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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENTS
PART I
DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION
Definitions and
interpretation
1. (1) In
this Act,
“annual general
meeting” means a meeting of the owners of a
corporation held in accordance with
subsection 45 (2); (“assemblée générale
annuelle”)
“approval authority” means the approval
authority for the purposes of sections 51,
51.1 and 51.2 of the Planning Act; (“autorité
approbatrice”)
“auditor” means a person licensed as a
public accountant under the Public
Accounting Act, 2004 who is appointed as
an auditor of a corporation under section
60; (“vérificateur”)
“board” means the
board of directors of a corporation;
(“conseil”)
“building” means a
building included in a property;
(“bâtiment”)
“by-law” means a
by-law of a corporation; (“règlement
administratif”)
“claim” includes a
right, title, interest, encumbrance or
demand of any kind affecting land but does
not include the interest of an owner in the
owner’s unit or common interest;
(“réclamation”)
“common elements”
means all the property except the units;
(“parties communes”)
“common elements
condominium corporation” means a common
elements condominium corporation described
in subsection 138 (2); (“association
condominiale de parties communes”)
“common expenses”
means the expenses related to the
performance of the objects and duties of a
corporation and all expenses specified as
common expenses in this Act or in a
declaration; (“dépenses communes”)
“common interest”
means the interest in the common elements
appurtenant to,
(a) a unit, in the
case of all corporations except a common
elements condominium corporation, or
(b) an owner’s parcel
of land to which the common interest is
attached and which is described in the
declaration, in the case of a common
elements condominium corporation; (“intérêt
commun”)
“common surplus”
means the excess of all receipts of the
corporation over the expenses of the
corporation; (“excédent commun”)
“corporation” means
a corporation created or continued under
this Act; (“association”)
“declarant” means a
person who owns the freehold or leasehold
estate in the land described in the
description and who registers a declaration
and description under this Act, and includes
a successor or assignee of that person but
does not include a purchaser in good faith
of a unit who pays fair market value or a
successor or assignee of the purchaser; (“déclarant”)
“declaration” means
a declaration registered under section 2 and
all amendments to the declaration; (“déclaration”)
“deed” includes a transfer under the Land
Titles Act; (“acte scellé”)
“description” means
a description registered under section 2 and
all amendments to the description;
(“description”)
“encumbrance” means a claim that secures the
payment of money or the performance of any
other obligation and includes a charge under
the Land Titles Act, a mortgage and a
lien; (“sûreté réelle”)
“freehold
condominium corporation” means a corporation
in which all the units and their appurtenant
common interests are held in fee simple by
the owners; (“association condominiale de
propriété franche”)
“leasehold
condominium corporation” means a corporation
in which all the units and their appurtenant
common interests are subject to leasehold
interests held by the owners; (“association
condominiale de propriété à bail”)
“lessor”, in
relation to a leasehold condominium
corporation, means the person who owns the
freehold estate in the land described in the
description; (“bailleur”)
“Minister” means the
minister responsible for the administration
of this Act; (“ministre”)
“mortgage” includes a charge under the
Land Titles Act, in which case
“mortgagor” and “mortgagee” mean the chargor
and the chargee under the charge; (“hypothèque”,
“débiteur hypothécaire”, “créancier
hypothécaire”)
“owner” means,
(a) in relation to a
corporation other than a leasehold
condominium corporation or a common elements
condominium corporation, a person who owns a
freehold interest in a unit and its
appurtenant common interest and who is shown
as the owner in the records of the land
registry office in which the description of
the corporation is registered, and includes
a mortgagee in possession and a declarant
with respect to any unit that the declarant
has not transferred to another person,
(b) in relation to a
leasehold condominium corporation, a person
who owns a leasehold interest in a unit and
its appurtenant common interest and who is
shown as the owner in the records of the
land registry office in which the
description of the corporation is
registered, and includes a mortgagee in
possession and a declarant with respect to
any unit in which the declarant has not
transferred the leasehold interest to
another person but does not include a tenant
of the owner,
(c) in relation to a
common elements condominium corporation, a
person, including the declarant, who owns a
common interest in the common elements and a
freehold interest in the parcel of land to
which the common interest is attached as
described in the declaration and who is
shown as the owner in the records of the
land registry office in which the
description of the corporation is
registered; (“propriétaire”)
“phased condominium
corporation” means a phased condominium
corporation to which Part XI applies;
(“association condominiale constituée par
étape”)
“prescribed” means
prescribed by the regulations made under
this Act; (“prescrit”)
“property” means the
land, including the buildings on it, and
interests appurtenant to the land, as the
land and interests are described in the
description and includes all land and
interests appurtenant to land that are added
to the common elements; (“propriété”)
“proposed property”
means the property described in the
declaration and description that are
required to be registered to designate a
proposed unit as a unit under this Act;
(“propriété projetée”)
“proposed unit”
means land described in an agreement of
purchase and sale that provides for delivery
to the purchaser of a deed in registerable
form after a declaration and description
have been registered in respect of the land;
(“partie privative projetée”)
“purchaser of a
unit”, in relation to a leasehold
condominium corporation, means the purchaser
of an owner’s interest in a unit and the
appurtenant common interest; (“acquéreur
d’une partie privative”)
“registered” means registered under the
Land Titles Act or the Registry Act
and “register” and “registration” have
corresponding meanings; (“enregistré”,
“enregistrer”, “enregistrement”)
“reserve fund” means
a reserve fund established under section 93;
(“fonds de réserve”)
“reserve fund study”
means a reserve fund study described in
section 94; (“étude du fonds de réserve”)
“rule” means a rule
of a corporation; (“règle”)
“status certificate”
means a status certificate described in
section 76; (“certificat d’information”)
“unit” means a part
of the property designated as a unit by the
description and includes the space enclosed
by its boundaries and all of the land,
structures and fixtures within this space in
accordance with the declaration and
description; (“partie privative”)
“vacant land
condominium corporation” means a vacant land
condominium corporation described in
subsection 155 (2). (“association
condominiale de terrain nu”) 1998, c. 19,
s. 1 (1); 2002, c. 17, Sched. F, Table;
2004, c. 8, ss. 46, 47 (3).
Ownership of land
(2) For
the purposes of this Act, the ownership of
land or of a leasehold interest in land
includes the ownership of space or of a
leasehold interest in space respectively.
1998, c. 19, s. 1 (2).
Proposed declarant
(3) A
reference to a declarant in this Act shall
be deemed to include, where applicable, a
person who proposes or intends to register a
declaration and description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 1 (3).
PART II
REGISTRATION AND CREATION
Creation
Registration
2. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act and
subsection (2), a declaration and
description may be registered by or on
behalf of the person who owns the freehold
or leasehold estate in the land described in
the description. 1998, c. 19, s. 2 (1).
Restriction
(2) A
declaration and description for a freehold
condominium corporation shall not be
registered by or on behalf of a person who
does not own the freehold estate in the land
described in the description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 2 (2).
Effect of
registration
(3) Upon
registration of a declaration and
description,
(a) this Act governs the
land and the interests appurtenant to the
land, as the land and the interests are
described in the description;
(b) the land described
in the description is divided into units and
common elements in accordance with the
description; and
(c) a condominium
corporation is created. 1998, c. 19,
s. 2 (3).
Place of
registration
3. (1) The
declaration and description shall be
registered in,
(a) the land titles
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office has a land titles
division; or
(b) the registry
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office does not have a
land titles division. 1998, c. 19, s. 3 (1).
Index
(2) A
land registrar in whose office a declaration
and description are registered shall keep an
index of the corporations created by the
registrations. 1998, c. 19, s. 3 (2).
Same
(3) The
index mentioned in subsection (2) shall be
in the form approved by the Director of
Titles appointed under section 9 of the
Land Titles Act and shall be known in
English as the Condominium Corporations
Index and in French as Répertoire des
associations condominiales. 1998, c. 19,
s. 3 (3).
Condominium
register
(4) A
land registrar in whose office a declaration
and description are registered shall keep a
register in the form approved by the
Director of Titles to be known in English as
the Condominium Register and in French as
Registre des condominiums. 1998, c. 19,
s. 3 (4).
Contents of
condominium register
(5) Declarations,
descriptions, by-laws, notices of
termination and other instruments respecting
land governed by this Act shall be
registered and recorded in the Condominium
Register in accordance with the regulations
made under this Act and the instructions of
the Director of Titles. 1998, c. 19,
s. 3 (5).
Real property Acts
4. (1) The
Land Titles Act or the Registry
Act, as the case may be, applies in
respect of property governed by this Act
but, if the provisions of either of those
Acts conflict with the provisions of this
Act, the provisions of this Act prevail.
1998, c. 19, s. 4 (1).
Rights of tenants
(2) The
registration of a declaration and
description shall not terminate or otherwise
affect the rights under the Residential
Tenancies Act, 2006 of a person who, at
the time of the registration, is a tenant of
the property or of a part of the property.
1998, c. 19, s. 4 (4); 2006, c. 17,
s. 248 (1).
No termination of
tenancy
(3) The
registration of a declaration and
description does not constitute grounds for
a landlord to give notice of termination
under Part V of the Residential Tenancies
Act, 2006 to a tenant described in
subsection (2). 1998, c. 19, s. 4 (4); 2006,
c. 17, s. 248 (2).
(4) Spent:
1998, c. 19, s. 4 (4).
Corporation
5. (1) A
corporation created or continued under this
Act is a corporation without share capital
whose members are the owners. 1998, c. 19,
s. 5 (1).
Name
(2) The
land registrar shall assign a name to each
corporation in accordance with the
regulations made under this Act. 1998,
c. 19, s. 5 (2).
Other Act
(3) The
Corporations Act does not apply to
the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 5 (3).
Same
(4) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, the
Corporations Information Act applies
to the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 5 (4).
Types of
corporations
6. (1) Corporations
under this Act consist of the following
types:
1. Freehold
condominium corporations.
2. Leasehold
condominium corporations. 1998, c. 19,
s. 6 (1).
Types of freehold
corporations
(2) Freehold
condominium corporations consist of the
following types:
1. Common elements
condominium corporations.
2. Phased condominium
corporations.
3. Vacant land
condominium corporations.
4. Standard
condominium corporations that are not any of
the corporations mentioned in paragraphs 1,
2 and 3. 1998, c. 19, s. 6 (2).
Restriction on
registration
(3) A
declaration and description shall not be
registered unless the registration would
create a freehold condominium corporation or
a leasehold condominium corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 6 (3).
Indication in
declaration
(4) The
declaration shall state,
(a) whether the
corporation is a freehold condominium
corporation or a leasehold condominium
corporation; and
(b) if the corporation
is a freehold condominium corporation, the
type of freehold condominium corporation
that it is. 1998, c. 19, s. 6 (4).
Declaration and
Description
Requirements for
declaration
7. (1) A
declaration shall not be registered unless
the declarant has executed it in the manner
prescribed by the Act under which it is to
be registered. 1998, c. 19, s. 7 (1).
Contents
(2) A
declaration shall contain,
(a) a statement that
this Act governs the land and interests
appurtenant to the land, as the land and the
interests are described in the description;
(b) the consent of every
person having a registered mortgage against
the land or interests appurtenant to the
land, as the land and the interests are
described in the description;
(c) a statement of the
proportions, expressed in percentages, of
the common interests appurtenant to the
units;
(d) a statement of the
proportions, expressed in percentages
allocated to the units, in which the owners
are to contribute to the common expenses;
(e) an address for
service, a municipal address for the
corporation, if available, and the mailing
address of the corporation if it differs
from its address for service or municipal
address;
(f) a specification of
all parts of the common elements that are to
be used by the owners of one or more
designated units and not by all the owners;
(g) a statement of all
conditions that the approval authority, in
approving or exempting the description under
section 9, requires the declaration to
mention; and
(h) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 7 (2).
Consent
(3) A
person shall not withhold the consent
mentioned in clause (2) (b) by reason only
of the failure of the declarant to enter
into a specified number of agreements of
purchase and sale for the sale of proposed
units. 1998, c. 19, s. 7 (3).
Additional contents
(4) In
addition to the material mentioned in
subsection (2) and in any other section in
this Act, a declaration may contain,
(a) a statement
specifying the common expenses of the
corporation;
(b) conditions or
restrictions with respect to the occupation
and use of the units or common elements;
(c) conditions or
restrictions with respect to gifts, leases
and sales of the units and common interests;
(d) a list of the
responsibilities of the corporation
consistent with its objects and duties; and
(e) a description of the
allocation of obligations to maintain the
units and common elements and to repair them
after damage, which allocation has been done
in accordance with this Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 7 (4).
Inconsistent
provisions
(5) If
any provision in a declaration is
inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, the provisions of this Act prevail and
the declaration shall be deemed to be
amended accordingly. 1998, c. 19, s. 7 (5).
Requirements for
description
8. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, a
description shall contain,
(a) a plan of survey
showing the perimeter of the horizontal
surface of the land and the perimeter of the
buildings;
(b) architectural plans
of the buildings and, if there are any,
structural plans of the buildings;
(c) a specification of
the boundaries of each unit by reference to
the buildings or other monuments;
(d) diagrams showing the
shape and dimensions of each unit and the
approximate location of each unit in
relation to the other units and the
buildings;
(e) a certificate of an
architect that all buildings have been
constructed in accordance with the
regulations and, if there are structural
plans, a certificate of an engineer that all
buildings have been constructed in
accordance with the regulations;
(f) a certificate signed by an Ontario land
surveyor licensed under the Surveyors Act
stating that the diagrams of the units are
substantially accurate;
(g) a description of all
interests appurtenant to the land that are
included in the property; and
(h) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 8 (1).
Preparation of
documents
(2) A
survey, plan, specification, diagram,
certificate or description mentioned in
subsection (1) shall be prepared in
accordance with the regulations made under
this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 8 (2).
Common elements,
units in building
(3) A
description shall not be registered unless,
(a) the property
includes common elements; and
(b) each unit for
residential purposes includes one or more
buildings or is included in a building.
1998, c. 19, s. 8 (3).
Approval by
examiner of surveys
(4) The
examiner of surveys appointed under the
Land Titles Act may require a
description or an amendment to a description
to be submitted to the examiner of surveys
for approval before it is registered. 1998,
c. 19, s. 8 (4).
Same
(5) The
examiner of surveys shall approve the
description or the amendment to the
description if satisfied that the document
submitted meets the requirements of this
section. 1998, c. 19, s. 8 (5).
Planning Act
Subdivision control
9. (1) Section
50 of the Planning Act does not apply
in respect of,
(a) dealings with whole
units and common interests; or
(b) easements
transferred by or reserved to the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (1).
Approvals of
descriptions
(2) Subject
to this section, the provisions of sections
51, 51.1 and 51.2 of the Planning Act
that apply to a plan of subdivision apply
with necessary modifications to a
description or an amendment to a
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (2).
Registration
(3) A
description or an amendment to a description
shall not be registered unless,
(a) the approval
authority has approved it; or
(b) the approval authority has exempted it
from those provisions of sections 51 and
51.1 of the Planning Act that would
normally apply to it under subsection (2)
and it is accompanied by a certificate of
exemption issued by the approval authority.
1998, c. 19, s. 9 (3).
Conversion of
rented residential premises
(4) If
an applicant makes an application for
approval in respect of a property that
includes a building or related group of
buildings containing one or more premises
that is used as a rented residential
premises or that has been used as a rented
residential premises and is vacant, the
approval authority may, after consulting
with the council of the local municipality
in which the property is located if the
approval authority is not that municipality,
require the applicant to have a person who
holds a certificate of authorization within
the meaning of the Professional Engineers
Act or a certificate of practice within
the meaning of the Architects Act or
another qualified person inspect the
property and report to the approval
authority all matters that the approval
authority considers may be of concern. 1998,
c. 19, s. 9 (4).
Additional
conditions
(5) In
addition to the conditions that it may
impose under subsection 51 (25) of the
Planning Act, the approval authority
that receives an application described in
subsection (4) may impose the conditions
that it considers are reasonable in light of
the report mentioned in subsection (4).
1998, c. 19, s. 9 (5).
Application for
exemption
(6) Before
making an application under subsection 51
(16) of the Planning Act, the owner
of a property or a person authorized in
writing by the owner of the property may
apply to the approval authority to have the
description or any part of the description
exempted from those provisions of sections
51 and 51.1 of the Planning Act that
would normally apply to it under subsection
(2). 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (6).
Individual
exemption
(7) The
approval authority may grant an exemption if
it believes the exemption is appropriate in
the circumstances. 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (7).
Exemption made by
Minister
(8) If
the Minister of Municipal Affairs and
Housing is the approval authority, that
Minister may by regulation provide that the
provisions of sections 51 and 51.1 of the
Planning Act that apply to a plan of
subdivision do not apply to a class of
description or an amendment to a class of
description specified in the regulation.
1998, c. 19, s. 9 (8).
Effect of
regulation
(9) The
regulation may be restricted to specified
geographic areas of Ontario. 1998, c. 19,
s. 9 (9).
Exemption made by
municipality
(10) If
the Minister of Municipal Affairs and
Housing is not the approval authority, the
approval authority may by by-law provide
that the provisions of sections 51 and 51.1
of the Planning Act that apply to a
plan of subdivision do not apply to a class
of description or an amendment to a class of
description specified in the by-law. 1998,
c. 19, s. 9 (10).
Effect of by-law
(11) The
by-law may be restricted to specified
geographic areas within the geographic area
of the authority. 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (11).
s. 52 of Planning Act
(12) Section
52 of the Planning Act applies in
respect of a description of a vacant land
condominium corporation but does not apply
in respect of a description of any other
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 9 (12).
PART III
OWNERSHIP
Type of property
10. Units
and common elements are real property for
all purposes. 1998, c. 19, s. 10.
Ownership of
property
11. (1) Subject
to this Act, the declaration and the
by-laws, each owner is entitled to exclusive
ownership and use of the owner’s unit. 1998,
c. 19, s. 11 (1).
Same, common
elements
(2) The
owners are tenants in common of the common
elements and an undivided interest in the
common elements is appurtenant to each
owner’s unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 11 (2).
Common interests
(3) The
proportions of the common interests are
those expressed in the declaration. 1998,
c. 19, s. 11 (3).
No separation
(4) The
ownership of a unit shall not be separated
from the ownership of the common interest
and an instrument that purports to separate
the ownership of a unit from a common
interest is void. 1998, c. 19, s. 11 (4).
No division
(5) Except
as provided by this Act, the common elements
shall not be partitioned or divided. 1998,
c. 19, s. 11 (5).
Easements
12. (1) The
following easements are appurtenant to each
unit and shall be for the benefit of the
owner of the unit and the corporation:
1. An easement for
the provision of a service through the
common elements or any other unit.
2. An easement for
support by all buildings and structures
necessary for providing support to the unit.
3. If a building or a
part of a building moves after registration
of the declaration and description or after
having been damaged and repaired but has not
been restored to the position occupied at
the time of registration of the declaration
and description, an easement for exclusive
use and occupation over the space of the
other units and common elements that would
be space included in the unit if the
boundaries of the unit were determined by
the position of the buildings from time to
time after registration of the description
and not at the time of registration.
4. If a corporation
is entitled to use a service or facility in
common with another corporation, an easement
for access to and for the installation and
maintenance of the service or facility over
the land of the other corporation, described
in accordance with the regulations made
under this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 12 (1).
Same, common
elements
(2) The
following easements are appurtenant to the
common elements:
1. An easement for
the provision of a service through a unit or
through a part of the common elements of
which an owner has exclusive use.
2. An easement for
support by all units necessary for providing
support. 1998, c. 19, s. 12 (2).
Effect on
encumbrances
13. Upon
the registration of the declaration and
description, an encumbrance against the
common elements is no longer enforceable
against the common elements but is
enforceable against all the units and common
interests. 1998, c. 19, s. 13.
Discharge of
encumbrances
14. (1) If
an encumbrance registered before the
registration of the declaration and
description is, by virtue of section 13,
enforceable against all the units of a
corporation and their common interests, an
owner may discharge the portion of the
encumbrance that is applicable to the
owner’s unit and common interest by paying
to the encumbrancer the portion of the
amount owing on account of principal and
interest under the encumbrance that is
attributable to the owner’s common interest
as specified in the declaration. 1998,
c. 19, s. 14 (1).
Form
(2) Upon
payment of the portion of the encumbrance
sufficient to discharge a unit and common
interest, and upon demand, the encumbrancer
shall give to the owner a discharge of that
unit and common interest in accordance with
the requirements of the regulations made
under this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 14 (2).
Assessment
15. (1) Each
unit, together with its appurtenant common
interest, constitutes a parcel for the
purpose of municipal assessment and
taxation. 1998, c. 19, s. 15 (1).
Common elements
(2) Subject
to subsection (3), the common elements of a
corporation that is not a common elements
condominium corporation do not constitute a
parcel for the purpose of municipal
assessment and taxation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 15 (2).
Exception
(3) A
part of the common elements of a corporation
that is not a common elements condominium
corporation constitutes a separate parcel
for the purpose of municipal assessment and
taxation if it is leased for business
purposes under section 21, the lessee
carries on an undertaking for gain on it and
it is in the commercial property class
prescribed under the Assessment Act.
1998, c. 19, s. 15 (3).
Common elements
condominium corporation
(4) The
common elements of a common elements
condominium corporation constitute a parcel
for the purpose of municipal assessment and
taxation within each municipality in which
the common elements or a part of them are
located and the municipal taxes levied on
the parcel or parcels shall form part of the
common expenses of the corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 15 (4).
PART IV
CORPORATION
General
Seal
16. (1) The
corporation shall have a seal that the board
shall adopt and may change. 1998, c. 19,
s. 16 (1).
Name
(2) The
name of the corporation shall appear in
legible characters on the seal. 1998, c. 19,
s. 16 (2).
Objects
17. (1) The
objects of the corporation are to manage the
property and the assets, if any, of the
corporation on behalf of the owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 17 (1).
Duties
(2) The
corporation has a duty to control, manage
and administer the common elements and the
assets of the corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 17 (2).
Ensuring compliance
(3) The
corporation has a duty to take all
reasonable steps to ensure that the owners,
the occupiers of units, the lessees of the
common elements and the agents and employees
of the corporation comply with this Act, the
declaration, the by-laws and the rules.
1998, c. 19, s. 17 (3).
Dealing with title
to real property
17.1 Nothing
in this Act confers on the corporation the
power to grant, transfer, lease, release,
dispose of or otherwise deal with the title
to any real property that the corporation
does not own or any interest in real
property where the corporation does not own
the interest, unless this Act specifically
confers the power on the corporation. 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (1).
Assets
18. (1) The
corporation may own, acquire, encumber and
dispose of real and personal property only
for purposes that are consistent with the
objects and duties of the corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 18 (1).
Interests in real
property
(1.1) The
assets of the corporation do not include any
real property that the corporation does not
own or any interest in real property where
the corporation does not own the interest.
2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (2).
Interest in assets
(2) The
owners share the assets of the corporation
in the same proportions as the proportions
of their common interests in accordance with
this Act, the declaration and the by-laws.
1998, c. 19, s. 18 (2).
Validity of
easement
(3) A
grant or transfer of an easement to the
corporation is valid even though the
corporation does not own land capable of
being benefited by the easement. 1998,
c. 19, s. 18 (3).
Right of entry
19. On
giving reasonable notice, the corporation or
a person authorized by the corporation may
enter a unit or a part of the common
elements of which an owner has exclusive use
at any reasonable time to perform the
objects and duties of the corporation or to
exercise the powers of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 19.
Easements described
in declaration or phase
20. (1) An
easement described in subsection (2) is
created,
(a) upon the
registration of a declaration and
description that creates a corporation, if
the easement is described in the declaration
and description; or
(b) upon the
registration of an amendment to a
declaration and description that creates a
phase within the meaning of Part XI in a
phased condominium corporation, if the
easement is described in the amendment.
1998, c. 19, s. 20 (1).
Application
(2) Subsection
(1) applies to an easement that,
(a) imposes a benefit or
a burden on land owned by the declarant
other than the property; or
(b) the approval
authority requires as a condition of
approving the declaration and description
for the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 20 (2).
Creation of
easement
(3) No
deed or other document is required to be
registered or delivered to the owner of the
land benefited by an easement that is
created under subsection (1) in order for
the easement to be made effective. 1998,
c. 19, s. 20 (3).
Validity of
easement
(4) An
easement that is created under subsection
(1) is valid even though the declarant owns
the land to be benefited or burdened by the
easement in addition to owning the land
relating to the easement that is described
in the description. 1998, c. 19, s. 20 (4).
Easements and lease
of common elements
21. (1) The
corporation may by by-law,
(a) lease a part of the
common elements, except a part that the
declaration specifies is to be used only by
the owners of one or more designated units
and not by all the owners;
(b) grant or transfer an
easement or licence through the common
elements; or
(c) release an easement
that is part of the common elements. 1998,
c. 19, s. 21 (1); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B,
s. 7 (3).
Binding on all
owners
(2) A
lease, grant, transfer or release mentioned
in subsection (1), signed by the authorized
officers of the corporation, affects the
interest of every owner in the common
elements as if the lease, grant, transfer or
release had been executed by that owner.
1998, c. 19, s. 21 (2); 2000, c. 26,
Sched. B, s. 7 (4).
Telecommunications
agreements
22. (1) In
this section,
“telecommunications”
means the emission, transmission or
reception of any combination of signs,
signals, writing, images, sound, data,
alphanumeric characters or intelligence of
any nature by wire, cable, radio or an
optical, electromagnetic or any similar
technical system; (“télécommunications”)
“telecommunications
agreement” means an agreement for the
provision of services or facilities related
to telecommunications to, from or within the
property of a corporation and includes a
grant or transfer of an easement, lease or
licence through the property of a
corporation for the purposes of
telecommunications. (“convention concernant
les télécommunications”) 1998, c. 19,
s. 22 (1).
By-law not required
(2) Despite
subsection 21 (1), a corporation may, by
resolution of the board without a by-law,
(a) make an agreement
for a network upgrade to a
telecommunications system that services the
units of the corporation;
(b) make an agreement
for a telecommunications system that is not
connected to a telecommunications system
that services the units of the corporation;
or
(c) amend an agreement
for a telecommunications system that
services the units of the corporation to
permit the other party to the agreement to
supply and invoice part or all of the
services directly to the unit owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 22 (2).
Notice required
(3) Subsections
97 (3), (4), (5) and (6) apply to an
agreement described in subsection (2) as if
it were a change in a service that a
corporation provides to the owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 22 (3).
Charge to unit
owners
(4) The
cost of the services that are invoiced
directly to the unit owners under clause (2)
(c) shall not form part of the common
expenses, despite anything in the
declaration. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (4).
Telecommunications
easement
(5) A
corporation and a party, if any, that has
entered into a telecommunications agreement
with the corporation shall have a
non-exclusive easement over the part of the
property described in clause (b) for the
purpose of installing and using a
telecommunications system if,
(a) the corporation was
created on or after the day this section
comes into force and includes one or more
units for residential purposes;
(b) part of the property
is designed to control, facilitate or
provide telecommunications to, from or
within the property; and
(c) the corporation does
not have an easement over the property
described in the description or a right to
use the property that is adequate for,
(i) the
telecommunications agreement that it has
entered into with respect to the property,
if it has entered into such an agreement, or
(ii) the
telecommunications system that the
corporation intends to install and use on
the property, if it has not entered into a
telecommunications agreement with respect to
the property. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (5).
Duty to accommodate
easement
(6) If
a telecommunications system installed on the
part of the property described in clause (5)
(b) interferes with a telecommunications
system that the corporation intends to have
installed and to use on the property
described in the description, the owner of
the part of the property shall, upon 30 days
written notice by the owner of the easement
described in subsection (5), take all
necessary steps that are reasonable to
accommodate the intended telecommunications
system. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (6).
Validity of
easement
(7) The
easement is valid even though the
corporation and the party, if any, that has
entered into a telecommunications agreement
with the corporation own no land to be
benefited by the easement. 1998, c. 19,
s. 22 (7).
Easements
non-exclusive
(8) If
the property of a corporation that includes
one or more units for residential purposes
is subject to an easement for the purposes
of telecommunications and at least 10 years
have passed since the later of the execution
of the grant of the easement and the
registration of the declaration and
description, then, despite anything in the
grant, the easement shall be deemed to be
non-exclusive. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (8).
Termination of
agreements
(9) A
corporation that includes one or more units
for residential purposes may terminate a
telecommunications agreement if,
(a) at least 10 years
have passed since the later of the execution
of the agreement and the registration of the
declaration and description;
(b) the board has, by
resolution, approved the termination of the
agreement;
(c) the owners of more
than 50 per cent of the units at the time
the board passes the resolution consent in
writing to the termination of the agreement;
and
(d) the corporation has
given the person 120 days written notice of
the termination. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (9).
Exception
(10) Subsection
(9) does not apply to a telecommunications
agreement if,
(a) the corporation
entered into the agreement after a new board
is elected at a turn-over meeting held under
section 43;
(b) the agreement is
non-exclusive; and
(c) the agreement makes
allowance for the installation of alternate
telecommunications systems. 1998, c. 19,
s. 22 (10).
Personal property
(11) If,
under subsection (9), a corporation
terminates a telecommunications agreement, a
party to the agreement may, on giving
reasonable notice to the corporation, remove
personal property that it owns and that is
located on the property that was subject to
the agreement within 30 days after the
termination of the agreement. 1998, c. 19,
s. 22 (11).
Duties on removal
(12) A
party removing personal property under
subsection (11) shall,
(a) carry out the
removal in a manner that facilitates the
installation of other similar personal
property for the purposes of
telecommunications; and
(b) reimburse the
corporation for the damage, if any, that the
removal causes to the property of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 22 (12).
Abandonment
(13) A
party to a telecommunications agreement that
has the right to remove its personal
property under subsection (11) shall be
deemed to have abandoned the property if it
does not remove the property within the time
specified in that subsection. 1998, c. 19,
s. 22 (13).
