Evans and Anor. v Maclean Shire Council
[2004] NSWLEC 512
•09/09/2004
Land and Environment Court
of New South Wales
CITATION: Evans and Anor. v Maclean Shire Council and Anor. [2004] NSWLEC 512 PARTIES: APPLICANT:
RESPONDENT:
Evans and Anor.
Maclean Shire Council and Anor.FILE NUMBER(S): 41468 of 2003 CORAM: Bignold J KEY ISSUES: Development Consent :- challenge to validity on ground that the council granting it was not the relevant consent authority-whether approved development was State significant development if consent was granted pursuant to existing use entitlements LEGISLATION CITED: Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, s 76A(7)
State Environmental Planning Policy No 71 - Coastal ProtectionCASES CITED: Carden v Willoughby Municipal Council (1985) 56 LGRA 366;
Chambers v Maclean Shire Council (2003) 126 LGERA 7;
Currey v Sutherland Shire Council (2003) 129 LGERA 223;
Golden Fleece Petroleum Pty Ltd v Rockdale Municipal Council (1984) 52 LGRA 202;
Hurstville Municipal Council v Bindon (1981) 45 LGRA 420;
Johns v Australian Securities Commission (1993) 178 CLR 408;
Jones v Sutherland Shire Council (1979) 40 LGRA 323;
The Minister for Urban Affairs v Rosemount Estates Pty Ltd (1996) 91 LGERA 31DATES OF HEARING: 17/08/2004 DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/09/2004 LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES: FIRST RESPONDENT:
APPLICANT:
Mr C J Leggat, Barrister with A E Maroya, Barrister
SOLICITORS
Environmental Defender's Office
submitting appearance
SECOND RESPONDENT:
Mr T Robertson SC
SOLICITORS:
FIRST RESPONDENT
N/A
SECOND RESPONDENT
Pike Pike and Fenwick
JUDGMENT:
THE LAND AND
ENVIRONMENT COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
BIGNOLD J
9 September 2004
JUDGMENT41468 of 2003 S AND R EVANS v MACLEAN SHIRE COUNCIL; INTEGRATED SITE DESIGN PTY LTD
HIS HONOUR
:
A. INTRODUCTION
1 By their class 4 application filed 1 December 2003, the Applicants who reside at premises known as No 298 O’Keefe’s Lane, Palmers Island seek declaratory and injunctive relief in respect of a development consent granted by the first Respondent (the Council) to the second Respondent in respect of adjoining land known as No 286 O’Keefe’s Lane, Palmers Island (the subject land) for the considerable expansion of the existing Caravan Park facilities established on that land (the development consent).
2 The second Respondent which sought and obtained the Council’s development consent as the planning consultant to the owners of the subject land, has opposed the Applicants’ claims to relief. The Council has filed a submitting appearance.
3 The sole basis for the Applicants’ challenge to the validity of the development consent is that it was granted in contravention of State Environmental Planning Policy No 71—Coastal Protection (SEPP 71) in terms of which (i) specified developments including (so it is asserted) the development approved by the development consent is declared to be relevantly “State significant development” within the meaning of s 76A(7) of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (the EP&A Act) and (ii) the Minister is, declared to be the relevant “consent authority” for that State significant development: vide cl 10(1) and(2) of SEPP71.
4 According to the Points of Claim and the Points of Defence, the following facts are admitted:
- (i) the subject land is included in the “ coastal zone ” as defined by the Coastal Protection Act 1979 (which definition is adopted by SEPP71);
(ii) SEPP 71 applies to all land in the coastal zone.
(iii) Development specified in Schedule 2 of SEPP 71 is declared by cl 10(1) of SEPP 71 (as relevantly in force when the development consent was granted) to be State significant development. Development so specified includes the following:
- Development on land to which the Policy applies for the purposes of tourist facilities (except bed and breakfast establishments, and farm stays).
(v) the Minister did not grant the development consent.
5 The Points of Claim also allege the following fact which the second Respondent in its Points of Defence does not admit, namely that the proposed development for which the development consent was granted was relevantly a “tourist facility” within the meaning of SEPP 71.
6 The second Respondent denies the Applicants’ allegations that the Minister was the proper and only lawful consent authority in respect of the development application to which the development consent was granted and that the determination of the Council granting the development consent, was ultra vires and of no effect.
7 In denying the Applicants’ allegation that the development consent was ultra vires, the second Respondent asserts that the Council was relevantly the consent authority in respect of the development application to which it granted the development consent pursuant to the provisions of the EP&A Act and the Regulation made thereunder relating to “existing uses”.
8 The Applicants counter the second Respondent’s reliance upon relevant “existing use” entitlements conferred by the EP&A Act and Regulation by asserting that any relevant existing use is confined to part only of the subject land, namely lot 68 DP 751388 and does not apply to the other parts of the subject land, namely lots 66 and 67 DP 751388 and Lot 1 DP 823611 and that accordingly, the existing use entitlements do not apply to and accordingly cannot lawfully sustain the development consent which was expressed to apply to the whole of the subject land. But at the hearing, this issue was relegated to a fallback argument by the Applicants whose principal argument was that the Minister was the relevant consent authority no matter upon what factual and legal basis the development consent had been granted (including pursuant to existing use entitlements).
9 According to the pleadings, the following issues require adjudication—
- (i) whether the proposed development to which the development consent was granted was relevantly development for the purposes of a “ tourist facility ” within the meaning of SEPP 71; and
(ii) whether that development, if so characterised, was relevantly State significant development.
10 As will appear the manner in which the case was mutually conducted, issue (i) was not seriously in contest. Rather, having assumed an affirmative answer to the question, the competing cases explored the legal consequences of that affirmative answer for the second of the stated issues. In particular, the second Respondent’s case was that in consequence of an affirmative answer to issue (i), it necessarily followed that the development consent had approved development that was prohibited development in terms of the Maclean Local Environmental Plan 2001 (the LEP) and that that result was only legally sustainable by reference to the power that is conferred by the EP&A Regulation concerning the expansion or intensification of “existing uses”. The second Respondent argued that once the “existing use” power is necessarily invoked to sustain the development consent which authorised the carrying out of prohibited development, that development cannot in law be State significant development as defined by s 76A(7)(a).
11 If the Applicants are to succeed in their challenge to the validity of the development consent, both issues (which reflect the two ingredients of the statutory concept of State significant development) must be answered in the affirmative.
B. THE LEGAL FOUNDATION FOR THE APPLICANTS’ CLAIM
12 The Applicants’ case is that no matter how the development consent granted by the Council is legally conceived in terms of the legal permissibility of the approved development (whether or not that permissibility is sourced in the LEP or existing use entitlements under the EP&A Regulation), the development consent nonetheless is a legal nullity because the approved development was relevantly State significant development and the Minister (and not the Council) was the relevant consent authority having the responsibility to determine the development application.
13 “State significant development” is defined by the EP&A Act, s 4(1) as having the meaning given by s 76A(7) which is in the following terms:
- (7) State significant development
- State significant development is:
(a) development:
- (i) that is declared by a State environmental planning policy or a regional environmental plan to be State significant development, and
(ii) that may be carried out with development consent, or
- (i) that, under an environmental planning instrument, may be carried out with development consent, and
(ii) that, in the opinion of the Minister, is of State or regional environmental planning significance, and
(iii) that is declared by the Minister, by notice in the Gazette, to be State significant development, or
(d) prohibited development in respect of which a direction by the Minister under section 89 is in force.
