In a sharp reminder of how bureaucratic delays and administrative lethargy can permanently erode public open spaces, the Bombay High Court has ruled that a prime plot of land reserved for a playground in Karvenagar, Pune, has lapsed and now belongs back to the New Lotus Co-operative Housing Society Ltd.

In a detailed judgment delivered on 23 April 2026 by the Division Bench of Justices M. S. Karnik and S. M. Modak, the Court declared that the reservation on Survey Nos. 39/1 and 40/1 (total area approx. 1.97 hectares) in Karvenagar has lapsed under Section 127 of the Maharashtra Regional & Town Planning (MRTP) Act, 1966. The Society can now develop the land for residential and commercial purposes permissible in the adjoining area.

The Backdrop: 60 Years of Reservation, 25 Years of Inaction

The land was first reserved for a High School (HS-15) in Pune’s Development Plan of 1966 and continued under the same reservation in the 1987 plan. The New Lotus Co-operative Housing Society purchased the privately owned land through a registered sale deed on 2 August 2000.

Frustrated by the decades-long lock-up of its land, the Society served a formal purchase notice under Section 127 of the MRTP Act on the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) on 18 September 2001. The notice was duly received by PMC’s reception on 26 September 2001.

Under the law, once such a notice is served, the planning authority (PMC) is given exactly six months to either acquire the land or at least commence acquisition proceedings. If it fails to do so, the reservation is deemed to have lapsed automatically by operation of law.

What is Section 127 of the MRTP Act? (The Game-Changer)

Section 127 is one of the most powerful protective provisions for landowners in Maharashtra. It prevents planning authorities from keeping private land under reservation indefinitely without acquiring it.

In simple words:

  • If any land is reserved in a Development Plan for a public purpose (school, playground, road, etc.) and is not acquired within 10 years from the date the plan comes into force,
  • The owner can serve a purchase notice calling upon the authority to acquire it.
  • The authority then gets 6 months (as applicable in 2001) to take concrete steps for acquisition.
  • If it fails, the reservation automatically lapses and the land is released to the owner for development as per the zoning of the surrounding area.

This provision acts as a statutory “use-it-or-lose-it” deadline to protect property owners from endless uncertainty.

PMC’s Contradictory Stand Exposed

Despite receiving the notice, PMC took its own sweet time. It passed resolutions in 2002 and 2005, prepared acquisition proposals, and even executed an agreement with the State in 2007 — all after the six-month deadline had expired. Later, when the Development Plan was revised in 2013, the reservation was changed from High School to Playground (PG-34).

When the Society approached the High Court in 2010 (and filed a connected petition in 2016), PMC took contradictory stands:

  • First claiming the 2001 notice was “not traceable”,
  • Then arguing it was not a valid Section 127 notice.

The Court rejected all these arguments outright. It relied on RTI replies and internal PMC letters that clearly proved the notice was received and acted upon. The judges observed that PMC’s flip-flop was “unfair to the property owner whose land has been blocked for so long.”

Court’s Verdict

The Bombay High Court held:

  • A valid purchase notice under Section 127 was duly served and received.
  • PMC failed to take steps within the mandatory six-month period.
  • Therefore, the reservation lapsed by operation of law as far back as March 2002.
  • All subsequent actions, including the change of reservation to playground, are of no legal effect.

The Court allowed the Society’s writ petition and declared that the land is now free for the Society to develop. The connected petition challenging the revised Development Plan was also disposed of.

A Wake-Up Call for Municipal Corporations

This judgment is a textbook illustration of how sheer administrative delay and bureaucratic inertia can permanently deprive cities of much-needed open spaces. Instead of acquiring the land within the statutory timeline, PMC’s procrastination has resulted in the loss of a reserved playground — turning it into developable land for a housing society.

For housing societies and landowners across Maharashtra, the message is loud and clear: Section 127 is your strongest legal weapon against indefinite reservation of private property.

Advocates Senior Advocate Surel Shah with Advocate Amey Deshpande and team appeared for the Society. The State and PMC were represented by Additional Government Pleaders and Advocate Abhijit Kulkarni.

Also Read: Maharashtra Govt Issues Orders to Regularise Pre-2011 Residential Encroachments on Govt Land

You May Also Like

Lodha Reports Record Q2 Pre-Sales of ₹45.7 Billion, Profit Doubles Amid Market Momentum

Lodha Group has posted record Q2 FY26 pre-sales of ₹45.7 billion and nearly doubled profits, achieving its full-year development target within six months. With a strong balance sheet, sustainability focus, and entry into data infrastructure, the developer is positioning itself for India’s next phase of housing and digital growth.

Disputed Property in BDD will be put on Director’s Name

Disputed properties of which legal heirs haven’t yet decided who will be…

Housing Society tired of no work by builder, opts for self redevelopment

This housing society was tired of no work being carried out by…

Homebuyers Win Big: Tribunal Nixes Builder Moratorium, Orders Compensation for Delays

In a landmark decision, the Maharashtra Real Estate Appellate Tribunal has ordered developer Sheth Infraworld to compensate homebuyers for significant project delays, specifically disallowing the use of the pandemic-related moratorium as an excuse. This ruling marks a crucial victory for allottees seeking timely possession and fair compensation.