ARTICLE
8 October 2012

Practical New Requirement Pertaining To Registering A Construction Lien Against A Condominium Project

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Lerners LLP

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Lerners LLP is one of Southwestern Ontario’s largest law firms with offices in London, Toronto, Waterloo Region, and Strathroy. Ours is a history of over 90 years of successful client service and representation. Today we are more than 140 exceptionally skilled lawyers with abundant experience in litigation and dispute resolution(including class actions, appeals, and arbitration/mediation,) corporate/commercial law, health law, insurance law, real estate, employment law, personal injury and family law.
After a condominium is registered, it is a complicated and costly process to register a construction lien for work done on the condominium project.
Canada Real Estate and Construction
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After a condominium is registered, it is a complicated and costly process to register a construction lien for work done on the condominium project. However, the Construction Lien Act now requires that developers and builders post a Notice of Intention to Register a Condominium in a construction trade magazine prior to taking the steps to register the condominium by sending the description to the municipality where the property is located. This Notice must be published between 5 and 15 days (not including Sundays and holidays) before the description is sent to the municipality. The published Notice gives lien claimants an opportunity to register a construction lien against the property prior to title of the individual units being registered.

It is much less expensive to register a construction lien prior to registration because it is a single property owned only by the developer/builder. After registration of the condominium, the common elements are owned collectively by all of the condominium unit owners and as such, a construction lien must be registered against every condominium unit for work pertaining to the common elements.

You can search to see if a Notice has been published on the Daily Commercial News website and Construction Record. Under the heading "CSPs", you can search to determine if a Notice of Intention to Register a Condominium has been published.

If an owner (builder/developer) fails to publish the required Notice, the owner is liable to any person entitled to a construction lien who has suffered damages as a result. If you did not file before the registration of the condominium, you will still want to look to see whether there were any Notices published in case the builder/developer forgot to file a Notice as this would mean you would be able to look to the builder/developer to cover any additional damages caused by the lack of Notice.

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