The defaults by the Developer have undoubtedly caused immense prejudice and harm to the members of the Society. The hardship to the members is real and immediate; the so-called hardship to the Developers is notional. When it spent in the
project, this was no altruism or charity. It was an investment toward great profit. Every investment involves risk. The Developer gambled on the project. Receiving monthly rent is not a sop, not a matter of ‘convenience’. It is a matter of survival. Therefore, the non-payment of dues, the delays in project completion, and not paying transit rent for months together speaks to an inherent, and constantly growing, social injustice. It should not be allowed to continue. Therefore, apart from the exceptionally strong prima facie case that the Society makes
out, the ‘balance of convenience’ is decidedly in its favour.
The society’s members
agree to this upheaval, to move out altogether, to separate from each
other while their new homes are built. The promise to them is that
they will be looked after and provided for while their new homes are
being built. Days, weeks, months and years pass; the members do not
receive the promised rent. Thus begins the downward slide. The
promised homes are delayed, then delayed further, and then delayed
even further. This cuts at the root of the initial entrustment. A
development project for a society demands commitment, fidelity,
respect and honesty. When these begin to disappear, the contractual
relationship collapses. Where there was anticipation and confidence,
there is now just bitterness, disappointment and despair. There is a
breakdown of confidence, and there is only distrust. Loss of faith and
confidence on account of contractual violations and breaches by a
developer are sufficient grounds to find for the society and against the developer. Gopi Gorwani v Ideal Cooperative Housing Society Ltd & Ors, 2013 SCC OnLine Bom 1967. Indeed, I would go a step further. There is urgency for the society. Therefore, the slightest delay in project completion, unless specifically accepted by the society, and even one single default in payment of transit rent or other dues is actually sufficient to warrant a termination. There is no such thing in these matters as ‘substantial compliance’. That is not the principle of obligations in the realm of private law.
REPORTABLE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
IN ITS COMMERCIAL DIVISION
COMM ARBITRATION PETITION (L) NO. 74 OF 2020
Rajawadi Arunodaya Co-op Hsg Soc Ltd Vs Value Projects Pvt Ltd.,
CORAM : G.S.Patel, J.
DATED : 15th March 2021
1. This order will dispose of two competing Petitions under
Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996. The first
Petition is filed by the Rajawadi Arunodaya Co-operative Housing
Society Ltd (“Rajawadi”; “the Society”) against the Respondent
builder, Value Projects Pvt Ltd (“Value Projects”; “the
Developer”). The opposing petition is by Value Projects.
2. While the narrative runs the usual pattern with some minor
factual variations, I believe it is important to begin with an analysis of
the rival claims and the relief that each seeks. Rather than set out the
prayers in full, I will summarise them, thus. Rajawadi seeks, first, a
mandatory injunction directing Value Projects to deliver possession
of the project site or plot along with the structures on it, whether
complete or partially complete. It then seeks the appointment of a
Receiver to take possession (a prayer added by amendment); a
temporary restraint against the Developer from creating third party
rights over the land and building; another restraint against the
Developer from interfering with or obstructing the redevelopment
process being taken up by the Society or from interfering with
Rajawadi’s possession; and, finally, an order to deliver to the society
the necessary documents regarding the redevelopment project.
3. The Developer’s Petition first seeks an order of status quo in
regard to the Development Agreement as it stood prior to the
termination notice of 13th December 2019; a restraint against the
Society from appointing another developer; another restraint from
creating third party rights; a restraint against the Society from taking
steps to eject the Petitioner from the project; and a prayer for a bank
guarantee of about Rs.20 crores to secure the Developer’s monetary
claim.
4. Before I proceed to the factual narrative and the legal questions
that arise, I must record here that, although the Society’s Petition was
filed in January 2020, much of that year was lost to an effective
hearing on account of the pandemic. Hearings could not be regularly
scheduled to ensure some continuity. Despite this, whenever
possible, I took up the matter on several dates in an effort to bring
both sides together to avoid precipitating a more protracted legal
battle. I did this because there is a partially complete construction on
site. The Society and its members have been out of possession and
without their new homes for a long time (some members have
possession of commercial units). Proceeding on its own or through a
new developer is, I thought, very likely a complex and delicate
business demanding a next level of civil engineering and construction
skill. Plus, there were financial considerations on both sides. If,
therefore, both sides could be brought together, the building
completed, the Developer’s financial obligations under the contract
met, and all this done in a stated time-frame under Consent Terms
with a built-in default clause, then the needs of all sides could be met
and litigation costs, time and trouble saved. To this end, I involved
the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (“MCGM”) though
not a party to the Society’s petition on the aspect of arrears of
property tax. I asked Mr Shah for the Developer more than once to
submit without prejudice proposals by which the various issues could
be resolved. He has done this, identifying the various financial and
development matters that need to be addressed. The most recent of
these proposals was just a few days ago. None of these proposals has
met with the Society’s approval. But this is not to suggest that the
Society and its members have been unreasonable or that they are
unjustified in declining to consider the proposals that come from the
Developer. There is, and now there is no doubt about it, an
irreversible and irredeemable loss of confidence in the developer. To
put at its most blunt, the Society simply does not trust this Developer
one inch. It says through its Counsel, Mr Khandeparkar, that it has
ample reasons for this distrust. Some of the considerations that must
weigh with a Court of equity are well known, and I will return to these
towards the end of this judgment. But, at this stage, it is simply not
possible for any Court to compel one or the other side to accept any
particular offer. While addressing his case, Mr Shah has fairly stated
that his instructions are not to resist the Society’s application to be
permitted to appoint another developer or to proceed with the
redevelopment, but to submit instead that provision be made to
safeguard the Developer’s rights emanating from the contract. He
clarified this to mean that while the development may proceed by the
Society through any other developer, and members may take
possession of their common areas, amenities and individual
apartments or commercial spaces if not already done, the free-sale
components should be preserved so that no third party rights are
created and are kept available as security for the claim that the
Developer undoubtedly intends to make in arbitration. His
instructions are to say that the Developer has spent between Rs.19 to
20 crores on the project. But this will not be the fullness of the claim.
There will be a claim for loss of profit and possibly for damages. The
expenditure by the Developer is not such that can be denied.
Therefore, in his submission, some provision must be made to secure
at least the return of the Developer’s investment in the project. After
all, he submits, the Developer started work, and admittedly did a fair
amount of it, but none of it was intended to be done gratuitously.
Thus, whether one looks at the money claim of the Developer as
arising under the contract or even as a claim for quantum meruit,
there can be no doubt that this claim must, in equity, be appropriately
safeguarded. If this is not done, he submits, the Developer will be left
with a paper award in arbitration and without any effective means of
recovery. Section 9 requires an order to be both just and equitable.
The requirement of equity, in Mr Shah’s formulation, is that the
competing rights of both sides must be judiciously balanced so that
one side is not left without any remedy or recourse in future at all.
5. I note this at the forefront because it considerably narrows the
controversy to be decided. What needs to be seen is whether the
Developer in this case or, for that matter, any developer in such a case,
can demand security for what is essentially a claim in restitution or
damages or both.
6. The facts are actually not many, but they traverse a
considerable period of time. I will deal with these as quickly and as
briefly as the requirements of such an order allow. The Society’s
property is on a plot of land at Ghatkopar (East). The plot is just
under 1000 sq mtrs. It stands at the junction of 4th and 7th Road at
Ghatkopar (East), Mumbai 400 077. On this, there stood the old
Rajawadi Arunodaya Cooperative Housing Society’s building. This
was a mixed-use structure with 20 residential units and seven
commercial units. It was very possibly the sort of typical middleincome
enclave that one finds everywhere in this city. The shops
would have been the routine small and medium vendors, and the
residences were unlikely to have been either very spacious or very
upmarket. The community was probably an old and well-knit group
of friends and neighbours with associations going back many years.
The two-wing building itself was constructed prior to 1985. Over
time, it required major repairs. Sometime in 2012, the Society’s
members got together and decided that these persistent repairs could
not be sustained. The existing building required to be redeveloped.
7. Evidently, the Society could not do this re-development itself,
because it involved, as all such projects do, the demolition of the
existing building, the accommodation of existing occupants in some
form of transit or temporary accommodation while re-development
was going on, obtaining a large number of permissions with their
attendant complexity, completing construction and then putting the
Society’s members, both residential and commercial, into possession
of their redeveloped premises. So the Society invited tenders from
respective developers. The matter then followed the usual trajectory.
On 20th July 2012, the Society unanimously appointed Value
Projects as the developer.