14 In order to substantiate their legal claim that the approved development was relevantly State significant development, the Applicants who rely in this respect exclusively upon SEPP71, must establish that the approved development was relevantly (i) “development on land to which SEPP71 applies for the purpose of tourist facilities (except bed and breakfast establishments and farm stays)” as referred to in Schedule 2 to SEPP 71; and (ii) was “development that may be carried out with development consent”. In this respect, cl 10 of SEPP 71 provides:
- State significant development
(1) Pursuant to section 76A (7) of the Act, development specified in Schedule 2 is declared to be State significant development.
(2) Pursuant to section 76A (9) of the Act, the Minister is the consent authority for State significant development.
15 Although in these proceedings the second Respondent has not sought to argue that the approved development was not relevantly development of land to which SEPP71 applies for the purposes of “tourist facilities” (it has argued that it was not relevantly State significant development because, in terms of the LEP, development for the purposes of a “tourist facility” was an absolutely prohibited purpose of development in respect of the subject land), it nonetheless is incumbent upon the Applicants to establish all elements of their claim to declaratory relief: see Jones v Sutherland Shire Council (1979) 40 LGRA 323 at 327 per Hutley JA:
- Where a person seeks a declaration, he has to prove all the facts which are necessary to enable that declaration to be obtained. This means that he takes upon himself to prove all the conditions necessary to be established, including matters which he could require the other party to prove, if he were the defendant.
16 In seeking to establish their claim that the development consent is a legal nullity because the approved development was relevantly a State significant development, the competing cases have commonly proceeded upon two unstated assumptions which are fundamental to the Applicants’ claim, namely:—
- (i) that it is for this Court to determine for itself whether the approved development was relevantly development for the purposes of “ tourist facilities ” within the meaning of SEPP71, and
(ii) that the effect of s 76A(7)(a) of the EP&A Act (repeated by cl 10 of SEPP71) declaring the Minister to be the consent authority for the State significant development specified in Schedule 2 to SEPP71 necessarily divested the Council of its function as the “ consent authority ” nominated by the LEP in respect of the development application to which it purported to grant the development consent.
17 Despite the fundamental importance of these two unstated assumptions, they were not the subject of any argument or debate at the hearing. It may be that without expressly so saying, all parties conceded that the correctness of both assumptions was supported by two recent decisions of the Court of Appeal, namely Chambers v Maclean Shire Council (2003) 126 LGERA 7 and Currey v Sutherland Shire Council (2003) 129 LGERA 223 insofar as they commonly held that a development application made to a body that is not the relevant “consent authority” in terms of the EP&A Act is of no legal effect.
18 In these circumstances, I do not think it necessary for me to closely examine the two assumptions other than what I now have to say in respect of the question of who in the present case was the relevant “consent authority” (this being something that was not discussed in either of the decisions of the Court of Appeal).
19 The statutory functions conferred upon a “consent authority” are of fundamental importance to the operation of Pt 4 of the EP&A Act. Thus, to note some of those functions, all development applications are made to the consent authority (s 78A), any procedural requirements relating to the development application must be undertaken by the consent authority (ss 79, 79A, 79B), the planning evaluation of the development application is undertaken by the consent authority (s 79C) and the development application is determined by the consent authority (s 80).
20 Who then, in respect of any given development application, is the “consent authority”? The term is defined by the EP&A Act, s 4(1) as follows:
- consent authority , in relation to a development application or an application for a complying development certificate, means:
(a) the council having the function to determine the application, or
(b) if a provision of this Act, the regulations or an environmental planning instrument specifies a Minister or public authority (other than a council) as having the function to determine the application—that Minister or public authority, as the case may be.
21 The references in this definition to “having the function to determine the application” may readily be taken to be references to the duty that is imposed upon the consent authority by ss 80 and 79C to evaluate and determine a development application.
22 They may also be taken to be referring to any provisions of an environmental planning instrument specifying a Minister or public authority (which includes a local council) authorised “to determine, apply or regulate” any matter or thing from time to time: vide s 32.
23 Relevantly, in the present case, cl 6 of the LEP provides:
- Subject to the Act, the Council is the consent authority for the purposes of this plan.
24 Relevantly, the EP&A Act, s 76A(9) states:
- The Minister is the consent authority for State significant development.
25 The LEP contains no express provision relating to State significant development, being a term that was first introduced into the EP&A Act on 1 July 1998 when the Environmental Planning and Assessment (Amendment) Act 1997 (Act No 152) came into force. From that time, the effect of s 76A(9) in combination with the definition of “consent authority” meant that the Minister and not the Council was the consent authority in respect of development applications for State significant development located within the Maclean Shire.
26 When cl 10(2) of SEPP 71 (which came into force on 1 November 2002, some 18 months after the date that the LEP came into force) declared the Minister to be the consent authority for the State significant development specified in Schedule 2 to SEPP71, the position from that point of time was clear, namely that the Minister and not the Council was the relevant consent authority for the State significant development specified in Schedule 2 to the Policy. It there were scope for any shadow of doubt as to the effect of the interrelationship between relevant provisions of the LEP and SEPP71, it was dispelled by cl 5 of SEPP71 declaring that “in the event of an inconsistency between this Policy and another environmental planning instrument, whether made before or after this Policy, this Policy prevails to the extent of the inconsistency”.
27 For all of the foregoing reasons, it would necessarily follow that if the Applicants establish that the development for which the development consent was granted by the Council is relevantly to be characterised as (i) development for the purposes of “tourist facilities” within the meaning of cl 10(1) and Schedule 2 to SEPP71; and (ii) State significant development, the relevant consent authority to determine that development application was the Minister and not the Council. The legal consequence of this fact would be that the development consent purportedly granted by the Council would be a legal nullity by dint of the jurisdictional error that was committed by the Council (albeit in all innocence in view of the advice that it had received from Planning NSW that the second Respondent’s development application which had been referred to the Department was suitable for the Council to determine).
28 I am now in the position to separately determine the two issues upon which the Applicants must succeed if they are to substantiate their attack on the validity of the development consent.
C. DID THE DEVELOPMENT CONSENT APPROVE DEVELOPMENT THAT WAS RELEVANTLY A “TOURIST FACILITY” WITHIN THE MEANING OF SEPP71?
29 In posing the question in this manner and directing attention to the operation of SEPP71, I am acutely aware that the Council, in granting the development consent did not go about its task of determining the second Respondent’s development application by reference to SEPP71 presumably because of the advice that it had received from Planning NSW. Rather, its total focus was on the relevant provisions of the LEP. Nonetheless, it is clear that SEPP71 intersects with the operation of the LEP so as to materially affect its operation, most importantly, in the present case in its declaring of State significant development (specified in Schedule 2) and in its declaring the Minister to be the consent authority for that development vide: cl 10.
30 There are other direct impacts of SEPP71 on other environmental planning instruments that are provided for in Part 4 (“Development control”) and Part 5 (“Master Plans”) of SEPP71 in circumstances where the provisions of SEPP71 prevail over any inconsistencies with other environmental planning instruments (vide cl 5). However, there is no need in this case to consider impacts other than the impact of cl 10.
31 The true effect of cl 10(1) in specifying in Schedule 2 to SEPP71 development that is declared to be State significant development is dependent upon the effect of the EP&A Act, s 76A(7) and more particularly upon par (a) of that provision.
