CASE LAW HOUSING
Late possession/ No possession/
Defective dwelling/ Area less/ Cost escalation/ Forfeiture of registration fee
in case of cancellation of flat/ Approach road dispute
M.G.Gupta V Lukhnow
Development Authority SC 1993
Facts of the case:
Authority invited
applications,applications were more than flatsavailable, draw,full
payment made as per demand,possession not given as flate not ready.
§ Consumer forum in
favour
§ State commission held
in favour
§ Authority raised one more
plea of jurisdiction of the commission –not consumer National commission held
in favour .
Supreme court along with
many cases. Laid down Law;
!)Purchaser is a
consumer against board/construction company for services hired
!!)Erring officer can be
penalized with the payment of compensation which is to
be paid to the consumer
2 Ghaziabad Development
Authority V Balbir SinghSC,2004 ,[CTJ]PAGE 605 .
Law laid down
!)Order for
interest on the amount deposited should be on the basis of facts of the case
and not always @18% as ordered by National commission.
!!)If order
for interest is given ,there should not be any further order for
compensation as both the things cannot go together
!!!)In case where
compensation for mental agony is given,there should not be any tax deduction at
sourse as such compensation is not an income
3. Banglore Development
Authority VS Syndicate Bank Y 17 MAY, 2005
R V RAVEENDRAN
Laws Laid Down;
!) Delay in delivery of the HIG
houses / possession of the houses amounts to deficiency in services
!!) interest granted on
the price paid, at the bank rate from 01.01.1986 till date the delivery of the
houses
!!!) Reimbursement of the
losses incurred on account of the non-delivery.-rent paid by the allottee
during delay period
4. U.T Chandigah Administration
And Others V Amarjeet Singh And Others (Supreme Court ) Cp Page 486 ,It Was Held By The
Apex Court :
“That where an auction is on
‘as is where is basis’ with reference to a public auction of the existing site
,the purchase /lessee is not a consumer ,the owner is not a service provider ”
5.Faqir Chand Gulati V/S Uppal
Agencies Pvt. Ltd. & Anr .Civil Appeal No. 3302 Of 2005 Date Of
Judgment: July 10, 2008 SC
“ land owner, who enters into
an agreement with a builder, for construction of an Apartment Building and for
sharing of the constructed area, is a `consumer' entitled to maintain a
complaint against the builder as a service-provider under the Consumer Protection
Act, 1986.’
‘The District Forum, the
State Commission and the National Commission committed a serious error in
wrongly assuming that agreements of this nature being in the nature of joint
venture are outside the scope of consumer disputes.’
6. Nahal chand Laloo chand P. Ltd.
vs. Panchali Co-Op. Housing Sty. Ltd.
On August 31, 2010, the Hon’ble
Supreme Court of India, in the case of Nahalchand Laloochand P. Ltd. vs. Panchali Co-Op. Housing
Sty. Ltd. held that Portions of their flat complexes, usable as parking
spaces, cannot be sold separately by flat builders/promoters/developers as
“garage”. The court reasoned that these spaces are part of the “common
areas” in flat complexes and are therefore not “saleable independently as a
flat or along with a flat”.
“Open-to-sky” areas or
“stilted” (covered) This is a landmark judgment, and the first to conclusively
deal with this issue. .
7. Neha Singhal Vs M/s. Unitech Limited
‘ that fact alone cannot
suffice to oust the territorial jurisdiction of the (Delhi) State Commission to
adjudicate upon the complaint, in view of the specific provisions of section 11
(2) (b) of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 (‘the Act’). To emphasise, the
clause relating to jurisdiction of “courts” in the agreement between the
parties cannot by itself over-ride the statutory right of the appellant/
complainant conferred by the above-mentioned provision of the Act – that
would defeat the purpose and object of the Act. This view is also in accord
with the provisions of section 28 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (as amended
with effect from 8th January 1997).’
9. . Amrapali
Sapphire Developers v/s Amrapali Sapphire Flat Buyers Welfare
Association
The 43 buyers got together and formed Amrapali Sapphire Flat
Buyers Welfare Association, to file the complaint against the builder in May
2016, for delay in handing over possession of their flats.
The Supreme Court (SC) announced on Tuesday that flat owners can now
join hands and directly approach the National Consumer
Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC)
against real estate developers for delay in handing over possession of
their flats,
Highlights:
1. Flat buyers can come
together to file complain against developers with NCDRC
2. The 43 buyers had complained
against Amrapali Sapphire Developers to the Supreme Court for delay in handing
over possession of their flats
3. As per the Consumer
Protection Act, a plea can be filed in NCDRC directly only if the cost involved
is more than Rs 1 crore
Realtors body CREDAI
today expressed concern that the Supreme Court judgement that flat buyers can
jointly approach the apex consumer commission NCDRC will open the floodgates of
legal cases against builders
10. Financial creditor
cannot take over home belongings of homebuyers.-supreme court of india
IBC- (Insolvency and bankruptcy
Code-2016) visa Vis Real estate regulation and development act 2016
IBC allows companies to file
insolvency proceedings so that they can provide relief to the debtors or
creditors
RERA was implemented with the sole motive of getting justice for
aggrieved homebuyers and penalizing builders or developers if the project is
delayed
These two laws contradict each
other and the question is if developer defaults, whether the homebuyer should approach
RERA or BIC.
Supreme Court in Amrapali case held that financial creditor cannot
take over home belongings of homebuyers. In other words, the Supreme Court
upheld the rights of home buyers ahead of the creditors.
Be noted,
Funds Utilization Norms set
under New RERA ACT 2016
(Real Estate Regulators And
Developers Act 2016
“Developer obliged to park 70% of the project funds in a dedicated
bank account to ensure that developers are not able to invest in numerous new
projects with the proceeds of the booking money for one project.’
The above clause comes to
rescue the home buyers against BIC 2016
The Supreme Court, while delivering its
judgement on 2nd April 2019, in the case of Pioneer Urban Land &
Infrastructure Ltd Vs Govindan Raghavan, has held that terms of a contract will
not be final and binding if it is shown that the flat purchasers had no option
but to sign on the dotted line, on a contract framed by the builder. It further
held that incorporation of one-sided clauses in an agreement constitutes an
unfair trade practice as per Section 2 (r) of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986
since it adopts unfair methods or practices for the purpose of selling the
flats by the builder.
Become a Member of the new revolution "Consumer Awakening" and instantly expand your knowledge with the Important Landmark Judgements, Laws Laid down by the Supreme Court for Consumer Rights, Get access to hundreds of Featured Articles in 2 different Languages; English and Hindi - a valuable professional resource to draw upon, and a powerful, collective voice to advocate for your protection of rights as a consumer nationwide.
Thank you for your interest in becoming a "Consumer Awakening" Member!
You will find information on Customer Rights, what we're doing and how to become a member. If you are looking forward to become a member of our portal and gain access to Hundreds of Featured Articles which will clearly give you an insight of yoru rights as a Consumer, then Read Further. more detail on our technologies and technology process,