Commonwealth of Australia (As Represented BY the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development) v Shirvington (No.4)
[2017] FCCA 1315
•23 June 2017
FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA
| COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA (AS REPRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT) v SHIRVINGTON (No.4) | [2017] FCCA 1315 |
| Catchwords: ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – Commonwealth tenancy dispute – termination of long term tenancy agreement – application for extension of time within which to apply for a warrant of possession – extension necessitated by respondent’s appeal and stay of orders previously made – discretion under s.121 of the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW) – application for extension of time granted. |
| Legislation: Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW), ss.80, 94, 121, Pt.5, Pt.6 |
| Cases cited: Commonwealth of Australia v Patrick & Anor [2015] FCCA 3413 King v New South Wales Land & Housing Corporation (1992) 26 ALD 684 Shirvington v Commonwealth of Australia (as represented by the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development) [2017] FCAFC 22 |
| Applicant: | COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA (AS REPRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT) |
| First Respondent: | KEN SHIRVINGTON |
| File Number: | SYG 648 of 2015 |
| Judgment of: | Judge Smith |
| Hearing date: | 18 May 2017 |
| Date of Last Submission: | 18 May 2017 |
| Date of Orders Made: | 18 May 2017 |
| Delivered at: | Sydney |
| Delivered on: | 23 June 2017 |
REPRESENTATION
| Counsel for the Applicant: | Mr J. Doyle and Mr D.W. Rayment |
| Solicitors for the Applicant: | Australian Government Solicitor |
| Counsel for the Respondent: | Mr P. King |
| Solicitors for the Respondent: | The People's Solicitor Pty Ltd |
ORDERS (AS MADE ON 18 MAY 2017)
The time within which the applicant may apply for a warrant for possession is extended to 30 days from the date of this order.
The respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs in the application in a case.
The applicant’s costs referred to in order 2 are fixed in the amount of $2,900.
Order 1 is stayed for a period of 7 days from the date of this order on the condition that Mr Shirvington does not interfere with any contractor or officer of the Commonwealth carrying out surveying work on the property, having 24 hours’ notice of such works being given to Mr Shirvington.
| FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT SYDNEY |
SYG 648 of 2015
| COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA (AS REPRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT) |
Applicant
And
| KEN SHIRVINGTON |
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
The Commonwealth is the registered proprietor of the land situated at:
a)1962-1970 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745;
b)2035-2045 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745;
c)2055 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745;
d)80 Anton Road Luddenham, NSW 2745 and
e)90 Anton Road Luddenham, NSW 2745
comprising part of Lot 1 DP 838361 (Premises). The respondent has been in continual possession of the Premises for over 20 years. He currently lives at other premises, 1966 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745. Those premises are the subject of other proceedings, judgment in which was given by me on 21 December 2015 (Commonwealth of Australia v Patrick & Anor [2015] FCCA 3413 and, on appeal Shirvington v Commonwealth of Australia (as represented by the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development) [2017] FCAFC 22). He concedes that he is still in possession of the Premises.
In March 2015, the Commonwealth commenced proceedings seeking orders terminating the residential tenancy agreement between it and the respondent in respect of the Premises and for vacant possession of the Premises.
The proceedings were contested and after a number of hearings, on 11 December 2015 I made the following orders:
1.The residential tenancy agreement between the applicant and the respondent in relation to the properties situated at;
a) 1962-1970 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745;
b) 2035-2045 The Northern Road, Luddenham, NSW 2745;
c) 2055 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745;
d) 80 Anton Road Luddenham, NSW 2745; and
e) 90 Anton Road Luddenham, NSW 2745
comprising part of folio identifier Lot 1 DP 838361 (“Premises”) be terminated forthwith.
2.Vacant possession of the Premises be given to the applicant on or before 18 December 2015.
3.The order for vacant possession be suspended until 9 February 2016.
…
The respondent appealed from that judgment and on 22 January 2016 Robertson J stayed Orders 2 and 3.
On 2 March 2017, the Full Court of the Federal Court (Kenny, Robertson and Griffiths JJ) dismissed the appeal: Shirvington v Commonwealth of Australia (as represented by the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development) [2017] FCAFC 23.
On the same day, Griffiths J ordered that Orders 2 and 3 made by me and the orders of the Full Court of the Federal Court be stayed for a period of 28 days to enable the respondent to decide whether or not to apply for special leave to appeal to the High Court of Australia.
On 30 March 2017 the respondent applied for special leave to appeal to the High Court and, on the same day, the stay ordered by Griffiths J on 2 March 2017 lapsed.
There has been no further stay of Orders 2 and 3 made by me on 11 December 2015.
The Commonwealth now seeks an extension of time within which to apply for a warrant for possession.
