03/11/2024
Property Development Structures – Asset Protection
Legislation/Other Material: Designers and Building Practitioners Act 2020, Designers and Building Practitioners Regulation 2021, Design and Building Practitioners Amendment Regulation 2022, Duties Act 1997, Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
Designers and Building Practitioners Act 2020
The Designers and Building Practitioners Act 2020 (the Act) and the Designers and Practitioners Regulation 2021 (the Regulations) was enacted on 1 July 2021.
Retrospective effect
The Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 (DBP Act) establishes a statutory duty of care for economic loss caused by defects in or related to a building. This duty applies to persons carrying out construction work and is owed to the owner of the land where the work occurs. Importantly, the duty has retrospective application, covering economic losses that became apparent within 10 years immediately before the DBP Act commenced (subject to relevant limitation periods). It remains in effect even if an action for breach of common law duty of care was initiated before the statutory duty came into force
Key components
Before the enactment of the Act, the prevailing common law stance, as established by several High Court cases, held that builders were not obligated to exercise a duty of care to prevent economic loss for subsequent property owners. However, under Part 4 of the Act, specific parties are now bound by a duty to current and future property owners. This duty requires them to exercise reasonable care to prevent economic loss arising from defects related to a building resulting from construction work. Here are some key features:
Parties Covered: The duty of care extends to individuals involved in construction work, including builders, designers, manufacturers, suppliers of building products, and supervisors, coordinators, and project managers.
Beneficiaries: The duty applies to both current and future property owners, and it is not limited to residential buildings.
Definition of Construction Work: While the Act currently defines construction work to include residential building work under the Home Building Act 1989, it allows for additional categories of work to be specified by regulation (although this has not yet occurred).
Strata Schemes and Community Land: If the land is subject to a strata scheme (as defined by the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015), the owner includes both the lot owner and the owner's corporation. Similarly, for land subject to a community, precinct, or neighbourhood scheme (as per the Community Land Management Act 1989), the owner encompasses the lot proprietor and the association for the scheme.
Leasehold Strata Schemes: The duty also extends to leasehold strata schemes, even though they currently lack statutory warranty rights.