8. This led to a Deed of Redevelopment of 5th April 2013. This
was registered a little later that month on 29th April 2013. I will turn
to the relevant clauses and provisions of this Agreement for a closer
analysis a little later in this judgment. At this stage, it is enough to
note that the Developer was to complete the project within 24 months
of being delivered vacant possession by the members of the Society
and receipt of a commencement certificate. There was a six-month
grace period. At its broadest level, the Developer agreed to pay stated
amounts as monthly transit or relocation compensation, corpus,
reallocation or shifting charges, and some share in the profits. A day
later, the Society executed a Power of Attorney in favour of the
Developer. This would have been required to obtain the necessary
permissions.
9. An Intimation of Disapproval or IOD — as the initiating
building permission in Mumbai is oddly called, with all permissions
being worded in the negative — from the MCGM came in on 9th
December 2014. Up to this point, the Society members was still in
occupation of their respective premises. Very shortly after the IOD,
in January 2015, the members of the Society delivered vacant
possession to the Developer.
10. This is important because this is the trigger or starting point of
the development process. It is also this that triggers a large range of
financial obligations on the part of the Developer, including payment
of transit rent, etc. This assumes importance for two reasons. First, it
has not been shown to me that these financial obligations of the
Developer were in any way conditional or contingent upon any
further act of the Society or its members. In other words, the
obligations began to operate once the Developer had possession.
Second, and this is an aspect to which I will return towards the end of the judgment, is that the delivery of vacant possession of the old flats, and the transition of Society members into transit accommodation,
have a profound societal and human impact. This is seldom, if ever,
explicitly acknowledged in judgments. But, in my judgment, this
must affect any consideration of the balance of convenience,
irreparable prejudice and balancing of competing equities.
11. To return to the chronological narrative, on 18th March 2015,
there was a letter from the Developer noting the discussions that were
held a few days earlier on 11th March 2015. Every member was given
the Permanent Alternative Accommodation Agreements (what I will
call the P3As) for signature. These were to be returned for
registration. It was also apparently agreed that in lieu of the
contractually-mandated bank guarantee, the Developer would
provide its 500 sq ft office and another 800 sq ft built-up area at
Vidhyavihar as security.
12. A partial commencement certificate was received on 28th July
2015.
13. Then there is something of a hiatus for the next two years or
so. On 15th April 2017, Value Projects came forward with a
confirmation letter proposing a scheduled date of completion, a date
for possession of units and other compliances with MCGM rules,
dates for payment of corpus and pending transit rent amounts, and in
relation to some documents regarding additional FSI. A copy of this
document is at Exhibit “E” to the Petition. I do not propose to
scrutinize each document in detail — that must await a trial in
arbitration — but I look at this only to note item 7 at page 212, for this
indicates that even now, the Developer was already in some default of
its obligations for payment of transit rent.
14. There was a meeting on 18th July 2017. This follows in
relevance from the previous document. Rent had not been paid since
December 2016. The second instalment of corpus fund was unpaid.
Rent and other cheques were regularly dishonoured. The Developer
said that because of adverse market conditions, there were no
investors or buyers and that completion was likely to be inevitably
delayed. Despite this, the Developer promised a part occupation
certificate at least for the commercial premises by August 2017. The
earlier formats of the P3As had to be changed for RERA compliance.
15. About a month later, on 5th August 2017, at a meeting on 5th
August 2017, the Developer informed the Society that the timeline
for completion would have to be extended even further, now until
June 2019.
16. Pausing for a moment, it will be noticed that this is a meeting
of August 2017 proposing a completion date of June 2019. The
Agreement in question contemplated completion of the entire project
by April 2015 or, at the most, with a further six-month extension until
about October 2015. There was thus already a delay of at least four
years in project completion. The Society members themselves had by
now been out of possession for a full two years. There were already
admitted arrears of transit rent. At the meeting, the members
demanded an increase of 10% in the monthly rent with effect from
December 2017. The Developer agreed.
17. There was another meeting on 15th September 2017. The
Society noted that, despite the earlier promise, the partial occupation
certificate for the commercial units promised by August 2017 had not
been received. There was now rent pending for over eight months.
The Developer asked the Society not to insist on the provision of a
bank guarantee and said that it was obtaining a loan from the Thane
Bharat Sahakari Bank (“Thane Bank”). The Society declined to
waive the requirement for the bank guarantee. There was another
meeting on 8th November 2017. The Developer agreed to provide a
cheque of Rs.2 crores as security. It also agreed that if it defaulted in
payment of rents by April 2019, the cheque could be deposited.
Another meeting followed on 14th January 2018, with minutes dated
11th February 2018. There was again a discussion of pending
amounts of transit rent. There was some discussion about the drafts
of the P3As. On 26th February 2018, the Developer mortgaged nine
residential flats to raise loan funding of Rs.4 crores from the Thane
Bank.
18. In June 2018, the Developer substituted its contractor and
appointed another, one Jagruti Enterprises. The arrangement
between the Developer and Jagruti was one of ‘barter’. The
Developer allotted Jagruti two flats and also promised certain
remuneration. The contractor was apparently at liberty to sell these
flats to recoup its costs.
19. On 3rd August 2018, the Developer sent the Society rent
cheques for one month. The amount outstanding since December
2016 (nearly two years) was yet not paid. According to the Society,
there was even now no work at the site. On 24th September 2018, the
Society finally sent a legal notice to the Developer demanding that it
clear all outstanding rent and corpus payments, demanding interest
on these amounts, demanding that the P3As be executed and
registered and that there be a confirmation in respect of other
obligations. I find no reply to this notice.
20. By 16th March 2019, there was now in place a new
development regime in the form of DCPR 2034. This is a point in
time six years down the road from the execution of the Development
Agreement. The Developer now proposed that new applications be
submitted in accordance with the new development regime (with the
Society’s approval) so as to obtain a revalidated IOD. Necessarily, the
completion timeline would be pushed back even further now from
June 2019 to March 2020. The Developer promised payments of
arrears of rent by 15th April 2019.
21. This met with the almost predictable response of outrage from
the Society. It said that the project had been delayed now for six years.
The draft P3As was not in place. There was no clarity on the
additional areas to be offered to members. Timelines for completion
were not finalized. Approvals on drawings and designs had not been
disclosed. Funding arrangements were still unclear.
22. By now apprehensive of the Developer’s bona fides and
abilities, the Society conducted a search and found that on 28th
October 2015, the Developer mortgaged some flats with one SN
Damani Holdings Private Limited (“Damani”). The Society also
found that some flats earmarked for existing members, i.e. flat Nos.
502, 503, 901 and 902, had been sold to third parties under
Agreements for Sale. Several crores of rupees have been borrowed
from the Thane Bank by mortgaging 12 residential flats and three
commercial units.
23. Matters went from bad to worse. A cheque for Rs. 2 crores
dated 30th April 2019 was dishonoured because of stop payment
instructions. A replacement cheque dated 7th October 2019, when
deposited, was almost predictably dishonoured for insufficiency of
funds.
24. On 15th September 2019, the Society resolved to terminate the
Development Agreement and the Power of Attorney. Up to this time,
there was only a shell constructed to the 7th floor, although the
construction was of 13 upper floors.
25. At about this time, there came a demand from the MCGM for
Rs.9,35,579/- as arrears of property tax.
26. In October 2019, two members of the Society lodged police
complaints against the Developer’s partners for illegally creating
third party rights in respect of those members’ flats.
27. The Society held an extraordinary general meeting on 8th
December 2019 and resolved to terminate the Deed of
Redevelopment. This was followed a few days later by a formal notice
of termination dated 13th December 2019. The notice lists a number
of breaches, including a failure to complete construction, a failure to
deliver copies of building plans, a failure to pass on the benefits of the
implementation of the new development regime, the failure to
execute P3As, the failure to pay the monthly rent, the failure to pay
hardship compensation, non-payment of taxes and dues, selling
members flats to third parties etc. A day later, the Society issued a
public notice. In early January 2020, the Society resumed possession
of the suit property. It affixed a notice board at the site and appointed
security guards. There is some controversy about the Developer
allegedly attempting to break open locks and manhandling the
Society’s guards and staff, but I will let that pass at the moment.
28. On 13th January 2020, the Developer’s Advocates wrote to the
Society, asking it to refrain from acting on its termination notice. Now
the Developer filed its own cross-petition on 26th September 2020.
The Developer has invoked arbitration under the very same
Redevelopment Agreement of 5th April 2013. The Society has not
done so, but it is now settled law that the Petition itself, and especially
one that has followed a route such as this one, may be treated as a
notice of invocation of arbitration. This only stands to reason, for
what else but arbitration is the Society pursuing? In any case, Mr
Khandeparkar states that the Society will formally invoke arbitration
within 48 hours from today.
29. Mr Khandeparkar for the Petitioners lists nearly a dozen
breaches that he claims the Developer has committed. In no
particular order of priority, these are:
(a) Selling four flats supposedly reserved for members to
third parties without the members’ consent.
