Times Colonist

Condo purchaser shouldn’t have to pay retroactiv­e fees

- TONY GIOVENTU Condo Smarts

Dear Tony: We just purchased a condo in Langley and within a week of becoming owners, we were sent an invoice from our property manager that we owed back strata fees for November and December.

These are the increases to the strata fees that were not approved until the AGM at the end of December 2017, and we only became the owners as of Jan. 5.

Our strata fiscal year runs from Nov. 1 to Oct. 31. While the amount is not significan­t, it is the principle of the claim and the penalties being imposed by the strata manager that has us irate. Is a strata allowed to back-charge retroactiv­e fees from previous owners to new owners?

Carol and Dave J. The simple answer to your question is no, there are no provisions for retroactiv­e fees; however, this is a more complicate­d problem that requires understand­ing how the Strata Property Act, regulation­s and the bylaws of each strata corporatio­n function.

Here are the basic accounting principles for a strata corporatio­n.

Every strata must approve an annual budget for a fiscal year. They can approve this before the year end for the next year, or no later than two months after the fiscal year end.

To ensure a strata corporatio­n does not run out of operating funds, owners continue to pay the previously approved strata fee until the next budget is approved.

When the budget is proposed in the notice package, the notice must also include the schedule of proposed strata fees for the fiscal year.

This is where the owners would be notified of how increases will be covered in the next fiscal year.

By approving either the budget or amended budget, the owners are consenting to the fee schedule.

If the budget is approved before the new fiscal year begins, the solution is simple: the new fees come into effect.

If it is approved after the fiscal-year end, then the balance of the fee increases has to be paid for the remainder of the year.

The strata must collect the amount approved in the budget for the fiscal year, as that is the legal requiremen­t under the act — the total amount of the budget divided by the unit entitlemen­t/total unit entitlemen­t of each strata lot for the fiscalyear period.

If the strata approves $100,000 in operating funds and a $25,000 contingenc­y for the 2018 fiscal year, they must collect it. If they do not and it results in a deficit, the strata must pay that deficit back to the budget in the next fiscal year.

Many strata corporatio­ns that approve their budgets after the fiscal-year end choose to calculate the balance of the increases over the next 10- or 11-month period so it has the least impact on the owners and sets a comparable fee for the next year’s period with the least increase.

But some also introduce an adjustment for the next payment and call it a retroactiv­e fee, which is incorrect, as the fee was not approved for that period; it encompasse­s the full fiscal year.

This is where your bylaws come into effect.

Strata corporatio­ns have modified their bylaws on payment schedules and methods, and this affects the ability of the strata corporatio­n to manage and collect fees.

This is especially vulnerable when a sale occurs during the budget-approval process.

In your strata, the bylaws require the provision of 12 postdated cheques for the next fiscal year, but that would be impossible, as your strata does not approve its budget until the end of the two-month period after your fiscal-year end.

A close look at the notice package for the AGM should indicate what the strata had intended and approved for the payment schedule.

A recent Civil Resolution Tribunal decision involving strata plan NW2729 will hopefully open the dialogue on this issue and help strata corporatio­ns plan their budget approvals and bylaws and manage their increases in strata fees correctly. Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n.

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