Lessons Every Homebuyer Must Learn from a MahaRERA Appellate Tribunal Judgment
Buying a home is often the biggest financial decision of one’s life. Yet, many homebuyers unknowingly make legal mistakes that can completely strip them of protection under real estate laws. A recent judgment of the Maharashtra Real Estate Appellate Tribunal (MREAT) is a stark reminder that emotions and trust cannot replace documentation and legal compliance.
The case highlights how buyers who paid money and waited for years were still not recognised as “allottees” under RERA, leaving them without relief.
Here are the critical lessons every homebuyer must learn from this judgment.
1. Never Rely on an Unregistered Agreement
In this case, the buyers relied on an unregistered agreement for sale from 1996.
The Tribunal held that:
- An unregistered agreement carries weak legal value
- Inconsistencies in signatures raised doubts about authenticity
- Without a valid agreement, allotment itself becomes questionable
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
Always ensure your Agreement for Sale is registered. An unregistered document can collapse your entire case—no matter how old or emotionally significant it is.
2. Receipts Are Not Enough—Bank Proof Is Mandatory
The buyers claimed they paid the entire consideration and produced receipts.
However:
- They failed to show bank statements proving money reached the society or developer
- One major payment was made to a third party, not the society
- The society denied receiving any money
The Tribunal ruled that receipts without banking proof do not establish payment.
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
Always pay only to the promoter’s official bank account and preserve:
- Bank statements
- Cheque details
- Transaction references
Without this, RERA protection may not apply.
3. Don’t Pay Money to Middlemen or Consultants
Part of the money was paid to Dalvi & Associates, who were not parties to the project.
The Tribunal completely rejected this as valid consideration payment.
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
Never pay money to:
- Consultants
- Agents
- “Project coordinators”
- Society office bearers personally
Only the promoter or registered entity can legally receive consideration.
4. Society Member vs Homebuyer: Know the Difference
The buyers argued they were members of the cooperative society.
This backfired.
The Tribunal held that:
- Disputes between society members and the society fall under the Maharashtra Cooperative Societies Act
- Such disputes cannot be decided by MahaRERA
- Jurisdiction lies with the Cooperative Court
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
If your dispute is about:
- Membership
- Society rights
- Internal allotment issues
RERA may not help you. Jurisdiction matters as much as merits.
5. Old Transactions Need Stronger Documentation
The transaction dated back nearly 25 years.
Over time:
- Bank records were missing
- Parties changed
- Developers completed the project and handed over flats to others
The Tribunal found the buyers unable to prove continuity of their claim.
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
For old projects or delayed developments:
- Keep documents digitised
- Periodically assert your rights legally
- Don’t wait decades to take action
6. RERA Protection Is Not Automatic
The biggest misconception exposed by this case is that anyone who paid money is an “allottee.”
The Tribunal clarified:
- Allottee status must be proved
- Documentation, payment trail, and jurisdiction decide protection
- Sympathy cannot override legal requirements
📌 Lesson for homebuyers:
RERA protects prepared buyers, not careless ones.
Final Takeaway: Trust Documents, Not Promises
This judgment is a wake-up call for homebuyers who:
- Trust verbal assurances
- Skip registration
- Pay informally
- Delay legal action
In real estate, what you can prove matters more than what you believe.
Also Read: Renewal of Lease = New Lease, Attracts Stamp Duty Bombay High Court