MTIANZ regard ADLS Sale and purchase agreement
MTIANZ welcomes the release of the jointly endorsed
Auckland District Law Society and REINZ standard sale and
purchase Agreement (10th Edition 2019). The inclusion of a
toxicology condition clause (9.5), and new wording for
vendor warranties (7.2), establishes certainty and
protection for potential purchasers who choose to include a
toxicology condition, or if the vendor fails to disclose
historical information that may not comply with the New
Zealand Standard NZS8510:2017.
The standard toxicology condition applies to contamination resulting from both USE and MANUFACTURE of methamphetamine, and requires a potential purchaser to acknowledge whether or not a toxicology report is a condition of the agreement. This is to be included or excluded under the conditions of the contract on the first page. The standard terms of the toxicology report are outlined under section 9.5 which reads as follows:
9.5 Toxicology report
condition
1) If the purchaser has
indicated on the front page of this agreement that a
toxicology report is required, this agreement is conditional
upon the purchaser obtaining at the purchaser’s cost on or
before the fifteenth working day after the date of this
agreement, a toxicology report on the property that is
satisfactory to the purchaser, on the basis of an objective
assessment.
2) The purpose of the toxicology
report shall be to detect whether the property has been
contaminated by the preparation, manufacture or use of drugs
including, but not limited to,
methamphetamine.
3) The report must be prepared in
good faith by a suitablyqualified inspector using
accepted principles and methods (and where the testing is in
relation to methamphetamine, in accordance with the New
Zealand Standard 8510:2017) and it must be in
writing.
4) Subject to the rights of any tenants
of the property, the vendor shall allow the inspector to
inspect the property at all reasonable times upon reasonable
notice for the purposes of carrying out the testing and
preparation of the report.
5) The inspector may
not carry out any invasive testing in the course of the
inspection without the vendor’s prior written
consent.
6) If the purchaser cancels this
agreement for nonfulfilment of this condition pursuant to
subclause 9.10(5), the purchaser must provide the vendor
immediately upon request with a copy of the inspectors
report.
MTIANZ recommend licenced agents and vendors
understand the importance of the wording within section
9.5(3) states “a suitably qualified inspector.” For
NZS8510:2017 compliant methamphetamine testing by a suitably
qualified inspector is defined under Section 7 which states
that screening assessments Shall be
conducted by an NZQA Certified Sampler. This means they must
hold the NZQA unit standards 30892,30893 and 30894.
The MTIANZ board are urging those providing services within the Methamphetamine Testing Industry, to get compliant or make it very clear to their clients that their services are not compliant with NZS8510:2017. Operators should heed this warning, or some may find themselves in breach of the Fair Trading Act 1986, and subsequently be liable for misrepresentations.
The MTIANZ Executive
Board has raised a formal complaint with the REA involving
agent disclosure obligations in regards to Methamphetamine
contamination. The REA Website states the following:
•
Methamphetamine contamination of 15 micrograms (g) per
100 square centimetres (cm2) or above is considered a
property defect that must be disclosed to potential buyers
(rule 10.7 of the Code of Conduct).
•
You do not have to disclose test results below 15g per
100cm2 unless specifically asked by a prospective buyer or
where a prospective buyer has clearly shown an interest in
methamphetamine contamination (rule 6.4 of the Code of
Conduct).
Disclosure is not required
where:
• methamphetamine has only been
used at the property and the property has been successfully
remediated back to below 15g per 100cm2.
•
methamphetamine has been produced or manufactured at the
property and the property has been successfully remediated
back to below 1.5g per 100cm2.
MTIANZ believe these
statements are in direct conflict with the Auckland District
Law Society (ADLS) Standard Sale and Purchase Agreement
(10th Edition 2019. There now appears to be a breach of
agent obligations under Real Estate Agents Act (Professional
Conduct and Client Care) Rules 2012. This places agents and
consumers in serious jeopardy. The MTIANZ hope this will be
addressed by the REA with some urgency.