32 Clause 10(1) read with Schedule 2 to SEPP71 clearly enough fulfils the requirements of subparagraph (a)(i) but what of the requirements of subparagraph (a)(ii)? Since it is clear that subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of paragraph (a) of s 76A(7) provide a composite or compound test for what qualifies as State significant development it necessarily follows that the true effect of cl 10(1) and Schedule 2 to SEPP71 operating within the boundaries set by s 76A(7)(a), is that State significant development comprises those developments which are specified in Schedule 2 and which may be carried out with development consent under the EP&A Act (my emphasis).
33 These emphasised words express an essential ingredient of the definition of State significant development that is not incorporated in the definition of the term “designated development” contained in the EP&A Act, s 77A. As will be seen, it is this additional ingredient that has considerably complicated the resolution of the single yet fundamental question posed by this case, namely whether the approved development was relevantly State significant development. The complication arises because SEPP71 does not itself provide that the development specified in Schedule 2 to the Policy may be carried out with development consent.
34 Since there is nothing in SEPP71 which provides that State significant development may be carried out with development consent, it is necessary to identify some other source of such provision, thereby satisfying the second essential ingredient, before it can be concluded that the developments specified in Schedule 2 of SEPP71 relevantly qualify as “State significant development” within the meaning of s 76A(7)(a). Such other source is potentially readily to hand in the form of the obviously multitudinous environmental planning instruments which variously apply to lands within the “coastal zone” (having the same meaning as is given to that term in the Coastal Protection Act 1979) being the land to which SEPP71 applies: vide cl 4.
35 Accordingly, in the present case the LEP provides that potential source. The LEP applies to land within the local government area of Maclean (cl 3) which includes land (including the subject land) within the “coastal zone”. In terms of the LEP, the subject land is included in Zone No 1(b) “Rural (General Rural land) Zone” and development that is prohibited by cl 31 of the LEP relevantly includes:
Development for the purpose of “ tourist facilities ”.
36 The term “tourist facility” is defined by cl 7(1) of the LEP as follows:
- Tourist facility means an establishment providing for holiday accommodation or recreation and may include backpackers’ accommodation, bed and breakfast accommodation, boat landing facilities, boat sheds, camping grounds, caravan parks, guest houses, holiday cabins, hotels, houseboats, marinas, motels, playgrounds, recreation facilities, refreshment rooms, serviced apartments, kiosks, water sport facilities or clubs used in conjunction with holiday accommodation or recreation, but does not include a total destination resort.
37 It is this express prohibition by the LEP of “tourist facility” development on land within Zone No 1(b) that poses an obvious and considerable difficulty for the acceptance of the Applicants’ assertion that cl 10(1) of SEPP71 effectively declares to be State significant development, development for the purposes of “tourist facilities”, since such an effect of the LEP is the very antithesis of the required effect if the LEP is to provide the essential element by providing that such development may be carried out with development consent.
38 That difficulty would become insurmountable if it were concluded that the reference to development for the purposes of “a tourist facility” in both the LEP and SEPP71 were a reference to precisely the same development (ie the same term bore the same meaning in both instruments).
39 As it happens, when the development consent was granted, SEPP71 did not provide any definition of “tourist facilities” (although somewhat curiously, it did contain definitions of “bed and breakfast establishments” and ‘farm stays” being the two express exceptions to the specification in Schedule 2 to SEPP71 of “development for the purpose of tourist facilities”).
40 It is this feature of SEPP71, combined with the fact that despite “caravan parks” being expressly included within the definition of “tourist facility” in the LEP, the LEP also expressly includes “caravan parks” within the specification of purposes for which development within Zone No 1(b) may be carried out only with consent, that is relied upon by the Applicants to support their argument that a “caravan park type of tourist facility” is concurrently both (i) a permissible form of development of the subject land in terms of the LEP; and (ii) a “tourist facility” within the meaning of Schedule 2 of SEPP71.
41 This submission by the Applicants proffers a construction of the relevant provisions of the LEP from the obvious viewpoint of seeking a harmonising effect with cl 10(1) of SEPP71 declaring “tourist facilities” to be relevantly State significant development.
42 Such an approach does not reflect the approach that was taken by the Council in granting the development consent. That approach, which adopted the legal advices received by the Council as to the legal permissibility of the proposed development in terms of the LEP, was to characterise the proposal as development for the permissible purposes of a “caravan park” (rather than the competing characterisation for the prohibited purpose of “tourist facility”) and to describe the approved development in its Notice of Determination in the following terms:
- Expansion of Caravan Park to 297 sites and provision of ancillary facilities plus provision of on-site sewerage treatment plant
43 This description of the approved development reflects some of the representations that had been made in respect of the proposal by the supporting Environmental Impact Statement which was required to accompany the second Respondent’s development application because the proposal included a sewerage treatment plant that qualified as “designated development” in terms of the EP&A Act. For example, one such representation that appears in the Executive Summary of the Environmental Impact Statement described the proposal as follows:
- The proposed development involves a staged plan to increase the number of sites from (existing) 64 to 297 by developing an additional 233 short-term sites together with the required communal amenities and facilities. In essence, the proposal is for an improvement and continuation of the existing use. The staging of the development will be undertaken over a number of years.
44 It is clear from the documentary avoidance that the Council, in granting the development consent—
- (i) was aware of the existence of SEPP71 but did not consider its impact on the question whether the proposed development was for a permissible purpose of development;
(ii) had been ultimately notified by Planning NSW that the development application was “ suitable for the Council to determine ” (earlier Departmental advice had stated that the proposed development was State significant development for which the Minister was the consent authority);
(iii) had considered legal advice on the permissibility of the proposed development which it had obtained from its Solicitors and separate legal advice received from the Solicitors acting for the second Respondent as agent for the owners of the subject land (which latter advice had included the advice that if the Council were to conclude that the proposed development was for a prohibited purpose, then it was open to the Council to grant consent to the expansion of the existing development pursuant to existing use entitlements applying to the subject land); and
(iv) had decided that the proposed development was properly characterised as a permissible purpose of development of the subject land in terms of the LEP, namely “ a caravan park ” and was not a “ tourist facility ” or “ total destination resort ” (each of those terms being a prohibited purpose of development in terms of the LEP).
45 Clause 7 of the LEP contains the following definition of “caravan park”:
- caravan park means land used for the accommodation of caravans or other moveable dwellings within the meaning of the Local Government (Caravan Parks, Camping Grounds and Moveable Dwellings) Regulation 1995 .
46 The Local Government (Caravan Parks, Camping Grounds and Moveable Dwellings) Regulation 1995 applies to “the operation of caravan parks and camping grounds and to the installation of moveable dwellings both in caravan parks and camping grounds and elsewhere” (cl 4) with the express object (cl 3) of providing opportunities for affordable alternatives in short term and long term accommodation:
- (a) by establishing standards for the design of caravan parks and camping grounds;
(b) by establishing standards for the design and construction of moveable dwellings; and
(c) by establishing standards to promote the health, safety and amenity of occupiers of moveable dwellings.
47 The Regulation defines “caravan” as meaning a moveable dwelling that is designed so as to be registrable as a trailer under the Traffic Act 1909, but does not include a camper trailer.
48 The Regulation defines “moveable dwelling” according to the meaning that is given that term by the Local Government Act 1993¸ namely
- Moveable dwelling means:
(a) any tent, or any caravan or other van or other portable device (whether on wheels or not), used for human habitation, or
(b) a manufactured home, or
(c) any conveyance, structure or thing of a class or description prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this definition.
