Hardie Holdings Pty Limited v Cessnock City Council
[2010] NSWLEC 1259
•5 May 2010
Land and Environment Court
of New South Wales
CITATION: Hardie Holdings Pty Limited v Cessnock City Council [2010] NSWLEC 1259 PARTIES: APPLICANT
Hardie Holdings Pty LimitedRESPONDENT
INTERVENOR (pursuant to s64 of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979)
Cessnock City Council
Roads and Traffic AuthorityFILE NUMBER(S): 10662 of 2009 CORAM: Moore SC KEY ISSUES: DEVELOPMENT CONSENT :- Modification application; De facto new application LEGISLATION CITED: Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 DATES OF HEARING: 5 May 2010 EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT DATE: 5 May 2010 LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES: APPLICANT
Ms A Pearman, barrister
INSTRUCTED BY
MRM Thompson NorrieRESONDENT
Mr P Clay, barrister
INSTRUCTED BY
Sparke HelmoreINTERVENOR (pursuant to s64 of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979)
Mr R Lancaster SC
INSTRUCTED BY
Blake Dawson
JUDGMENT:
THE LAND AND
ENVIRONMENT COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
MOORE SC
5 May 2010
JUDGMENT10662 of 2009 Hardie Holdings Pty Limited v Cessnock City Council
- This decision was given as an extemporaneous decision. It has been revised and edited prior to publication.
1 SENIOR COMMISSIONER: The applicant in these proceedings currently has development consent to permit it to erect a substantial retail development on Wine Country Drive at Nulkaba. At the present time, the applicant is required by the conditions of consent to construct a signalised intersection at Wine Country Drive and Kerlew Street with the fourth arm, that is the arm to the east, to comprise the access to the site.
2 The applicant has applied, pursuant to s 96 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, to modify the requirements in the development consent approval for that signalised intersection by proposing, as an alternative, an access that would be some 200 metres or so to the north on Wine Country Drive. That is the matter that is presently formally before the Court.
3 The applicant now seeks this morning, by this Notice of Motion, to substitute, for the plans of the intersection (that is the offset intersection to the north which would be unsignalised), a roundabout intersection that is at the location proposed for the signalised intersection required by the consent. The internal configuration of the development would also be changed in a number of modest fashions.
4 The propositions that are put on behalf of the applicant are that, consistent with s 56 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 for the just quick and cheap resolution of the issues in dispute between the parties and the fact that the plans proposed to be substituted in the s 96 application address substantially the contentions that are raised with respect to the present s 96 application plans, this provides an appropriate basis for dealing with the application to amend this morning, and to permit substitution of the plans.
5 Mr Clay, barrister, puts on behalf of the council, the proposition that there is such a significant difference between the concepts that it constitutes a second s 96 application, one that is not capable of being entertained in these proceedings.
6 Although Ms Pearman, barrister, puts the propositions to me that it has been now for a number of years the approach of the Court in seeking the best community outcome for proceedings, a process and an objective espoused by former Chief Judge McClellan J and by the present Chief Judge, Preston J, those changes that are consistently adopted by Commissioners on the merits, deal with matters that are capable of being dealt with, within the scope of the application then before the Court. That is not the case here.
7 The application that is currently before the Court bears absolutely no resemblance to the application that is the subject of the notice of motion. I reject the Notice of Motion and decline to permit reliance on the proposed amended plans.
Senior Commissioner
0
0
1