Boccabella v Valuer-General

Case

[2017] QLC 21

13 April 2017

No judgment structure available for this case.

LAND COURT OF QUEENSLAND

CITATION:  Boccabella v Valuer-General [2017] QLC 21*
PARTIES:  Lorenzo Boccabella
(applicant)
v
Valuer-General
(respondent)
FILE NO:  LVA922-16
DIVISION:  General division
PROCEEDING:  Jurisdiction – appeal against annual land valuation.
DELIVERED ON:  13 April 2017
DELIVERED AT:  Brisbane
HEARD ON:  Submissions closed 29 March 2017
HEARD AT:  Brisbane
JUDICIAL 
REGISTRAR:  GJ Smith

ORDER: 

1. 

The Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal.

CATCHWORDS: 

Practice and procedure – jurisdiction – failure to appeal to Land Court within time – failure to read objection decision notice – whether reasonable excuse is established

Land Valuation Act 2010 ss 155, 157, 158
AG Russell v. The Crown (1992-93) 14 QLCR 202
Gurney v The Valuer-General [2010] QLC 141
Villa Sul Mare v Valuer-General [2011] QLC 77
APPEARANCES:  Mr Lorenzo Boccabella on his own behalf.
Mr SP Fynes-Clinton instructed by Legal Services, DNRM.

*Pursuant to Rule 45 of the Land Court Rules 2000, this is a corrected decision, issued on 18 April 2017, and replaces
the original decision issued on 13 April 2017.

[1]      This application requires the Court to determine whether it has jurisdiction to hear an

appeal lodged by Mr Lorenzo Boccabella (the applicant) pursuant to s 157 of the Land

Valuation Act 2010 (the LVA) concerning a property situated at New Farm within the

Brisbane City Council local government area.

Background

[2]      On 31 August 2016 a Notice of Appeal was lodged by the applicant against a valuation

by the respondent pursuant to s 158 of the LVA. On 1 September 2016 the Registrar

of the Court wrote to the applicant advising that the period for filing the Notice of

Appeal expired on 28 August 2016 and that the proposed appeal could only be heard

if “reasonable excuse” was established as required by s 158 of the LVA.

[3]      On 22 February 2017 a Deputy Registrar of the Court wrote to the parties to advise

them that a hearing to determine whether the Court had jurisdiction to hear the appeal

was scheduled for 29 March 2017.

[4] Section 157 (2) of the LVA provides –

(2) Subject to section 158, an appeal cannot be started after 60 days after the day
of issue stated in the objection decision notice (the appeal period).

[5] Relevantly, s 158 of the LVA provides –

158 - Late filing

(1) This section applies if a valuation appeal notice is filed after
the appeal period has ended.
(2) The Land Court can hear the appeal only if—
(a) the valuation appeal notice was filed 1 year or less after the objection decision notice was issued; and
(b) the appellant satisfies the court there was a reasonable excuse for not filing the notice within the appeal period.

Example of reasonable excuse—

The notice of the valuer-general’s decision or the valuation
appeal notice was lost or delayed in the ordinary course of post.”

[6]      Upon the hearing of this matter, Mr Boccabella, a barrister, appeared in his capacity

as landowner, while the respondent was represented by Mr SP Fynes-Clinton,

instructed by Legal Services, Department of Natural Resources and Mines (DNRM).

Evidence

[7]      The evidence on behalf of the applicant is comprised of the contents of an email dated

29 March 2017 (Ex.1) from the applicant to Mr Ian Pepper, Lawyer, DNRM together

with an attachment containing seven objection decision notices issued by the

respondent to the applicant in respect of properties he owned. Of the seven notices

six were dated 29 June 2016 with the remaining notice being dated 3 July 2016. It is

contended by the applicant that all notices arrived on the same date in one bundle with

the relevant objection decision notice being the second document in the bundle.