49 The Regulation provides for both short-term and long-term dwelling sites to be established within a caravan park or camping ground, the former being defined as meaning “a dwelling site on which a moveable dwelling that is ordinarily used for holiday purposes may be installed…..”.
50 It is apparent that in terms of the Regulation, a caravan park may be approved for either short-term or long-term uses or both and that a short term use would be typically used for holiday purposes.
51 In my judgment, the Applicants’ contention that the approved development is relevantly characterised as a “caravan park type tourist facility” for the purposes of the LEP and SEPP71 (and as such concurrently falls within the permissible purpose of development, “caravan park” within the meaning of the LEP and the declared State significant development of ‘tourist facilities” within the meaning of SEPP71) is entirely unpersuasive. Its attempt to achieve positive and harmonious outcomes concurrently under the LEP and SEPP71 fails for a number of reasons. Firstly, it fails because the suggested category of permissible development “caravan park type tourist facility” is a hybrid concoction that attempts to straddle the boundaries set by the LEP defined categories of “caravan park” and “tourist facility” resulting in the disingenuous avoidance of the essential question whether the approved development falls within one or the other category. Secondly, it does not demonstrate why the hybrid classification (even assuming its legitimacy) does not ultimately fall within the prohibited category of “tourist facility”. The suggested hybrid solution is in truth no solution to the problem of construction posed by the LEP in specifying “caravan park” as a permissible purpose of development within Zone No 1(b) and ‘tourist facility” (which includes a “caravan park”) as a prohibited purpose of development within the same zone.
52 The question that arises is how the defined meaning of the term “caravan park” that is adopted by the LEP is to be understood and applied in the light of cl 31 of the LEP expressly providing (i) that “caravan park” is a permissible purpose of development within Zone No 1(b); and (ii) that “tourist facilities” (which may include “caravan parks”) is a prohibited purpose of development within that same zone. The question must be resolved by the process of statutory interpretation
53 Having been unpersuaded by the Applicants’ proffered construction, clearly the most obvious and preferred construction of the relevant provisions of the LEP is to regard “caravan parks” as being comprehended by the defined term “tourist facility” where the proposed development provides for “holiday accommodation or recreation” as the principal component of the use of the caravan park, and as not being so comprehended where the proposed development does not so provide for “holiday accommodation or recreation” as the principal component of the use of the caravan park.
54 It follows from the adoption of this construction that if it is properly concluded that the approved development is for the purpose of a “caravan park”, it is for a permissible purpose of development of the subject land in terms of the LEP. But a necessary corollary of such a conclusion would be that it is not development for the purposes of a “tourist facility” in terms of the LEP and this corollary conclusion must, in my opinion, be transmitted or translated into the proper construction of the term “tourist facilities” employed by SEPP71.
55 Conversely, if it is properly concluded that the approved development is for the purpose of “tourist facility” within the meaning of the LEP, that conclusion is also relevantly transmitted to SEPP71 in its employment of the same term.
56 The Applicants’ argument that because the term “tourist facility” is not defined by SEPP71 it may have a meaning that is different from the meaning of the same term under a relevant LEP, fails to appreciate the utter dependency of SEPP71 upon the existence of relevant provisions of the LEP if cl 10(1) of SEPP1 is to effectively declare State significant development. This is because it is those relevant provisions of the LEP which specify development that may be carried out with development consent, which supply the second essential ingredient of the defined term “State significant development”.
57 Where, as in the present case, the effectiveness of the declaration in SEPP71 that “tourist facilities” is a State significant development, is wholly dependent upon a provision of the LEP specifying that such development may only be carried out with development consent, and there is a provision of the LEP specifically prohibiting development for the purposes of “tourist facilities” (where that term is defined in the LEP, but is not defined in SEPP71) the preferred construction of the undefined term in SEPP71 is obviously one that reflects, or is commensurate with, the defined meaning of the same term in the LEP.
58 Such a construction avoids the sophistications and complications of attempting to harmonise different meanings ascribed to the same term in their separate contexts in the LEP and SEPP71, or even worse (if harmonisation is not possible) of having to scrutinise and analyse the definitions in order to derive common features, because it is only, in respect of the common features of the separate meanings that may be ascribed to the term, “tourist facility” that the declaration of State significant development by cl 10(1) of SEPP71 can be effective, by virtue of the congruence between the two separate ingredients of the defined term “State significant development”.
59 A moment’s reflection demonstrates how entirely unsatisfactory any other interpretive approach and solution would be in postulating whether it is the Minister or the Council which is the relevant consent authority having responsibility to determine a particular development application (including the second Respondent’s application to which the Council granted the development consent).
60 Somewhat ironically, subsequent to the grant of the development consent, SEPP71 was amended on 1 August 2003 (vide Government Gazette No 121 of 1 August 2003 at pp 7572 to 7577) to include in Schedule 2 definitions of each of the several purposes of development specified therein, including the following definition:
- Tourist facilities means any of the following which provide accommodation for tourists: hotels, motels, backpackers’ accommodation, hostels, tourist resorts, holiday cabins, holiday units, serviced apartments, eco-tourism resorts, caravan parks and camping grounds, but excludes internal refits of, or minor alterations or minor additions to, existing tourist facilities.
61 It is to be noted that this definition is close to, but not identical with, the definition of “tourist facility” contained in the LEP. It would follow from what I have already said that as a result of those amendments to SEPP71, in order to determine in any given case whether the declaration as State significant development of the developments specified in Schedule 2 to the Policy are effective, it will be necessary to analyse the defined terms employed in the relevant provisions of the environmental planning instruments that are affected by cl 10 of SEPP71 in order to establish mutuality in the relevant terms or to derive common features in the relevant terms.
62 This task is likely to create problems in administration where it is discovered that the terms defined by Schedule 2 to SEPP71 do not correspond with the definitions of the same terms contained in environmental planning instruments (such as the LEP) which provide that specified developments may be carried out only with development consent. If such a result occurs, there will be disparity or inconsistency between the two ingredients of the relevantly declared State significant development, which may impair the efficacy of the relevant declaration.
63 This particular problem would not arise if SEPP71 had simply adopted as the definitions of the purposes of the development specified in Schedule 2 to SEPP71 the definitions that are contained in the relevant environmental planning instruments which are affected by the operation of SEPP71, in which event there would be no possibility of conflict between the relevant provisions of SEPP71 and the relevant provisions of the other environmental planning instruments affected by it (assuming of course that those provisions relevantly provide that such development may be carried out with development consent).
64 It follows from the foregoing reasons that the Applicants, in submitting that the approved development was relevantly characterised as “caravan park type tourist development”, have not established their claim that the development that was authorised by the development consent was relevantly for a permissible purpose of development in terms of the LEP and hence, was State significant development by virtue of cl 10 of SEPP71.
65 The Applicants’ alternate argument was that the development that was approved by the development consent was relevantly characterised as development for the purposes of a “caravan park” and that this development was for a permissible purpose under the LEP and hence, was State significant development by virtue of cl 10 of SEPP71.
66 In my judgment, the first aspect of this argument has not been substantiated on the basis of the documentary evidence pertaining to the grant of the development consent which clearly establishes that the approved development for the expanded caravan park use was principally for use of the expanded facilities as “holiday accommodation” rather than long term residential use, and accordingly, is properly characterised as development for the purposes of a “tourist facility” in terms of the LEP, being a purpose of development that is absolutely prohibited in Zone No 1(b).
