29 Sections of a Property Legal Opinion — What Each One Checks
If you have ever received a property legal opinion, you have likely noticed it is a dense document filled with legal language. Most buyers glance at the conclusion, skip the rest, and hope for the best. That is a mistake. A comprehensive legal opinion should contain 29 distinct sections, each verifying a specific aspect of property title and ownership. Understanding what each section checks gives you the power to spot red flags, ask the right questions, and avoid costly surprises. In India, where 7 out of 10 properties are estimated to have some form of title defect, knowing what your legal opinion actually says is not optional — it is essential.
This guide breaks down all 29 sections of a professional property legal opinion, explains what each one verifies, and shows you why incomplete reports put your investment at risk.
What is a Property Legal Opinion?
A property legal opinion is a formal document prepared by a legal professional after scrutinizing the title documents, government records, and court filings associated with a property. Its purpose is to confirm whether the seller has a clear, marketable title and whether the property is free from legal encumbrances.
Banks require a legal opinion before approving home loans. The standard practice involves a 30-year title search, where every transaction involving the property over the past three decades is traced and verified. If any link in the ownership chain is broken, forged, or disputed, it shows up in this report.
A well-structured legal opinion does not just state "title is clear." It walks through every verification performed, every document examined, and every risk identified. The 29-section framework described below represents the most comprehensive approach to property title scrutiny available today.
For a broader overview of what a legal opinion costs and when you need one, see our complete guide to property legal opinions.
The 29 Sections — A Complete Breakdown
A professional title scrutiny report is structured into 29 sections, grouped into four logical parts. Each section serves a specific purpose. Some apply to every property, while others activate only for specific property types — apartments trigger different checks than agricultural land, for example.
Here is what each section examines and why it matters for your purchase decision.
Part 1 — Property Identity and Ownership (Sections 1-8)
These sections establish the basics: what exactly is the property, who owns it, and how did they acquire it?
Section 1: Executive Summary A high-level overview of the entire legal opinion. It states whether the title is clear, conditionally clear, or defective. This is the section most buyers read — but reading only this section is like reading only the headline of a news article. The details matter.
Section 2: Basic Property Information Identifies the property by survey number, plot number, door number, village, mandal, district, and registration details. Cross-references the address in the sale deed against revenue records. If the addresses do not match, this section flags it immediately.
Section 3: Property Boundaries and Items Verifies the boundaries described in the title deed against survey records and adjoining property descriptions. Boundary discrepancies are one of the most common causes of property disputes in India. This section checks whether the property you think you are buying is actually what the documents describe.
Section 4: Development Project Details For properties within housing projects, layouts, or gated communities, this section verifies the developer's approvals, layout permissions, and project registration. It checks whether the project has valid RERA registration, building permissions, and environmental clearances. This section activates only for project-based properties.
Section 5: Current Ownership Details Identifies the current legal owner(s) based on the latest registered document. Checks whether ownership is held individually, jointly, or through an entity. Verifies that the person selling the property is actually authorized to do so.
Section 6: Chain of Title Analysis The backbone of any legal opinion. This section traces ownership back through every transfer — sale, gift, inheritance, partition — over the past 13 to 30 years. A single gap in the chain can invalidate the entire title. This analysis reveals whether every transfer was legally valid and properly registered.
Section 7: Document Title Chain Lists every registered document in chronological order with document numbers, registration dates, and Sub-Registrar Office details. This provides a verifiable paper trail that anyone can cross-check with the registration department.
Section 8: Property Chain Visualization A visual graph showing the complete ownership history chronologically. Unlike the textual chain of title, this visual format makes it immediately apparent if ownership branched (through partition or multiple heirs), merged, or has unexplained gaps. Some advanced tools generate this graph automatically from document analysis.
Part 2 — Legal Clearances and Compliance (Sections 9-16)
These sections verify that the property is free from financial liabilities, legal restrictions, and compliance failures.
Section 9: Encumbrances Analysis Checks whether the property has any registered encumbrances — mortgages, liens, attachments, or charges. Unlike a basic EC check, this section analyzes the nature and status of each encumbrance. An old mortgage that was repaid but never formally released still appears as an encumbrance until a release deed is registered. For a detailed explanation of encumbrance certificates, see our complete EC guide.
