counsel appearing: Anna Charlotta Harpur.
The Tribunal confirmed that the reference to “owner” and “ownership” in the WHRS Act 2006 refers to legal ownership only, and that equitable or beneficial owners do not have standing to bring a claim.
In May 2007, when he was the sole legal owner, Mr Dassanayake had applied to the WHRS and obtained an assessor’s report concluding he had an eligible claim. In December 2007, as part of a bank refinance, the ownership of the property was transferred to the joint ownership of Mr and Mrs Dassanayake. Mrs Dassanayake had lived at the property throughout the sole legal ownership of her husband and had at all times an equitable interest in the property. In February 2010, Mr and Mrs Dassanayake applied for adjudication of the claim commenced by Mr Dassanayake in May 2007.
The issue for the Tribunal was whether the transfer from sole to joint ownership in December 2007 had terminated Mr Dassanayake’s claim by virtue of section 55 of the WHRS Act 2006, which provides that a change in the ownership of a property on or after 1 April 2007 terminates any claim made in respect of a dwellinghouse on a property by its former owner.
The claimants argued that the transfer to joint ownership did not constitute a change in ownership, as Mrs Dassanayake had at all times been an equitable owner of the property.
The Tribunal rejected the claimants’ argument and held that, for the purposes of the WHRS Act 2006, ownership referred to legal ownership only. Therefore, the ownership of the property had changed after 1 April 2007 and, as a result, terminated the claim.