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Queensland Body Corporate and Community Management Commissioner - Adjudicators Orders |
Last Updated: 10 October 2007
REFERENCE: 0214-2007
ORDER OF AN ADJUDICATOR
MADE UNDER
PART 9 OF CHAPTER 6
BODY CORPORATE AND COMMUNITY MANAGEMENT ACT
1997
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Number of Scheme:
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22798
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Name of Scheme:
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Sanctuary Gardens
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Address of Scheme:
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30 Caseys Road, Hope Island, 4212
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TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to an application made under the abovementioned Act by
David Hale, co-owner of lot 70
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I hereby order that the application for an order "body corporate should honour the commitment made by the previous body corp. that is the undertaking of remedial action for my damaged balcony (water damage) – minuted by the body corporate in Feb 2004 well before the builders warranty expired in 2005." is dismissed In lieu I order as follows -
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STATEMENT OF ADJUDICATOR’S REASONS FOR DECISION - REF
0214-2007
"Sanctuary Gardens" CTS 22798
APPLICATION
This is an application dated 2nd March
2007 by David Hale, (the Applicant) co-owner of Lot 70 in the scheme
against the body corporate for Sanctuary Gardens CTS 22798 (the body
corporate) for an order that the body corporate should "honour the
commitment made by the previous body corp. that is the undertaking of remedial
action for my damaged balcony (water damage)
minuted by the body corporate in
February 2004, well before the builders’ warranty expired in
2005."
JURISDICTION
"Sanctuary Gardens" Community
Titles Scheme 22798 is a community titles scheme governed by the Body
Corporate and Community Management Act 1997 (the Act) and the Body
Corporate and Community Management (Accommodation Module) Regulation 1997
(the Accommodation Module). There are 100 lots in the scheme created
under two Group Title Plans of subdivision, GTP 104325 and GTP105954 and four
Building
Format Plans (BFP) of subdivision, SP114229, SP114517, SP114511 and
SP114510. Lot 70 is in BFP 114229. A new Community Management
Statement was
recorded on 21st August 1999.
Section 276(1) of the Act
provides that an adjudicator may make an order that is just and equitable in the
circumstances (including a declaratory
order) to resolve a dispute, in the
context of a community titles scheme, about-
(a) a claimed or anticipated contravention of the Act or the community management statement; or
(b) the exercise of rights or powers, or the performance of duties, under the Act or the community management statement; or
(c) a claimed or anticipated contractual matter about-
(i) the engagement of a person as a body corporate manager or service contractor for a community titles scheme; or
(ii) the authorisation of a person as a letting agent for a community titles
scheme.
An order may require a person to act, or prohibit a person from
acting, in a way stated in the order (section 276(2)). An adjudicator's
order may contain ancillary and consequential provisions the adjudicator
considers necessary or appropriate (section
284(1)).
SUBMISSIONS
The Applicant says that he
purchased Lot 70 in April 2005. Water damage to the balcony was reported to the
then resident manager
Grant Tippett (Mr Tippett). The balcony "was
tabled" in the committee minutes in February 2004, although this is not
explained. The Applicant spoke to Mr Tippett
in February 2005 and Mr Tippett
advised that repairs would be completed prior to the Applicant’s contract
settling. There
was repair work done but the Applicant has since found out
that it was just a ‘cover up’ job, when structural repairs
were
needed. The Applicant was also told that the builder’s warranty
period did not expire until 2006, and that after repair work on the
balcony,
there would be a further seven years’ warranty. He now believes that the
original warranty expired in January-February
2005, before he purchased.
Mr Tippett is no longer the caretaker for the scheme.
In February 2007,
he received a letter from the body corporate. He does not explain the content
of this letter and it is not attached
as part of his application although it
purports to be attached.
The application contains a document setting out
the Applicant’s case and signed by him; Susan Chang for the owners of Lot
61,
Mr and Mrs Bayliss; Jean-Marc Moutin of Lot 66; and Alison Collett of Lot 59
all of whom have lodged separate dispute resolution
applications about their
respective balconies giving identical supporting grounds for their claim that
the body corporate should
be responsible for their repair.
The document
says that water damage to balconies was reported by many owners to the body
corporate committee and to the then resident
manager in 2002 when the buildings
were still under the builders’ warranty. "The body corporate
committee failed to take action to advise the BSA within three months of the
defects becoming obvious", and the situation dragged on until the warranty
period had expired. The body corporate and/or the resident manager were
negligent
in this regard and the body corporate has refused to say how many
balconies are affected in this way. The body corporate now says
that owners are
responsible to remedy the defects.
