By Russell Cocks, Solicitor
English and Australian common law is historically based on promoting the needs of the wealthy in preference to the poor. Consider the traditional preference to the lender over the borrower, the landlord over the tenant and the vendor over the purchaser. Hence the principle, caveat emptor – let the buyer beware.
But, the Golden Age of the consumer has been the greatest force for change in Australian law over the last 50 years and initially the courts, but more recently, Parliament have made changes to the law in all of these areas designed to promote the interests of the consumer over the wicked lender, landlord or vendor. The Consumer Credit Code in respect of lending, the Residential and Retail leasing legislation in relation to tenancy and the Vendor Statement requirements in relation to sales are three standout examples. We are getting much closer to crossing the Rubicon from caveat emptor to caveat vendor and recent changes, somewhat surreptitiously introduced, take us further down that path.
Sale of Land Act 1962 was indeed a very early example of consumer protection. The post-World War 2 rush of migration to Australia produced a vast number of people willing to work hard and make a new life. The first thing they needed was a job, of which there were plenty, and then somewhere to call home. Owning a little piece of big Australia was the migrant dream and the best way to do that was a hundred pounds down and five pounds a week. Contracts for the sale of land, or house and land, could be structured to meet the needs of this new class of property owner who, by and large, were not welcome at the door of traditional lenders. Rather than buying the property outright, by what is referred to as a ‘cash contract’, these transactions were based on payment over time, known as a ‘terms contract’. A small deposit at the beginning and small regular payments over a longer period of time, traditionally 5 years.
There was no shortage of supply for this demand. Small inner-city houses and new greenfield subdivisions serviced the need and the economy developed quickly. But there was a fundamental flaw with the application of this model on such a wide scale – no-one ever became the new owner. The title to the land remained in the name of the owner who started the chain and successive purchasers on-sold, usually taking a small profit out to apply to a ‘better’ property. By this method a chain of owners was created, with the original owner still on title and the rights of each successive owner dependent upon the due performance of the chain of contracts. As soon as one link in the chain failed, the chain broke, often with drastic consequences for the last person in the chain who, having paid their money, might lose it all.
The initial objective of the Sale of Land Act was to prevent this situation harming those at the end of the chain by outlawing successive terms contract. Thus, a purchaser on a terms contract may enter into a contract to sell the land, but only pursuant to a cash contract, not another terms contract. By this means, the title is transferred to the subsequent purchaser at the same time as the original terms purchaser completes their terms contract. This overcame the terms contract problem, but created a new problem of needing to invent a new financing model to provide a capital amount to complete the purchase contemporaneously with the contract, rather than over a number of years. Initially, this funding came by way of the second mortgage, a device designed to allow the purchaser to make up a shortfall in borrowing power by paying the vendor a part of the sale price over an extended period and eventually led to an easing of borrowing requirements and, ultimately, to the rise of Building Societies that were prepared to support borrowing for this purpose.
In the 1980s the Sale of Land Act was again the vehicle for the introduction of significant consumer protection provisions. Rarely, but occasionally, a purchaser would lose their deposit when a vendor sold a property that was subject to a substantial mortgage and the vendor took the deposit and decamped, leaving the purchaser with the vendor’s mortgage that could not be discharged for the balance due under the contract. Stakeholding of the deposit pending settlement was the solution, an admirable outcome but clumsily introduced. The more significant changes were aimed directly at the caveat emptor principle and, for the first time, introduced a vendor obligation to disclose certain information about the property prior to contract. Until this time, the vendor ranged wide and free across the property landscape. The hapless purchaser was invited to sign a contract (or even more dubious, a Contract Note or Sale Note) and then commence inquiries about the property that the purchaser was by that stage legally bound to buy. The farce of Requisitions on Title was meant to be the shield for the purchaser, but was in fact made of papier mache and the purchaser was effectively obliged to accept the property warts and all.
The vendor’s obligation to provide certain information in relation to the property prior to the purchaser entering into the contract was based on the consumer protection adage that information is knowledge and that an informed consumer is better able to make a judgment about the transaction. By and large, this has proven correct, with prospective purchasers now able to seek advice about the information provided in the Vendor Statement prior to committing to the transaction. The removal of the dubious Contract Note means that the purchaser is also more than likely now advised about the full terms of the contract, as well as the matters disclosed by the Vendor Statement.
But the vendor disclosure obligations are not a tell-all obligation. The vendor is only obliged to comply with the requirements of s 32 and, provided the vendor does that, no further disclosure is required. Austlii is littered with cases testing the extent of those obligations and various legislative fine-tuning exercises have taken place over the years. For every obligation specified in s 32, there is a question of degree or uncertainty. For instance:
- building permits must be disclosed, but what if no building permit was obtained?
