[ This article was published in the New Indian Express on 5.9.2017 under the title: BUILDING APARTMENTS IN THE AIR ]
The declaration of
JayPee Infratech as insolvent under the new Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act 2016
is just the tip of a massive real estate ice berg which has the potential to
sink hundreds of thousands of families. Other developers will follow the same exit
route soon, not only in Delhi NCR but all over the country, given the impunity
with which they have been siphoning off the money of home buyers. The Unitech
Directors are already in jail and a bankruptcy petition has also been filed
against Amrapali by two banks.
Matters have been
allowed to reach this low point by successive venal governments in UP and
Haryana which have been happily approving projects without any oversight or
questions. The scale of the emerging problem can be gauged from the fact that
in Greater Noida alone there are 203 projects, of which 82 are “critical”, i.e
have taken money from buyers but are in no position to deliver the flats.
Jaypee has swallowed up Rs.17000 crores from 30000 applicants, Amrapali from
about another 10000 victims. Builders in Noida also owe thousands of crores to
banks and Rs. 7200 crores to the Noida authority as land dues! Gurgaon is
another bubble waiting to burst, and other metros will soon follow suit.
All these
developers, like Jaypee, will in all likelihood be declared insolvent/bankrupt
by the NCLT( National Company Law Tribunal) under the new Bankruptcy Code. The
Act, however, is so framed that the home buyers are not likely to get any
relief or recover any substantial part of their moneys. Firstly, the builders
have had enough time to transfer their funds elsewhere and will leave behind
empty shells from which little can be recovered by way of auction. Secondly, they
have built fire-walls around their other assets which in all probability cannot
be touched. Thirdly, the home buyers are not even mentioned in the list of
seven entities entitled for payment of dues following liquidation of a company
under the Act! They are neither investors, nor financial creditors, nor
operational creditors, nor workmen! The simple truth is that this Act is intended
to primarily help the Banks, and is therefore hopelessly inadequate in resolving the peculiar problems of consumers
or casualties of the real estate sector- the home buyers.
The time has
therefore come for the government to seriously consider the following
issues/questions:
[1] Home buyers have
been given a raw deal under the Code. They are the last category when it comes
to a refund whereas they are the biggest investors in the company declared
bankrupt. IDBI Bank ( which will get the first priority) has to recover only
Rs. 526 crore from Jaypee whereas the buyers have put in 17000 crores. And yet
they are not considered as secured investors!
[2] A bank ( or any
other creditor) can approach the NCLT if its dues are not paid and trigger the
Insolvency process, but a home-buyer cannot even if s/he has not been provided
the home for which s/he has paid. This is patently unfair and must change.
[3] A home buyer cannot be a part of the Creditors’ Committee
which will finalise the plan for redistribution of the realised assets of the
insolvent company, since s/he is neither a financial nor an operational
creditor. This is illogical and unjust considering that s/he has the maximum
stakes in the company and has the most to lose.
[4] The built-up assets of the bankrupt company ( at whatever
stage of completion) belong to the applicants who have paid for them. How then
could they have been mortgaged by the said company to the Banks as security for
loans ? This is a fraud on the home
buyers: no second ( or “pari passu”)charge can be created on an asset without
the written concurrence of the party to whom it is already pledged- in this
case the home buyer. The builder company has the right to create the charge
only if it constructs the flats with its own funds first, and then subsequently
sells them. But that is not the business model followed by either Jaypee ,
Unitech , Amrapali or any other builder. They follow the “ pay as you build”
model and take advance payments in instalments at every stage of the
construction; the flats therefore belong to the applicant-buyer and cannot be
mortgaged without his consent. The primary lawful lien on these assets, therefore, is
that of the home buyer and not of the Banks. The Code should recognise this.
[ 5] Another injustice heaped on the home buyers is that once
the NCLT starts the bankruptcy process the former cannot approach any other
court or Consumer Forum for redressal of
their grievances. This is not equitable since the builder company can drag the
matter through our notoriously sluggish legal system for years together, while
the individual home buyer, usually subsisting on a salary or a pension, can
only wait, watch and pray.
[6] Another
interesting question that arises is: how can the banks give two loans against
the same flat/property- one to the buyer, and one to the builder? Is this
prudent banking practice ? By doing so the banks are over exposing themselves,
for if the builder fails to deliver then both loans go bad ! The only one who
makes a killing is the builder, which is what appears to be happening in the
instant cases- the promoters of both, Jaypee and Amrapali, will happily exit
after limiting their losses, and the banks and buyers will be left holding the
proverbial can.
[7] The Bankruptcy
Code contains no specific provision for either a forensic audit or initiation
of criminal action against the promoters of the company by the RP ( Resolution
Professional) if he finds that funds have been siphoned off or fraud committed.
This provides them an undesirable immunity.
The Code as it
stands today is apparently intended to help the Banks recover their NPAs. It
does not recognize the different character of the real estate sector and its
notorious track record. It needs to be amended suitably to instil faith in the
public. The Union Finance Minister has given some tepid assurances that the
interest of the JayPee home buyers will be protected. It means little in the
absence of specific enabling provisions in the Code. He needs to convert the standard
rhetoric into appropriate legislation in Parliament.
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