The builder was Rubicon Pty Ltd
(Rubicon), and in October 2002, 23 balconies "were reported", (although
the document does not say who by, or to whom) under the terms of the
construction warranty. A copy of the construction warranty is not supplied.
The faults complained of were leaks, lifting tiles,
and collapsing timbers. This
became "phase one" of certain warranty work and was to be overseen by the
caretaking service contractor
for the scheme. Remedial work was started
spasmodically and continued for the next two years. By October 2004,
despite continual complaints to Rubicon, none of "phase one" work had been
completed. More faulty balconies have
since been reported.
There was a
body corporate committee meeting in November 2004, when the committee received a
report from Rubicon listing all ‘phase
one’ works as "completed"
which the Applicant says was not the case. The committee decided to investigate
lot owners’
rights as a matter of urgency, with a view to reporting
Rubicon to the Building Services Authority (BSA). The committee was also
concerned about the viability of Rubikon but "it was understood that if they
did go into liquidation we would be protected under the terms of the insurance
cover provided by the
BSA." The Applicant does not say whether this was his
understanding or the understanding of the committee, or how that information was
communicated to him personally, since it relates to a time prior to his
purchase.
The then caretaking service contractor, Tippo Pty Ltd,
represented by Grant Tippett (Tippo) also advised "that as the matter
had been reported to the builder within the warranty period so that we were
legally covered for any work not
completed at the expiration of the warranty
period"; and that the "warranty period was a total of seven years.
(Ending in 2006.)"
However, the then chairman discovered
just before Christmas 2004, after contacting the BSA that a formal submission
had to be made
to the BSA within the warranty period for the work to be covered
by the BSA’s insurance, and that the warranty period was six
and not seven
years, and expired in mid-February 2005. Tippo had not made a formal submission
to the BSA. It was agreed between
a sub-committee and Tippo that as a matter of
urgency they obtain the appropriate submission forms from the BSA and then the
chairman
would distribute the forms to on-site owners, collect them and forward
them to BSA. Tippo would do same for off-site owners whom
he knew wanted
"warranty repairs". The Applicant does not say in what way this arrangement is
relevant to him.
It later transpired that Tippo had not distributed the
forms. As a result of this failure, the Applicant says: "We believe that
approximately 19 villas - although reported to the resident manager during this
time, had not been reported to the
BSA, and may have warranty repairs
outstanding." The Applicant does not state whether his lot is one of the
19.
The Applicant claims in summary that Tippo had agreed to
"supervise this work (from late 2002) as part of Resident Managers duties"
; gave incorrect advice to the committee about the warranty time frame;
failed to inspect work adequately when the builders said it
was completed;
failed to submit requests to Rubikon in writing or failed to produce reports to
the committee when asked; failed
to send the BSA forms to off-site owners; and
that the body corporate is therefore liable for Tippo’s actions since
Tippo
was "appointed" by the body corporate. He adds that the then body
corporate managers Silver Stewart King and Burns (SSKB) also knew what
was going on and were "at times acting as the Body corporate Committee on
behalf of owners" and gave improper advice. He implies that either SSKB or
the body corporate for engaging SSKB, is culpable. Further he asks that
the
body corporate committee be instructed to obtain an independent inspection of
all balconies in the scheme and "as a result of ongoing negligence the cost
of repairs be borne by the body corporate committee." He does not say
which committee members these should be. There is no evidence of SSKB’s
"improper advice" or when this was
given.
The Applicant attaches extracts
from the minutes of committee meetings held on 29th July 2004,
30th November 2004 and 28th April 2005 to support his claim.
The extract from the minutes of 29th July 2004 says that
Rendell Digby of Burchill Partners Civil and Consulting Engineers and Planners
(Burchills) is continuing to supervise the "work on balconies, garage
ceilings and building cracks in consultation with the Resident Unit
Managers."
The extract from the minutes of 30th November
2004 says that the "Building Managers" advised that they were not happy with the
progress of the repairs despite frequent
contact with Rubikon. The committee
resolved to have the chairperson contact the builder for a copy of the
builder’s work-list,
signed off as each is completed and to advise the
builder that body corporate would be "notifying the Building Services
Authority if a satisfactory outcome was not forthcoming within two weeks."
It was also resolved that the chairman would contact the BSA for their advice
and for a complaints form. The Body Corporate Manager
was to forward a copy of
the building defects report from Burchills to the chairman and to tell Burchills
"not to proceed with any further work in relation to building defects on
behalf of the committee at this time."
The extract from the minutes
of 28th April 2005 state that "John Arthur noted that owners of
units who had not complete a submission to the BSA may be facing the cost of
having this work carried
out at own expense."
