Last month, the Court of Appeal reversed that decision and ruled that when sellers make a representation to the best of their knowledge and belief, the statement only speaks to the exact point in time the representation was made. Unless the language in the contract states that the representation continues until closing, it does not.
After reciting a number of errors made by the Superior Court judge, appeal court Justice David Brown wrote in his decision: “I conclude that the sellers’ representation and warranty in the Illegal Substances Clause, that the use of the property had never been for the growth or manufacture of illegal substances, was limited to their knowledge and belief as it existed when they executed the (Agreement of Purchase and Sale).
“At that time, they did not know about the property’s prior use as a grow-op. In those circumstances, I conclude the application judge erred in finding the sellers breached the clause. They did not.”
Sidney Troister is a specialist in real estate law. In an email after the appeal decision was released, he cautioned that language is crucial in the drafting of an Agreement of Purchase and Sale. He noted that it is important for lawyers (and presumably agents) to be clear on what the terms of a contract mean, and what the clients want to give and to get.
“The court of appeal got it right, in my view,” Troister wrote. “A representation is not absolute if qualified by knowledge and belief, and the timing that the representation is given is critical to the parties’ expectations.”
So, if a seller uses this clause but discovers before closing that the house was a grow-op, or contains Kitec plumbing, do they have to disclose the discovery? Even if there is no right to terminate the contract?
The answer to that question will have to wait for another case.
Top image credit: gamegfx, Getty Images
Bob Aaron is Toronto real estate lawyer. His Title Page column appears on this blog, Move Smartly, and in The Toronto Star. You can follow Bob on Twitter @bobaaron2 and at his website aaron.ca