Toronto Star

$100K dispute proves importance of surveys

- Bob Aaron

A recent court case emphasizes the importance of using a survey and getting accurate property measuremen­ts before signing an agreement in a home purchase.

Nancy Ann Pringle was the owner of a detached, two-storey house on a corner lot with irregular measuremen­ts on the northern edge of East York, in the GTA. Prior to listing the property for sale, her real estate agent asked if there was a land survey indicating the property dimensions.

Despite the fact that surveys of the property are available at nominal cost in online databases at protectyou­rboundarie­s.com and landsurvey­records.com, Pringle said she did not have one and her agent did not check for a survey. That was mistake No. 1.

Even without a survey, the lot size could have been verified against a copy of the subdivisio­n plan, available at the Toronto Land Registry Office for $15.

Pringle’s agent, instead, checked the database of the Municipal Property Assessment Corporatio­n (MPAC) and noted that the property had a frontage of 87.64 feet by a depth of 0 feet. Mistake No. 2.

The agent then visited the property and measured it himself. Mistake No. 3. He then listed the property on the Multiple Listing Service, incorrectl­y showing the land dimensions as 87.64 feet by 100 feet. Mistake No. 4. However, the MLS listing did state: “Irregular corner lot — depths to be verified” and “Buyer/Buyer’s Agent to verify all measuremen­ts.”

Daryoush Hosseinzad­eh is a renovator and builder. In early 2017, he offered to buy the property for $1,200,000, hoping to subdivide it and build two houses there. The offer, drafted by his own agent without checking the dimensions, described the property as having a frontage of 87.64 feet more or less by a depth of 100 feet more or less. Mistake No. 5.

The offer included language that “the buyer is advised to verify any measuremen­ts.” This was not done. Mistake No. 6. The parties agreed on a signback at $1,233,000 with a $100,000 deposit. The seller inserted the words “to be verified” above the lot dimensions.

When Hosseinzad­eh discovered the true dimensions of the lot, and that it was too small to divide into two lots, he refused to close. The property was subsequent­ly resold for $1,280,000.

A new survey prepared during the litigation showed the lot area as 5,787.7 square feet. If the lot was 87.64 by 100 feet, the size would have been 8,764 square feet — a huge discrepanc­y.

This past March, the parties appeared before Justice Patrick Monahan.

Each sought payment of the $100,000 deposit.

In his ruling awarding the seller the entire deposit and court costs, the judge wrote that the buyer “is the author of his own misfortune.”

The “to be verified” wording meant that Hosseinzad­eh “had the responsibi­lity to satisfy himself as to the accuracy of the lot dimensions.”

By initialing that language and accepting an unconditio­nal purchase agreement in the face of known risks, “he cannot now seek to avoid its binding effect when those very risks materializ­ed,” the judge wrote.

Bob Aaron is a Toronto real estate lawyer. He can be reached at bob@aaron.ca, on his website aaron.ca and Twitter @bobaaron2.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Improper property measuremen­ts cost a prospectiv­e buyer $100,000, on top of the legal fees of losing at court.
DREAMSTIME Improper property measuremen­ts cost a prospectiv­e buyer $100,000, on top of the legal fees of losing at court.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada