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Bombay HC upholds RERA

December 06, 2017 16:36 IST

The Bombay high court on Wednesday upheld the validity of the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act (RERA), saying its objective is to develop the real
estate sector.

A bench of Justices Naresh Patil and Rajesh Ketkar pronounced its judgment on a bunch of petitions filed by real estate developers and individual plot owners, all
challenging the constitutional validity of the Act that was brought into effect in May this year.

 

The bench, headed by Justice Patil, however, allowed a significant leeway for the developers in the judgment by permitting the state-level RERA Authority and the Appellate Tribunal to consider delays on a case-to-case basis, and not to cancel such projects or developers' registration in cases where the delay was caused due to "exceptional and compelling circumstances."

"In case the authority is satisfied that there are exceptional and compelling circumstances due to which a developer could not complete the project inspire the one year extension granted, then the authority will be entitled to let the developers' registration continue," the court said.

"Such powers shall be exercised on a case-to-case basis. The authority shall consult with the state in such cases if needed," the high court bench said.

The bench ruled that the Act was crucial to protect the interest of flat buyers across the country.

"RERA is not a law relating to only regulatory control the promoters (developers), but its objective is to develop the real estate sector, particularly the incomplete projects
across the country," the bench said.

"The problems are enormous. It's time to take a step forward to fulfil dreams of the Father of the Nation, Mahatma Gandhi, to wipe every tear from every eye," Justice Patil said.

The Act, among other things, mandates that all developers or promoters register themselves under a state level regulatory authority.

It also allows buyers to claim compensation for delay in possession, and envisages cancellation of a developer's registration and imposition of severe penalties in case where the developer fails to complete the project within the stipulated deadline.

Most of the developers had challenged a provision of 'force majeure or a natural disaster' -- that allowed an extension of the deadline by a maximum of one year, if the
delay was caused on account of natural disasters such as earthquakes or floods.

The developers had also opposed the composition of the state-level RERA Authority and the Appellate Tribunal.

The HC did not interfere with the composition of the state-level authority, but it ruled that the tribunal must be headed by a judicial officer and not a bureaucrat, or a
member of the Indian legal services, and that majority of the members of such tribunal must be officers or members of the judiciary.

The Centre and the state had vehemently defended the Act, and justified the strict provisions by arguing that the same were meant to protect buyers, and to rein in rogue
developers.

While the bench concurred with the state and the Union government's arguments, it said that the authorities must also closely monitor the implementation of the Act.

"We are conscious of the fact that the actual implementation of RERA needs to be closely monitored in the years to come," the bench said.

In September, after several petitions challenging RERA were filed in high courts across the country, the Supreme Court stayed the proceedings in other courts and suggested that the Bombay high court hear its RERA cases first.

Other courts should wait for the Bombay high court's decision before hearing RERA-related matters, it said, while directing the high court here to expedite the hearings.

Photograph: Reuters.

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