Baron Corporation Pty Ltd v Owners of Strata Plan 69567
[2013] NSWCA 238
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2013-07-18
Before
McColl JA, Barrett JA, Stevenson J, Coll JA
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (16 paragraphs)
F Corsaro SC - Appellant I G B Roberts SC/T J Davie - Respondent Solicitors:
Colin Biggers & Paisley - Appellant Bannermans Lawyers - Respondent File Number(s): 2013/156063 Decision under appeal Citation: Owners - Strata Plan No 69567 v Baseline Constructions Pty Ltd [2013] NSWSC 409 Date of Decision: 2013-04-24 00:00:00 Before: Stevenson J File Number(s): SC2011/63243
Judgment 1McCOLL JA: I agree with Barrett JA's reasons and the orders his Honour proposes. 2BARRETT JA; One of the purposes of the Home Building Act 1989 is to cause every contract for the carrying out of residential building work by a contractor who is (or is required to be) licensed under that Act to contain certain implied warranties by the contractor. The statutory warranties include a warranty that the work will be performed in a proper and workmanlike manner in accordance with the plans and specifications and a warranty as to the quality of all materials. 3The questions that arise in these proceedings concern the provisions of the Home Building Act as in force on 22 October 2009. Also relevant, however, is a provision introduced into the Act in 2010 which, because of the words "is taken always to have been entitled", is relevant to a determination of the position at 22 October 2009. 4The questions arise upon an application for leave to appeal (and, if leave to appeal is granted, an appeal) brought by Baron Corporation Pty Ltd ("Baron") against Owners of Strata Plan 69567 ("the Owners Corporation") in relation to three residential apartment buildings at Rosebery in respect of which strata plans have been registered under the Strata Schemes (Freehold Development) Act 1973. By virtue of s 18(1) of that Act, the Owners Corporation is now the proprietor of the land that constitutes the common property of each strata scheme. Baron was one of the two registered proprietors of that land immediately before registration of the strata plan. 5The issue for determination is whether the Owners Corporation has the benefit of the statutory warranties in such a way that it can assert a liability of Baron upon those warranties. The Owners Corporation maintains (and the primary judge held) that a provision of the Home Building Act causes Baron to be liable to it upon the statutory warranties. 6Baron was not a contractor by which residential building work was done. There is therefore no direct basis for the imposition of liability on Baron. The question whether Baron was liable to the Owners Corporation on the statutory warranties turns on the interpretation of provisions of the Act imposing upon a "developer" liability "as if" it was required to be licensed and had entered into a contract for the doing of such work.