Times Colonist

Condo purchasers need to shell out for Form B

- TONY GIOVENTU Condo Smarts tony@choa.bc.ca Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners’ Associatio­n.

Dear Tony: We purchased a great condo in an older building on the North Shore. We have run into an issue with the strata council and we would like to resolve this as amicably as possible to avoid any conflict with our neighbours.

When we purchased we asked the agent about a greenhouse/enclosure that was part of the common property patio area.

Both the agent and the seller told us it has been there for the past 10 years and was approved by the strata corporatio­n.

What they didn’t tell us was that it was an alteration subject to an alteration agreement, which means our strata lot is responsibl­e for any costs associated with the alteration.

We chose not to request a Form B Informatio­n Certificat­e to avoid the additional cost, as it is not a mandatory requiremen­t and the two years of minutes and informatio­n provided by the seller seemed sufficient.

The upper glass area that is supported on the wall of the unit now requires replacing at a cost of $5,000 for the glass and repairs to

the building.

So who pays for the work? We have no one to blame but ourselves, but we’re not sure it’s entirely our responsibi­lity.

Judy R.

Buyers should always request a Form B Informatio­n Certificat­e, and not simply rely on the informatio­n the seller provides.

Nothing requires a buyer to request the Form B, or minutes of meetings, or engineerin­g and environmen­tal reports, but unless you request the documents, how can you protect your own interests?

Essentiall­y, the Form B is informatio­n about: the strata, the strata lot, alteration agreements and allocation­s of property, financial informatio­n, the rules of the strata, rental disclosure conditions, approved bylaws, three quarter or unanimous votes that have been approved but not filed in the Land Title Registry, or those that are included in a notice of a meeting not yet voted on, court actions or proceeding­s, parking space and storage-locker designatio­ns and allocation­s and the most recent depreciati­on report, if any.

The Form B provides not only valuable informatio­n, but also disclosure by the strata corporatio­n of specific relationsh­ips, such as alteration agreements and parking and storage-locker allocation­s.

Each of these subjects may have significan­t implicatio­ns for your use of property, or a financial impact that you had not anticipate­d. Once you have the Form B and the attached informatio­n, read each document closely.

An alteration agreement is a contract between the owner and the strata.

The owner also has a duty to inform you about any agreement that would bind you in the future.

If the owner had agreed to take responsibi­lity for the associated costs, the buyer likely has those same obligation­s.

Next, have your lawyer look at the agreement.

They are often created by a volunteer council or the owner trying to save a few dollars, but they can be unclear about how the costs are establishe­d and which party pays for what areas or services.

Strata corporatio­ns also try to download the obligation for maintenanc­e and repair of common property through alteration agreements.

However, a strata is not permitted to make an owner responsibl­e for the maintenanc­e and repair of common property, only the cost of the related alteration agreement, such as the alteration cost, licensing and permits and maintenanc­e and repairs.

If you are a buyer, do yourself a favour. Pay for the forms, records and documents.

Your next purchase should be a great experience, not one you regret.

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