The Owners - Strata Plan No 70798 v Bakkante Constructions Pty Limited
[2013] NSWSC 848
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Supreme Court of NSW
Decision date
2013-06-21
Before
Pembroke J
Catchwords
- (1997) 187 CLR 384 Master Education Services Pty Ltd v Ketchell [2008] HCA 38
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (14 paragraphs)
Judgment 1This is the hearing of separate questions relating to the validity of certain actions taken by the executive committee of an owners' corporation under the Strata Schemes Management Act 1996 (the Act). The impugned actions of the committee are the commencement of proceedings on behalf of the owners corporation against a builder on 13 February 2009 in the Consumer Trader & Tenancy Tribunal (CTTT) and a decision taken on 21 May 2009 to 'amend the building defect application to the CTTT to include the draft Acumen report and other building defect reports as they arise'. The effect of the 21 May decision was to substantially expand the scope and cost of those proceedings. 2The builder is the first defendant and various persons associated with it are lot owners. At the hearing, it adopted a limited role. The case for invalidity was substantially advanced by Dr Zankin, a non-party lot owner whom I allowed to be joined as the second defendant.
Scheme of the Act 3Central to the resolution of both questions is the relationship between an executive committee and an owners' corporation. That relationship includes certain restraints that are imposed on the executive committee's conduct by Section 80D of the Act, to which Regulation 15 of the Strata Schemes Management Regulation 2005 operates as a limited exemption. 4Section 80D of the Act is headed 'Legal action to be approved by general meeting'. It is to be found in Division 3 which is headed 'Restrictions on spending'. Section 80D provides: 80D Legal action to be approved by general meeting (1) An owners corporation or executive committee of an owners corporation must not seek legal advice or the provision of any other legal services, or initiate legal action, for which any payment may be required unless a resolution is passed at a general meeting of the owners corporation approving the seeking of the advice or services or the taking of that action. (2) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to exempting any type of legal service or legal action from the operation of this section. 5Regulation 15 provided at the relevant time: 15 Exemptions from need for approval for certain legal action (1) The seeking of legal advice, the provision of legal services or the taking of legal action is exempt from the operation of section 80D of the Act if the reasonably estimated cost of seeking the legal advice, having the legal services provided or taking the legal action would not exceed: (a) an amount equal to the sum of $750 for each lot in the strata scheme concerned (excluding utility lots), or (b) $10,000, whichever is the lesser. (2) In a case where the cost, or estimated cost, of seeking legal advice, having legal services provided or taking legal action has been: (a) disclosed by the Australian legal practitioner concerned in accordance with the Legal Profession Act 2004, or (b) set out in a proposed costs agreement under that Act, the reasonably estimated cost of seeking the legal advice, having the legal services provided or taking the legal action is taken, for the purpose of this clause, to be the cost or estimated cost so disclosed or set out. 6The second reading speech relating to Section 80D contains the following luminous passage: Concern has been expressed that prior to commencing action individual owners should be made aware of the cost of legal action and the likelihood of success. Most strata schemes will include individuals from a broad cross-section of the community with a variety of personal expectations, attitudes and level of involvement. It is impossible to expect that there will always be perfect harmony. The commencement of legal action on matters concerning the scheme is one area where it is certain that a divergence of views will exist. The Government proposes to minimise the level of internal dispute arising in this area by taking some simple but effective measures. Firstly, if legal action of any type is being contemplated, the estimated cost of the action is to be provided in writing to all owners in accordance with the Legal Profession Act. A meeting of the owners corporation must be called before the action can actually commence to ensure that everyone can have a say if they wish. These new provisions will not only include the initiation of legal proceedings but also the obtaining of legal advice. Executive committees will effectively be prevented from undertaking legal action under their own initiative thus removing the possibility that claims will be made that a committee has not acted in the interests of all owners and added to existing conflict rather than dissipated it. (emphasis added) 7It is apparent from the language of the Act and the Regulation, let alone from the second reading speech, that the broad general object of this statutory regime is to preclude an owners corporation, or an executive committee on its behalf, from incurring substantial legal costs without the approval of lot owners.