SALE OF LAND AMENDMENT BILL 2014 – Delivered in Parliament 2 April 2014
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — I also rise to speak on the Sale of Land Amendment Bill 2014. In so doing , as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of Victoria, as somebody in possession of a practising certificate and as somebody who has actually worked in the area of conveying land, I can tell members that this can be a surprisingly difficult area that all too often is passed over by the community at large as being a perfunctory function. However, there is no more important acquisition that people make in their lives than the purchase of their homes, and the Sale of Land Act 1962 attaches to that.
Section 32 statements, or what are commonly known as vendor statements, are quite often the foundation and basis under which the purchaser is informed and the purchaser makes clear decisions about whether or not the price is right in terms of purchasing a property.
Those section 32 statements are generally required to be presented at the point of inspection of properties, particularly where auctions are concerned, and while it is important to go through a process of re-enacting, reforming and modernising provisions of the act, it is important that we do not blind ourselves with language associated with removing red tape. We need also to recognise that the red tape we need to remove is the red tape that does not provide adequate and sufficient safeguards for the community and is that it is an encumbrance on business and our citizenry.
In that respect I have some reservations about this bill. If section 32 statement information — that is, the obligations that a vendor must make clear to a purchaser — is passed over in a superficial way and thus to some extent the obligations on a vendor are reduced, there must be good reason for it.
At the end of the day while the Latin maxim caveat emptor, or the buyer beware, must apply, we have a statutory regime that qualifies that, and the section 32 statement is a very clear exposition of that statutory moderation of the broad principle that the buyer should beware. In this case it requires that the buyer be informed adequately.
The present act requires those who sell land in Victoria to disclose certain information through a vendors statement to a purchaser. That is a very important piece of precontractual clarification, and when the contract of sale is ultimately signed the section 32 statement is generally appended to that contract. The statement becomes, as it were, part and parcel of the conditions attaching to the sale, and the information contained in it will inform the purchaser and give them confidence that what they are buying is fit for their purpose. That is why it is important that the alterations to these changes are clearly explained and justified.
Part 1 of the bill, the purpose of the act and so on comes into effect on the day after the royal assent is granted, and the remaining parts 2 to 5 of the bill will come into effect on the day of proclamation. That of course gives the legal fraternity an opportunity to adapt their processes to these regimes. The bill enacts section 32 of the Sale of Land Act ‘with improvements to increase efficiencies in the preparation of section 32 statements, improve the readability of section 32 statements and bring greater clarity to, and refinement of, existing disclosure requirements. Redundant and outdated provisions in the legislation will not be re-enacted’.
It is in that context that this bill should be construed and assessed as to whether or not it meets its requirements. The most controversial issue in the bill is the removal of four generic warnings that relate principally to planning controls, commercial and agricultural production, growth areas, infrastructure contributions and the availability of essential services.
There are a number of other changes that have been made but essentially they relate to the list of connected services. Only non-connected services will be required to be listed and therein I think lies a problem. We are effectively falling for that Rumsfeldian problem of having known unknowns — that is, the things that are not there — rather than having a clear explanation of the services that are available to the property.
Section 32 statements require vendors to specify the particulars of any water supply or sewerage services connected to the land not of the standard level available in the locality. In effect there is no obligation to state what is within the context of ordinary or normal services within the locality, and therefore the provision assumes there is knowledge on the purchaser’s part about what constitutes the locality’s capacity in this regard. Currently there is a requirement for a vendor to disclose that a planning instrument prohibits construction of a dwelling house on land outside the metropolitan area.
The removal of these provisions could give rise to some concerns — for example, those who advocate for right-to-farm legislation — that there should be an obligation to clarify the nature of industries in and around a property to be acquired, so that those who seek to purchase a property and then subsequently revise and assess the amenity and desirability of the locale in which they have purchased cannot use the fact that long-established industries or farming practices constitute something they can agitate about for the purposes of prohibition of long-established industries in those areas.
I have also have great concerns about the removal of the requirement to attach a copy of the section 32 statement to the contract of sale.
It is one thing for a vendor to sign a section 32 statement, but it is a valuable part of the process of sale. It is a clear precontractual statement by the vendor about matters considered sufficiently important that the legislature has required the vendor to give those assurances at the point of signing of a contract note. The point is if we take away that obligation, we create a qualification around the level of clarity of the assurances given to a purchaser. What is the mischief the government is seeking to address here? Is it that there is too great a burden upon the vendor in these circumstances? There may be, and I can understand that in certain circumstances vendors will feel this is an undue irritation. But the legal community understands its obligations in this respect, so much so that it has very qualified paralegals who do a lot of this work.
I am gravely concerned if we are simply saying, ‘It is red tape. They are actions that need not occur. Get rid of them’.
We need to measure it in the context of the mischief we are seeking to resolve and where the burden should properly lie in terms of disclosure associated with land acquisition. The grave problem associated with this provision is that in many cases the bill’s purported purpose of re-enactment, reform and modernisation is just the removal of an obligation upon the vendor to disclose issues that are important for the vendor to disclose. Those obligations should not be reduced. I have concerns with the removal of section 32 statements from a contract of sale because in many respects it will undermine the quality and level of assurances given and incorporated into contracts, which ultimately will be enforced. These are not minor or small contractual arrangements that are entered into. They are serious arrangements, and they go to the very livelihood and wellbeing of the purchaser. The principle of caveat emptor, which is clarified by legislation, should be preserved.