In a significant ruling that strengthens buyer protection under India’s real estate law, the Maharashtra Real Estate Appellate Tribunal (MahaREAT) has held that developers cannot deny RERA rights by later branding a transaction as an “investment”, if money was taken and flats were promised with possession timelines—even through a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

The judgment, delivered on 23 December 2025, arose from a long-running dispute between M/s Saffron Infradev Pvt. Ltd. and Golden Dreams Buildcon Pvt. Ltd. over a residential project named “Flamingo” at Chikalthana, Aurangabad (now Chhatrapati Sambhaji Nagar).

In doing so, MahaREAT set aside a 2020 MahaRERA order, sharply criticising it for misclassifying a homebuyer as a promoter and granting reliefs that were never even sought.


Background: ₹7 Crore Paid, 35 Flats Promised, Possession Never Given

The dispute traces its origin back to October 2012, when Saffron Infradev paid ₹7 crore upfront to Golden Dreams Buildcon under a Memorandum of Understanding dated 18 October 2012.

Under this MoU, the developer agreed to:

  • Allot 35 residential flats in the “Flamingo” project
  • Complete construction and hand over possession by September 2013
  • Execute registered agreements for sale
  • Pay a high rate of interest (27%) in case of delay

However:

  • No registered agreements for sale were executed
  • Possession was never handed over
  • Only one wing of the project was later registered under MahaRERA

With years passing and no delivery, the dispute eventually reached MahaRERA, which passed an order in February 2020.


MahaRERA’s 2020 Order: Buyer Turned Into ‘Promoter’

In its earlier order, MahaRERA took the view that:

  • Saffron Infradev was not an allottee
  • The transaction was investment-driven
  • The buyer should be reflected as a co-promoter with area-sharing rights, instead of being granted buyer remedies like possession or interest

This order surprised both parties and led to cross appeals before MahaREAT, with:

  • The buyer challenging denial of RERA protection
  • The developer opposing any buyer-centric relief

Key Question Before MahaREAT: Investor or Allottee?

At the heart of the appeal was a crucial legal question:

Can a person who invests money but is promised flats under an MoU still be treated as an “allottee” under RERA?

The answer, MahaREAT made clear, is yes.


MoU Can Amount to Allotment, Tribunal Holds

MahaREAT held that the MoU of 18 October 2012 was not a vague investment document, but satisfied all the essential ingredients of an allotment, including:

  • Identification of the project
  • Clear number of flats promised
  • Defined consideration amount
  • Fixed possession timeline
  • Consequences for delay

The Tribunal ruled that once flats are promised against consideration, the nature of the transaction changes.

Merely labelling it an “investment” cannot strip the buyer of statutory protection under RERA.


Big Finding: Even Investors Promised Homes Are Protected Under RERA

One of the most far-reaching observations of the judgment is MahaREAT’s clear stand that:

  • RERA does not bar investors from being allottees
  • Even a speculative or bulk buyer is entitled to protection if the promoter commits to delivering homes
  • Supreme Court rulings excluding speculative investors in insolvency cases do not automatically apply to RERA matters

This clarification has wide implications, as it protects structured real estate investments, bulk bookings, and redevelopment-linked deals, provided homes are promised.


Tribunal Slams MahaRERA for Overreach

MahaREAT did not stop at correcting the outcome—it also strongly criticised MahaRERA’s approach, noting that:

  • MahaRERA granted a relief not even prayed for
  • Declaring a buyer as a promoter without proper hearing violated principles of natural justice
  • The authority exceeded its jurisdiction by reshaping the transaction instead of adjudicating the dispute placed before it

Accordingly, MahaREAT set aside the entire MahaRERA order of 13 February 2020.


Delay Since 2013: Buyer Entitled to Interest

The Tribunal also noted that:

  • Possession was promised by September 2013
  • Delay was undisputed
  • The buyer was not responsible for the delay

Invoking Section 18 of the RERA Act, MahaREAT held that the allottee was entitled to statutory interest for delayed possession, regardless of how the transaction was labelled.


Final Directions by MahaREAT

In its final operative order, MahaREAT directed that:

  1. The MahaRERA order dated 13 February 2020 be quashed and set aside
  2. The developer must:
    • Execute and register Agreements for Sale for four flats in Wings A-3 and A-4
    • Pay interest on the proportionate amount
      • Rate: SBI MCLR + 2% (simple interest)
      • Period: 1 October 2013 till the date of offer of possession
  3. Each party to bear its own costs

Why This Judgment Matters

This ruling sends a clear message to the real estate industry:

  • Developers cannot escape RERA liability by rebranding buyers as investors
  • MoUs promising flats can trigger full RERA protection
  • Regulatory authorities must stay within the reliefs sought and the law

For buyers, especially those who entered early-stage or structured deals, the judgment reassures that RERA protection is based on substance, not labels.

Also Read: Key Real Estate Trends in 2024: Rapid Urbanization, Demographic Shifts, and Rising Foreign Investment

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