Also attached
is a letter dated 10th April 2004, from Don Dennis of Lot 73 to all
owners headed "A matter of concern," referring to "a body corporate meeting"
held
on 5th February 2004. The letter says that 23 units are
awaiting completion or waiting for warranty work to commence on balconies and
that
the repairs have been outstanding for over two years. He warns "the result
of inaction could be costly," and that the body corporate
must get Rubikon to
honour its warranty obligations. There is no evidence provided by the Applicant
about the effect of this letter
on him or whether he received it. Whether or not
Lot 70 was one of the 23 units awaiting completion or warranty work is not
stated.
On 1st January 2007 the Applicant, with other
lot-owners Alison Collett (Lot 59), Jean-Marc Moutin (Lot 66), Michael
Nitschke (Lot 64) and Mr and Mrs Baylisss (Lot 61) wrote a joint letter
to the
committee following receipt of a letter "recently received" from the current
body corporate manager Cambridge Management Services,
(the body corporate
manager) advising him that the balcony repairs were the responsibility of
each owner. A copy of the received letter is not provided in the
application. They jointly ask the body corporate urgently to obtain an
engineers’ report on the condition, especially the safety, of every
balcony in "Stage 2" of the scheme in time for the next committee meeting on
17th February 2007. They point out that some owners had
their balconies repaired by the body corporate in the warranty works that were
done by the builders,
and that they should not be disadvantaged by the
mismanagement of SSKB.
In accordance with section 243(2)(b) Act,
submissions were invited from all lot owners.
Max Bond, owner of Villa
17, explains that the first stage of Sanctuary Gardens does not have the same
type of balconies as those
in Stage 2 of the development and it is the Stage 2
balconies which have the problems. He recalls that the problems with the Stage
2 balconies were well-known and voiced between 2004 and 2006. He was left with
the impression that those lot owners affected had
been advised to "lodge a
submission to have the defects rectified by the builder before the
builder’s warranty period expired...." which he thinks was in March
2005. He sympathises with the application but does not support that the body
corporate should become
responsible if owners are now facing the costs of
repair.
Colleen Greenwood, owner of lot 77, says that the committee (she
does not say which committee) should be responsible. She says that
the
balconies are part of the structure of the building. The builders also used the
"wrong timbers etc etc." She thinks the repairs should be paid for from
the sinking fund, or maybe by a loan. She has no specific evidence about the
Applicant’s
balcony.
Donald Dennis, owner of Villa 73 says
that he reported his own defective balcony in September 2003 to Grant Tippet who
was at that time also the
chairman of the committee. He gives no personal
knowledge of the Applicant’s balcony. Remedial works took place around
the complex to defective balconies. By 1st April 2004 there had been no start
on his balcony which was now "sagging considerably".
He then circulated a
letter to all lot owners, and gathered support to discuss the matter at the next
general meeting in May 2004.
Again the "Resident Manager assured everyone
that all reporting had been made" and that we were covered by the BSA
warranty. SSKB said the matter had not been reported to the BSA and the lot
owners at the meeting
requested that this be done. The caretaking service
contractor said that it had "in effect" been done by raising the matter with
the
builder.
In August 2004 his balcony repairs were commenced but
remained incomplete. The repair was found to be unsatisfactory one month later
when the main beam was found to be rotted and he had to have the balcony taken
down and rebuilt.
A new committee took up the matter conducting a
thorough investigation about the facts and lot owner rights and lot owners
learned
that the warranty would expire on 6th February 2005. He says
that it is unfair that the body corporate now says that owners must repair their
own balconies when it has already fixed several
small faults which it has
acknowledged are its responsibility."
Lindsay Dowrick and
Jennifer Coupe, (Resident managers) owners of Lot 76 say that respective lot
owners should pay for repairs and
that the body corporate is not responsible. As
new owners they have taken their viewpoint from body corporate records. They
agree
that the balconies have been poorly built and that the repairs appear to
be of a poor standard. However, their submission is that
the Applicant has
owned Lot 70 since February 2005 and that repairs were carried out by the
builder in February 2005. To rebuild
the balcony in hardwood would be very
expensive, there are some units which do not have balconies, and so it would be
unfair for
the cost of a new balcony to be shared by all. The total bill if the
body corporate were to pay would require a very large levy.
They attach
minutes of committee meetings held on 5th February 2004,
6th May 2004, 29th July 2004, 30th November
2004 and of the annual general meeting of 30th September 2004.
