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Agents on the hook for illegal in-law suites

by admin | Oct 4, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca Discipline hearings signal need for fuller knowledge about two-unit homes The Real Estate Council of Ontario (RECO), the body that licenses and governs real estate agents, is cracking down on representatives who advertise two-unit homes without...

Will discipline hearing end risky SPIS form?

by admin | Sep 20, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca Seller’s form has prompted 200 Canadian court cases A recent decision of a discipline panel of the Real Estate Council of Ontario (RECO) could spell the end of the Seller Property Information Statement in Ontario. The SPIS is a disclosure form...

Condo board fined for defying unit owners and court ruling

by admin | Sep 6, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca Directors must pay for flouting Condominium Act What happens if condominium board members fail to comply with the Condominium Act? That question was the focus of a case which ultimately wound up in Ontario’s Court of Appeal. In 2011, following...

‘Use it or lose it’ under the Land Titles system

by admin | Aug 9, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca A decade of not setting foot on property ends ownership – A patch of fenced-off land was the subject of a recent Ontario court ruling on squatter’s rights Is it possible to claim possessory title to a parcel of someone else’s land if the...

Sellers’ form still troubling the real estate industry

by admin | Jul 26, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca Buyers and sellers alike suffer the consequences The Seller Property Information Statement, a disclosure form created by the real estate industry, continues to cause grief for sellers, buyers — and real estate agents. Back in August, 2008,...

More to a tree trunk than meets the eye

by admin | Jul 12, 2014 | 2014 Toronto Star Columns, Toronto Star Property Law Columns

Bob Aaron bob@aaron.ca Court judges a boundary tree by entire trunk, from roots to foliage. A little Norway maple can grow into a big legal problem for neighbours who share it Who owns a tree which straddles the property line between my house and my neighbours? Can I...
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More Practice Areas

  • Beware the rules of your condominium — or you may end paying $10,000 for a doorbell
  • Judge awards luxury home seller eye-popping amount when lakefront Port Credit deal falls through
  • My real estate lawyer didn’t witness my e-signature. Should I be concerned?
  • A silent killer in your home. How to test if your Toronto house is one of the 19% with high levels of this odourless gas
  • B.C. court decision opens floodgates for future Aboriginal land title claims

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