Neale v Mine Subsidence Board

Case

[2013] NSWLEC 34

21 March 2013


Land and Environment Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: Neale v Mine Subsidence Board [2013] NSWLEC 34
Hearing dates:15 February 2013
Decision date: 21 March 2013
Jurisdiction:Class 3
Before: Pain J
Decision:

1. Proceedings are dismissed for want of jurisdiction as disclosing no reasonable cause of action under r 13.4 Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005.

2. Costs reserved.

Catchwords: PROCEDURE - whether court has jurisdiction to hear appeal in relation to payment from Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund
Legislation Cited: Land and Environment Court Act 1979 s 19(1f), s 39
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 s 4, s 5, s 7A, s 10, s 12, s 12A, s 12B, s 13A, s 15, s 15B
Mine Subsidence Compensation Regulation 2012 r 5
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 r 13.4
Cases Cited: Alinta LGA Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2008] HCA 17; (2008) 244 ALR 276
Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2011] HCA 19; (2011) 243 CLR 558
Venn v Mine Subsidence Board [2013] NSWLEC 30
Category:Procedural and other rulings
Parties: Kylie Neale (Applicant)
Representation: Mr J Robson SC with Mr P Arblaster (Applicant)
Ms P Thew (Respondent)
Colin Biggers & Paisley (Applicant)
Kilmurray Lawyers (Respondent)
File Number(s):31124 of 2012

Judgment

  1. The Mine Subsidence Board has filed a Notice of Motion dated 6 December 2012 seeking an order that these proceedings be dismissed for want of jurisdiction as disclosing no reasonable cause of action under r 13.4 Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (the UCPR). The proceedings have been commenced by Mrs Neale seeking compensation from the Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund (the Fund) in reliance on s 12B of the Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (MSC Act).

  1. The Court has jurisdiction under s 19(f1) of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (the Court Act) in Class 3 proceedings to hear and dispose of appeals under s 12B of the MSC Act. By virtue of s 39 of the Court Act the Court has power to undertake a de novo merits review for those matters within jurisdiction.

Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961

  1. Section 4 of the MSC Act defines improvement and subsidence as:

4 Definitions
...
Improvement includes any building or work erected or constructed on land; any formed road, street, path, walk or drive-way; any pipeline, water, sewer, telephone, gas or other service main, whether above or below the surface of the land.
...
Subsidence means subsidence due to:
(a) the extraction of coal or shale, or
(b) the prospecting for coal or shale carried out within a colliery holding by the proprietor of the holding,
and includes all vibrations or other movements of the ground related to any such extraction or prospecting (whether or not the movements result in actual subsidence), but does not include vibrations or other movements of the ground that are due to blasting operations in an open cut mine and that do not result in actual subsidence.
  1. Section 7A provides:

7A Board may reconsider matters
(1) The Board may reconsider any matter which has been dealt with by it and may adhere to, rescind, alter or amend any decision previously made by it, but shall not rescind, alter or amend any such decision except with the consent in writing:
(a) where the decision was that a payment be made under section 12 or 12A, of the person in respect of whose claim the decision was made, or
...
  1. The Mine Subsidence Board (the Board) is constituted under s 5 of the MSC Act. The Fund is set up under s 10.

