Penticton Herald

Bylaws deemed unenforcea­ble

- TONY GIOVENTU

Dear Tony: I have owned my strata lot for 22 years in East Vancouver. In September I received a notice from my strata council that I had altered my balcony without written permission, and unless I was prepared to have the alteration removed I would be fined $200 a week.

I responded that it has always been this way and if it was altered, the constructi­on was done before I ever purchased. Council responded that it didn’t matter as it was my balcony and started fining me.

To make matters worse, our strata has a bylaw that authorizes the council to receive monies paid for any item to be first applied to outstandin­g fines and penalties and within two months they had forced me into arrears, filed a lien against my strata lot and I have just received a notice of order for sale if I don’t pay the back fees, fines, lien costs, legal fees and the balcony correction­s.

How is this even enforceabl­e? Nothing has changed in 22 years and out of the blue they start attacking owners for changes they never made!

Dear Elizabeth: The funds collected for strata fees or special levies must be applied to strata fees and special levies.

In a recent court decision, strata BCS 3648 vs Podwinski and the Royal Bank, the judge determined such a by-law is invalid because it would prevent an owner from stipulatin­g that fees are being paid and that fines are not.

This type of bylaw denies the owner the right to challenge the bylaw enforcemen­t decision, which includes an applicatio­n to the Supreme Court of BC, Arbitratio­n or an applicatio­n to the Civil Resolution Tribunal.

Because the owner had paid the strata fees within the terms of a pre-authorized payment form, which is now common for most strata fee payments, the strata corporatio­n accepted the monies on that basis and only that basis.

The judge rejected the strata corporatio­n’s argument that the terms of the by-law override the terms of the pre-authorized payment form.

Strata corporatio­ns who have adopted payment diversion bylaws will be faced with similar challenges and should seek legal advice on enforcemen­t or amending them as owners can now use the Civil Resolution Tribunal (www.civilresol­utionbc.ca) to quickly file a claim to challenge the bylaw.

Under the CRT, owners and tenants can challenge whether a bylaw is: legally enforceabl­e, whether it was passed or filed correctly and whether it has been enforced fairly. The applicatio­n process is on line, inexpensiv­e and the matter is resolved in a few months with a binding decision or settlement.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n To offer a question for considerat­ion write: CHOA, Suite 200-65 Richmond St., New Westminste­r, B.C., V3L 595 or email: tony@choa.bc.ca. This column appears most Thursdays.

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