Owners Corporations must not sit on their hands when it comes to building defects claims

Owners Corporations must not sit on their hands when it comes to building defects claims
Tom Bacon

There are strict time limitation periods in Victoria’s building laws, which require owners of buildings to file their claims at VCAT or in the Courts promptly.

Owners Corporations owe a strict duty to repair and maintain its common property, and this duty can be enforced by any member of the relevant Owners Corporation. 

If an Owners Corporation suspects that there is damage to common property (or accelerated deterioration) from either:

  • defective workmanship or building practice; or
  • defective design by the builder / developer/ architect.

Then the Owners Corporation should immediately engage an expert engineer to inspect the common property, commission an expert report on the exact cause of the defect, and an explanation as to how it should be fixed. 

It is well known that an Owners Corporation has only up to 10 years from the date of the building’s occupancy certificate to bring about a claim for defects of the common property.

What is not so well known is that the time limitation period is reduced to six years in circumstances where the Owners Corporation becomes aware of the existence of the defect (or is “reasonably” taken to be on notice of the existence of the defect).

If the Owners Corporation has missed the time period in which to file a claim, then it will have no choice but to fund any repairs themselves by raising special levies. 

Section 134(2) of the Building Act allows for an extended limitation period for building actions related to non-compliant cladding products, which would have otherwise expired on or after July 16, 2019, but before December 1, 2023, providing that these actions can be brought more than 10 years but less than 15 years after the issue of the occupancy permit or certificate of final inspection.

Care should also be taken to find out whether the builder’s company is still in business. If it has been de-registered, then there will be no utility in bringing a claim.

An Owners Corporation should also investigate whether the builder sub-contracted to an alternative company to complete a particular part of the building, as this will have a bearing on who the Owners Corporation can chase for rectification.

The Supreme Court recently determined in a case the long-held view that an Owners Corporation may sue a developer for defects under the Domestic Building Contracts Act, although only in circumstances where the particular contract between the developer and builder makes explicit reference to the nature of the building work to be performed. 

This is a complex area of the law, and great care should be taken in engaging any expert or in taking any steps to bring a claim.

However, it is recommended that an Owners Corporation ought to be commissioning building-wide reports from around the five-year mark after completion with a view to bringing a claim for any defects against all relevant wrongdoers.

It is very rare that a builder’s company would still be registered ten years after the project is completed, further limiting the window of opportunity for an Owners Corporation to seek redress. •

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