Sunday, September 15, 2019

Lies of Omission

To improve the accuracy of Daphne Bramham's article I would add to the excerpt below the words that I have emphasized in UPPER CASE letters - because the silence is deafening on the FUNDAMENTAL role that the legal profession plays in stirring up and perpetuating strata strife by persistently breaching the Strata Property Act in an inherent conflict of interest.
Condo life is rife with conflict

Tony Gioventu, CHOA’s executive director says “Nobody is to blame, but everybody is at fault, from the Strata Property Act to property managers to strata corporations to the owners.”
....Although property managers are hired to provide good advice, there are many examples of them doing the opposite, according to both Gioventu and Deryk Norton, who runs the website strataadvocate.ca and is a director of the Vancouver Island Strata Owners Association.
...Norton and Gioventu also say that the government must raise the penalties and fines because they fall so far short of the damage that bad managers, BAD LAWYERS, BAD JUDGES, and BAD ADVOCATES inflict on condo owners that it amounts to almost no consequence at all. And they urge the government to include fines and penalties for anyone else who breaches the act including BAD ADVOCATES, MANAGERS, LAWYERS, JUDGES, real estate agents, developers and even strata council members.

By omitting legal professionals and bad advocates like himself from responsibility and claiming they are not "to blame" Tony Gioventu is guilty of deception, to say the least. Other than falling into such a trap of distraction and lies of omission, the Vancouver Sun published a respectable column.


DO NOT TRUST ADVOCATES WHO ACT LIKE WOLVES IN SHEEP’S CLOTHING

Legal professionals acting in conflict mislead advocates who blindly follow like sheep, so that on its website the Vancouver Island Strata Owners Association answers the following question, and others, deceptively, and so do the Condominium Homeowners Association and the Canadian Condominium Institute. THIS IS HIGHLY PROFITABLE FOR LAWYERS AND INSURANCE COMPANIES and an unspeakable cost for strata owners.

Can a bylaw make owners responsible for accidental damage to common property that they have caused?

Under the law the answer is No. Neither the Strata Property Act nor the Regulations allow the strata corporation to transfer its responsibility to repair damage to common property (s. 72), and a bylaw that contravenes the Act is unenforceable (s.121).

Section 155 of the Act makes owners of strata lots “named insureds” under the strata corporation’s liability insurance, but the strata corporation's insurance deductible (s.158.1) is a “common expense” (s.1) and as such, the strata must sue an owner “in order to recover the deductible portion of an insurance claim if the owner is responsible for the damage” (s.158.2).

To best protect themselves it is prudent for owners to take out personal liability insurance to cover the strata’s insurance deductibles as the courts have defined “responsible” to mean that the damage came from the owner’s strata lot, whether or not the owner actually caused the accident.  For example, if an owner’s plumbing fixture or appliance leaks and damages the suite below, the owner is responsible because the appliance or fixture is on his/her property. Mari v. Strata Plan LMS 2835, 2007 BCSC 740, The Owners, Strata Plan VIS 6634 v. Brown, 2017 BCCRT 86. In contrast, if a leaking pipe in a strata lot happens to be common property the Act makes the strata responsible for repairs, and Graham v. The Owners, Strata Plan K 852, 2018 BCCRT 619 is just one court case example of that.  

Bottom line: a bylaw cannot override the Act or deprive an owner of their right to due process in court. Anyone (judge, lawyer, manager, insurer, realtor, council member, owner, or advocate) who undermines this minimum statutory protection is acting in a scandalous conflict of interest that brings the law into disrepute and irresponsibly manufactures perpetual strife at the expense of BC strata owners.