Enter your email Address

LookUpStrata

Strata Information Leading to Open Discussion

  • The Strata Magazine banner
  • Subscribe to LookUpStrata banner
Australia's Top Property Blog Dedicated to Strata Living
  • Home
  • What is strata?
    • Strata Legislation – Rules and ByLaws
    • What is Strata?
    • Glossary of NSW Strata Terms and Jargon
    • Understand Strata Management with this Five-Minute Guide
    • Cracking the Strata Fees Code
    • Strata Finance
  • Strata Topics
    • Strata Information By State
      • New South Wales
      • Queensland
      • Victoria
      • Australian Capital Territory
      • South Australia
      • Tasmania
      • Western Australia
      • Northern Territory
    • Strata Information By Topic
      • COVID-19
      • By-Laws & Legislation
      • Smoking
      • Parking
      • Noise & Neighbours
      • Insurance
      • Pets
      • Your Levies
      • New Law Reform
      • Maintenance & Common Property
      • Committee Concerns
      • NBN & Telecommunications
      • Building Defects
      • Renting / Selling / Buying Property
      • Strata Managers
      • Building Managers & Caretakers
      • Strata Plan / Strata Inspection Report
      • Apartment Living Sustainability
    • Strata Webinars
      • NSW Strata Webinars
      • QLD Strata Webinars
      • VIC Strata Webinars
      • ACT Strata Webinars
      • SA Strata Webinars
      • WA Strata Webinars
    • Upcoming Strata Events
  • Blog
    • Newsletter Archives
  • The Strata Magazine
    • The NSW Strata Magazine
    • The QLD Strata Magazine
    • The VIC Strata Magazine
    • The WA Strata Magazine
  • Advertise With Us
    • Site Sponsors
  • About Us
    • Testimonials for LookUpStrata
  • Help
    • Ask A Strata Question
    • Q&As – about the LookUpStrata site
    • Sitemap
Home » Committee Concerns » Committee Concerns NSW » NSW: Q&A Consider a strata renewal proposal or collective sale?

NSW: Q&A Consider a strata renewal proposal or collective sale?

Published July 11, 2019 By Yuhao Gu, Omega Legal Leave a Comment Last Updated August 24, 2023

Share with your strata community

12 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

This Q&A is about a strata renewal proposal or the collective sale process.

Lannock Feb 2024 Webinar NL Promo

Table of Contents:

  • QUESTION: What happens to the capital works fund if the strata is terminated as part of a collective sale? Do the funds get redistributed to owners, or does the purchaser keep the fund as part of the purchase?
  • QUESTION: Two adjacent strata schemes would like to explore the tendering process for a collective sale. How do we go about achieving this? What steps do we need to follow?
  • QUESTION: Is it ok for a developer to convene the strata meetings to buy out a strata during the collective sale process? What can we do to take back control?

CLICK HERE TO BE NOTIFIED WHEN WE PUBLISH CONTENT TO THE SITE

Question: What happens to the capital works fund if the strata is terminated as part of a collective sale? Do the funds get redistributed to owners, or does the purchaser keep the fund as part of the purchase?

Answer: It would ultimately depend on the negotiated outcome agreed to by the owners corporation and purchaser.

It would ultimately depend on the negotiated outcome agreed to by the owners corporation and purchaser (developer) and settlement price therein.

Under section 77 of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 (NSW), there is the option for the owners corporation to distribute funds from the administrative or capital works fund. This would require a unanimous resolution by the owners corporation in a general meeting. The funds would be distributed back to the owners in accordance with their unit entitlements.

Tim Sara
Strata Choice
E: [email protected]
P: 1300 322 213

This post appears in the September 2023 edition of The NSW Strata Magazine.

Question: Two adjacent strata schemes would like to explore the tendering process for a collective sale. How do we go about achieving this? What steps do we need to follow?

We are 2 strata schemes adjoining each other on the same street.