  1. The relevant sections of the MSC Act relating to compensation are as follows:

12 Claims for damage arising out of subsidence
(1) Claims may be made under this Act for payment from the Fund of:
...
(c) an amount equivalent to the rent which would have been payable for such period as may be prescribed in respect of any buildings or works which by reason of such damage are untenantable, under repair or in course of construction, or where such buildings or works or any part thereof are or is occupied by the owner thereof such sum in lieu of rent as the Board deems just
[relevant]
...
(2)
(a) The owner of any improvement or any household or other effects which have been damaged by subsidence may notify the Secretary of the Board in a form approved by the Board and within the prescribed time of the details of such damage; the location of the improvement damaged; the description of the household or other effects damaged; the amount claimed from the Fund and such other particulars as may be prescribed.
Such notification shall be treated as a claim for payment from the Fund under subsection (1). [not relevant]
(b) Any such notification received shall be recorded and investigated by the Board, an officer of the Board or some other officer in the Public Service acting for the Board and on receipt of a report of such investigation the matter shall be placed before a meeting of the Board for a decision as to the payment, if any, to be allowed in respect of the damage to which such notification relates.
12A Claims arising out of actions to prevent or mitigate damage
(1) Subject to this section, claims may be made under this Act for payment from the Fund of:
...
(b) an amount to meet the proper and necessary expense incurred or proposed by or on behalf of the owner of improvements or household or other effects in preventing or mitigating damage to those improvements or household or other effects that, in the opinion of the Board, the owner could reasonably have anticipated would otherwise have arisen, or could reasonably anticipate would otherwise arise, from a subsidence that has taken place, other than a subsidence due to operations carried on by the owner.
(2) A claim under subsection (1):
...
(b) shall be made, in the case of a claim for payment of an amount under subsection (1) (b), within three months after the day on which the expense to which the claim relates became known to the claimant [relevant] or, where some other time within which such a claim may be made is prescribed by the regulations, within the time so prescribed,
(c) shall specify the location of the land or improvements, or the description of the household or other effects, to which the claim relates, the amount claimed, the nature and extent of the damage or, as the case may be, the matters in respect of which the expense was, or is to be, incurred, and
(d) shall contain such other particulars as may be prescribed.
(3) The provisions of section 12 (2) (b) and (5) shall, mutatis mutandis, apply to and in respect of claims and payments under this section in the same manner as they apply to and in respect of notifications and payments under section 12.
(4) (Repealed)
12B Appeals
A person claiming compensation under section 12 or 12A may appeal to the Land and Environment Court against the decision of the Board:
(a) as to whether damage has arisen from subsidence or could reasonably have been anticipated, or
(b) as to the amount of the payment from the Fund.
  1. Clause 5 of the Mine Subsidence Compensation Regulation 2012 (the Regulation) provides:

5 Prescribed period under section 12 (1) (c)
The prescribed period for the purposes of section 12 (1) (c) of the Act is the period, not exceeding 6 months, or not exceeding 3 years if the Board is satisfied that there are special circumstances, during which any buildings or works are (by reason of damage arising from subsidence due to the extraction of coal or shale) untenantable, under repair or in course of construction.

Evidence

  1. The affidavit of Mr Cole-Clark CEO of the Board dated 3 December 2012 was read in part. Mr Cole-Clark stated that in July 2009 he instructed the Board's legal representatives that the Board was unable to accept the "fourth" claim under s 13A of the MSC Act and would treat the claim as under s 12. The Board's solicitor wrote to Mrs Neale's solicitor advising the "fourth" claim made pursuant to s 12 of the MSC Act was rejected on 25 August 2010.

  1. Mr Cole-Clark stated that the Neales made a further claim dated 1 September 2012 under s 12A(1)(b), s 13 (not the subject of this appeal) and s 12(1)(c) of the MSC Act. On 5 September 2012 Mr Cole-Clark formed the view that the Board was unable to accept this claim. In accordance with instructions, the Board's solicitors advised Mrs Neale's solicitor by letter dated 6 September 2012 that the Board was unable to accept the claim. The letter of 6 September 2012 stated that the matters addressed in the letter were not decisions that may be appealed under s 12B of the MSC Act.

  1. The affidavit of Mrs Neale dated 10 January 2013 was also read in part. It states that the contract to purchase the property was entered into in 2004 and that the Neales first became aware of subsidence in 2007. Mrs Neale stated that she and her family moved out of the property because of the risk of further subsidence in May 2008. Mrs Neale also detailed the measures taken to pursue a claim against the Board. Mrs Neale stated that she and her family moved back to the property in November 2011 because they could not afford paying both the mortgage of the property and rent.

  1. Mrs Neale's claim application dated 1 September 2012 is in the following terms:

1. A claim is made pursuant to section 12A(1)(b) of the Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) (Act) for payment from the Fund of an amount sufficient to pay for the proposed preventative or mitigatory works.
2. Alternatively, a claim is made, pursuant to section 13 of the Act that the MSB purchase the land. [not subject of this appeal]
3. A claim is also made, pursuant to s 12(1)(c) of the Act, for the rent paid by the owner from May 2008 to 26 November 2011 in the amount of $60,750 being the equivalent amount of rent paid by the Owner for the period in which the property has been untenantable.
  1. A quotation from Keller Ground Engineering dated 24 July 2012 was attached to the application in support of the s 12A(1)(b) claim.