[8]      The relevant portion of Ex 1 is set out below:

“Attached is how the decisions on objection arrived. There is particular poignancy

to this as the following year’s valuations all showed a decline (something I have

never seen before). The error made in my office was that the date was taken from

the top document not realising that all the other documents were dated earlier”.

[9]      The material before the Court does not disclose the date upon which the objection

decision notices are said to have been received or the date that the oversight or error

is said to have occurred within the applicant’s office. Although Ex 1 was received by

the Court without objection the means and basis of the applicant’s knowledge has not

been detailed.

[10]    Upon the hearing of this matter the respondent’s legal representative advised the Court

that although no issue was taken with the facts outlined in Ex 1, it was the respondents

position that relevant authorities would suggest that it was unlikely that the

circumstances would be such to establish “reasonable excuse” as required by s 158

of the LVA.

Applicant’s submissions

[11]    A summary of the submissions by the applicant is set out as follows:

a) The interpretation of the statute in the context of what has occurred would

establish reasonable excuse in respect of the two day delay.

b) This subsequent year’s valuations pursuant to the LVA are lower and

therefore suggestive of a possible error in the valuation of the subject

property. This factor could be taken into account and the valuation reviewed.

c) As far as the applicant can recall all of the valuations arrived in one bundle

on the one date and this fact distinguishes the present circumstances from the

authorities relied upon by the respondent.

Respondent’s submissions

[12]   A summary of the contentions made on behalf of the respondent are summarised

below:

a) A review of authorities including Gurney v The Valuer-General [2010] QLC

141 (Gurney) and Villa Sul Mare v Valuer-General [2011] QLC 77 (Villa Sul

Mare) suggests that the applicants explanation may not meet the threshold.

b) The excuse must be substantial and be some cause that a reasonable person

would regard as consistent with a reasonable standard of conduct.

c) The case of Villa Sul Mare is factually similar in that it involved different dates

being ascertained from different notices without ambiguity and in that case the

Court was not prepared to accept that failing to recognize the difference in dates

amounted to a reasonable excuse. Accordingly by analogy a failure to look at

the dates on each decision notice would not be sufficient to establish a

reasonable excuse in the present circumstances and a mere oversight is not

sufficiently explanatory of the circumstances.

Conclusion

[13]      I have considered the limited evidence before the Court in light of the submissions

made by the parties. The applicant correctly submits that the resolution of this

application necessarily involves the interpretation of s 158 in the context of the

evidence presented by him regarding the alleged oversight, apparently by his office

staff concerning the relevant objection decision notice.

[14]      As I understand it, the thrust of the applicants argument is that while the legal

principles set out in the cases referred to on behalf of the respondent are not disputed,

the application of those principles to the facts would result in a finding of reasonable

excuse as to the best of the applicants recollection the objection decision notices “all

arrived in the same envelope on the same day.”

[15]      Notwithstanding the similarities between the Villa Sul Mare decision and the present

circumstances, the Court must necessarily reach its own conclusions in determining

if “reasonable excuse” is established by the applicant i.e. was the failure by the

applicant’s administrative staff to turn over one page and examine the relevant

objection decision notice a factor of “substantial[1]” character involving “some cause

which a reasonable man would regard as a sufficient cause, consistent with a

reasonable standard of conduct, the kind of thing which one might have expected to

[1]              AG Russell v. The Crown (1992-93) 14 QLCR 202.

delay the taking of action by a reasonable man [2]”.

[2]              Gurney v The Valuer-General [2010] QLC 141.

[16]      I have considered these two questions and have concluded that the failure to examine

the relevant objection decision notice is neither a factor of substantial character nor

the kind of thing “which might be expected to delay the taking of action by a

reasonable man”[3]. Such a pivotal document clearly required greater attention from

[3] Ibid.

not only the applicant’s staff but also from the applicant himself as owner and

potential litigant. The evidence before the Court fails to establish any reasonable

excuse in this case as required by s 158 of the LVA and accordingly the Court has

no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal.

Order
1. The Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal.

GJ SMITH
JUDICIAL REGISTRAR OF THE LAND COURT

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