1、Building Management Workshop 2010,Lawrence H.C. PANG FRICS FHKIS AACI MBA MSc (Finance) CFA,The Manager appointed under the DMC had constructive if not actual knowledge of the provisions of the DMC and that the right to enjoy the Common Parts had been reserved to all the co-owners.,The Incorporated
2、Owners of Million Fortune Industrial Centre v Jikan Development Ltd and Another 2001 1 HKLRD 463,The preamble to the Building Management Ordinance,To facilitate the incorporation of owners of flats in buildings or groups of buildings; To provide for the management of buildings or groups of buildings
3、 and for matters incidental thereto or connected therewith,Grande Properties Management Ltd v. Sun Wah Ornament Manufactory Ltd 2006 3 HKLRD 473,The provisions of the Deed of Mutual Covenant and the Ordinance are usually aimed at: facilitating the management of the building by reducing conflicts amo
4、ng co-owners on the one hand and preventing abuse by the manager and the majority owner on the other.,Inter-relation of DMCs and BMO,The objective of the BMO is to supplement the DMC. Unless the BMO specifically provides otherwise, even if there is any inconsistency between BMO and DMC, the DMC will
5、 prevail. See Pearl Island Hotel Ltd. v. Li Ka-yu 1988 2 HKLR 87.,A Guide on Building Management Ordinance (Cap.344),Formation of an Owners Corporation; Meetings and Procedure of an Owners Corporation; Powers and Duties of a Management Committee; Preparation of Budget and Maintenance of Accounts; Pr
6、ocurement Arrangements for Owners Corporation; Duties of Manager,The Building Management (Amendment) Ordinance 2007,Except for the provisions relating to mandatory procurement of third party risks insurance by owners corporations (OCs), it has come into force since August 1, 2007,It is expected that
7、 the Building Management (Third Party Risks Insurance) Regulation will come into effect on January 1, 2011 .,S.16. Rights etc. of owners to be exercised etc. by corporation,Where an OC has been formed, the rights, powers, privileges and duties of the owners in relation to the common parts of the bui
8、lding shall be exercised and performed by the OC. The liabilities of the owners in relation to the common parts of the building shall be enforceable against, the corporation to the exclusion of the owners. Accordingly- (a) any notice, order or other document which relates to any of the common parts
9、of the building may be served upon the corporation at its registered office; and (b) any proceedings in the tribunal in respect of any of the common parts of the building may be brought and pursued by or against the corporation.,“It is plain that a major purpose of the incorporation of owners of fla
10、ts in buildings at which the Ordinance expressly aims to facilitate is to provide convenience in suit and to avoid the problems that might arise from the multiplicity of parties and suits involving such owners which may be numerous. S 16 is specifically designed for such purpose, so that after incor
11、poration under the Ordinance, the rights, powers and privileges of the owners in relation to the common parts of the building shall be exercised and the duties of the owners in relation thereto shall be performed by the corporation to the exclusion of the owners, and that the liabilities of the owne
12、rs in relation thereto shall be enforceable against the corporation to the exclusion of the owners. The corporation is intended to be the sole representative of all the owners regarding matters within the ambit of s 16. ”,Hang Yick Properties Management Limited v The Incorporated Owners of Tuen Mun
13、Kar Wah Building, 2005 2 HKLRD 499,Notices of creation of easements etc. under s. 21 of Railways Ordinance,Notice of creation of an easement or right is to be -(a) served on every person known to the Secretary as having any estate, right, share or interest in the land mentioned in the order,Locus St
14、andi to bring proceedings,In respect of the common parts of a building, an individual owner cannot bring proceedings against another individual owner.,Chau Mei Lee Fragance See Wah Fan v. The Incorporated Owners of Ki Tat Garden (Phase I), CACV 389 of 2002,IO should be joined as party to court proce
15、edings,In Wong Wai Chun v. Shing Sau Wan, CACV 173 of 2004, the applicant claimed the respondent, as chairman of the management committee, had in breach of section 18(2)(aa) of the BMO and without the approval of the corporation by resolution passed at a general meeting of owners paid or caused to b
16、e paid to herself out of the funds of the corporation as allowances the total sum of HK$19,110.00. The nature of the relief sought by the applicant required the corporation to be a party to the proceedings.,Fidelity Realty Limited v. Management Committee of The Incorporated Owners of Hong Chiang Bui
17、lding, LDBM 241 of 2004 (reported as 2005 1 HKLRD 309),This application is fought between members of the IO on the validity of the election of the Respondents to the MC of the IO. They should thus sue and be sued in their own names, instead of the IO. It would likewise be wrong to sue the MC as a re