  1. The letter dated 6 September 2012 from the Board's solicitors to Mrs Neale's solicitors set out the reasons Mrs Neale's claims were not accepted as follows:

RE: Mine Subsidence Board and Kylie NEALE
Claim Application dated 1 September 2012
We refer to the above Claim Application lodged on behalf of your client with our client, the Mine Subsidence Board (the "MSB").
On behalf of the MSB, we are instructed to advise that none of the claims set out in the Claim application are accepted for the reasons set out below.
Claim item B(1) of the Schedule
This purports to be a claim "pursuant to section 12A(1)(b) of the Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961" (the "Act"), being a claim for payment of an amount to meet your client's "proper and necessary expense" to prevent or mitigate possible damage to improvements resulting from subsidence.
Section 12A(2)(b) of the Act relevantly provides that a claim under section 12A(1)(b) "shall be made ... within three months after the day on which the expense to which the claim relates became known to the claimant or, where some other time within which such a claim may be made is prescribed by the regulations, within the time so prescribed".
We note that no such "other time" has been prescribed by the regulations for the purpose of section 12A(2)(b) of the Act.
We note that the expense to which the claim relates (for the purposes of section 12A(1)(b)) is the work set out in "the estimate provided by ... Keller Ground Engineering on 24 July 2012 ... to fill the voids left by former workings" which is "estimated to cost between $3.1M and $3.8M" (the "Expense").
We also note that, on page 16 of Dr Pells' report dated 11 June 2008 (the "Pells Report"), Dr Pells estimates the cost to "[fill] the voids ... beneath the house, and beneath the property (sic)" to be between $400,000 and ">$6M". This estimate is for work which is substantially identical to the Expense.
Accordingly, the Expense became known, or should have become known, to your client at least as early as the date of receipt of the Pells Report, being on or about 11 June 2008 and which is more than three months prior to the Claim Application being lodged.
This claim, therefore, was made outside of the time prescribed in section 12A(2)(b) of the Act, notwithstanding that your client has obtained a further estimate from Keller Engineering.
This claim is not accepted by the MSB.
...
Claim Item B(3) of the Schedule
This is a claim for rent and is a reiteration of part of the claim made by your client to the MSB on 19 May 2008, being a claim for, inter alia, "Rent from May 2008".
That claim was rejected by the MSB on 16 September 2010.
Accordingly, the MSB considers this claim to be a request that it exercise its discretion under section 7A of the Act to reconsider a matter which has already been dealt with.
The MSB declines to exercise that discretion.
  1. The issue crystallises around whether the Board's letter dated 6 September 2012 constitutes a decision of the Board for the purposes of founding an appeal to this Court under s 12B of the MSC Act.

Board's submissions

  1. No decision for the purposes of s 12B has been made for the claims under s 12A(1)(b) and s 12(1)(c) so that no appeal right arises. In Alinta LGA Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2008] HCA 17; (2008) 244 ALR 276 the High Court unanimously interpreted the jurisdiction of the Court under s 12B and that interpretation applies squarely to these proceedings. The condition precedent to the Court's jurisdiction is whether there is a decision of the Board against which Mrs Neale can appeal.

  1. The letter of 6 September 2012 expressly states that it is not a decision of the Board. The refusal to accept the application did not constitute a decision of the Board for the purposes of s 12B.

Applicant's submissions

  1. In Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2011] HCA 19; (2011) 243 CLR 558, also a claim for compensation under s 12B, the majority of the High Court at [37] referred to the need to construe legislation amply where it provides substitutes for private interests lost, as occurred with the establishment of the Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund. This resulted in the extinguishment of valuable rights relating to property. The right of Mrs Neale to sue the collier responsible for creating the mine workings is such a right. Alinta should be distinguished on its facts as identified in [64] of the judgment.

