Kerala High Court: RERA
Redevelopment Registration Exemption Not Available if Original Project Required
Registration
In a
significant ruling under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016
(RERA), the Kerala High Court has clarified that the exemption from
registration available to renovation, repair, or redevelopment projects cannot
be invoked where the original project itself was required to be registered
under the Act.
The
judgment came in a batch of writ petitions filed by the Army Welfare Housing
Organisation (AWHO) and its Project Director challenging interim orders passed
by the Kerala Real Estate Regulatory Authority (K-RERA) concerning the Chander
Kunj Army Towers project in Kochi.
Background of the Dispute
The controversy arose from complaints filed by
homebuyers (allottees) of the Chander Kunj Army Towers project located at
Silver Sand Island, Vyttila, Kochi. The complainants approached K-RERA alleging
grievances related to the project.
K-RERA, through a common interim order, held that the
complaints were maintainable under the provisions of the RERA Act. Aggrieved by
this finding, AWHO approached the Kerala High Court seeking to set aside the
authority's decision.
AWHO's Argument
AWHO contended that the project was exempt from
mandatory registration under Section 3(2)(c) of the RERA Act, which provides an
exemption for projects involving renovation, repair, or redevelopment that do
not involve marketing, advertising, selling, or new allotment of apartments,
plots, or buildings.
On this basis, AWHO argued that the complaints filed
before K-RERA were not maintainable.
Homebuyers' Stand
The allottees, supported by the Union of India, opposed
the petitions. They argued that the project had already been determined to
require registration under the RERA Act. Consequently, the exemption under
Section 3(2)(c) could not be claimed.
They further pointed out that an earlier judgment involving the same project
had already upheld K-RERA's direction requiring registration, after finding
that the project qualified as an "ongoing project" under the Act.
Significance of the Judgment
This ruling provides important clarity on the scope of
the redevelopment exemption under the RERA framework. The judgment makes it
clear that developers cannot rely on the renovation, repair or redevelopment
exemption to avoid registration where the original project itself falls within
the category of projects that require registration under the Act.
The decision also reinforces the rights of homebuyers to seek remedies
before RERA authorities in respect of projects that are otherwise required to
be registered.