The minutes of the 5th February 2004 record at Motion 5
(headed "Balcony Repairs") that Burchills reported that the builder had applied
waterproof membrane
to Lots 57, 62, 63, 70, 79, 80, 87, 90 and 93 ; " that
the balcony tiles are to be replaced and the texture finish and painting to be
completed." A waterproof membrane was still to be applied to Lot 89, and
Lot 81 was "still to be completed." Lots 81, 89, 32, 39, 40, 59, 66, 73,
74, 94, 96, 97 and 98 were showing signs of deterioration and water penetration,
and Lot 73
was in urgent need of repair. It was resolved that the Resident
Manager keep in constant contact with builder to ensure remedial
work is
finished as soon as possible. At Motion 19 ( headed "Developer Repairs") the
committee resolved to accept the "site inspection
report" from Burchills in
relation to remedial work being done by the original builder on the balconies,
leaking showers, ‘hebel’
fascias and that the Resident Manager will
continue to contact the builder to complete this urgent work.
The
minutes of 6th May 2004 show at Motion 12 headed "Builder’s
Repairs" that the committee "discussed the matter at length with the Building
Manager and noted his comments about the delays with the contractors completing
the works required." The committee resolved to give the builder 7 days
grace and then "a letter to be forwarded" to the Building Services Authority
within
14 days if no action is received.
The minutes of the AGM held on
30th September 2004 show that following the AGM, the new committee was asked to
address the time-line
for the completion of the building defects as a matter of
urgency with a view to proceeding to the BSA " if there is not prompt
completion of this work by the builder."
The minutes of 30th November
2004 detailed at Motion 1 (headed "Balcony Repairs) that the Resident Manager
was not satisfied with
progress of the builders. It was resolved that chairman,
John Arthur, would contact the builders for their work list and notify
the BSA
as has been detailed above. They supply a copy of a letter dated
2nd February 2005 from the BSA to Burchills, envisaging a site visit
by a BSA inspector on 15th February 2005 at 9am. The letter shows
that a complaint had been laid in relation to Lots 59, 63, 66, 73, 76, and 94.
They also provide a list of defects by unit, which I understand to be an
extract from the "site inspection report" prepared by Burchills,
referred to at
the committee meeting of 5th February 2004. This report,
headed "Sanctuary Gardens – Inspection Summary" says that rear
balconies 57, 62, 63, 70, 73, 79, 80, 81, 85, 87, 89, 90 and 93 are
under
repair, and units 39, 71, 72, 94, 97, and 98 need attention by the builder and
an inspection should be arranged at the earliest
convenience. It says "If any
of them have structural defects, they would be classified as Category 1 and be
referable to the builder." The remainder indicate "normal shrinkage and
movement" and the report says that the builder should perform random checks.
David and Jennifer Thomas, owners of Lot 88, support the application.
John and Gael Springett owners of Lot 53, support the application
and say that
the body corporate should honour its commitment "made by the previous body
corp" to undertake remedial action.
Joanne Bowen, owner of lot 31,
says that she became aware of the building history at a general meeting on
15th February 2006. She had noticed water seeping through her
downstairs patio light fitting once after heavy downpour. She checked it
after
that and applied sealant over the grouting between the tiles and no more water
seeped through until mid December 2006 after
heavy rain. She has now fixed her
own balcony in February 2007, by engaging a waterproofer at a cost of $1371. She
has no evidence
about the Applicant’s balcony.
Douglas Schmidt,
(Mr Schmidt) owner of Lot 44 says he totally disagrees with the
application. He says that maintenance is the lot-owners’ responsibility
since the complex is registered under a standard format plan of subdivision, and
that others who have had the same problem with balconies
have sorted it out
themselves, instead of letting it get out of hand to a stage where it is
a hazard. He further says that the committee alone did not have the
power to
make a decision about taking on remedial work, which is something which would
have had to be out to a general meeting of
the body corporate, and it never was
so approved.
Lynne and Louise Matthias, owners of lot 97, support the
application. They are concerned about the "lack of management of this
problem..." by Tippo, when Grant Tippett was chairman and by SSKB. They
were aware of a problem with their own balcony before they purchased
in
September 2003 but they were "assured it would be dealt with under the
building warranty..." These submitters lodged their own application for
dispute resolution on 13 June 2007. They have no evidence about the
Applicant’s balcony.
Ronald and Judith Munro owners of lot 37 say
they don’t know how widespread the issue is. Kerrin and Norman Ambrose
owners
of lot 57 made a submission in this application on a dispute application
form. They have noticed some cracked grouting on their own
balcony. They " were
advised by owners" in 2007 that balconies 26 – 100 were built without
using treated timbers and water
penetration has got into the structure and
rotted them.
John and Eileen Doherty, owners of Lot 9 say that the body
corporate should honour its commitment and that the present committee refuses
to
discuss this issue. Christine Scales owner of Lot 81 says that the Applicants
reported the damage in a timely manner and they
should have been advised to
complete a claim form against either the builder or the body corporate manager
or resident manager at
least.