  1. The Board's reasoning for its decision in relation to the prevention claim under s 12A(1)(b) is as follows:

(a) s 12A(2)(b) of the MSC Act requires the claim to be made within three months after the day the expense to which the claim relates become known to the claimant;

(b)   the expense is the work set out in the Keller estimate;

(c)   Dr Pells gave an estimate of $400,000 to more than $6M on 11 June 2008 (the Pells estimate);

(d)   the work in the Keller estimate and the Pells estimate are substantially identical;

(e)   the expense was known or should have been known to Mrs Neale on about 11 June 2008 such that the claim was not made within the prescribed time

  1. While the Board's response was couched in a way that coloured it as a decision based on whether the claim was brought within time, the question of whether the decision is appellable turns on the substance of the response not its form. The substance of the response was consideration of the expense in the Keller estimate, which meets the terms of s 12A(1)(b) and s 12B(b).

  1. The rent claim pursuant to s 12(1)(c) of the MSC Act was refused on the following reasoning:

(a)   the claim formed part of a rent claim made on 19 May 2009;

(b)   that claim was rejected on 16 September 2010;

(c) the MSB therefore takes the claim as a request to exercise its discretion under s 7A to reconsider a matter already dealt with and declines to exercise that discretion.

  1. The substance of the response, rather than the form, is whether rent is payable from the Fund which satisfies the description in s 12(1)(c) and s 12B(b). Accordingly the Board made a decision for each claim which is appellable under s 12B.

Consideration

  1. The scope of the Court's jurisdiction to consider appeals relying on s 12B of the MSC Act is in issue. The statutory scheme in s 12, s 12A and s 12B was addressed in Alinta. Section 12B does not provide for unlimited appeal rights, as considered in Alinta. The High Court at [58] - [64] unanimously stated:

58 Three observations may be made about the text of s 12B. First, there must be a decision of the Board on a claim under ss 12 or 12A for the right of appeal provided by s 12B to be enlivened. The Board's decision on an application for approval under s 15 or certification under s 15B will not meet the statutory description called for by the section. It may thus be observed at the outset that not every decision of the Board will be the subject of an appeal to the LEC.
59 The second observation is that the Board's decision on the claim must be a decision "as to" one of two classes of subject matter (identified in pars (a) and (b) of s 12B) for the right of appeal to be enlivened.
60 The third observation is that the subject matter prescribed in pars (a) and (b) is identified and delimited by the language of ss 12 and 12A. This proposition is elucidated by a textual comparison. The disjunctive expression "arisen from subsidence or could reasonably have been anticipated" in par (a) corresponds to the language used to prescribe causal elements of claims under ss 12 and 12A respectively. Under s 12(1), compensation may be claimed for damage which "arises from subsidence" (s 12(1)(a) and (d)) (emphasis added). That language is adopted by the first limb of s 12B(a) which refers to a decision "as to whether damage has arisen from subsidence" (emphasis added). By way of example, the Board may decide on a claim under s 12(1)(a) that there is no damage or less damage than is claimed or that the relevant damage pre-existed the alleged subsidence or has some other cause. Those decisions would be decisions as to the subject matter identified by s 12B(a). Similarly, a claim may be brought under s 12A(1)(b) in respect of an amount to meet the expense of preventing or mitigating damage that, in the opinion of the Board, the owner could "reasonably have anticipated would otherwise have arisen, or could reasonably anticipate would otherwise arise" from a subsidence that has taken place (emphasis added). This language is reflected by the second limb of s 12B(a). This provides a right of appeal against a decision "as to whether damage ... could reasonably have been anticipated". Pursuant to s 12B(a), an appeal lies to the LEC against the Board's decision as to that subject matter on a claim under s 12A.
61 As to par (b) of s 12B, claimants under ss 12(1) or 12A(1) must specify the "amount claimed" from the Fund in their application (ss 12(2)(a) and 12A(2)(c)) (emphasis added). Sections 12(1)(b) and 12A(1)(b) confer the right to make a claim for an "amount to meet the proper and necessary expense" of undertaking certain works (s 12(1)(b)) or preventing or mitigating damage (s 12A(1)(b)) and s 12(1)(c) confers the right to make a claim for an "amount equivalent to the rent which would have been payable" (emphasis added). The Board may also reduce "the amount of compensation" where the damage caused by subsidence is greater because of the negligent or improper manner in which an improvement is constructed or maintained (s 12(1), ultimate paragraph) (emphasis added). The Board's decision as to the quantum of payment from the Fund pursuant to these provisions would be a decision "as to the amount of the payment from the Fund" within s 12B(b) of the Subsidence Act.
62 The Board submits that, if a broader construction of s 12B(b) be accepted, s 12B(a) would be rendered redundant. This would be because any adverse decision by the Board on the question of causation which leads to the refusal of a claim and hence "no payment" or a reduced payment is appealable under s 12B(b). Hodgson JA recognised the force of this submission but observed that [19]:
"It seems to me unlikely that the legislature intended that the availability of an appeal, and the availability or need to approach the Supreme Court, should depend upon capricious distinctions ... so although there is force in the contention that a broad construction of s 12B(b) would render s 12B(a) otiose, I think the broad construction of s 12B(b) is preferable."
63 However, there may be a number of reasons for the distinction drawn by the text of s 12B. One is that s 12B reflects an intention to limit the liability of the Fund under s 10(3)(b) to the costs of a rehearing in the LEC on any decision of the Board that goes on appeal. Another is that the legislature left to the Board the determination of jurisdictional facts, subject to scrutiny only on judicial review in the Supreme Court. That state of affairs is more readily understood where, as here, the jurisdictional impediment was in the alleged absence of approval and the absence of a certificate respecting Alinta's improvement. On the other hand, the legislation left for determination by the LEC de novo such questions as the determination of causation and quantum of compensation in claims competently made against the Fund.
64 The right of appeal to the LEC is restricted to appeals against decisions of the Board as to the subject matter identified in s 12B(a) and (b). The outcome of "no payment" in this case followed not from a decision as to either of those subject matters, but from the Board's application of the statutory requirement that no claim be entertained in the circumstances prescribed by s 15(5)(b). In these circumstances, there was no decision of the Board "as to the amount of the payment from the Fund" under s 12B(b) against which an appeal would lie to the LEC. The jurisdiction to hear and dispose of an appeal under s 12B of the Subsidence Act is not enlivened by Alinta's application.
  1. In Alinta the refusal of certification under s 15B of the MSC Act for an improvement resulted in the application of s 15(5)(b). No claim could be considered under the Act for damage to improvements from subsidence if no certificate had been issued under s 15B. The Board's decision was held not to meet the statutory description in s 12B so that a right of appeal to this Court was not enlivened. The High Court observed that not every decision of the Board would be the subject of an appeal at [58]. The Board's decision must be a decision "as to" the subject matter in s 12B(a) or (b); at [59]. At [60] the High Court identified that the subject matter in s 12B(a) and 12B(b) was delimited by the language of s 12 and s 12A. Section 12B(a) was considered in relation to claims under s 12(1)(a), 12(1)(d) and s 12A(1)(b). The High Court was considering the meaning of s 12B in the context of "arisen from subsidence or could reasonably have been anticipated".

