Edited photos, virtual staging should void contract for home purchase, B.C. man argues
A B.C. man who backed out on a deal to buy a house after he realized online photos of it were edited and virtually staged has been ordered to pay a penalty for rescinding the contract.
Braden Messenger entered into a $490,000 contract of purchase and sale for a property being sold by Mary Bell in 2023, according to a decision from the Civil Resolution Tribunal on the dispute over the $1,225 fee.
"It is undisputed that Mr. Messenger did not view the property before agreeing to the CPS," tribunal member Alison Wake wrote.
After seeing the property, Messenger notified Bell that he was rescinding the contract. He argued he should not have to pay the fee, which Bell was claiming, because the property was misrepresented.
"Mr. Messenger says that before he made the offer that formed the basis for the CPS, Ms. Bell or her agent added photographs to the property’s online listing that had been virtually staged and significantly altered, without including a disclaimer or notation," the decision said.
"Mr. Messenger says these photographs constitute a misrepresentation, and so the CPS is void."
Bell did not dispute that the photos were edited and evidence reviewed by the tribunal showed that the listing photos were "significantly altered," including by being virtually staged. In one instance, according to the decision, a "large area of peeling paint" had been edited out of a photo of a bedroom.
However, the issue of whether the property was misrepresented was found to be irrelevant to the question of whether Messenger was required to pay the fee.
Messenger signed a "notice of rescission" exercising his right to terminate the contract under a particular section of B.C.'s Property Law Act. This, Bell argued, was not his only option in the situation.
"Mr. Messenger could have let his offer lapse by not removing the subjects to it, with no penalty," the decision says.
Contracts can be cancelled for "a material misrepresentation by the other party," the tribunal noted. But the document Messenger signed explicitly agreed to a penalty equivalent to 0.25 per cent of the property's sale price — an amount mandated by B.C.'s Home Buyer Rescission Period Regulation.
"I find that I do not need to determine whether Ms. Bell materially misrepresented the property’s condition, because Mr. Messenger agreed to pay the rescission fee in any event," Wake wrote.
In addition to the fee, Messenger was ordered to pay Bell $73.84 in pre-judgment and $125 in tribunal fees.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'Say it to my face': Singh confronts heckling protester on Parliament Hill
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh confronted a protester for calling him a 'corrupted bastard' on Parliament Hill on Tuesday.
BREAKING Poilievre's first chance to topple Trudeau government expected next week
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is set to get his first chance to topple Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority Liberal government next week, CTV News has confirmed.
Why it's 'very hard' to find work in Canada
Vacancies have steadily fallen since the glut of nearly one million open posts in 2022. At the time, one in three businesses had trouble hiring staff due to a labour shortage. Since then, vacancies have dropped.
Judge orders Sean 'Diddy' Combs jailed in sex trafficking and racketeering charges
Sean 'Diddy' Combs presided over a sordid empire of sexual crimes, coercing and abusing women for years while using blackmail and shocking acts of violence to keep his victims in line, according to an indictment unsealed Tuesday.
A wave of exploding pagers in Lebanon and Syria kills at least 9, including members of Hezbollah
Pagers used by hundreds of members of the militant group Hezbollah exploded near simultaneously in Lebanon and Syria on Tuesday, killing at least nine people -- including an 8-year-old girl -- and wounding several thousand, officials said. They blamed Israel in what appeared to be a sophisticated, remote attack.
Two people charged in murder of Halifax teen; police believe remains have been found
Halifax Regional Police believe Devon Sinclair Marsman, who disappeared in 2022, was the victim of a homicide and two people have now been charged in his death.
BREAKING Canucks' Dakota Joshua reveals he is recovering from cancer
Vancouver Canucks forward Dakota Joshua revealed Tuesday he underwent cancer treatment over the summer, and will not be ready to play when the team’s training camp begins later this week.
How to prevent lung cancer, regardless of whether you smoke, according to a doctor
More people who have never touched a cigarette are getting lung cancer, but there are ways to prevent it, according to a doctor.
Liberals need to 'redouble efforts' after byelection losses, Trudeau ministers say
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he's going to 'stay focused' on governing after being handed his second byelection upset in recent months, as members of his front bench say they’re 'disappointed' in the party's latest showing at the polls.