Action by
corporation
23. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), in addition to any other
remedies that a corporation may have, a
corporation may, on its own behalf and on
behalf of an owner,
(a) commence, maintain
or settle an action for damages and costs in
respect of any damage to common elements,
the assets of the corporation or individual
units; and
(b) commence, maintain
or settle an action with respect to a
contract involving the common elements or a
unit, even though the corporation was not a
party to the contract in respect of which
the action is brought. 1998, c. 19,
s. 23 (1).
Notice to owners
(2) Before
commencing an action mentioned in subsection
(1), the corporation shall give written
notice of the general nature of the action
to all persons whose names are in the record
of the corporation maintained under
subsection 47 (2) except if,
(a) the action is to
enforce a lien of the corporation under
section 85 or to fulfil its duty under
subsection 17 (3); or
(b) the action is
commenced in the Small Claims Court. 1998,
c. 19, s. 23 (2).
Costs
(3) Unless
the board determines otherwise, the legal
and court costs in an action that the
corporation commences or maintains in whole
or in part on behalf of any owners in
respect of their units shall be borne by
those owners in the proportion in which
their interests are affected. 1998, c. 19,
s. 23 (3).
Judgment as asset
(4) A
judgment for payment in favour of the
corporation in an action that the
corporation commences or maintains on its
own behalf is an asset of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 23 (4).
Corporation may be
sued
(5) The
corporation may, as representative of the
owners of the units, be sued in respect of
any matter relating to the common elements
or assets of the corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 23 (5).
Judgment against
corporation
(6) A
judgment for the payment of money against
the corporation is also a judgment against
each owner at the time of judgment for a
portion of the judgment determined by the
proportions specified in the declaration for
sharing the common interests. 1998, c. 19,
s. 23 (6).
Notices under the Expropriations Act
24. (1) For
the purposes of the Expropriations Act,
if the land to be expropriated is part of
the common elements of a corporation and
does not include any units, any document
that an expropriating authority is required
or entitled to serve on the owner of the
land, including a notice, an appraisal
report and an offer of compensation, is
sufficiently served on the owners of the
land if the expropriating authority serves
the document,
(a) on the corporation;
and
(b) if the land to be
expropriated is part of the common elements
that the declaration specifies are for the
exclusive use of the owners of one or more
of the units of the corporation, but not all
the owners, on the owners of those units.
1998, c. 19, s. 24 (1).
Notice to owners
(2) Within
15 days of being served with a document
under subsection (1), the corporation shall
notify all persons whose names are in the
record of the corporation maintained under
subsection 47 (2) that it has been served
with a document for the purposes of the
Expropriations Act and shall make a copy
of the document available for examination by
them. 1998, c. 19, s. 24 (2).
Corporation acting
for owners
(3) For
the purposes of the Expropriations Act,
all the rights under that Act of the owners
of the land to be expropriated in respect of
which a document has been served on the
corporation under subsection (1) shall be
transferred to and exercised by the
corporation, subject to section 126. 1998,
c. 19, s. 24 (3).
Notices under the Planning Act
25. A
corporation that is served with a notice
under the Planning Act shall, within
15 days of being served, notify all persons
whose names are in the record of the
corporation maintained under subsection 47
(2) that it has been served with a notice
under that Act and shall make a copy of the
notice available for examination by them.
1998, c. 19, s. 25.
Occupier’s
liability
26. For
the purposes of determining liability
resulting from breach of the duties of an
occupier of land, the corporation shall be
deemed to be the occupier of the common
elements and the owners shall be deemed not
to be occupiers of the common elements.
1998, c. 19, s. 26.
Directors and Officers
Board of directors
27. (1) A
board of directors shall manage the affairs
of the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 27 (1).
Number
(2) Subject
to subsection 42 (4), the board shall
consist of at least three persons or such
greater number as the by-laws may provide.
1998, c. 19, s. 27 (2).
Change in number
(3) The
corporation may by by-law increase or,
subject to subsection (2), decrease the
number of directors as set out in its
by-laws. 1998, c. 19, s. 27 (3).
Election of
directors
28. (1) Subject
to subsection 42 (1), the owners shall elect
the board of directors in accordance with
this Act and the by-laws. 1998, c. 19,
s. 28 (1).
Notice of
candidates
(2) The
notice of a meeting to elect one or more
directors shall include the name and address
of each individual who has notified the
board in writing of the intention to be a
candidate in the election as of the fourth
day before the notice is sent. 1998, c. 19,
s. 28 (2).
Notice of
owner-occupant position
(3) If,
under subsection 51 (6), one position on the
board is reserved for voting by owners of
owner-occupied units, the notice of meeting
shall include,
(a) a statement that one
position on the board is reserved for voting
by owners of owner-occupied units; and
(b) a statement
indicating which persons have notified the
board in writing as of the day before the
notice is sent that they intend to be
candidates for the position on the board
reserved for voting by owners of
owner-occupied units. 1998, c. 19,
s. 28 (3).
Qualifications
29. (1) No
person shall be a director if,
(a) the person is under
eighteen years of age;
(b) the person is an
undischarged bankrupt; or
(c) the person is a
mentally incompetent person. 1998, c. 19,
s. 29 (1).
Disqualification
(2) A
person immediately ceases to be a director
if,
(a) the person becomes
an undischarged bankrupt or a mentally
incompetent person; or
(b) a certificate of
lien has been registered under subsection 85
(2) against a unit owned by the person and
the person does not obtain a discharge of
the lien under subsection 85 (7) within 90
days of the registration of the lien. 1998,
c. 19, s. 29 (2).
Consent
30. (1) A
person shall not be elected or appointed as
a director unless the person consents. 1998,
c. 19, s. 30 (1).
Deemed consent
(2) A
person shall be deemed to consent if the
person is present at the meeting when
elected or appointed and does not refuse to
act as a director. 1998, c. 19, s. 30 (2).
Written consent
(3) A
person who is not present at the meeting may
be elected or appointed if the person
consents in writing to act as director
before the meeting or within 10 days after
the meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 30 (3).
Non-compliance
(4) The
election or appointment of a person as
director contrary to this section is
ineffective. 1998, c. 19, s. 30 (4).
Term
31. (1) Except
in the case of directors appointed to the
first board of directors under subsection 42
(1), a director is elected for a term of
three years or such lesser period as the
by-laws may provide. 1998, c. 19, s. 31 (1).
Same
(2) Despite
subsection (1), a director may continue to
act until a successor is elected. 1998,
c. 19, s. 31 (2).
Conduct of business
32. (1) Subject
to subsection 42 (5), the board of a
corporation shall not transact any business
of the corporation except at a meeting of
directors at which a quorum of the board is
present. 1998, c. 19, s. 32 (1).
Quorum
(2) A
quorum for the transaction of business is a
majority of the members of the board. 1998,
c. 19, s. 32 (2).
Removal
33. (1) Subject
to subsection 51 (8), a director, other than
a director on the first board, may be
removed before the expiration of the
director’s term of office by a vote of the
owners at a meeting duly called for the
purpose where the owners of more than 50 per
cent of all of the units in the corporation
vote in favour of removal. 1998, c. 19,
s. 33 (1).
Replacement
(2) In
accordance with the by-laws dealing with the
election of directors, the owners may, at
the meeting, elect any person qualified to
be a member of the board for the remainder
of the term of a director who has been
removed. 1998, c. 19, s. 33 (2).
Vacancy
34. (1) If
a vacancy arises in the board, the remaining
directors may exercise all the powers of the
board as long as a quorum of the board
remains in office. 1998, c. 19, s. 34 (1).
Replacement made by
board
(2) If
a vacancy arises in the board and a quorum
of the board remains in office, the majority
of the remaining members of the board may
appoint any person qualified to be a member
of the board to fill the vacancy until the
next annual general meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 34 (2).
Replacement made by
owners
(3) Subject
to subsection 51 (6), at the annual general
meeting mentioned in subsection (2) the
owners shall elect a person to fill the
vacancy that arose under that subsection who
shall hold office for the remainder of the
term of the director whose position became
vacant. 1998, c. 19, s. 34 (3).
Election when no
quorum
(4) If
a vacancy arises in the board and there are
not enough directors remaining in office to
constitute a quorum, the remaining directors
shall, within 30 days of losing the quorum,
call and hold a meeting of owners to fill
all vacancies in the board. 1998, c. 19,
s. 34 (4).
Owner may call
meeting
(5) If
the directors do not call and hold the
meeting or if there are no directors then in
office, an owner may call the meeting. 1998,
c. 19, s. 34 (5).
Reimbursement of
cost
(6) Upon
request, the corporation shall reimburse an
owner who calls a meeting under subsection
(5) for the reasonable costs incurred in
calling the meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 34 (6).
Increase
(7) Despite
subsection (2), a vacancy resulting from an
increase in the number of directors shall be
filled only by election at a meeting of
owners duly called for that purpose and the
directors so elected shall not act until the
by-law increasing the number of directors is
registered under subsection 56 (9). 1998,
c. 19, s. 34 (7).
Meetings of
directors
35. (1) In
addition to meetings of the directors
required by the by-laws of the corporation,
a quorum of the directors may, at any time,
call a meeting for the transaction of any
business. 1998, c. 19, s. 35 (1).
Notice
(2) The
person calling a meeting of directors shall
give a written notice of the meeting to
every director of the corporation,
(a) at least 10 days
before the day of the meeting, unless the
by-laws specify otherwise; and
(b) by delivering it to
the director personally or by sending it by
prepaid mail, courier delivery or electronic
communication addressed to the director at
the latest address as shown on the records
of the corporation, unless the by-laws
specify otherwise. 1998, c. 19, s. 35 (2).
Content of notice
(3) The
notice shall state the time and place of the
meeting and the general nature of the
business to be discussed at the meeting.
1998, c. 19, s. 35 (3).
Waiver of notice
(4) A
director who attends a meeting shall be
deemed to have waived the right to object to
a failure to give the required notice unless
the director expressly objects to the
failure at the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 35 (4).
Teleconference
(5) A
meeting of the directors may be held by
teleconference or another form of
communications system that allows the
directors to participate concurrently if,
(a) the by-laws
authorize those means for holding a meeting
of the directors; and
(b) all directors of the
corporation consent to the means used for
holding the meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 35 (5).
Officers
36. (1) A
corporation shall have a president and a
secretary and all other officers that are
provided for by by-law or by resolution of
the directors. 1998, c. 19, s. 36 (1).
Election and
appointment
(2) Subject
to the by-laws, the directors,
(a) shall elect the
president from among themselves;
(b) shall appoint or
elect the secretary; and
(c) may appoint or elect
one or more vice-presidents or other
officers. 1998, c. 19, s. 36 (2).
Holding several
offices
(3) The
same person may hold two or more offices of
the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 36 (3).
Standard of care
37. (1) Every
director and every officer of a corporation
in exercising the powers and discharging the
duties of office shall,
(a) act honestly and in
good faith; and
(b) exercise the care,
diligence and skill that a reasonably
prudent person would exercise in comparable
circumstances. 1998, c. 19, s. 37 (1).
Validity of acts
(2) The
acts of a director or officer are valid
despite any defect that may afterwards be
discovered in the person’s election,
appointment or qualifications. 1998, c. 19,
s. 37 (2).
Liability of
directors
(3) A
director shall not be found liable for a
breach of a duty mentioned in subsection (1)
if the breach arises as a result of the
director’s relying in good faith upon,
(a) financial statements
of the corporation that the auditor in a
written report, an officer of the
corporation or a manager under an agreement
for the management of the property
represents to the director as presenting
fairly the financial position of the
corporation in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles; or
(b) a report or opinion
of a lawyer, public accountant, engineer,
appraiser or other person whose profession
lends credibility to the report or opinion.
1998, c. 19, s. 37 (3); 2004, c. 8,
s. 47 (1).
Indemnification
38. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), the by-laws of a
corporation may provide that every director
and every officer of the corporation and the
person’s heirs, executors, administrators,
estate trustees and other legal personal
representatives may from time to time be
indemnified and saved harmless by the
corporation from and against,
(a) any liability and
all costs, charges and expenses that the
director or officer sustains or incurs in
respect of any action, suit or proceeding
that is proposed or commenced against the
person for or in respect of anything that
the person has done, omitted to do or
permitted in respect of the execution of the
duties of office; and
(b) all other costs,
charges and expenses that the person
sustains or incurs in respect of the affairs
of the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 38 (1).
Not for breach of
duty
(2) No
director or officer of a corporation shall
be indemnified by the corporation in respect
of any liability, costs, charges or expenses
that the person sustains or incurs in or
about an action, suit or other proceeding as
a result of which the person is adjudged to
be in breach of the duty to act honestly and
in good faith. 1998, c. 19, s. 38 (2).
Insurance
39. If the
insurance is reasonably available, a
corporation shall purchase and maintain
insurance for the benefit of a director or
officer against the matters described in
clauses 38 (1) (a) and (b) except insurance
against a liability, cost, charge or expense
of the director or officer incurred as a
result of a breach of the duty to act
honestly and in good faith. 1998, c. 19,
s. 39.
Disclosure by
director of interest
40. (1) A
director of a corporation who has, directly
or indirectly, an interest in a contract or
transaction to which the corporation is a
party or a proposed contract or transaction
to which the corporation will be a party,
shall disclose in writing to the corporation
the nature and extent of the interest. 1998,
c. 19, s. 40 (1).
Interest to be
material
(2) Subsection
(1) does not apply to a contract or
transaction or a proposed contract or
transaction unless both it and the
director’s interest in it are material.
1998, c. 19, s. 40 (2).
Purchase of
property
(3) If
the contract or transaction or the proposed
contract or transaction to which subsection
(1) applies involves the purchase or sale of
real or personal property by the corporation
that the seller acquired within five years
before the date of the contract or
transaction or the proposed contract or
transaction, the director shall disclose the
cost of the property to the seller, to the
extent to which that information is within
the director’s knowledge or control. 1998,
c. 19, s. 40 (3).
Time of disclosure
(4) The
disclosure required by this section shall be
made,
(a) at the meeting of
the board at which the contract or
transaction or the proposed contract or
transaction is first considered;
(b) if the director is
not as of the date of the meeting mentioned
in clause (a) interested in the contract or
transaction or the proposed contract or
transaction, at the next meeting of the
directors held after the director becomes so
interested;
(c) if the director
becomes interested in the contract or
transaction after it is entered into, at the
first meeting of the directors held after
the director becomes so interested; or
(d) if the contract or
transaction or the proposed contract or
transaction is one that in the ordinary
course of the corporation’s business would
not require approval by the directors or
owners, at the first meeting of the
directors held after the director becomes
aware of the contract or transaction or the
proposed contract or transaction. 1998,
c. 19, s. 40 (4).
Minutes
(5) The
board shall enter the disclosure made by a
director under this section in the minutes
of the meeting of the board at which the
disclosure was made. 1998, c. 19, s. 40 (5).
Right to vote
(6) The
director shall not be present during the
discussion at a meeting, vote or be counted
in the quorum on a vote with respect to a
contract or transaction or a proposed
contract or transaction to which subsection
(1) applies unless the director’s interest
in it,
(a) is or would be
limited solely to the insurance described in
section 39 or remuneration as a director,
officer or employee of the corporation; or
(b) arises or would
arise solely because the director is a
director, officer or employee of the
declarant, if the director has been
appointed to the first board by the
declarant under subsection 42 (1). 1998,
c. 19, s. 40 (6).
Effect of
disclosure
(7) A
director who has complied with the
requirements of this section and who was
acting honestly and in good faith at the
time the contract or transaction was entered
into, is not, by reason only of holding the
office of director, accountable to the
corporation or to its owners for any profit
or gain realized from the contract or
transaction, and the contract or transaction
is not voidable by reason only of the
director’s interest in it. 1998, c. 19,
s. 40 (7).
Confirmation by
owners
(8) Despite
anything in this section, a director who has
acted honestly and in good faith is not
accountable to the corporation or to the
owners for any profit or gain realized from
the contract or transaction by reason only
of holding the office of director, and the
contract or transaction is not voidable by
reason only of the director’s interest in it
if,
(a) the contract or
transaction is confirmed or approved by at
least two-thirds of the votes cast at a
meeting of owners duly called for that
purpose; and
(b) the nature and
extent of the director’s interest in the
contract or transaction are declared and
disclosed in reasonable detail in the notice
calling the meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 40 (8).
Disclosure by
officer of interest
41. (1) An
officer of a corporation who is not a
director and who has, directly or
indirectly, an interest in a contract or
transaction to which the corporation is a
party or a proposed contract or transaction
to which the corporation will be a party,
shall disclose in writing to the corporation
the nature and extent of the interest. 1998,
c. 19, s. 41 (1).
Time of disclosure
(2) An
officer who is required to make a disclosure
under subsection (1) shall make the
disclosure at the first meeting of the board
held after the officer becomes aware of the
contract or transaction or the proposed
contract or transaction. 1998, c. 19,
s. 41 (2).
Application of s.
40
(3) Subsections
40 (2), (3), (5), (7) and (8) apply to an
officer of a corporation who is not a
director as if all references to a director
in those subsections were references to an
officer. 1998, c. 19, s. 41 (3).
Transfer of Control by
Declarant
First board of
directors
42. (1) Within
10 days after the registration of the
declaration and description, the declarant
shall appoint the first board of a
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (1).
Replacements
(2) The
declarant may revoke the appointment of a
director to the first board and appoint
another director to the first board who
shall hold office until a new board is
elected at a turn-over meeting held under
section 43. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (2).
Term
(3) The
first board shall hold office until a new
board is elected at a turn-over meeting held
under section 43. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (3).
Number
(4) The
first board shall consist of three persons
or such greater number as the declaration
provides. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (4).
Conduct of business
(5) A
written resolution that is adopted by the
first board before the owners elect a
director to the first board under subsection
(8) and that is signed by all the directors
entitled to vote on the resolution at a
meeting of the first board, is valid even
though no meeting is held to vote on the
resolution. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (5).
Owners’ meeting
(6) Subject
to subsection (7), the first board shall
call and hold a meeting of owners by the
later of,
(a) the 30th day after
the day by which the declarant has
transferred 20 per cent of the units in the
corporation; and
(b) the 90th day after
the declarant transfers the first unit in
the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (6).
Exception
(7) The
first board is not required to call or hold
the meeting mentioned in subsection (6) if,
by the day set for the meeting, the
declarant no longer owns a majority of the
units and advises the first board in writing
of that fact. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (7).
Election of
directors
(8) At
the meeting mentioned in subsection (6), the
owners, other than the declarant, may elect
two directors to the first board. 1998,
c. 19, s. 42 (8).
Quorum
(9) Despite
subsection 50 (1), at the meeting mentioned
in subsection (6), the quorum for the
election of directors under subsection (8)
is those owners who own 25 per cent of the
units in the corporation not owned by the
declarant. 1998, c. 19, s. 42 (9).
Determination of
quorum
(10) To
count towards the quorum, an owner must have
been entitled to receive notice of the
meeting, must be entitled to vote at a
meeting and shall be present at the meeting
or represented by proxy. 1998, c. 19,
s. 42 (10).
Increased number
(11) A
director elected to the first board under
subsection (8) shall hold office in addition
to the directors appointed to the first
board even if the addition of an elected
director results in more directors on the
board than the declaration allows. 1998,
c. 19, s. 42 (11).
Transition
(12) The
owners other than the declarant shall not be
entitled to elect a director under
subsection (8) if the corporation’s first
board was appointed or elected on or before
the day this section comes into force. 1998,
c. 19, s. 42 (12).
Turn-over meeting
43. (1) The
board elected or appointed at a time when
the declarant owns a majority of the units
shall, not more than 21 days after the
declarant ceases to be the registered owner
of the majority of the units, call a meeting
of owners to elect a new board. 1998, c. 19,
s. 43 (1).
Who may call
meeting
(2) If
the board does not call the meeting within
the required time, an owner or a mortgagee
having the right to vote under section 48
may call the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 43 (2).
Time of meeting
(3) The
board shall hold the meeting within 21 days
after it is called. 1998, c. 19, s. 43 (3).
Things to turn over
(4) At
the meeting, the declarant shall deliver to
the board elected at the meeting,
(a) the seal of the
corporation;
(b) the minute book for
the corporation including a copy of the
registered declaration, registered by-laws,
current rules and minutes of owners’
meetings and board meetings;
(c) copies of all
agreements entered into by the corporation
or the declarant or the declarant’s
representatives on behalf of the
corporation, including management contracts,
deeds, leases, licences and easements;
(d) copies of all
policies of insurance and the related
certificates or memoranda of insurance and
all insurance trust agreements;
(e) bills of sale or
transfers for all items that are assets of
the corporation but not part of the
property;
(f) the records
maintained under subsection 47 (2) and
subsection 83 (3); and
(g) all records that it
has related to the units or to employees of
the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 43 (4).
Same, after meeting
(5) The
declarant shall deliver to the board within
30 days after the meeting,
(a) the existing
warranties and guarantees for all the
equipment, fixtures and chattels included in
the sale of either the units or common
elements that are not protected by
warranties and guarantees given directly to
a unit purchaser;
(b) the as-built
architectural, structural, engineering,
mechanical, electrical and plumbing plans;
(c) the as-built
specifications, indicating all substantive
changes, if any, from the original
specifications;
(d) all existing plans
for underground site services, site grading,
drainage and landscaping, and television,
radio or other communications services;
(e) all other existing
plans and information not mentioned in
clause (b), (c) or (d) that are relevant to
the repair or maintenance of the property;
(f) if the property of the corporation is
subject to the Ontario New Home
Warranties Plan Act,
(i) proof, in the
form, if any, prescribed by the Minister,
that the units and common elements have been
enrolled in the Plan within the meaning of
that Act in accordance with the regulations
made under that Act, and
(ii) a copy of all
final reports on inspections that the
Corporation within the meaning of that Act
requires be carried out on the common
elements;
(g) a table setting out
the responsibilities for repair after damage
and maintenance and indicating whether the
corporation or the owners are responsible;
(h) a schedule setting
out what constitutes a standard unit for
each class of unit that the declarant
specifies for the purpose of determining the
responsibility for repairing improvements
after damage and insuring them;
(i) all financial
records of the corporation and of the
declarant relating to the operation of the
corporation from the date of registration of
the declaration and the description;
(j) if the meeting is
held after nine months following the
registration of the declaration and
description, the reserve fund study that is
required within the year following the
registration of the declaration and
description;
(k) all reserve fund
studies that have been completed or are
required to have been completed at the time
the meeting is held, other than the reserve
fund study that is required within the year
following the registration of the
declaration and description;
(l) a copy of the most
current disclosure statement delivered to a
purchaser of a unit in the corporation under
section 72 before the meeting; and
(m) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require to be given to the board. 1998,
c. 19, s. 43 (5).
Cost
(6) The
items mentioned in subsections (4) and (5)
shall be prepared at the declarant’s
expense, except for the items mentioned in
clauses (5) (j) and (k) which shall be
prepared at the expense of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 43 (6).
Audited financial
statements
(7) The
declarant shall deliver to the board within
60 days after the meeting audited financial
statements of the corporation prepared by
the auditor, on behalf of the owners and at
the expense of the corporation, as of the
last day of the month in which the meeting
is held. 1998, c. 19, s. 43 (7).
Application
(8) The
corporation may make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order under
subsection (9). 1998, c. 19, s. 43 (8);
2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Court order
(9) The
court, if satisfied that the declarant has,
without reasonable excuse, failed to comply
with subsection (4), (5) or (7),
(a) shall order that the
declarant pay damages to the corporation for
the loss it incurred as a result of the
declarant’s acts of non-compliance with
subsection (4), (5) or (7), as the case may
be;
(b) shall order that the
declarant pay the corporation’s costs of the
application;
(c) may order the
declarant to pay to the corporation an
additional amount not to exceed $10,000; and
(d) may order the
declarant to comply with subsection (4), (5)
or (7), as the case may be. 1998, c. 19,
s. 43 (9).
Performance audit
44. (1) If
the property of the corporation includes one
or more units for residential purposes or if
the corporation is a common elements
condominium corporation, the board shall
retain a person who holds a certificate of
authorization within the meaning of the
Professional Engineers Act or a
certificate of practice within the meaning
of the Architects Act to conduct a
performance audit of the common elements
described in the description on behalf of
the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 44 (1).
Time for audit
(2) A
performance audit shall be conducted no
earlier than six months, and no later than
10 months, following the registration of the
declaration and description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 44 (2).
Cost
(3) The
corporation shall pay the cost of the
performance audit and it shall form part of
the corporation’s budget for the year
following the registration of the
declaration and description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 44 (3).
Purpose
(4) The
person who conducts the performance audit
shall determine whether there are any
deficiencies in the performance of the
common elements described in the description
after construction has been completed on
them that,
(a) may give rise to a claim for payment out
of the guarantee fund under section 14 of
the Ontario New Home Warranties Plan Act
to the corporation; or
(b) subject to the
regulations made under this Act, would give
rise to a claim described in clause (a) if
the property of the corporation were subject
to that Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 44 (4).
Duties
(5) In
making the determination, the person who
conducts the performance audit shall,
(a) inspect the major
components of the buildings on the property
which, subject to the regulations made under
this Act, include the foundation, parking
garage, wall construction, air and vapour
barriers, windows, doors, elevators,
roofing, mechanical system, electrical
system, fire protection system and all other
components that are prescribed;
(b) subject to the
regulations made under this Act, inspect the
landscaped areas of the property;
(c) review all final reports on inspections
that the Corporation within the meaning of
the Ontario New Home Warranties Plan Act
requires be carried out on the common
elements; and
(d) conduct a survey of
the owners of the corporation as to what
evidence, if any, they have seen of,
(i) damage to the
units that may have been caused by defects
in the common elements, and
(ii) defects in the
common elements that may cause damage to the
units. 1998, c. 19, s. 44 (5).
Powers for audit
(6) The
person who conducts a performance audit may,
for the purpose of the audit,
(a) enter onto the
property at any reasonable time either alone
or accompanied with any expert that the
person considers necessary for the audit;
(b) require any person
to produce any drawings, specifications or
information that may on reasonable grounds
be relevant to the audit;
(c) make all
examinations, tests or inquiries that may on
reasonable grounds be relevant to the audit;
and
(d) call upon any expert
for the assistance that the person considers
necessary in conducting the audit. 1998,
c. 19, s. 44 (6).
No obstruction
(7) No
person shall obstruct a person who is
exercising powers under this section or
provide false information or refuse to
provide information to the person. 1998,
c. 19, s. 44 (7).
Contents
(8) The
person who conducts a performance audit
shall prepare a written report that
includes,
(a) a copy of the person’s certificate of
authorization within the meaning of the
Professional Engineers Act or
certificate of practice within the meaning
of the Architects Act, as the case
may be;
(b) details of the
inspection and findings made by the person
in the course of conducting the audit;
(c) a statement that the
person has reviewed all final reports
described in clause (5) (c);
(d) a copy of the survey
described in clause (5) (d) and a summary of
the results of it;
(e) the determination
that subsection (4) requires the person to
make; and
(f) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 44 (8).
Submission of
report
(9) Before
the end of the 11th month following the
registration of the declaration and
description, the person who conducts a
performance audit shall,
(a) submit the report to
the board; and
(b) file the report with the Corporation
within the meaning of the Ontario New
Home Warranties Plan Act if the property
is subject to that Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 44 (9).
Claim under other
Act
(10) The
filing of the report with the Corporation
within the meaning of the Ontario New
Home Warranties Plan Act shall be deemed
to constitute a notice of claim that the
corporation gives to the Corporation within
the meaning of that Act under the
regulations made under that Act for the
deficiencies disclosed in the report. 1998,
c. 19, s. 44 (10).
Owners
Meetings
45. (1) Subject
to the other requirements of this Act,
anything that this Act requires to be
approved by a vote of any of the owners
shall be approved only at a meeting of
owners duly called for that purpose. 1998,
c. 19, s. 45 (1).
Annual general
meeting
(2) The
board shall hold a general meeting of owners
not more than three months after the
registration of the declaration and
description and subsequently within six
months of the end of each fiscal year of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 45 (2).
Matters for annual
general meeting
(3) At
an annual general meeting, an owner may
raise for discussion any matter relevant to
the affairs and business of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 45 (3).
Other meetings
(4) The
board may at any time call a meeting of
owners for the transaction of any business,
and the notice of the meeting shall specify
the nature of the business. 1998, c. 19,
s. 45 (4).
Requisition for
meeting
46. (1) A
requisition for a meeting of owners may be
made by those owners who at the time the
board receives the requisition, own at least
15 per cent of the units, are listed in the
record maintained by the corporation under
subsection 47 (2) and are entitled to vote.
1998, c. 19, s. 46 (1).
Form of requisition
(2) The
requisition shall,
(a) be in writing and be
signed by the requisitionists;
(b) state the nature of
the business to be presented at the meeting;
and
(c) be delivered
personally or by registered mail to the
president or secretary of the board or
deposited at the address for service of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 46 (2).
Same, removal of
directors
(3) If
the nature of the business to be presented
at the meeting includes the removal of one
or more of the directors, the requisition
shall state, for each director who is
proposed to be removed, the name of the
director, the reasons for the removal and
whether the director occupies a position on
the board that under subsection 51 (6) is
reserved for voting by owners of
owner-occupied units. 1998, c. 19,
s. 46 (3).
Duty of board
(4) Upon
receiving a requisition mentioned in
subsection (1), the board shall,
(a) if the
requisitionists so request in the
requisition or consent in writing, add the
business to be presented at the meeting to
the agenda of items for the next annual
general meeting; or
(b) otherwise call and
hold a meeting of owners within 35 days.
1998, c. 19, s. 46 (4).
Non-compliance
(5) If
the board does not comply with subsection
(4), a requisitionist may call a meeting of
owners which shall be held within 45 days of
the day on which the meeting is called.
1998, c. 19, s. 46 (5).