18、presentative of the IO. It is also wrong to sue a management committee as a respondent as it is not a legal entity. The IO should only be joined as a nominal Respondent so that it would be bound by the order to be made.,S.14 Powers of corporation generally,(1) Subject to this Ordinance, at a meeting
19、 of a corporation any resolution may be passed with respect to the control, management and administration of the common parts or the renovation, improvement or decoration of those parts and any such resolution shall be binding on the management committee and all the owners.,Control, Management and A
20、dministration of the Common Parts,The clause should include reasonable acts necessary to protect the interests of the owners in the common parts(Grande Properties Management Ltd v. Sun Wah Ornament Manufactory Ltd 2006 3 HKLRD 473),“Amusement Game Centre“ (遊戲機中心),Any place in which there is installe
21、d or placed for use or operation for the purpose, in whole or in part, of amusement, recreation or entertainment on payment directly or indirectly of any consideration in money or moneys worth, any machine or device - (a) which enables or is capable of enabling any person by any means whatever to re
22、lease, set in motion, manipulate, control or direct the movement of any ball, projectile, or other object, and registers any score or combination in any manner whatever; or (b) which enables or is capable of enabling any person by any means whatever to release, set in motion, manipulate, control or
23、direct the movement of any image, signal or electrical impulse; or (c) which upon the insertion therein by any person of any coin, token, disc, card or object, produces or is capable of producing to him any prize, coin, token or disc or any other object or article whatever.,Video Game Rooms in Clubh
24、ouses of Private Housing Estates,Such clubhouses must apply for a license for amusement game centre (AGC) from the Television and Entertainment Licensing Authority under the Amusement Game Centres Ordinance (Cap. 435)*;If the facilities in clubhouses of residential estates are provided exclusively f
25、or use by resident card holders as well as their relatives and friends, and are not open to the public, and the amusement game machines in the clubhouses are provided for use free of charge, the owners corporation or owners committee of the residential estate may apply to the Government for a licenc
26、e exemption for the concerned premises.,* AGCs can only be located in commercial buildings and properties for commercial purposes, and cannot be established within a radius of 100 metres from an educational institution.,S. 18 Duties and Powers of Corporation,(1)(c) The corporation shall do all thing
27、s reasonably necessary for the enforcement of the obligations contained in the deed of mutual covenant (if any) for the control, management and administration of the building.(2)(g) A corporation may, in its discretion, act on behalf of the owners in respect of any other matter in which the owners h
28、ave a common interest.,Incorporated Owners of Block F1 F7 Pearl Island Holiday Flats v. Incorporated Owners of Pearl Island Garden 1997 4 HKC 424,The Court of Appeal held the incorporated owners could take action to enforce a right of way over a road which was not part of the common parts, because t
29、he owners had a common interest in respect of the right of way.,Incorporated Owners of Mirador Mansion v. Tecowin Development Limited HCA 4069 of 1996,The owners have a common interest over the user of the Roof (which was though assigned to the exclusive use of an owner), particularly, as a means of
30、 fire escape.,“The trial judge had plainly erred in this regard. Section 18(2) deals with management matters such as the employment and remuneration of staff, the insurance of the building, acquisition of property for use in connection with the common areas, etc. It does not confer power where none
31、existed. If a right of action against an owner, in relation to the common parts, was in law exercisable by the corporation in terms of s.16, then s.18(2)(g) empowers the corporation to engage solicitors to institute proceedings. But it begs the very question.”,Jikan Development Ltd & Anor v The Inco
32、rporated Owners of Million Future Industrial Centre (2003) 6 HKCFAR 446,Whether the Incorporated Owners have the power to sell the property which they own?,Incorporated Owners are “owners” in respect of undivided shares in the Building for the purposes of the BMO. Unless there is some express provis
33、ion to the contrary, the power to sell ones property must be implicit in the power to own. The proposed sale by the Incorporated Owners was not ultra vires their duty to manage the Building on behalf of individual owners.,The Incorporated Owners of Lee Hang Industrial Building v. Billion Development
34、 & Project Management Limited, HCMP 2243 of 2007,Whether the Incorporated Owners have the power to invest the reserve of $3M in bonds?,Under s. 20(2), (3) & (7), a corporation may only maintain a contingency fund in an interest-bearing account (with a bank within the meaning of section 2 of the Bank