This application was heard with a number of similar matters on 18 May 2017 and I made orders on that day. These are my reasons for those orders.
These reasons are similar to the reasons I gave in the matter of Commonwealth of Australia (as represented by the Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development) v Uren & Ors (No.2) [2017] FCCA 1014 (Uren) which dealt with the same issues and arguments by the parties in this application.
For the reasons explained by the Full Court of the Federal Court, the law to be applied to the dispute between the parties was the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW) (Act).
Section 121 of the Act relevantly provides:
121 Enforcement of orders for possession
(1)The principal registrar of the Tribunal may, on the application of a person in whose favour an order for possession was made, issue a warrant for possession of the residential premises concerned if the principal registrar is satisfied that the order or a condition of suspension of the order has not been complied with.
(2)An application for a warrant for possession may be made immediately, if the order for possession so provides, or not more than 30 days after the date by which vacant possession was required or within such further period as the Tribunal may permit.
(3)Without limiting subsection (2), the Tribunal may permit an application to be made within a further period if the delay in making the application is attributable to genuine attempts by the applicant to reach agreement with the tenant for reinstatement of the tenancy.
…
(Emphasis in original)
The reference to “Tribunal” is taken to be a reference to the Court.
The “date by which vacant possession was required” referred to in s.121(2) was originally 9 February 2016; however, that changed because of orders staying the orders made on 11 December 2015. In effect, Order 3 made on that day has been overcome by the stay ordered by Robertson J on 22 January 2016. The consequence is that the order for immediate possession took effect only on 30 March 2017.
The Commonwealth argues that the Court ought to allow a further period under s.121(3) for the following reasons:
(i)Order 1 made on 11 December 2015 operated to immediately terminate the residential tenancy. The order has never been stayed and so the respondent had no legal right to possession since 11 December 2015;
(ii)the respondent is in breach of Order 2 requiring him to give vacant possession to the Commonwealth;
(iii)the only reason why the Commonwealth has not moved more quickly to apply for a warrant is that the relevant orders were stayed until very recently; and
(iv)to refuse the grant of an additional period within which a warrant may be applied for by the Commonwealth would defeat the purposes for which the orders were made.
The respondent resisted the application on a number of bases.
Amongst those was the argument that the conferral on the Court of powers under the Act was unconstitutional. I note that, in support of an application for a stay of the order granting an extension of time within which to apply for a warrant in the matter of Uren, counsel for the respondent argued that I had not dealt with that argument in my judgment. That contention was correct, only in that I did not deal with the argument expressly. However, I observed in Uren, as I have observed at [12] above, that the law to be applied in these proceedings was the Act. That implicitly dealt with the argument and nothing further needs to be said about it. Indeed, as I noted in response to the argument in the application for a stay in Uren, nothing of any substance was said about it in the respondent’s oral submissions. The point was, and remains, unarguable in light of the decision of the Full Court.
Turning to the more substantial arguments, the respondent first argued that, in light of s.121(3) of the Act, the fact that the Commonwealth has given no assistance to him to move, weighs against any extension of time. The argument is based on the purpose of s.121(3) which is to encourage genuine attempts to resolve difficulties between the parties. The difficulty with this submission is that it ignores the opening words of s.121(3) “without limiting subsection (2)”. While it may be accepted that s.121(3) encourages negotiation between the parties, it does nothing to limit the power of the Court to extend time under s.121(2), even if such attempts to reach agreement do not take place. Certainly, it does not, in my view, make the existence of negotiations a prerequisite, or even necessarily relevant to the exercise of the power in s.121(2).
The respondent then argued that there was no evidence that the Commonwealth had approached the Registrar of the Court for the issue of a warrant, or that the orders made on 11 December 2015 had been served on the respondent. I do not accept that either of those matters makes any difference.
First, there is no express or implicit limitation on the power to extend the time within which to apply for a warrant connected with an application to the Registrar, or the service of the relevant orders. Counsel for the respondent referred to a decision of the New South Wales Residential Tenancies Tribunal[1] (RTT) in which, he said, the Tribunal held that there was no power in the Registrar to make an order for the issue of a warrant in the absence of proof of service of the orders. That however, addressed a different question to the one I am asked to consider. I am not determining whether to issue a warrant, but only to extend the time within which the Commonwealth might ask for a warrant to be issued. In any event, although the Registrar may properly refuse to exercise the power to issue a warrant for possession in the absence of satisfaction that a former tenant is on notice of the order for possession, I do not accept that he or she has no power to issue a warrant in those circumstances.
[1] As it was then known. On 1 January 2014, it became the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal, also known as “NCAT”.
Secondly, and in any event, the respondent was clearly aware of the orders made on 11 December 2015: he both appealed from them and sought a stay of them.