Reimbursement of
cost
(6) Upon
request, the corporation shall reimburse a
requisitionist who calls a meeting under
subsection (5) for the reasonable costs
incurred in calling the meeting. 1998,
c. 19, s. 46 (6).
Notice to owners
47. (1) A
notice that is required to be given to
owners shall,
(a) be in writing;
(b) be given at least 15
days before the day of the meeting if the
notice is a notice of meeting of owners; and
(c) be given to,
(i) each owner who
has notified the corporation in writing of
the owner’s name and address for service,
and
(ii) each mortgagee
of a unit who,
(A) under the
terms of the mortgage, has the right to vote
at a meeting of owners in the place of the
unit owner or to consent in writing in the
place of the unit owner, and
(B) has notified
the corporation in writing of the right and
the mortgagee’s name and address for
service. 1998, c. 19, s. 47 (1).
Record of owners
and mortgagees
(2) A
corporation shall maintain a record of the
names and addresses for service that it
receives under subsection (1). 1998, c. 19,
s. 47 (2).
Use of record
(3) A
corporation shall use the record for the
purposes of this Act, and no other purpose.
1998, c. 19, s. 47 (3).
Change in address
(4) A
person whose name is in the record shall
notify the corporation in writing of all
changes in the address for service. 1998,
c. 19, s. 47 (4).
Record date
(5) In
the case of a notice of meeting of owners,
the persons whose names appeared in the
record 20 days before the day of the meeting
shall be deemed to be the persons to whom
the notice is required to be given under
subsection (1). 1998, c. 19, s. 47 (5).
Same, other notice
(6) In
the case of a notice to owners that is not a
notice of meeting of owners, the persons
whose names appeared in the record 5 days
before the day the notice is given shall be
deemed to be the persons to whom the notice
is required to be given under subsection
(1). 1998, c. 19, s. 47 (6).
Service on owner
(7) A
notice that is required to be given to an
owner shall be,
(a) delivered to the
owner personally;
(b) sent by prepaid mail
addressed to the owner at the address for
service that appears in the record;
(c) sent by facsimile
transmission, electronic mail or any other
method of electronic communication if the
owner agrees in writing that the party
giving the notice may give the notice in
this manner; or
(d) delivered at the
owner’s unit or at the mail box for the unit
unless,
(i) the party giving
the notice has received a written request
from the owner that the notice not be given
in this manner, or
(ii) the address for
service that appears in the record is not
the address of the unit of the owner. 1998,
c. 19, s. 47 (7).
Service on
mortgagee
(8) A
notice that is required to be given to a
mortgagee shall be,
(a) delivered to the
mortgagee personally;
(b) sent by prepaid mail
addressed to the mortgagee at the address
for service that appears in the record; or
(c) sent by facsimile
transmission, electronic mail or any other
method of electronic communication if the
mortgagee agrees in writing that the party
giving the notice may give the notice in
this manner. 1998, c. 19, s. 47 (8).
Content of notice
of meeting
(9) A
notice of meeting of owners shall,
(a) specify the place,
the date and the hour of the meeting, as
well as the nature of the business to be
presented at the meeting; and
(b) be accompanied by,
(i) a copy of all
proposed changes to the declaration,
by-laws, rules or agreements that are to be
discussed at the meeting, and
(ii) a copy of the
requisition, if an owner has made a
requisition under section 46. 1998, c. 19,
s. 47 (9).
Matters at meeting
(10) No
vote shall be taken at a meeting of owners
on any matter other than routine procedure
unless that matter was clearly disclosed in
the notice of the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 47 (10).
Waiver of notice
(11) An
owner or mortgagee who attends a meeting or
who is represented by proxy at a meeting
shall be deemed to have waived the right to
object to a failure to give the required
notice, unless the person expressly objects
to the failure at the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 47 (11).
Mortgagee’s right
to vote
48. (1) A
mortgagee of a unit who is entitled to
receive notice of a meeting of owners has
the right to vote at the meeting in the
place of the unit owner or to exercise the
right, if any, of the unit owner to consent
in writing if the mortgagee gives notice to
the corporation and to the owner at least
four days before the date of the meeting of
the mortgagee’s intention to exercise the
right. 1998, c. 19, s. 48 (1).
More than one
mortgagee
(2) If
a unit is subject to more than one mortgage
for which the mortgagee has the right to
vote at a meeting of owners in the place of
the owner or to consent in writing in the
place of the owner, the mortgagee who has
priority may exercise the right and in that
case no other mortgagee may exercise the
right. 1998, c. 19, s. 48 (2).
Same
(3) If
a mortgagee who has priority fails to
exercise the right, the mortgagee who is
next in priority may exercise the right and
in that case no other mortgagee may exercise
the right. 1998, c. 19, s. 48 (3).
Voting by owner
(4) If
none of the mortgagees who have the right
exercises the right, the owner has the right
to vote at a meeting of owners subject to
subsection 51 (1) or to consent in writing.
1998, c. 19, s. 48 (4).
Loss of owner’s
right to vote
49. (1) An
owner is not entitled to vote at a meeting
if any contributions payable in respect of
the owner’s unit have been in arrears for 30
days or more at the time of the meeting.
1998, c. 19, s. 49 (1).
Payment of arrears
(2) An
owner who is not entitled to vote under
subsection (1) may vote if the corporation
receives payment of the arrears with respect
to the owner’s unit before the meeting is
held. 1998, c. 19, s. 49 (2).
Parking or storage
unit
(3) No
owner shall vote in respect of a unit that
is intended for parking or storage purposes
or for the purpose of housing services or
facilities or mechanical installations
unless all the units in the corporation are
used for one or more of those purposes.
1998, c. 19, s. 49 (3).
Quorum
50. (1) A
quorum for the transaction of business at a
meeting of owners is those owners who own 25
per cent of the units of the corporation,
unless a by-law registered in accordance
with subsection 56 (9) after this subsection
comes into force provides that the quorum is
those owners who own 331/3
per cent of the units of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 50 (1).
Determination of
quorum
(2) To
count towards the quorum, an owner must have
been entitled to receive notice of the
meeting, must be entitled to vote at a
meeting and shall be present at the meeting
or represented by proxy. 1998, c. 19,
s. 50 (2).
Where only one
owner
(3) If
a corporation has only one owner, the owner
present in person or by proxy constitutes a
meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 50 (3).
Voting
51. (1) To
vote at a meeting of owners, an owner must
have been entitled to receive notice of the
meeting and must be entitled to vote at the
meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 51 (1).
One vote per unit
(2) All
voting by owners shall be on the basis of
one vote per unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 51 (2).
Joint owners
(3) The
majority of the owners of a unit may
exercise the right to vote in respect of the
unit but the vote shall not be counted if
there are two or more owners of the unit and
they are evenly divided on how to exercise
the vote. 1998, c. 19, s. 51 (3).
Voting for
directors
(4) Subject
to this section, on a vote to elect or to
remove a member of the board all owners
entitled to vote may vote for each member of
the board. 1998, c. 19, s. 51 (4).
Definition
(5) In
subsections (6), (7) and (8),
“owner-occupied unit”
means a unit of an owner who is entitled to
vote in respect of the unit at a meeting to
elect or to remove a director where the unit
is used for residential purposes and the
owner has not leased the unit within the 60
days before notice is given for the meeting,
as shown by the record that the corporation
is required to maintain under subsection 83
(3). 1998, c. 19, s. 51 (5).
Reserved position
(6) If
at least 15 per cent of the units of the
corporation are owner-occupied units on or
after the time at which the board is
required to call a turn-over meeting under
section 43, no persons other than the owners
of owner-occupied units may elect a person
to or remove a person from one of the
positions on the board. 1998, c. 19,
s. 51 (6).
Other positions
(7) Nothing
in subsection (6) affects the right of the
owner of an owner-occupied unit to vote to
elect or to remove any members of the board
other than the member who occupies the
position mentioned in that subsection. 1998,
c. 19, s. 51 (7).
Removal
(8) A
director elected under subsection (6) may be
removed before the expiration of the
director’s term of office by a vote of the
owners at a meeting duly called for the
purpose where the owners of more than 50 per
cent of all of the owner-occupied units in
the corporation vote in favour of removal.
1998, c. 19, s. 51 (8).
Method of voting
52. (1) On
a show of hands or on a recorded vote, votes
may be cast either personally or by proxy.
1998, c. 19, s. 52 (1).
Request for
recorded vote
(2) At
a meeting of owners, a person entitled to
vote at the meeting may request that a
recorded vote be held on any item scheduled
for a vote either before or promptly after
the vote. 1998, c. 19, s. 52 (2).
Proxy
(3) A
proxy need not be an owner. 1998, c. 19,
s. 52 (3).
Appointment of
proxy
(4) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act and
subsection (5), an instrument appointing a
proxy shall be in writing under the hand of
the appointer or the appointer’s attorney
and shall be for a particular meeting of
owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 52 (4).
Proxy for voting
for directors
(5) An
instrument appointing a proxy for the
election or removal of a director at a
meeting of owners shall state the name of
the directors for and against whom the proxy
is to vote. 1998, c. 19, s. 52 (5).
Prescribed form
(6) An
instrument appointing a proxy may be in the
prescribed form. 1998, c. 19, s. 52 (6).
Record of
corporation
(7) The
corporation shall retain all instruments
appointing a proxy for a meeting of owners
as a record of the corporation for 90 days
following the date of the meeting. 1998,
c. 19, s. 52 (7).
Majority voting
53. Unless
otherwise provided in this Act, all
questions proposed for the consideration of
the owners at a meeting of owners shall be
determined by a majority of the votes cast
by owners present at the meeting in person
or by proxy if there is a quorum at the
meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 53.
Service on owner or
mortgagee
54. Unless
this Act indicates otherwise, anything
required to be given to an owner or a
mortgagee under this Act is sufficiently
served if it is given in accordance with
subsection 47 (7) or (8), as the case may
be. 1998, c. 19, s. 54.
Records
55. (1) The
corporation shall keep adequate records,
including the following records:
1. The financial
records of the corporation.
2. A minute book
containing the minutes of owners’ meetings
and the minutes of board meetings.
3. A copy of the
declaration, by-laws and rules.
4. All lists, items,
records and other documents mentioned in
subsections 43 (4) and (5).
5. The report
described in subsection 44 (8) that the
corporation receives from the person who
conducts a performance audit.
6. The records
required under subsection 47 (2) and 83 (3).
7. A record of all
reserve fund studies and all plans to
increase the reserve fund under subsection
94 (8).
8. A copy of all
agreements entered into by or on behalf of
the corporation.
9. The report that
the corporation receives from an inspector
in accordance with subsection 130 (5).
10. All other records
as may be prescribed or specified in the
by-laws of the corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 55 (1).
Financial records
(2) The
corporation shall keep all financial records
for at least six years from the end of the
last fiscal period to which they relate, in
addition to satisfying the requirements of
any taxing authority of Ontario, the
government of Canada or any other
jurisdiction to which the corporation is
subject. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (2).
Examination of
records
(3) Upon
receiving a written request and reasonable
notice, the corporation shall permit an
owner, a purchaser or a mortgagee of a unit
or an agent of one of them duly authorized
in writing, to examine the records of the
corporation, except those records described
in subsection (4), at a reasonable time for
all purposes reasonably related to the
purposes of this Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 55 (3).
Exception
(4) The
right to examine records under subsection
(3) does not apply to,
(a) records relating to
employees of the corporation, except for
contracts of employment between any of the
employees and the corporation;
(b) records relating to
actual or pending litigation or insurance
investigations involving the corporation; or
(c) subject to
subsection (5), records relating to specific
units or owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (4).
Same
(5) Clause
(4) (c) does not prevent,
(a) an owner, a
purchaser or a mortgagee of a unit or an
agent of one of them from examining records
under subsection (3) that relate to the unit
of the owner, the unit being purchased or
the unit that is subject to the mortgage, as
the case may be; or
(b) an owner of a unit
or an agent of the owner from examining
records under subsection (3) that relate to
the owner. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (5).
Copies of records
(6) The
corporation shall, within a reasonable time,
provide copies of the records to a person
examining them, if the person so requests
and pays a reasonable fee to compensate the
corporation for the labour and copying
charges. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (6).
Admissible evidence
(7) A
copy that a corporation has certified under
its seal to be a true copy of a record is
admissible in evidence and, in the absence
of evidence to the contrary, is proof of the
facts stated in it. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (7).
Penalty for
non-compliance
(8) A
corporation that without reasonable excuse
does not permit an owner or an agent of an
owner to examine records or to copy them
under this section shall pay the sum of $500
to the owner on receiving a written request
for payment from the owner. 1998, c. 19,
s. 55 (8).
Recovery of sum
(9) The
owner may recover the sum from the
corporation by an action in the Small Claims
Court. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (9).
Order for
production of records
(10) If
a corporation without reasonable excuse does
not permit an owner or an agent of an owner
to examine records or to copy them under
this section, the Small Claims Court may
order the corporation to produce the records
for examination. 1998, c. 19, s. 55 (10).
By-laws and Rules
By-laws
56. (1) The
board may, by resolution, make, amend or
repeal by-laws, not contrary to this Act or
to the declaration,
(a) to govern the
number, qualification, nomination, election,
resignation, removal, term of office and
remuneration of the directors, subject to
subsection (2);
(b) to regulate board
meetings, the form of board meetings and the
quorum and functions of the board;
(c) to provide that the quorum for the
transaction of business at a meeting of
owners is those owners who own 331/3
per cent of the units of the corporation,
subject to subsection 50 (2);
(d) to govern the
appointment, remuneration, functions,
duties, resignation and removal of agents,
officers and employees of the corporation
and the security, if any, to be given by
them to it;
(e) subject to
subsection (3), to authorize the borrowing
of money to carry out the objects and duties
of the corporation;
(f) to authorize the corporation to object
to assessments under the Assessment Act
on behalf of owners if it gives notice of
the objections to the owners, and to
authorize the defraying of costs of
objections out of the common expenses;
(g) to govern the
assessment and collection of contributions
to the common expenses;
(h) to establish what
constitutes a standard unit for each class
of unit specified in the by-law for the
purpose of determining the responsibility
for repairing improvements after damage and
insuring them;
(i) to extend the
circumstances described in subsection 105
(2) under which an amount shall be added to
the common expenses payable for an owner’s
unit for the purposes of subsection 105 (3);
(j) to govern the
maintenance of the units and common
elements;
(k) to restrict the use
and enjoyment that persons other than
occupants of the units may make of the
common elements and assets of the
corporation, subject to any agreement made
by the corporation with respect to the use
and enjoyment of its common elements and
assets that it shares with another person;
(l) to govern the
management of the property;
(m) to govern the use
and management of the assets of the
corporation;
(n) to specify duties of
the corporation in addition to the duties
set out in this Act and the declaration;
(o) to establish the
procedure with respect to the mediation of
disputes or disagreements between the
corporation and the owners for the purpose
of section 125 or 132; or
(p) to govern the
conduct generally of the affairs of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 56 (1).
Remuneration of
directors
(2) A
by-law relating to the remuneration of
directors shall fix the remuneration and the
period not exceeding three years for which
it is to be paid. 1998, c. 19, s. 56 (2).
Borrowing by-law
(3) A
corporation shall not borrow money for
expenditures not listed in the budget for
the current fiscal year unless it has passed
a by-law under clause (1) (e) specifically
to authorize the borrowing. 1998, c. 19,
s. 56 (3).
Assessment appeal
(4) If
the board has made a by-law under clause (1)
(f), the corporation shall have the capacity
and authority to appeal under section 40 of
the Assessment Act on behalf of
owners but shall not be liable for an
alteration in the assessment of a unit or
for any other matter relating to the appeal,
except for the costs of the appeal. 2008,
c. 7, Sched. A, s. 18.
Same
(5) Despite
a by-law made under clause (1) (f), on
written notice to the board and to the
Assessment Review Board given before the
hearing of an appeal under section 40 of the
Assessment Act, an owner may withdraw
an appeal that the corporation has made on
the owner’s behalf. 2008, c. 7, Sched. A,
s. 18.
By-laws to be
reasonable
(6) The
by-laws shall be reasonable and consistent
with this Act and the declaration. 1998,
c. 19, s. 56 (6).
Same, proposed
by-laws
(7) By-laws
proposed by the declarant before the
registration of a declaration and
description shall be reasonable and
consistent with this Act and the proposed
declaration. 1998, c. 19, s. 56 (7).
Inconsistent
provisions
(8) If
any provision in a by-law or a proposed
by-law is inconsistent with the provisions
of this Act, the provisions of this Act
shall prevail and the by-law or proposed
by-law, as the case may be, shall be deemed
to be amended accordingly. 1998, c. 19,
s. 56 (8).
Registration
(9) For
each by-law of a corporation, an officer of
the corporation shall certify a copy of the
by-law as a true copy and the corporation
shall register the copy in,
(a) the land titles
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office has a land titles
division; or
(b) the registry
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office does not have a
land titles division. 1998, c. 19,
s. 56 (9).
When by-law
effective
(10) A
by-law is not effective until,
(a) the owners of a
majority of the units of the corporation
vote in favour of confirming it, with or
without amendment; and
(b) a copy of it is
registered in accordance with subsection
(9). 1998, c. 19, s. 56 (10).
Same, proposed
by-law
(11) Despite
subsection (10), a by-law proposed by the
declarant before the registration of the
declaration and description shall be
effective until it is replaced or confirmed
by a by-law of the corporation that takes
effect in accordance with subsection (10).
1998, c. 19, s. 56 (11).
Occupancy standards
by-law
57. (1) Subject
to section 56, the board may, by resolution,
make, amend or repeal by-laws not contrary
to this Act or the declaration that
establish standards for the occupancy of
units of the corporation for residential
purposes. 1998, c. 19, s. 57 (1).
Standards
(2) The
standards shall be,
(a) the occupancy
standards contained in a by-law passed by
the council of a municipality in which the
land of the corporation is situated; or
(b) subject to the
regulations made under this Act, standards
that are not more restrictive than standards
that are in accordance with the maximum
occupancy for each unit based on the maximum
occupancy for which the building in which
the units are located is designed. 1998,
c. 19, s. 57 (2).
Prohibition
(3) A
by-law passed under subsection (1) may
prohibit persons from occupying units of the
corporation that do not comply with the
standards set out in the by-law. 1998,
c. 19, s. 57 (3).
Assessments
(4) If
the board has passed a by-law under
subsection (1) and a person contravenes the
standards for the occupancy of a unit set
out in the by-law, the board may, by
resolution, levy against the unit,
(a) an assessment for
the amount that reasonably reflects the
amount by which the contravention increases
the cost of maintaining the common elements
and repairing them after damage; and
(b) an assessment for
the amount that reasonably reflects the
amount by which the contravention increases
the cost of using the utilities that form
part of the common expenses. 1998, c. 19,
s. 57 (4).
Part of common
expenses
(5) The
assessments mentioned in subsection (4)
shall form part of the contribution to the
common expenses payable for the unit. 1998,
c. 19, s. 57 (5).
Rules
58. (1) The
board may make, amend or repeal rules
respecting the use of common elements and
units to,
(a) promote the safety,
security or welfare of the owners and of the
property and assets of the corporation; or
(b) prevent unreasonable
interference with the use and enjoyment of
the common elements, the units or the assets
of the corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 58 (1).
Rules to be
reasonable
(2) The
rules shall be reasonable and consistent
with this Act, the declaration and the
by-laws. 1998, c. 19, s. 58 (2).
Same, proposed
rules
(3) Rules
proposed by the declarant before the
registration of a declaration and
description shall be reasonable and
consistent with this Act, the proposed
declaration and the proposed by-laws. 1998,
c. 19, s. 58 (3).
Inconsistent
provisions
(4) If
any provision in a rule or a proposed rule
is inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, the provisions of this Act shall
prevail and the rule or proposed rule, as
the case may be, shall be deemed to be
amended accordingly. 1998, c. 19, s. 58 (4).
Amendment by owners
(5) The
owners may amend or repeal a rule at a
meeting of owners duly called for that
purpose. 1998, c. 19, s. 58 (5).
Notice of rule
(6) Upon
making, amending or repealing a rule, the
board shall give a notice of it to the
owners that includes,
(a) a copy of the rule
as made, amended or repealed, as the case
may be;
(b) a statement of the
date that the board proposes that the rule
will become effective; and
(c) a statement that the
owners have the right to requisition a
meeting under section 46 and the rule
becomes effective at the time determined by
subsections (7) and (8). 1998, c. 19,
s. 58 (6).
When rule effective
(7) Subject
to subsection (8), a rule is not effective
until,
(a) the owners approve
it at a meeting of owners, if the board
receives a requisition for the meeting under
section 46 within 30 days after the board
has given notice of the rule to the owners;
or
(b) 30 days after the
board has given notice of the rule to the
owners, if the board does not receive a
requisition for the meeting under section 46
within those 30 days. 1998, c. 19,
s. 58 (7).
Same
(8) A
rule or an amendment to a rule that has
substantially the same purpose or effect as
a rule that the owners have previously
amended or repealed within the preceding two
years is not effective until the owners
approve it, with or without amendment, at a
meeting duly called for that purpose. 1998,
c. 19, s. 58 (8).
Same, proposed rule
(9) Despite
subsection (7), a rule proposed by the
declarant before the registration of the
declaration and description shall be
effective until it is replaced or confirmed
by a rule of the corporation that takes
effect in accordance with subsection (7).
1998, c. 19, s. 58 (9).
Compliance
(10) All
persons bound by the rules shall comply with
them and the rules may be enforced in the
same manner as the by-laws. 1998, c. 19,
s. 58 (10).
Joint by-laws and
rules
59. (1) The
boards of two or more corporations may make,
amend or repeal joint by-laws or rules
governing the use and maintenance of shared
facilities and services. 1998, c. 19,
s. 59 (1).
Application to
corporations
(2) A
joint by-law or rule is a by-law or rule, as
the case may be, of each corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 59 (2).
When joint by-law
effective
(3) A
joint by-law is not effective until,
(a) the majority of the
owners of the units of each corporation vote
in favour of confirming it, with or without
amendment; and
(b) each corporation
registers a copy of it in accordance with
subsection 56 (9). 1998, c. 19, s. 59 (3).
Joint meeting
(4) The
vote of the owners under clause (3) (a) may
be at a joint meeting of the corporations
duly called for that purpose. 1998, c. 19,
s. 59 (4).
Repeal of joint
by-law
(5) Once
a joint by-law is effective, it is effective
until the owners of a majority of the units
of each corporation vote in favour of
repealing it and a copy of the repealing
by-law is registered in accordance with
subsection 56 (9). 1998, c. 19, s. 59 (5).
Amendment of joint
rule
(6) The
owners of each corporation may amend or
repeal a joint rule at a joint meeting of
owners of the corporations or at a meeting
of owners of each corporation if the meeting
has been duly called for that purpose. 1998,
c. 19, s. 59 (6).
Notice of joint
rule
(7) Upon
making, amending or repealing a joint rule,
the board of each corporation shall give a
notice of the joint rule to its owners that
includes,
(a) a copy of the rule
as made, amended or repealed, as the case
may be;
(b) a statement of the
date that the boards propose that the rule
will become effective; and
(c) a statement that the
owners have the right to requisition a
meeting under section 46 and the rule
becomes effective at the time determined by
subsections (8), (9) and (10). 1998, c. 19,
s. 59 (7).
When joint rule
effective
(8) Subject
to subsection (10), if the board of any of
the corporations receives a requisition for
a meeting under section 46 within 30 days
after it gives notice of the joint rule to
its owners, the joint rule is not effective
until the owners approve it at a joint
meeting of owners of the corporations or at
a meeting of owners of each corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 59 (8).
Same, no
requisition
(9) Subject
to subsection (10), if the board of none of
the corporations receives a requisition for
a meeting under section 46 within 30 days
after it gives notice of the joint rule to
its owners, the joint rule is not effective
until 30 days after the board of each
corporation has given notice of the joint
rule to its owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 59 (9).
Same, previous rule
(10) A
joint rule or an amendment to a joint rule
that has substantially the same purpose or
effect as a joint rule that the owners have
previously amended or repealed within the
preceding two years is not effective until
the owners of each corporation approve it,
with or without amendment, at a joint
meeting of owners of the corporations or at
a meeting of owners of each corporation duly
called for that purpose. 1998, c. 19,
s. 59 (10).
Auditors and
Financial Statements
Appointment of
auditor
60. (1) At
their first meeting, the owners shall
appoint one or more persons qualified to be
auditors to hold office as auditors until
the close of the next annual general meeting
and, if the owners do not do so, the board
shall make the necessary appointments as
expeditiously as possible. 1998, c. 19,
s. 60 (1).
Same, subsequent
years
(2) At
each annual general meeting, the owners
shall appoint one or more persons qualified
to be auditors to hold office as auditors
until the close of the next annual general
meeting and, if the owners do not do so, the
auditor in office continues in office until
a successor is appointed. 1998, c. 19,
s. 60 (2).
Appointment by
court
(3) If
for any reason no auditor is appointed as
required by this section, the Superior Court
of Justice may, on the application of an
owner,
(a) appoint one or more
persons qualified to be auditors to hold
office as auditors until the close of the
next annual general meeting;
(b) fix the remuneration
that the corporation shall pay for the
services of the auditor who is appointed;
and
(c) fix the amount that
the corporation shall pay to the owner for
the cost of the application. 1998, c. 19,
s. 60 (3); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Notice of
appointment
(4) The
corporation shall give notice in writing to
an auditor of the appointment immediately
after the appointment is made. 1998, c. 19,
s. 60 (4).
Exception
(5) The
owners of a corporation shall not appoint
auditors under subsection (2) at an annual
general meeting if,
(a) a turn-over meeting
has been held under section 43;
(b) the corporation
consists of fewer than 25 units; and
(c) as of the date of
the meeting, all the owners consent in
writing to dispense with the audit mentioned
in subsection 67 (1) until the next annual
general meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 60 (5).
Qualifications
61. No
person shall act as auditor of a corporation
if the person,
(a) is a director,
officer or employee of the corporation;
(b) is a manager under
an agreement for the management of the
property of the corporation;
(c) has an interest in a
contract to which the corporation is a
party; or
(d) is a partner,
employer or employee of a person mentioned
in clause (a) or (b). 1998, c. 19, s. 61.
Remuneration
62. The
remuneration of an auditor shall be fixed,
(a) by the owners if the
auditor is appointed by the owners; or
(b) by the board if
authorized by the owners to do so or if the
auditor is appointed by the board. 1998,
c. 19, s. 62.
Removal
63. (1) The
owners may remove an auditor before the
expiration of the auditor’s term of office
at a meeting duly called for that purpose.
1998, c. 19, s. 63 (1).
Replacement
(2) If
the owners remove an auditor under
subsection (1), they shall, at the same
meeting, appoint a person qualified to be an
auditor to act as auditor for the remainder
of the term of the auditor who was removed.
1998, c. 19, s. 63 (2).
Approval
(3) The
removal of an auditor and the appointment of
an auditor under subsection (2) requires the
approval of the majority of votes cast by
the owners who are present at the meeting in
person or by proxy. 1998, c. 19, s. 63 (3).
Notice to auditors
(4) At
least 30 days before giving the owners
notice of a meeting for the purpose of
removing an auditor, the person calling the
meeting shall give to the auditor,
(a) written notice of
the intention to call the meeting,
specifying the date on which the notice of
the meeting is proposed to be mailed;
(b) a statement of the
name of the auditor who is proposed to be
removed and the reasons for the removal; and
(c) a copy of all
material proposed to be sent to the owners
in connection with the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 63 (4).
Right to make
representations
(5) An
auditor may make written representations to
the corporation concerning the proposed
removal of the auditor or the appointment of
another person to fill the office of
auditor. 1998, c. 19, s. 63 (5).
Method
(6) In
order to make representations under
subsection (5), an auditor shall send them
to the person calling the meeting at least
three days before the mailing of the notice
of the meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 63 (6).
Notice of meeting
(7) The
person calling the meeting shall, at the
expense of the corporation, include in the
notice of the meeting,
(a) a statement of the
name of the auditor who is proposed to be
removed and the reasons for the removal; and
(b) a copy of all
representations received. 1998, c. 19,
s. 63 (7).
Resignation
64. (1) A
resignation of an auditor becomes effective
at the time a written resignation is
delivered to the corporation or at the time
specified in the resignation, whichever is
later. 1998, c. 19, s. 64 (1).
Representations
(2) In
a resignation, the auditor may make written
representations to the corporation
concerning the resignation and in that case
the corporation shall attach a copy of the
representations to the notice of the next
meeting of owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 64 (2).
Vacancy
65. (1) If
a vacancy arises in the office of auditor,
the directors may appoint any person
qualified to be an auditor to hold office as
auditor to fill the vacancy. 1998, c. 19,
s. 65 (1).
Term of replacement
(2) An
auditor appointed under subsection (1) shall
hold office until the close of the next
annual general meeting or until a successor
is appointed, whichever is later. 1998,
c. 19, s. 65 (2).
Financial
statements
66. (1) A
corporation shall have its financial
statements prepared in the prescribed manner
and in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles as are prescribed.
1998, c. 19, s. 66 (1).
Contents
(2) The
financial statements shall include,
(a) a balance sheet;
(b) a statement of
general operations;
(c) a statement of
changes in financial position;
(d) a statement of
reserve fund operations;
(e) prescribed
information relating to the reserve fund
study and the operation of the reserve fund;
(f) an indication of the
aggregate remuneration paid to the directors
in that capacity and the aggregate
remuneration paid to the officers in that
capacity; and
(g) the additional
statements or information that the
regulations made under this Act require.
1998, c. 19, s. 66 (2).
Approval
(3) The
board shall approve the financial statements
before placing them before an annual general
meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 66 (3).
Form of approval
(4) The
approval shall be evidenced by the signature
at the bottom of the balance sheet by two of
the directors duly authorized to sign. 1998,
c. 19, s. 66 (4).
Audit
67. (1) The
auditor shall, every year, make the
examination that is necessary in order to
make an annual report on the financial
statements to the corporation on behalf of
the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 67 (1).
