Site icon LookUpStrata

NSW: Unauthorised works on common property and an intimidating committee member

NSW strata committee unauthorised common property works removal NCAT

Question: Our strata committee has a long-serving member authorising works on common property for their own benefit and intimidating anyone who raises concerns. Do we go to NCAT, or is there a better way?

We have uncovered that building work, tree removal, and expenditure have taken place on common property without approval at a general meeting. One long-serving committee member acts as though they own the scheme and makes decisions that appear to enhance their own private section of the common property.

They also patrol the common grounds and threaten and intimidate residents, particularly tenants, who, as a result, are reluctant to formally complain. Do we go to mediation, engage a solicitor, or go to NCAT with the evidence?

Answer: Three distinct problems are occurring. Unauthorised works, a self-interested committee member, and intimidation. Start inside your scheme, build the evidence, and escalate methodically.

There are actually three distinct problems bundled into this question, and they don’t all follow the same path. Sorting them before you act will save you a lot of time and legal costs.

Problem 1 — Unauthorised works and expenditure on common property.

Under section 108 of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 (the Act), any addition to, alteration of, or new structure on common property requires a special resolution of the owners corporation passed at a general meeting before work is done, where the work is for the purpose of improving or enhancing the common property. That qualifier matters. Genuine maintenance and repair under section 106 constitute a separate category and don’t require a special resolution. So, for example, removing a dead or dangerous tree is maintenance. It doesn’t require a section 108 resolution. Removing a healthy, established tree to open up a view or “tidy up” an area near someone’s lot is an alteration to common property and absolutely does require a resolution. The distinction is worth getting right, because it determines which works in the scheme were unlawfully carried out and which weren’t. A committee does not have the power to authorise section 108 work on its own, and an individual owner certainly does not. Funds spent on works that were never authorised are also a problem in their own right. The owners corporation can only spend in accordance with its approved budget and the Act.

Problem 2 — A long-serving committee member acting in self-interest.

Since 1 July 2025, section 37 of the Act has set out clear statutory duties for every strata committee member. They must act honestly and fairly, exercise due care and diligence, act in the best interests of the owners corporation, and not misuse their position. A committee member who is directing decisions that enhance their own portion of common property is, on the face of it, in serious breach of those duties.

Problem 3 — Intimidation of residents and tenants.

This is not a strata dispute. Threatening behaviour on common property is a matter for NSW Police, and depending on what’s been said and done, may warrant an application for an Apprehended Personal Violence Order (APVO) by the affected residents. Tenants have the same right to live peacefully in their home as any owner-occupier, and their landlords (the investor-owners) should be made aware of this so they can also raise it with the agent or directly. Don’t let this issue get folded into the strata governance process. This sits separately, and it’s the one most likely to keep escalating if left alone.

Where to start: the order of operations

You’ve asked whether to start at mediation, a solicitor, or NCAT. The honest answer is: none of those first. The first lever, and the most powerful one available to you, sits inside your own scheme.

Step 1: Remove the committee member at a general meeting

Under section 238 of the Act, an owners corporation can remove a member of the strata committee by ordinary resolution at a general meeting (this was reduced from a special resolution under the 2023 reforms, which makes the threshold much more achievable. A simple majority of votes cast).

To get there:

This is the most direct, lowest-cost route, and it sends an unmistakable signal to the rest of the committee that the scheme is taking governance seriously. To borrow an analogy: some people obey parking laws, and others ignore them until they see a ranger walking the street. A successful removal vote is your ranger.

Step 2: Deal with the works themselves

Separately to the removal vote, the owners corporation needs to decide what to do about the unauthorised work. Broadly, there are three options:

Step 3: Mediation, then NCAT (if needed)

If the internal process at Step 1 doesn’t get there, for example, the member has enough numbers among owners to survive a vote, or the scheme can’t reach a workable resolution on the works, mediation through NSW Fair Trading is compulsory before most NCAT applications can be made (sections 226 and 227 of the Act). It’s free, and even where it doesn’t resolve the dispute, it forces both sides to articulate their position in writing, which is invaluable preparation for NCAT.

From there, NCAT has the power under:

NCAT does not remove committee members lightly. The case law (Lockrey v Rosewall [2022] NSWCATCD 27; Vojkovic v Savva [2023] NSWCATCD 141) makes clear that it reserves removal for the “clearest of cases” backed by substantial evidence, not personality clashes. A pattern of unauthorised works, self-dealing, and intimidation, properly documented, is exactly the kind of “clearest of cases” the Tribunal contemplates.

Step 4: When to bring in a solicitor

A solicitor adds the most value when:

You don’t necessarily need a solicitor at Step 1. You may very well need one by Step 3.

Evidence — the part that determines the outcome

Whichever path you go down, your case stands or falls on the evidence. Before anyone votes, mediates, or hears the matter, you want:

The intimidation evidence is also relevant to the strata case, even though the police are the right forum for the threats themselves. Conduct of that kind goes directly to whether the member has engaged in “serious misconduct” for the purposes of section 238 and breached the duty under section 37 not to unreasonably affect others’ enjoyment of their lots and the common property.

In summary

Mediation, solicitor, NCAT are all tools you may need, but they’re rarely the first move. Start inside your scheme. Build the evidence, call a general meeting, and put a properly drafted removal motion to the owners. If the scheme can’t or won’t act, mediation, then NCAT under section 232 and section 238 are the next escalations. And keep the intimidation issue separate. That’s a Police matter, not a strata one.

The single most important thing you can do right now is stop treating this as one big problem. Three problems, three tracks. Sort them, evidence them, and move on the first one.

This article is general information only and is not legal advice. Owners should check their scheme’s registered by-laws and seek independent legal advice on their specific circumstances. Where intimidation or threats are involved, contact NSW Police directly.

This post appears in Strata News #796.

Tim Sara Sara Strata E: tim@sarastrata.com.au P: 04 8500 7960

Exit mobile version