Three Lamps Lawyers
In 1993 Mrs Brooker bought a commercial unit (Unit A), together with some accessory units or carparks, in a property in Mt Eden. The title was issued under the Unit Titles Act 1972, and there was a Body Corporate namely Body Corporate No. 154558, the Defendant in this proceeding.
Mrs Brooker bought Unit A which occupied half the ground floor of the building which was then being converted by the addition of a first floor apartment block. The standards of design and workmanship in the conversion process were grossly defective.
Mrs Brooker or her interests operated various restaurant and bar businesses from Unit A. Water leaked into the premises at an early stage, either through the ceiling or at ground level. In 1997 the scale of leaking escalated. At that time Mrs Brooker converted her largest carpark into a function room.
It was not until late 1998, that the Body Corporate resolved to commission major remedial work in the ceiling above Unit A. This remedial work was completed in mid 1999. Payment was effected by a special levy imposed on all current unit holders. The incidence of water ingress then subsided substantially. Mrs Brooker sold her property in 2003.
Mrs Brooker brought a claim against the Body Corporate, alleging breaches of statutory duty or alternatively common law negligence, for losses suffered as a result of water leakage into Unit A and elsewhere. The head of losses claimed were:
Damage to premises of $25,617
General repairs and maintenance $100,743
Repairs and maintenance to machinery and equipment $45,873
Loss of capital value $300,000 on sale of property
Loss of rental of $442,857
General damages of $200,000
Legal fees of $7346.25
Mrs Brooker failed in proving any of these heads of losses, and thus the Body Corporate was not required to pay anything to her. The Judge did find however that as at 6 October 1997 the Body Corporate was on notice that relatively major remedial work was necessary in the common area above Unit A. He then went onto find that the Body Corporate did not take any immediate steps until July 1998. However no losses to Mrs Brooker were proved to have flowed from this breach of the Body Coporate Rules.
Even though Mrs Brooker was unsuccessful, there was interesting discussion within the decision about the obligations of the Body Corporate.
The following points were made by the Judge:
This decision will no doubt be of significant interest to unit owners in multi-unit developments, and what they can reasonably expect their Body Corporate to do when water ingress issues are discovered.