67 The Environmental Impact Statement supporting the development application had noted (in the Executive Summary) that the existing caravan park had operated continuously for over 25 years with operational approval for 64 sites comprising 14 long-term sites, 31 short-term sites and 19 campsites (with 11 of the approved sites being occupied by self-contained cabins) and that the proposal was to add 233 short-term sites, together with the required communal amenities and facilities.
68 In Section 4 of the Environmental Impact Statement, the proposed development was described in considerable detail. It is sufficient to quote a few extracts. Included within the stated objectives (Section 4.1) is the following:
- To create a caravan park that offers an attractive holiday environment and caters for the needs of holiday-makers in a way that recognises the documented recreational value of the Clarence River and is consistent with State, Regional and Local tourism initiatives.
69 Section 4.2 (“Accommodation and amenities”) which immediately follows the stated objectives, opens with the following statement:
- The proposal aims to achieve these objectives by expanding the existing caravan park and creating a range of accommodation settings that are capable of fulfilling the requirements of visitors to the Maclean Shire. The proposal contains an achievable long-term vision for increasing the number of sites within the existing caravan park from 64 sites to 297 sites. The proposal is spacious in design and character in order to preserve the existing open qualities of the site and to give guests a holiday experience that reflects the ambience of the Clarence River environment.
70 Upon the basis of the documents supporting the development application, the character of the approved development is unquestionably that of a caravan park, principally providing “holiday accommodation”. As such, the approved development unquestionably fell within the LEP definition of “tourist facility”, being a prohibited purpose of development of the subject land.
71 The Council’s decision that the proposed development was properly characterised as development for the purposes of a “caravan park” was not reasonably open to it, unless its understanding of the relevant provisions of the LEP controlling development within Zone 1(b) reflected the proper construction of those provisions. For the reasons that I have previously given, the proper construction of those provisions was not the construction that was adopted by the Council, acting upon the basis of the legal advices that it had received.
72 As I have held (properly construing the LEP), development for the purposes of a caravan park which was expressly permissible development within Zone No 1(b) was confined to such development where the principal use of the caravan park was for non-holiday accommodation. Clearly, the principal use of the proposed development was to provide holiday accommodation and no other view of the development application was reasonably available. It follows that the Applicants have not established that the approved development was for the permissible purpose of a caravan park.
73 Even if the Applicants had established that the approved development was for the permissible purpose of a “caravan park”, that fact would not have substantiated a concurrent finding that the approved development was development for the purpose of a “tourist facility” within the meaning of SEPP71. On the contrary, for the reasons I have earlier given, a finding that the approved development was for the permissible purpose of a “caravan park” necessarily would mean that it was not for the purpose of a “tourist facility” in terms of the LEP and this last-mentioned fact would also necessarily exclude the approved development from being characterised as development for the purposes of “tourist facility” in terms of SEPP71.
74 It follows from the foregoing that the Applicants have failed to establish that the approved development was for the purposes of a “tourist facility” in terms of SEPP71 upon the basis that the development consent authorised development either for the permissible purpose of “caravan park” (reflecting the Council’s approach to the characterisation of the approved development or for the permissible purpose of a “caravan park type tourist facility” (reflecting the Applicants’ characterisation of the approved development conformably to their suggested construction of the relevant provisions of the LEP).
75 However, there remains one further possible basis for characterising the approved development as development for the purpose of a “tourist facility” within the meaning of SEPP71, namely that the development consent was granted pursuant to the “existing use” entitlements available under the EP&A Act and the Regulation for the expansion or intensification of the existing use of the subject land for the prohibited purpose of a “tourist facility”.
76 In this respect, it is to be recalled that the second Respondent (in answer to the Applicants’ claim that the development consent was ultra vires the Council) pleaded that the Council was relevantly the consent authority for the development consent pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Act, s 108 and cll 44 to 46 of the Regulation.
77 Upon the assumption that the development consent was authorised by the relevant existing use provisions of the EP&A Act and Regulation, it is clear that that source of power was sufficient to authorise the carrying out of prohibited development, including development that fell within the LEP definition of “tourist facility”.
78 It is also clear from what I have earlier said concerning the interrelationship between the relevant provisions of SEPP71 and the LEP that if the approved development fell within the LEP definition of “tourist facility”, it also concurrently fell within the meaning of that same term where employed by SEPP71.
79 For the reasons that I have earlier given, it is clear that the proper characterisation of the approved development in terms of the LEP is that it was development for the purposes of a ‘tourist facility”. It is equally clear that this conclusion necessarily means that the approved development falls within the meaning of “tourist facility” in terms of SEPP71.
80 Accordingly, upon the basis that the development consent was factually and legally sustainable by reference to the relevant existing use entitlements applying to the subject land, it follows that the approved development was for the purpose of a “tourist facility” within the meaning of SEPP71.
81 This means that the Applicants may be taken to have substantiated the first ingredient of the definition as State significant development in respect of the approved development.
82 But this conclusion leads to what became the focal point of the competing cases presented at the hearing, namely whether upon the basis that the development consent is only sustainable by reference to the “existing use” entitlements conferred by the EP&A Regulation, the second ingredient of the definition of State significant development has been substantiated by the Applicants, namely that development for the purposes of a “tourist facility” is relevantly development “that may be carried out with development consent” (vide s 76A(7)(a)(ii)).
83 The question posed focuses attention upon the second ingredient of the relevant part of the definition of State significant development, that is alone relevant to the present case, namely that contained in s 76A(a)(ii) which provides as follows:
- State significant development
State significant development is:
(a) development:
- (i) …………..
(ii) that may be carried out with development consent,
84 The parties are in dispute as to the precise meaning of the statutory language and as to whether that meaning has any application to a case (such as the present) where the relevant development consent is sustained by the existing use entitlements conferred by the EP&A Act and Regulation.
85 The parties’ competing submissions are to the following effect. The second Respondent submits that “State significant development” is a type or subset of development that “needs development consent”. Such development is defined and provided for by the EP&A Act, s 76A, being one of the “threefold classifications” of development recognised and provided for by Division 1 of Part 4 of the EPA namely—
- (i) development that does not need consent: vide s 76 ;
(ii) development that needs consent: vide s 76A
(iii) development that is prohibited: vide s 76B .
86 As a type or subset of “development that needs consent” State significant development does not comprehend “prohibited development” except where the Minister has given a relevant direction under the EP&A Act, s 89: vide s 76A(7)(d).
87 Since the development consent properly understood granted consent to development that was prohibited by the LEP and was accordingly “prohibited development” (vide s 76B of the EP&A Act) to which no relevant direction pursuant to s 89 had been given, it does not, and cannot, qualify as “State significant development”, because it was not relevantly “development that may be carried out with development consent” (s 76A(7)(a)(ii)).
88 The development consent was nonetheless legally effective in approving of prohibited development because of the availability of the power conferred by the EP&A, s 108 and the Regulation made thereunder. In this respect, it does not matter if the Council, in granting the development consent, did not expressly or consciously rely upon this available source of power, the vital consideration being that the power was relevantly available and is legally capable of sustaining the development consent: see The Minister for Urban Affairs v Rosemount Estates Pty Ltd (1996) 91 LGERA 31 at 85/89 and Johns v Australian Securities Commission (1993) 178 CLR 408 at 426 per Brennan J:
- When a power is exercised, a mistake in the source of the power works no invalidity. Validity depends simply on whether a relevant power existed.
