Title: Condominium Property and Residential Tenancies Acts
1Condominium Property and Residential Tenancies
Acts
2Condominium Ownership
- Each owner holds a private ownership (fee simple
title or leasehold) in his or her own unit and
group ownership (an undivided interest) in all
non-unit or common property managed by the board
of managers of the condominium corporation
3Ad/Disadvantages
- Economical form of property owner-ship
(residential and commercial) - Private ownership in areas where land values or
construction costs would make this prohibitive - Lifestyle alternatives (amenities)
- Recreational amenities
4Target Market
- Single people, childless and/or professional
couples and retired people - First time buyers
- Investors
5Types of Development
- New (completely planned and offered for sale as a
condominium) - Converted (existing apartment block or townhouse
development converted to a condominium note
even though building may be old, is treated as
new sales)
6Possible Legal Registration
- Conventional (no subdivision of land)
- Bare Land (units are the building lots)
- Re-divided Bare Land (e.g. existing apartment
allowing re-division of a unit to include common
areas - Strata Lot (3 dimension air)
- Phased (developer registers in phases)
7Types of Structures
- Townhouse, stacked townhouses, duplex, midrise
apartment, highrise apartment, single-family,
bare land, leasehold, mixed use condominiums - Commercial condominiums
- Industrial condominiums
- Time Share Ownership
8Condominium Property Act
- Requirements for the creation and registration of
a condominium plan are specified in the Act and
further described in the Regulation
9Creation of the Plan
- Developer buys land
- Developer prepares drawings and obtains all
permits - At completion of framing surveyor prepares plan
outlining particulars and required documentation
included - Plan registered at Land Titles Office
10Unit Factors
- Every condominium in Alberta has 10,000 unit
factors - Developer assigns unit factors according to
proportional size of unit - Used to determine unit share of common expenses,
units voting rights and distribution of funds on
termination
11Condominium Corporation
- Two main purposes) mini-government
- Allows people to live harmoniously in close
proximity sharing common property minimum
inconvenience - Provides maintenance of the common property which
protects investments and enhances property value.
12Bylaws
- In conjunction with the Act, bylaws state how the
business of the corporation shall be carried out
and give the corporation the necessary power to
do the business required. - Detail the owners obligations as well as the
Board of Directors
13Voting Rights
- At a general meeting, most voting is done by a
show of hands with each unit owner having one
vote - A poll may be demanded, each owners vote is
weighted according to unit factor - Lender for unit may have voting priority
14Special Resolutions
- Anything that involves changing the bylaws or
purchasing property re-quires a Special
Resolution - Passed at properly convened meeting or agreed to
in writing by a majority of not less than 75 of
persons entitled AND not less than 75 of total
unit factors for all units
15Board of Directors
- Board elected to administer the business of the
corporation - Bylaws outline how the board is elected and how
it functions - First meeting of owners must be held within 90
days after 50 of the units are sold or within
180 days of when first unit is sold
16Duties of the Board
- Annual general meetings once per year and within
15 months of previous - Collect owners contributions, administer
affairs, repair and maintain common property,
obtain insurance, set budget and issue financial
statements - Issue estoppel certificates and supply information
17Estoppel Certificate
- Legal document that certifies
- Current monthly condominium fees
- Date fee is payable each month
- Whether or not there are any arrears
- A specific bylaw (described fully) is in default
18Condominium Fees
- Condominium corporation sets budget and
calculates monthly fees - Budget amount/12 months x unit factors per
unit/10,000 monthly condominium fees for unit - Maintain Capital Replacement Reserve Fund and
Condominium Insurance
19Formulas to KNOW!
- Unit factor sq.ft (m2) total sq. ft.
- Monthly annualcondo fees
uf budget 10,000 12
X 10,000
X
20Capital Replacement Reserve
- Reserve fund is to provide money for the repair,
replacement or improvement of property owned by
the corporation and common property when this is
not a yearly occurrence - Reserve Fund Study (study for 25 years, plan is
only good for 5 years)
21Condominium Management
- Self or Professional management
- Financial
- Supervision and maintenance
- Administrative and communications
- Board chooses to handle none, some or all of
these duties
22Rental of Units
- Unit owner may rent unit, and
- must give notice to the corporation of intention
- must indicate amount of rent charged
- must provide address for service
- must give occupancy/vacate notice (20)
- Security deposit may be required
23Use and Occupancy Bylaws
- Most bylaws contain these restrictions (living
together rules) - Such as pets being allowed, balcony furniture,
visitor parking, rules about parties, etc. - Exclusive Use Areas granting owner to right of
certain common property
24Real Estate Transaction
- Realtor must be careful as there are more
intangible and legal implications to a
condominium transaction - Extensive documentation must be gathered and
examined - Resales differ from new sales
- Complexity increases for disclosure
25Residential Tenancies Act
- This Act applies to the rental of residences such
as houses, apartments, duplexes and rooms or
suites in a house or rooming house - Both parties must conduct them-selves in
accordance to the Act and both have
responsibilities to one another
26Tenancy Agreement
- Agreement between a landlord and a tenant for the
renting of residential premises - Referred to as a Lease, Rental Agreement or a
Tenancy Agreement - Either periodic tenancy or a fixed term tenancy
27Breach of Tenancy Agreement
- Substantial breach occurs if a tenant does not
fulfill any one of the tenants covenants or if a
tenant commits a series of breaches of the
agreement
28Remedies of a Breach
- Apply to Court to terminate the tenancy and/or
- Give the tenant 14 days notice of termination of
the tenancy - Notice must be in writing, with reason, time and
date tenancy ends stated and be signed - To object, tenant must explain in writing within
14 days
29Termination of Tenancy
- Acceptable reasons to terminate
- Landlord or relative wants to move in
- Selling premises and Buyer notifies
- Intends to demolish building
- Intends to re-rent for non-residential
- Intends to do major renovations
30Amount of Notice Required
- Proper legal notice by either landlord or tenant
- Week to week one tenancy week
- Month to month 3 full tenancy months (1 for
tenant) - Year to year 90 full days prior to last day of
year (60 for tenant)
31Accommodation Inspection
- Accommodation Inspection Report is a written
document of the condition of the premises at the
beginning and at the end of the tenancy - This ensures tenant not be charged for damage
present on move-in
32Security Deposit
- Money paid as security for the performance of
obligation - Tenant not held liable for normal wear and tear
- May not exceed one months rent
- Deposited in interest-bearing trust account and
normally paid annually
33How to treat Security Deposit
- lt one month rent
- Initial inspection (Report)
- Deposit in trust within 2 days
- Return within 10 working days
- Verify deductions (damages)
34Increases in Rent
- Landlord must give tenant written notice of an
increase in rent at least 90 days prior - Increases may not occur more than twice a year
35Entry
- Landlord may enter
- If there are reasonable grounds to think there is
an emergency, or - Reasonable grounds that the premises have been
abandoned - After giving proper notice (24 hours prior to
entry (8am-8pm)
36Locks
- Neither landlord nor tenant may change the locks
on any premises without mutual agreement. If
changed, a key must be immediately provided - Tenant may add security device capable of being
used while inside
37General Information
- Tenant is entitled to assign a sublet of rented
premises unless tenancy agreement prohibits or
limits - Usually specified that the landlord must provide
written consent not reasonably withheld - Refer to Landlord and Tenant Advisory Board for
advice
38Real Estate Transaction
- Listing contract includes a section in the
Appendix to deal with rentals - Realtor to get all relevant details at the time
of listing - Understanding this Act will help Realtor smoothly
and better serve the client and manage
transaction effectively