- notices affecting the land must be disclosed, but what about notices affecting adjoining land?
- do defects such as contamination, asbestos or structural defects need to be disclosed?
As the law stands, s 32 probably does not require the disclosure of such matters but here is the tension between caveat emptor and caveat vendor, with the above questions being answered in the negative on the basis of caveat emptor but potentially requiring disclosure if a caveat vendor principle is applied.
An amendment to s 12 Sale of Land Act that came into effect on 1 March 2020 moves this tension further in favour of a caveat vendor approach. Importantly, the new section does not create vendor disclosure obligations that directly affect the vendor-purchaser relationship, as the section creates an offence rather than directly giving rights to the purchaser, but arguably the purchaser can rely on a breach of s 12 to challenge the vendor for non-disclosure. It may have been preferrable to keep all vendor disclosure obligations within s 32, with any expansion of those obligations structured to complement the existing obligations, rather than a supplementary regime established by s 12.
Previously, s 12 created an offence for a vendor or vendor’s agent to fraudulently make a false representation in relation to the sale of land. The section had been something of a ‘lame duck’, as establishing fraud in such circumstances carried a high onus of proof. Changing ‘fraudulently’ to ‘knowingly’ arguably covers a much more expansive category of representation and GUIDELINES have been issued to illustrate the matters that may require disclosure.
Whilst breach of s 12 is an offence and does not purport to create any legal rights in favour of the purchaser, s 48A of the Act may, indirectly, do so. It has been held in Wagner v Usatov [2014] VCAT 1198 that:
Section 217 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (‘the 2012 Act’) creates a right of action for a person who suffers loss because of a contravention of that Act and confers upon VCAT a jurisdiction to determine any proceeding brought to pursue that right of action. So far as is presently relevant, s 217 provides:
(1) A person who suffers loss, injury or damage because of a contravention of a provision of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage or damages in respect of the injury by proceeding against any person who contravened the provision or was involved in the contravention.
(3) A proceeding under this section may be brought before VCAT or in any court of competent jurisdiction.
Section 48A of the Sale of Land Act is headed ‘Application of Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012’. Section 48A (1) provides:
(1) Sections 125, 195 and 196 and Part 8.2 (except section 213) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 extend and apply (with any necessary modifications) to this Act as if any reference in those provisions to the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 were a reference to this Act.
Section 217 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act is within Part 8.2.
The combined effect of those two sections is that a person who claims to have suffered loss as a result of a contravention of a provision of the Sale of Land Act 1962 may bring a proceeding at VCAT, under s 217 of the 2012 Act, to recover the amount of the loss against any person who contravened the provision of the Sale of Land Act. In other words, it is as if the words ‘this Act’ in s 217 were ‘the Sale of Land Act 1962’ instead.
This view was adopted in Han v Pirrie [2019] VCAT 1966.
In Wagner v Usatov the vendor was found to have breached s 32(2)(e) by not disclosing particulars of a planning permit and the purchaser was successful in a claim for losses said to have arisen from this breach.
Importantly, whilst Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 requires the alleged breach to have arisen in the context of a supply of an interest in real estate in trade or commerce, not such limitation applies when the vendor has breached a provision of the Sale of Land Act 1962. A ‘private’ vendor who breaches s 12 Sale of Land Act 1962 will be liable to the purchaser for any loss suffered by the purchaser because of that contravention.
Potentially, this sounds the death knell of caveat emptor in respect of the sale of real estate and crowns caveat vendor as the ruling principle. Whether that revolution should have been via a palace coup, rather than an election where the competing arguments were considered, is a matter for debate. Indeed, given the lack of fanfare, perhaps this was an accidental coup. Fine tuning and expanding the fundamental disclosure section (s 32) would have been a preferable course of action to the introduction of an entirely new and uncertain category of material facts.
Perhaps the final nail in the coffin of caveat emptor will be the imposition of a compulsory building inspection report in relation to any property (or perhaps just residential properties) that must be obtained by the vendor prior to sale and included in the Vendor Statement. This would probably add $1,000 to the cost of every proposed sale and might have the unintended effect of hosing down the property market. People would suddenly find themselves bidding for properties on a ‘warts-exposed’ basis, rather than through rose-coloured glasses.
Material Fact Guidelines
Sale of Land Act 1962
Section 12(d)
The Sale of Land Amendment Act 2019 (Amendment Act) was passed by the Victorian Parliament on 28 May 2019 and received the Royal Assent on 4 June 2019. The Amendment Act makes a number of amendments to the Sale of Land Act 1962 (the Act), including an amendment to section 12(d) of the Act.