Right of access
(2) The
auditor has right of access at all times to
all records, documents, accounts and
vouchers of the corporation and is entitled
to require from the directors, officers and
employees of the corporation or from persons
under contract to the corporation to manage
the property or its assets the information
and explanations that, in the auditor’s
opinion, are necessary in order to make the
report. 1998, c. 19, s. 67 (2).
Standards
(3) The
auditor’s report shall be prepared in the
prescribed manner and in accordance with
generally accepted auditing standards as are
prescribed. 1998, c. 19, s. 67 (3).
Contents of report
(4) The
auditor shall include in the report the
statements that the auditor considers
necessary if the corporation’s financial
statements are not in accordance with the
requirements of this Act and the regulations
made under it. 1998, c. 19, s. 67 (4).
Same, reserve fund
study
(5) The
auditor shall state in the report whether
the statement of reserve fund operations and
any other prescribed information relating to
the operation of the reserve fund and
contained in the financial statements do not
fairly present the information contained in
the reserve fund studies that the auditor
has received. 1998, c. 19, s. 67 (5).
Presentation of
report
(6) The
auditor shall present the auditor’s report
to the audit committee described in
subsection 68 (1) or to the board if there
is no audit committee. 1998, c. 19,
s. 67 (6).
Immunity
(7) Except
with respect to the contents of the report,
no action or other proceeding for damages
shall be instituted against an auditor or a
former auditor for any oral or written
statement made in good faith in the
execution or intended execution of the duty
as auditor under this Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 67 (7).
Audit committee
68. (1) If
the number of directors of the corporation
is more than six, the directors may elect
annually from among their number a committee
to be known as the audit committee to hold
office until the next annual general
meeting. 1998, c. 19, s. 68 (1).
Members
(2) The
audit committee shall be composed of at
least three directors and the majority of
committee members shall not consist of
officers or employees of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 68 (2).
Review of
statements
(3) On
receiving the financial statements, the
auditor’s report and an amended auditor’s
report, if any, the audit committee shall
review them and submit them to the board.
1998, c. 19, s. 68 (3).
Auditor to appear
(4) The
auditor has the right to appear before and
be heard at any meeting of the audit
committee and shall appear before the
committee when the committee so requires.
1998, c. 19, s. 68 (4).
Meeting at
auditor’s request
(5) At
the request of the auditor, the audit
committee shall convene a meeting of the
committee to consider all matters the
auditor believes should be brought to the
attention of the board or the committee
members. 1998, c. 19, s. 68 (5).
Delivery of
statements
69. (1) The
board shall place before each annual general
meeting,
(a) the financial
statements as approved by the board;
(b) the auditor’s
report; and
(c) all further
information respecting the financial
position of the corporation that the by-laws
of the corporation require. 1998, c. 19,
s. 69 (1).
Copy with notice of
meeting
(2) The
corporation shall attach to the notice of
the annual general meeting a copy of the
financial statements and the auditor’s
report. 1998, c. 19, s. 69 (2).
Right to attend
meeting
70. (1) The
auditor is entitled to attend a meeting of
owners and to be heard on any part of the
business of the meeting that concerns the
office of the auditor. 1998, c. 19,
s. 70 (1).
Notice of meetings
(2) The
corporation shall give the auditor notice of
all meetings of owners and all other
communications relating to the meetings that
the owners are entitled to receive. 1998,
c. 19, s. 70 (2).
Attendance required
(3) The
corporation or an owner may require that an
auditor or a former auditor attend a meeting
of owners for the purpose of answering
inquiries described in subsection (6) by
giving written notice to the person whose
attendance is required, at least five days
before the meeting, that the person’s
presence is required. 1998, c. 19,
s. 70 (3).
Notice to
corporation
(4) An
owner who gives written notice to an auditor
or former auditor under subsection (3) shall
give a copy of the notice to the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 70 (4).
Remuneration for
attendance
(5) If
an auditor or a former auditor is required
to attend a meeting of owners, the
corporation shall compensate the auditor or
former auditor, as the case may be, for
expenses and pay the reasonable remuneration
that it deems appropriate. 1998, c. 19,
s. 70 (5).
Duty to answer
questions
(6) At
a meeting of owners, the auditor or former
auditor, as the case may be, if present,
shall answer inquiries concerning the basis
upon which the person formed the opinion
stated in the person’s reports. 1998, c. 19,
s. 70 (6).
Amendment of
statements
71. (1) The
board shall amend the corporation’s
financial statements if facts come to the
attention of the directors or officers of a
corporation after the annual general meeting
and the facts require a material adjustment
to the financial statements that were
presented at the meeting. 1998, c. 19,
s. 71 (1).
Copy of amended
statements
(2) Immediately
after making an amendment, the corporation
shall send to the auditor a statement of the
facts that gave rise to the amendment and a
copy of the amended financial statements.
1998, c. 19, s. 71 (2).
Amendment of
auditor’s report
(3) On
receiving the statements furnished under
subsection (2), the auditor shall amend the
auditor’s report if the auditor is of the
opinion that it is necessary and in that
case shall present it to the audit committee
or to the board if there is no audit
committee. 1998, c. 19, s. 71 (3).
Delivery of amended
report
(4) The
board shall mail or deliver a copy of the
amended report to the owners. 1998, c. 19,
s. 71 (4).
Same, by auditor
(5) If
the board does not mail or deliver a copy of
the amended report to the owners within a
reasonable time, the auditor shall mail or
deliver a copy of the amended report to the
owners and the corporation shall reimburse
the auditor for the reasonable costs
incurred in the mailing or the delivery.
1998, c. 19, s. 71 (5).
PART V
SALE AND LEASE OF UNITS
Disclosure
Requirements
Disclosure
statement
72. (1) The
declarant shall deliver to every person who
purchases a unit or a proposed unit from the
declarant a copy of the current disclosure
statement made by the declarant for the
corporation of which the unit or proposed
unit forms part. 1998, c. 19, s. 72 (1).
Purchaser not bound
(2) An
agreement of purchase and sale of a unit or
a proposed unit entered into by a declarant
is not binding on the purchaser until the
declarant has delivered to the purchaser a
copy of the current disclosure statement.
1998, c. 19, s. 72 (2).
Contents
(3) A
disclosure statement shall specify the date
on which it is made and shall contain,
(a) a table of contents
prepared in accordance with subsection (4)
and located at the beginning of the
disclosure statement;
(b) a statement
indicating,
(i) whether the
corporation is a freehold condominium
corporation or a leasehold condominium
corporation, and
(ii) if the
corporation is a freehold condominium
corporation, the type of freehold
condominium corporation that it is;
(c) a statement of the
name and municipal address of the declarant
and the mailing address of the property or
the proposed property and its municipal
address if available;
(d) a general
description of the property or proposed
property including the types and number of
buildings, units and recreational and other
amenities together with all conditions that
apply to the provision of amenities;
(e) if the declarant has
made an application for approval described
in subsection 9 (4), a summary of the
reports, if any, that the approval authority
has required be made under subsection 9 (4)
and the agreements, if any, that the
approval authority has imposed under
subsection 9 (5) as a condition of approval;
(f) a statement indicating whether the
property or part of the property is or may
be subject to the Ontario New Home
Warranties Plan Act or whether the
declarant has enrolled or intends to enrol
the proposed units and common elements in
the Plan within the meaning of that Act in
accordance with the regulations made under
that Act;
(g) a statement whether
a building on the property or a unit or a
proposed unit has been converted from a
previous use;
(h) a statement whether
one or more units or proposed units may be
used for commercial or other purposes not
ancillary to residential purposes;
(i)
a statement of the portion of units or
proposed units which the declarant intends
to market in blocks of units to investors;
(j) a statement of the portion of units or
proposed units, to the nearest anticipated
25 per cent, that the declarant intends to
lease;
(k) if construction of
amenities is not completed, a schedule of
the proposed commencement and completion
dates;
(l) a list of the amenities that the
declarant proposes to provide to the
purchaser during a period of interim
occupancy of a proposed unit under section
80;
(m) a copy of the
existing or proposed declaration, by-laws,
rules and insurance trust agreement, if any;
(n) a brief description
of the significant features of all
agreements or proposed agreements mentioned
in section 111, 112, 113 or 114 and of all
agreements or proposed agreements between
the corporation and another corporation;
(o) a statement of whether, to the knowledge
of the declarant, the corporation intends to
amalgamate with another corporation or
whether the declarant intends to cause the
corporation to amalgamate with another
corporation within 60 days of the date of
registration of the declaration and
description for the corporation;
(p) if an amalgamation
is intended under clause (o), a copy of the
proposed declaration, description, by-laws
and rules for the amalgamated corporation,
if available;
(q) a copy of the budget
statement described in subsection (6);
(r) a copy of the budget
of the corporation for the current fiscal
year if more than one year has passed since
the registration of the declaration and
description for the corporation;
(s) a statement setting
out the fees or charges, if any, that the
corporation is required to pay to the
declarant or another person; and
(t) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 72 (3); 2001, c. 9,
Sched. D, s. 3 (1).
Table of contents
(4) The
table of contents in the disclosure
statement shall be in the prescribed form,
shall indicate whether the declaration,
by-laws, rules or the proposed declaration,
by-laws or rules of the corporation or any
other material in the disclosure statement
deal with the following matters and, if so,
shall indicate where the matters are dealt
with:
1. A statement
indicating,
i. whether the
corporation is a leasehold condominium
corporation or a freehold condominium
corporation, and
ii. if the corporation
is a freehold condominium corporation, the
type of freehold condominium corporation
that it is.
2. The property or part of the property is
or may be subject to the Ontario New Home
Warranties Plan Act or the proposed
units and common elements are enrolled or
are intended to be enrolled in the Plan
within the meaning of that Act in accordance
with the regulations made under that Act.
3. A building on the
property or a unit or a proposed unit has
been converted from a previous use.
4. One or more units
or proposed units may be used for commercial
or other purposes not ancillary to
residential purposes.
5. A provision exists
with respect to pets on the property or the
proposed property.
6. There exist
restrictions or standards with respect to
the occupancy or use of units or proposed
units or the use of common elements or
proposed common elements that are based on
the nature or design of the facilities and
services on the property or on other aspects
of the buildings located on the property.
7. A statement of the
portion of units or proposed units, to the
nearest anticipated 25 per cent, that the
declarant intends to lease.
8. A statement
whether the proportion, expressed in
percentages, of the common interest
appurtenant to any unit or proposed unit
differs in an amount of 10 per cent or more
from that appurtenant to any other unit or
proposed unit of the same type, size and
design.
9. A statement
whether the proportion, expressed in
percentages, in which the owner of any unit
or proposed unit is required to contribute
to the common expenses differs in an amount
of 10 per cent or more from that required of
the owner of any other unit or proposed unit
of the same type, size and design.
10. A statement
whether any unit or proposed unit is exempt
from a cost attributable to the rest of the
units or proposed units.
11. Part or the whole
of the common elements or the proposed
common elements are subject to a lease or
licence.
12. A statement
whether parking is allowed in or on a unit,
on the common elements or on a part of the
common elements of which an owner has
exclusive use and a statement of the
restrictions on parking.
13. Any other
statement specified in the regulations made
under this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 72 (4).
Copy of budget
(5) On
the request of the declarant, the
corporation shall, promptly and without
charge, provide a copy of its budget for the
current fiscal year to the declarant. 1998,
c. 19, s. 72 (5).
Budget statement
(6) The
budget statement is a statement for the
one-year period immediately following the
registration of the declaration and
description and shall contain,
(a) a statement of the
common expenses of the corporation;
(b) a statement of the
proposed amount of each expense of the
corporation, including the cost of the
reserve fund study required for the year,
the cost of the performance audit under
section 44 and the cost of preparing audited
financial statements if subsection 43 (7)
requires the declarant to deliver them
within one year following the registration
of the declaration and description;
(c) particulars of the
type, frequency and level of the services to
be provided;
(d) a statement of the
projected monthly common expense
contribution for each type of unit;
(e) a statement of the
portion of the common expenses to be paid
into a reserve fund;
(f) a statement of the
status of all pending lawsuits material to
the property of which the declarant has
actual knowledge and that may affect the
property after the registration of a deed to
the unit from the declarant to the
purchaser;
(g) a statement of the
amounts of all current or expected fees,
charges, rents or other revenue to be paid
to or by the corporation or by any of the
owners for the use of the common elements or
other facilities related to the property,
unless a turn over meeting has been held
under section 43;
(h) a statement of all
services not included in the budget that the
declarant provides, or expenses that the
declarant pays and that might reasonably be
expected to become, at any subsequent time,
a common expense and the projected common
expense contribution attributable to each of
those services or expenses for each type of
unit;
(i) a statement of the
projected amounts in all reserve funds at
the end of the current fiscal year;
(j) a summary of the
most recent reserve fund study, if any; and
(k) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 72 (6).
Rescission of
agreement
73. (1) A
purchaser who receives a disclosure
statement under subsection 72 (1) may, in
accordance with this section, rescind the
agreement of purchase and sale before
accepting a deed to the unit being purchased
that is in registerable form. 1998, c. 19,
s. 73 (1).
Notice of
rescission
(2) To
rescind an agreement of purchase and sale
under this section, a purchaser or the
purchaser’s solicitor shall give a written
notice of rescission to the declarant or to
the declarant’s solicitor who must receive
the notice within 10 days of the later of,
(a) the date that the
purchaser receives the disclosure statement;
and
(b) the date that the
purchaser receives a copy of the agreement
of purchase and sale executed by the
declarant and the purchaser. 1998, c. 19,
s. 73 (2).
Refund upon
rescission
(3) If
a declarant or the declarant’s solicitor
receives a notice of rescission from a
purchaser under this section, the declarant
shall promptly refund, without penalty or
charge, to the purchaser, all money received
from the purchaser under the agreement and
credited towards the purchase price,
together with interest on the money
calculated at the prescribed rate from the
date that the declarant received the money
until the date the declarant refunds it.
1998, c. 19, s. 73 (3).
Material changes in
disclosure statement
74. (1) Whenever
there is a material change in the
information contained or required to be
contained in a disclosure statement
delivered to a purchaser under subsection 72
(1) or a revised disclosure statement or a
notice delivered to a purchaser under this
section, the declarant shall deliver a
revised disclosure statement or a notice to
the purchaser. 1998, c. 19, s. 74 (1).
Definition
(2) In
this section,
“material change”
means a change or a series of changes that a
reasonable purchaser, on an objective basis,
would have regarded collectively as
sufficiently important to the decision to
purchase a unit or proposed unit in the
corporation that it is likely that the
purchaser would not have entered into an
agreement of purchase and sale for the unit
or the proposed unit or would have exercised
the right to rescind such an agreement of
purchase and sale under section 73, if the
disclosure statement had contained the
change or series of changes, but does not
include,
(a) a change in the
contents of the budget of the corporation
for the current fiscal year if more than one
year has passed since the registration of
the declaration and description for the
corporation,
(b) a substantial
addition, alteration or improvement within
the meaning of subsection 97 (6) that the
corporation makes to the common elements
after a turn-over meeting has been held
under section 43,
(c) a change in the
portion of units or proposed units that the
declarant intends to lease,
(d) a change in the
schedule of the proposed commencement and
completion dates for the amenities of which
construction had not been completed as of
the date on which the disclosure statement
was made, or
(e) a change in the
information contained in the statement
described in subsection 161 (1) of the
services provided by the municipality or the
Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing,
as the case may be, as described in that
subsection, if the unit or the proposed unit
is in a vacant land condominium corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 74 (2).
Contents of revised
statement
(3) The
revised disclosure statement or notice
required under subsection (1) shall clearly
identify all changes that in the reasonable
belief of the declarant may be material
changes and summarize the particulars of
them. 1998, c. 19, s. 74 (3).
Time of delivery
(4) The
declarant shall deliver the revised
disclosure statement or notice to the
purchaser within a reasonable time after the
material change mentioned in subsection (1)
occurs and, in any event, no later than 10
days before delivering to the purchaser a
deed to the unit being purchased that is in
registerable form. 1998, c. 19, s. 74 (4).
Purchaser’s
application to court
(5) Within
10 days after receiving a revised disclosure
statement or a notice under subsection (1),
a purchaser may make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for a
determination whether a change or a series
of changes set out in the statement or
notice is a material change. 1998, c. 19,
s. 74 (5); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Rescission after
material change
(6) If
a change or a series of changes set out in a
revised disclosure statement or a notice
delivered to a purchaser constitutes a
material change or if a material change
occurs that the declarant does not disclose
in a revised disclosure statement or notice
as required by subsection (1), the purchaser
may, before accepting a deed to the unit
being purchased that is in registerable
form, rescind the agreement of purchase and
sale within 10 days of the latest of,
(a) the date on which
the purchaser receives the revised
disclosure statement or the notice, if the
declarant delivered a revised disclosure
statement or notice to the purchaser;
(b) the date on which
the purchaser becomes aware of a material
change, if the declarant has not delivered a
revised disclosure statement or notice to
the purchaser as required by subsection (1)
with respect to the change; and
(c) the date on which
the Superior Court of Justice makes a
determination under subsection (5) or (8)
that the change is material, if the
purchaser or the declarant, as the case may
be, has made an application for the
determination. 1998, c. 19, s. 74 (6); 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Notice of
rescission
(7) To
rescind an agreement of purchase and sale
under this section, a purchaser or the
purchaser’s solicitor shall give a written
notice of rescission to the declarant or to
the declarant’s solicitor. 1998, c. 19,
s. 74 (7).
Declarant’s
application to court
(8) Within
10 days after receiving a notice of
rescission, the declarant may make an
application to the Superior Court of Justice
for a determination whether the change or
the series of changes on which the
rescission is based constitutes a material
change, if the purchaser has not already
made an application for the determination
under subsection (5). 1998, c. 19,
s. 74 (8); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Refund upon
rescission
(9) A
declarant who receives a notice of
rescission from a purchaser under this
section shall refund, without penalty or
charge, to the purchaser, all money received
from the purchaser under the agreement and
credited towards the purchase price,
together with interest on the money
calculated at the prescribed rate from the
date that the declarant received the money
until the date the declarant refunds it.
1998, c. 19, s. 74 (9).
Time of refund
(10) The
declarant shall make the refund,
(a) within 10 days after
receiving a notice of rescission, if neither
the purchaser nor the declarant has made an
application for a determination described in
subsection (5) or (8) respectively; or
(b) within 10 days after
the court makes a determination that the
change is material, if the purchaser has
made an application under subsection (5) or
the declarant has made an application under
subsection (8). 1998, c. 19, s. 74 (10).
Accountability for
budget statement
75. (1) The
declarant is accountable to the corporation
under this section for the budget statement
that covers the one-year period immediately
following the registration of the
declaration and description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 75 (1).
Common expenses
(2) The
declarant shall pay to the corporation the
amount by which the total actual amount of
common expenses incurred for the period
covered by the budget statement, except for
those attributable to the termination of an
agreement under section 111 or 112, exceeds
the total budgeted amount. 1998, c. 19,
s. 75 (2).
Revenue
(3) The
declarant shall pay to the corporation the
amount by which the total actual amount of
fees, charges, rents and other revenue paid
or to be paid to the corporation, during the
period covered by the budget statement, for
the use of any part of the common elements
or assets or of any other facilities related
to the property, is less than the total
budgeted amount. 1998, c. 19, s. 75 (3).
Set-off
(4) If
the total actual amount of revenue described
in subsection (3) exceeds the total budgeted
amount, the declarant may deduct the excess
from any amount payable under subsection
(2). 1998, c. 19, s. 75 (4).
Notice of payment
(5) After
receiving the audited financial statements
for the period covered by the budget
statement, the board shall compare the
actual amount of common expenses and revenue
described in subsections (2) and (3) for the
period covered by the budget statement with
the budgeted amounts and shall, within 30
days of receiving the audited financial
statements, give written notice to the
declarant of the amount that the declarant
is required to pay to the corporation under
this section. 1998, c. 19, s. 75 (5).
Time for payment
(6) Within
30 days of receiving the notice, the
declarant shall pay the corporation the
amount that it is required to pay under this
section. 1998, c. 19, s. 75 (6).
Status certificate
76. (1) The
corporation shall give to each person who so
requests a status certificate with respect
to a unit in the corporation, in the
prescribed form, that specifies the date on
which it was made and that contains,
(a) a statement of the
common expenses for the unit and the
default, if any, in payment of the common
expenses;
(b) a statement of the
increase, if any, in the common expenses for
the unit that the board has declared since
the date of the budget of the corporation
for the current fiscal year and the reason
for the increase;
(c) a statement of the
assessments, if any, that the board has
levied against the unit since the date of
the budget of the corporation for the
current fiscal year to increase the
contribution to the reserve fund and the
reason for the assessments;
(d) a statement of the
address for service of the corporation;
(e) a statement of the
names and address for service of the
directors and officers of the corporation;
(f) a copy of the
current declaration, by-laws and rules;
(g) a copy of all
applications made under section 109 to amend
the declaration for which the court has not
made an order;
(h) a statement of all
outstanding judgments against the
corporation and the status of all legal
actions to which the corporation is a party;
(i) a copy of the budget
of the corporation for the current fiscal
year, the last annual audited financial
statements and the auditor’s report on the
statements;
(j) a list of all
current agreements mentioned in section 111,
112 or 113 and all current agreements
between the corporation and another
corporation or between the corporation and
the owner of the unit;
(k) a statement that the
person requesting the status certificate has
the rights described in subsections (7) and
(8) with respect to the agreements mentioned
in clause (j);
(l) a statement whether
the parties have complied with all current
agreements mentioned in clause 98 (1) (b)
with respect to the unit;
(m) a statement with
respect to,
(i) the most recent
reserve fund study and updates to it,
(ii) the amount in
the reserve fund no earlier than at the end
of a month within 90 days of the date of the
status certificate, and
(iii) current plans,
if any, to increase the reserve fund under
subsection 94 (8);
(n) a statement of those
additions, alterations or improvements to
the common elements, those changes in the
assets of the corporation and those changes
in a service of the corporation that are
substantial and that the board has proposed
but has not implemented, together with a
statement of the purpose of them;
(o) a statement of the
number of units for which the corporation
has received notice under section 83 that
the unit was leased during the fiscal year
preceding the date of the status
certificate;
(p) a certificate or
memorandum of insurance for each of the
current insurance policies;
(q) a statement of the
amounts, if any, that this Act requires be
added to the common expenses payable for the
unit;
(r) a statement whether
the Superior Court of Justice has made an
order appointing an inspector under section
130 or an administrator under section 131;
(s) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 76 (1); 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Fee for certificate
(2) The
corporation may charge the prescribed fee
for providing the status certificate. 1998,
c. 19, s. 76 (2).
Time for giving
certificate
(3) The
corporation shall give the status
certificate within 10 days after receiving a
request for it and payment of the fee
charged by the corporation for it. 1998,
c. 19, s. 76 (3).
Omission of
information
(4) If
a status certificate that a corporation has
given under subsection (1) omits material
information that it is required to contain,
it shall be deemed to include a statement
that there is no such information. 1998,
c. 19, s. 76 (4).
Default in giving
certificate
(5) A
corporation that does not give a status
certificate within the required time shall
be deemed to have given a certificate on the
day immediately after the required time has
expired stating that,
(a) there has been no
default in the payment of common expenses
for the unit;
(b) the board has not
declared any increase in the common expenses
for the unit since the date of the budget of
the corporation for the current fiscal year;
and
(c) the board has not
levied any assessments against the unit
since the date of the budget of the
corporation for the current fiscal year to
increase the contribution to the reserve
fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 76 (5).
Effect of
certificate
(6) The
status certificate binds the corporation, as
of the date it is given or deemed to have
been given, with respect to the information
that it contains or is deemed to contain, as
against a purchaser or mortgagee of a unit
who relies on the certificate. 1998, c. 19,
s. 76 (6).
Examination of
agreements
(7) Upon
receiving a written request and reasonable
notice, the corporation shall permit a
person who has requested a status
certificate and paid the fee charged by the
corporation for the certificate, or an agent
of the person duly authorized in writing, to
examine the agreements mentioned in clause
(1) (k) at a reasonable time and at a
reasonable location. 1998, c. 19, s. 76 (7).
Copies of
agreements
(8) The
corporation shall, within a reasonable time,
provide copies of the agreements to a person
examining them, if the person so requests
and pays a reasonable fee to compensate the
corporation for the labour and copying
charges. 1998, c. 19, s. 76 (8).
Information on
corporation
77. On the
request of any person, the corporation
shall, without fee, provide the names and
address for service of the directors and
officers of the corporation, the person
responsible for the management of the
property of the corporation and the person
to whom the corporation has delegated the
responsibility for providing status
certificates. 1998, c. 19, s. 77.
Sale of Units
Implied covenants
78. (1) Every
agreement of purchase and sale of a proposed
unit entered into by a declarant before the
registration of the declaration and
description that creates the unit shall be
deemed to contain the following covenants by
the declarant:
1. If the proposed
unit is for residential purposes, a covenant
to take all reasonable steps to sell the
other residential units included in the
property without delay, except for the units
that the declarant intends to lease.
2. A covenant to take
all reasonable steps to deliver to the
purchaser without delay a deed to the unit
that is in registerable form.
3. A covenant to hold
in trust for the corporation the money, if
any, that the declarant collects from the
purchaser on behalf of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 78 (1).
No merger of
covenants
(2) The
covenants shall be deemed not to merge by
operation of law on delivery to the
purchaser of a deed that is in registerable
form. 1998, c. 19, s. 78 (2).
Compliance order
(3) If
the declarant breaches a covenant described
in subsection (1), the purchaser under the
agreement of purchase and sale may make an
application for an order under section 134
and an order may be made under that section.
1998, c. 19, s. 78 (3).
Duty to register
declaration and description
79. (1) A
declarant who has entered into an agreement
of purchase and sale of a proposed unit
shall take all reasonable steps to complete
the buildings required by the agreement
subject to all prescribed requirements and
to register, without delay, a declaration
and description in respect of the property
in which the proposed unit will be included.
1998, c. 19, s. 79 (1).
No right to
terminate
(2) Despite
any provision to the contrary in the
agreement of purchase and sale, the
declarant is not entitled to terminate an
agreement of purchase and sale of a proposed
unit by reason only of the failure to
register the declaration and description
within a period of time specified in the
agreement, unless the purchaser consents to
the termination in writing. 1998, c. 19,
s. 79 (2).
Application to
court
(3) Despite
subsection (2), if a declaration and
description have not been registered, the
declarant may, upon 15 days written notice
to the purchasers of all proposed units in
the property affected by the declaration and
description, make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order
terminating the agreements of purchase and
sale of the purchasers. 1998, c. 19,
s. 79 (3); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (5).
Subsequent
registration
(4) The
court may, in the order, provide that a
declaration and description shall not be
registered in respect of the property in
which the proposed units will be included
during a period specified in the order.
1998, c. 19, s. 79 (4).
Considerations
(5) On
an application for an order, the court shall
consider whether,
(a) the declarant has
taken all reasonable steps to register a
declaration and description;
(b) a declaration and
description can be registered within a
reasonable period of time; and
(c) the failure and
inability to register a declaration and
description is caused by circumstances
beyond the control of the declarant. 1998,
c. 19, s. 79 (5).
Registration of
order
(6) The
order is ineffective until a certified copy
of it is registered. 1998, c. 19, s. 79 (6).
Interim occupancy
80. (1) An
agreement of purchase and sale may permit or
require interim occupancy of a proposed
unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (1).
Definition
(2) In
this section,
“interim occupancy”
means the occupancy of a proposed unit
before the purchaser receives a deed to the
unit that is in registerable form. 1998,
c. 19, s. 80 (2).
Right to pay in
full
(3) Despite
any provision to the contrary in the
agreement of purchase and sale, before the
expiry of the time period mentioned in
subsection 73 (2) for rescinding the
agreement, a purchaser may elect to pay in
full, on assuming interim occupancy of the
proposed unit, the balance of the purchase
price remaining after deducting the amounts
paid under the agreement before assuming
interim occupancy. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (3).
Occupancy fee
(4) If
the purchaser assumes interim occupancy of a
proposed unit or is required to do so under
the agreement of purchase and sale, the
declarant may charge the purchaser a monthly
occupancy fee which shall not be greater
than the total of the following amounts:
1. Where applicable,
interest calculated on a monthly basis on
the unpaid balance of the purchase price at
the prescribed rate.
2. An amount
reasonably estimated on a monthly basis for
municipal taxes attributable to the unit.
3. The projected
monthly common expense contribution for the
unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (4).
Reserve fund
contribution
(5) If
the declarant charges the purchaser a
monthly occupancy fee for interim occupancy
of a proposed unit for residential purposes
for longer than six months and the monthly
occupancy fee includes a projected
contribution to the reserve fund of the
corporation, then, with respect to the
occupancy fee for each month after the sixth
month, the declarant shall hold in trust and
remit to the corporation upon registering
the declaration and description the portion
of the monthly occupancy fee that represents
the projected contribution to the reserve
fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (5).
Rights and duties
of declarant
(6) If
a purchaser assumes interim occupancy of a
proposed unit, the declarant,
(a) shall provide those
services that the corporation will have a
duty to provide to owners after the
registration of the declaration and
description that creates the unit;
(b) shall repair and
maintain the proposed property and the
proposed unit in the same manner as the
corporation will have a duty to repair after
damage and maintain after the registration
of the declaration and description that
creates the unit;
(c) has the same right
of entry that the corporation will have
after the registration of the declaration
and description that creates the unit;
(d) may withhold consent
to an assignment of the right to occupy the
proposed unit;
(e) may charge a
reasonable fee for consenting to an
assignment of the right to occupy the
proposed unit; and
(f) shall, within 30
days of the registration of the declaration
and description that creates the unit,
notify the purchaser in writing of the date
and instrument numbers of the registration,
unless within that time the purchaser
receives a deed to the unit that is in
registerable form. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (6).