(b) Mortgaging premises without earmarking or allotting
four premises to existing members of the Society. There
is no absolute ban in the agreement from creating a
mortgage, but Clauses 5.2.4 and 14(a) say that the
Developer is not to make a mortgage, charge or lien until
flats are allotted to members. Mr Khandeparkar says
that the mortgages in favour of Damani were without the
Society’s consent. These mortgages were apparently
created to clear old or historical dues. The mortgage in
favour of the Thane Bank was of free-sale flats, but at
least one member’s flat (No. 804) was apparently
mortgaged to Damani.
(c) There was a default in payment of rent. As of the date of
termination, the amount is 1,62,88,391/-. This is only
the amount payable to residential members. In addition,
there is the rent payable to commercial shop members
from March 2017 to August 2017, Rs.60,69,400/-.
(d) The second instalment of corpus or hardship
compensation is even now unpaid.
(e) The Developer has not paid his share of property taxes
and other statutory dues.
(f) The Developer has not provided a bank guarantee of Rs.
3.48 crores.
(g) The Developer converted a fourth-floor podium parking
area in to residential. There may be some controversy
about this because I have understood Mr Khandeparkar
to say that this was a proposal by the Developer. Mr
Shah clarifies that there is no such proposal and even if
it was once made, it is withdrawn. I will, therefore,
ignore this aspect of the matter for the time being.
(h) Then there are additional breaches alleged in regard to
the P3As and the delay in completion.
30. Until 2018, after which there has been no work on the site, the
project status is this. The proposal contemplated a new structure of
one basement, a commercial ground floor and first floor, a three-level
parking (part parking and partly for a gymnasium on the third level
parking), and nine upper habitable floors. As last done, the basement,
commercial ground and first floors, three levels of parking and the
shell only of just three upper habitable floors had been completed.
The total number of residential flats proposed was 35, of which 20
were reserved for members and 15 were free sale flats. All flats in the
free-sale component had been sold. This was in addition to the
mortgages of members’ flats and mortgages in favour of the Thane
Bank and Damani. Of the shops, there were thirteen proposed in the
redeveloped building. Of these, eleven were to be handed over to
members, and two were to be sold in the free sale. One has been sold
and is used as a dental clinic, and one is mortgaged to Damani. The
status of the proposals has not much changed since July 2015.
31. According to Mr Khandeparkar, there is long list of admitted
breaches, including non-payment of rent, arrears of property tax,
non-execution of the P3As and delay in construction. This is how the
parties are respectively positioned today.
32. The Developer does not necessarily accept this delineation of
the breaches as portrayed by Mr Khandeparkar. But that is a matter
of detail perhaps best left to arbitration. I am not required in this
Section 9 proceeding to examine to each of those of rival contentions
in detail. What I am required to do is assess which of the two petitions
discloses a sufficient prima facie case for the grant of equitable and
discretionary relief. Second, I must assess whether the defence in
each can be said to be tenable, in which case some equities will need
to be adjusted, or whether the defence is wholly unstatable in which
case no equities will arise in favour of the respondent in each case.
Conveniently, the Developer’s defence to the Society’s petition is the
Developer’s affirmative case in the other petition, and vice versa.
33. Our starting point for this discussion must be the Development
Agreement itself. This will tell us what the reciprocal rights and
obligations of the two sides are. It will also facilitate a clearer
understanding of the submissions Mr Shah makes before me, one that
is entirely predicated on a certain reading of the Development
Agreement.
34. A copy of this Agreement is from page 40 of the society’s
petition. Every member of the Society has joined and is shown as a
consenting member. There is a recital at the very beginning which
asserts that the Society has a good and marketable title to the plot of
land that I have described above. The building, and its separation
between residential and commercial units, is mentioned in recital ‘B’.
The proposal for redevelopment is narrated in recital ‘C’. There then
follow the operative portions of the Agreement. Mr Shah invites
attention inter alia to the first recital and to clause 2.1 and its subclauses
(a) to (g) to assert that the entire project was predicated on
the Society having good title to the entire land. In 2013, when the
development was proposed, this would have allowed for an FSI of 2.7.
He says that it was found that at least part of the land required
Collector’s permission and was therefore not freehold but leasehold.
This hindered funding from being obtained in a timely fashion.
According to Mr Shah, this had a cascading or domino effect.
Without the necessary FSI entitlement in hand at the time of
execution of the Agreement, the Developer’s entire funding
arrangement was thrown into disarray. All that the Developer had was
a fraction of the FSI represented to be available on the basis of full
ownership. The Developer was unable to raise the necessary funding.
This, he contends, was a fundamental breach, or a breach of
fundamental term, by the Society. If the Society represented that it
had plenary dispositive rights as an owner of the property and it was
then found that it did not, thus limiting, reducing or constricting the
Developer’s planning and benefits, then equity demands that the
Developer cannot be held to its obligations irrespective of this factor
while the Society is allowed the fullness of its rights. Of course, the
project has been delayed. Of course, there have been difficulties in
making payment of transit rent and other obligations. But none of this
would have happened had the promised FSI been in place, and had
there not been this false or misleading representation by the Society,
to begin with. The rectification of that title lacuna did not actually
happen until December 2018. So it is utterly pointless for the Society
to allege defaults on the part of the Developer from April 2013 to
December 2018. On the contrary, he submits, despite the very
significant impediment and hurdle of an imperfection in title, the
Developer did everything possible to keep the project afloat. It is not
as if the Developer did not obtain the building permissions. It did. It
is not as if the Developer did not put up any construction at all; even
on the Society’s showing, it did. Only a few floors remained to be
done, and the interiors and finishing work. In the current
Development Control Regime of DCPR 2034 there may be additional
benefits. There is no reason at all, he submits, for the Society
therefore to be allowed to terminate the Agreement without having
regard to these factors; and, in particular, the question of title. On the
question of equitable rights in continuing with the project, the
submission from Mr Shah is not that the Developer necessarily has
interest in the land, but he most emphatically has an interest in the
project. There is a real, though subtle, distinction between the two.
35. Mr Shah’s construct, therefore, rests on two principle
foundations. First, there is the submission that the inaccurate
representation as to title itself provides an almost complete answer to
the question of delay in project completion. The second is that,
demonstrably, the Developer has spent between Rs. 19 and 20 crores
on the project. Of course, the Developer has done so with a profit
motive, i.e. to recoup returns on his investment from the sale at
market prices of the free sale units. But that is not only not illegal, let
alone a crime; it is his contractual entitlement to begin with.
36. The two arguments must be addressed somewhat differently.
The first, as to imperfection of title, is perhaps a more complex
question and will require some level of examination when parties lead
evidence. Two things militate against its immediate acceptance at this
stage. Mr Shah has relied on one set of representations and
statements in the Agreement itself. But equally, there is the statement
and assertion by the Developer in Clause 2.1(i) at page 58:
“2.1 (i) That the title of the said property in the hands
of the Owners/Society is clear and marketable and free from
all encumbrances and reasonable doubts of any nature
whatsoever. Prior to entering into this Deed of Redevelopment,
the Developers have caused the search of
the title of the property in the hands of the
Owners/Society and have accepted the same. The
Developers shall not be entitled to raise any query as to
the title of the said property in the hands of the
Owners/Society. However, in the event of any claim being
made by any third party in respect of the said property or any
part thereof, the same shall be defended by the
Owners/Society at its own costs, charges and expenses.”
(Emphasis added)
37. The other dimension to this first argument by Mr Shah is to
see whether, in the correspondence prior to this petition, the
Developer has ever said, or contended in response to the legal
notices, that it is this lacuna in title that has caused the delay. Mr Shah
points to a Resolution of 30th November 2014 in this regard at page
623, which suggests that there were some CTS numbers in the
Property Card that reflected as a B1 tenure, and there is also a
question of road setback, thus limiting FSI. This is a less than
persuasive argument for two reasons. First, these facts are ones that
the Developer knew or must be deemed to have known in April 2013.
The clause that I have just reproduced contains the Developer’s
representations that it has taken full search and satisfied itself as to
title. A Developer is not some wide-eyed innocent child wandering
about in a development wonderland. In a fiercely competitive field,
with an eye firmly to vast profits, the Developer is undoubtedly astute
about its business. And its business is development. And fundamental
to property development is knowledgeability and skill in handling title
issues. How could the Developer not have known about the tenure?
Was there active concealment? Fraud? There is no such case.
38. The second is a consequence in contract law. If, as Mr Shah
says, this was a breach of a fundamental term or was a fundamental
breach, then we must ask if the Developer’s conduct shows that it saw
it as such. Did the Developer terminate the Agreement and sue for
damages or restitution or both? Did it allege misrepresentation or
fraud and attempt to void the Agreement on that basis? If the
Developer is seeking specific performance, as I imagine that it will in
arbitration, then it must stand to reason that the Developer has not
repudiated this contract. On the contrary, it has condoned this alleged
breach and proceeded on the footing that the Agreement is subsisting,
valid and binding, and capable of being specifically performed. In
other words, its own previous conduct does not show that it has
treated this as a breach by the Society.
