In April last year the Court
of Appeal ruled (in Holler and Rouse v Osaki) that a tenant did not have to pay
for damage where the cause was not done intentionally. The facts of that
case go something like this.
Mr Holler
and Ms Rouse rented a house rented to Mr Osaki and his family. The house was
insured with AMI. It seems Mrs Osaki was a bit of an absent minded cook as she
left a pot of oil on full heat, which caused a fire and over $216k worth of
damage.
The landlord
claimed the full cost less the excess from AMI, which was not a problem. The
problems started when AMI sought recovery of their loss from the tenant, which
lawyers refer to as their right of subrogation - a fancy term meaning
they pursue the person who actually caused the damage. They therefore started
proceedings against the tenants to recover their loss.
The Osaki
family however got a smart lawyer who argued that sections 268 and 269 of the
Property Law Act (PLA) gave them protection under the landlord’s insurance
policy. Section 268 lists the situations where S269 applies. It specifically
mentions fire, and says S269 applies, "even
though an event that gives rise to the destruction or damage is caused or
contributed to by the negligence of the lessee…"
Section 269
says where any one of the situations noted in S268 apply then,
"the
lessor must not require the lessee —
(a)
to meet the cost of making good the destruction or damage; or
(b)
to indemnify the lessor against the cost of making good the destruction or
damage; or
(c)
to pay damages in respect of the destruction or damage."
It
continues to say that this exoneration does not apply if the damage was
intentional or the result of a criminal offence.
AMI
tried to argue that sections 268 and 269 did not apply to residential
tenancies. They said the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) applied - in
particular the part where tenants agree that they will not intentionally or
carelessly damage the property. They argued because Mrs Osaki was careless and
the tenant was therefore liable for the $216k damage.
The Court of
Appeal disagreed, ruling the PLA applied to commercial and residential
tenancies, and because Mrs Osaki did not intend to damage the property, and
cooking is not a criminal offence, the tenants were not liable.
In this case the Landlord was
largely unaffected because they were covered by their policy with AMI.
Understandably insurance companies are not happy about the decision because it
limits their right to pursue the tenant for damage to situations where the act
was intentional or arose from an unlawful activity.
The effect of the Osaki case
has gone beyond the parties involved. In a case before the Tenancy
Tribunal the adjudicator found a tenant was not liable for damage caused by
their dog – even though the tenancy agreement specified no pets were allowed!
The adjudicator took a leaf out of the Osaki decision and said the damage to a
rental property was due to carelessness, not deliberate or criminal behaviour,
so the tenant did not have to pay for the damage - they were protected by the
landlord’s insurance.
That ruling has since
been overturned by the District Court. The judge ruled the adjudicator was
wrong to conclude that the damage was not intentional. The judge accepted the
landlord’s view that the tenant’s actions were intentional and deliberate.
While the District Court
brought some sanity back to the interpretation of the Osaki case, it does show
that when things get a little complex common sense gets lost.
The Minister of Housing,
Nick Smith, says the Osaki decision has caused him to look at an amendment to
the RTA.
He said, "The issue is tenant damage to a
property through carelessness or negligence. The latest court rulings mean
landlords cannot recover the costs of this damage where they have insurance,
including for their costs such as the excess…My concern about this new interpretation
is that it will add to the overall costs of the residential sector, driving up
insurance costs and rents…However, we do not wish to return to the situation
where tenants may be sued by their landlord's insurance company for hundreds of
thousands of dollars, such as with an accidental house fire."
The Minister says he is considering a proposal where, "…tenants
would be liable for damage caused by carelessness or negligence up to the value
of their landlord's insurance excess but not exceeding four weeks' rent, which
is aligned with the standard tenancy bond."
Let's hope Dr Smith is able to bring some clarity to
this issue quicker and more effectively than the time it has taken him to
introduce changes to the RMA!
1 comment:
Damage of home by unruly dog.
Looks like the present legal situation gives dogs a good opt in for general biting of homes and furniture.
Because : Exoneration applies to unintentional damage
Anyway, dogs almost always refuse to sign contracts.
And it is well known that dogs think they are being good, even when they are chewing up homes. I have never met a dog who can understand that somehow this biting up homes thing has consequences. Its just one of the lousy attitude characterisrtics which dogs have.
Cats are worse, and they do damage intentionally. Everyone knows about cats.
As for Nick Smith doing something effective about anything, No I don't really think so.
Post a Comment