According to the ACL, property sellers and agents must disclose any defects in a property, which a buyer is planning to buy. Lying by omission would lead to breach of contract. This law does not mean that the property dealer guarantees the good title of the property but that he/she has not done anything, or is not aware of anything, which would make their title defective.[1] Each Australian state and territory has modified this common law differently.[2][3][4]
Table
editThis table shows that the law varies from state to state. The data have been updated to 2017.[3]
State/Territory | Requirements |
---|---|
Australian Capital Territory |
|
New South Wales | A property seller should attach a section 149 certificate for the lot to the contract. Other mandatory property dealer disclosure documents require the following information:
|
Victoria | A property seller's section 32 statement should be given to the buyer earlier the contract is signed/exchanged. This section requires information such as:
|
Queensland |
|
South Australia | A Form 1 Vendor's Statement should be given to the buyer at least ten days earlier settlement - or two days before the auction day if a property is for sale by bidding.
The statement requires information such as:
|
Western Australia | In Western Australia only the basic rules apply. But if the property is strata-titled, the strata plan's copy, the strata scheme by-laws and the unit entitlement should be available to property dealer. |
Tasmania |
|
Northern Territory |
|
Criticism
editIn 2006 Queensland industry experts expressed the view supporting a universal Vendor Disclosure Statement for Australia that presents information "in such a way as to unambiguous, clear, and concise and which is known to the vendor or which should be known". They were convinced that "smarter disclosure, focussing on identifying the product attributes" will improve the real estate industry's standards and image. Experts believed that "there should be an executive summary or checklist of disclosure requirements", since few buyers had read/understand current (at that time) disclosure legislation, which was characterized by complex "legalese" language. That means experts calling for "additional, yet smarter and user-friendly disclosure which focuses on outlining a property's attributes".[5]
References
edit- ^ Hepburn, Samantha (2013). Australian Principles of Property Law. Routledge. pp. 179–180. ISBN 9781135315795.
- ^ Christensen, S; Duncan, William (2009). Sale of Businesses in Australia. Federation Press. p. 44. ISBN 9781862877504.
- ^ a b "What Property sellers have to disclose". Property Update. November 4, 2017. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
- ^ Mayhew, Claire (2007). Australian Master OHS and Environment Guide. CCH Australia Limited. p. 500. ISBN 9781921223655.
- ^ Miller, Evonne (October 27, 2006). "Is mandatory disclosure an effective consumer protection mechanism in Australian real estate markets?" (PDF): 11. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
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Further reading
edit- Christensen, S; Duncan, William (2009). "Chapter 3: Pre-Contractual Disclosure". Sale of Businesses in Australia. Federation Press. pp. 44–84. ISBN 978-1-862-87750-4.