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NSW: NCAT Orders Owners Corporation to Repaint Ceiling and Repair Damage to Lot Property

Repaint Ceiling

This article about responsibility for maintenance of lot property has been provided by Adrian Mueller, JS Mueller & Co Lawyers.

Introduction

There is a common misconception that an owners corporation is not responsible for repainting a water damaged ceiling in a lot or repairing consequential water damage to the lot that is caused by a common property defect. In a recent case, NCAT held that an owners corporation is responsible for carrying out those repairs. NCAT also held that the common property memorandum does not exempt an owners corporation from having to perform those repairs.

Background

Ms Mastellone owns a residential lot in a strata building in Sydney. Ms Mastellone claimed that water leaked into her lot through defects in the roof of the building which caused water staining to the paintwork on her ceiling. She applied to NCAT for an order to force the owners corporation of her building to repaint her ceiling. Initially, NCAT rejected Ms Mastellone’s claim for that work. However, on 25 June 2021, an appeal by Ms Mastellone against that decision was allowed by the Appeal Panel of NCAT in Mastellone v The Owners- Strata Plan No. 87110 [2021] NSWCATP 188.

Arguments of Owners Corporation

In the case, it was common ground that the paintwork on the ceiling was lot property, not common property. The owners corporation argued that NCAT did not have power to order it to carry out repairs to lot property. The owners corporation also argued that it had adopted the common property memorandum and a special by-law both of which provided that a lot owner was responsible for carrying out repairs to paintwork on ceilings. The owners corporation said that this meant it had no responsibility for repainting Ms Mastellone’s ceiling as a result of which NCAT could not order it to do so.

Reasoning of Appeal Panel

The Appeal Panel rejected the owners corporation’s arguments. The Appeal Panel was satisfied that the roof of the building was common property, that there were defects in the roof which allowed water to leak into and cause damage to Ms Mastellone’s ceiling and that therefore the owners corporation was in breach of its duty to keep the common property in good repair in accordance with section 106 of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015. The Appeal Panel concluded that the common property memorandum and special by-law did not exempt the owners corporation from its duty to keep the common property in good repair or deal with the liability of the owners corporation arising from a breach of its duty to repair the common property. Further, the Appeal Panel held that the power given to NCAT to make orders to settle strata disputes is broad enough to permit NCAT to order an owners corporation to repair damage to lot property caused by water leakage through a common property defect. For these reasons, the owners corporation was ordered to repaint Ms Mastellone’s ceiling.

Conclusion

The Mastellone case is an important decision. The case confirms that NCAT has the power to order an owners corporation to repair damage to lot property that is caused by water that leaks into a lot through common property defects. The case also confirms that the common property memorandum or a special by-law that make lot owners responsible for repairing lot property does not exempt the owners corporation from having to repair damage to lot property that is caused by a defect in the common property.

Adrian Mueller Partner + Senior Lawyer JS Mueller & Co Lawyers E: adrianmueller@muellers.com.au P: 02 9562 1266

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is provided for your personal information only. It is not meant to be legal or professional advice nor should it be used as a substitute for such advice. You should seek legal advice for your specific circumstances before relying on any information herein. Contact JS Mueller & Co for any required legal assistance.

This post appears in Strata News #502

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This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the JS Mueller & Co Lawyers website.

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