by admin | Feb 6, 2021 | 2021 Toronto Star Property Law Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns
Can a home inspector avoid legal responsibility if is an exclusion of liability clause in the inspection contract? In February, 2009, Michael Smith retained Terry Gordon, a registered home inspector, to inspect a house for sale in Dartmouth, N.S. Gordon presented...
by admin | Jan 23, 2021 | 2021 Toronto Star Property Law Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns
Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca The Ontario Court of Appeal has ordered two Oakville, Ont. homeowners to pay $40,000 in court costs and to remove a swimming pool they had built on top of a utility easement. The easement, in favour of the town of Oakville and Oakville Hydro,...
by admin | Jan 9, 2021 | 2021 Toronto Star Property Law Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns
Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca A discovery of $500,000 in cash and gold by Alberta homebuyers as they renovated their house in 2017 was the subject of my column in November https://www.aaron.ca/do-home-buyers-keep-the-500k-they-discover-in-their-house-during-renovations/. A...
by admin | Dec 23, 2020 | 2020 Toronto Star Property Law Column, Toronto Star Property Law Columns
Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca A century of Canadian legal precedents dealing with listings describing homes for sale were reversed late last year by an Ontario Court of Appeal decision that is being seen as one of the year’s most significant real estate law rulings. The case...
by admin | Dec 9, 2020 | 2020 Toronto Star Property Law Column, Toronto Star Property Law Columns
Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca When the heirs of a GTA deceased homeowner decide it’s time to sell the property, it typically takes the Ontario estates court many months to rubber-stamp probate documents allowing the sale to proceed. This delay is causing significant hardship...