  1. The Board's refusal of a claim, in relation to causation, and therefore no payment from the Fund, could result in many appeals under s 12B(b) if that section was broadly interpreted. The Board submitted such an approach would render s 12B(a) redundant in [61] - [62]. The High Court's acceptance of that submission and the observations in [63] are particularly pertinent where the High Court concluded that the legislation leaves for determination by this Court questions of determination of causation and quantum in claims competently (emphasis added) made against the Fund. The legislature left to the Board the determination of jurisdictional facts, subject only to scrutiny of judicial review in the Supreme Court. The High Court adopted a narrow approach to the scope of s 12B(b) in the reasoning in [63] and [64]. The no payment outcome was held not to give rise to a decision as to the subject matters of s 12B(a) or (b) in [64].

  1. Jemena was decided after Alinta. The facts in Jemena vary from this matter and Alinta. In Jemena the majority of the High Court (French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ, Bell J dissenting) was considering a claim for payment from the Fund of expenditures made in relation to subsidence-caused damage to those improvements under s 12A(1)(b). At issue was the meaning of the phrase "damage...from a subsidence that has taken place" in s 12A(1)(b). In the course of its determination the majority of the High Court identified at [37] that there is a common law rule of statutory interpretation requiring that "clear and unambiguous words be used before there will be imputed to the legislature an intent to expropriate or extinguish valuable rights relating to property without fair compensation." Legislation is commonly construed not to expropriate or extinguish rights unless just terms are provided instead. The High Court referred to Alinta but not in relation to those aspects relied on by the Board in this case. This was no doubt because the scope of the appeal under s 12B did not arise for consideration in Jemena in the same manner. The reasoning in Alinta, which is unaffected by the reasoning in Jemena, must be applied to the facts of this case.

