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OREAT Allows Panchayat as Aggrieved Person Under RERA in Landmark Case

Pre-RERA Apartments

In a significant development for real estate governance and local self-government bodies, the Odisha Real Estate Appellate Tribunal has delivered a landmark ruling allowing a gram panchayat to challenge a housing project approval. The case involved Kantabada Panchayat contesting the actions of the Bhubaneswar Development Authority over alleged jurisdictional violations.

This ruling has widened the interpretation of the term “aggrieved person” under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016, marking an important shift in how complaints can be filed under the Act.

Background of the Dispute

The dispute revolves around a three-storeyed residential project with 26 units in Kantabada. The gram panchayat argued that:

As per a 2018 notification by the Panchayati Raj Department, gram panchayats have the authority to grant building approvals in rural areas.

However, the Odisha Real Estate Regulatory Authority had earlier dismissed the complaint, stating that the sarpanch did not qualify as an “aggrieved person” since she was neither an allottee, promoter, nor real estate agent.

OREAT’s Key Observations and Ruling

Overturning ORERA’s decision, OREAT made several critical observations:

The tribunal clearly stated that ORERA misinterpreted the law, leading to an incorrect dismissal of the complaint.

Recognition of Panchayat’s Legal Standing

A major highlight of the judgment is the recognition of local self-government bodies as legitimate stakeholders in real estate disputes. The tribunal held that:

This interpretation strengthens decentralized governance and ensures that local authorities are not sidelined in development decisions.

Failure of ORERA to Address Core Issues

OREAT also criticized ORERA for not examining key aspects of the case, including:

The tribunal has now directed ORERA to rehear the matter on May 4 and dispose of it by the end of the month.

Impact on Real Estate Regulation

This ruling has far-reaching implications:

Real estate experts have welcomed the decision, noting that such clarity will help avoid confusion and ensure that all stakeholders can seek justice under a unified legal framework.

Conclusion

The Kantabada Panchayat case marks a progressive interpretation of RERA, ensuring that the law remains inclusive and responsive to real-world governance challenges. By recognizing panchayats as “aggrieved persons,” OREAT has set an important precedent that could influence similar disputes across India.

This decision underscores that real estate regulation is not limited to buyers and developers alone, but also includes local authorities responsible for planning and governance, thereby strengthening the overall regulatory ecosystem.

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