CONDOMINIUM AUTHORITY TRIBUNAL
Order under section 1.44 of the Condominium Act, 1998.
Member: Marc Bhalla, Member
The Applicant, Yuantao Ji Self-Represented
The Respondent, Toronto Standard Condominium Corporation No. 1611 Represented by Annette Quitevis, Agent
Hearing: Written Online Hearing – February 17 to April 13, 2022
REASONS FOR DECISION
A. INTRODUCTION
1This is the third records case that has come before this Tribunal involving the parties – an Applicant unit owner and Respondent condominium corporation. The cases all relate to the documentation of noise complaints made by the Applicant. The Applicant wants incident reports of their noise complaints.
2The Applicant requested incident reports for noise complaints of September 13, October 19, October 24, October 30 and November 7, 2021. Soon after the Applicant filed this case, the Respondent provided the Applicant with incident reports of September 14, October 19, October 24 and November 7, 2021. The Applicant still wants incident reports of September 13 and October 30, 2021. The Respondent claims those reports do not exist.
3The Respondent refused to provide records to the Applicant without a reasonable excuse. It then corrected the refusal. I am not convinced further records exist or should exist. A small penalty is in order.
4While this case is a records case, not as a noise case, there is no question that the Applicant has noise concerns. The Respondent has acknowledged receiving 26 noise complaints from the Applicant. It may well be time for the Applicant and the Respondent to address the underlying issue.
B. ISSUES & ANALYSIS
Did the Respondent refuse to provide the Applicant with records?
5The Applicant requested records on December 21, 2021. Without a reply, the Applicant filed this case on January 24, 2022. On January 28, 2022, the Applicant moved the case to Stage 2 – Mediation and the Respondent provided the Applicant with four incident reports.
6The Respondent failed to respond to the Applicant’s Request for Records within the 30 days required by Section 13.3(6) of Ontario Regulation 48/01. As in Ji v. Toronto Standard Condominium Corporation No. 1611, 2021 ONCAT 122 (“2021 ONCAT 122”), I find this lack of reply to be a refusal to provide records.
7On the two requested reports the Respondent has not provided, the Applicant offered screen shots of calls and recordings of conversations as evidence that they made noise complaints on September 13 and October 30, 2021. This does not prove that incident reports exist. This case is not about whether the Applicant made allegations of nuisance on the dates in question. This case is about records. The Applicant has not established that the Respondent had to create incident reports based on their interactions of September 13 and October 30, 2021.
8The Respondent did not refuse to provide the Applicant with records that do not exist. It refused to provide the Applicant with the incident reports that it has since given to the Applicant.
Should a penalty be awarded?
9Section 1.44(1)6 of the Condominium Act, 1998 (the “Act”) allows this Tribunal to order a penalty if a condominium corporation refuses to offer a record without reasonable excuse. The Respondent explains the delay in addressing the Applicant was due to a staffing change. I accept this as an explanation, not as a reasonable excuse. I find that the Respondent refused to offer a record without reasonable excuse.
10This is not the first request made by the Applicant to the Respondent. This is not the first time the Respondent failed to reply to the Applicant within the prescribed timeline. Yet, the Respondent mitigated the refusal by providing the Applicant with records four days after this case was filed. This distinguishes this case from 2021 ONCAT 122. Here, the Respondent provided records before the case moved to Stage 3 for a hearing and 38 days after they were requested. In 2021 ONCAT 122, records were provided during the Stage 3 hearing, many months later.
11I question the merit of bringing this case to a Stage 3 hearing. A $150 penalty is appropriate. I caution the Respondent not to make a habit of failing to reply to requests for records within the prescribed timeline. Larger penalties may be appropriate if that continues.
12Rule 48.1 of this Tribunal’s Rules of Practice establish that filing fees are generally recoverable by a successful party. I find it appropriate for the Applicant to recover only the filing fees they paid before they received records, $75.
C. ORDER
13The Tribunal Orders that the Respondent is to pay the Applicant a penalty of $150 and filing fees of $75. If the full amount of $225 is not provided to the Applicant within 30 days of this Order, the Applicant can set-off the amount against the common expenses attributable to their unit(s) as set out in Section 1.45(3) of the Act. Each party shall otherwise bear their own costs for this proceeding.
Marc Bhalla
Member, Condominium Authority Tribunal
Released on: April 29, 2022