  1. As already stated, the facts in this matter vary from those in Alinta. The application by Mrs Neale is directed to the subject matter in s 12B being a claim for rent under s 12(1)(c) and for prevention costs under s 12A(1)(b). That is clear from the application for compensation made to the Board. The opening words of s 12B refer explicitly to a claim for compensation under s 12 or s 12A. The same notification process applies to both claims as identified in s 12(2)(b) for the rent claim and adopted in s 12A(3) for the prevention claim. The issue for decision in this case is whether a claim for compensation on two bases having been made under s 12 and s 12A, is a decision made by the Board as to the subject matter of s 12B(a) and/or (b). Mrs Neale's counsel relied particularly on s 12B(b).

  1. The Board through its CEO determined in relation to the prevention claim under s 12A(1)(b) that the claim was not made within time under s 12A(2)(b) because the expense became known, or should have become known, to Mrs Neale as early as the date of the Pells report, being 11 June 2008. That I am informed was an earlier report provided to the Board by Mrs Neale. The reasoning of the Board, set out in the letter from its solicitor in par 13 above, was that the expense claim under s 12A(2)(b) (claim item B(1)) of the schedule) had already been made in 2008. The claim for expenses based on the later Keller report was therefore out of time. Section 12A(2)(b) is expressed in mandatory terms as a statutory time limit for the making of claims and is similar in that regard to s 15(5)(b) considered in Alinta, in that it is a mandatory provision which must be complied with if making a claim. The decision that the claim is time-barred under s 12A(2)(b) is a decision whether Mrs Neale's claim was competently made. Section 12A(2)(b) was not therefore complied with. Mrs Neale's counsel submitted that if form is considered the Board did have before it an expenses claim which came within s 12A(1)(b). Section 12A(1)(b) is qualified by s 12A(1)(c) which is in mandatory terms and determines the competency of an appeal in relation to a statutory time bar.

  1. The High Court's reasoning in Alinta that the Court's jurisdiction is enlivened by claims competently made under s 12B in [63] and a narrow approach to a no payment outcome under s 12B(b) in [64] applies squarely. I am bound by it in concluding that the Board's letter dated 6 September 2012 does not provide a decision from which an appeal can be made under s 12A(1)(b) for the prevention claim.

  1. As identified in the solicitor's letter in par 13, the Board considered the rent claim made under s 12(1)(c) (claim item B(3) of the schedule) was a reiteration of part of a claim already made in May 2008 and rejected in September 2010. Such claims are limited by the time frame specified in cl 5 of the Regulation of six months or no more than three years if the Board is satisfied that there are special circumstances. The claim was considered by the Board as a request under s 7A for the consideration of a previous decision on the same topic. While Mrs Neale's counsel sought to render the substance of the decision as a claim as to payment from the Fund, the decision of the Board was on the competency of the claim. That decision which resulted in a no payment outcome cannot be characterised as a decision as to the payment from the Fund in accordance with s 12B(b). That the result of the Board's response is a non-payment from the Fund does not result in it being a decision as to the subject matter identified in s 12B(b) per Alinta at [64].

  1. I am mindful of the observations in Jemena that legislation which appropriates property rights is frequently construed as not extinguishing rights unless fair compensation is provided. I agree with the Board that Alinta is unable to be distinguished however. It follows that I am bound to apply the reasoning to the facts here which raise squarely the scope of an appeal enabled by s 12B. Based on the reasoning in Alinta, only competent appeals may be brought before the Court and the determination of competence remains with the Board, subject to judicial review proceedings in the Supreme Court of NSW, reflecting the specific nature of the appeal rights in s 12B. My reasoning is also consistent with the recent decision of Craig J in Venn v Mine Subsidence Board [2013] NSWLEC 30 at [24], [40] - [41]. My conclusion means that Mrs Neale's appeal cannot proceed.

  1. The Board's notice of motion is successful and I find that this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear this appeal.

Orders

  1. The Court makes the following orders:

(1) Proceedings are dismissed for want of jurisdiction as disclosing no reasonable cause of action under r 13.4 Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005.

(2)   Costs reserved.

**********

Decision last updated: 21 March 2013

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