39. Can the financial obligations of the Developer be fairly said to
be linked to any corresponding obligation of the Society or a
correctness or otherwise a particular representation? It is only if Mr
Shah can show such a linkage that his argument will have any heft.
One of the representations by the Developer is to be found in Clause
2.3(a) at page 60. This tells us that, for its part, the Developer
warranted that it had not only sufficient experience and expertise but
also the finance to carry out the development of the project. Putting
these two together, what we see is that on its search of the title and its
assessment of the FSI entitlement as it then stood, the Developer
warranted that it had the sufficient experience, knowledge of title,
expertise and finance to fulfil the obligations it undertook. The
obligation to enter into an agreement with the members in Clause
2.3(b) is not contingent on any other factor. Clause 5 deals with the
obligations of the Developer. These include the obligation to
demolish, to purchase and acquire TDR, to obtain the necessary
sanctions, get layouts of plans approved, pay all costs and so on. The
Developer was bound to furnish the Society with certified copies of
the sanctioned plans. Clause 5.1.3 says that the Developer shall be
solely bound and liable to pay all municipal taxes, water, power bills
use of the Collector from the date of commencement of demolition
of the existing building until expiry of 30 days’ after the Developer
has offered possession of the new premises. Then there is an
obligation in Clause 5.1.5 to complete the construction within 24
months. The financial obligations in the Agreement include payment
of temporary transit rent or compensation in Clause 6(iv)(a) for
residential premises and Clause 6(v)(a) for commercial premises. The
obligation to pay hardship compensation is in Clause 6(iii). Not one
of these obligations is conditional or contingent upon either FSI or
any representations or warranties.
40. While Mr Shah invokes the indemnity provision of the
Agreement in Clause 21, this only means that if there is a claim
against the Developer by any third party or someone claiming by,
through or under the Society, the Developer is entitled to be
damnified. But if the Developer seeks to enforce an indemnity, the
Developer must sue on that indemnity. There is no such third party
claim, and the damnification does not extend to what Mr Shah
describes as a failure to make out a good title, or a fundamental
breach. That is not a reason to deny interim discretionary relief here.
41. The more troubling aspect of the matter is that Mr Shah’s
construct really amounts to a re-writing of fundamental and essential
terms of the Agreement. This is despite Clause 24 which says that no
addition, alteration or amendment is to be valid, operative, effective
or binding unless in writing and signed by the parties hereto. There is
no such agreement.
42. If, therefore, it is to be held that the default by the Developer
in meeting its financial obligations is not a fundamental breach
because of the alleged misrepresentation as to title, then that really
amounts to inserting an entirely new conditionality into the
Agreement. In my understanding of it, arbitration law is a constricted
branch of the wider law of contracts. It provides a method by which
contractual disputes are to be resolved. It does not actually create a
contract. Contractual rights are governed by the law of contracts. The
Arbitration Act controls the manner in which those contractual
disputes are to be resolved. For this reason, an arbitrator — being
necessarily a creature of contract, one who would not exist as an
arbitrator but for a contractual agreement to that effect ― cannot ever
re-write the terms of a contract. For an identical reason, neither can
an arbitration Court.
43. This sort of argument, and one that comes so late in the day,
can hardly be said to be one that will work in favour of the Developer.
44. As I see it, the Developer may be entitled to mount a claim for
damages or specific performance or restitution or any combination of
these. But that does not by itself means that it should be allowed to
continue to throttle the Society’s attempt to complete its
development.
45. On the question of an interest in the project, I drew Mr Shah’s
attention to the Supreme Court decision in Sushil Kumar Agarwal v
Meenakshi Sadhu,1 gave him time to consider it and invited him to
make his submissions on it. I heard him and Mr Khandeparkar on this
decision and submissions in regard thereto on 18th March 2021.
46. Mr Shah’s submission was that the Sushil Kumar Agarwal
judgment makes a distinction between different types of agreements
in relation to development. Of course, this judgment was rendered in
the context of a claim for specific performance challenging the
termination of an agreement and seeking an injunction against the
owner from engaging a third party. In paragraph 17, the Supreme
Court considered the expression ‘Development Agreement’. It said
that this is a catch-all nomenclature that may apply to a range of
agreements that a property owner may enter into for the development
of immovable property. Paragraph 17.3 speaks of an agreement by a
property owner (or a person with other rights in immovable property)
with another person who is granted development rights. Typically,
the developer is required to deliver a part of the constructed area to
the owner, and, as consideration, is entitled to deal with the balance
constructed area. Sometimes, a society or other association is formed
and the land is conveyed or leased to such society or association. In
some categories of development agreements, thus, a developer may
acquire a valuable right either in the property or constructed area. A
right in the project is thus distinguishable from a right in the land. A
developer may not have an interest in the land but may nonetheless
have a valuable right in the project. In paragraph 19, the Supreme
1 (2019) 2 SCC 241.
Court spoke of a developer possibly acquiring such a valuable right
sought in the property or constructed area. This is a divesting by the
owner of part of the owner’s complex of in rem rights. Where the
developer has incurred a substantial investment, altered the state of
the property or created third party rights in the property, a different
set of considerations might well arise. In such a case, it might be
difficult to hold that an agreement is “per se incapable of being
performed”. Where a developer is able to show that for no fault on its
part, the property owner is seeking to resile from the agreement and
terminate it, it may be difficult to hold that the developer is not
entitled to enforce his rights. It is this portion on which Mr Shah
places great reliance. One of the assessments required, he submits, is
the extent of harm or injury allegedly suffered by the developer, and
whether or not compensation is sufficient recompense for the losses
suffered if the contractual breach on the part of the owner is
established.
47. But the question, as Mr Shah points out, is what is to happen
when there is, as it were, a midstream upending of a contractual
possession as originally contemplated. He submits that rights that
have accrued and third party rights that have been created must
necessarily be protected. A termination of such agreement is not to
be easily allowed. In this context, and in response to one of my
queries, he pointed out that there is no standalone or distinct
termination clause in this agreement. Clause 9.1 at page 108 speaks of
a specific set of circumstances, i.e. if demolition of the existing
building is not commenced within six weeks after issuance of IOD
and of members having delivered possession. In that case, the Society
and its consenting members could terminate the Deed of
Redevelopment. Nobody has invoked this clause. The only other
clause is 13(i) at page 118. This says that if the Developer fails to
obtain approvals and start construction from the date of the
agreement, the agreement and the Power of Attorney would
automatically end, the Society could enter into an agreement with a
third party without any claims from this Developer, and the
Developer would not be entitled to claim a refund of any amount that
is paid to the Society.
48. I do not believe Mr Shah is completely correct in saying that
this excludes the possibility of termination on account of any other
breach by the Developer. Even if neither of these clauses is invoked,
the general law in contracts and especially Section 39 will apply.2 It is
surely unreasonable to suggest that a developer may commit a breach
of a term of the contract, even a fundamental term, but the Society is
shackled.
49. In all this, we should not miss something that seems to me to
be cardinal. It is a mistake, in my view, to pillory a developer for being
profit-oriented. That is the nature of every developer’s business.
That is what it does. Pursuing a profit is, as Mr Shah points out,
neither illegal nor criminal. It is perfectly legitimate. The question is
not whether the pursuit of a profit is a good or a bad thing. It is a
question of fidelity to the contract that permits the pursuit of profit.
It is only this aspect of the matter with which we are concerned. In
2 Section 39. Effect of refusal of party to perform promise wholly.—When a
party to a contract has refused to perform, or disabled himself from performing, his
promise in its entirety, the promisee may put an end to the contract, unless he has
signified, by words or conduct, his acquiescence in its continuance.
the course of pursuing that profit, the developer will create third
party rights. Those cannot, in turn, create equities in favour of the
developer against its contractual counterparty, the society. The
developer takes the risk of satisfying those third-party claims simply
because those third-party rights are principal-to-principal agreements
between the developer and third parties. The developer created them
and incurred liabilities to third parties on his own and in pursuit of his
gains. But that is only ever legitimate if the developer is not in default
of its obligations to the society in the first place. No developer can be
heard to say it has rights vis-Ã -vis third parties or free sale areas while
yet in default of its obligations to the society. The fulfilment of the
obligations to the society by the development is the sine-qua-non that
entitles the developer to create third party rights and make profits
from the free-sale areas. Absent a fulfilment of a foundational
obligation to the society, there are no equities or rights that inhere in
a developer vis-Ã -vis others or in respect of any free-sale areas.