Section 10: Legal Clearances Analysis Verifies whether the property has obtained all required legal clearances — conversion orders (if agricultural land was converted), NOCs from relevant authorities, and compliance certificates. Missing clearances can render a property legally unbuildable even if you hold a valid sale deed.
Section 11: Land Use and ULC Compliance Checks the land use classification (residential, commercial, agricultural, industrial) and whether the current usage complies with the master plan or zoning regulations. Also checks compliance with the Urban Land Ceiling Act, which restricted ownership of large urban plots. Properties that were not regularized under ULC exemptions can face government acquisition.
Section 12: Building Approvals For constructed properties, this verifies the building plan approval, Commencement Certificate, Completion Certificate, and Occupancy Certificate. Many properties in India are occupied without a valid OC — purchasing such a property exposes you to demolition risk and loan rejection.
Section 13: Other Statutory Clearances Covers clearances beyond the standard set: environmental clearances for properties near water bodies or forests, Coastal Regulation Zone compliance for coastal properties, airport authority NOCs for properties under flight paths, and defense ministry clearances for properties near cantonment areas.
Section 14: Revenue Records Examines the ROR (Record of Rights), Pahani, or equivalent state revenue records. These records show who the government recognizes as the property owner, which can differ from what the registration documents say. Discrepancies between revenue records and registration records are a significant red flag.
Section 15: Tax Dues Records Verifies whether property tax, water tax, and other municipal dues are paid up to date. Unpaid dues become the liability of the new owner. This section also checks whether the property's tax assessment matches its actual usage (residential vs. commercial assessment affects tax rates significantly).
Section 16: Encumbrance Certificates Documents the formal EC obtained from the Sub-Registrar's Office. The EC shows all registered transactions during a specified period. A "nil encumbrance" certificate confirms no transactions — which is good if the property was held by the same owner, but suspicious if ownership should have changed during that period.
Part 3 — Risk Assessment and Special Checks (Sections 17-22)
These sections cover litigation risks and property-type-specific checks that generic reports often miss entirely.
Section 17: Litigation and Restrictions Searches court records across District Courts and High Courts for any pending or decided cases involving the property or its owners. This includes civil suits, partition cases, injunctions, and attachment orders. A property under active litigation can lead to years of legal uncertainty. Learn more about checking court cases in our eCourts guide.
Section 18: Development and Mortgage Checks For properties with development agreements or joint ventures between landowners and builders, this section verifies the terms, revenue sharing, and whether the builder has the authority to sell the specific units being offered. Also checks for existing mortgages with banks or financial institutions.
Section 19: Entity Ownership Checks When the seller is a company, partnership, trust, or HUF (Hindu Undivided Family), this section verifies the entity's legal standing, whether the person signing has authorization (board resolution, partnership deed authority), and whether the entity is in good standing with regulatory bodies.
Section 20: Flat/Apartment-Specific Checks Activated for apartments and flats. Verifies the undivided share of land, common area allocation, society or association formation, maintenance agreements, and whether the builder has conveyed the land to the society. Many apartment buyers do not realize that the builder often retains land ownership long after selling all units.
Section 21: Special Transfer Checks Covers non-standard ownership transfers: gifts (which can be revoked under certain conditions), Power of Attorney sales (GPA sales are not recognized as valid transfers in many states), court-ordered sales, and transfers through compromise decrees. Each type carries specific risks that standard title checks may not catch.
Section 22: Agricultural Land Checks Activated for agricultural properties. Verifies whether the buyer is eligible to purchase agricultural land (many states restrict purchase to agriculturists), whether land conversion is required and obtained, and whether the land falls under ceiling limits. Also checks for tenancy rights that could give cultivators legal standing to claim the land.
Part 4 — Documentation and Conclusion (Sections 23-29)
These sections tie everything together with action items, risk ratings, and the final legal conclusion.
Section 23: Documents Verified A complete list of every document examined during the scrutiny — original sale deeds, certified copies, government search results, court records, and any supporting documents. This section provides transparency about the scope of verification performed.
Section 24: Document Classification Each document is classified by type (sale deed, gift deed, EC, court order, etc.) with metadata: registration date, document number, Sub-Registrar Office, and parties involved. This organized classification makes it easy for lawyers, banks, and buyers to verify specific documents independently.
Section 25: Action Items A list of specific actions the buyer must take before completing the purchase. This could include obtaining a missing NOC, getting a release deed for a resolved mortgage, or requesting additional documents from the seller. The action items turn the legal opinion from a passive report into an actionable checklist.
Section 26: Rectifications Identifies title defects that can be corrected through specific legal procedures. Unlike outright deal-breakers, rectifiable issues can be resolved — but they need attention before registration. Examples include name mismatches between documents and government records, missing endorsements, or correctable boundary descriptions.
Section 27: Acknowledgements Documents the sources of information used: government portals accessed, court databases searched, offices visited, and documents provided by the parties. This section establishes the thoroughness and reliability of the verification process.
Section 28: Risk Assessment A structured evaluation of every identified risk, categorized by severity (high, medium, low) and type (legal, financial, regulatory). Each risk includes its potential impact and recommended mitigation. This gives buyers and banks a clear picture of what they are accepting.
Section 29: Legal Opinion Conclusion The final determination: whether the property title is clear and marketable, conditionally clear (with specific conditions to satisfy), or defective (with identified legal issues). This conclusion carries legal weight and is the section banks rely on for loan approval decisions.
Why Most Legal Opinions Fall Short
Traditional legal opinions in India typically cover 5 to 10 verification points. A junior lawyer might check the latest sale deed, pull an EC, and write a one-page opinion stating the title appears clear. This approach misses critical checks.
Agricultural land eligibility, entity authorization, development agreement terms, building approval status, and cross-court litigation searches are routinely skipped in abbreviated reports. The Supreme Court of India has itself emphasized that banks must exercise greater care when accepting title clearance reports, warning against inadequate scrutiny in lending decisions.
The gap between a 5-point check and a 29-section analysis is the difference between surface-level comfort and genuine verification. When your property investment represents years of savings, surface-level is not enough.
How AI Makes 29-Section Reports Possible
Running 29 comprehensive checks manually would take a team of lawyers several days and cost thousands of rupees. Traditionally, the scope of a legal opinion was limited by the time and resources available. AI changes this equation.
Modern AI-powered verification systems generate all 29 sections simultaneously, not sequentially. While a traditional lawyer searches one court database at a time, AI searches 100+ courts in parallel. Government portal data — encumbrance certificates, property tax records, RERA status, revenue records — is pulled and analyzed concurrently.
The result is a report that would take 5 to 7 days manually, delivered in approximately 30 minutes. At Rs.749 per report, it costs a fraction of traditional legal fees while covering significantly more ground. For details on what banks specifically look for, see our guide to property due diligence for home loans.
The technology does not replace legal judgment — it handles the research and formatting while encoding legal expertise into a structured analytical framework developed with practicing property lawyers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do all 29 sections appear in every report? No. Sections activate based on property type. Agricultural land checks appear only for agricultural properties. Flat/apartment checks appear only for apartments. The framework adapts to ensure relevance without unnecessary clutter.
Is a 29-section report accepted by banks for home loans? Yes. The format matches and exceeds what major Indian banks require for loan due diligence. In fact, a comprehensive 29-section report is less likely to result in loan rejection compared to an abbreviated opinion.
How long does a 29-section report take to generate? With AI-powered verification, approximately 30 minutes from document upload to complete report. Manual preparation by a lawyer typically takes 5 to 7 working days.
What happens if a section finds a problem? Problems are flagged in the relevant section and summarized in Sections 25 (Action Items), 26 (Rectifications), and 28 (Risk Assessment). This gives you a clear path to resolving issues before proceeding with the purchase.
Conclusion
A property legal opinion is only as good as the sections it covers. A 5-point opinion might miss the court case that voids your ownership. A 10-point opinion might skip the agricultural land restriction that makes your purchase illegal. The 29-section framework ensures that every legal, financial, and regulatory angle is verified before you commit your money.
Before you finalize any property purchase, ask your lawyer or verification service one question: how many sections does your report cover? If the answer is less than 29, you are leaving gaps that could cost you everything.