Going to court to have a judge hear evidence and decide your case can be expensive. You may wish to consider resolving the dispute within the strata, using the Civil Resolution Tribunal, or getting legal advice before starting a court case.
Learn more on this page:
Parties involved in a law suit
Limitation period
Applying to the Supreme Court for an order
Serving notice
Owner authorization
Costs of the law suit
Court ruling against the strata corporation
Limits on an owner involved in a law suit with the strata corporation
Provincial Court (Small Claims Court)
The strata corporation or section may be sued by a strata lot owner. In addition the strata corporation or section may be sued as a representative of the owners with respect to matters relating to:
The strata corporation or section may sue as a representative for strata lot owners, on behalf of one or more owners about matters affecting only their strata lots and an owner.
On June 1, 2013 the basic limitation period under the BC Limitation Act changed to two years.
For strata corporations this means that some debts - such as special levies and strata fees - that become due and owing are generally not collectable after a two-year period.
Since the Limitation Act was changed in 2013, subsequent court cases and Civil Resolution Tribunal decisions have indicated that the two-year limitation period does not apply to the collection of strata fines.
An owner or tenant may apply to the Supreme Court for an order preventing or remedying a significantly unfair:
An owner, tenant, mortgagee of a strata lot or interested party can apply to the Supreme Court for an order that the strata corporation:
The strata corporation, on behalf of all owners except those being sued, may bring an action relating to the following matters:
The strata corporation may apply to the Supreme Court for an order that an owner, tenant or other person:
Service on the strata corporation of any court proceeding may only occur by personally serving a strata council member or sending the notice by registered mail to the strata corporation at its most recent mailing address on file in the Land Title Office.
Unless otherwise provided by the Strata Property Act, before a strata corporation can begin a lawsuit in the name of all of the strata lot owners (except the strata lot owner who is being sued), the suit must be authorized by a resolution approved by a 3/4 vote. For the purpose of this vote a person being sued is not an eligible voter.
A strata corporation is not required to obtain approval of the strata lot owners before proceeding in Small Claims Court if:
A strata corporation can begin a law suit on behalf of one or more owners about matters affecting only their strata lots if:
If the law suit proceeded in the name of all strata lot owners:
The strata lot owned by the strata lot owner who is a party to the law suit should not be used in the unit entitlement of calculation.
If the law suit proceeded in the name of only some of the strata lot owners:
All strata lot owners are responsible for a judgment against the strata corporation and must pay the judgment according to their unit entitlement (unless another method of contributing to the common expenses has been unanimously agreed to).
A strata lot owner who is sued by, is joined in a law suit or has sued the strata corporation:
Generally, court actions relating to the interpretation of the Strata Property Act and the duties and obligations of various parties in a strata development cannot be brought to Provincial Court. However, the strata corporation may sue an owner or tenant, and may file an arbitrator’s decision and order for costs in Provincial Court if the:
The Civil Resolution Tribunal now handles many types of small claim disputes up to $5,000. Learn more at the CRT website.
References:
Strata Property Act: Sections 163-173.1
Find it fast: a handy site map listing all the strata housing pages and subpages.
The information on this website about strata housing is provided for the user’s convenience as a basic starting point; it is not a substitute for getting legal advice. Learn more about the site’s purpose and limits. The content on this website is periodically reviewed and updated by the Province of British Columbia as per the date noted on each page: January 8, 2021.
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