This article about defamation in body corporates has been supplied by Frank Higginson, Hynes Legal.
It must be the season for ‘interesting’ defamation proceedings. This one will be of special interest to the strata managers (and perhaps chairpersons) out there who have to declare people unfinancial at general meetings.
A lot owner sued a strata manager for defamation for doing just that. If you want to know how it played out, read on.
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The facts are very simple. An owner owed levies. These were paid online the day before a general meeting, but the exact amount paid did not match with what was owing, which meant that the body corporate manager’s system did not pick up the payment.
The body corporate manager went to the meeting believing that the owner had not paid when he actually had. The body corporate manager then declared at the meeting that the lot owner was unfinancial. This was also written into the minutes.
The owner said that the declaration that he was unfinancial imputed that:
- He was a delinquent payer
- He could not afford to pay his body corporate levies
- He had financial difficulties
- He was insolvent
The owner said these imputations damaged his reputation to the extent of $100,000 and he sued the body corporate manager personally for them.
As always, there are some passages in both the original decision and the appeal decision that are incredibly relevant.
These are from the original decision:
‘What is beyond doubt is that this payment was long overdue and was paid effectively at the last minute. [The Plaintiff] said he had been overseas for some time. It is not surprising that the Body Corporate Manager might not have allocated it to [the Plaintiff]’s account or realized it had been paid’
Credibility of the witnesses matters a lot (again):
‘I was not impressed by the Plaintiff as a witness. I find it difficult to accept that even he believed what he said of the significance of the alleged defamation on his reputation compared to the publication of what he said and did in relation to the Body Corporate in the years afterwards.’
But the key thing was whether declaring the lot owner unfinancial meant what the lot owner said it did. In response to that the Magistrate said:
‘Many people (if not all of us) have paid a bill late. The reasons commonly include oversight, lost mail, change of address, absence when the bill arrives, mistakes as to the due date, failure of transfer payments etc. In essence, the Plaintiff asserts that the four imputations arise and that an ordinary person would not imagine the more mundane and clearly non-defamatory possibilities are more likely. It is possible that some people could jump to wild theories but the hypothetical right-thinking person would not have
And this:
‘Even if there is a member of society who has never paid a bill late that person would be aware that they are a rarity and that their friends, family and co-workers are sometimes late and miss a due date. Do people hate or ridicule one another about overdue bills? Do these cause people’s estimations of one another to be lowered where neither the amount, the period they are late or the reason are known? Clearly not. Ordinary people accept that other ordinary people are neither infallible or perfect.’
The Magistrate found that the lot owner had not been defamed, but even if he had been, the matter was trivial and the defence of qualified privilege applied – in that fellow lot owners had an interest in it.
It was also held that there was never any malice on the part of the body corporate manager either. He was just doing his job.
As happens in these things, the Magistrate then went on to disincentivise an appeal by saying that even if he was wrong on the defamation and the defences, that he would have assessed damages at only $1,500.
The owner lost the first round resoundingly – but then appealed.
The appeal reinforced the original decision, and again the passage that matters really is with respect to whether being declared unfinancial was defamatory:
‘In my view, the statements complained of amounted to no more than the assertion, which was no doubt correct (and not suggested before me to be incorrect) that as at the relevant date the records of the body corporate indicated that the levies for the relevant lot were unpaid, that is, that the Plaintiff owed a debt.’
This was not capable of bearing any meaning defamatory of the owner.
The other findings were:
- Reputational harm could not have occurred because the matter was so trivial.
- The actions of the body corporate manager were reasonable in giving members of the body corporate information about which they had an interest in receiving.
- The owner had commenced numerous proceedings against the body corporate and if other owners were poorly disposed towards him, it was more likely to be because of this than anything the body corporate manager did.
The occupational hazards we all face in our day-to-day dealings are sometimes laid bare in disputes of this nature.
Other related articles or resources that you might be interested in:
- The original decision
- The QUT issues paper on lot entitlements
- The appeal decision
- Our recent ‘letterbox’ defamation article
This post appears in Strata News #256.
Read next:
- QLD: Q&A Levy Increases – As Lot Owners, Can We Refuse?
- NSW: Taming Keyboard Warriors – How to Deal With Unreasonable Strata Communications
- WA: Q&A Should Lot Owner’s Overdue Strata Levies Be Kept Private?
Frank Higginson
E: [email protected]
P: 07 3193 0500
W: http://www.hyneslegal.com.au
This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the Hynes Legal website.
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Have a question or something to add to the article? Leave a comment below.
Allan says
Apart from the cost of around 60%, does the owner who loses against the Owners Corporation also have to pay their share of the OC’s ~40%? If they do, and if every owner is made aware of this early on and they remain ever mindful of it, this could then serve to largely assist in deterring those owners who lose their rag over spilt milk and will very likely lose in but a ri$ible result, that they will then have to, be it but in part, help fund the other side’s costs to boot, which in the case above, could result in serving to make the owner become unfinancial writ large, a situation in which they may not in fact have actually been before they unwittingly decided to suddenly want to start spending up big.
Nikki Jovicic says
Hi Allan
Thanks for your comment. We have received the following reply from Todd Garsden, Hynes Legal:
Yes – all owners need to contribute towards the body corporate’s costs based on their lot entitlements. There is no way to selectively levy owners for costs of the body corporate.
Merryl McHugh says
The problem is how much do individuals and OCs have to spend defending such nonsensical claims? Are costs awarded against the person who made the claim, including costs for legal representation or do both parties pay their own costs?
Nikki Jovicic says
Thanks for your comments Merryl.
We have received this reply from Todd Garsden, Hynes Legal:
Costs will normally follow the event (meaning that the losing party will need to contribute to costs). However, this normally ends up only being around 60% of what was actually incurred and can very easily outweigh the damages that are awarded.