89 That power was vested by the Regulation in the Council as the relevant consent authority and the power so vested, is by virtue of the EP&A Act, s 76C, a separate power from the power that is conferred upon a consent authority by s 76A(1) to grant development consent to development that is relevantly specified in an environmental planning instrument as development that may not be carried out except with development consent.
90 The Applicants’ competing argument is that properly construed, that ingredient of the expression “State significant development” that is defined or comprised in subpar (a)(ii) of s 76A(7) extends to a development consent that is granted pursuant to the relevant entitlements concerning existing uses that are conferred by the EP&A Regulation.
91 As I have earlier noted, if the Applicants’ interpretation of s 76A(7)(a) is correct, there will be no need to determine the disputed question whether relevant existing use entitlements apply to the whole of the subject land (as claimed by the second Respondent or only to that part comprising lot 68 DP 823611 as asserted by the Applicants).
92 In any event, in the present case where the sole basis for the alleged invalidity of the development consent is that it was granted by the Council which was not the relevant consent authority, it is not appropriate to enquire into the possibility of some entirely different basis for invalidity of the development consent, especially given the prima facie evidence of the existence of relevant existing use entitlements in the legal context where the Applicants bear the legal onus of establishing their case for declaratory relief.
93 Accordingly, I propose to adjudicate the case upon the following assumptions (which are favourable to the position of the second Respondent in relation to the question of existing use entitlements)—
- (i) the development consent approved a development that was prohibited by the LEP, namely a “ tourist facility ”; and
(ii) although the consent was granted, upon the legally erroneous basis that the proposed development was development for a permissible purpose under the LEP, namely “ a caravan park ”, nevertheless the development consent is legally sustainable by virtue of the availability of the relevant entitlements conferred by the EP&A Regulation for the expansion or intensification of an existing use.
94 In order to arrive at the true meaning of the statutory expression “State significant development” as defined by s 76A(7)(a) and in particular, the second ingredient enunciated in subparagraph (a)(ii), it is necessary to appreciate the statutory context, which most immediately is s 76A, but also includes the whole of Division 1 of Part 4 which provides as follows—
- Part 4 Development Assessment
Division 1—Carrying out of development—the threefold classification
(1) General
- If an environmental planning instrument provides that specified development may be carried out without the need for development consent, a person may carry the development out, in accordance with the instrument, on land to which the provision applies.
- An environmental planning instrument may provide that development of a specified class or description that is of minimal environmental impact is exempt development.
- (a) the development may be carried out, in accordance with the instrument, on land to which the provision applies without the need for development consent, unless that land:
- (i) is critical habitat, or
(ii) is, or is part of, a wilderness area (within the meaning of the Wilderness Act 1987 ), and
A provision made under subsection (2) has no effect at any time during which the land is land to which paragraph (a) (i) or (ii) applies.
- 76A Development that needs consent
(1) General
- If an environmental planning instrument provides that specified development may not be carried out except with development consent, a person must not carry the development out on land to which the provision applies unless:
(a) such a consent has been obtained and is in force, and
(b) the development is carried out in accordance with the consent and the instrument.
- (a) by the making of a determination by a consent authority to grant development consent, or
(b) in the case of complying development, by the issue of a complying development certificate.
- Development that may not be carried out except with development consent comprises 2 types, namely:
(a) local development (which includes complying development), and
(b) State significant development.
- Local development is development that is described in subsection (1) and that is not State significant development.
- An environmental planning instrument may provide that local development that can be addressed by specified predetermined development standards is complying development.
- (a) if the development is State significant development, or
(b) if the development is designated development, or
(c) if the development is development for which development consent cannot be granted except with the concurrence of a person other than:
- (i) the consent authority, or
(ii) the Director-General of National Parks and Wildlife as referred to in section 79B (3), or
(d) so as to apply to land that is critical habitat, or
(e) so as to apply to land that is, or is part of, a wilderness area (within the meaning of the Wilderness Act 1987), or
(f) so as to apply to land that comprises, or on which there is, an item of the environmental heritage:
- (i) that is subject to an interim heritage order under the Heritage Act 1977 , or that is listed on the State Heritage Register under that Act, or
(ii) that is identified as such an item in an environmental planning instrument, or
(g) so as to apply to land that is identified as an environmentally sensitive area in the environmental planning instrument that makes provision for the complying development.
A provision made under subsection (5) has no effect in relation to development or land at any time during which the development or land is development or land to which paragraph (a)–(g) applies.
- Note . Further provisions concerning complying development are found in Division 3 of this Part.
- State significant development is:
(a) development:
- (i) that is declared by a State environmental planning policy or a regional environmental plan to be State significant development, and
(ii) that may be carried out with development consent, or
(b) particular development, or a particular class of development:
- (i) that, under an environmental planning instrument, may be carried out with development consent, and
(ii) that, in the opinion of the Minister, is of State or regional environmental planning significance, and
(iii) that is declared by the Minister, by notice in the Gazette, to be State significant development, or
(c) development that is proposed to be carried out in accordance with a development application that the Minister has directed, under section 88A, to be referred to the Minister for determination, or
(d) prohibited development in respect of which a direction by the Minister under section 89 is in force.
- (a) a project comprises development part of which is State significant development, all other development comprised in the project is taken to be State significant development, and
(b) but for this provision, part of State significant development would be subject to Part 5, this Part applies to the exclusion of Part 5 and the development may be carried out with development consent, and
(c) but for this provision, part of State significant development would be prohibited, the development may be carried out with development consent.
- 76B Development that is prohibited
- If an environmental planning instrument provides that:
(a) specified development is prohibited on land to which the provision applies, or
(b) development cannot be carried out on land with or without development consent,
a person must not carry out the development on the land.
- 76C Relationship of this Division to this Act
- This Division is subject to the other provisions of this Act, unless express provision is made to the contrary.
95 It is also necessary to recite the relevant provisions of the EP&A Act and Regulation relating to “existing use”. The relevant provisions of the EP&A Act are found in Div 10 of Pt 4 and provide as follows:—
- Division 10—Existing Uses
In this Division, existing use means:
(a) the use of a building, work or land for a lawful purpose immediately before the coming into force of an environmental planning instrument which would, but for Division 4A of Part 3 or Division 4 of this Part, have the effect of prohibiting that use, and
(b) the use of a building, work or land:
- (i) for which development consent was granted before the commencement of a provision of an environmental planning instrument having the effect of prohibiting the use, and
(ii) that has been carried out, within one year after the date on which that provision commenced, in accordance with the terms of the consent and to such an extent as to ensure (apart from that provision) that the development consent would not lapse.
- (1) Except where expressly provided in this Act, nothing in this Act or an environmental planning instrument prevents the continuance of an existing use.
(2) Nothing in subsection (1) authorises:
- (a) any alteration or extension to or rebuilding of a building or work, or
(b) any increase in the area of the use made of a building, work or land from the area actually physically and lawfully used immediately before the coming into operation of the instrument therein mentioned, or
(c) without affecting paragraph (a) or (b), any enlargement or expansion or intensification of an existing use, or
(d) the continuance of the use therein mentioned in breach of any consent in force under this Act in relation to that use or any condition imposed or applicable to that consent or in breach of any condition referred to in section 80A (1) (b), or
(e) the continuance of the use therein mentioned where that use is abandoned.
(3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2) (e), a use is to be presumed, unless the contrary is established, to be abandoned if it ceases to be actually so used for a continuous period of 12 months.
