Guide · Money & process
The token, the bayana, and what your money is actually doing
What does a token legally do?
It converts a conversation into a contract. The bayana is consideration against an agreement to sell: the seller promises to convey by a date at a price; the buyer promises to complete; the earnest stands as the good-faith stake. Under the Transfer of Property Act's scheme, an agreement to sell confers no ownership by itself — the land moves only when a sale deed is executed and registered. The Supreme Court's Suraj Lamp ruling (2012) closed the folk shortcut too: GPA-plus-agreement "sales" are not conveyance, in Haryana or anywhere.
What must the agreement contain before you pay?
- Parties exactly as the record names them — every co-sharer of a joint holding signs.
- The land exactly as the record describes it — khasra numbers, area, share.
- Total price, the bayana amount, and the payment schedule to completion.
- The completion date, and what extends it.
- Refund and forfeiture: what happens if seller defaults, if buyer defaults, if records fail verification.
- Who cures defects found in verification, at whose cost, within what time.
- Possession terms and crop/harvest handling for agricultural parcels.
How much token, and when in the process?
Practice, not statute, sets the range — and practice varies with deal size and trust. The number matters less than the sequencing: in this practice, the record is verified before the token, always. A token paid to "hold" an unverified parcel is a fee for hope; the folklore that a big bayana proves a serious buyer is exactly the lever pressure-sellers pull. Serious is a signed agreement with clean terms.
Verify → agree in writing → token → deed → mutation. Money that moves earlier than its paperwork is exposed.
When do tokens get forfeited — or recovered?
By the agreement's own words, mostly. A buyer walking away without cause typically forfeits the earnest; a seller resiling typically refunds it — commonly with an agreed penalty — and a defect the seller cannot cure is the classic no-fault unwind. Courts read earnest-money clauses seriously but not infinitely: penal excess can be trimmed, and specific performance of land agreements remains a live remedy for a buyer who has kept his side. All of which argues for the same boring conclusion: the agreement is the whole game; write it like it will be read in a courtroom, and it rarely has to be.
What does the law actually say about your token?
Three statutes frame every bayana, and knowing them changes how you draft. The Contract Act: sections 73 and 74 govern what happens when a side walks — compensation for actual loss, and forfeiture of earnest money only to the extent it is a genuine pre-estimate rather than a penalty; courts routinely trim confiscations that read as punishment. The Transfer of Property Act: section 54 says in terms that an agreement to sell creates no interest in the land itself — paying a token makes you a contract-holder, not a part-owner, which is why possession and title checks cannot wait for the deed. The Registration Act: since the 2001 amendment (section 17(1A)), an agreement to sell under which possession is handed over must be registered to earn the part-performance protection of section 53A — an unregistered possession-agreement is a weak shield precisely when the stakes are highest.
The stamp on the agreement itself is modest — ₹100 under the schedule's agreement article — so cost never excuses an undocumented token. What the paper must carry is the deal's skeleton: parties as per the record, khasras and shares exactly, total consideration, the token amount and its fate on each side's default, the deed deadline, and who bears which cost. A token that travels by bank transfer against that paper is recoverable; cash against a handshake is a donation to the eventual dispute.
The questions to settle before any bayana
- Has the full record been verified — jamabandi, mutation chain, khasra walked?
- Is every owner in the record present and signing?
- Is any acquisition or project notification touching the khasras?
- Does the timeline survive realistic registry logistics?
- Is the refund/forfeiture clause written for both directions of default?
Sources
- Transfer of Property Act §54 (agreement ≠ transfer); Registration framework — Statute, standing law
- Suraj Lamp & Industries v State of Haryana — GPA sales are not conveyance — Supreme Court, 2012
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