Chair
Tim Jones, Barrister
The Complexities of Apportioning Costs
- The general principles of apportioning costs
- The interplay between sections 126, 127 and 138 of the Unit Titles Act 2010
- Schemes under s74 of the Unit Titles Act 2010
Presented by Iain Stephenson, Director, Stephenson Law
Description
Attend and earn 0.5 CPD hour
* This interactive online recording includes questions and quizzes requiring critical thinking about the topics, so you have no annual limits to the number of points/hours you can claim with this format of learning. Please verify with your CPD rules
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the principles of cost apportionment under the Unit Titles Act 2010, including the interaction of sections 126, 127, and 138
- Learn how to develop and implement schemes under section 74 to manage complex cost allocation issues
Presenters
Iain Stephenson, Director, Stephenson Law
Iain is a Building Law and Construction Disputes specialist. He specialises in building compliance, property decision-making, and repair/maintenance projects for existing buildings. Over the past decade Iain has worked with contractors, consenting authorities, commercial and residential clients, and central government. This includes project and contract disputes, and decision making. A significant client following for Iain is the multi-unit buildings sector (mainly Unit Titles). He has appeared in the Tenancy Tribunal, District Court, High Court, Court of Appeal and Supreme Court.
Tim Jones, Barrister
As one of New Zealand’s foremost property lawyers Tim Jones has been practising since 1975; first at Simpson Grierson and for 38 years as a member of and partner at Glaister Ennor in Auckland. He led Glaister Ennor’s residential and land development team for many years. That team dealt with a broad range of property transactions from sales and purchases of all types of properties to the sale of developments for property developers including a significant number of unit title developments. Tim developed an intimate understanding of land development following the passing of the Resource Management Act 1991. He also has a keen understanding and knowledge of unit titles and was involved in the mid-1970s with developers who were the forerunners of the land development industry, using the 1972 Unit Titles Act for multi-unit developments. Tim has been involved with the drafting of the Unit Titles Act 2010 and the amendment Act 2022. Since 2018 Tim has been practicing as a barrister sole advising on a broad range of land, property and unit title problems. Tim has always been heavily involved in Law Society affairs. He was the Auckland Vice President of the New Zealand Law Society Board.