Combined, we have a lot of land in a prime area. We have been approached by developers for a collective sale in the past but we feel that we are being short changed and therefore we wish to go down the path where we take control of the tendering process for our combined land.

How do we go about achieving this? What steps do we need to follow?

Answer: Sale of the whole building is on a per strata basis so there is no explicit mechanism under the Act for multiple strata schemes to combine forces and act together, however…..

The collective sale process under the Strata Schemes Development Act 2015 (the Act) is on a per strata basis so there is no explicit mechanism under the Act for multiple strata schemes to combine forces and act together. However, that is not to say arrangements cannot be put in place to run the separate processes concurrently to achieve the same practical result.

It is important to take the preliminary step to ensure that each owners corporation has opted into the collective sale processes under the Act.

For the opt-in meeting, a motion should be put forward for the two owners corporations to jointly seek expressions of interest from developers for proposals involving both owners corporations.

Further, a joint committee from both owners corporation will be established to manage the process for each strata for a defined period.

If there is any proposal received from the developers during the expression of interest period, the usual processes under the Act should be followed by each owners corporation, and the meetings may take place concurrently or immediately after one another – whichever is more efficient and practical for the owners.

This post appears in Strata News #296

Question: Is it ok for a developer to convene the strata meetings to buy out a strata during the collective sale process? What can we do to take back control?

A developer has approached the members of the strata committee and is refusing to deal with the committee to set up a proposal/offer but instead is insisting on creating their own meeting off-premises and invite all owners.

As a committee member, I have asked the developer to put their proposal and offer in writing so we can assess this and pass it on to the owners. The developer claims that we must all be at their scheduled meeting for a written offer/proposal to be put forward.

They held a meeting and only a few turned up. Again no written documentation was provided and when I request that they should put their claims in writing the developer insists that they require all owners to be present before this can be done.

I feel that the developer is not following the collective sale process. He is taking away the control of these proceedings from the strata committee and the owners corporation by these actions. Am I correct to assume this?

What can I do for the owners corporation and the strata committee to take back control of the collective sale process? It is causing certain anxieties among some unit owners.

Answer: It is indeed unusual for the developer to conduct the process in this particular manner.

For a collective sale to proceed under the Strata Schemes Development Act the processes, as prescribed under that Act, must be followed. So it is indeed unusual for the developer to conduct the process in this particular manner.

From what you have described, it appears that the following key processes required by the Act have not been followed:

  1. a general meeting for the owners to ‘opt in’ (For readers who want to find out more, see our previous blog on what preliminary information a developer can provide);
  2. a written strata renewal proposal, after at least 50% of the owners agree to opt in; and
  3. a general meeting convened by the strata committee to consider the proposal.

Who can convene a general meeting to consider a strata renewal proposal?

A general meeting can only be validly convened by the strata committee or the secretary of the strata corporation, whether on its own volition or after receiving a request from at least 25% of the owners by unit entitlement.

An attempt by the developer to take control of the process in the manner that you have described will undesirably waste everyone’s time for the purposes of the collective sale process. The owners should be put on notice that the developer’s direct contact with the owners for a collective sale is not approved or supported by the strata committee and consequently the enforceability of any agreement reached with the developer cannot be guaranteed.

Reminder to owners – obtain your own legal advice early

The developer may still acquire each unit individually by inviting all of the owners to attend a meeting it organises so as not to take advantage of the collective sale process. But this is difficult to achieve and I recommend that the owners obtain their own legal and financial advice earlier on to ensure their interests are protected.

Yuhao Gu
Omega Legal
E: [email protected]
P: 0402 990 108

This post appears in Strata News #264

Have a question about the collective sale process or something to add to the article? Leave a comment below.

Embed

Read next:

  • NSW: Q&A What Do We Do When A Developer Comes Knocking?
  • NSW Strata Renewal: Tips For Oc’s – Finding A Way Through The Renewal Maze
  • Collective sale and renewal
  • History made as NSW court orders strata collective sale

Visit Strata Committee Concerns OR NSW Strata Legislation.