Valerie and Bruce Burrow, owners of lot 45
say they have recently been made aware of the structural problems in many
balconies, and
that they are advised that they are not the body
corporate’s responsibility because they are not part of the structure.
This
is a surprise to them and they thought the balconies were under the
roofline and part of the structure.
The body corporate manager,
Cambridge, making a submission on behalf of the body corporate, says that
it has searched body corporate records and can find no record that
the body
corporate undertook to take remedial action for the Applicant’s damaged
balcony at its cost in February 2004. It
says that there was only a committee
meeting on 5th February 2004 and the only item about balcony repairs
was Motion 5 wherein it was simply resolved that the Resident Manager kept
in
close contact with the builders "to ensure this remedial work (as noted
in a site inspection report by Burchills) is finalised at the earliest
possible date." The undertaking, if any, was to hurry on the work, not to
carry it out at the body corporate’s expense.
The body corporate
manager notes that the scheme is registered as a Group Title Plan, so that all
lot owners are responsible for the
maintenance of their own lots. There is "no
ability" for the body corporate to carry out remedial action to a damaged
balcony, even
if it wanted to. If some owners have reported their faulty
balconies to the BSA then that is between those owners and the BSA.
If some
claims were made through the previous Resident Unit Manager, the owners may have
some further claim but the body corporate
would not be a party to that action.
It provides a letter dated 19th June 2007 from lawyers Corrs Chambers
Westgarth which supports this view.
It also points out that each lot is
contained within a "designated lot boundary" or is surrounded by common property
over which each
lot owner has an exclusive use, and that in accordance with
scheme by-laws, the occupiers of lots allocated exclusive use "must perform
the duties of the body corporate in respect of the exclusive use area"
including maintenance of any improvements in the exclusive use area.
I
sought further information from the Applicant by 23rd August 2007.
He says that the balcony was under repair at the time he purchased the lot, and
that it was Mr Tippett who told him
that the work would be finalised prior to
the completion date. He was further told by Mr Tippett that the warranty period
would
be extended by a further 7 years following rectification of the balcony
defect.
The Applicant says that the damage has been caused by water
leaking through the balcony tiles into the ground floor balcony light
fitting
which has caused a timber joist to rot as well as caused an electrical fault.
The repairs done in February 2005 were not
been done, or not done properly. He
reported the damage to the body corporate manager Cambridge by letter on
4th November 2006, saying that he had noticed "over a period of
weeks that water is coming through the ceiling, filling the external lights with
water." He observes that he believes this to be a body corporate
responsibility and seeks prompt rectification.
He has taken no steps to
rectify the problem himself. He provides a copy of the building and pest
report obtained prior to purchase
and undertaken on 14th February
2005 by QBR Reports. The BR report notes that "repairs have been carried out
to leak to rear balcony." He has no personal knowledge of the involvement
of the body corporate with Burchills, or about the document headed "Inspection
Summary" provided from body corporate records by the current caretakers Lindsay
Dowrick and Jennifer Coupe. He has never seen any
documents or correspondence
with Mr Tippett or Tracey Tippett about them acting as agents for Lot 70 in a
claim to the BSA.
The Applicant encloses a copy of a photograph showing a
decayed beam, described as a "main beam" by him which is revealed where the
fascia appears to have been removed. He also points out former repair work on
the photo behind the facia. The Applicant advises
that he does not live on
site, but is concerned about the structural safety of the balcony which is
becoming more dangerous after
rainfall.
I also sought further information
from the current caretaking service contractors, Lindsay Dowrick and Jenny
Coupe. They do not have
any copy letters between the BSA and the body
corporate, or know when Burchills were called in or what Burchills were asked to
do.
They say that the documents "Sanctuary Gardens - defects" and "Sanctuary
Gardens-Inspection Summary" were in the body corporate
records and amongst their
searches made on their own purchase of the management rights. They do not know
who compiled them. They
provide copies of committee meeting minutes for
meetings held on 5th February 2004, 6th May 2004,
29th July 2004, and 30th November 2004; and a copy of the
resident manager’s report dated "November 2004", saying that "work
(on the balconies) should be completed by this
meeting."
Further information was also sought from Cambridge, the
body corporate manager who provided copies of committee minutes and minutes
of
general meetings, as well as copies of correspondence from Burchills in 2004.
DERMINATION
In this application, the fact that
certain balconies in the scheme are in need of repair is not in dispute.