Application of Residential Tenancies
Act, 2006
(7) The
rights and duties described in subsection
(6) apply despite any provision to the
contrary in the Residential Tenancies
Act, 2006. 1998, c. 19, s. 80 (11);
2006, c. 17, s. 248 (3).
Refund of municipal
taxes
(8) The
declarant shall, on delivering to the
purchaser a deed that is in registerable
form or as soon as is practicable after
delivery, refund to the purchaser the
portion of the monthly occupancy fee that
the purchaser has paid on account of
municipal taxes attributable to the proposed
unit in excess of the amount actually
assessed against the unit. 1998, c. 19,
s. 80 (8).
Municipal taxes
payable
(9) If
the portion of the monthly occupancy fee
that the purchaser has paid on account of
municipal taxes attributable to the proposed
unit is insufficient to pay the amount
actually assessed against the unit, the
declarant may require the purchaser to pay
the difference between the two amounts.
1998, c. 19, s. 80 (9).
Non-application
(10) Sections
149, 150, 151, 165, 166 and 167 and Part VII
of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006
do not apply to interim occupancy and
monthly occupancy fees charged under this
section. 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (6);
2006, c. 17, s. 248 (4).
(11) Spent:
1998, c. 19, s. 80 (11).
(12) Spent:
1998, c. 19, s. 80 (12).
Money held in trust
81. (1) A
declarant shall ensure that a trustee of a
prescribed class or the declarant’s
solicitor receives and holds in trust all
money, together with interest earned on it,
as soon as a person makes a payment,
(a) with respect to
reserving a right to enter into an agreement
of purchase and sale for the purchase of a
proposed unit;
(b) on account of an
agreement of purchase and sale of a proposed
unit; or
(c) on account of a sale
of a proposed unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 81 (1).
Exception
(2) Subsection
(1) does not apply to money received,
(a) on account of the
purchase of personal property included in
the proposed unit that is not to be
permanently affixed to the land; or
(b) as an occupancy fee
under subsection 80 (4). 1998, c. 19,
s. 81 (2).
Reservation money
(3) If
a person has paid money to reserve a right
to enter into an agreement of purchase and
sale for the purchase of a proposed unit and
subsequently enters into such an agreement
with the declarant, the declarant shall, on
entering into the agreement, credit the
money received to the purchase price under
the agreement, despite any provision of the
agreement. 1998, c. 19, s. 81 (3).
Trustee
(4) Upon
receiving money that is required to be held
in trust under subsection (1), a trustee of
a prescribed class shall hold the money in
trust in a separate account in Ontario
designated as a trust account at a bank
listed in Schedule I or II to the Bank
Act (Canada), a trust corporation, a
loan corporation or a credit union. 1998,
c. 19, s. 81 (4); 2002, c. 8, Sched. I, s. 7
(1).
Declarant’s
solicitor
(5) Upon
receiving money that is required to be held
in trust under subsection (1), the
declarant’s solicitor shall hold the money
in trust in a trust account in Ontario.
1998, c. 19, s. 81 (5).
Evidence of
compliance
(6) Within
10 days of the payment of the money under
subsection (1), the declarant shall provide
to the person who paid the money written
evidence, in the form prescribed by the
Minister, of compliance with subsection (1)
and one of subsections (4) and (5). 1998,
c. 19, s. 81 (6).
Duration of trust
(7) Despite
the registration of a declaration and
description, the person who holds money in
trust under subsection (1) shall hold it in
trust until,
(a) the person holding
the money in trust disposes of it to the
person entitled to it, where the disposal is
done in accordance with this Act and an
agreement that the person who paid the money
has entered into with respect to the
proposed unit; or
(b) the declarant
ensures that security of a prescribed class
is provided for the money, except if the
money has been received under clause (1) (a)
and has not been credited to the purchase
price under the agreement. 1998, c. 19,
s. 81 (7).
Interest
82. (1) The
declarant shall pay interest at the
prescribed rate to the purchaser on all
money that a person pays on account of the
purchase price of a proposed unit or that
the declarant credits to the purchase price
of a proposed unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 82 (1).
Money released from
trust
(2) The
interest is payable on the money even if,
under clause 81 (7) (b), the declarant
provides security of a prescribed class for
the money. 1998, c. 19, s. 82 (2).
Calculation
(3) The
interest shall be calculated from the day
the person pays the money received until the
day the proposed unit is available for
possession or occupancy in accordance with
the purchaser’s agreement of purchase and
sale with the declarant. 1998, c. 19,
s. 82 (3).
Time of payment
(4) The
interest shall be paid to the purchaser by
way of payment or set-off,
(a) on the day the
declarant delivers to the purchaser a deed
to the proposed unit that is in registerable
form, if the declarant so elects; or
(b) on the day the
proposed unit is available for possession or
occupancy in accordance with the purchaser’s
agreement of purchase and sale with the
declarant, otherwise. 1998, c. 19,
s. 82 (4).
Compound interest
(5) A
declarant who elects to pay the interest to
the purchaser on the day of delivering to
the purchaser a deed to the proposed unit
that is in registerable form shall, on that
day, pay interest to the purchaser at the
prescribed rate on the interest that the
declarant is required to pay under
subsection (1). 1998, c. 19, s. 82 (5).
Calculation
(6) The
declarant shall pay the interest payable
under subsection (5) from the day the
proposed unit is available for possession or
occupancy in accordance with the purchaser’s
agreement of purchase and sale with the
declarant until the day of payment. 1998,
c. 19, s. 82 (6).
Terminated
agreements
(7) If
an agreement of purchase and sale provides
that a purchaser is entitled to a return of
money paid under the agreement upon
termination of the agreement and the
agreement is terminated, the declarant shall
pay interest at the prescribed rate to the
purchaser on the money returned. 1998,
c. 19, s. 82 (7).
Excess interest
(8) The
declarant is entitled to the excess of all
interest earned on money held in trust over
the interest it is required to pay under
this section. 1998, c. 19, s. 82 (8).
Lease of Units
Notification by
owner
83. (1) The
owner of a unit who leases the unit or
renews a lease of the unit shall, within 30
days of entering into the lease or the
renewal, as the case may be,
(a) notify the
corporation that the unit is leased;
(b) provide the
corporation with the lessee’s name, the
owner’s address and a copy of the lease or
renewal or a summary of it in the form
prescribed by the Minister; and
(c) provide the lessee
with a copy of the declaration, by-laws and
rules of the corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 83 (1).
Termination of
lease
(2) If
a lease of a unit is terminated and not
renewed, the owner of the unit shall notify
the corporation in writing. 1998, c. 19,
s. 83 (2).
Record of notices
(3) A
corporation shall maintain a record of the
notices that it receives under this section.
1998, c. 19, s. 83 (3).
PART VI
OPERATION
Common
Expenses
Contribution of
owners
84. (1) Subject
to the other provisions of this Act, the
owners shall contribute to the common
expenses in the proportions specified in the
declaration. 1998, c. 19, s. 84 (1).
Common surplus
(2) A
common surplus in a corporation shall be
applied either against future common
expenses or paid into the reserve fund, and
except on termination, shall not be
distributed to the owners or mortgagees of
the units. 1998, c. 19, s. 84 (2).
No avoidance
(3) An
owner is not exempt from the obligation to
contribute to the common expenses even if,
(a) the owner has waived
or abandoned the right to use the common
elements or part of them;
(b) the owner is making
a claim against the corporation; or
(c) the declaration,
by-laws or rules restrict the owner from
using the common elements or part of them.
1998, c. 19, s. 84 (3).
Lien upon default
85. (1) If
an owner defaults in the obligation to
contribute to the common expenses, the
corporation has a lien against the owner’s
unit and its appurtenant common interest for
the unpaid amount together with all interest
owing and all reasonable legal costs and
reasonable expenses incurred by the
corporation in connection with the
collection or attempted collection of the
unpaid amount. 1998, c. 19, s. 85 (1).
Expiration of lien
(2) The
lien expires three months after the default
that gave rise to the lien occurred unless
the corporation within that time registers a
certificate of lien in a form prescribed by
the Minister. 1998, c. 19, s. 85 (2).
Certificate of lien
(3) A
certificate of lien when registered covers,
(a) the amount owing
under all of the corporation’s liens against
the owner’s unit that have not expired at
the time of registration of the certificate;
(b) the amount by which
the owner defaults in the obligation to
contribute to the common expenses after the
registration of the certificate; and
(c) all interest owing
and all reasonable legal costs and
reasonable expenses that the corporation
incurs in connection with the collection or
attempted collection of the amounts
described in clauses (a) and (b), including
the costs of preparing and registering the
certificate of lien and a discharge of it.
1998, c. 19, s. 85 (3).
Notice to owner
(4) At
least 10 days before the day a certificate
of lien is registered, the corporation shall
give written notice of the lien to the owner
whose unit is affected by the lien. 1998,
c. 19, s. 85 (4).
Service of notice
(5) The
corporation shall give the notice by
personal service or by sending it by prepaid
mail addressed to the owner at the address
for service that appears in the record of
the corporation maintained under subsection
47 (2). 1998, c. 19, s. 85 (5).
Lien enforcement
(6) The
lien may be enforced in the same manner as a
mortgage. 1998, c. 19, s. 85 (6).
Discharge of lien
(7) Upon
payment of the amounts described in
subsection (3), the corporation shall
prepare and register a discharge of the
certificate of lien in the form prescribed
by the Minister and shall advise the owner
in writing of the particulars of the
registration. 1998, c. 19, s. 85 (7).
Priority of lien
86. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), a lien mentioned in
subsection 85 (1) has priority over every
registered and unregistered encumbrance even
though the encumbrance existed before the
lien arose but does not have priority over,
(a) a claim of the Crown
other than by way of a mortgage;
(b) a claim for taxes, charges, rates or
assessments levied or recoverable under the
Municipal Act, 2001, the City of
Toronto Act, 2006, the Education Act,
the Local Roads Boards Act or the
Statute Labour Act; or
(c) a lien or claim that
is prescribed. 1998, c. 19, s. 86 (1); 2002,
c. 17, Sched. F, Table; 2006, c. 32,
Sched. C, s. 7.
Exception,
non-residential lien
(2) A
lien in respect of a unit for
non-residential purposes does not have
priority under this section in respect of
the amount by which the owner of the unit
has defaulted in the obligation to
contribute to the common expenses before the
coming into force of this section. 1998,
c. 19, s. 86 (2).
Notice of lien
(3) The
corporation shall, on or before the day a
certificate of lien is registered, give
written notice of the lien to every
encumbrancer whose encumbrance is registered
against the title of the unit affected by
the lien. 1998, c. 19, s. 86 (3).
Service of notice
(4) The
corporation shall give the notice by
personal service or by sending it by
registered prepaid mail addressed to the
encumbrancer at the encumbrancer’s last
known address. 1998, c. 19, s. 86 (4).
Effect of no notice
(5) Subject
to subsection (6), the lien loses its
priority over an encumbrance unless the
corporation gives the required notice to the
encumbrancer. 1998, c. 19, s. 86 (5).
Priority if notice
late
(6) If
a corporation gives notice of a lien to an
encumbrancer after the day the certificate
of lien is registered, the lien shall have
priority over the encumbrance to the extent
of,
(a) the arrears of
common expenses that accrued during the
three months before the day notice is given
and that continue to accrue subsequent to
that day; and
(b) all interest owing
on the arrears and all reasonable legal
costs and reasonable expenses incurred by
the corporation in connection with the
collection or attempted collection of the
arrears. 1998, c. 19, s. 86 (6).
Default with
respect to leased unit
87. (1) If
an owner who has leased a unit defaults in
the owner’s obligation to contribute to the
common expenses, the corporation may, by
written notice to the lessee, require the
lessee to pay to the corporation the lesser
of the amount of the default and the amount
of the rent due under the lease. 1998,
c. 19, s. 87 (1).
Service on lessee
(2) The
corporation shall give the notice to the
lessee by personal service or by sending it
by prepaid mail addressed to the lessee at
the address of the unit. 1998, c. 19,
s. 87 (2).
Notice to owner
(3) If
the corporation gives a notice to a lessee,
it shall give a copy of the notice to the
owner of the unit that the lessee has
leased. 1998, c. 19, s. 87 (3).
Service on owner
(4) The
corporation shall give the copy of the
notice to the owner by personal service or
by sending it by prepaid mail addressed to
the owner at the address for service that
appears in the record of the corporation
maintained under subsection 47 (2). 1998,
c. 19, s. 87 (4).
Rent paid to
corporation
(5) Upon
receiving a notice under subsection (1), the
lessee shall make the required payment to
the corporation even if an encumbrancer of
the unit has acquired the right of the
lessor to receive rent under the lease.
1998, c. 19, s. 87 (5).
No default in lease
(6) The
payment to the corporation shall constitute
payment towards rent under the lease and the
lessee shall not by reason only of the
payment to the corporation be considered to
be in default of an obligation in the lease.
1998, c. 19, s. 87 (6).
Mortgagee’s rights
88. (1) Every
mortgage of a unit shall be deemed to
contain a provision that,
(a) the mortgagee has
the right to collect the owner’s
contribution to the common expenses and
shall promptly pay the amount so collected
to the corporation on behalf of the owner;
(b) the owner’s default
in the obligation to contribute to the
common expenses constitutes default under
the mortgage;
(c) the mortgagee has
the right to pay,
(i) the amounts of
the owner’s contribution to the common
expenses that from time to time fall due and
are unpaid in respect of the mortgaged
premises,
(ii) all interest
owing and all reasonable legal costs and
reasonable expenses that the corporation
incurs in connection with the collection or
attempted collection of the amounts
described in subclause (i), including, where
applicable, the costs of preparing and
registering a certificate of lien and a
discharge of it;
(d) payments made by the
mortgagee under clause (c), together with
interest and all reasonable costs, charges
and expenses incurred in respect of the
payments, are to be added to the debt
secured by the mortgage and to be payable,
with interest at the rate payable on the
mortgage; and
(e) if after demand the
owner fails to fully reimburse the
mortgagee, the mortgage immediately becomes
due and payable at the option of the
mortgagee. 1998, c. 19, s. 88 (1).
Statement of common
expenses
(2) A
corporation shall, on request and free of
charge, provide to the mortgagee of a unit a
written statement setting out the common
expenses in respect of the unit and, if
there is a default in the payment of them,
the amounts described in subsection 85 (3)
in respect of the unit. 1998, c. 19,
s. 88 (2).
Repair and
Maintenance
Repair after damage
89. (1) Subject
to sections 91 and 123, the corporation
shall repair the units and common elements
after damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 89 (1).
Extent of
obligation
(2) The
obligation to repair after damage includes
the obligation to repair and replace after
damage or failure but, subject to subsection
(5), does not include the obligation to
repair after damage improvements made to a
unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 89 (2).
Determination of
improvements
(3) For
the purpose of this section, the question of
what constitutes an improvement to a unit
shall be determined by reference to a
standard unit for the class of unit to which
the unit belongs. 1998, c. 19, s. 89 (3).
Standard unit
(4) A
standard unit for the class of unit to which
the unit belongs shall be,
(a) the standard unit
described in a by-law made under clause 56
(1) (h), if the board has made a by-law
under that clause;
(b) the standard unit
described in the schedule mentioned in
clause 43 (5) (h), if the board has not made
a by-law under clause 56 (1) (h). 1998,
c. 19, s. 89 (4).
Transition,
existing corporations
(5) A
corporation that was created before the day
this section comes into force and that had
the obligation of repairing after damage
improvements made to a unit before the
registration of the declaration and
description shall continue to have the
obligation unless it has, by by-law,
established what constitutes a standard unit
for the class of unit to which the unit
belongs. 1998, c. 19, s. 89 (5).
Maintenance
90. (1) Subject
to section 91, the corporation shall
maintain the common elements and each owner
shall maintain the owner’s unit. 1998,
c. 19, s. 90 (1).
Normal repairs
included
(2) The
obligation to maintain includes the
obligation to repair after normal wear and
tear but does not include the obligation to
repair after damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 90 (2).
Provisions of
declaration
91. The
declaration may alter the obligation to
maintain or to repair after damage as set
out in this Act by providing that,
(a) subject to section
123, each owner shall repair the owner’s
unit after damage;
(b) the owners shall
maintain the common elements or any part of
them;
(c) each owner shall
maintain and repair after damage those parts
of the common elements of which the owner
has the exclusive use; and
(d) the corporation
shall maintain the units or any part of
them. 1998, c. 19, s. 91.
Work done for owner
92. (1) If
the declaration provides that the owner has
an obligation to repair after damage and the
owner fails to carry out the obligation
within a reasonable time after damage
occurs, the corporation shall do the work
necessary to carry out the obligation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 92 (1).
Same, maintenance
(2) If
the declaration provides that the owner has
an obligation to maintain the common
elements or any part of them and the owner
fails to carry out the obligation within a
reasonable time, the corporation may do the
work necessary to carry out the obligation.
1998, c. 19, s. 92 (2).
Same, maintenance
of units
(3) If
an owner has an obligation under this Act to
maintain the owner’s unit and fails to carry
out the obligation within a reasonable time
and if the failure presents a potential risk
of damage to the property or the assets of
the corporation or a potential risk of
personal injury to persons on the property,
the corporation may do the work necessary to
carry out the obligation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 92 (3).
Cost
(4) An
owner shall be deemed to have consented to
the work done by a corporation under this
section and the cost of the work shall be
added to the owner’s contribution to the
common expenses. 1998, c. 19, s. 92 (4).
Reserve fund
93. (1) The
corporation shall establish and maintain one
or more reserve funds. 1998, c. 19,
s. 93 (1).
Purpose of fund
(2) A
reserve fund shall be used solely for the
purpose of major repair and replacement of
the common elements and assets of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 93 (2).
Designation not
required
(3) A
fund set up for the purpose mentioned in
subsection (2) shall be deemed to be a
reserve fund even though it may not be so
designated. 1998, c. 19, s. 93 (3).
Contributions to
fund
(4) The
corporation shall collect contributions to
the reserve fund from the owners, as part of
their contributions to the common expenses.
1998, c. 19, s. 93 (4).
Amount of
contributions
(5) Unless
the regulations made under this Act specify
otherwise, until the corporation conducts a
first reserve fund study and implements a
proposed plan under section 94, the total
amount of the contributions to the reserve
fund shall be the greater of the amount
specified in subsection (6) and 10 per cent
of the budgeted amount required for
contributions to the common expenses
exclusive of the reserve fund. 1998, c. 19,
s. 93 (5).
Same, after first
reserve fund study
(6) The
total amount of the contributions to the
reserve fund after the time period specified
in subsection (5) shall be the amount that
is reasonably expected to provide sufficient
funds for the major repair and replacement
of the common elements and assets of the
corporation, calculated on the basis of the
expected repair and replacement costs and
the life expectancy of the common elements
and assets of the corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 93 (6).
Income earned
(7) Interest
and other income earned from the investment
of money in the reserve fund shall form part
of the fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 93 (7).
Reserve fund study
94. (1) The
corporation shall conduct periodic studies
to determine whether the amount of money in
the reserve fund and the amount of
contributions collected by the corporation
are adequate to provide for the expected
costs of major repair and replacement of the
common elements and assets of the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 94 (1).
Contents of study
(2) A
reserve fund study shall be of the
prescribed class, shall include the material
that is prescribed for its class and shall
be performed in accordance with the
standards that are prescribed for its class.
1998, c. 19, s. 94 (2).
Updates
(3) For
the purposes of this Act, an update to a
reserve fund study shall constitute a class
of reserve fund study. 1998, c. 19,
s. 94 (3).
Time of study
(4) A
corporation created on or after the day this
section comes into force shall conduct a
reserve fund study within the year following
the registration of the declaration and
description and subsequently at the
prescribed times. 1998, c. 19, s. 94 (4);
2001, c. 9, Sched. D, s. 3 (2).
Same, existing
corporations
(5) A
corporation created before the day this
section comes into force shall conduct a
reserve fund study at the prescribed times.
1998, c. 19, s. 94 (5).
Person conducting
study
(6) A
reserve fund study shall be conducted by a
person of a prescribed class who shall have
no affiliation with the board or with the
corporation that is contrary to the
regulations made under this Act. 1998,
c. 19, s. 94 (6).
Cost of study
(7) The
cost of conducting the study shall be a
common expense which the board may charge to
the reserve fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 94 (7).
Plan for future
funding
(8) Within
120 days of receiving a reserve fund study,
the board shall review it and propose a plan
for the future funding of the reserve fund
that the board determines will ensure that,
within a prescribed period of time and in
accordance with the prescribed requirements,
the fund will be adequate for the purpose
for which it was established. 1998, c. 19,
s. 94 (8).
Copy of plan
(9) Within
15 days of proposing a plan, the board
shall,
(a) send to the owners a
notice containing a summary of the study, a
summary of the proposed plan and a statement
indicating the areas, if any, in which the
proposed plan differs from the study; and
(b) send to the auditor
a copy of the study, a copy of the proposed
plan and a copy of the notice sent to the
owners under clause (a). 1998, c. 19,
s. 94 (9).
Implementation of
proposed plan
(10) The
board shall implement the proposed plan
after the expiration of 30 days following
the day on which the board complies with
subsection (9). 1998, c. 19, s. 94 (10).
Use of reserve fund
95. (1) No
part of a reserve fund shall be used except
for the purpose mentioned in subsection 93
(2). 1998, c. 19, s. 95 (1).
Board’s use
(2) The
board does not require the consent of the
owners to make an expenditure out of a
reserve fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 95 (2).
No distribution
(3) The
amount of a reserve fund shall constitute an
asset of the corporation and shall not be
distributed to the mortgagees of the units
or, except on termination of the
corporation, to the owners of the units.
1998, c. 19, s. 95 (3).
Warranties
96. (1) All
warranties given with respect to work and
materials furnished for a unit shall be for
the benefit of an owner. 1998, c. 19,
s. 96 (1).
Enforcement by
corporation
(2) The
corporation may enforce the warranties
mentioned in subsection (1) on behalf of an
owner if the corporation does work on behalf
of the owner under section 92. 1998, c. 19,
s. 96 (2).
Same, common
elements
(3) All
warranties given with respect to work and
materials furnished for the common elements
shall be for the benefit of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 96 (3).
Changes to
Common Elements and Assets
Changes made by
corporation
97. (1) If
the corporation has an obligation to repair
the units or common elements after damage or
to maintain them and the corporation carries
out the obligation using materials that are
as reasonably close in quality to the
original as is appropriate in accordance
with current construction standards, the
work shall be deemed not to be an addition,
alteration or improvement to the common
elements or a change in the assets of the
corporation for the purpose of this section.
1998, c. 19, s. 97 (1).
Changes made
without notice
(2) A
corporation may, by resolution of the board
and without notice to the owners, make an
addition, alteration or improvement to the
common elements, a change in the assets of
the corporation or a change in a service
that the corporation provides to the owners
if,
(a) it is necessary to
make the addition, alteration, improvement
or change to comply with an agreement
mentioned in section 113 or the requirements
imposed by any general or special Act or
regulations or by-laws made under that Act;
(b) in the opinion of
the board, it is necessary to make the
addition, alteration, improvement or change
to ensure the safety or security of persons
using the property or assets of the
corporation or to prevent imminent damage to
the property or assets; or
(c) subject to the
regulations made under this Act, the
estimated cost, in any given month or other
prescribed period, if any, of making the
addition, alteration, improvement or change
is no more than the greater of $1,000 and 1
per cent of the annual budgeted common
expenses for the current fiscal year. 1998,
c. 19, s. 97 (2).
Changes made on
notice
(3) A
corporation may make an addition, alteration
or improvement to the common elements, a
change in the assets of the corporation or a
change in a service that the corporation
provides to the owners if,
(a) the corporation has
sent a notice to the owners that,
(i) describes the
proposed addition, alteration, improvement
or change,
(ii) contains a
statement of the estimated cost of the
proposed addition, alteration, improvement
or change indicating the manner in which the
corporation proposes to pay the cost,
(iii) specifies that
the owners have the right, in accordance
with section 46 and within 30 days of
receiving the notice, to requisition a
meeting of owners, and
(iv) contains a copy
of section 46 and this section; and
(b) one of the following
conditions has been met:
1. The owners have
not requisitioned a meeting in accordance
with section 46 within 30 days of receiving
a notice under clause (a).
2. The owners have
requisitioned a meeting in accordance with
section 46 within 30 days of receiving a
notice under clause (a) but have not voted
against the proposed addition, alteration,
improvement or change at the meeting. 1998,
c. 19, s. 97 (3).
Approval of
substantial change
(4) Despite
subsection (3), the corporation shall not
make a substantial addition, alteration,
improvement to the common elements, a
substantial change in the assets of the
corporation or a substantial change in a
service that the corporation provides to the
owners unless the owners who own at least 662/3
per cent of the units of the corporation
vote in favour of approving it. 1998, c. 19,
s. 97 (4).
Meeting
(5) The
vote shall be taken at a meeting duly called
for the purpose of subsection (4). 1998,
c. 19, s. 97 (5).
Meaning of
substantial change
(6) For
the purposes of subsection (4), an addition,
alteration, improvement or change is
substantial if,
(a) its estimated cost,
based on its total cost, regardless of
whether part of the cost is incurred before
or after the current fiscal year, exceeds
the lesser of,
(i) 10 per cent of
the annual budgeted common expenses for the
current fiscal year, and
(ii) the prescribed
amount, if any; or
(b) the board elects to
treat it as substantial. 1998, c. 19,
s. 97 (6).
Cost of changes
(7) The
cost of an addition, alteration, improvement
or change that the corporation makes under
this section shall form part of the common
expenses. 1998, c. 19, s. 97 (7).
Changes made by
owners
98. (1) An
owner may make an addition, alteration or
improvement to the common elements that is
not contrary to this Act or the declaration
if,
(a) the board, by
resolution, has approved the proposed
addition, alteration or improvement;
(b) the owner and the
corporation have entered into an agreement
that,
(i) allocates the
cost of the proposed addition, alteration or
improvement between the corporation and the
owner,
(ii) sets out the
respective duties and responsibilities,
including the responsibilities for the cost
of repair after damage, maintenance and
insurance, of the corporation and the owner
with respect to the proposed addition,
alteration or improvement, and
(iii) sets out the
other matters that the regulations made
under this Act require;
(c) subject to
subsection (2), the requirements of section
97 have been met in cases where that section
would apply if the proposed addition,
alteration or improvement were done by the
corporation; and
(d) the corporation has
included a copy of the agreement described
in clause (b) in the notice that the
corporation is required to send to the
owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 98 (1).
No notice or
approval
(2) Clauses
(1) (c) and (d) do not apply if the proposed
addition, alteration or improvement relates
to a part of the common elements of which
the owner has exclusive use and if the board
is satisfied on the evidence that it may
require that the proposed addition,
alteration or improvement,
(a) will not have an
adverse effect on units owned by other
owners;
(b) will not give rise
to any expense to the corporation;
(c) will not detract
from the appearance of buildings on the
property;
(d) will not affect the
structural integrity of buildings on the
property according to a certificate of an
engineer, if the proposed addition,
alteration or improvement involves a change
to the structure of the buildings; and
(e) will not contravene
the declaration or any prescribed
requirements. 1998, c. 19, s. 98 (2).
When agreement
effective
(3) An
agreement described in clause (1) (b) does
not take effect until,
(a) the conditions set
out in clause (1) (a) and subsection (2)
have been met or the conditions set out in
clauses (1) (a), (c) and (d) have been met;
and
(b) the corporation has
registered it against the title to the
owner’s unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 98 (3).
Lien for default
under agreement
(4) The
corporation may add the costs, charges,
interest and expenses resulting from an
owner’s failure to comply with an agreement
to the common expenses payable for the
owner’s unit and may specify a time for
payment by the owner. 1998, c. 19,
s. 98 (4).
Agreement binds
unit
(5) An
agreement binds the owner’s unit and is
enforceable against the owner’s successors
and assigns. 1998, c. 19, s. 98 (5).
Insurance
Property insurance
99. (1) The
corporation shall obtain and maintain
insurance, on its own behalf and on behalf
of the owners, for damage to the units and
common elements that is caused by major
perils or the other perils that the
declaration or the by-laws specify. 1998,
c. 19, s. 99 (1).
Definition
(2) In
subsection (1),
“major perils” means
the perils of fire, lightning, smoke,
windstorm, hail, explosion, water escape,
strikes, riots or civil commotion, impact by
aircraft or vehicles, vandalism or malicious
acts. 1998, c. 19, s. 99 (2).
Exclusion
ineffective
(3) An
exclusion in the insurance required by this
section is not effective with respect to
damage resulting from faulty or improper
material, workmanship or design that would
be insured, but for the exclusion. 1998,
c. 19, s. 99 (3).
Improvements not
included
(4) The
obligation to insure under subsection (1)
does not include insurance for damage to
improvements made to a unit. 1998, c. 19,
s. 99 (4).
Determination of
improvements
(5) For
the purpose of this section, the question of
what constitutes an improvement to a unit
shall be determined by reference to a
standard unit for the class of unit to which
the unit belongs. 1998, c. 19, s. 99 (5).
Standard unit
(6) A
standard unit for the class of unit to which
the unit belongs shall be,
(a) the standard unit
described in a by-law made under clause 56
(1) (h), if the board has made a by-law
under that clause;
(b) the standard unit
described in the schedule mentioned in
clause 43 (5) (h), if the board has not made
a by-law under clause 56 (1) (h). 1998,
c. 19, s. 99 (6).
Amount of recovery
(7) Subject
to a reasonable deductible, the insurance
required under this section shall cover the
replacement cost of the property damaged by
the perils to which the insurance applies.
1998, c. 19, s. 99 (7).
Breach of policy
(8) Despite
anything in an insurance policy issued under
this section, no act of any person shall be
deemed to be a breach of the conditions of
the policy if the act is prejudicial to the
interests of the corporation or the owners.
1998, c. 19, s. 99 (8).