Purpose
Section 12A of the Act (as amended) says:
The Director of Consumer Affairs Victoria may make guidelines to assist vendors of land and their agents to understand what a material fact is likely to be for the purposes of section 12(d).
A court may have regard to any guidelines made under subsection (1).
The purpose of these guidelines is to assist vendors of land and their agents (including estate agents) to understand what a material fact is likely to be under section 12(d) of the Act.
Context
Section 12(d) of the Act (as amended) provides:
Any person who, with the intention of inducing any person to buy any land—
(d) makes or publishes any statement promise or forecast which he knows to be misleading or deceptive or knowingly conceals any material facts or recklessly makes any statement or forecast which is misleading or deceptive shall be guilty of an offence against this Act…
The penalty for breaching section 12(d) of the Act is 120 penalty units or up to 12 months imprisonment.
The Amendment Act replaces the word ‘fraudulently’ with ‘knowingly’. The previous wording of section 12(d) of the Act reflected the common law tort of deceit where, although a vendor or agent is generally not required to advise a potential purchaser of any serious defects in the property of which they are aware, they cannot fraudulently (meaning, knowingly with intent to deceive) actively conceal defects. In addition, a vendor may commit the tort of deceit if they fail to answer any question about the structural soundness or quality of the property honestly and completely.
The change to section 12(d) means that it is an offence if a vendor or agent knowingly conceals a material fact about land for sale, with the intention of inducing a potential purchaser to buy the land. It is not necessary to show that anything active was done to conceal the material fact, although doing so knowingly will still be an offence. It is sufficient if a vendor or agent withholds a material fact which the vendor or agent knows to be material, with the intention of inducing a potential purchaser to buy the land.
As amended, section 12(d) of the Act supports a purchaser to make a fully informed decision before they buy land.
Commonly, some information about a property for sale may only be known to the person who has owned and/or occupied that property, and may not be known to potential purchasers even if they have personally inspected the property.
This information imbalance makes it essential for the vendor or their agent to be obliged to disclose material facts known to them to a potential purchaser of the land.
What is a material fact?
A material fact is a fact that would be important to a potential purchaser in deciding whether or not to buy any land. In the context of a proposed sale of land, a material fact is one that influences a purchaser in deciding whether or not to buy any land at all, or to buy land only at a certain price.
A fact is not innuendo, gossip or mere speculation. However, an opinion may be a ‘material fact’, if it is an expert opinion that is honestly held on reasonable grounds, and the vendor or agent have knowledge of that expert opinion.
Failure to disclose a fact alone is not sufficient to establish an offence under s 12(d). The fact must be material. A fact can be ‘material’ in two ways:
- Generally: a fact that an average, reasonably informed purchaser with a fair-minded understanding of the property market, including the role of an estate agent, would generally regard as material in their decision to buy land (examples are provided below).
- Specifically: if a fact about land is known by the vendor (or the vendor’s agent, including an estate agent) to be important to a specific purchaser, it can be material, even if other agents and consumers would not generally consider that fact to be important or of significance to them. This knowledge could arise if (for example) a particular purchaser:
- asks a specific question about the land of the vendor or the vendor’s agent (including their estate agent), and/or
- where a purchaser informs the vendor/agent of their intended use of the land.
Further indications which would be relevant to determining whether something is a material fact include:
- whether the fact is only known by the vendor
- the reaction of other potential purchasers to the fact, including whether knowledge of the fact may impact a potential purchaser’s willingness to buy land, and
- whether the fact results in the property being in a rare or unusual category or position.
Vendors or agents who have knowledge of material facts cannot rely on purchasers becoming aware of them through making ‘usual inquiries’ or following the Due Diligence Checklist to avoid disclosure. General examples of material facts about land which are known to the vendor or agent but which may not be obvious to a potential purchaser include (but are not limited to) circumstances where:
- prior tests or investigations have revealed (or the vendor or agent otherwise knows of) a defect in the structure of the building, a termite infestation, combustible cladding, asbestos (including loose-fill asbestos insulation) or contamination through prior uses of the land,
- the underlying cause of an obvious physical defect is not readily apparent upon inspection (for example, whilst a large uncovered crack in a wall would be obvious to a purchaser upon inspection, the underlying reason for the crack, such as defective stumping, may not);
- there has been a significant event at the property, including a flood, or a bushfire,
- there is a history of pesticide use in the event the property had been used for horticulture or other agricultural purposes,
- there are restrictions on vehicular access to a property that are not obvious during a property inspection (such as truck curfews or where access is via an easement that is not apparent on the Certificate of Title or plans),
- facts about the neighbourhood surrounding the property which may not be immediately apparent upon inspection (such as sinkholes, surface subsidence, development proposals) that would likely affect the use and enjoyment of the property to a greater extent than the usual disturbances and inconveniences of occupying land of the kind and in the local area of the land being sold,
- building work or other work done without a required building permit, planning permit or that is otherwise illegal,
- the property during the current or previous occupation has been the scene of a serious crime or an event which may create long-term potential risks to the health and safety of occupiers of the land, such as:
- extreme violence such as a homicide
- use for the manufacture of substances such as methylamphetamine, or
- a defence or fire brigade training site involving the use of hazardous materials.