108 Regulations respecting existing use
(1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to existing use and, in particular, for or with respect to:
- (a) the carrying out of alterations or extensions to or the rebuilding of a building or work being used for an existing use, and
(b) the change of an existing use to another use, and
(c) the enlargement or expansion or intensification of an existing use.
(2) The provisions (in this section referred to as the incorporated provisions ) of any regulations in force for the purposes of subsection (1) are taken to be incorporated in every environmental planning instrument.
(3) An environmental planning instrument may, in accordance with this Act, contain provisions extending, expanding or supplementing the incorporated provisions, but any provisions (other than incorporated provisions) in such an instrument that, but for this subsection, would derogate or have the effect of derogating from the incorporated provisions have no force or effect while the incorporated provisions remain in force.
(4) Any right or authority granted by the incorporated provisions or any provisions of an environmental planning instrument extending, expanding or supplementing the incorporated provisions do not apply to or in respect of an existing use which commenced pursuant to a consent of the Minister under section 89 to a development application for consent to carry out prohibited development.
96 The relevant provisions of the EP&A Regulation are found in Part 5 which provides as follows—
- 39 Definitions
In this Part:
changed existing use means a use to which an existing use is changed in accordance with this Part.
relevant date means:
(a) in relation to an existing use referred to in section 106 (a) of the Act—the date on which an environmental planning instrument having the effect of prohibiting the existing use first comes into force, or
(b) in relation to an existing use referred to in section 106 (b) of the Act—the date when the building, work or land being used for the existing use was first erected, carried out or so used.
40 Object of Part
The object of this Part is to regulate existing uses under section 108 (1) of the Act.
41 Certain development allowed
(1) An existing use may, subject to this Division:
- (a) be enlarged, expanded or intensified, or
(b) be altered or extended, or
(c) be rebuilt, or
(d) be changed to another use, including a use that would otherwise be prohibited under the Act.
42 Development consent required for enlargement, expansion and intensification of existing uses
(1) Development consent is required for any enlargement, expansion or intensification of an existing use.
(2) The enlargement, expansion or intensification:
- (a) must be for the existing use, or for a changed existing use, but for no other use, and
(b) must be carried out only on the land on which the existing use was carried out immediately before the relevant date.
(1) Development consent is required for any alteration or extension of a building or work used for an existing use.
(2) The alteration or extension:
- (a) must be for the existing use of the building or work, or for a changed existing use, but for no other use, and
(b) must be erected or carried out only on the land on which the building or work was erected or carried out immediately before the relevant date.
- (1) Development consent is required for any rebuilding of a building or work used for an existing use.
(2) The rebuilding:
(a) must be for the existing use of the building or work, or for a changed existing use, but for no other use, and
(b) must be carried out only on the land on which the building or work was erected or carried out immediately before the relevant date
- Development consent is required:
(a) for any change of an existing use to another use, and
(b) in the case of a building, work or land that is used for different existing uses, for any change in the proportions in which the various parts of the building, work or land are used for those purposes.
- Nothing in this Part prevents the granting of a development consent referred to in clause 42, 43 or 44 at the same time as the granting of a development consent referred to in clause 45.
97 Section 76A(7) creates four separate types or species of the class of development nominated as “State significant development”—each of the types specified in pars (a), (b), and (c), is clearly a type of development that “may not be carried onto except with development consent”: vide s 76A(3). Exceptionally the type of “State significant development” specified in par (d) is “prohibited development” (a term that is defined by s 4(1)): vide s 76B—but where a direction has been given by the Minister pursuant to the EP&A Act, s 89 (a) a person may make a development application to the Minister to carry out the prohibited development; and (b) that development may be carried out if development consent is granted to that application “despite any other provision of this Act or an environmental planning instrument”: vide s 89(2).
98 The question ultimately at issue in the present case is whether the type of State significant development specified in par (a) of s 76A(7) includes “development” (that is relevantly declared to be State significant development such as is provided by cl 10(1) of SEPP71) “that may be carried out with development consent” where that consent is granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation.
99 This immediately raises the question whether a development consent granted pursuant to the EP&A Regulation is relevantly a “development consent” for the purposes of s 76A(7)(a)(ii). The second Respondent’s argument that it is not such a development consent is founded upon the proposition that the development authorised to be carried out by a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation is not relevantly specified development that “an environmental planning instrument provides may not be carried out except with development consent” within the meaning of s 76A(1).
100 Accordingly, so the second Respondent’s argument goes, development that is authorised by a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation does not qualify as one of the two types of development that need development consent as prescribed by s 76A(3) and accordingly does not qualify as “State significant development” within the meaning of s 76A(7)(a). The second Respondent’s argument contrasts “prohibited development” that may be authorised by a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation with “prohibited development” in respect of which a direction made by the Minister pursuant to the EP&A Act, s 89 is in force, it only being the latter class of “prohibited development” that qualifies as State significant development by virtue of the express provision made by s 76A(7)(d).
101 The final component in the second Respondent’s argument is its reliance upon the EP&A Act, s 76C to support its submission that the existing use provisions contained in the EP&A Act, Div 10 of Pt 4 operate independently of the provisions of Div 1 of Pt 4 and in a manner which prevails over the provisions of Div 1 of Pt 4 by virtue of the express statement that Div 1 is “subject to the other provisions of this Act, unless express provision is made to the contrary”.
102 Although I was initially attracted by the logical force of the second Respondent’s argument, upon deeper reflection, I have found the argument to be fatally flawed in that (i) it entirely overlooks the legal effect of the EP&A Act, s 108(2) which deems the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation “to be incorporated in every environmental planning instrument” and (ii) it fails to demonstrate that a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation is a different phenomenon or entity (factually or legally) from a development consent granted otherwise under the EP&A Act.
103 It is necessary that I develop each of these reasons which have led me to reject the second Respondent’s argument and to conclude that development that has been authorised by a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation is “development” (that has been relevantly declared by cl 10 of SEPP71 to be State significant development) “that may be carried out with development consent” within the meaning of s 76A(7)(a) and hence qualifies as “State significant development”.
104 My first reason concerns the effect of s 108(2) of the EP&A Act. That effect in the present case is that there is that there is relevantly to taken to be incorporated in the LEP all of the provisions of Pt 5 of the EP&A Regulation (the “incorporated provisions”).
105 For present purposes, it is sufficient to note the effect of cl 42(1) of the incorporated provisions which is to require “development consent for any enlargement, expansion or intensification of an existing use”. The incorporation into the LEP of cl 42 of the EP&A Regulation, produces the result that for the purposes of s 76A(1) the types of development that are expressly provided for in the EP&A Regulation, cl 42 are relevantly “specified development that an environmental planning instrument provides may not be carried out except with development consent”. To the extent that there is any provision in the text of the LEP (apart from the incorporated provisions) eg its express prohibition of development for the purposes of tourist facility within Zone No 1(b) which applies to the subject land that would derogate or have the effect of derogating from the incorporated provisions such provision “has no force or effect while the incorporated provisions remain in force”: cf Carden v Willoughby Municipal Council (1985) 56 LGRA 366.
