Tuesday, 20 June 2023

Home builder defeated on supply chain & materials cost contract price increase

In August 2022 Charith and Hew Perera entered into a “fixed price” $645k home build contract with an anticipated start date of 9 December having earlier paid a non-refundable deposit to secure the price.

Just eight weeks later builder Bold Properties Pty Ltd notified the couple that the anticipated start date would not be met – due to COVID related “shortages in various key building trades and disruptions to the industries supply chain” – and that the customer must “share the burden of the additional costs”.

Home builder defeated on COVID related supply chain & materials cost contract price increaseOn those grounds it imposed a price increase of $51,342.

The Pereras contested the builder’s reliance on special condition 7 which purported to allow it to “increase the contract price to the current base price of the house type”. The clause permitted it to do so at its sole discretion “in the event that commencement has not taken place by the anticipated start date”.

They applied to the District Court for an order declaring the price escalation clause to be void and severing it from the contract.

Judge Kenneth Barlow KC observed, when the matter came before him by way of originating application, that although the price increase was to the “current base price” of the particular house type, the contract provided no indication as to how the base price was determined.

“This leaves the respondent without any real constraint or reference criteria by which a price increase may be determined,” he noted. “Rather, the respondent may fix whatever price it determines as its current base price for the house type, including a price that has no correlation to the price that it agreed to charge”.

In his view, the ability to change its price without any express criteria rendered the clause void for uncertainty.

The court also considered section 14 of schedule 1B of the QBCC Act that requires domestic building contracts valued over $20,000 to specify the price or “the method for calculating it” and that a prominent warning be included with brief details as to the factors that might escalate the price.

The warning on this contract’s first page adjacent to the specified price stated that it was “subject to change” by reason of factors contained in various contract clauses.

The “subject to change” warning did not though refer to special condition 7 which only appeared on page 10 of the contract bundle, something the judge also thought was fatal to the builder.

The “indirect” reference to the special condition did not in his view meet the consumer protection objectives of the QBCC Act and was therefore void on that basis as well.

The court also considered the nature and effect of the delay to the build start date.

Clause 2.1 specified the building works would start “on the later of the anticipated start date or 20 working days from the day” that various prerequisites had been completed. Clause 2.7 obliged the builder to ensure that building works would start “as soon as is reasonably possible”.

On 22 November Bold had notified the owners that it anticipated commencing site preparations in January and the slab pour in February. It was not in dispute that the final start work prerequisite was satisfied when Bold received building approval on 23 November.

By operation of clause 2- – the judge concluded – it was therefore obliged to have commenced work as soon as possible but no later than 21 December 2022.

Judge Barlow observed that although special condition 7 was impliedly meant to allow an increase in the base price to reflect costs increases since the date of contract to that date in December – it was expressed in wider terms to permit any increase which thereby also made its potential effect uncertain.

The outcome has the effect of requiring Bold to build the home at the original price.

Perera v Bold Properties (QLD) Pty Ltd [2023] QDC 99 Barlow KC DCJ, 12 June 2023



from
https://qldbusinesspropertylawyers.com.au/blog/no-right-to-apply-price-increase-on-house-build-contract/


from
https://qldbusinesspropertylawyers0.weebly.com/blog/home-builder-defeated-on-supply-chain-materials-cost-contract-price-increase

from
https://kathleenlett.blogspot.com/2023/06/home-builder-defeated-on-supply-chain.html


from
https://kathleenlett.weebly.com/blog/home-builder-defeated-on-supply-chain-materials-cost-contract-price-increase

from
https://tonybrown0.blogspot.com/2023/06/home-builder-defeated-on-supply-chain.html


from
https://tonybrown0.weebly.com/blog/home-builder-defeated-on-supply-chain-materials-cost-contract-price-increase

Monday, 19 June 2023

Landlord refused to negotiate COVID relief barred from recovery of arrears

Landlords who refused to negotiate COVID relief with their tenants for rent relief during the emergency response period remain at risk over demands on tenants to pay arears or for having taken unlawful rent recovery action.

Consider this account of a Gold Coast restauranteur who leased a Paradise Point premises just days prior to the worldwide emergence of COVID.

Landlord refused to negotiate COVID relief, barred from recovery of arrearsKeiran Temple took up the space on the Esplanade for a 12-month term from 27 January 2020 with 2 options of 1 year each.

Base rent was $66,000.00 p.a. with the first month free for rent but not for outgoings.

During the fit-out month he fell behind and in March requested his rent

payments be reduced to reflect the inevitable loss he was going to experience due to lockdown induced trade losses.

The COVID Emergency Response period ran in Queensland from 29 March 2020 to 31 December 2021.

The emergency regulation applying to all leases required landlords to negotiate rent relief with tenants by way of abatements and deferrals. It also prohibited recovery action and lease terminations.

In April 2020 landlord Heather Penney purported to serve a notice to remedy breach of covenant demanding outstanding rent of $5,500 from 27 February 2020 to 26 April.

Temple offered to forfeit the complete $35,0000 fit out he had constructed – which sum included $23,000 for his own labour – if the landlord allowed him to walk away from the lease and all arrears liabilities.

Penney – who contended the premises had been handed over with an operational kitchen and restaurant – then entered into negotiations but rather than withdrawing the notice to remedy, she held it over him “like the Sword of Damocles”.

After she re-took possession and changed the locks, Temple filed QCAT proceedings alleging an entitlement to damages for the invalid termination and demanding the return of his goods.

QCAT has jurisdiction over restaurant lease disputes because they are retail premises but its jurisdiction to determine disputes under the emergency response regulation extended to all leases, not just those of a retail nature.

The dispute was resolved in Temple’s favour but Penney appealed. When it came before the QCAT appeals tribunal, Members Robert King-Scott, Donald McBryde and Neil Judge had no hesitation in concluding the termination had been unlawful.

They observed the landlord had acted in complete disregard of the emergency response regulation by failing to negotiate before precipitously serving the notice and then re-taking possession.

“We find that the landlord contravened section 11 by not attempting to negotiate any reduction in rent,” they ruled.

As it happened the notice of breach was also defective for numerous other reasons. It mis described the premises. And the landlord re-entered before the period specified in the notice had expired.

They also found that the landlord’s entry and change of locks was unlawful, thereby entitling Temple to damages.

Unfortunately for the hapless tenant, he hadn’t produced any evidence of what his losses had amounted to and had ignored numerous directions to provide hose details, thereby preventing any order being made in his favour for damages.

The landlord’s claim – in excess of $130,000 for loss of past and future rent, re-letting fees and restoration costs etc – was dismissed due to her breaches of the emergency response regulation and failure to substantiate her claims.

The landlord succeeded in recovering just $630 for the cost of replacement plate glass broken by the tenant.

Temple v Penney (No 2) [2023] QCAT 182 King-Scott, McBryde and Judge 22 May 2023 



from
https://qldbusinesspropertylawyers.com.au/blog/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid-relief-barred-from-recovery-of-arrears/


from
https://qldbusinesspropertylawyers0.weebly.com/blog/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid-relief-barred-from-recovery-of-arrears

from
https://kathleenlett.blogspot.com/2023/06/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid.html


from
https://kathleenlett.weebly.com/blog/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid-relief-barred-from-recovery-of-arrears

from
https://tonybrown0.blogspot.com/2023/06/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid.html


from
https://tonybrown0.weebly.com/blog/landlord-refused-to-negotiate-covid-relief-barred-from-recovery-of-arrears

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