Toronto Star

Oakville man sues over six-digit repairs

Couple blame extensive trouble with townhouse on lack of inspection by town during constructi­on

- ALEX MCKEEN STAFF REPORTER

David Goodale and Jennifer Hyde had problems renovating their first home, so they were feeling more confident with their next purchase in October 2013. The Oakville townhouse was only six years old and they had a home inspection.

Looking back now, he said that wishful attitude has turned irreparabl­y sour.

“It’s been one nightmare after another,” Goodale, 41, said Thursday.

Four years after he and Hyde bought townhouse No. 26 at 96 Nelson St., for $613,000, they’re still reeling from emotional and financial strain. They say they’ve spent $350,000 in repairs and legal fees, had to postpone their wedding (even splitting up temporaril­y) and were forced to sell their Oakville home and move to the less-expensive Grimsby area.

“The foundation walls don’t touch . . . How does the inspector miss that?” DAVID GOODALE HOMEOWNER

None of the problems turned up on their home inspection, but lurked behind the walls — costly time bombs Goodale blames the Town of Oakville for failing to catch during mandatory building inspection­s when the home was first built (municipali­ties are responsibl­e for enforcing Ontario’s building code).

Goodale sued Oakville in August 2014, claiming $800,000 in losses and damages from negligence. The claim has not been proven in court, and Oakville denied both the existence of the losses and any responsibi­lity for them in an October 2014 statement of defence.

A spokespers­on for the Town of Oakville said the town couldn’t comment on the case because it’s still before the courts.

The first red flag was a “musty smell” in the basement Goodale initially thought was caused by a minor leak. When an engineer broke open a piece of drywall, a host of structural issues were laid bare. The couple eventually learned there was a 10-centimetre gap between the rear foundation and a wall, among multiple other major structural problems.

Goodale alleges the town temporaril­y lost crucial building plans between 2007 and 2015 that could have saved him money in engineerin­g fees, only to later argue he had spent too much on his home repairs.

Mostly, he feels he’s been failed by the town. “The foundation walls don’t touch . . . How does the inspector miss that?” he said.

All in all, it took a year, and much disruption to the lives of Goodale, Hyde and their neighbours, to fix the house’s structural problems.

In the statement of defence, the town argues “municipali­ties do not provide a warranty nor do they guarantee that a building is constructe­d in accordance with the Ontario Building Code.”

The statement also claims that if structural deficienci­es occurred in the constructi­on, they arose after the inspection­s and were therefore not the town’s responsibi­lity.

Since selling the house and moving to Grimsby, Goodale said he and Hyde just want to get their lives back.

“They know we can’t do this. They’re just trying to crush us,” he said of the town’s defence.

Throughout the ordeal Goodale turned repeatedly to his town councillor, Sean O’Meara, who didn’t comment on the details of the case. But O’Meara said he’s “very, very sad” to see the couple leave the town under the circumstan­ces they did.

“There are times when a municipal government sees itself as a corporatio­n and acts like that. I would never ever want that to happen to anyone else again because of processes and circumstan­ces and decisions that are made beyond his control.”

 ?? LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR ?? David Goodale and his partner, Jennifer Hyde, were forced to sell their Oakville home after spending $350,000 fixing it.
LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR David Goodale and his partner, Jennifer Hyde, were forced to sell their Oakville home after spending $350,000 fixing it.

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