However, the Applicant
has not provided any evidence that he is currently in
dispute with the body corporate, other than providing a copy of a letter he
wrote on 4th November 2006 to the body corporate manager, to which no
reply is attached. Perhaps there was no reply. There is a suggestion that
the
letter he received form the body corporate in January 2007 is a letter advising
owners, or certain owners, that they are responsible
for their own respective
balcony repairs since the scheme is registered as a Standard Format Plan of
subdivision, formerly known
as a Group Title Plan. No copy of that letter was
provided in his application.
The evidence presented in the application is
general in the extreme and relates largely to a period of time before the
Applicant purchased
Lot 70. The Applicant has no personal knowledge about his
balcony prior to some time in early 2005. The jointly signed document
which
makes up the main part of his application is therefore largely irrelevant. He
cannot say whether his balcony was reported
as defective in 2002, or whether the
body corporate played any part in reporting Rubikon’s building defects to
the BSA. The
warranty period is stated in other applications relating to this
scheme to have ended on 6th February 2005, before or about the time
of his purchase of Lot 70.
The document headed ‘Inspection Summary"
provided from body corporate records by the current caretakers, and believed to
be
complied by Burchills possibly in 2003, lists Lot 70 as being in need of
repair and notes "if any of these balconies are determined to have structural
defects, then they would be classified as Category 1 and referable to
the
builder."
I note that Motion 5 of the minutes of a committee meeting
on 5th February 2004, where balcony work is discussed in relation to several
balconies, shows that Burchills report to the committee that Lot 70’s
balcony has had a waterproof membrane applied to it,
and that balcony tiles are
to be replaced and the texture finish and painting is to be completed.
A
copy of a letter dated 29th July 2004 from Burchills to the body
corporate and provided by the body corporate manager, shows that Lot 70 was
listed as a "defective
balcony" and that tiling had been completed, and
plastering would take place on 9th August 2004
There was
general talk about remedial work to balconies at a committee meeting on 30th
November 2004 with the body corporate noting
with concern the delay by the
builders, Rubikon, and a decision taken that, if after 7 days, there was no
improvement, " a letter
would be forwarded" to the BSA within 14 days. There
is no mention of Lot 70 at this meeting.
There is no document provided
showing what repairs were undertaken in February 2005, or at whose
instigation.
The Applicant seeks that the body corporate should
"honour the commitment made by the previous body corp. that is the
undertaking of remedial action for my damaged balcony (water damage)
minuted by
the body corporate in February 2004, well before the builders’ warranty
expired in 2005."
The only committee minutes for February 2004 (which
have been provided by the current caretakers), do not demonstrate any
undertaking
to Lot 70, but merely a decision to report on the progress of
remedial works to defective balconies, of which Lot 70 was one. The
body
corporate was at this stage chasing Rubikon to complete works, or repair
defects. The body corporate at no time decided to be
responsible, that is, pay
for the repairs itself, and as pointed out by submitter Mr Schnidt, could not do
so, certainly at committee
level. Further, repairs were done in February 2005,
although the Applicant claims that these were not done properly.
The
application therefore fails. However, I am aware that there are genuine
concerns about defects to balconies in this scheme,
and that the current
position, regardless of what was reported, or what repairs were previously
undertaken, is that the Applicant
has a balcony severely affected by water
damage, and evidence of a rotten beam, visible from the exterior of his unit.
A lot owner is generally responsible for the maintenance of his or her
own lot save in some circumstances which are specifically
defined in the
legislation. Section 108 Accommodation Module states the exception as
follows –
Duties of body corporate about common property--Act, s 152[SM, s 109]
(1) The body corporate must maintain common property in good condition, including, to the extent that common property is structural in nature, in a structurally sound condition.
(2) To the extent that lots included in the scheme are created under a building format plan of subdivision, the body corporate must--
(a) maintain in good condition--
(i) railings, parapets and balustrades on (whether precisely, or for all
practical purposes) the boundary of a lot and common property;
and
(ii) doors, windows and associated fittings situated in a boundary
wall separating a lot from common property; and
(iii) roofing
membranes that are not common property but that provide protection for lots or
common property; and
(b) maintain the following elements of scheme land that are not common property in a structurally sound condition--
(i) foundation structures;
(ii) roofing structures providing protection;
(iii) essential supporting framework, including load-bearing walls.
(3) (a)....
(b)....
(4) To avoid doubt, it is declared that, despite an obligation the body corporate may have under subsection (2) to maintain a part of a lot in good condition or in a structurally sound condition, the body corporate may recover the prescribed costs, as a debt, from a person (whether or not the owner of the lot) whose actions cause or contribute to damage or deterioration of the part of the lot.
(5).....