Termination
(9) An
insurance policy issued under this section
shall be deemed to include a clause that the
insurer shall not terminate the insurance
contract unless the insurer gives the
corporation and the insurance trustee, if
any, at least 60 days notice by registered
mail. 1998, c. 19, s. 99 (9).
Proceeds
100. (1) Despite
anything contained in an insurance trust
agreement that the corporation has entered
into with an insurance trustee, if the
proceeds of an insurance policy issued under
section 99 are less than 15 per cent of the
replacement cost of the property covered by
the policy, the insurer shall pay the
proceeds to the corporation or the person
whom the corporation specifies. 1998, c. 19,
s. 100 (1).
Use of insurance
proceeds
(2) Upon
the proceeds being available, the
corporation shall promptly use them for the
repair or replacement of the damaged units
and common elements, unless the owners have
voted to terminate because of substantial
damage in accordance with section 123. 1998,
c. 19, s. 100 (2).
Payment from
Ontario New Home Warranties Plan
(3) A
corporation that receives a payment out of
the guarantee fund under subsection 14 (3)
or (4) of the Ontario New Home Warranties
Plan Act for remedial work to the common
elements shall promptly use the payment for
the remedial work, unless,
(a) the owners have
voted to terminate because of substantial
damage in accordance with section 123; or
(b) the corporation has
already completed and paid for the remedial
work. 1998, c. 19, s. 100 (3).
Limitation,
mortgage
(4) Despite
any provision in a mortgage or subsection 6
(2) of the Mortgages Act, a mortgagee
may not require that proceeds received under
an insurance policy on the property or on a
part of the property or a payment received
out of the guarantee fund under subsection
14 (3) or (4) of the Ontario New Home
Warranties Plan Act be applied towards
the discharge of the mortgage; a requirement
that contravenes this subsection is void.
1998, c. 19, s. 100 (4).
Double coverage
101. (1) Insurance
that a corporation obtains and maintains
under section 99 shall be deemed not to be
other insurance for the purpose of any
prohibition of or condition against other
insurance in a policy of an owner insuring
against loss of or damage to the owner’s
unit or the owner’s interest in the common
elements and covering only to the extent
that the insurance placed by the corporation
is inapplicable, inadequate or ineffective.
1998, c. 19, s. 101 (1).
No reciprocal
contribution
(2) Despite
section 150 of the Insurance Act, an
insurance policy issued under section 99 and
any other insurance policy, except another
policy under section 99, are not liable to
be brought into contribution with each
other. 1998, c. 19, s. 101 (2).
Other insurance
102. The
corporation shall obtain and maintain,
(a) insurance against
its liability resulting from a breach of
duty as occupier of the common elements or
land that the corporation holds as an asset;
and
(b) insurance against
its liability arising from the ownership,
use or operation, by or on its behalf, of
boilers, machinery, pressure vessels and
motor vehicles. 1998, c. 19, s. 102.
Capacity to
maintain insurance
103. (1) Nothing
in this Act shall be construed to restrict
the capacity of a corporation, an owner or
any other person to obtain and maintain
insurance in respect of an insurable
interest. 1998, c. 19, s. 103 (1).
Same
(2) For
the purposes of sections 99 and 102, the
corporation shall be deemed to have an
insurable interest in the units and common
elements. 1998, c. 19, s. 103 (2).
Disclosure by
insurer
104. An
insurer under an insurance policy required
by this Act shall provide the corporation
with a certificate or memorandum of
insurance declaring the coverage carried by
the corporation on behalf of all owners.
1998, c. 19, s. 104.
Deductible
105. (1) Subject
to subsection (2) and (3), if an insurance
policy obtained by the corporation in
accordance with this Act contains a
deductible clause that limits the amount
payable by the insurer, the portion of a
loss that is excluded from coverage shall be
a common expense. 1998, c. 19, s. 105 (1).
Owner’s
responsibility
(2) If
an owner, a lessee of an owner or a person
residing in the owner’s unit with the
permission or knowledge of the owner through
an act or omission causes damage to the
owner’s unit, the amount that is the lesser
of the cost of repairing the damage and the
deductible limit of the insurance policy
obtained by the corporation shall be added
to the common expenses payable for the
owner’s unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 105 (2).
Same, by-law
(3) The
corporation may pass a by-law to extend the
circumstances in subsection (2) under which
an amount shall be added to the common
expenses payable for an owner’s unit if the
damage to the unit was not caused by an act
or omission of the corporation or its
directors, officers, agents or employees.
1998, c. 19, s. 105 (3).
Owner’s insurable
interest
(4) The
amount payable by an owner under this
section or as a result of a by-law passed
under this section constitutes an insurable
interest of the owner. 1998, c. 19,
s. 105 (4).
Act prevails
106. If
any provision of an insurance policy
required by section 99 or 102 or any part of
the Insurance Act conflicts with
anything in this Act, the provisions of this
Act apply. 1998, c. 19, s. 106.
Amendments
to the Declaration and Description
Amendments with
owners’ consent
107. (1) The
corporation shall not amend the declaration
or the description except in accordance with
this section. 1998, c. 19, s. 107 (1).
Conditions
(2) The
corporation may amend the declaration or the
description if,
(a) the board, by
resolution, has approved the proposed
amendment;
(b) the declarant has
consented to the proposed amendment in
writing if,
(i) at the time the
board approved the proposed amendment, the
declarant had not transferred all of the
units except for the part of the property
described in subsection 22 (5), and
(ii) less than three
years have elapsed from the later of the
date of registration of the declaration and
description and the date that the declarant
first entered into an agreement of purchase
and sale for a unit in the corporation;
(c) the board has held a
meeting of owners in accordance with
subsections (3) and (4);
(d) the owners of at
least 90 per cent of the units at the time
the board approved the proposed amendment
have consented to it in writing, if it makes
a change in a matter described in clause 7
(2) (c), (d) or (f) or 7 (4) (e);
(e) the owners of at
least 80 per cent of the units at the time
the board approved the proposed amendment
have consented to it in writing, in all
cases apart from a case described in clause
(d); and
(f) the corporation has,
in accordance with subsection 47 (8), sent a
notice of the proposed amendment to all
mortgagees whose names appeared in the
record of the corporation maintained under
subsection 47 (2) at the time the board
approved the proposed amendment. 1998,
c. 19, s. 107 (2).
Meeting of owners
(3) The
board shall call a meeting of owners for the
purpose of considering the proposed
amendment. 1998, c. 19, s. 107 (3).
Notice of meeting
(4) The
board shall give the owners a notice of the
meeting which shall include a copy of the
proposed amendment. 1998, c. 19, s. 107 (4).
Registration
(5) The
corporation shall register a copy of an
amendment made under this section but shall
not register the copy until after the
expiration of 30 days following the time at
which it gave the notice described in clause
(2) (f). 1998, c. 19, s. 107 (5).
Form of
registration
(6) The
registered copy of the amendment shall
include a certificate, in the form
prescribed by the Minister, made by the
officers authorized to act on behalf of the
corporation that certifies that the
amendment complies with the requirements of
this section. 1998, c. 19, s. 107 (6).
When amendment
effective
(7) An
amendment made under this section is
ineffective until the copy of the amendment
has been registered. 1998, c. 19,
s. 107 (7).
Change of address
for service
108. Despite
section 107, the board may change the
address for service or the mailing address
of the corporation by registering a notice
of change of address in the form prescribed
by the Minister. 1998, c. 19, s. 108.
Court order
109. (1) The
corporation or an owner may make an
application to the Superior Court of Justice
for an order to amend the declaration or
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 109 (1); 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Notice of
application
(2) The
applicant shall give at least 15 days notice
of an application to the corporation and to
every owner and mortgagee who, on the 30th
day before the application is made, is
listed in the record of the corporation
maintained under subsection 47 (2), but the
applicant is not required to give notice to
the applicant. 1998, c. 19, s. 109 (2).
Grounds for order
(3) The
court may make an order to amend the
declaration or description if satisfied that
the amendment is necessary or desirable to
correct an error or inconsistency that
appears in the declaration or description or
that arises out of the carrying out of the
intent and purpose of the declaration or
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 109 (3).
Registration
(4) An
amendment under this section is ineffective
until a certified copy of the order has been
registered. 1998, c. 19, s. 109 (4).
Order of Director
of Titles
110. (1) The
corporation or an interested person may
apply to the Director of Titles appointed
under section 9 of the Land Titles Act
for an order to amend the declaration or
description to correct an error or
inconsistency that is apparent on the face
of the declaration or description, as the
case may be. 1998, c. 19, s. 110 (1).
Notice of
application
(2) The
applicant shall give notice of the
application in the form and manner that the
Director of Titles directs to the
corporation and to every owner and mortgagee
listed in the record of the corporation
maintained under subsection 47 (2) whose
interest would be affected by the amendment,
but the applicant is not required to give
notice to the applicant. 1998, c. 19,
s. 110 (2).
Grounds for order
(3) The
Director of Titles shall make an order to
amend the declaration or description if
satisfied that the amendment will correct an
error or inconsistency that is apparent on
the face of the declaration or description,
as the case may be. 1998, c. 19, s. 110 (3).
Registration
(4) An
amendment under this section is ineffective
until a certified copy of the order has been
registered. 1998, c. 19, s. 110 (4).
Termination
of Agreements
Management
agreements
111. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), a corporation may, by
resolution of the board, terminate an
agreement for the management of the property
that it has entered into with a person
before the owners elected a new board at a
meeting held in accordance with subsection
43 (1). 1998, c. 19, s. 111 (1).
Notice
(2) To
terminate an agreement, the board shall give
at least 60 days notice in writing of the
date of termination to the person with whom
the corporation entered into the agreement.
1998, c. 19, s. 111 (2).
Other agreements
112. (1) Subject
to subsection (4), a corporation may, by
resolution of the board within 12 months
following the election of a new board at a
meeting held in accordance with subsection
43 (1), terminate an agreement mentioned in
subsection (2) that the corporation has
entered into with a person other than
another corporation before the election of
the new board. 1998, c. 19, s. 112 (1).
Application
(2) Subsection
(1) applies to the following agreements:
1. An agreement for
the provision of goods or services on a
continuing basis.
2. An agreement for
the provision of facilities to the
corporation on other than a non-profit
basis.
3. A lease of all or
part of the common elements for business
purposes. 1998, c. 19, s. 112 (2).
Non-application
(3) Subsection
(1) does not apply to a telecommunications
agreement within the meaning of section 22.
1998, c. 19, s. 112 (3).
Notice
(4) To
terminate an agreement, the board shall give
at least 60 days notice in writing of the
date of termination to the person with whom
the corporation entered into the agreement.
1998, c. 19, s. 112 (4).
Exception,
easements
(5) Nothing
in this section permits the termination of
an easement created by an instrument in
writing except in accordance with the
instrument. 1998, c. 19, s. 112 (5).
Mutual use
agreements
113. (1) If
a corporation and a person have entered into
an agreement for the mutual use, provision
or maintenance or the cost-sharing of
facilities or services before the owners
elected a new board at a meeting held in
accordance with subsection 43 (1), any party
to the agreement may, within 12 months
following the election, make an application
to the Superior Court of Justice for an
order under subsection (3). 1998, c. 19,
s. 113 (1); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Non-application
(2) Subsection
(1) does not apply to a telecommunications
agreement within the meaning of section 22.
1998, c. 19, s. 113 (2).
Court order
(3) The
court may make an order amending or
terminating the agreement or any of its
provisions or may make any other order that
the court deems necessary if it is satisfied
that,
(a) the disclosure
statement did not clearly and adequately
disclose the provisions of the agreement;
and
(b) the agreement or any
of its provisions produces a result that is
oppressive or unconscionably prejudicial to
the corporation or any of the owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 113 (3).
Insurance trust
agreements
114. Despite
anything contained in an insurance trust
agreement that a corporation has entered
into with an insurance trustee and anything
in the declaration, the corporation may
terminate the agreement by giving at least
60 days notice in writing of the termination
date to the trustee. 1998, c. 19, s. 114.
Miscellaneous
Corporation’s money
115. (1) A
person who receives money on behalf of or
for the benefit of the corporation,
including money received from owners as
contributions to the common expenses or the
reserve fund, shall hold the money, together
with interest and other proceeds earned from
investing it, in trust for the performance
by the corporation of its duties and
obligations. 1998, c. 19, s. 115 (1).
Corporation’s
accounts
(2) A
corporation shall maintain one or more
accounts in its name designated as general
accounts and one or more accounts in its
name designated as reserve fund accounts.
1998, c. 19, s. 115 (2).
Location of
accounts
(3) Each
of the accounts shall be located in Ontario
at a bank listed under Schedule I or II to
the Bank Act (Canada), a trust
corporation, a loan corporation or a credit
union authorized by law to receive money on
deposit. 1998, c. 19, s. 115 (3); 2002,
c. 8, Sched. I, s. 7 (2).
Deposit of money
(4) Subject
to subsections (6) and (7), the person who
receives money on behalf of or for the
benefit of the corporation shall pay the
money, together with interest and other
proceeds earned from investing it, into,
(a) a general account of
the corporation, if the money was not
received as contributions from owners to the
reserve fund; or
(b) a reserve fund
account of the corporation, if the money was
received as contributions from owners to the
reserve fund. 1998, c. 19, s. 115 (4).
Definition
(5) In
subsections (6) and (7),
“eligible security”
means a bond, debenture, guaranteed
investment certificate, deposit receipt,
deposit note, certificate of deposit, term
deposit or other similar instrument that,
(a) is issued or
guaranteed by the government of Canada or
the government of any province of Canada,
(b) is issued by an
institution located in Ontario insured by
the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation, or
(c) is a security of
a prescribed class. 1998, c. 19, s. 115 (5).
Investment
(6) The
board may invest all or any part of the
money in the corporation’s general accounts
in eligible securities if,
(a) they are convertible
to cash within 90 days following a request
by the board; and
(b) they are,
(i) registered in the
name of the corporation, or
(ii) held in a
segregated account under the name of the
corporation by a member of the Investment
Dealers Association of Canada and insured by
the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. 1998,
c. 19, s. 115 (6).
Same, reserve fund
accounts
(7) Subject
to subsection (8), the board may invest all
or any part of the money in the
corporation’s reserve fund accounts in
eligible securities if they are,
(a) registered in the
name of the corporation; or
(b) held in a segregated
account under the name of the corporation by
a member of the Canadian Investment Dealers
Association and insured by the Canadian
Investor Protection Fund. 1998, c. 19,
s. 115 (7).
Investment plan
(8) Before
investing any part of the money in the
corporation’s reserve fund accounts, the
board shall develop an investment plan based
on the anticipated cash requirements of the
reserve fund as set out in the most recent
reserve fund study. 1998, c. 19, s. 115 (8).
Records
(9) A
person who receives money under subsection
(1) shall keep records relating to the
receipt and disposition of all money under
this section and shall, upon reasonable
notice and at all reasonable times, make the
records available for examination by the
corporation, an owner or a mortgagee. 1998,
c. 19, s. 115 (9).
Use of common
elements by owners
116. An
owner may make reasonable use of the common
elements subject to this Act, the
declaration, the by-laws and the rules.
1998, c. 19, s. 116.
Dangerous
activities
117. No
person shall permit a condition to exist or
carry on an activity in a unit or in the
common elements if the condition or the
activity is likely to damage the property or
cause injury to an individual. 1998, c. 19,
s. 117.
Entry by canvassers
118. No
corporation or employee or agent of a
corporation shall restrict reasonable access
to the property by candidates, or their
authorized representatives, for election to
the House of Commons, the Legislative
Assembly or an office in a municipal
government or school board if access is
necessary for the purpose of canvassing or
distributing election material. 1998, c. 19,
s. 118.
Compliance with Act
119. (1) A
corporation, the directors, officers and
employees of a corporation, a declarant, the
lessor of a leasehold condominium
corporation, an owner, an occupier of a unit
and a person having an encumbrance against a
unit and its appurtenant common interest
shall comply with this Act, the declaration,
the by-laws and the rules. 1998, c. 19,
s. 119 (1).
Responsibility for
occupier
(2) An
owner shall take all reasonable steps to
ensure that an occupier of the owner’s unit
and all invitees, agents and employees of
the owner or occupier comply with this Act,
the declaration, the by-laws and the rules.
1998, c. 19, s. 119 (2).
Right against owner
(3) A
corporation, an owner and every person
having a registered mortgage against a unit
and its appurtenant common interest have the
right to require the owners and the
occupiers of units to comply with this Act,
the declaration, the by-laws and the rules.
1998, c. 19, s. 119 (3).
Proposed unit
(4) Until
the declarant registers a declaration and
description and the by-laws and rules of the
corporation come into force, an occupier of
a proposed unit shall comply with this Act,
the declaration and the by-laws and rules
proposed by the declarant; the declarant
shall take all reasonable steps to ensure
that the occupier complies with this
section. 1998, c. 19, s. 119 (4).
Right against
occupier
(5) Until
the declarant registers a declaration and
description and the by-laws and rules of the
corporation come into force, an occupier of
a proposed unit has the right to require the
occupiers of the other units in the proposed
corporation to comply with this Act, the
declaration and the by-laws and rules
proposed by the declarant. 1998, c. 19,
s. 119 (5).
PART VII
AMALGAMATION
Amalgamation
120. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, two
or more leasehold condominium corporations
or two or more freehold condominium
corporations of the same type may amalgamate
by registering a declaration and description
amalgamating the corporations if,
(a) the board of each
amalgamating corporation has held a meeting
in accordance with subsections (2) and (3);
(b) the owners of at
least 90 per cent of the units of each
corporation as of the date of that
corporation’s meeting have, within 90 days
of the meeting, consented in writing to the
registration of the declaration and
description; and
(c) the corporations
have complied with all prescribed
requirements. 1998, c. 19, s. 120 (1).
Meeting of owners
(2) The
board of each amalgamating corporation shall
call a meeting of owners for the purpose of
considering a declaration and description
amalgamating the corporations. 1998, c. 19,
s. 120 (2).
Notice of meeting
(3) The
board shall give the owners a notice of the
meeting which shall include,
(a) a copy of the
proposed declaration and description of the
amalgamated corporation and a copy of the
proposed budget for the corporation’s first
year of operation;
(b) a copy of all
proposed by-laws and rules of the
amalgamated corporation;
(c) a certificate as to
the status for each amalgamating corporation
in the form prescribed by the Minister;
(d) for each
amalgamating corporation, the auditor’s
report on the last annual financial
statements of the corporation, if it is not
included in the certificate mentioned in
clause (c); and
(e) all additional
statements and information that the
regulations made under this Act require.
1998, c. 19, s. 120 (3).
Signing of
declaration
(4) The
declaration of an amalgamated corporation
shall not be registered unless the officers
of each amalgamating corporation who are
duly authorized to sign on behalf of the
corporation have signed the declaration.
1998, c. 19, s. 120 (4).
Part VIII not
applicable
(5) Part
VIII does not apply to an amalgamation
carried out under this section but does
apply to an amalgamated corporation after
the registration of its declaration and
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 120 (5).
Effect of
registration
121. (1) On
registration of a declaration and
description for an amalgamated corporation,
(a) the amalgamating
corporations are amalgamated and continue as
one corporation;
(b) the units and common
interests of the amalgamating corporations
are continued as units and common interests
in the amalgamated corporation;
(c) all encumbrances,
easements and leases that affected the units
or common elements of the amalgamating
corporations are continued as encumbrances,
easements and leases respectively that
affect the units or common elements, as the
case may be, of the amalgamated corporation;
(d) all declarations,
descriptions, by-laws and rules of the
amalgamating corporations cease to apply;
(e) the directors of the
amalgamating corporations constitute the
first directors of the amalgamated
corporation;
(f) the proposed by-laws
and rules mentioned in clause 120 (3) (b)
shall be the by-laws and rules respectively
of the amalgamated corporation until the
corporation amends or replaces them;
(g) the amalgamated
corporation possesses all the assets, rights
and privileges and is subject to all
liabilities, including civil, criminal and
quasi-criminal, and all contracts,
agreements, warranties and debts of each of
the amalgamating corporations;
(h) a conviction
against, or ruling, order or judgment in
favour of or against an amalgamating
corporation may be enforced by or against
the amalgamated corporation; and
(i) the amalgamated
corporation shall be deemed to be the party
plaintiff or the party defendant, as the
case may be, in all civil actions commenced
by or against an amalgamating corporation
before the amalgamation becomes effective.
1998, c. 19, s. 121 (1).
First auditors
(2) Immediately
following the registration of a declaration
and description for an amalgamated
corporation, the directors shall appoint one
or more auditors who shall hold office until
the close of the meeting of owners described
in subsection (3). 1998, c. 19, s. 121 (2).
Subsequent
directors
(3) The
first directors of an amalgamated
corporation shall hold office until the
owners elect their successors at a meeting
which the first directors shall call and
hold within 60 days following the
registration of the declaration and
description for the corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 121 (3).
Subsequent auditors
(4) At
the meeting the owners shall, subject to
section 60 with necessary modifications,
appoint successors for the auditors
mentioned in subsection (2). 1998, c. 19,
s. 121 (4).
PART VIII
TERMINATION
Termination with
consent
122. (1) A
corporation shall register a notice
terminating the government of the property
by this Act if,
(a) the owners of at
least 80 per cent of the units, at the date
of the vote, vote in favour of termination;
and
(b) at least 80 per cent
of those persons who, at the date of the
vote, have registered claims against the
property, that were created after the
registration of the declaration and
description that made this Act applicable to
the property, consent in writing to the
termination. 1998, c. 19, s. 122 (1).
Notice of
termination
(2) The
notice of termination shall be in the form
prescribed by the Minister, shall be signed
by the authorized officers of the
corporation and shall include a certificate
stating that the persons described in clause
(1) (b) have consented in writing to the
termination. 1998, c. 19, s. 122 (2).
Termination upon
substantial damage
123. (1) The
registration of a notice under subsection
(7) terminates the government of the
property by this Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 123 (1).
Definition
(2) In
this section,
“substantial damage”
means damage for which the cost of repair is
estimated to equal or exceed 25 per cent of
the replacement cost of all the buildings
and structures located on the property.
1998, c. 19, s. 123 (2).
Estimates of damage
(3) If
damage occurs to a building or a structure
located on the property that, in the opinion
of the board, may constitute substantial
damage, the board shall have at least two
persons, who shall have no affiliation with
the board and who, in the opinion of the
board, are qualified, make estimates of the
damage within 30 days after the occurrence
of the damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 123 (3).
Determination by
board
(4) The
board shall determine whether, based on the
estimates, there has been substantial
damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 123 (4).
Notice of
determination
(5) If
the board determines that there has been
substantial damage, it shall give notice of
its determination to the owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 123 (5).
Contents of notice
(6) The
notice shall specify that,
(a) the owners have the
right, in accordance with section 46 and
within 30 days of receiving the notice, to
requisition a meeting of owners; and
(b) the board is
required to register a notice terminating
the government of the property by this Act
if the condition described in subsection (7)
is met. 1998, c. 19, s. 123 (6).
Vote for
termination
(7) The
board shall register a notice terminating
the government of the property by this Act
if the owners of at least 80 per cent of the
units, at the date of the vote, vote in
favour of termination. 1998, c. 19,
s. 123 (7).
Form of notice
(8) The
notice shall be in the form prescribed by
the Minister and shall be signed by the
authorized officers of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 123 (8).
Time of
registration
(9) The
board shall register the notice within 30
days of a vote in favour of termination
under subsection (7). 1998, c. 19,
s. 123 (9).
Repairs if no
termination
(10) If
there is no vote in favour of termination
under subsection (7), the corporation shall,
within a reasonable time, repair the damage
to the building or structure located on the
property. 1998, c. 19, s. 123 (10).
Termination upon
sale of property
124. (1) If
the corporation sells the property or a part
of the common elements, this Act ceases to
govern the property being sold. 1998, c. 19,
s. 124 (1).
Authorization of
sale
(2) The
corporation shall not sell the property or a
part of the common elements unless,
(a) the owners of at
least 80 per cent of the units, at the date
of the vote, vote in favour of the sale;
(b) at least 80 per cent
of those persons who, at the date of the
vote, have registered claims against the
property being sold, that were created after
the registration of the declaration and
description that made this Act applicable to
the property being sold, consent in writing
to the sale; and
(c) if the sale is for
only part of the common elements and
includes common elements that are for the
use of the owners of certain designated
units and not all the owners, the owners of
the designated units consent in writing to
the sale. 1998, c. 19, s. 124 (2).
Conveyance
(3) When
a sale takes place, the board shall deliver
to the purchaser the following documents
signed by the authorized officers of the
corporation: a deed and a certificate in the
form prescribed by the Minister stating that
the persons who, under subsection (2), are
required to vote in favour of the sale or
consent in writing to the sale have done so.
1998, c. 19, s. 124 (3).
Proceeds
(4) Subject
to subsection (5), the owners at the time of
the registration of the deed shall share the
net proceeds of the sale in the same
proportions as their common interests. 1998,
c. 19, s. 124 (4).
Same
(5) The
portion of the proceeds of the sale that is
attributable to a portion of the common
elements that is for the use of the owners
of certain designated units, and not all the
owners, shall be divided among the owners of
the designated units in the proportions in
which their interests are affected. 1998,
c. 19, s. 124 (5).
Right of dissenters
125. (1) A
corporation that has made a sale under
section 124 and every owner in the
corporation shall be deemed to have made an
agreement that an owner who has dissented on
the vote authorizing the sale may, within 30
days of the vote, submit to mediation a
dispute over the fair market value of the
property or the part of the common elements
that has been sold, determined as of the
time of the sale. 1998, c. 19, s. 125 (1).
Application of s.
132
(2) If
an owner submits a dispute to mediation,
section 132 applies to the dispute with
necessary modifications as if it were a
disagreement under that section. 1998,
c. 19, s. 125 (2).
Notice
(3) An
owner who submits a dispute to mediation
shall give the corporation notice of
intention within 10 days after the vote
authorizing the sale. 1998, c. 19,
s. 125 (3).
Entitlement to
amount
(4) An
owner who serves a notice of intention is
entitled to receive from the proceeds of the
sale the amount the owner would have
received if the sale price had been the fair
market value as determined by the
arbitration. 1998, c. 19, s. 125 (4).
Deficiency
(5) The
corporation shall pay to each of the owners
who served a notice of intention, the
deficiency in the amount to which the owner
is entitled if the proceeds of the sale are
inadequate to pay the amount. 1998, c. 19,
s. 125 (5).
Liability
(6) The
owners other than those who dissented on the
vote authorizing the sale are liable for the
amount of the deficiency payments determined
by the proportions of their common
interests. 1998, c. 19, s. 125 (6).
Common expenses of
other owners
(7) The
corporation shall add the amount of the
liability of each of the owners who voted in
favour of the sale to the common expenses
appurtenant to the units of those owners and
may specify a time for payment by each of
those owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 125 (7).
Expropriation
126. (1) Upon
expropriation of the property or a part of
the common elements under the
Expropriations Act, this Act ceases to
govern the property or the part of the
common elements, as the case may be. 1998,
c. 19, s. 126 (1).
Proceeds
(2) Subject
to subsection (3), if part of the common
elements is expropriated under the
Expropriations Act, the owners shall
share the proceeds in the same proportions
as their common interests. 1998, c. 19,
s. 126 (2).
Same
(3) The
portion of the proceeds received on
expropriation under the Expropriations
Act that is attributable to a portion of
the common elements that is for the use of
the owners of certain designated units, and
not all the owners, shall be divided among
the owners of the designated units in the
proportions in which their interests are
affected. 1998, c. 19, s. 126 (3).
Effect of
registration
127. (1) Upon
registration of a notice of termination
under section 122 or 123,
(a) this Act ceases to
govern the property;
(b) the owners are
tenants in common of the land and interests
appurtenant to the land described in the
description in the same proportions as their
common interests;
(c) claims against the
land and the interests appurtenant to the
land described in the description, that were
created before the registration of the
declaration and description that made this
Act applicable to the land, are as effective
as if the declaration and description had
not been registered;
(d) encumbrances against
each unit and common interest, that were
created after the registration of the
declaration and description that made this
Act applicable to the unit, are claims
against the interests of the owner in the
land and interests appurtenant to the land
described in the description and have the
same priority as they had before the
registration of the notice of termination;
and
(e) all other claims
against the property that were created after
the registration of the declaration and
description that made this Act applicable to
the property are extinguished. 1998, c. 19,
s. 127 (1).
Same, sale or
expropriation
(2) Upon
the registration of a deed and a certificate
under section 124 or upon expropriation
under section 126,
(a) this Act ceases to
govern the property being sold or
expropriated, as the case may be;
(b) claims against the
land and interests appurtenant to the land,
that were created before the registration of
the declaration and description that made
this Act applicable to the land, are as
effective as if the declaration and
description had not been registered; and
(c) claims against the
property being sold or expropriated, as the
case may be, that were created after the
registration of the declaration and
description that made this Act applicable to
that property, are extinguished. 1998,
c. 19, s. 127 (2).
Termination by
court
128. (1) A
corporation, an owner, or a person having an
encumbrance against a unit and common
interest, may make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order
terminating the government of the property
by this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 128 (1); 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for order
(2) The
court may order that the government of the
property by this Act be terminated if the
court is of the opinion that the termination
would be just and equitable, having regard
to,
(a) the scheme and
intent of this Act;
(b) the probability of
unfairness to the owners if the court does
not order termination;
(c) the probability of
confusion and uncertainty in the affairs of
the corporation or of the owners if the
court does not order termination; and
(d) the best interests
of the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 128 (2).
Contents of order
(3) The
court may include in the order all
provisions that it considers appropriate in
the circumstances. 1998, c. 19, s. 128 (3).
Registration of
order
(4) If
the court makes an order terminating the
government of the property by this Act, the
applicant shall register the order. 1998,
c. 19, s. 128 (4).
Distribution of
assets
129. When
the owners and the property cease to be
governed by this Act,
(a) the assets of the
corporation shall be used to pay all claims
for the payment of money against the
corporation; and
(b) the remainder of the
assets of the corporation shall be
distributed among the owners in the same
proportions as the proportions of their
common interests. 1998, c. 19, s. 129.
