effects so a contract win does not create a compliance loss elsewhere.
Quality and Ethics
I do not promise outcomes. I promise disciplined process, candid risk assessment, and advocacy within the bounds of PRC law and professional rules. Fee arrangements, conflict checks, and engagement letters are handled before substantive advice begins. Sensitive personal data and commercial secrets are segregated with access limited to the matter team.
After closing a matter I deliver a short handover pack: final agreements, authority receipts, open obligations, and renewal or enforcement calendars. That discipline reduces repeat disputes and keeps institutional knowledge with the client.
Professional Approach
I build every engagement around a clear scope, a written strategy, and measurable milestones. Clients receive plain-language risk maps, document checklists, and decision trees before major steps are taken. I coordinate with translators, notaries, and local counsel when cross-border evidence or bilingual filings are required, and I keep privilege and confidentiality controls explicit from day one.
Communication is scheduled and documented. Status notes summarize what changed, what remains open, and what decision is needed from the client. I prefer early settlement pathways when they protect value, and I prepare litigation or arbitration files as if trial were inevitable so negotiation leverage stays real.
Working With Foreign Clients
Foreign individuals and companies often face unfamiliar filing windows, authority practices, and cultural expectations in Chinese proceedings. I translate those constraints into practical timelines, identify which facts must be proven with original seals versus certified copies, and design bilingual work products that remain usable in both home-country and PRC forums.
Where board approvals, power of attorney chains, or apostille/legalization steps are required, I sequence them so substantive work is not stalled. I also flag immigration, employment, and regulatory knock-on effects so a contract win does not create a compliance loss elsewhere.
Specific details
Location
Area of Expertise Details
Yi Yangchun's Articles
Lawyers practice the same law
Weisheng Liang is a Xiangtan-based lawyer practicing at Hunan Furong Law Firm, specializing in...
Attorney Shubing Jin practices property disputes at Lantai Law Firm (Nanjing Office) in Suqian...