35、ing Ordinance) and shall use that account exclusively in respect of the management of the building.,Who will be responsible? Does it require a resolution to be passed at a meeting of the corporation? Whether the committee members are liable personally?,House Rules,House Rules are legally subsidiarie
36、s of the DMC and are inherently inferior to the DMC. Usually, power to make House Rules is limited to the making of rules relating to the use of the common parts and the Access area. The House Rule that prohibits owners to keep dogs within their own unit has gone beyond its ambit under the DMC. The
37、owner/occupants in exercising their right to exclusive use occupation and enjoyment of their flats, they ought to have reasonable access and usage of the common parts as access with their pet.,Tsang Chi Ming v. Broadway-Nassau Investments Limited and The Incorporated Owners of Mei Foo Sun Chuen Stag
38、e-VII, 2008 5 HKC 19,Schedule 3 Meetings and Procedure of Corporation,Paragraph 3(7) provides that no resolution passed at any meeting of the corporation shall have effect unless the same was set forth in the notice or is ancillary or incidental to a resolution or other matter so set forth,蘇振文、鄧平與盧永
39、佳訴置安大廈業主立案法團 20001 HKC 732,The Grande Properties Management Limited v. Sun Wah Ornament Manufactory Limited, 2006 3 HKLRD 473; (2006) 9 HKCFAR 462,It is important that the Manager and the owners are entitled to make appropriate decisions unless such decisions are prohibited by the DMC; Subsequent sa
40、nction or approval is also necessary to correct mistakes, cure defects or remedy oversight; There is no good ground for holding that a resolution is invalid simply because it takes retrospective effect; Insofar as the Court of Appeal in So Chun Man Paul had held that in law, no retrospective resolut
41、ion can be valid, this was erroneous and should not be followed.,Wing Kwai Investment Company Limited and Another v. Kar Ming Machine Works Company Limited 2008 3 HKC 394,By a resolution of the owners meeting in November 2007 WK, the developer of the building in question, was re-appointed manager of
42、 the building with retrospective effect from the expiry date of the first appointment some 20 years ago. The Respondent had not paid any management fees for some 20 years and challenged the authority of the Applicants status. If the resolution was to allow its retrospective effect, it would be unfai
43、r and oppressive to the Respondents, especially when it would be difficult for him, if possible at all, to scrutinise the spending of the Applicants all these years.,Function of Management Committee,Section 29 of the Building Management Ordinance delegates the powers and duties of the incorporated o
44、wners to the management committee. A management committee is the agent of the owners incorporated. Insofar as they are intra vires, decisions and acts taken by the members of a management committee are not only the decisions and acts of the management committee, but also those of the incorporated ow
45、ners.,Incorporated Owners of Kwai Wan Industrial Building v. Kwai Fung Industrial Limited and Others, LDBM 208, 209, 210, 212, 222, 226 & 20 of 2002,Legal Position of Management Committee,A management committee of an incorporated owners of a multi-storey building or a housing estate is just like the
46、 board of directors of a limited company. The company is a legal person but the board of directors is not. The fact that section 45 of the Building Management Ordinance, Cap. 344 has included a management committee as one of the persons who is competent to commence proceedings in the Tribunal under
47、that section is, without more, insufficient to make the management committee a legal person. When the interest of the company is in issue, it is the company that can sue or be sued in its own name, not the board of directors. The board of directors is not a legal person independent of the company. T
48、he same applies to an incorporated owners and its management committee.”,恆麗園業主立案法團第四屆管理委員會 訴 恆麗園業主立案法團第二屆管理委員會及恆麗園業主立案法團第三屆管理委員會 , LDBM 73 of 2004,Yeung Chung Lau v. Incorporated Owners of Century Industrial Centre, CACV 381 of 2006,Section 14 covers the giving of an indemnity to members of the mana
49、gement committee against an action of defamation arising from the enforcement of obligation in the DMC,The Management Committee has no power to act on behalf of the owners in making donations,The Incorporated Owners of Swiss Towers v. Chow Yum Wah, CACV 122 of 2006,Para 1(1) of Schedule 3,The manage
50、ment committee shall convene- the first annual general meeting of a corporation not later than 15 months after the date of the registration of the corporation; an annual general meeting not earlier than 12 months, and not later than 15 months, after the date of the first or previous annual general meeting; ,
copyright@ 2008-2019 麦多课文库(www.mydoc123.com)网站版权所有
备案/许可证编号:苏ICP备17064731号-1