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Entries in Home Building Act (2)

Thursday
Feb092012

Home Building Act Reforms

Home Building Act Reforms: The second phase of the Home Building Act came into force on 1 February 2012. Key changes are:
                                
Statutory warranty periods

  • Builders, developers, owner–builders and tradespeople must warrant that, amongst other things, their work has been performed in a proper and workmanlike manner. Under the current law a homeowner, or subsequent purchaser, has the right to enforce these warranties for up to 7 years after the work was completed.
  • Commencing 1 February 2012, the warranty period will be 6 years for structural defects and 2 years for non–structural defects. These periods will be extended by 6 months if the homeowner or subsequent purchaser becomes aware of a defect in the last 6 months of these time periods.


Threshold for mandatory home warranty insurance and cooling off periods

  • Commencing 1 February 2012, all residential building work worth more than $20,000 must be covered by mandatory home warranty insurance. The current threshold is $12,000. The new threshold will also apply to the sale of a home by an owner–builder and to cooling off periods.

New small job contracts category

  • Residential building contracts must be in writing and include a number of requirements.
  • Commencing 1 February 2012, a new category of written contracts for ‘small jobs’ worth between $1,001 and $5,000 will come into effect. A small job contract must be in writing, dated and signed on behalf of both of the parties and contain the following information:
  • the names of the parties, including the name and number of the holder of the contractor licence,    a description of the work (including any plans and specifications for the work) the contract price, if known.


Additional home warranty insurance benefits for homeowners

  • Under the existing law, if a homeowner makes a home warranty insurance claim, they must pay the first $500 of that claim. After 1 February 2012, homeowners will only be required to pay the first $250 of any claim.
  • In addition, all home warranty insurance policies issued after 1 February 2012 will receive a minimum cover of $340,000, regardless of the value of the work.

Definition of ‘related’ corporations to a builder or developer

  • Under the existing law, an insurance policy may prevent a builder, developer or a ‘related’ corporation to a builder or developer from being a beneficiary of the home warranty insurance policy for that work.
  • The definition of a ‘related’ corporation in the existing law is quite narrow and doesn’t include corporations that most people would consider as being ‘related’. Accordingly the new law provides a wider definition of what it means to be a ‘related’ corporation.

                            
For further details refer to OFT web site at: http://tinyurl.com/6cop68e

Wednesday
Oct192011

NSW builders better protected from indefinite insurance claims, but home owners lose some recourse

This would seem to be a common sense legislation amendment in our view.

 The recently unveiled NSW state government reforms to the Home Building Act aimed at pumping some adrenalin in the industry will benefit builders, developers and insurers, but leave home buyers with less recourse to pursue faulty workmanship claims.

The legislation reduces warranties offered to home buyers from seven years to two for non-structural defects.

It’s been argued that the bill will assist builders, developers and insurers of new houses and apartments by taking away the unrealistic expectation that builders are perpetually liable for wear and tear in homes they have constructed.

NSW Fair Trading Minister Anthony Roberts is correct to argue it is inappropriate to have a seven-year warranty period for painting and possibly the plastering.

The minister notes a result of a 2008 Supreme Court ruling and subsequent amendments to the act in 2009 that there was potential for a claim against home warranty insurance to be made at any time.

“In effect, this means that insurers face the real risk of unending liability for home warranty insurance claims,” he advises.

Some insurers are not releasing bank guarantees provided by builders as security against their home warranty insurance policies, and this means that builders, many of whom are small business owners, are continuing to pay interest on securities being held. This was affecting the ability of these builders to take on new jobs, as their capital was tied up.

But the proposed changes could make some legitimate claims practically impossible to pursue through the courts.

Many defects do not emerge in the initial two years of a newly constructed building.

Not only is time against the home buyers. As strata lawyer David Bannerman suggests, strata flat buyers could be particularly without remedy given that to launch a claim an apartment owners’ meeting needs approval to engage costly professionals in resolutions approved by the owners’ corporation at a time when possibly unsold apartments mean the developer has effective control of the decision making of the owners’ committee.

The legislation reduces warranties developers must offer home buyers from seven years to six for the more serious structural defects. Some states offer up to a decade for claims to emerge.

The bill allows for the practical completion of each building in a multi-building project to be considered independently.

Even the legal definition as to what’s structural and non-structural is not clear-cut.

At present "structural defects" are defined in clause 71 of the Home Building Regulation 2004, which provides that a structural defect is one that causes physical damage or prevents, or is likely to prevent, the continued practical use of the building or any part of the building. Every component of the external walls or roof, including weatherproofing, is considered to be a structural element of the building.

"Non-structural defects" are, by default, anything that does not fall into the just-mentioned definition. The bill does not propose any change to the current definition of "structural defect".

But some industry groups have strong views that the current definition was too wide and requires urgent revision, which the Fair Trading Department is still considering.

Roberts says the bill will “pump some adrenalin in the industry".

"We want to remove the dead hand of government off as many small tradespeople and builders as possible," he says.

Roberts says since 2002 only 7% of claims and notifications relating to structural defects were lodged six years after the issue of the insurance certificate and that data collected by Fair Trading’s Home Building Service since 2007 shows that more than 82% of complaints about structural defects are made within six years.

Claims data produced by the Home Building Service dating back to July 2007 shows that more than 80% of non-structural defect complaints are made within the first two years.

But NSW opposition spokeswoman Linda Burney says the opposition will be seeking to amend the bill.

“Whatever the reason that the government has put forward for this change it cannot be argued that it will maintain the current level of consumer protection,” she says.

“The reduction of the time frame within which a consumer can collect on a warranty is something that the opposition cannot support.

“While we agree that burdensome regulation and red tape in the construction industry is inappropriate, improvements on this front should not come at the expense of consumers,” Burney says.

One likely outcome of the bill is that builders and developers will no longer be able to use proportionate liability laws to shift responsibility to their subcontractors for warranty breaches.

Until 2010 it was considered that the provisions of the Civil Liability Act did not apply to statutory warranty claims under the Home Building Act. However, in July 2010 the Supreme Court allowed a builder to use the rules of proportionate liability to defend himself in a statutory warranty claim.

A significant amendment raises the threshold for home warranty insurance from $12,000 to $20,000.

Industry stakeholders have expressed concern that the $12,000 does not represent the increases in building and labour costs that have occurred since 2004.

It is suggested the requirement has had a negative effect on small to medium builders and tradespeople as in order to be eligible for home warranty insurance, builders and tradespeople must meet stringent prudential requirements.

Builders and tradespeople had also raise concerns about the cost, time and effort required to obtain home warranty insurance for small-scale building works

The bill will increase the threshold at which written contracts are mandatory from $1,100 to $5,100.

By Jonathan Chancellor

Property Observer