Submitters have mentioned that the buildings in
the scheme are created under a Group Title Plan of sub-division, and the body
corporate
has relied on that fact when sending out a letter dated
27th November 2006 to lot owners, (which letter does not form part of
this Application but has been referred to in other applications
concerning
balconies in this scheme). In fact, this scheme has buildings created under
two Group Title Plans and four Building
Format Plans (numerated as Survey Plans
as stated above.) This is most unusual but not unknown. The responsibilities
of the body
corporate differ between a Building Format Plan and a Group Title
Plan (now known as a Standard Format Plan). In a Group Title Plan,
the owner is
responsible for the maintenance of his lot. (Section 119 Accommodation
Module) In a Building Format Plan, the body corporate is responsible, by virtue
of section 108 Accommodation Module, for example, for the
maintenance of foundation structures and essential supporting framework, and for
those parts of the building
on the boundary between the lot and common property,
such as doors and windows.
Lot 70 is within SP 114229 which is a
Building Format Plan of subdivision.
Exactly what is wrong with the
Applicants’ balcony, and how it might be repaired is therefore crucial in
the examination of
who is now responsible for the repair of it. The Applicant
has provided no quotations for repair or reports about the effective
way to
remedy the current problems.
Section 108(2)(a)(i)
Accommodation Module
The body corporate is responsible for maintenance
and repair of facias, railings, balustrades, fittings and any part of the
balcony
which forms a boundary between the owner’s lot and the (air space)
common property, even if the lot owner has an exclusive
use of the common
property immediately around the balcony.
Section
108(2)(a)(iii) Accommodation Module
The body corporate is
responsible for the maintenance of any waterproof membrane within the balcony
floor if that membrane can be
described as a "roofing membrane" which provides
protection for another part of the lot (or common property.) Clearly the
balcony
floors and tiles are within respective owner’s lots in this
scheme. The body corporate would not generally be responsible
for cracks and
lifting tiles. However, if cracks are caused by structural movement, or if
cracks allow water to penetrate timber
because there is no membrane at all or
insufficient sealing under the tiles so that the timber rots, which is the case
put forward
here, then the body corporate might be responsible if the membrane
is a "roofing membrane."
I understand that the balconies provide a "roof"
and ceiling to patios below, and I am of the view that a membrane in the
balconies
can be describes as a "roofing membrane." It appears from documents
attached to submissions that a membrane was applied to Lot
70 sometime before
February 2004. Certainly that fact was stated by Burchills to the committee.
(see Motion 5 committee meeting 4th February 2004.) The body
corporate has a duty to make sure that this membrane is
effective.
Section 108(2)(b)(i) Accommodation
Module
The body corporate is responsible for any foundation structures.
I am not satisfied that the balconies are " foundation structures,"
in that it
appears possible from quotation provided for another lot in the scheme, to
remove and rebuild them without having to
shore up the rest of the
house.
Section 108(2)(b)(ii) Accommodation
Module
The body corporate is responsible for "roofing structures
providing protection."
A previous adjudication has considered the issue
of whether balconies are "roofing structures", in a scheme where "...each
balcony is also the ceiling/roof of the balcony below...". The adjudicator
made the following comments in his order:
"Whilst it is arguable that the balcony slab on the upper level provides the "roof" of the balcony on the level below, I do not consider this interpretation of the legislation is intended. The interpretation of "roof" must include an element of "providing protection". In my view, the balcony of an upper level does not provide protection as such for the lower level balcony. Rather, the balconies are there principally for the amenity of each lot, and not as a means of protecting the lower balcony. I do not consider that section 109(2)(b)(ii) (Standard Module) is applicable here, and conclude that there is no basis on which the body corporate is responsible for the maintenance of the balconies of each lot. Rather these are the responsibility of each owner under section 120..."[1]
The
legislation is not explicit as to whether any structure that provides protection
(whether that is it is the primary purpose of
the structure or not), but that is
not at the top of the entire building, can be a roof or not. The Concise
Oxford English Dictionary
suggests the ordinary definition of ‘roof’
as: "...upper covering of house or building or room usu. supported by its
walls...". These sources are not conclusive. Accordingly the question must
rely on the specific circumstances.
On balance, I am of the view that the
balconies in this particular scheme are "roofing structures." They provide
cover to a small
area, and the Applicant has complained about water in light
fittings of the patio ceiling below. The patios seem to be adjacent
to garages,
and the balconies give protection to occupants entering and leaving the garages.
The balcony area is identical to the
patio area (5 square metres) serving
exactly as a roof for the lower area.
Section
108(2)(b)(iii) Accommodation Module
Finally, the body
corporate is responsible for "essential supporting framework, including
load-bearing walls."
Whilst the question of whether the balconies are
also roofs may be a fine point, there is no room for doubt that the balcony
bearer
beams and supports are "essential supporting framework" for the balcony.
