The Tamil Nadu government made an amendment to Registration Act whereby
it included memorandum of deposit of title deeds in the list of documents under
section 17 of the Act.
Let us see some points, what is Title deed, what is deposit, what is
sec.17, what is its effect?
Title deeds of a property is known as document or a set of documents
which confers right of ownership over a property on a person.
When a person borrows money from another, who asks some sort of security
for the loan, so the borrower deposits the title deeds of some property to the
financier and thus creates the equitable mortgage over the property.
Various types of mortgages are available; Simple mortgage, mortgage with
possession, conditional mortgage, etc are the main types; among these equitable
mortgage is one which is created by just depositing/ handing over the title
deeds and which did not require any separate document and registration of the
same.
Whereas the simple mortgage and other types of mortgage require separate
mortgage deed and its registration.
If any letter, document, memorandum or document is executed evidencing
the deposit of title deeds, it did not require registration but optionally can
be registered.
Registration Act lists out the documents in sec.17, which are
compulsorily registered and in sec.18, which are optionally regisetrable.
As the equity mortgage did not require any separate document or its
registration, its existence could not be available in any public records viz.,
encumbrance certificate, patta or chitta and could not be found also without
any special prudence.
If any person lacking proper scrutiny or without any legal advice buys
any property which is under equitable mortgage, later he may have to face the
liability and redeem the property from the mortgage for the loan borrowed by ht
previous owner.
In order to avoid such situation, the buyer has to insist the seller to
produce all the title deeds and documents in original, before finalising the terms and entering into agreement.
One may think and ask, how a person can sell a property without the
original deeds, when it is equitably mortgaged? Here is a circumstance
narrated, one firm mortgaged the larger extent of lands in order to develop the
same into a residential layout and has deposited the title deed to the
financing firm.
It is the normal practice in vogue that a real estate firm shall not give
the original deeds or even show them in original to the purchasers. The legal
advisor of the buyer shall scrutiny the Xerox of all title deeds and found
it in order and may certify that the real estate firm or the seller has the
marketable title over the property and entitled to sell the same.
Actually, the property is encumbered by the said equitable mortgage, which is
not registered and cant be found in EC or by the lawyer in his scrutiny.
If a seller with wrong intention, after sale of all the plots in the
residential layout, do not wish to repay the said loan amount, the bank
[financing firm] shall initiate the process to seize the mortgaged property.
Now, all the buyers or owners of the plots have to face this dispute and hence
to lose the plots.
The same situation may exist in the case of apartments developments. The
property developer shall produce the Xeroxes of title deeds only to the
purchaser.
Moreover, the banks are empowered to sell the property by invoking the
provisions of SARFAESI Act without assistance of Court of Law.
The only remedy to the innocent buyers is to give the property to the
financing bank and get the money back from the seller, but which is a tough
task if the seller has already acted with pre-planned wrong intention. All
these headaches are due to the unregistered equitable mortgage.
Now the scene is changed, the TN government has passed an amendment
whereby the memorandum of deposit of title deeds or any other document/s
evidencing the creation of equitable mortgage is made as to be a compulsorily
registered one, which will result that no bank or financiers can claim any
right or lien or charge over any property through an unregistered mortgage deed
or equitable mortgage deed.
Hence, the purchasers of plot or flat are relieved from the invisible
demon of equitable mortgage. As such, this is a welcome move by the government, however, it is not out of
place to mention that the stamp duty and registration fee have to be revised
for the registration of such memorandum, because these expenditures are borne
by the borrower which adds the liability of the borrower.