Real Estate in India
Article: Real Estate
Topic: Real
Estate in India
Introduction
The term ‘real estate’ is defined as land, including the air
above it and the ground below it, and any buildings or structures on it. It is
also referred to as realty. It covers residential housing, commercial offices,
trading spaces such as theatres, hotels and restaurants, retail outlets,
industrial buildings such as factories and Government buildings.
Real estate involves the purchase, sale, and development of
land, residential and non-residential buildings.The main players in the real
estate market are the landlords, developers, builders, real estate agents,
tenants, buyers etc. The activities of the real estate sector encompass the
housing and construction sectors also.
The real estate sector in India
has assumed growing importance with the liberalization of the economy. The
consequent increase in business opportunities and migration of the labour force
has, in turn, increased the demand for commercial and housing space, especially
rental housing.
Supply of urban land is largely controlled by state-owned
development bodies like the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) and Housing Boards
leaving very limited developed space free, which is controlled by a few major
players in each city.
Many of the over 100 laws governing various aspects of real
estate date back to the 19th century. Despite the plethora of laws, the
situation appears to be far from satisfactory and major amendments to existing
laws are required to make them relevant to modern day requirements.
The Central laws governing real
estate include:
Indian
Contract Act, 1872:
This legislation specifies when a party can be said to have
the capacity to contract. A contract pertaining to realty can be entered into,
among others, by an individual (who is not a minor or of unsound mind),
partners of a firm, a corporate body, a trust, a sole corporation, the manager
of an undivided family, and a foreigner.
All the requirements of a valid contract, i.e.,
consideration, intention to contract and validity under the law of the land
must be satisfied.
Transfer of Property Act, 1882:
This lays down the general principles of realty, like
part-performance and has provisions for dealing with property through sale,
exchange, mortgage, lease, lien and gift. A person acquiring immovable
property or any share/interest in it is presumed to have notice of the title of
any other person who was in actual possession of such property.
Registration Act, 1908:
The purpose of this Act is the conservation of evidence,
assurances, title, publication of documents and prevention of fraud. It details
the formalities for registering an instrument.
Instruments mandatory to
register include:
(a)
Instruments of gift of immovable property;
(b) Other
non-testamentary instruments which purport or operate to create, declare,
assign, limit or extinguish, whether in present or in future, any right, title
or interest, whether vested or contingent, to or in immovable property;
(c) (c)
Non-testamentary instruments which acknowledge the receipt or payment of any
consideration on account of instruments in (b) above.
(d) Leases of immovable property from year to
year, or for any term exceeding one year, or reserving a yearly rent.
(e) Sales,
mortgages (other than by way of deposit of title deeds) and exchanges of
immovable property are required to be registered by virtue of the Transfer of
Property Act. Evidently, therefore, all the above documents have to be in
writing.
(f) Section 17
of the Act provides for optional registration. An unregistered document will
not affect the property comprised in it, nor be received as evidence of any
transaction affecting such property (except as evidence of a contract in a suit
for specific performance or as evidence of part- performance under the Transfer
of Property Act or as collateral), unless it has been registered.
(g) Thus, the
doctrine of part performance dealt with under section 53A of the Transfer of
Property Act and the provision of section 49 of the Registration Act (which
provides that an unregistered document cannot be admissible as evidence in a
court of law except as secondary evidence under the Indian Evidence Act)
together protect the buyer in possession of an unregistered sale deed and
cannot be dispossessed.
(h) The net
effect has been that a large number of property transactions have been
accomplished without proper registration. Further other instruments such as
Agreement to Sell, General Power of Attorney and will have been
indiscriminately used to effect change of ownership.
Special Relief Act, 1963:
This Act is only to enforce individual civil rights. A
person dispossessed of immovable property without his consent (other than in
due course of law) can recover possession by a suit filed within six months
from the date of dispossession.
Unless the contrary is proved, in a suit for specific
performance of a contract, the Court shall presume that a contract to transfer
immovable property is one in which monetary compensation for its
non-performance would not afford adequate relief. The Court could also grant a
permanent/mandatory injunction preventing the breach of such contract and
award damages.
Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act (ULCRA), 1976:
This legislation has fixed a ceiling on the vacant urban
land that a ‘person’ in urban agglomerations can acquire and hold. A person is
defined to include an individual, a family, a firm, a company, or an
association or body of individuals, whether incorporated or not. This ceiling
limit ranges from 500-2,000 square metres (sq. m).
Excess vacant land is either to be surrendered to the
Competent Authority appointed under the Act for a small compensation, or to be
developed by its holder only for specified purposes. The Act provides for
appropriate documents to show that the provisions of the Act are not attracted
or should be produced to the registering officer before registering instruments
compulsorily registrable under the Registration Act.
The objective of acquiring the excess vacant land could not
be achieved because of intrinsic deficiencies in the legislation itself. The
provisions under sections 19, 20 and 21 of the Act have together proved counterproductive
to the objectives of the legislation.
Land
Acquisition Act, 1894:
This Act authorises Governments to acquire land for public
purposes such as planned development, provisions for town or rural planning,
provision for residential purpose to the poor or landless and for carrying out
any education, housing or health scheme of the Government. In its present form,
the Act hinders speedy acquisition of land at reasonable prices, resulting in
cost overruns.
The
Indian Evidence Act, 1872:
Under the Act, whenever the status of any property of which
he is shown to be in possession is questioned, the burden of proving that he is
not the owner lies on the person who asserts that he is not the owner.
State
Laws Governing Real Estate:
While each State has its own set of laws, which govern
planned development, rules for construction and floor-area-ratio (FAR) or
floor space index (FSI) and formation of societies and condominiums, two laws
that exist in every State, are the stamp duty and rent laws.
Rent Control Act:
Rent legislation in India has been in existence for a
very long time. Rent control by the Government initially came as a temporary
measure to protect the exploitation of tenants by landlords after the Second
World War. However, these rent control Acts became almost a permanent feature.
Rent legislation provides payment of fair rent to landlords
and protection of tenants against eviction. Besides, it effectively allows the
tenant to alienate rented property. Tenants occupying properties since 1947 continue
to pay rents fixed then, regardless of inflation and the realty boom.
Some of the adverse impact of
the Rent Control Act are:
1. Negative
effect on investment in housing for rental purposes.
2.
Withdrawal of existing housing stock from the rental market.
3. Accelerated
deterioration of the physical condition of the housing stock.
4.
Stagnation of municipal property tax revenue, as it is based on the rent.
Promotion of rental housing can
have a significant impact on the economy in many ways:
1. It
reduces shortage of housing for a large section of the population who cannot
afford ownership.
2. Housing construction being a labour intensive activity,
investment in housing generates employment for both skilled and unskilled
labour. Housing has backward and forward linkages with many other industries.
3. Rental housing helps in stabilising real estate prices
and checking speculation and, thus, makes housing affordable for the weaker
sections.
4. It helps check proliferation of slums.
In the absence of rent control, dilapidated urban housing
would be periodically pulled down and replaced by modern apartment buildings
and other complexes leading to more rational use of prime locations and also
creating a continuous process of urban renewal. This has not happened in India
because rent control combined with security of tenure provides no incentive for
house owners to undertake renovation work.
This explains the run down appearance of many of our
buildings in prime locations, which gives Indian cities a much more shabby
appearance than their counterparts in other developing countries. Repeal of
the Rent Control Act could unleash a construction boom as has happened in many
major cities all over the world.
This is not only necessary to meet the growing unmet demand
for housing but it would also have a highly favourable effect on employment
generation.
In 1992, the Central Government proposed a model rent
control legislation which was circulated to all States. The model Act proposed
modification of some of the existing provisions regarding inheritance of
tenancy and also defined a rent level beyond which rent control could not
apply.
A New Delhi Rent Control Act based on this model law waspassed in 1997 but it has not been notified to date because of resistance from
traders who are sitting tenants. Only a few States have introduced the model
Act.

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