National Post (National Edition)
Condos can ban Airbnb, Expedia rentals: court
ONTARIO RULING
“I would suspect that in most common law jurisdictions — that’s all of them except Quebec — a similar concept would apply,” says, Rod Escayola, the lawyer in the Ottawa office of Gowling WLG who argued the case on behalf of the condo building, Ottawa-Carleton Standard Condominium Corp. No. 961.
Douglas Menzies and his wife Norma White offered stays in their Ottawa condo unit through their private company, DGM Management Corp. The listings offered access to their unit, as well as the condo’s parking, exercise room, pool and common spaces. According to the court decision, the Airbnb listing asked that guests “be discreet about mentioning Airbnb to anyone in the building.”
The condo corporation argued in court that making the unit available for short-term stays violated the condo’s “declaration.” This is the legal document that created the condo corporation and that limits how unit owners can use the property. The condo corporation also argued the rentals breached a rule the building introduced in April that bars unit owners from renting out their properties for terms of less than four months.
Judges have enforced four-month lease minimums in the past, so it was no surprise that Justice Beaudoin confirmed the Ottawa condo corporation’s ability to impose the four-month lease limit. What’s important and novel about the Ottawa case is that Justice Beaudoin also found that short-term rentals breached the declaration.
Ontario law allows condo boards to adopt rules that govern things such as the number of pets a unit owners can keep or when residents may use the pool.
Rules can also govern short-term rental periods. Still, unit owners might argue these rules shouldn’t apply retroactively, especially if they’d been renting out their units before the rule kicked in. They might claim a “grandfather” exemption to the short-term rental ban. Banning short-term rentals at the declaration level wipes out that argument. The declaration is the pinnacle in the hierarchy of documents that govern a condo corporation. It ranks in a superior position to the rules, and it’s a very difficult document to amend.
Escayola thinks the Ottawa decision gives a condo corporation with a “single family use” provision in its declaration the power to enforce bans short-term rentals, even retroactively. Such provisions are a common feature of Ontario condo declarations. Condo lawyers in other parts of Canada will likely study the Ottawa decision to see if the reasoning will apply in their jurisdictions.
“I think it’s going to be a game changer in the province of Ontario,” Escayola said.