There is now a Maharashtra conveyance deed process app.
PUNE: Members of the State Housing Federation have developed a mobile application with the assistance of the department of cooperation to instruct housing societies on how to execute a conveyance deed or considered conveyance.
The conveyance deed, also known as a presumed conveyance, refers to the builder transferring land in the name of the housing society. According to state officials, more than 60,000 of the 1.15 lakh registered cooperative housing societies in Maharashtra still need a conveyance document or presumed conveyance. The members claimed that it is free to download the “Housing Co-op Master” app from the Google Play Store.
According to Shree Prasad Parab, member and knowledgeable director of the Maharashtra State Cooperative Housing Federation, the app also has data on society statutes. More societies will be able to complete the process and contact the department with questions if they are aware of conveyance or considered conveyance, according to Parab.
A free seminar series on transferring land in the name of housing societies has also been launched by the federation. In addition to deputy registrars, we received support for the app from senior secretary of the state cooperation department Anoop Kumar and commissioner Anil Kawade, according to Parab.
Videos that have been posted to the app cover a variety of subjects, including considered conveyance, its procedure, and mutation entries. The software would be useful to societies, according to a senior official in the cooperation department, because few people were aware of the transfer deed’s process and significance.
“The common laws in the app will also assist in resolving disagreements between society members on maintenance fees and the imposition of interest on defaulters. Such complaints will be reduced thanks to the app “a departmental official claimed.
Invoking Advocate Parab, “We are unable to personally educate people about the cooperative housing society and it’s regulating acts and bylaws. So, we considered leveraging technology to reach a wider audience.” Shridhar Murthy, a resident of a housing society in Pune, said of the app, “It’s simple to use.