50. The other fundamental factor never to be lost sight of is this:
the Society is the owner of the property. It belongs to the Society. The
Society and the members will decide how and through whom they
want to exploit their legal ownership rights over that property. It is
not for any other outsider to say in generality that the rights of an
owner have been compromised. If the Society has divested itself of
ownership rights, there are ways in law of doing this. If the Society
has found that its redevelopment project has not proceeded in the
manner that it intended, then the Society is always within its legal
entitlement to undertake the development itself or through any other
developer of its choice. To resist this, a developer must able to show
unequivocally that it is the society that is in default and it must show
this in the clearest and most unambiguous terms, not in some
roundabout, inferential or speculative manner. I imagine Mr Shah
understands this perfectly well. This is indeed the reason he has been
at pains to try and make out a case in regard to deficiency of title. But
if that case is not a clear and unambiguous breach, i.e. a fundamental
breach, then his submissions will not assist his client, the Developer
here.
51. There is a considerable amount of judicial learning on this
branch of the law. I myself have had occasion to deal with such issues
in the past, but before I turn to those, I believe this is an opportune
matter to set out some broad principles.
52. There are, in my experience, and I do not say this with any
rigidity, three broad classes of disputes of this kind pertaining to
societies and their disputes with developers.
(a) In Category 1, we find those cases where an agreement is
entered into, the society and its members for some
reason or the other do not vacate although the developer
has everything ready to proceed.
(b) In Category 2, one that is sadly quite common, we have a
situation where the society and their members vacate,
the developer takes possession, but then nothing
happens for years together; and when the society tries to
take charge of its own estate and redevelopment, the
developer comes forward and cites the pendency of the
agreement. In such cases, the developer is very often in
default of huge amounts of financial obligations. There,
clearly, there is no equity on the side of the developer.
Such developers are often only speculating in land and
property prices.
(c) Category 3 cases, and this is where I believe the present
case falls, are those where the society has vacated, the
developer has taken possession, has done some amount
of work, but then at some point falls behind in payment
of financial obligations and completion of development.
This is a downward spiral. The developer gets mired
more and more in debt. The arrears of transit rent keep
mounting with each passing month, and then there is a
near financial impossibility. Sometimes, these matters
are resolved by negotiations, but it is here that the
questions of law and of assessment of contracts really
arise.
(d) Category 4 cases are of the kind where both the society
and the developer are on the same page. Most members
of the society have vacated. The developer is ready to
proceed, but there are one or two dissenting members.
This category of cases will fall within the Girish
Mulchand Mehta & Ors v Mahesh S Mehta & Ors3 line of
judgments and need not detain us. That is now a
separate jurisprudence of its own.
3 2019 SCC OnLine Bom 1986; Aditya Developers v Nirmal Anand Coop
Hsg Soc Ltd & Ors, 2016 SCC OnLine Bom 100: 2016 (3) Mah LJ 761; and
Sarthak Developers v Bank of India Amrut-Tara Staff CHSL, Appeal (L) No
310 of 2012.
53. Each of one these requires a slightly different approach, but in
the Category 3 cases with which we are concerned, I would venture
to suggest that, again without attempting to lay down any strait jacket
or rigid formula, the following tests are among those to be applied:
(a) Can it be shown that there is a default on the part of the
society in fulfilling its obligations? For instance, has the
society failed or refused to vacate? Has it wrongly
claimed arrears of transit rent or other dues although
these have been paid? Is the society itself merely trying
to squeeze more financial gain out of the developer? If
so, the society’s petition will be dismissed — possibly
with costs and even strictures — and the developer will
receive the full weight of protection against unjust or
unlawful termination.
(b) Can the default by the society be said to be a
fundamental breach or a breach of a fundamental term
such as would excuse the developer from performing
one or more of its obligations? For instance, a failure to
deliver possession might constitute such a fundamental
breach; for, without possession, the developer simply
cannot proceed. Unless it has vacant possession, the
developer has no obligation to pay transit compensation
or, possibly, the other dues.
(c) Can it be shown that the financial or other obligations of
the developer have a one-to-one correspondence with
the obligations of the society such that a default by the
society would absolve the developer from the
performance of his obligations? Again, an example of
this might be the society’s obligation to deliver vacant
possession. It is quite clear from any reading of any of
these agreements that a failure to do so will result in the
developer being excused from performing almost all his
obligations including the financial obligations. But once
this has happened — and this is why at the beginning of
this judgment I called a trigger event — then a series of
consequences begin to follow. Unless it is demonstrated
that the developer’s ensuing obligations have a express
conditionality attached to them, the developer cannot
seek to evade the consequences of a breach of its
financial obligations and its obligations to complete the
development on time.
54. Therefore, a final factor relates to how a Category 3 case
developer conducts itself once the society has come to court. There
are several distinct elements in play at this time: (i) accumulated
arrears of transit rent and other dues; (ii) the obligation to pay
ongoing transit rent until possession with an occupation certificate;
(iii) payment of statutory and corporation dues, including property
tax (including arrears, and irrespective of when these are actually
due), for non-payment puts at risk the very property of the society;
and (iv) a demonstration of the financial means to bring the project to
completion. To stave off a society’s petition framed such as the
present one is, the respondent-developer must place an acceptable
proposal that covers all these. Accumulated arrears can be capitalized
and allowed to be paid in reasonable tranches or instalments. But
while that is happening, ongoing payment obligations must be met
month to month. All statutory dues and property taxes must be
cleared. There must be a tenable, viable and cogent statement of
availability of financing to complete the project, and this, in turn,
requires a fair estimate of the remaining costs of completion,
disclosure of the source of funding (not some woolly promise or
expectation) and the actual and ready availability of, and access to,
that funding. Inevitably, there will also be a default clause in any such
re-worked understanding that culminates in Consent Terms or a
consent order: if there is a default (of such kind as is agreed before the
Court), the developer must accept (a) the termination; (b) ejectment
from the site; and (c) its liability to pay all accumulated financial debts
until the date of default — all resulting automatically in an
enforceable order of the court. Nothing short of this will do.4
55. In the narrative that I have set out above, I find no explanation
or no justification for Value Projects to have created third party rights
in respect of flats allotted to members. It is simply not possible to
accept the argument that this was necessary because the alleged
misrepresentation as to title had financial consequences, and
therefore, the developer was left with no choice. This is a clear-cut
breach of the terms of the Development Agreement. It simply cannot
be explained in this manner. Similarly, there is no explanation for the
non-payment of the second instalment of the corpus or the defaults
in payment of the rent.
4 In some cases, the court has taken the extraordinary step of having the
Court Receiver complete the project. See Goverdhangiri CHSL v Bharat
Infrastructure & Engineering Ltd, cited below.
56. I have previously had occasion to hold in Borivali Anamika
Niwas CHSL vs Aditya Developers & Ors5 that non-payment of rent is
a breach of a fundamental term. The same consideration will apply
here.
57. I have also dealt with the issue of how such equities should be
balanced in Goverdhangiri CHSL v Bharat Infrastructure &
Engineering Ltd:6
13. Before me today Mr. Tamboly for the 2nd
Respondent has candidly accepted that there are arrears of
transit rent that remain unpaid. He does say that the 2nd
Respondent has put a considerable amount into the project.
He cannot however claim that the project is complete except
for minor finishing works; there is clearly much that remains
to be done. There are pending instalments of FSI that have
not been paid. Sale proceeds from the free sale flats have not
been put into the escrow account. There are significant
arrears of property tax. A bank guarantee of about Rs. 3
crores to cover the rent to be paid has not been furnished.
The arrears of compensation until March 2020 have touched
nearly Rs. 3 crores.
14. I have given both sides repeated opportunities to
try and resolve these differences. I am mindful of the
condition of the members of the society. This has to be a
primary concern of any Court of equity. Indeed this was
the primary concern that led to the Court in the contempt
petition taking an extraordinary step of appointing not
5 2019 SCC OnLine Bom 10718.
6 2020 SCC OnLine Bom 2787. This was also the view taken in Chaurangi
Builders and Developers Pvt Ltd v Maharashtra Airport Development Company Ltd,
2013 SCC Online Bom 1530.
only a Receiver but a Special Committee including an
independent Architect to complete the project. The
society’s members had to be provided housing at the
earliest possible. They also had to be provided transit
accommodation.
15. Let us take a step back and imagine or visualize the
scenario from the point of view of the members of the society
represented by Mr. Subramanian. He has not, in fairness,
used this simply as a point of prejudice though he was well
within his rights to have done so. His submissions have
been to portray the desperate plight of the members of the
society: out of the original homes that they had for a long
time, left to fend for themselves for payment of
compensation or rent while in transit; deprived of rent
and displacement compensation; not being provided
their homes; only being given repeated assurances; and
with no real prospect of seeing their new promised homes
ever becoming reality.
