National Post

‘Anti competitiv­e’

REALTORS CAN MAKE SALES DATA AVAILABLE ONLINE, COURT SAYS.

- Aleksandra Sagan

The Federal Court of Appeal has upheld a previous ruling that Canada’s largest real estate board must allow its realtor members to make home sales data available online, in a precedent-setting case that could enable agents across the country to introduce new online services.

The Toronto Real Estate Board ( TREB) has vowed to continue to fight the decision in court.

The appeal court’s decision, released Friday, is ex- pected to have widespread ramificati­ons and affect how other real estate boards provide services to customers on the internet.

The top court dismissed an appeal from TREB arguing that the Competitio­n Tribunal erred in an April 2016 ruling that the board’s practices prohibitin­g sharing informatio­n online are anti-competitiv­e.

The quasi-judicial tribunal sided with the Competitio­n Bureau, which first made an applicatio­n in 2011 alleging that TREB’s rules prevented competitio­n and stifled digit- al innovation by prohibitin­g its realtor members from posting sales data on their websites.

The tribunal also said TREB must provide data such as sales figures, pending sales and broker commission­s, which it does not currently disclose.

TREB CEO John DiMichele said the organizati­on, which represents realtors from the Greater Toronto Area, is disappoint­ed with the news.

The profession­al body will seek leave to appeal, as well as an order staying the deci- sion until the outcome of the appeal — if it is granted, he said in a statement.

“TREB believes strongly that personal financial informatio­n of home buyers and sellers must continue to be safely used and disclosed,” he said.

The organizati­on had argued that publishing sensitive data, such as the price a home is sold for, would violate consumers’ privacy.

“TREB made no substantiv­e challenge to the tribunal’s finding that it controlled the relevant market,” the federal appeal court said in a summary of its decision.

“The tribunal made no error in finding that TREB engaged in an anti-competitiv­e practice and that this practice had and will likely continue to have the effect of preventing or lessening competitio­n substantia­lly in the ( Greater Toronto Area) sufficient to meet the requiremen­ts.”

The board, which represents about 45,000 realtor members, has said its policy is intended to protect personal financial informatio­n and argues that posting that online would amount to a breach of consumer privacy laws.

However, the Commission­er of Competitio­n argued that TREB’s rules restricted the ability of realtors to introduce innovative real estate brokerage services online, denying consumers the benefits of greater competitio­n, such as lower prices.

“We welcome today’s Federal Court of Appeal decision in our case against the Toronto Real Estate Board — a win for both competitio­n & innovation!” the Competitio­n Bureau said on Twitter.

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