Builder Risk Alert: Court Compliance Is Not Optional

Builders prefer being on the tools; court proceedings are generally of no interest to them.

However, the Supreme Court decision in The Owners – Strata Plan No 94624 v G & T Younan Constructions Pty Ltd  provides a reminder for builders: failing to comply with court processes can be as damaging as the defects themselves.

Background

The Owners Corporation of a Dee Why residential building sued the builder, G & T Younan Constructions, and developer, Gold Star Holding. The action included a claim for defective works and loss occasioned by the defects under both the Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) and the Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 (NSW).

Of interest in this matter is the consequences of the defendant builder and developer’s lack of attention to the proceedings, the result which followed.

The Outcome

The Court found that the defendants’ works were defective and so awarded the Owners:

  • $1.718 million in rectification damages;
  • $945,205 in interest (running from 2016); and
  • Costs.

Total exposure exceeded $2.6 million, before legal costs.

The builder and the developer did not appear at trial.

What Went Wrong Procedurally 

The defendants:

  • Failed to comply with the relevant practice note and the Court orders;
  • Did not participate in expert conclaves;
  • Ceased legal representation shortly before trial; and
  • Failed to appear at the hearing.

Relying on case authority, the Court confirmed it may proceed in a party’s absence where notice has been given.

The plaintiff still had to prove its case — but did so through structured, uncontested expert evidence.

As the defence did not engage or appear at the final hearing, their evidence was not read into Court and not considered by the judge, resulting in the plaintiff’s technical narrative going unchallenged.

Key Compliance Lessons for Builders

Non-Appearance Does Not Stop a Trial

The Court can (and will) proceed under r 29.7 UCPR, which provides that the Court may either proceed with the trial generally or so far as concerns any claim for relief in the proceedings, or adjourn the trial where a party does not appear.

In this case, the Court was satisfied that the builder had plenty of notice of the hearing and so chose to proceed.

Practice Note Breaches Have Consequences

Failure to file evidence, attend conclaves or comply with timetable orders strips you of the opportunity to challenge expert material.

In this case, the experts were ordered to conclave on 3 separate dates, however the conclave failed to proceed.

Expert Evidence Wins Undefended Cases

If you do not serve competing expert reports, the Court may accept the plaintiff’s evidence in full.Further, if no one appears to read your evidence into Court, the Court is not obliged to consider it when making a decision.

In this case, the evidence was not read into Court so the Court relied wholly on the evidence of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s evidence was also found to have been prepared by experts in the field who had considered and complied with the expert code of conduct.

Interest Accumulates While You Delay

Almost $1 million in interest was awarded because the matter remained unresolved for years.

In this case, interest was calculated from 2016.

The Commercial Reality

Court compliance is not administrative formality; it is risk management.

Ignoring directions, missing deadlines, or assuming proceedings will “go away” can convert a defendable defect claim into a multi-million-dollar judgment.

For builders, the lesson is simple:

  • Engage legal representation early.
  • Comply strictly.
  • Defend properly.

(or just build a defect-free building)

Failure to do so is financially unforgiving; and may cost more than the cost of rectification.

 

 

This communication is sent by Kreisson Legal Pty Limited (ACN 113 986 824). This communication has been prepared for the general information of clients and professional associates of Kreisson Legal. You should not rely on the contents. It is not legal advice and should not be regarded as a substitute for legal advice. The contents may contain copyright.

Gretel Wathen

gretel.wathen@kreisson.com.au

Associate | Project Coordinator | 02 8239 6509

About Gretel, /our-people/gretel-wathen/