There is a community expectation that homicides that have occurred at a property be disclosed to potential purchasers. Other known acts of extreme violence should be disclosed if a potential purchaser makes a specific enquiry. While these circumstances may not be a physical barrier to the use of the property, they may materially affect a purchaser’s decision to buy the land.
Defects and damage arising from prior significant events of the kind specified above, and contamination from prior uses of the land will not be considered material if they have been fully remediated, and no further repairs or other works (including ongoing work) will need to be carried out in the future. However, if a potential purchaser asks a specific question relating to defects and damage arising from prior significant events, or from contamination arising from prior uses of the land, those questions must still be answered by the vendor fully and frankly and to the best of the vendor’s knowledge.
Positive enhancements or improvements made to a property such as renovations are likely to be disclosed in the course of marketing land for sale. Positive information about land for sale, if withheld, is not of its nature the kind of information which is likely to ‘induce’ a sale.
When to disclose material facts
Estate agents (or vendors where they are not using an estate agent) should disclose all known material facts to potential purchasers as soon as they indicate that they are considering purchasing the property. They must also make continuing disclosure if further material facts become known until the property is sold.
Generally, material facts will not be concealed from purchasers if they are disclosed:
- in marketing material or information statements; or
- in a section 32 statement or contract of sale; or
- on a physical inspection of the property where they are clearly visible; or
- by specific disclosures made to particular purchasers in the course of negotiations; or
- before the start of a public auction.
However, specific disclosure of a material fact to a particular purchaser will be required where the vendor or agent knows that the material fact has not come to the attention of the purchaser by other means.
Vendors are not required or expected to carry out tests and investigations of the property to determine if there are any unknown problems that ought to be disclosed, other than as may be required to prepare a section 32 statement.
However, if a potential purchaser asks a vendor or a vendor’s agent a question about a property, before that property is sold, the vendor or the vendor’s agent must answer that question fully and frankly and to the best of their knowledge.
If the vendor or a vendor’s agent has no knowledge of the matters raised by the potential purchaser, they can advise that potential purchaser that they do not know.
What should vendors do?
Vendors should prepare the property for inspection by potential purchasers without taking any steps to hide defects or any other important feature which would otherwise come to the attention of someone doing an inspection. They should carefully consider all information known to them or disclosed to them by their solicitor or conveyancer after having conducted the usual searches and inquiries for a section 32 statement and disclose any known material facts to their estate agent prior to the marketing of the property. Vendors should answer all inquiries about the property put to the vendor by purchasers through their agent as fully and frankly as possible.
If vendors disclose material facts to their estate agent for the purpose of answering questions asked by potential purchasers, acting reasonably and diligently, they have discharged their obligation to not knowingly conceal material facts, and the burden of disclosure of those material facts falls upon the estate agent.
If the vendor is selling the property without an estate agent, the vendor should answer all questions about the property put to them by purchasers as fully or frankly as possible in the circumstances.
What should estate agents do?
Estate agents should discuss with vendors any material facts that are likely to be the subject of statements or representations by the estate agent in the course of marketing the property. During this process, it is important for the estate agent to inspect the property, read the section 32 statement and contract and gather information from the vendor and their solicitor or conveyancer on aspects of the property which are material to the market to assist them in accurately and honestly representing the property.
The estate agent should answer all inquiries by purchasers as fully and frankly as possible in the circumstances, including by referring those inquiries back to the vendor or the vendor’s solicitor or conveyancer as necessary and diligently following up those responses.
These pro-active steps are also required of estate agents under the Estate Agent (Professional Conduct) Regulations 2018 which require an estate agent to act fairly, honestly, in good faith and in the vendor’s best interests. It is also best practice if the estate agent provides potential purchasers with a copy of the section 32 statement and contract of sale at open for inspections and via email as early as possible in the marketing campaign.