Buying a home yourself? Torri reviews your contract in plain English — torri.com.au

The whole bundle, reviewed as one matter

Contract of sale, Section 32 and the certificates — one combined PDF or separate files, recognised and reviewed together in a single pass.

The problem with the bundle

A Victorian sale rarely arrives as tidy separate documents. The agent sends one PDF — contract of sale, Section 32, title search, plan, owners corporation certificate, sometimes a planning certificate — scanned together in whatever order the vendor's side stapled them. Generic tools read that as one long document. The Section 32 check needs the statement found first; the special conditions live somewhere behind page forty; and if the contract in the bundle belongs to a different lot than the statement, nothing complains.

How Torri reads a bundle

  • 1

    Find every document

    Torri detects the documents inside the file — the contract of sale, the Section 32 and the certificates attached to it — wherever they sit in the bundle.

  • 2

    Review them together

    One review covers the lot: the Section 32 checked against the disclosure duties, the special conditions against the standard LIV/REIV general conditions, the certificates against what the statement claims.

  • 3

    Confirm it's one property

    The documents are checked against each other — the contract and the statement must describe the same land, so a mixed-up bundle is caught before it wastes your afternoon.

Built for how Victorian contracts actually arrive

Separate files work the same way: add the contract and the Section 32 to the same review and Torri reads them as one matter. Either way you get a single set of findings for a single property — not a document-by-document scatter you have to reassemble yourself.

Where it fits your review

The bundle is the unit of work a Victorian conveyancer actually receives, so it is the unit Torri reviews. You open one review, see the contract and the statement reconciled, and spend your time on the findings — not on splitting PDFs. You keep the judgement and sign the report.

Questions, answered

The agent sent everything as one PDF — is that a problem?

No — that is the norm in Victoria. Torri recognises the contract of sale, the Section 32 and the attached certificates inside a single combined file and reviews them together as one matter.

What if the contract and Section 32 arrive separately?

Add them to the same review. Torri reads them together and checks they describe the same property, so a mismatched bundle is caught before it wastes your time.

What does Torri check across the bundle?

The Section 32 against the vendor disclosure duties, the special conditions against the standard LIV/REIV general conditions, and the certificates against what the statement claims — one review, not three.

See it on your next contract.

Three reviews on us. No credit card. No sales call.