16. Consequently, Mr. Tamboly’s task as an advisor to
the 2nd Respondent necessarily meant that the 2nd
Respondent would, to avoid the consequences that must
now follow, have to commit unequivocally to even more
stringent conditions. One of these would be to establish
that it is not in arrears and to clear all financial dues to
the society. It is true that the society has indeed invoked a
bank guarantee but there has been no restraint against that
and that is well within the permissible contours of the law
regarding the bank guarantee. That is not an equitable
consideration that can conceivably be invoked by the 2nd
Respondent. There is undoubtedly an amount payable to
the society. This has not been paid. Construction has not
been completed. Property tax dues are in arrears — and
this alone puts the Society’s own property in jeopardy for
no fault of the Society’s members. There is no evidence
before me that the 2nd Respondent has any funds at all to
complete the project. It only says that it is on the verge of
receiving financial support. That is not good enough.
17. The only argument available to the 2nd
Respondent is that it has ploughed money into the
project. This is commended as an equitable
consideration. It is not. It can never be. The 2nd
Respondent committed to the re-development enterprise
not out of any altruistic motivations for the common good
of the Society, but to make a profit. It knowingly took the
risk. It risked its funding. Every risk-taking necessarily
contemplates either success or failure, two sides of a
single coin. No developer can turn an open-eyed risk into
an advantage in equity unless it shows that its risk has
been caused or increased by a default by the Society, but
for which matters would not have come to this pass. The
2nd Respondent developer cannot insist on contractual
rights being safeguarded or protected as a matter of
equity or law. If the developer wants equity, the
developer must demonstrate that it has done equity;
clearly at least at a prima facie stage, this appears to be
far from correct.
18. As against this — and this is the ‘balance of
convenience’ test — is the condition of the Society and
its members, and the inconceivable prejudice to them.
Apart from the very many tangibles I have outlined
above, there is now the added burden of finding a source
of funding, or a means of self-financing, to complete the
project, and perhaps having to write off the promises
displacement compensation altogether short of an
arbitral award in a long and expensive litigation process.
There can be not the slightest doubt that the balance of
convenience is with the Petitioners who have made out a
very strong prima facie case.
19. The prejudice to the Petitioners if relief is denied will be
incalculable. All that they are being offered today are more
promises. Promises were made before, only to be broken,
again and again and again.
(Emphasis added)
58. In Punjab National Bank Workers’ Cooperative Housing Society
Ltd vs Meeti Developers,7 while holding against the developer I said:
17. The question therefore now is whether it can truly
be said that the developers is entitled to any equitable
discretionary relief under Section 9. That can only be
done if in a matter like this the developers is able to
demonstrate prima facie that any delay is not attributable
to it and that it has, in other words, fulfilled and complied
with its contractual obligations.
18. … … …
19. … … …
20. The other argument for equitable relief that Mr Davar
advances is that the developers has paid compensation —
the amount is not relevant — though it was ‘not bound to do
so’, and the Society members have accepted it till as late as
2020. Payment of transit rent or displacement
compensation is a contractual provision. It is nobody’s
case that the developers was not bound to pay any transit
rent or displacement compensation at all. What the
submission really amounts to is that by conduct of parties
the Addendum of 13th December 2017 was somehow
novated and a modified Agreement was arrived at. This
7 Arbitration Petition (L) No 8189 of 2020 and connected matters, decided
on 11th February 2021. Here, too, there were cross petitions by the society and
the developer, almost exactly paralleling the present case.
is not even remotely facie compelling. If there is to be any
alteration of the Agreement, clearly it would have to be
in writing and this is true whether or not the Agreement
contains any specific provision to that effect. I say this
because the Addendum had the signatures of all the society
members and the shopkeepers as well. I do not see how it can
be said that generalised statement of payment to one or the
other or in differential amounts could lead to a novated
Agreement with the different terms including an expansion
of the time frames applicable to all. The old residential
structure still stands. It is empty and vacant. The
shopkeepers’ structure still stands but they are in
occupation. Nothing whatsoever has happened.
21. This is sadly the stark reality of redevelopment
project in this city. Society members are entitled to better
their living conditions. The property is theirs. They are
the owners of it. It may be that in the course of
redevelopment they are required to confer certain rights
on a developer. After all, they are not able to afford the
costs of reconstruction themselves. Allowing a developer
the right to sell free sale units is compensation for the
developers putting up the rehabilitation units to reaccommodate
members. This does not confer by itself in
every case rights in the land in favour of a developer.
There are equitable considerations to be kept in mind. A
developer is in search of only thing: the profits that it will
make from the project. The interest of society members
are entirely different. What they are looking at is better
homes, ones long promised to them, but ones that
remained an unfulfilled dream forever receding in time.
22. The contest is therefore between what is a
essentially human displacement problem and the purely
profit-oriented objective. If there is to be an equitable
balance, then there can be no doubt on which side a Court
of equity will lean. The developers may have a claim to
be made in damages. It is free to pursue that claim. That
cannot give it rights in specie over the property itself nor
can it subject the full ownership rights of the society to its
demands. Not only is the developer entirely profitoriented,
and that necessarily matters that a developer
can be compensated in money terms, immediately
putting them out of the reach of any interim relief, but
they have also cannot said to have acquired any direct
interest in the land itself. Indeed, the only situation in
which a developer may be able to get some relief is if it
can demonstrate that it has played it ‘by the book’, as it
were, and there is no default on its part.
23. An attempt, however, on the other hand to choke
up a development to leverage changes in development
policy and available FSI to maximise profit is a strategy
that comes at a real cost to society members, and is a
stratagem that no Court of equity can, will or should ever
countenance for a minute.
24. The strategy is plain and, like the Emperor’s
clothes, it bares all. The idea is to keep the society and its
members hanging by a thread, stuck in an endless cycle
of delayed payments and part payments, all the while
ostensibly keeping the contract ‘alive’, claiming rights in
it, and waiting to squeeze every last drop of available
buildability out of the project only to maximize profits.
25. If therefore today Meeti Developers is unable to
demonstrate compliance, the fact it may have made some
payment in between will be of no avail. The only way it
can stave of its ejectment as a developer is to demonstrate
complete and exact compliance with its contractual
obligations under the contract. This it is clearly unable to
do.
26. The society for its part does not have to do very
much more then demonstrate the lack of compliance by
the developers. The society is after all the owner of the
property and its title is paramount. The society terminated
the Agreement on 12th November 2020. I cannot
understand why the developers even then sat idly by and did
not think to come to Court till as late as 18th January 2021.
That delay alone probably tells us all that we need to know
about the bona fides of the counter petition by Meeti
Developers.
(Emphasis added)
59. Meeti Developers was taken in appeal. A few observations of
the Appeal Court while dismissing the Appeal are relevant. In
paragraphs 11, 13 and 14 the Appeal Court held:
“11. Even if we were to ignore the fact that there has been
a tremendous (and largely unjustifiable) length of time that
has passed since the original Development Agreement and
consider events only after the Addendum of 13th December
2017, in our view, prima facie, there appears to be a
complete failure on the part of the Developer in
complying with the timelines set out in the Addendum.
Admittedly, the NOC from MHADA which was agreed to
be obtained by the Developer within 90 days from the
execution of the Addendum, was obtained almost 2. 5 years
after the execution of the Addendum i.e. only on 15th June
2020. Even thereafter, the IOD which was agreed to be
obtained within 90 days of the MHADA NOC, was not
obtained by the Developer; the same was eventually
obtained through the Society’s new Architect on 19th
January 2021. There is no cogent justification or explanation
given for the delay between 2017 and 2020.
13. It is trite that a party must be held to the terms of
its bargain. Having failed to fulfill its part of the bargain,
the Developer cannot now seek to restrain the Society
from enforcing the provisions of the Addendum which
entitle it to terminate the Agreements and proceed with
the redevelopment through a different builder.
14. Even otherwise, on the factual matrix before us, we
cannot allow the developer continuing to hold the project to
ransom despite having miserably failed to comply with the
timelines which were solemnly agreed to by the Developer. It
is also important to note that the Society terminated the
Development Agreement on 12th November 2020 and for
over 2 months, the Developer made no attempt to
approach the Court or seek a stay of the termination. In
the meantime, the Society has taken steps to appoint a new
developer and has obtained the IOD through its new
architect. This delay also militates against grant of any
interim relief to the Developer pending the arbitration.
(Emphasis added)
60. The Meeti Developers Appeal Court also referred to the
decisions in Jal Ratan Deep Cooperative Housing Society Ltd vs Kumar
Builders Mumbai Realty Private Limited8 and Gopi Gorwani vs Ideal
CHSL.9
61. I am leaving aside any argument about the pandemic and
Covid. The defaults of this Developer go back much further than that.