Looking for strata information concerning your state? For state-specific strata information, try here.

After a free PDF of this article? Log into your existing LookUpStrata Account to download the printable file. Not a member? Simple – join for free on our Registration page.

Share with your strata community

12 shares
  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

About Yuhao Gu, Omega Legal

Omega Legal prides itself in providing clients with responsive and reliable legal services in commercial and property laws. We take care of the legal needs of business owners, strata committee members, property buyers and property investors. Like our clients, we invest and live in strata properties so understand how strata laws and regulations can impact our everyday livelihood. Our current major project involves acting pro bono on behalf of more than 100 residents to harmoniously resolve a by-law dispute in everyone’s health and financial interests. Contact Omega Legal on 0402 990 108 or email us anytime.

Yuhao is a regular contributor to LookUpStrata. You can take a look at Yuhao’s articles here .

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search For Strata Articles

  • Advert Stratabox
  • StrataBox Advert
  • Advert: StrataLoans
  • Advert: StrataLoans
  • Advert: StrataLoans
Subscribe Newsletter

TESTIMONIALS

"LookUpStrata should be compulsory reading for every member of a Body Corporate Committee. It provides the most understandable answers to all the common (and uncommon) questions that vex Body Corporates everywhere. Too often Committee members do not understand what Body Corporates are legally able to do and not do. LookUpStrata helps educate everybody living in a Body Corporate environment for free." John, Lot Owner

"It's the best and most professional body corporate information source a strata manager could have! Thanks to the whole team!" MQ, Strata Manager

"I like reading all the relevant articles on important issues on Strata living that the LookUpStrata Newsletter always effectively successfully covers"
Carole, Lot Owner

"Strata is so confusing and your newsletters and website are my go-to to get my questions answered. It has helped me out so many times and is a fabulous knowledge hub." Izzy, Lot Owner

Quick Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

Categories

  • Contact a Strata Specialist on the LookUpStrata Directory
  • Ask Us A Strata Question
  • New South Wales
  • Queensland
  • Victoria
  • Australian Capital Territory
  • South Australia
  • Tasmania
  • Western Australia
  • Northern Territory
  • ByLaws & Legislation
  • Smoking
  • Parking
  • Noise & Neighbours
  • Insurance
  • Pets
  • Levies
  • Law Reform
  • Maintenance & Common Property
  • Committee Concerns
  • NBN & Telecommunications
  • Building Defects
  • Renting / Selling / Buying
  • Strata Managers
  • Building Managers and Caretakers
  • Strata Reports / Plans
  • Sustainability

Recent Comments

  • Liza Admin on QLD: Q&A Renting, Selling or Reallocation – Exclusive Use of Common Property
  • Liza Admin on QLD: Q&A Holding Positions on the Executive and Ordinary Committee
  • William Marquand on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Tyrone Shandiman on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Liza Admin on SA: Q&A Strata Regulations About Car Parking Rules
  • Liza Admin on SA: Q&A Rights to have pets for residents in strata
  • Tyrone Shandiman on NAT: Q&A Yearly Increases To Strata Insurance
  • Tyrone Shandiman on NAT: Q&A Yearly Increases To Strata Insurance
  • Tyrone Shandiman on QLD: What does Strata Insurance cover? What do we need to disclose?
  • Robert Budniak on NSW: E-Bike and E-Scooter Battery Fires in Strata on the Increase

WEBSITE INFORMATION

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions of Use
  • Terms of Use for Comments and Community Discussion
  • Advertising Disclosure
  • Sitemap

SCA Membership

SCA WA Membership

ASK A STRATA QUESTION

Disclaimer

The opinions and/or views expressed on the LookUpStrata site, including, but not limited to, our blogs and comments, represent the thoughts of individual bloggers and our online communities, and not those necessarily of LookUpStrata Pty Ltd. In all instances, information should not be taken as advice and independent legal advice should be consulted.

CONTACT US VIA EMAIL

Copyright © 2024 · LookUpStrata ® Pty Ltd · All rights reserved