106 It follows that development authorised by the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation (and in particular in the present case the development comprising the enlargement, expansion or intensification of the existing use within the meaning of cl 42 of the EP&A Regulation) is not development that is prohibited by an environmental planning instrument by virtue of the incorporation into the LEP of the provisions of Part 5 of the EP&A Regulation (vide s 108(2)) and by virtue of s 108(3) nullifying any provision of the LEP which would derogate from the incorporated provisions. It further follows that the development authorised by the grant of the development consent pursuant to the EP&A Regulation, cl 42 is relevantly, for the purposes of s 76A(1) and (3), “development that may not be carried out except with development consent” and is relevantly for the purposes of s 76A(7)(a)(ii) “development that may be carried out with development consent”. This ultimate holding entirely undermines the second Respondent’s argument.
107 My conclusion as to the effect in the present case of the incorporation into the LEP of the relevant existing use provisions of Part 5 of the EP&A Regulation is consistent with two early decisions of Cripps J when a Judge of this Court.
108 In the first decision, Hurstville Municipal Council v Bindon (1981) 45 LGRA 420, Cripps J rejected a submission that because environmental planning instruments no longer contained existing use provisions (which were now provided in the Regulation made under the EP&A Act), no development consent could be given to an application made under the existing use provisions of the Regulation.
109 In the second decision, Golden Fleece Petroleum Pty Ltd v Rockdale Municipal Council (1984) 52 LGRA 202, Cripps J, in the following extended passage at 205/206 considered and rejected the argument which had sought to distinguish an application for consent pursuant to the existing use provisions of the Regulation from a development application for consent under the EP&A Act:
- Section 97 gives a right of appeal to an applicant who is dissatisfied with a determination of a consent authority with respect to his development application . Mr Campbell has submitted that because development application is defined by s 4 to mean an application for consent under Division 1 of Part IV to carry out development and development consent is similarly defined, it is not competent for this Court to entertain an appeal arising under what he submits is an application and consent under Div. 2 Pt IV, i.e. against the refusal by the council to consent to an extension of a building. Mr Campbell submits that because s 97 gives a right of appeal only against a determination of the consent authority with respect to his development application there can be no appeal in respect of an application for change of an existing use or the alteration or extension of existing buildings. The consequence of this submission is, of course, not only that this appeal is incompetent but that there are no rights of appeal in respect of applications to councils for any of the matters referred to in the regulations relating to existing uses.
In my opinion, this submission must be rejected. It is expressly provided in s 108 that the regulations making provision for the carrying out of alterations or extensions to buildings shall be deemed to be incorporated in every environmental planning instrument: see s 108(2). Accordingly, Regulation 52 is, among others, deemed to be incorporated in the deemed environmental planning instrument, i.e. the Rockdale Planning Scheme Ordinance. In Hurstville Municipal Council v L. & D. R. Bindon (23 March 1981, unreported), this Court rejected a submission that because environmental planning instruments no longer contain existing use provisions, no consent could be given to applications under Regulations 52, 53 and 54. In the course of rejecting this submission, it was said:
- .… This submission overlooks s 108(2) which provides that the relevant regulations `shall be deemed to be incorporated in every environmental planning instrument'. Consequently, an application for the alteration or extension of a building or the rebuilding of a building or for the change of an existing use to another use would be a `development application' within the meaning of the Act and would be determined in accordance with the relevant provisions of the legislation.
110 His Honour went on to hold at 206 that the limitation on increasing the floor space of an existing building expressed in the relevant existing use Regulation was relevantly a development standard under the EP&A Act which was accordingly amenable to the dispensational power provided by State Environmental Planning Policy No 1—Development Standards.
111 In so holding, his Honour had concluded that the relevant existing use Regulation which was deemed to be incorporated into the relevant environmental planning instrument by virtue of the EP&A Act, s 108(2) was relevantly “a provision of an environmental planning instrument…..”: vide the then applicable definition of “development standard” contained in the EP&A Act, s 4(1).
112 Citation of the decision in Golden Fleece leads to the following elaboration of my second reason for rejecting the second Respondent’s argument, namely that the statutory concept or phenomenon of “development consent” is a single concept which is subject to a uniform procedure, in terms of the EP&A Act, which procedure does not distinguish between a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Act and a development consent granted otherwise under the EP&A Act. Whereas in the Golden Fleece case a textual argument based upon the definitions of “development application” and “development consent” contained in the EP&A Act (as originally enacted) was available in support of the what was held to be an unsuccessful attempt to distinguish a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation from a development consent otherwise granted under the EP&A Act, the text of the EP&A Act has been changed so that currently (and relevantly when the development consent was granted) the EP&A Act, s 4(1) provides the following definitions—
development consent means consent under Part 4 to carry out development and includes, unless expressly excluded, a complying development certificate.development application means an application for consent under Part 4 to carry out development but does not include an application for a complying development certificate.
113 Whereas the existence of statutory definitions obviously does not conclusively determine the matter, a consideration of the substantive provisions of the EP&A Act relating to development consents conclusively indicates that there is no conceptual or practical distinctions concerning development consents generally or concerning in particular a development consent granted pursuant to the existing use provisions of the EP&A Regulation which provisions are deemed to be incorporated in all environmental planning instruments by force of the EP&A Act, s 108(2). Thus, and by way of illustration (which is not intended to be exhaustive) it can be said of all development consents in terms of the EP&A Act—
- (i) they require the existence of a development application made pursuant to s 78A ;
(ii) they come into existence by virtue of a determination of a development application by the relevant consent authority pursuant to s 80 ;
(iii) the determination of a development application involves a planning appraisal of relevant considerations pursuant to s 79C ;
(iv) a development consent for the erection of a building is sufficient to authorise the use of the building when erected pursuant to s 81A(1) ;
(v) a development consent becomes effective from the date determined in accordance with s 83 ;
(vi) a development consent is liable to lapse pursuant to s 95 ; and
(vii) a development consent may be modified in accordance with s 96 .
114 There is simply nothing in the EP&A Act, which provides any foundation or support for the second Respondent’s argument that a development consent granted pursuant to existing use entitlements conferred by EP&A Regulation is a different factual or legal phenomenon or entity from a development consent not granted pursuant to existing use entitlements. Indeed, the EP&A Act recognises a development consent granted under that Act as a single conception.
115 Accordingly and for all of the foregoing reasons, the Applicants have established that the development approved by the development consent was relevantly “development that may be carried out with development consent” within the meaning of s 76A(7)(a)(ii), and that therefore the second ingredient of the definition of State significant development relevant in the present case has been satisfied.
E. CONCLUSIONS AND ORDERS
116 In view of my earlier conclusions that the development approved by the development consent was relevantly development for the purpose of a “tourist facility” within the meaning of SEPP71 and that that development was relevantly “development that may be carried out with development consent”, it follows that the Applicants have established that the development approved by the development consent was relevantly State significant development as declared by cl 10(1) of SEPP71 for which the Minister (and not the Council) was the relevant consent authority. It follows that the development consent purportedly granted by the Council was a legal nullity because the Council was not the relevant consent authority and had no power to determine the second Respondent’s development application.
117 No question of discretion has been raised in the proceedings and the contest has focussed exclusively on the single disputed question whether the approved development was relevantly State significant development.
118 The Applicants, having been successful on this issue, are entitled to the declaratory and consequential injunctive relief claimed.
119 Accordingly, I make the following orders—
- 1. Declare to be null and void the development consent No 2003/0112 purported to be granted by the Maclean Shire Council on 21 July 2003 for the expansion of an existing caravan park on property known as 286 O’Keefe’s Lane, Palmers Island.
2. Order the second Respondent, by itself, its agents and servants, be restrained from carrying out any development in reliance upon the said purported development consent.
3. Exhibits be returned.
4. Question of costs be reserved.
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