The respondent next argued that any extension of time ought to be subject to conditions, namely, that the warrant not be applied for within 90 days. In support of this, the respondent relied on the broad protective provisions in Pt.5 of the Act; commencing with s.80 and, in particular, s.94. He also relied on the decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in King v New South Wales Land & Housing Corporation (1992) 26 ALD 684 (King).
Part 5 of the Act deals with the termination of residential tenancy agreements. The residential tenancy agreement between the respondent and the Commonwealth was terminated in accordance with those provisions by Order 1 made on 11 December 2015. I do not accept that those provisions have any impact once an order for possession has been made and, as in this case, not complied with. It may be that those provisions were intended to address the imbalance of power between landlords and tenants, but that does not appear to be the purpose of the provisions in Pt.6 of the Act, such as s.121, which concern the recovery of possession of residential premises.
The decision in King does not assist the respondent. That case was an appeal by leave from the refusal by a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales to grant interlocutory relief pending the determination of a summons seeking judicial review of the decision of the RTT. The RTT had made an order for possession in respect of premises occupied by Mr King but had suspended that order subject to a number of conditions. It also ordered that, if Mr King did not comply with those conditions, the respondent could apply for the issue of a warrant of possession without further notice to Mr King. The case did not involve an extension of time under s.121(2), and gives no support to the proposition that such an extension can be made subject to conditions.
Even if I did have the power to impose conditions on the extension of time under s.121(2) of the Act, I would not impose any condition on that extension.
First, the delay has not been caused by the Commonwealth. Rather, the extension of time has been necessitated by the respondent’s appeal and the orders staying the orders of 11 December 2015 for possession. Although the respondent seems to have pursued his appeal with all due expedition, the appeal was ultimately unsuccessful.
Secondly, the respondent has no right to remain on the Premises and has known for many months of the possibility that he would have to leave with little or no notice.
Thirdly, the respondent has known since 30 March 2017 that the Commonwealth has had the right to immediate possession. Any delay in taking all necessary steps to vacate the Premises falls on him, as does any difficulty created by his failure to do so. The respondent’s evidence does not affect my view about that. My view in that respect is not affected by the respondent’s evidence.
That evidence was as follows:
a)He is not physically able to contribute much to the move and has to rely on help from friends and family;
b)his mobility has been restricted since a fall on 3 April 2017 when he was climbing over a barrier after entering the Premises;
c)recent rain has made truck access to the Premises risky;
d)some of the equipment that he will have to recolate requires a Wide Load permit which has restrictions on time the vehicle can travel on the roads;
e)road work was currently 6 kilometres from his house at Badgerys Creek and the respondent believes that a reasonable time for him to move would be when the roadworks between Mersey Road and Eaton Road Luddenham commence.
As the respondent does not in fact reside on the Premises it is difficult to understand why any of those matters affects his ability to give vacant possession of the Premises to the Commonwealth or impacts on whether I should make an order extending the time within which an application may be made for a warrant. He says that he has made no attempt to vacate the Premises. That is in spite of orders made by me requiring him to do so.
The respondent also gave evidence in an application by the Commonwealth in the other proceedings to which he was a party. Although there was no order that the evidence in that case be evidence in these proceedings, I will take that evidence into account. That evidence was as follows:
a)the house the respondent lives in (1966 The Northern Road Luddenham, NSW 2745) is surrounded by the other properties he leases and it is important that he continues to remain in that house to maintain security for his equipment that is located on those properties;
b)no periodic inspections of the Premises have been carried out to see what maintenance was required since the notice of termination was given, not even mandatory checking of smoke detectors and the envirocycle (septic) systems have not been serviced for many months.
The properties referred to at [32](a) are the Premises in these proceedings. However, the respondent has not given any details of the equipment that he says remains on the Premises. He has not explained why that equipment remains there in the face of orders requiring him to give vacant possession of the Premises or what efforts he has made to remove it.
The fact that there have been no inspections or maintenance of the Premises is irrelevant to the question for determination. In any event, the tenancy agreement pursuant to which the Commonwealth may have had some obligations to inspect and maintain was terminated on 11 December 2015. The respondent was aware of that but has chosen to remain in possession of the Premises.
The delay in seeking the issue of a warrant has not been caused by anything other than the appeals in the courts brought by the respondent. The Commonwealth expeditiously applied for an order extending the time for applying for a warrant. It is entitled to immediate possession and the respondent is not acting in accordance with the orders of this Court.
In those circumstances, the only reasonable decision is to extend the time to apply for a warrant. An extension of 30 days reflects the original limit in s.121 of the Act and provides for a sufficient opportunity to enforce the judgment obtained on 11 December 2015.
The respondent should pay the costs of the application.
I certify that the preceding thirty-seven (37) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Judge Smith
Associate:
Date: 23 June 2017
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