Attention: owners, builders and designers
On 11 June 2020, NSW enacted legislation which imposes a number of new obligations on design practitioners, engineers and builders and sees a fundamental shift in the relationship between these practitioners and owners as part of its reforms to the building industry.
Three of the major changes resulting from the Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 (NSW) (the Act) are:
For all owners, builders and designers, we examine these changes below and outline steps you can take now.
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The Act part of the NSW Government’s response to the 2018 Shergold-Weir Report, which considered the effectiveness of compliance and enforcement systems for the building industry nationally.
For our initial insight into the reforms proposed to be introduced, please refer to our previous article.
After being withdrawn in late 2019, the current Act was passed following additional amendments that were largely directed at expanding the legislation’s scope and application.
How does it apply?
Part 4 of the Act imposes a statutory duty of care on those who carry out construction work (including preparation of regulated design work, the supply of manufacture of building products, and supervisory or other management roles) to the owner of the land. If this duty of care is breached, the owner will be entitled to damages for the breach as if the duty were a duty established by common law.
The duty requires those who carry out construction work to exercise reasonable care to avoid economic loss caused by defects in, or related to, a building for which the work is done and arising from construction work. This duty is owed to both current and future owners of the land. If the land is subject to a strata scheme within the meaning of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 (NSW), the owner includes the owner of a lot and the owners corporation constituted for the scheme. If the land is subject to a community, precinct or neighbourhood scheme within the meaning of the Community Land Management Act (NSW), the owner includes the proprietor of a lot as well as the association for the scheme.
An owners corporation or an association is taken to suffer economic loss if it bears the cost of rectifying defects (including damage that defects have caused) that are the subject of a breach of the duty of care imposed under the Act, and including reasonable costs of providing alternative accommodation where necessary.
The duty of care cannot be contracted out of or delegated to another party.
What classes of building are impacted?
The duty of care applies to construction work, which includes residential building work within the meaning of the Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) and any other building class or type prescribed by the regulations. No regulations have been released to date.
Will the duty of care apply retrospectively?
Yes – owners and subsequent owners of land may claim for a breach of this statutory duty where:
This applies regardless of whether an action for breach of a common law duty of care has commenced before the commencement of the statutory duty.
What are the key changes?
The Act introduces the following key reforms aimed at preventing defects occurring:
To assist in the enforcement of the above obligations, the Act allows the Secretary to issue stop work orders for up to 12 months, and seek relief from the Land and Environment Court of NSW to remedy or restrain a breach of the Act. The Secretary also has the power (with or without a complaint having been made) to investigate practitioners and former practitioners, and may audit a registered practitioner at any time.
Penalties of up to $330,000 for bodies corporate and $110,000 in any other case, may also be incurred for non-compliance.
In certain circumstances there is also the possibility of imprisonment. For example, if a person makes a design compliance declaration that they know to be false or misleading it may result in imprisonment of up to two years.
The Public Accountability Committee of the Legislative Council is to review the Act and consider the functions exercised by the Secretary and whether these are still desirable after 30 March 2022, with a report on the outcome of the review to be delivered 30 June 2022.
As part of the NSW Government’s broader building industry reforms, the recent Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Act 2020 (NSW) provides for the proactive investigation and rectification of serious defects in residential apartment buildings by the Secretary of the Department of Customer Services.
The Act is due to commence 1 September 2020. Developers and other relevant industry participants should take necessary steps now to prepare for the new regime.