PART IX
ENFORCEMENT
Inspector
130. (1) Upon
application by the corporation, a lessor of
a leasehold condominium corporation, an
owner or a mortgagee of a unit, the Superior
Court of Justice may make an order
appointing an inspector to,
(a) investigate the
items that the declarant is required to give
to the board under subsections 43 (4), (5)
and (7);
(b) investigate the
corporation’s records mentioned in
subsection 55 (1);
(c) investigate the
affairs of a person mentioned in subsection
115 (1); or
(d) conduct an audit of
the accounts and records mentioned in
section 43, 55 or 115. 1998, c. 19,
s. 130 (1); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for order
(2) The
court may make the order if it is satisfied
that the application is made in good faith
and that the order is in the best interests
of the applicant. 1998, c. 19, s. 130 (2).
Powers of inspector
(3) The
inspector shall have the powers of a
commission under Part II of the Public
Inquiries Act that the order states and
when the inspector exercises those powers,
that Part applies to the inspector’s
investigation or audit as if it were an
inquiry under that Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 130 (3).
Contents of order
(4) In
the order, the court,
(a) shall require the
inspector to make a written report within a
specified time to the applicant for the
order and to the corporation on the
activities that the order requires the
inspector to perform; and
(b) may make an order as
to the costs of the investigation or audit
or any other matter as it deems proper.
1998, c. 19, s. 130 (4).
Summary of report
(5) The
board shall send a summary of the report to
the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 130 (5).
Administrator
131. (1) Upon
application by the corporation, a lessor of
a leasehold condominium corporation, an
owner or a mortgagee of a unit, the Superior
Court of Justice may make an order
appointing an administrator for a
corporation under this Act if at least 120
days have passed since a turn-over meeting
has been held under section 43. 1998, c. 19,
s. 131 (1); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for order
(2) The
court may make the order if the court is of
the opinion that it would be just or
convenient, having regard to the scheme and
intent of this Act and the best interests of
the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 131 (2).
Contents of order
(3) The
order shall,
(a) specify the powers
of the administrator;
(b) state which powers
and duties, if any, of the board shall be
transferred to the administrator; and
(c) contain the
directions and impose the terms that the
court considers just. 1998, c. 19,
s. 131 (3).
Application for
direction
(4) The
administrator may apply to the court for the
opinion, advice or direction of the court on
any question regarding the management or
administration of the corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 131 (4).
Mediation and
arbitration
132. (1) Every
agreement mentioned in subsection (2) shall
be deemed to contain a provision to submit a
disagreement between the parties with
respect to the agreement to,
(a) mediation by a
person selected by the parties unless the
parties have previously submitted the
disagreement to mediation; and
(b) unless a mediator has obtained a
settlement between the parties with respect
to the disagreement, arbitration under the
Arbitration Act, 1991,
(i) 60 days after the
parties submit the disagreement to
mediation, if the parties have not selected
a mediator under clause (a), or
(ii) 30 days after
the mediator selected under clause (a)
delivers a notice stating that the mediation
has failed. 1998, c. 19, s. 132 (1).
Application
(2) Subsection
(1) applies to the following agreements:
1. An agreement
between a declarant and a corporation.
2. An agreement
between two or more corporations.
3. An agreement
described in clause 98 (1) (b) between a
corporation and an owner.
4. An agreement
between a corporation and a person for the
management of the property. 1998, c. 19,
s. 132 (2).
Disagreements on
budget statement
(3) The
declarant and the board shall be deemed to
have agreed in writing to submit a
disagreement between the parties with
respect to the budget statement described in
subsection 72 (6) or the obligations of the
declarant under section 75 to mediation and
arbitration in accordance with clauses (1)
(a) and (b) respectively. 1998, c. 19,
s. 132 (3).
Disagreements
between corporation and owners
(4) Every
declaration shall be deemed to contain a
provision that the corporation and the
owners agree to submit a disagreement
between the parties with respect to the
declaration, by-laws or rules to mediation
and arbitration in accordance with clauses
(1) (a) and (b) respectively. 1998, c. 19,
s. 132 (4).
Duty of mediator
(5) A
mediator appointed under clause (1) (a)
shall confer with the parties and endeavour
to obtain a settlement with respect to the
disagreement submitted to mediation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 132 (5).
Fees and expenses
(6) Each
party shall pay the share of the mediator’s
fees and expenses that,
(a) the settlement
specifies, if a settlement is obtained; or
(b) the mediator
specifies in the notice stating that the
mediation has failed, if the mediation
fails. 1998, c. 19, s. 132 (6).
Record of
settlement
(7) Upon
obtaining a settlement between the parties
with respect to the disagreement submitted
to mediation, the mediator shall make a
written record of the settlement which shall
form part of the agreement or matter that
was the subject of the mediation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 132 (7).
False, misleading
statements
133. (1) A
declarant shall not, in a statement or
information that the declarant is required
to provide under this Act,
(a) make a material
statement or provide material information
that is false, deceptive or misleading; or
(b) omit a material
statement or material information that the
declarant is required to provide. 1998,
c. 19, s. 133 (1).
Right to damages
(2) A
corporation or an owner may make an
application to the Superior Court of Justice
to recover damages from a declarant for any
loss sustained as a result of relying on a
statement or on information that the
declarant is required to provide under this
Act if the statement or information,
(a) contains a material
statement or material information that is
false, deceptive or misleading; or
(b) does not contain a
material statement or material information
that the declarant is required to provide.
1998, c. 19, s. 133 (2); 2000, c. 26,
Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Compliance order
134. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), an owner, an occupier of
a proposed unit, a corporation, a declarant,
a lessor of a leasehold condominium
corporation or a mortgagee of a unit may
make an application to the Superior Court of
Justice for an order enforcing compliance
with any provision of this Act, the
declaration, the by-laws, the rules or an
agreement between two or more corporations
for the mutual use, provision or maintenance
or the cost-sharing of facilities or
services of any of the parties to the
agreement. 1998, c. 19, s. 134 (1); 2000,
c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Pre-condition for
application
(2) If
the mediation and arbitration processes
described in section 132 are available, a
person is not entitled to apply for an order
under subsection (1) until the person has
failed to obtain compliance through using
those processes. 1998, c. 19, s. 134 (2).
Contents of order
(3) On
an application, the court may, subject to
subsection (4),
(a) grant the order
applied for;
(b) require the persons
named in the order to pay,
(i) the damages
incurred by the applicant as a result of the
acts of non-compliance, and
(ii) the costs
incurred by the applicant in obtaining the
order; or
(c) grant such other
relief as is fair and equitable in the
circumstances. 1998, c. 19, s. 134 (3).
Order terminating
lease
(4) The
court shall not, under subsection (3), grant
an order terminating a lease of a unit for
residential purposes unless the court is
satisfied that,
(a) the lessee is in
contravention of an order that has been made
under subsection (3); or
(b) the lessee has
received a notice described in subsection 87
(1) and has not paid the amount required by
that subsection. 1998, c. 19, s. 134 (4).
Addition to common
expenses
(5) If
a corporation obtains an award of damages or
costs in an order made against an owner or
occupier of a unit, the damages or costs,
together with any additional actual costs to
the corporation in obtaining the order,
shall be added to the common expenses for
the unit and the corporation may specify a
time for payment by the owner of the unit.
1998, c. 19, s. 134 (5).
Oppression remedy
135. (1) An
owner, a corporation, a declarant or a
mortgagee of a unit may make an application
to the Superior Court of Justice for an
order under this section. 1998, c. 19,
s. 135 (1); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for order
(2) On
an application, if the court determines that
the conduct of an owner, a corporation, a
declarant or a mortgagee of a unit is or
threatens to be oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to the applicant or unfairly
disregards the interests of the applicant,
it may make an order to rectify the matter.
1998, c. 19, s. 135 (2).
Contents of order
(3) On
an application, the judge may make any order
the judge deems proper including,
(a) an order prohibiting
the conduct referred to in the application;
and
(b) an order requiring
the payment of compensation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 135 (3).
Other remedies
136. Unless
the Act specifically provides the contrary,
nothing in this Act restricts the remedies
otherwise available to a person for the
failure of another to perform a duty imposed
by this Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 136.
Offences
137. (1) Every
corporation under this Act or any other Act
and every other person who knowingly
contravenes subsection 43 (1), (3), (4),
(5), (7), 55 (1) or 72 (1), section 81,
subsection 115 (1), (2), (3), (4) or (9),
section 118, subsection 133 (1), section
143, subsection 147 (1), (3), 152 (1), (2)
or 161 (2) or section 169 is guilty of an
offence and on conviction is liable to a
fine of,
(a) not more than
$100,000, if the person is a corporation
within the meaning of this Act or any other
Act; or
(b) not more than
$25,000, if the person is not a corporation
within the meaning of this Act or any other
Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 137 (1).
Directors and
officers
(2) It
is an offence for a director or officer of a
corporation within the meaning of this Act
or any other Act to knowingly cause,
authorize, permit, participate in or
acquiesce in the commission by the
corporation of an offence mentioned in
subsection (1). 1998, c. 19, s. 137 (2).
Limitation
(3) No
proceeding under this section shall be
commenced after the second anniversary of
the day on which the facts upon which the
proceeding is based first came to the
knowledge of the Director designated under
the Ministry of Consumer and Business
Services Act. 2006, c. 34, s. 7.
Compliance order
(4) The
court hearing the proceeding may make an
order requiring a person convicted of an
offence to comply with the provisions of the
Act that the person has contravened, if the
court has competent jurisdiction to make the
order. 1998, c. 19, s. 137 (4).
PART X
COMMON ELEMENTS CONDOMINIUM CORPORATIONS
Creation
138. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, a
declarant may register a declaration and
description that create common elements but
do not divide the land into units. 1998,
c. 19, s. 138 (1).
Type
(2) The
type of corporation created by the
registration of a declaration and
description under subsection (1) shall be
known as a common elements condominium
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 138 (2).
Requirements for
registration
(3) A
declaration and description for a common
elements condominium corporation shall not
be registered unless the registration would
create a freehold condominium corporation
that is not a vacant land condominium
corporation or, except as provided in the
regulations made under this Act, a phased
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 138 (3).
Application
(4) Subject
to this Part, Parts I to IX and XIV apply
with necessary modifications to a common
elements condominium corporation, except
that,
(a) references to a unit
or a proposed unit shall be deemed to be
references to a common interest in the
corporation or a proposed common interest in
the corporation, respectively;
(b) references to a
mortgagee of a unit shall be deemed to be
references to a mortgagee of a common
interest appurtenant to an owner’s parcel of
land mentioned in subsection 139 (1); and
(c) references to a
common interest appurtenant to a unit shall
be deemed to be references to a common
interest appurtenant to an owner’s parcel of
land mentioned in subsection 139 (1). 1998,
c. 19, s. 138 (4).
Other corporations
(5) This
Part does not apply to a corporation that is
not a common elements condominium
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 138 (5).
Owners’ land
139. (1) A
declaration for a common elements
condominium corporation shall not be
registered unless each of the owners of a
common interest in the corporation,
(a) also owns the
freehold estate in a parcel of land,
(i) that is not
included in the land described in the
description,
(ii) that, subject to
the regulations made under this Act, is
situated within the boundaries of the land
titles and registry divisions of the land
registry office in which the description of
the corporation is registered, and
(iii) to which the Land Titles Act
applies or for which a certificate of title
has been registered under the
Certification of Titles Act; and
(b) has signed a
certificate in a form prescribed by the
Minister stating the owner consents to the
registration of the declaration and the
notice described in subclause (2) (b) (i).
1998, c. 19, s. 139 (1).
Non-severable from
common interest
(2) Upon
the registration of a declaration and
description for a common elements
condominium corporation,
(a) the common interest
of an owner in the corporation attaches to
the owner’s parcel of land; and
(b) the declarant shall
register against each owner’s parcel of
land,
(i) a notice in the
form prescribed by the Minister that sets
out the information contained in clause (a),
and
(ii) a copy of the
certificate described in clause (1) (b).
1998, c. 19, s. 139 (2).
Division of parcel
(3) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, if
an owner’s parcel of land is divided into
two or more new parcels, the owners of the
new parcels are joint owners of the common
interest attached to the original parcel.
1998, c. 19, s. 139 (3).
Common interest
preserved
(4) Despite
any other Act, upon the sale of the parcel
of land of an owner in a common elements
condominium corporation or the enforcement
of an encumbrance registered against the
parcel, the common interest of the owner in
the corporation is not terminated or severed
from the parcel, but continues to be
attached to the parcel. 1998, c. 19,
s. 139 (4).
Lien
(5) If
an owner defaults in the obligation to
contribute to the common expenses of a
common elements condominium corporation, the
corporation has a lien against the owner’s
parcel of land. 1998, c. 19, s. 139 (5).
Same
(6) The
lien is a lien for the purposes of sections
85 and 86. 1998, c. 19, s. 139 (6).
Priority of lien
(7) Despite
section 86, the lien does not have priority
over an encumbrance registered against an
owner’s parcel of land before the common
interest of the owner attached to it unless
the encumbrancer agrees in writing
otherwise. 1998, c. 19, s. 139 (7).
Contents of
declaration
140. In
addition to the requirements of subsection 7
(2), a declaration for a common elements
condominium corporation shall contain,
(a) a statement that the
common elements are intended for the use and
enjoyment of the owners;
(b) a legal description
of the parcels of land mentioned in
subsection 139 (1); and
(c) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 140.
Contents of
description
141. Clauses
8 (1) (c), (d), (f) and 8 (3) (b) do not
apply to a description for a common elements
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 141.
Subdivision control
142. Section
50 of the Planning Act does not apply
in respect of dealings with common interests
in a common elements condominium
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 142.
Disclosure
statement
143. In
addition to the requirements of subsection
72 (3), a disclosure statement for a common
interest in a common elements condominium
corporation shall contain,
(a) a statement that the
common interest attaches to the owner’s
parcel of land described in the declaration
of the corporation and cannot be severed
from the parcel upon the sale of the parcel
or the enforcement of an encumbrance
registered against the parcel; and
(b) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 143.
Repair after damage
and insurance
144. (1) Sections
89 and 90 and clauses 91 (a) and (d) do not
apply to a common elements condominium
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 144 (1).
Repair after damage
and maintenance
(2) Subject
to clauses 91 (b) and (c) and section 123,
the corporation shall repair and replace the
common elements after damage or failure and
shall maintain them. 1998, c. 19,
s. 144 (2).
Insurance
(3) References
to a unit in sections 99 to 105 shall be
deemed not to apply to a common elements
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 144 (3).
PART XI
PHASED CONDOMINIUM CORPORATIONS
Type of corporation
145. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, the
declarant may create additional units or
common elements in a corporation in
accordance with this Part after the
registration of the declaration and
description if,
(a) the corporation is a
freehold condominium corporation;
(b) except as provided
in the regulations made under this Act, the
corporation is not a vacant land condominium
corporation or a common elements condominium
corporation;
(c) the declaration
indicates that the corporation is a phased
condominium corporation;
(d) the description
contains a legal description of the land
that will be the servient tenement within
the meaning of section 151; and
(e) the board has been
elected at a meeting of owners held at a
time when the declarant did not own a
majority of the units. 1998, c. 19,
s. 145 (1).
Type of corporation
(2) A
corporation that meets the criteria
described in subsection (1) shall be known
as a phased condominium corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 145 (2).
Definition
(3) In
this Part,
“phase” means the
additional units and common elements in a
phased condominium corporation that are
created in accordance with this Part upon
the registration of an amendment to both the
declaration and description. 1998, c. 19,
s. 145 (3).
Application
(4) Subject
to this Part, Parts I to IX and XIV apply
with necessary modifications to a phased
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 145 (4).
Same
(5) For
the purposes of subsection (4), a reference
to the registration of the declaration and
description in section 13, subsection 14
(1), 22 (4), 56 (11), 58 (9), 78 (1), 80
(6), 122 (1) or (2), 124 (2) or (3), 127 (1)
or (2) shall be deemed, if applicable, to be
a reference to the registration of the
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase.
1998, c. 19, s. 145 (5).
Other corporations
(6) This
Part does not apply to a corporation that is
not a phased condominium corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 145 (6).
Creation of phase
146. (1) A
phase that contains units may be created
only in the blocks of numbers of units,
during the time periods and in accordance
with the requirements that are prescribed.
1998, c. 19, s. 146 (1).
Phase containing
common elements
(2) A
phase that contains common elements may be
created only during the time periods and in
accordance with the requirements that are
prescribed. 1998, c. 19, s. 146 (2).
Method of creation
(3) To
create a phase, the declarant shall register
an amendment to both the declaration and
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 146 (3).
Amendment to
declaration
(4) The
amendment to the declaration required for
creating a phase shall include,
(a) the consent of every
person having a registered mortgage against
the land included in the phase or interests
appurtenant to the land, as the land and the
interests are described in the amendment to
the description required for creating the
phase;
(b) a statement of the
proportions, expressed in percentages, of
the common interests appurtenant to the
units in the corporation after the creation
of the phase;
(c) a statement of the
proportions, expressed in percentages
allocated to the units in the corporation,
in which the owners after the creation of
the phase are to contribute to the common
expenses;
(d) a specification of
all parts of the common elements contained
in the phase that are to be used by the
owners of one or more designated units and
not by all the owners;
(e) a statement of all
conditions that the approval authority, in
approving or exempting under section 9 the
amendment to the description required for
creating the phase, requires the amendment
to the declaration to mention; and
(f) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 146 (4).
Amendment to
description
(5) The
amendment to the description required for
creating a phase shall include,
(a) the material
mentioned in subsection 8 (1) prepared with
respect to the phase;
(b) a legal description
of the land that will be the servient
tenement within the meaning of section 151;
and
(c) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 146 (5).
Same
(6) Subsection
8 (2) and clause 8 (3) (b) apply with
necessary modifications to the amendment.
1998, c. 19, s. 146 (6).
Consent of owners
not required
(7) Section
107 does not apply to amendments to the
declaration that comply with subsection (4)
or to amendments to the description that
comply with subsections (5) and (6). 1998,
c. 19, s. 146 (7).
Completion of
buildings
(8) The
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase
shall not be registered unless all
facilities and services have been installed
or provided as the municipality in which the
land of the corporation is situated, or the
Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing if
the land is not situated in a municipality,
determines are necessary to ensure the
independent operation of the corporation if
no subsequent phases are created. 1998,
c. 19, s. 146 (8).
Security
(9) Despite
subsection (8), a declarant may register the
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase,
even though certain facilities and services
have not been installed or provided, if the
municipality or the Minister of Municipal
Affairs and Housing, as the case may be,
agrees that the declarant provide to a
specified person a bond or other security
that is sufficient to ensure the
installation or provision of the facilities
and services. 1998, c. 19, s. 146 (9).
Partial release
(10) The
person holding the bond or other security
may provide a partial release of it to the
declarant with the consent of the
municipality or the Minister of Municipal
Affairs and Housing, as the case may be.
1998, c. 19, s. 146 (10).
Full release
(11) The
person holding the bond or other security
shall not release it in full until,
(a) all the facilities
and services covered by the bond, or other
security have been installed or provided in
accordance with the regulations made under
this Act; and
(b) the municipality or
the Minister of Municipal Affairs and
Housing, as the case may be, consents. 1998,
c. 19, s. 146 (11).
Disclosure
statement
147. (1) In
addition to the requirements of subsection
72 (3), a disclosure statement for a unit or
a proposed unit in a phased condominium
corporation shall contain,
(a) a statement whether
the declarant intends to create one or more
phases after the creation of the unit or
proposed unit;
(b) a statement that the
declarant is not required to create a phase
after the creation of the unit or proposed
unit;
(c) a statement that
sets out the projected year of registration
of the amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating each phase
that the declarant intends to create after
the creation of the unit or proposed unit;
(d) a statement that
sets out, for each phase that the declarant
intends to create after the creation of the
unit or proposed unit,
(i) the approximate
number of the units included in the phase
and a legal description of the land included
in the phase,
(ii) the approximate
location of the buildings and structures to
be contained in the phase and a description
of the facilities and services to be
contained in the phase,
(iii) a statement of
the proportions, expressed in percentages,
of the common interests and common expenses
attributable to the units after the creation
of the phase,
(iv) a statement of
the facilities and services that the owners
will share after the creation of the phase,
and
(v) a statement that
there are no representations with respect to
the quality of materials or appearance of
buildings other than those specifically set
out as representations in the disclosure
statement; and
(e) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 147 (1).
Not material
changes
(2) A
change in the matters described in subclause
(1) (d) (i) and a change in the matters
described in subclause (1) (d) (iii) if it
is the result only of a change in the number
of units included in the phase shall be
deemed not to be a material change within
the meaning of section 74. 1998, c. 19,
s. 147 (2).
No merger of
statements
(3) The
statements described in clause (1) (d) and
made by a declarant in a disclosure
statement with respect to a phase that is
created after the creation of the unit or
proposed unit to which the disclosure
statement related are enforceable against
the declarant and shall be deemed not to
merge by operation of law when a deed that
is in registerable form is delivered to the
purchaser of the unit or proposed unit.
1998, c. 19, s. 147 (3).
Obligations for
phase
(4) If
a unit or proposed unit is part of a phase,
(a) a reference to the
registration of the declaration and
description in subsection 72 (3) or (6), 74
(2) or 75 (1) shall be deemed to be a
reference to the registration of the
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating the phase;
and
(b) the reference in
subsection 75 (2) to the termination of an
agreement under section 111 or 112 shall be
deemed to be a reference to the termination
of an agreement under section 111 or 112
that affects the property contained in the
phase. 1998, c. 19, s. 147 (4).
Copy of disclosure
statement
(5) Within
15 days of registering the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the declarant shall send
to the corporation a copy of the most
current disclosure statement delivered to
the purchasers of units in the phase. 1998,
c. 19, s. 147 (5).
Status certificate
148. In
addition to the requirements of subsection
76 (1), a status certificate for a unit in a
phased condominium corporation shall contain
a copy of the disclosure statement that the
corporation has received from the declarant
under subsection 147 (5) with respect to the
phase that contains the unit unless the
declarant,
(a) has completed all
phases described in the disclosure
statement; and
(b) no longer owns any
of the units in the phases except for the
part of the property designed to control,
facilitate or provide telecommunications to,
from or within the property. 1998, c. 19,
s. 148.
Corporation’s
remedy
149. (1) The
declarant shall not register the amendments
to the declaration and description required
for creating a phase until at least 60 days
after delivering to the corporation,
(a) a copy of the
disclosure statement delivered to a
purchaser of a unit in the corporation most
recently before the registration of the
declaration and description;
(b) a copy of the
proposed amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating the phase;
and
(c) a statement
specifying all differences between the
proposed amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating the phase
and the following matters with respect to
the phase that were described in the
disclosure statement mentioned in clause
(a):
1. The matters
described in subclauses 147 (1) (d) (ii) and
(iv).
2. The matters
described in subclause 147 (1) (d) (iii) if
they differ from the proposed amendments to
the declaration and description required for
creating the phase for a reason other than a
change in the number of units included in
the phase. 1998, c. 19, s. 149 (1).
Application for
injunction
(2) Before
the earlier of the registration date of the
proposed amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase
and 60 days after receiving the documents
described in clauses (1) (a), (b) and (c),
the corporation may make an application to
the Superior Court of Justice for an
injunction to prevent the registration if
any of the differences described in clause
(1) (c) are material and detrimentally
affect the corporation or the use and
enjoyment of the property by the owners.
1998, c. 19, s. 149 (2); 2000, c. 26,
Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for
injunction
(3) If
the court is satisfied that the grounds for
the application exist, it may grant the
injunction or award damages to the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 149 (3).
Contents of order
(4) The
court may include in the order all
provisions that it considers appropriate in
the circumstances. 1998, c. 19, s. 149 (4).
Restriction on
declarant
(5) If
the corporation makes an application for an
injunction under subsection (2), the
declarant is not entitled to register a
declaration and description to create a
corporation on the land to be included in
the phase, instead of registering the
amendments required for creating the phase,
unless 120 days have passed after the court
has made a final disposition of the
application for the injunction. 1998, c. 19,
s. 149 (5).
Remedy of
purchasers
150. (1) Within
15 days of registering the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the declarant shall send a
copy of the amendments to the corporation
and the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 150 (1).
Damages from
declarant
(2) A
person who purchased a unit or proposed unit
in the corporation before the registration
of the amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase is
entitled to recover damages from the
declarant for a difference between the
following matters disclosed in the
disclosure statement delivered to the person
and the registered amendments if the
difference is material and detrimentally
affects the use and enjoyment of the
person’s unit:
1. The matters
described in subclauses 147 (1) (d) (ii) and
(iv).
2. The matters
described in subclause 147 (1) (d) (iii) if
they differ from the registered amendments
for a reason other than a change in the
number of units included in the phase. 1998,
c. 19, s. 150 (2).
Court order
(3) Upon
application by the person, the Superior
Court of Justice may make an order requiring
the declarant to pay to the person the
damages to which the person is entitled
under subsection (2). 1998, c. 19,
s. 150 (3); 2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Easements
151. (1) Upon
registration of a declaration and
description for a phased condominium
corporation or the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the following easements
are created, where necessary, for the
benefit of the units and common elements:
1. An easement for
the provision of services over the servient
tenement.
2. An easement for
support from the servient tenement.
3. An easement for
access to and for the installation and
maintenance of the services and facilities
that the corporation is entitled to use over
the servient tenement.
4. An easement for
access to public roads over the servient
tenement. 1998, c. 19, s. 151 (1).
Definition
(2) In
subsection (1),
“servient tenement”
means the land owned by the declarant that
is not included in the phase, including the
buildings and structures on the land. 1998,
c. 19, s. 151 (2).
Turn-over
obligations
152. (1) In
addition to the items mentioned in
subsection 43 (4), the declarant shall give
to the board at the first meeting held under
section 43,
(a) a copy of the
statements described in subsection 147 (1);
and
(b) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 152 (1).
Obligation upon
creation of phase
(2) Upon
the registration of the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the declarant shall turn
over to the board all materials mentioned in
subsections (1) and 43 (4) and clauses 43
(5) (a) to (h) and (l) and (m) that relate
to the phase and that the declarant has not
previously turned over to the board. 1998,
c. 19, s. 152 (2).
Non-application of
s. 43
(3) Subsections
43 (4) and (5) do not apply to the declarant
if the board is required to hold a meeting
of owners under section 43 after the
declarant has turned over to the board the
materials mentioned in subsection (2). 1998,
c. 19, s. 152 (3).
Application
(4) The
corporation may make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order under
subsection (5). 1998, c. 19, s. 152 (4);
2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Court order
(5) If
the court is satisfied that the declarant is
required to comply with subsection (2) and
has not done so without reasonable excuse,
the court,
(a) shall order that the
declarant pay damages to the corporation for
the loss it incurred as a result of the
declarant’s acts of non-compliance with
subsection (2);
(b) shall order that the
declarant pay the corporation’s costs of the
application;
(c) may order the
declarant to pay to the corporation an
additional amount not to exceed $10,000; and
(d) may order the
declarant to comply with subsection (2).
1998, c. 19, s. 152 (5).
Election of
directors
(6) If,
30 days after the registration of the
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase,
the declarant owns a majority of the units
in the corporation, the board shall, at the
request of the declarant, call a meeting of
owners to elect a new board which shall hold
office until a board is elected as required
by subsection 43 (1). 1998, c. 19,
s. 152 (6).
Corporation’s
obligations for phase
153. (1) If
the declarant registers the amendments to
the declaration and description required for
creating a phase and the phase contains one
or more units for residential purposes, the
board shall have a performance audit of the
common elements contained in the phase
conducted on behalf of the corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 153 (1).
Application of s.
44
(2) Section
44 applies to the performance audit, except
that,
(a) references in that
section to the registration of the
declaration and description shall be deemed
to be references to the registration of the
amendments; and
(b) references in that
section to the common elements shall be
deemed to be references to the common
elements contained in the phase. 1998,
c. 19, s. 153 (2).
Financial
statements
(3) Within
90 days of the registration of the
amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase,
the corporation shall have the financial
statements required by subsection 66 (2)
prepared and sections 66 to 71 apply to
them. 1998, c. 19, s. 153 (3).
Reserve fund study
(4) Within
the prescribed time following the
registration of the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the corporation shall
conduct a reserve fund study in accordance
with section 94 with respect to the phase.
1998, c. 19, s. 153 (4).
Termination of
agreements
154. (1) Subject
to subsection (2), after the registration of
the amendments to the declaration and
description required for creating a phase, a
corporation may, by resolution of the board,
terminate an agreement for the management of
the property contained in the phase that the
declarant entered into on behalf of the
corporation before the registration of the
amendments. 1998, c. 19, s. 154 (1).
Notice
(2) To
terminate an agreement, the board shall give
at least 60 days notice in writing of the
date of termination to the person with whom
the declarant entered into the agreement.
1998, c. 19, s. 154 (2).
Other agreements
(3) Subject
to subsection (4) and subsection 112 (5),
within 12 months following the first
election of the board under section 43 after
the registration of the amendments to the
declaration and description required for
creating a phase, the corporation may, by
resolution of the board, terminate an
agreement described in subsection 112 (2),
that the declarant has entered into on
behalf of the corporation before the
registration of the amendments and that
affects the property contained in the phase.
1998, c. 19, s. 154 (3).
Notice
(4) To
terminate an agreement, the board shall give
at least 60 days notice in writing of the
date of termination to the person with whom
the declarant entered into the agreement.
1998, c. 19, s. 154 (4).
