Christensen v Brisbane City Council
[2001] QPEC 8
•13/02/2001
IN THE PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT COURT
OF QUEENSLAND
| CITATION: | Warren Christensen v Brisbane City Council [2001] QPE 008 | ||
| PARTIES: |
| ||
| v | |||
| |||
| FILE NO: | 2068 of 2000 | ||
| PROCEEDINGS: | APPEAL | ||
| COURT: | PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT COURT (BRISBANE) | ||
| DELIVERED ON: | 13 February 2001 at SOUTHPORT | ||
| HEARING DATES: | 24 OCTOBER & 1 DECEMBER 2000 | ||
| JUDGMENT OF: | NEWTON, DCJ | ||
| CATCHWORDS: | Town Plan for City of Brisbane – sec 7.2.6 – waiver of application for development work (demolition) – whether waiver may be granted retroactively. | ||
| COUNSEL: | Mr A Heyworth-Smith for the applicant Mr R Bain, QC for the respondent | ||
| SOLICITORS: | Ian Fry & Co for the applicant Brisbane City Council Legal Office for the respondent |
IN THE PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT COURT
HELD AT BRISBANE
| QUEENSLAND | No 2068 of 2000 |
| BETWEEN | WARREN CHRISTENSEN | Applicant |
| AND | BRISBANE CITY COUNCIL | Respondent |
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT - Newton DCJ
Delivered the 13th day of February 2001
[1] The applicant seeks a number of declarations and consequent orders in respect of a development
on land at 47 Prospect Street, Wynnum. The parties have agreed to confine their submissions for
present purposes to that part of the application set out in paragraph (d) thereof which seeks:
“(d) Alternatively, a declaration that upon the proper construction of Secs 7.2.6.1 and 7.2.6.2 of the Town Plan for the City of Brisbane, it is competent for the respondent to grant a waiver of the kind referred to in the Sec 7.2.6.2 notwithstanding that development work for which waiver has been sought has already commenced.” [2] It seems to be common ground that certain development work has been carried out by the
applicant on a residential building on the subject site. The applicant prefers to categorise this
work as “alteration, addition, extension, modification or renovation”. The respondent describes
the work as “demolition”.
[3] No agreed statement of facts has been placed before me and no evidence called to establish the
precise nature of the development work carried out by the applicant. However, it is not in dispute
that the work was done without any application being made to the respondent to grant a waiver of
the kind referred to in Sec 7.2.6.2 of the Town Plan for the City of Brisbane.
[4] It is also not in dispute that the subject site is located inside the area bounded by a heavy line in
figure 7.1.1 of the Town Plan. Thus, assuming the development work comprises or includes the
demolition of a building on the subject site, the development work is defined as “permissible
development” pursuant to the provisions of Sec 7.2.6.1(a) of the Town Plan. As such, it may
proceed only with the consent of the respondent.
[5] Section 7.2.6.2 of the Town Plan provides that:
“The Council may, on application made under subsection 24.5, waive the application of
subparagraph 7.2.6.1 with respect to a particular building where:
(a) it is satisfied that the building does not constitute a heritage or character building; or (b) the extent of demolition proposed is minor and:
(i) in the case of a heritage building, unlikely to have any significant adverse affect on the heritage significant of the building; or (ii) in the case of a character building, unlikely to have any significant adverse affect on the visual appearance of the building within its visual catchment. (c) the building is structurally unsound and not reasonably capable of being made structurally sound.”
[6] The respondent contends that it cannot lawfully retroactively waive the non-compliance with Sec
7.2.6.2. The applicant submits that it is competent for the respondent to grant now the waiver on a nunc
pro tunc basis.
[7] The proposed amendment which is sought by the applicant is in the following terms:
“(d)
Alternatively, a declaration that upon the proper construction of Sec 7.2.6.1 and 7.2.6.2 of the Town Plan for the City of Brisbane where development comprised the demolition of a building or part of a building on land which is located inside the area bounded by a heavy line in Figure 7.1.1, and where the particular building is neither a heritage building nor a character building as in the Plan defined, it is competent for the Council, where application is made under Sec 24.5, to waive the application Sec 7.2.6.1 in respect of that particular building notwithstanding:
(a)
that the development which comprises demolition of that particular building or part of that particular building has commenced, and
(b)
that so much of that development which constitutes such demolition has commenced.”
[8] The proposed amendment is based on the proposition that that last date (after
which the Council would say it has no power to entertain an application for waiver) is no
later that the commencement of the “demolition”, however defined. The applicant’s
position is that there is no point of time when the Council’s power to grant such waiver
comes to an end. Whether or not a waiver of Sec 7.2.6.1 should be granted, contends the
applicant, is always a matter of discretion to be exercised in accordance with the
circumstances of each particular case. Essentially, the amendment is sought by the
applicant to accommodate whichever position the Council finally adopts by making the
commencement of “demolition” rather than the commencement of “development work”
the time determinant.
[9] It is submitted on behalf of the applicant that the same question as to whether the
granting of waiver is a matter of power, or a matter of discretion, exists whether the
Council’s concept of “demolition” is adopted, or that for which the applicant contends.
Mr Heyworth-Smith illustrates that contention by submitting that it would be absurd if,
after a ramshackle edifice has been demolished, which no-one in their right mind would
want to leave standing, the Council had no power to waive the application of Sec 7.2.6.1,
with the resultant inexorable application of Sec 7.2.6.4(a).
[10] The applicant’s proposed amendment, by focusing on the “demolition” content of
development, is said to be intended to have regard to an argument raised on behalf of the
Council at the hearing, namely, that one intent of Sec 7.2.6 of the Town Plan was to put a
heavy sanction upon developers who might “demolish” heritage or character houses without the Council knowing, and without regard to public notification and
advertisement. Mr Heyworth-Smith submits that even if the proposed declaration is
made, the Council will retain its discretion to refuse a waiver. Whether it is likely to
refuse to exercise its discretion in favour of the applicant is irrelevant to the construction
question.
[11] Mr Bain QC, submits that the proposed amendment lacks legal utility firstly
because a declaration as proposed by the amendment would be inappropriate as not
clearly deciding anything, the “commencement” upon demolition of part of the building,
rather than the fact of demolition, being irrelevant; and in any event the declaration as
proposed by the amendment would not avail the applicant on the facts here.
[12] It is contended on behalf of the respondent that a person in the applicant’s
position will say that because the entire intended “demolition” has not been done, the fact
that some of it has been done, i.e. that it has “commenced”, is of no concern. Mr Bain
submits that that is not a permissible contention having regard to Sec 7.2.6 of the Town
Plan.
[13] The nub of the problem, it seems to me, is whether subparagraph 7.2.6.5, referring
to “demolition of … part of a building” presupposes that any demolition which has been
carried out of part of a building, whether or not that is the entirety of the demolition
intended in a particular project, constitutes “demolition” and, hence, “development”. In
my view subparagraph 7.2.6.5 does contain that presupposition.
[14] I accept that a developer may commence upon demolition, but yet not demolish
anything. Furthermore, in the application of this part of the Town Plan, as is the case
with the application of any statute, it is inevitable that a particular situation will be dealt
with as a matter of fact and degree. I accept that a line may and should be drawn between
demolition (as defined) having been done and demolition having been commenced. The
two are not necessarily the same.
[15] In the event, I am satisfied that in the circumstances of which demolition of part
of a building has occurred, the respondent lacks retroactive power to waive compliance
with the Section or otherwise render lawful the development comprised in the demolition.
The amendment is refused and the preliminary question should be resolved on the
existing application.
0
0
0