The balconies are part of the lots in question. The body
corporate is
responsible for seeing that the balconies are structurally sound, and fit for
use for their ordinary purpose.
Nature of damage
I am
unable to tell from the quality of the application, and its relevance to the
balcony of this lot, the exact cause of the damage
to the Applicants’
balcony, why previous repairs have failed, or what is required now to remedy the
problems. It may be that
there is in any event, a further warranty or further
relief that the Applicant can claim from the BSA which can be explored
concerning
the repair work done in 2005. This is a matter for him.
I
order that the body corporate immediately and at its expense, seeks an
independent civil engineer’s report into the current
state of the
Applicants’ balcony, as has been suggested in the past, and the reason for
its deterioration. The safety of the
structure of the balcony is paramount.
Immediate emergency measures should be taken by the body corporate if this
balcony is unsafe.
The independent engineer shall not be Burchills or one of
their associated companies.
Rectification work should be undertaken as
suggested by the independent engineer, and the payment for the works shall be in
accordance
with section 108 Accommodation Module, that is if essential
supporting framework or the membrane is to be repaired, the body corporate must
pay for
this part of the repair howsoever caused, but if the leak is caused
simply by lifting tiles, and there is no structural damage, then
stopping the
leak by sealing the tiles ( as has been done by submitter Joanne Bowen) is the
responsibility of the Applicant. It
might be that following the
engineer’s report that the body corporate and the Applicant may be jointly
liable for the repairs,
in equal or unequal amounts.
Rectification or
rebuilding work should be commenced within one month of the report being
obtained and finalised as soon as reasonably
possible. Any reports obtained by
the body corporate should be shown to the Applicant. The Applicant shall make
the lot available
to the engineer and the persons effecting the remedial works.
Complaint to the BSA for building defects
I do
not find it proved that the body corporate or the caretaking service contractor
undertook to perform any special service for
the Applicant or his predecessor in
title in relation to reporting building defects to the BSA prior to the
expiration of the warranty
period. The body corporate is also not responsible
for the actions of a caretaking service contractor, but only for decisions taken
by the committee as a committee, or by the body corporate at general meetings.
(Section 100 Act).
Exclusive uses
The fact that
the Applicant has exclusive use of the area immediately external to his balcony
does not change the responsibility attributed
by section 108
Accommodation Module to the body corporate. The exclusive uses detailed in
Schedule E of the community management statement concern
keeping the exclusive
use area tidy, maintaining the exclusive use area, which does not include the
balcony, but which is outside
the balcony; and maintaining any improvements on
the exclusive use area. The balcony is not within the exclusive use area, and
is not an "improvement" in the exclusive use area.
The passage of
time
Once the building is completed, and the scheme has been
established upon registration of the plan, the body corporate assumes its
responsibility notwithstanding that there might be some redress against the
builder for a certain period of time.
Section 108(4)
Accommodation Module allows the body corporate to recover "prescribed costs"
from anyone whose actions cause or contribute to damage or deterioration
of the part of the lot. "Prescribed costs" means the proportion of the
reasonable cost to the body corporate of carrying out the maintenance that can,
in the
body corporate’s reasonable opinion, be fairly attributed to the
person’s actions. At the committee meeting of 28th April 2005,
the chairman noted that owners who had not lodged a complaint to the BSA within
the warranty period might have to have
balcony work carried out at their own
expense.
However, I find that the body corporate did not until
27th November 2006 (in a letter copied in the application of
Jean-Marc Moutin of Lot 66) inform lot owners that the body corporate was
not going to take responsibility for the balconies, and that despite the delay
it was reasonable in the
circumstances and taking into consideration the
background to this scheme, that the Applicants continued to expect the body
corporate
to effect repairs.
I note the remark made by Mr Schmidt that
owners should have acted earlier and not let their balconies become a hazard.
Where the
body corporate is responsible for maintenance, the duty to maintain
cannot be transferred, and whilst some owners took the situation
into their own
hands, the body corporate remains responsible for those balconies which are now
in a worse state of repair, because
of the body corporate’s inaction.
The body corporate may like to take legal advice in respect of any claim
which it may have against Rubikon, or Tippo or SSKB or Burchills
in the civil
courts.
Lot owners within the four Building Format Plans of
subdivision, (Lots 27 – 101), who have effected their own repairs to
balconies,
may, in the light of this order and bearing in mind the division of
responsibility detailed at Section 108 Accommodation Module set out
above, ask the body corporate to consider reimbursement of all or parts of their
costs for repair.
[1] Norfolk Apartments [2001] QBCCMmr 385 (17 July 2001)
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