8 Arbitration Petition (L) No. 219 of 2015, decided on 24th June 2015.
9 Notice of Motion 1393 of 2012 in Suit No. 762 of 2012, decided on 10th June 2013.
62. The legal position that I have mentioned above is also the view
taken by this Court in SSD Estatics Pvt Ltd vs Goregaon Pearl Co-op
Housing Society Ltd;10 The New Aarti Co-operative Housing Society Ltd
vs Kabra Estate & Investment Consultants;11 and Solaris Developers Pvt
Ltd vs Eversmile Co-operative Housing Society Ltd.12
63. I need not at this stage trouble with any further issues regarding
the rights of third flat purchasers whether or not those are protected
or nor are outside the frame of present discussion.13
64. Having said this, there are certain overriding factors that I
believe I must heed. Section 9 is a discretionary and equitable remedy,
and the consideration of equity is often determinative. After all, in
such cases, we are not dealing with any arms’ length market
transaction of simply putting up a building on an empty plot of land.
On the one side is the question of development, the Developer, his
commercial intentions, genuine as these are. On the other, is a very
real issue of human displacement and of an associated trauma caused
to an entire community by the delay in project completion. The
description of this Society, with which I began this judgment, might
as easily apply to almost any community in this city, whether
Maharashtrian, Gujarati, Tamil, Kannada, Parsi or otherwise. We are
all familiar with these communities. They are part of our lives and
10 Commercial Arbitration Petition (L) No. 1072 of 2018.
11 2015 SCC Online Bom 5929.
12 Arbitration Petition (L) No. 593 of 2019.
13 Goregaon Pearl CHSL Dr Seema Mahadev Paryekar & Ors, 2019 SCC Online Bom 3274; Vaidehi Akash Housing Pvt Ltd vs New DN Nagar Co-operative Housing Society Ltd & Ors, MANU/MH/2888/2014.
always have been. This city is really nothing but an agglomeration of
these communities working together. The aridity of contractual
documents, lawyers’ notices and legal argot often mask or occlude
the enormous tragedy that lies beneath. This particular Society, with
its 20 houses and seven shops, was, in all likelihood, once a
community of its own. I am speculating, but I imagine that in such a
compact society, not only did everybody know everybody, but
everybody knew everything about everybody. Families would have
shared joys and sorrows, been together in good times and bad,
celebrated festivals together. Entire floors, even wings, might have
had a more or less open-door practice, with people constantly in and
out of each other’s houses without needing the formality of
invitations to visit. When, therefore, in the context of a dryly-worded
contract, we speak of “development”, it does not tell us what actually
has happened — that this community has been literally splintered and
torn apart. Persons who were together perhaps for generations are
now dispersed across the city. They may have lost their immediate
and daily contact. The contact that has persisted through generations
has almost certainly been lost. When and how that will ever be
brought back is a major question mark. This is what has been lost in
translation. This is what delayed redevelopment projects do not begin
to let us understand. There is a very real human tragedy unfolding in
case after case, and it is tearing apart the social fabric of this city. It is all very easy to say in a Court of law that “arrears of transit rent” have not been paid. What does this actually mean? Digits and commas on a page in a lawsuit do not let us comprehend the terrifying reality of
what that non-payment of rent month after month after month must
mean to ordinary middle-income people. For one thing, it means they
have to find their own way to pay the rent in transit. No landlord is
going to wait for a developer to pay up. That, in turn, would have
meant risking being dis-housed and put on the street with families,
old parents, young children. It might well have meant giving up any
number of things, some too frightening to contemplate — even food
for the family. These are not matters to which, just because we are in
the rarefied preserves of a court of law, we should blind ourselves.
These are the stark and terrible realities underlying such contracts.
65. I mention this (and some of this may indeed be speculation)
because when one speaks of the ‘balance of convenience’, another
umbrella term, one must attempt to give it some life and colour and
actual societal context. This speaks of the comparative mischief or
hardship to be weighed when granting or refusing relief. But there is
nothing here but imbalance. The defaults by the Developer have
undoubtedly caused immense prejudice and harm to the members of
the Society. The hardship to the members is real and immediate; the
so-called hardship to the Developers is notional. When it spent in the
project, this was no altruism or charity. It was an investment toward
great profit. Every investment involves risk. The Developer gambled
on the project. Receiving monthly rent is not a sop, not a matter of
‘convenience’. It is a matter of survival. Therefore, the non-payment
of dues, the delays in project completion, and not paying transit rent
for months together speaks to an inherent, and constantly growing,
social injustice. It should not be allowed to continue. Therefore, apart
from the exceptionally strong prima facie case that the Society makes
out, the ‘balance of convenience’ is decidedly in its favour.
66. These development agreements are, above all, in the nature of
an entrustment. They are not entered into blindly. There is a long and
laborious process of society notices, general body meetings, the
appointment of a consultant as an advisor, calling for tenders,
scrutinizing the bids, ensuring compliance with laws and regulations,
looking at the proposals and so on to the end of the chapter. This is
as it must be. For what is it that is actually happening here? The
society is entrusting an outsider with the one single asset that justifies
the society’s existence, that actually defines the society: the society’s
property. This is not the entrustment of some other land on which to
build so that the society can make handsome profits; no, this is the
entrustment of the actual property being used by the society and its
members, the very homes in which they live. The society’s members
agree to this upheaval, to move out altogether, to separate from each
other while their new homes are built. The promise to them is that
they will be looked after and provided for while their new homes are
being built. Days, weeks, months and years pass; the members do not
receive the promised rent. Thus begins the downward slide. The
promised homes are delayed, then delayed further, and then delayed
even further. This cuts at the root of the initial entrustment. A
development project for a society demands commitment, fidelity,
respect and honesty. When these begin to disappear, the contractual
relationship collapses. Where there was anticipation and confidence,
there is now just bitterness, disappointment and despair. There is a
breakdown of confidence, and there is only distrust. Loss of faith and
confidence on account of contractual violations and breaches by a
developer are sufficient grounds to find for the society and against the
developer. Gopi Gorwani v Ideal Cooperative Housing Society Ltd & Ors, 2013 SCC OnLine Bom 1967. Indeed, I would go a step further. There is urgency for the society. Therefore, the slightest delay in project completion, unless specifically accepted by the society, and even one single default
in payment of transit rent or other dues is actually sufficient to
warrant a termination. There is no such thing in these matters as
‘substantial compliance’. That is not the principle of obligations in
the realm of private law.
67. If we, therefore, approach these two matters from this
perspective, I do not believe it is even remotely possible to suggest
that this Developer, persistently in default, persistently delaying, and
never able to come up with actual money to make good the vast
accumulated arrears of financial obligations should now be able to tell
the society, “You will not be able to eject us from this project. When
we will complete your homes, we cannot and will not say. When we
will pay your dues, we cannot say. How we will raise finances is
unclear. We have none with us now. When you will finally get what
you are contractually due, we also cannot say. Even so, we are entitled
to be here until we make our profits.”
68. What is it that the society says on the other hand? In whatever
manner the prayers are worded all that the Society says is, “Give back
to us that which was ours. Allow us to get back our homes, and restore
our lives.”
69. That is an application that, in these circumstances, is
impossible to resist.
70. Mr Khandeparkar is mindful, as am I, that the first prayer is for
a mandatory injunction. This brings us within the frame of the law as
declared by the Supreme Court in Samir Narain Bhojwani v Aurora
Properties & Investments & Anr15and Dorab Cawasji Warden v Coomi
Sorab Warden.16 This has recently been explained in Hammad Ahmed
v Abdul Majeed & Ors,17 to say that an ad-interim mandatory
injunction is not to be granted lightly or for the asking; but it is also
not forbidden. An exceptionally strong prima facie case has to be
made out. If satisfied that withholding such an injunction would be
unjust and unconscionable, resulting in a perpetuation of injustice,
then a court of equity will indeed grant it. This, I believe, is a case that
wholly warrants such an injunction.
71. As amended, the prayers in the society’s Petition read thus:
“(a) An order of mandatory injunction directing the
Respondent, its directors, servants, agents and/or persons
claiming through them hand over peaceful possession of the
property viz. Land being part of CTS Nos. 4836, 4837, 4838,
4839, 4840, 4841, 4842, 4843, 4844 and 4844A admeasuring
997.20 sq. mtrs along with the existing structure/s
(completed or otherwise) standing thereupon titled as
Redevelopment project of “Rajawadi Arunodaya” situated
at Junction of 4th and 7th Road, Ghatkopar (East), Mumbai
– 400 077;
(a-1) That this Hon’ble Court be pleased to appoint a
Court Receiver, High Court Bombay and/or any other fit
and proper person to act as a Receiver having all powers
under Order XL r.1 of the Civil Procedure Code to take
possession of the said property i.e. CTS Nos. 4836, 4837,
4840, 4841, 4842, 4843, 4844 and 4844A admesuring 997.20
15 (2018) 17 SCC 203.
16 (1990) 2 SCC 117.
