Management contracts can be negotiated


Thursday, June 23rd, 2016

Change is allowed: Everything open for discussion unless there is a specific real estate or strata condition

Tony Gioventu
The Province

Dear Tony:

Our 200-unit strata is searching for a new management company and one of our requests was for the companies to provide us with a proposed contract for services and fees.

In every proposal except one, the companies have provided the Strata Property Agents of B.C. contract. It has a number of terms and conditions our strata council is not prepared to accept, but the companies are telling us this contract cannot be changed because it is a standard industry contract.

If we are not permitted to negotiate the contract, how do we get the services and conditions that are fair for our strata corporation, as well as the management company?

Carter J.

Dear Carter:

To begin with, there is no such thing as a standard industry contract for strata management agreements in B.C. A contract was created for the strata agents of B.C., and while that contract may have some copyright value, nothing prohibits amendments being attached to the contract when a strata corporation is negotiating a new contract or renegotiating an existing contract.

It is important for both the strata corporation and the management agent to negotiate terms and conditions that are in the interest of both parties.

For strata corporations with existing strata-management agreements, every time your company wants to renegotiate a term or fee in the contract, that provides you with an opportunity to reopen negotiations on terms and conditions of the contract. Everything in the contract is open to negotiation unless real estate or strata legislation requires a specific condition.

The whole basis of contracts is an exchange of services and products and money. What will you give us? What service will you provide? What terms and conditions apply to this contract? All in exchange for how much you will pay and what authority you are delegating in the contract.

The termination and assignment of contract clauses are often the most contentious. The Strata Property Act sets the default, or worse-condition scenario, to terminate a strata-management agreement requiring the strata to pass a three-quarters vote at a general meeting and 60 days notice. The strata corporation may negotiate whatever it feels is prudent. It could be a majority vote of owners at a general meeting or a unanimous vote of council, circumstances that result in termination, or any other condition, provided both parties agree.

In the event a company sells, it also sells its book of business to the next company. Assignment of contracts clauses are also disputed and they are not a standard form. It is your decision to determine whether your business can be transferred to another company or whether the contract terminates at point of sale.

Every strata corporation has the right to negotiate whatever it believes is in the best of their strata, which is its principle duty to the owners.

The best — and often only — time for negotiations is before you sign. Remember, your council is comprised of volunteers, they are not experienced contract negotiators. Retain an independent lawyer with experience in strata management agreements to help your strata understand and negotiate your contracts. No one complains when you do this right; everyone complains when something goes wrong.

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