Mutual use
agreements
(5) If
a declarant on behalf of a corporation has
entered into an agreement for the mutual
use, provision or maintenance or the
cost-sharing of facilities or services
before the registration of the amendments to
the declaration and description required for
creating a phase, and the agreement affects
the property contained in the phase, any
party to the agreement may, within 12 months
following the first election of the board
under section 43 after the registration of
the amendments, make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order under
subsection (6). 1998, c. 19, s. 154 (5);
2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Court order
(6) The
court may make an order described in
subsection 113 (3) if the requirements of
that subsection are met. 1998, c. 19,
s. 154 (6).
PART XII
VACANT LAND CONDOMINIUM CORPORATIONS
Creation
155. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, a
declarant may register a declaration and
description that create a corporation in
which, at the time of the registration,
(a) one or more units
are not part of a building or structure and
do not include any part of a building or
structure; and
(b) none of the units
are located above or below any other unit.
1998, c. 19, s. 155 (1).
Type of corporation
(2) The
type of corporation created by the
registration of declaration and description
under subsection (1) shall be known as a
vacant land condominium corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 155 (2).
Requirements for
registration
(3) A
declaration and description for a vacant
land condominium corporation shall not be
registered unless the registration would
create a freehold condominium corporation
that is not a common elements condominium
corporation or, except as provided in the
regulations made under this Act, a phased
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 155 (3).
Application
(4) Subject
to this Part, Parts I to IX and XIV apply
with necessary modifications to a vacant
land condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 155 (4).
Other corporations
(5) This
Part does not apply to a corporation that is
not a vacant land condominium corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 155 (5).
Contents of
declaration
156. (1) If
a unit in a vacant land condominium
corporation is to include a building or
structure constructed after the registration
of the declaration and description, the
declaration may contain restrictions with
respect to,
(a) the size, location,
construction standards, quality of materials
and appearance of the building or structure;
(b) architectural
standards and construction design standards
of the building or structure;
(c) the time of
commencement and completion of construction
of the building or structure; and
(d) the minimum
maintenance requirements for the building or
structure. 1998, c. 19, s. 156 (1).
Permitted
restrictions
(2) A
restriction contained in the declaration
shall be consistent with the conditions
imposed by the approval authority in
approving or exempting the description under
section 9. 1998, c. 19, s. 156 (2).
Contents of
description
157. (1) A
description of a vacant land condominium
corporation shall contain,
(a) a plan of survey
showing the perimeter of the horizontal
surface of the land, the perimeter of the
buildings and structures on the common
elements and the boundaries of each unit;
(b) subject to section
158, architectural plans of the buildings
and structures included in the common
elements and, if there are any, structural
plans of them;
(c) subject to section
158, a certificate of an architect that the
buildings included in the common elements
have been constructed in accordance with the
regulations made under this Act and, if
there are structural plans, a certificate of
an engineer that the buildings have been
constructed in accordance with the
regulations;
(d) a description of all
interests appurtenant to the land that are
included in the property; and
(e) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 157 (1); 2001,
c. 9, Sched. D, s. 3 (3).
Application
(2) Subsection
8 (1) and clause 8 (3) (b) do not apply to
vacant land condominium corporations. 1998,
c. 19, s. 157 (2).
Buildings on common
elements
158. (1) A
declaration and description of a vacant land
condominium corporation that show buildings,
structures, facilities and services to be
included in the common elements shall not be
registered unless,
(a) all buildings,
structures, facilities and services shown in
the declaration and description to be
included in the common elements have been
completed, installed and provided in
accordance with the regulations made under
this Act; or
(b) the declarant
provides to a person or body, including an
approval authority, specified by the
municipality in which the land is situated,
or the Minister of Municipal Affairs and
Housing if the land is not situated in a
municipality, a bond or other security that
is acceptable to the municipality or the
Minister, as the case may be, and that is
sufficient to ensure that,
(i) the buildings and
structures will be completed and installed
in accordance with the regulations made
under this Act,
(ii) the facilities
and services will be installed and provided,
and
(iii) the items
described in clauses 157 (1) (b) and (c)
will be included in an amendment to the
description. 1998, c. 19, s. 158 (1).
Partial release
(2) The
person holding the bond or other security
may provide a partial release of it to the
declarant with the consent of the
municipality or the Minister of Municipal
Affairs and Housing, as the case may be.
1998, c. 19, s. 158 (2).
Full release
(3) The
person holding the bond or other security
shall not release it in full until,
(a) all the buildings,
structures, facilities and services to be
included in the common elements have been
completed and installed in accordance with
the regulations made under this Act; and
(b) the declarant has
registered an amendment to the description
consisting of the items described in clauses
157 (1) (b), (c) and (e). 1998, c. 19,
s. 158 (3).
Consent of owners
not required
(4) Section
107 does not apply to an amendment to the
description if the amendment complies with
clause (3) (b). 1998, c. 19, s. 158 (4).
Status of buildings
in corporation
159. (1) The
buildings and structures located on a unit
or on the common elements of a vacant land
condominium corporation, whether or not the
buildings and structures had been
constructed at the time of the registration
of the declaration and description, are real
property and form part of the unit or common
elements respectively. 1998, c. 19,
s. 159 (1).
Insurance
(2) The
corporation is exempt from the obligation to
obtain and maintain the insurance described
in section 99 for buildings and structures
located on a unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 159 (2).
Owner to insure
(3) The
owner of a unit shall obtain and maintain
the insurance for damage to the unit that,
but for subsection (2), the corporation
would have had to obtain with respect to the
unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 159 (3).
By-laws
160. In
addition to the power to make, amend or
repeal by-laws under subsection 56 (1), the
board of a vacant land condominium
corporation may, subject to section 56,
make, amend or repeal by-laws, not contrary
to the declaration, specifying minimum
maintenance requirements for a unit or a
building or structure located on a unit.
1998, c. 19, s. 160.
Disclosure
statement
161. (1) Before
delivering the first disclosure statement
mentioned in section 72, the declarant with
respect to a unit or a proposed unit in a
vacant land condominium corporation shall
request from the municipality in which the
land is situated or from the Minister of
Municipal Affairs and Housing if the land is
not situated in a municipality, a statement
of the services provided by the municipality
or the Minister, as the case may be,
including the construction and maintenance
of roads. 1998, c. 19, s. 161 (1).
Contents
(2) In
addition to the material required under
subsection 72 (3), a disclosure statement
relating to the purchase of a unit or a
proposed unit in a vacant land condominium
corporation shall include,
(a) whatever statement
that the declarant has received from the
municipality or the Minister of Municipal
Affairs and Housing, as the case may be, in
response to a request; and
(b) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 161 (2).
If no statement
received
(3) If
the declarant has not received any statement
in response to a request within 30 days of
making it, the disclosure statement shall
contain a statement that the declarant has
requested a statement under subsection (1)
but has not received any statement in
response to the request. 1998, c. 19,
s. 161 (3).
Repair and
maintenance
162. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act,
sections 89, 90, 91 and 92 do not apply to a
vacant land condominium corporation. 1998,
c. 19, s. 162 (1).
Extent of
obligations
(2) For
the purpose of this section, the obligation
to repair after damage includes the
obligation to repair and replace after
damage or failure and the obligation to
maintain includes the obligation to repair
after normal wear and tear but does not
include the obligation to repair after
damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 162 (2).
Common elements
(3) A
vacant land condominium corporation shall
maintain the common elements and repair them
after damage. 1998, c. 19, s. 162 (3).
Units
(4) The
owner of a unit in a vacant land condominium
corporation shall maintain the owner’s unit
and repair it after damage. 1998, c. 19,
s. 162 (4).
Work done for owner
(5) If
an owner of a unit in a vacant land
condominium corporation fails to maintain
the owner’s unit within a reasonable time or
to repair it within a reasonable time after
damage, the corporation may maintain or
repair the unit, as the case may be. 1998,
c. 19, s. 162 (5).
Cost
(6) An
owner shall be deemed to have consented to
the repairs or maintenance carried out by
the corporation and the cost of the work
shall be added to the owner’s contribution
to the common expenses. 1998, c. 19,
s. 162 (6).
Substantial damage
163. (1) If
the board of a vacant land condominium
corporation determines under section 123
that substantial damage has occurred to a
building located on a unit and the owners do
not vote for termination under that section,
the owner of the unit may elect,
(a) not to repair the
damage; or
(b) to replace the
building with a different building, subject
to this Act, the declaration and the
by-laws. 1998, c. 19, s. 163 (1).
Owner’s duty
(2) An
owner of a unit who elects not to repair the
damage shall, as closely as is reasonably
possible, restore the land on which the
building was located to the state that the
land was in immediately before the
construction of the building. 1998, c. 19,
s. 163 (2).
Restoration done by
corporation
(3) If
the owner of the unit does not do the
restoration within a reasonable time, the
corporation may do it. 1998, c. 19,
s. 163 (3).
Cost
(4) The
owner shall be deemed to have consented to
the restoration done by the corporation and
the cost of the restoration shall be added
to the owner’s contribution to the common
expenses. 1998, c. 19, s. 163 (4).
PART XIII
LEASEHOLD CONDOMINIUM CORPORATIONS
Creation
164. (1) Subject
to the regulations made under this Act, a
declarant may register a declaration and
description that divide the leasehold estate
in the land described in the description
into units and common elements. 1998, c. 19,
s. 164 (1).
Type
(2) The
type of corporation created by the
registration of a declaration and
description under subsection (1) shall be
known as a leasehold condominium
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 164 (2).
Application
(3) Subject
to this Part, Parts I to IX and XIV apply
with necessary modifications to a leasehold
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 164 (3).
Other corporations
(4) This
Part does not apply to a corporation that is
not a leasehold condominium corporation.
1998, c. 19, s. 164 (4).
Leasehold interest
of owners
165. (1) Each
leasehold interest in a unit in a leasehold
condominium corporation and its appurtenant
common interest is valid even if the lessor
is the owner of the leasehold interest and
in that case the legal title and the
leasehold interest shall be deemed not to
merge. 1998, c. 19, s. 165 (1).
Same term
(2) All
leasehold interests in units in a leasehold
condominium corporation and their
appurtenant common interests shall be for
the same term. 1998, c. 19, s. 165 (2).
Term before renewal
(3) The
term of the leasehold interests before a
renewal under section 174 shall be not less
than 40 years less a day and not more than
99 years as specified in the declaration.
1998, c. 19, s. 165 (3).
Lessor’s consent
not required
(4) The
owner of a unit in a leasehold condominium
corporation may, without the consent of the
lessor, transfer, mortgage, lease or
otherwise deal with the leasehold interest
in the unit. 1998, c. 19, s. 165 (4).
Transfer of unit
(5) The
owner of a unit in a leasehold condominium
corporation may not transfer less than the
whole leasehold interest in the unit and its
appurtenant common interest. 1998, c. 19,
s. 165 (5).
Form of transfer
(6) A
leasehold interest in a unit in a leasehold
condominium corporation shall be transferred
in accordance with section 105 of the
Land Titles Act, even if the land
included in a leasehold condominium
corporation is situated within the
boundaries of a registry division. 1998,
c. 19, s. 165 (6).
Application of Residential Tenancies
Act, 2006
(7) The
Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 does
not apply to the leasehold interest of an
owner of a unit in a leasehold condominium
corporation and its appurtenant common
interest but does apply to a lease of an
owner’s leasehold interest in a unit. 1998,
c. 19, s. 165 (8); 2006, c. 17, s. 248 (5).
(8) Spent:
1998, c. 19, s. 165 (8).
Declaration
166. (1) A
declaration for a leasehold condominium
corporation shall not be registered unless
it is executed by the lessor. 1998, c. 19,
s. 166 (1).
Contents
(2) In
addition to the requirements of subsection 7
(2), a declaration for a leasehold
condominium corporation shall contain,
(a) a statement of the
term of the leasehold interests of the
owners;
(b) a schedule setting
out the amount of rent for the property
payable by the corporation on behalf of the
owners to the lessor and the times at which
the rent is payable for at least the first
five years immediately following the
registration of the declaration and
description;
(c) a formula to
determine the amount of rent for the
property payable by the corporation on
behalf of the owners to the lessor and the
times at which the rent is payable during
the remainder of the term of the owners’
leasehold interests following the time for
which the schedule described in clause (b)
states the amount of rent payable;
(d) a schedule of all
provisions of the leasehold interests that
affect the property, the corporation and the
owners; and
(e) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 166 (2).
Leasehold interests
in property
(3) Provisions
of the leasehold interests in the property
are not binding on the property, the
corporation or the owners unless the
declaration sets them out and states that
they are binding. 1998, c. 19, s. 166 (3).
Amendment of
declaration
(4) An
amendment to the declaration that affects
the leasehold interests in the property is
not effective unless the lessor has
consented in writing to the amendment. 1998,
c. 19, s. 166 (4).
Description
167. (1) In
addition to the requirements of section 8, a
description for a leasehold condominium
corporation shall contain all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 167 (1).
Registration
(2) In
addition to the requirements of section 8
and subject to the regulations made under
this Act, a description for a leasehold
condominium corporation shall not be
registered unless the buildings and
improvements to the property form part of
the property. 1998, c. 19, s. 167 (2).
Amendment to
description
(3) An
amendment to the description that affects
the leasehold interests in the property is
not effective unless the lessor has
consented in writing to the amendment. 1998,
c. 19, s. 167 (3).
Leasehold estate in
property
168. (1) A
leasehold condominium corporation shall, on
behalf of the owners, exercise all rights
and perform all obligations of the owners
with respect to the leasehold estate in the
property. 1998, c. 19, s. 168 (1).
Same
(2) The
owners shall not exercise the rights or
perform the obligations mentioned in
subsection (1). 1998, c. 19, s. 168 (2).
Mediation
(3) The
lessor and the corporation shall be deemed
to have agreed that either party may submit
to mediation a disagreement on the
interpretation of the provisions of the
leasehold interests in the property that
bind the property. 1998, c. 19, s. 168 (3).
Application of s.
132
(4) If
the lessor or the corporation submits a
disagreement to mediation, section 132
applies to it. 1998, c. 19, s. 168 (4).
Disclosure
statement
169. In
addition to the matters mentioned in
subsection 72 (3), a disclosure statement in
the case of a leasehold condominium
corporation shall include,
(a) a statement by the
declarant whether the provisions of the
leasehold interests in the property are in
good standing and have not been breached;
and
(b) all other material
that the regulations made under this Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 169.
Status certificate
170. In
addition to the material mentioned in
subsection 76 (1), a status certificate in
the case of a leasehold condominium
corporation shall include,
(a) a statement by the
corporation whether the provisions of the
leasehold interests in the property are in
good standing and have not been breached;
(b) a statement by the
corporation whether the lessor has applied
for a termination order under section 173;
and
(c) all other material
that the regulations made under the Act
require. 1998, c. 19, s. 170.
Rent for property
171. (1) The
rent for the property that a leasehold
condominium corporation is required to pay
to the lessor on behalf of the owners and
all other amounts necessary to comply with
the provisions of the leasehold interest
affecting the property are a common expense.
1998, c. 19, s. 171 (1).
Contribution of
owners
(2) The
corporation shall collect from each owner,
as part of the owner’s contribution to the
common expenses, a portion of the rent and
the amounts described in subsection (1)
based on the proportion of contributions to
the common expenses for the owner’s unit set
out in the declaration. 1998, c. 19,
s. 171 (2).
Payment to lessor
(3) The
corporation shall remit to the lessor, from
the contributions collected from the owners
under subsection (2), the amounts to which
the lessor is entitled under the provisions
of the leasehold interest affecting the
property. 1998, c. 19, s. 171 (3).
Consent of lessor
for termination
172. A
leasehold condominium corporation shall not
register a notice of termination under
section 122 or 123 or sell the property or a
part of the common elements under section
124 unless the lessor has consented to and
executed the notice or the agreement of
purchase and sale, as the case may be. 1998,
c. 19, s. 172.
Termination by
lessor
173. (1) The
lessor shall not terminate a leasehold
interest in a unit in a leasehold
condominium corporation unless the lessor
has been granted an order terminating the
leasehold interests in all of the units.
1998, c. 19, s. 173 (1).
Application
(2) The
lessor may make an application to the
Superior Court of Justice for an order
terminating all of the leasehold interests,
if a leasehold condominium corporation,
(a) has failed to remit
to the lessor the amounts to which the
lessor is entitled under the provisions of
the leasehold interest affecting the
property; or
(b) has failed to comply
with a court order. 1998, c. 19, s. 173 (2);
2000, c. 26, Sched. B, s. 7 (7).
Grounds for order
(3) On
an application, the court may make an order
if it is satisfied that the order is just
and equitable, having regard to the scheme
and intent of this Act and the interests of
all persons that would be affected by the
order. 1998, c. 19, s. 173 (3).
Contents of order
(4) The
order may provide that all of the leasehold
interests are terminated subject to the
conditions set out in the order or may
contain any other provision that the court
considers appropriate in the circumstances.
1998, c. 19, s. 173 (4).
Registration of
order
(5) If
the court makes an order terminating all of
the leasehold interests, the lessor shall
register the order. 1998, c. 19, s. 173 (5).
Expiration of
leasehold interests
174. (1) At
least five years before the end of the term
of the leasehold interests in the units in a
leasehold condominium corporation, the
lessor shall give the corporation,
(a) a written notice of
intention to renew all the leasehold
interests that sets out the provisions
applicable to the renewal; or
(b) a written notice of
intention not to renew all the leasehold
interests. 1998, c. 19, s. 174 (1).
Term of renewal
(2) A
renewal of the leasehold interests shall be
for at least 10 years or the greater term
specified in the notice. 1998, c. 19,
s. 174 (2).
Notice to owners
(3) Upon
receiving the notice, the corporation shall
send a copy of it to the owners. 1998,
c. 19, s. 174 (3).
Failure to give
notice
(4) If
the lessor does not give the required
notice, the lessor shall be deemed to have
given the notice required to renew the
leasehold interests for 10 years subject to
the same provisions that govern the
leasehold interests before the renewal and
the corporation shall send a notice of that
fact to the owners. 1998, c. 19, s. 174 (4).
Owners’ vote for
termination
(5) The
leasehold interests shall be renewed for the
term and subject to the provisions specified
in the notice or the deemed notice, as the
case may be, unless the owners who own at
least 80 per cent of the units cast a vote
against the renewal no later than one year
after the notice or the deemed notice, as
the case may be, was given to the
corporation. 1998, c. 19, s. 174 (5).
Notice of
termination
(6) The
corporation shall give notice to the lessor
if, under subsection (5), the owners vote
against the renewal. 1998, c. 19,
s. 174 (6).
Registration of
notice
(7) The
lessor shall prepare a notice in the form
prescribed by the Minister stating whether
the leasehold interests have been renewed or
not and register the notice in,
(a) the land titles
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office has a land titles
division; or
(b) the registry
division of the land registry office within
the boundaries of which division the land
described in the description is situated, if
the land registry office does not have a
land titles division. 1998, c. 19,
s. 174 (7).
New provisions upon
renewal
(8) If
the leasehold interests are renewed subject
to provisions that are different from those
that applied before the renewal, the
declaration shall be deemed to be amended to
contain the provisions that apply upon the
renewal and the corporation shall register a
copy of the provisions as an amendment to
the declaration. 1998, c. 19, s. 174 (8).
Consent of owners
not required
(9) Section
107 does not apply to an amendment to the
declaration if the amendment complies with
subsection (8). 1998, c. 19, s. 174 (9).
Effect of
termination or expiration
175. (1) In
the case of a leasehold condominium
corporation, upon the registration of a
notice of termination under section 122 or
123, the registration of a deed to the
property under section 124, expropriation
under section 126, the registration of an
order under section 128 or 173 (or such
other date, if any, specified in the
registered order) or the registration of a
notice under section 174 that the leasehold
interests in the units have not been renewed
(or such other date, if any, specified in
the registered notice),
(a) this Act ceases to
govern the property;
(b) the leasehold
interests in the units are terminated;
(c) claims against the
leasehold interests that do not secure the
payment of money are extinguished, unless
the lessor consented to their registration,
in which case they are continued against the
lessor’s interest; and
(d) claims against the
leasehold interests that secure the payment
of money are claims against the persons who
were owners of the leasehold interests
immediately before the termination of those
interests, and not against the land. 1998,
c. 19, s. 175 (1).
Same
(2) Section
127 does not apply to a leasehold
condominium corporation. 1998, c. 19,
s. 175 (2).
Appointment of
trustee
(3) Despite
section 129, before the time at which this
Act ceases to govern the property, the
corporation shall appoint a trustee to pay
out the money remaining in the corporation’s
reserve fund in accordance with this
section. 1998, c. 19, s. 175 (3).
Distribution of
money
(4) When
this Act ceases to govern the property, the
trustee shall pay out the money remaining in
the reserve fund at that time in accordance
with the following priorities:
1. To the lessor, the
amount, if any, that is required to repair
damage to the property that has not been
repaired.
2. To each of the
owners, a share of the balance in the same
proportion as their common interests,
subject to subsection (5). 1998, c. 19,
s. 175 (4).
Payment of secured
claims
(5) Before
paying out a share of money payable to an
owner, the trustee shall deduct from the
share the amount of claims against the owner
that secure the payment of money and shall
remit the deduction to the persons entitled
to the claims. 1998, c. 19, s. 175 (5).
PART XIV
GENERAL
Act prevails
176. This
Act applies despite any agreement to the
contrary. 1998, c. 19, s. 176.
Regulations
177. (1) The
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make
regulations,
1. classifying
corporations, properties or persons for the
purposes of the regulations;
2. specifying
prohibitions, restrictions and other
requirements that apply to the registration
of a declaration and description in respect
of any type of corporation;
3. specifying
requirements for the construction of the
buildings described in a description for the
purpose of a certificate mentioned in clause
8 (1) (e) or 157 (1) (c);
4. specifying
material to be included in a declaration, a
description, a report of a performance audit
mentioned in subsection 44 (8), a table of
contents, a disclosure statement, a budget
statement, a status certificate, an
agreement described in clause 98 (1) (b) or
a notice of meeting mentioned in subsection
120 (3);
5. specifying
deficiencies for the purpose of a
performance audit under section 44 and
governing the obligations of the person who
conducts the audit;
6. requiring
corporations to keep books, accounts and
records and governing the books, accounts
and records that corporations are required
to keep;
7. governing the
determination of occupancy standards under
section 57;
8. specifying the
form and content of financial statements and
audit reports;
9. prescribing rates
of interest payable under this Act,
including rates of interest that shall be
paid on money required to be held in trust
under this Act;
10. governing funds
intended for the payment of common expenses;
11. classifying
reserve fund studies for the purposes of
section 94;
12. governing the
contents of any or all classes of reserve
fund studies, the standards that shall be
observed in conducting them and the times at
which they shall be conducted;
13. prescribing the
persons who may conduct any or all classes
of reserve fund studies and specifying the
qualifications of the persons and the
affiliations for the purposes of subsection
94 (6) that disentitle the persons from
conducting the reserve fund studies;
14. governing the
cost mentioned in clause 97 (2) (c);
15. specifying
restrictions on the right of corporations to
amalgamate under section 120 and
requirements for corporations to fulfill in
order to amalgamate;
16. specifying
restrictions on the right of a declarant to
register a declaration and description to
create a common elements condominium
corporation, a vacant land condominium
corporation or a leasehold condominium
corporation and specifying requirements for
the declarant to fulfill in order to make
the registrations, including requirements
for the purpose of section 157;
17. respecting the
manner in which a common interest attaches
to an owner’s parcel of land for the purpose
of subsection 139 (3);
18. specifying
restrictions on the right of a declarant to
register an amendment to a declaration and
description required for creating a phase in
a phased condominium corporation and
specifying requirements for the declarant to
fulfill in order to make the registrations;
19. governing the
manner in which sections 89, 90, 91 and 92
apply to a vacant land condominium
corporation;
20. prescribing the
amounts of fees that are payable or
chargeable under this Act;
21. prescribing
forms, other than forms mentioned in this
Act as forms prescribed by the Minister, and
providing for their use;
22. prescribing any
matter mentioned in this Act as prescribed,
other than forms mentioned in this Act as
forms prescribed by the Minister;
23. respecting any
matter that this Act mentions may be or
shall be dealt with in the regulations;
24. exempting any
class of corporations, properties or persons
from any provision of this Act or the
regulations;
25. respecting any
matter necessary or advisable to carry out
the intent and purpose of this Act. 1998,
c. 19, s. 177 (1).
Minister’s
regulations
(2) The
Minister may make regulations,
1. respecting the
registration and recording of declarations,
descriptions, amendments to declarations or
descriptions, by-laws, notices of
termination and other instruments;
2. governing the
method of describing land or any interest in
land in instruments affecting a property or
part of a property;
3. governing surveys,
plans, specifications, certificates,
descriptions and diagrams, and prescribing
procedures for their registration and
amendment;
4. prescribing the duties of officers
appointed under the Land Titles Act
or the Registry Act for the purpose
of this Act;
5. requiring the payment of fees to officers
appointed under the Land Titles Act
or the Registry Act and prescribing
the amounts of the fees;
6. respecting the
names of corporations and requiring that the
name of a corporation indicate whether the
corporation is a freehold, leasehold, common
elements, phased or vacant land condominium
corporation;
7. governing the circumstances and the
manner in which the Corporations
Information Act is to apply to
corporations, including the time at which
that Act is to apply;
8. requiring that a
description in respect of any class of
properties contain a survey of the
properties showing the units and common
elements, in lieu of or in addition to the
requirements of section 8;
9. prescribing the
material required to be contained in the
certificate as to the status of an
amalgamating corporation for the purpose of
clause 120 (3) (c);
10. prescribing forms
described in this Act as forms prescribed by
the Minister and providing for their use.
1998, c. 19, s. 177 (2).
Application of
regulations
(3) A
provision of a regulation may be made to
apply to,
(a) all corporations or
any class or type of corporations;
(b) all properties or
any class of properties; or
(c) all persons or any
class of persons. 1998, c. 19, s. 177 (3).
Incorporation by
reference
(4) A
regulation made under subsection (1) that
prescribes any of the following things may
adopt by reference, with the changes, if
any, that the Lieutenant Governor in Council
considers advisable, any principle,
standard, code or formula, as it reads at
the time the regulation is made or as it is
amended from time to time, whether before or
after the time at which the regulation is
made:
1. The manner in
which financial statements of a corporation
are to be prepared or generally accepted
accounting principles for the purpose of
those statements.
2. The manner in
which the auditor’s report described in
subsection 67 (1) is to be prepared or
generally accepted auditing standards for
the purpose of that report. 2001, c. 9,
Sched. D, s. 3 (4).
Transition
178. (1) Corporations
created under the Condominium Act,
being chapter C.26 of the Revised Statutes
of Ontario, 1990, are continued as
corporations under this Act. 1998, c. 19,
s. 178 (1).
Lien
(2) A
corporation’s lien that was created under
the Condominium Act for the default
of an owner in the obligation to contribute
to the common expenses is continued as a
lien under subsection 85 (1) of this Act.
1998, c. 19, s. 178 (2).
Transition,
turnover
179. (1) If
the corporation was created under the
Condominium Act, being chapter C.26 of
the Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1990,
section 43 does not apply and section 26 of
that Act, as it existed immediately before
the coming into force of section 184,
continues to apply. 1998, c. 19, s. 179 (1).
Offences under
former Act
(2) Section
55 of the Condominium Act, as it
existed immediately before the coming into
force of section 184, continues to apply
with respect to contraventions of subsection
26 (3) of that Act. 1998, c. 19, s. 179 (2).
Transition,
disclosure
180. (1) If,
on or before the day sections 44, 72 to 75
and 78 to 82 come into force, the declarant
with respect to a corporation has entered
into one or more agreements of purchase and
sale for a unit or proposed unit in the
corporation,
(a) those sections do
not apply; and
(b) subject to subsection (2), sections 51
to 54 of the Condominium Act, being
chapter C.26 of the Revised Statutes of
Ontario, 1990, except for subsection 52 (5)
of that Act, as those sections existed
immediately before the coming into force of
section 184, continue to apply. 1998, c. 19,
s. 180 (1).
Not a material
amendment
(2) For
the purposes of subsection 52 (2) of the
Condominium Act, being chapter C.26 of
the Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1990, a
change to the information required to be
contained in a disclosure statement that
arises only as a result of the coming into
force of this Act does not constitute a
material amendment to the disclosure
statement. 1998, c. 19, s. 180 (2).
Offences under
former Act
(3) Section
55 of the Condominium Act, as it
existed immediately before the coming into
force of section 184, continues to apply
with respect to contraventions of subsection
52 (5), (6), or 53 (1) of that Act. 1998,
c. 19, s. 180 (3).
Transition,
insurance
181. (1) If,
at the time section 99 comes into
force, the corporation has entered into an
insurance policy under section 27 of the
Condominium Act, being chapter C.26 of
the Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1990, that
has not expired, section 99 does not apply
and section 27 of that Act, as it existed
immediately before the coming into force of
section 184, continues to apply. 1998,
c. 19, s. 181 (1).
Renewals
(2) Despite
subsection (1), section 99 applies if the
corporation renews an insurance policy
described in that subsection after section
99 comes into force. 1998, c. 19,
s. 181 (2).
Transition,
termination of agreements
182. If
the corporation has entered into an
agreement described in sections 111 and 112
before those sections come into force, those
sections do not apply and section 39 of the
Condominium Act, being chapter C.26
of the Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1990, as
that section existed immediately before the
coming into force of section 184, continues
to apply. 1998, c. 19, s. 182.
Transition,
regulations
183. Despite
section 184, the Lieutenant Governor in
Council may by regulation revoke regulations
made under section 59 of the Condominium
Act, being chapter C.26 of the Revised
Statutes of Ontario, 1990, as that section
read immediately before section 184 comes
into force, if the Minister makes a
regulation under subsection 177 (2) that is
inconsistent with those regulations. 1998,
c. 19, s. 183.
184.-186. Omitted
(amends or repeals other Acts). 1998, c. 19,
ss. 184-186.
187. Omitted
(provides for coming into force of
provisions of this Act). 1998, c. 19,
s. 187.
188. Omitted
(enacts short title of this Act). 1998,
c. 19, s. 188.
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