17 2019 SCC OnLine SC 467, paragraphs 57 and 58.
sq. mtrs. equivalent to 1192.65 sq. yards and buildings
standing hereon known as Rajawadi Arunodaya CHSL, lying
and being at “Arunodaya” Rajawadi, Junction of 4th and 7th
Road, Ghatkopar (East), Mumbai – 400 077, and said project
i.e. “Value Platinum” (with police assistances, if required)
and hand over the said project and property to the Petitioner
herein;
(a-2) That this Hon’ble Court be pleased to restrain the
Respondent its Directors, officers, servants, agents, and/or
all or any persons claiming through and under them b y an
order of temporary injunction from creating third party
rights i.e. mortgages, sale lien, leave and license, lease, gift
and/or encumbrance of any kind whatsoever in respect of
the said property i.e. CTS Nos. 4836, 4837, 4840, 4841,
4842, 4843, 4844 and 4844A admesuring 997.20 sq. mtrs.
equivalent to 1192.65 sq. yards and buildings standing
thereon known as Rajawadi Arunodaya CHSL, lying and
being at “Arunodaya” Rajawadi, Junction of 4th and 7th
Road, Ghatkoper (East), Mumbai – 400 077, and said project
i.e. “Value Platinum” in any manner whatsoever;
(b) That this Hon’ble Court be pleased to restrain the
Respondent its Directors, servants, agents, contractors
and/or all or any person claiming through or under them by
way of a temporary injunction from intermeddling,
interfering, obstructing in the redevelopment process,
construction by the Petitioner by appointment of a third
party developer, contractor, completion by selfdevelopment
process and/or all or any other acts done on the
said property and the said project by the Petitioner and/or
its assignees, nominees, agents, contractors, developers;
(c) That this Hon’ble Court be pleased to restrain the
Respondent its Directors, servants, agents, contractors
and/or all or any person claiming through or under them by
way of a temporary injunction from interfering in the
possession of the Petitioner Society and/or in manner
dispossessing the Petitioner Society and its members and/or
its assignees, nominees, agents, contractors, developers etc
from the said project and said property;
(d) That this Hon’ble Court be pleased to direct the
Respondent its Directors, servants, agents, contractors
and/or all or any person claiming through or under them to
hand over possession of all the Original Documents (i.e.
Development Agreement, Power of Attorney, original
approvals, original sanctions, original payment receipts
and/or all or any documents in relation to the said property
and said project) in the custody and possession of the
Respondent and/or all or any other writing executed
between the Petitioner and Respondent.”
72. I will have to make an order in terms of prayer clauses (a), (a-
1), (a-2), (b), (c) and (d) of the Society’s petition, reproduced above.
Further—
(a) The Court Receiver is appointed only to ensure that
there is no disturbance at site.
(b) The Court Receiver will remain in symbolic possession
of the site until the completion of the project.
(c) Any interference with the Court Receiver by the
Developer will be treated as an act of contempt of Court.
(d) The Receiver will appoint the Society as its agent
without payment of royalty. The Society’s office bearers
will execute the necessary Agency Agreement under an
order of the Court.
(e) The Developer-Respondent is to hand over all necessary
documents in original within two weeks from today. If
copies of the relevant plans are not given by the
Developer, Mr Patil on behalf of the MCGM agrees that
his officers will make available copies to the Society or
its newly appointed architects on payment of the
necessary copying charges.
(f) The MCGM will accept the Society’s nomination of a
new architect without insisting upon a no-objection
certificate from the previous architect/licensed
surveyor.
73. The Society’s Petition is disposed of in these terms. There
cannot be the kind of relief that the developer seeks in its Petition.
The developer’s Petition is thus dismissed.
74. Mr Shah points out that one of the commercial units, No. 107,
has been sold to an outsider who has taken possession and is running
a dental clinic there. In this fight between the Society and this
Developer, that medical practitioner should not suffer. On this, at
least, I believe Mr Shah is completely correct. The Court Receiver is
not to disturb the possession of the person in occupation of Unit No.
107. When that person seeks to join the Society as a member, that
application will be dealt with on merits in accordance with law. I see
no reason to appoint the Court Receiver of Unit No. 107, but if that
owner believes it is in his interest to be protected by a receivership,
he or she is at liberty to approach the Court Receiver. If the owner
exercises the choice, the Court Receiver will so stand appointed of
Unit No 107, to take symbolic possession and to appoint the owner
without royalty as his agent until re-development is complete and an
occupation certificate is obtained. This direction is purely for the
protection of the owner of Unit No. 107 so that none can obstruct his
or her possession or question title. But the choice is with the owner.
75. There is yet another commercial Unit No. 108. Mr Shah says
this is not only Developer’s site office but also its commercial office.
He would have it that the Developer should be entitled to continue
using this site office. Finally, Mr Shah submits that the Developer
should be given a reasonable time to clear its material from site.
76. The question regarding Unit No. 108 is very problematic. That
unit is mortgaged to the Damani NBFC. It was actually allotted to a
member under a letter of allotment against payment. There is some
dispute about whether the payment was received or not, but that
again will not help Mr Shah at this stage. There is no occupation
certificate for any part of the structure. How, in these circumstances,
the developer can itself claim a right to continue to occupy these
premises is unclear. I cannot accept that claim.
77. I will give the Developer time until 19th April 2021 to remove
itself, its equipment and material from the entire site. It also has that
much time to vacate Unit No. 108. It is to deliver possession of Unit
No. 108 to the Court Receiver, who will deliver possession to the
office bearers of the society.
78. This order is not a final determination of the Developer’s final
contentions or claims. It may in arbitration seek suitable reliefs other
than those in its present Section 9 Petition, which is dismissed.
79. The views and findings on facts in this order are prima facie
and for the purposes only of this order.
80. At this stage, both sides request that I appoint an Arbitrator. I
nominate Mr Karl Shroff, learned Advocate of this Court, to decide
the disputes and differences between the parties under the
Agreement of 5th April 2013.
TERMS OF APPOINTMENT
(a) Appointment of Arbitrator: Mr Karl Shroff, learned
Advocate, is hereby nominated to act as a Sole Arbitrator
to decide the disputes and differences between the
parties under Agreement of 5th April 2013.
(b) Communication to Arbitrator of this order:
(i) A copy of this order will be communicated to
the learned Sole Arbitrator by the Advocates
for the Petitioner within one week from the
date this order is uploaded.
(ii) The Advocates for the Petitioner will forward
an ordinary copy of this order to the learned
Sole Arbitrator at the following postal and
email addresses:
Arbitrator Mr Karl Shroff, Advocate.
Address Frenville, Jussawala Wadi
Juhu, Mumbai 400 049
Mobile 98200 69915
Email karlshroff@hotmail.com
(c) Disclosure: The learned Sole Arbitrator is requested to
forward, in hard copy or soft copy (or both), the
necessary statement of disclosure under Section 11(8)
read with Section 12(1) of the Arbitration Act to
Advocates for the parties as soon as possible. The
Advocates for the Petitioners will arrange to file the
original statement in the Registry. If the statement is
forwarded in soft copy, a print out of the covering email
is also to be filed in the registry.
(d) Appearance before the Arbitrator: Parties will appear
before the learned Sole Arbitrator on such date and at
such place as the learned Sole Arbitrator nominates to
obtain appropriate directions in regard to fixing a
schedule for completing pleadings, etc.
(e) Contact/communication information of the parties:
Contact and communication particulars are to be
provided by both sides to the learned Sole Arbitrator.
The information is to include functional email addresses
and mobile numbers.
(f) Section 16 application: The respondent is at liberty to
raise all questions of jurisdiction within the meaning of
section 16 of the Arbitration Act. All contentions are left
open.
(g) Interim Application/s:
(i) Liberty to the parties to make an interim
application or interim applications including
(but not limited to) interim applications under
Section 17 of the Arbitration & Conciliation
Act, 1996 before the learned Sole Arbitrator.
Any such application will be decided in such
manner and within such time as the learned
Sole Arbitrator deems fit.
(ii) The learned Sole Arbitrator is requested to
dispose of all interim applications at the
earliest.
(h) Fees: The arbitral tribunal’s fees shall be governed by
the Bombay High Court (Fee Payable to Arbitrators)
Rules, 2018.
(i) Sharing of costs and fees: Parties agree that all arbitral
costs and the fees of the arbitrator will be borne by the
two sides in equal shares in the first instance.
(j) Consent to an extension if thought necessary. Parties
immediately consent to a further extension of up to six
months to complete the arbitration should the learned
Sole Arbitrator find it necessary.
(k) Venue and seat of arbitration: Parties agree that the
venue and seat of the arbitration will be in Mumbai.
(l) Procedure: These directions are not in derogation of
the powers of the learned Sole Arbitrator to decide and
frame all matters of procedure in arbitration.
81. Rather than make an order of costs in these Section 9 Petitions,
I will leave it open to both sides to seek the costs of these Petitions as
costs in arbitration.
82. The Petitions are disposed of in these terms.
(G.S. PATEL, J.)
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