Section 10.2 of the standard Residential Purchase Contract continues to provide a fertile ground for discussion. On a recent purchase, my new buyers were very concerned that the seller planned to provide an RPR and a letter from the City of Edmonton saying the property was non-conforming. Their email to me said they were worried about buying this non-complying property.
They came into the office, and we sat down and looked at the RPR and the compliance letter from the City. That letter said the property is non-conforming rather than non-complying. Non-conforming is not the same as non-complying.
The distinction is important. A non-conforming property is essentially a 'grandfathered' property. The non-conforming aspect can continue to be used with no requirement to make any changes, especially no requirement to make the property 'comply.' On the other hand, non-complying means some aspect of the property is offside the City's bylaw, and the non-complying element has to be fixed.
I reviewed the distinction between non-conforming and non-complying, and this is what I told them.
Under section 10.2 of the contract, along with the RPR, the seller has to provide " … evidence of municipal compliance or non-conformance…". Since the City letter says the property is non-conforming, the seller has met their 10.2 contractual obligations.
My clients were relieved. They now understood the difference between non-conforming and non-complying. The garage was the non-conforming issue, and they had no plans to do anything with the garage except leave it alone and use it as is.
Be aware of the differences between complying, non-conforming and non-complying. Explain carefully to your clients whether you are the listing or selling realtor.
Protect yourself.
Cheers,
Barry
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