NSW Court of Appeal clar­i­fies whether devel­op­ment stan­dards are juris­dic­tion­al pre­req­ui­sites to the grant of devel­op­ment consent

S
Swaab

Contributor

Swaab, established in 1981 in Sydney, Australia, is a law firm that focuses on solving problems and maximizing opportunities for various clients, including entrepreneurs, family businesses, corporations, and high-net-worth individuals. The firm's core values include commitment, integrity, excellence, generosity of spirit, unity, and innovation. Swaab's lawyers have diverse expertise and prioritize building long-term client relationships based on service and empathy.
Com­pli­ance with relevant development stan­dards is not a pre­con­di­tion to the grant of consent by the LEC.
Australia Real Estate and Construction
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

On 26 April 2023, the New South Wales Court of Appeal hand­ed down its deci­sion in El Khouri v Gemaveld Pty Ltd [2023] NSW­CA 78 which has fur­ther clar­i­fied whether com­pli­ance with a devel­op­ment stan­dard is a juris­dic­tion­al fact that must be sat­is­fied in order to enliv­en the pow­er of the Land and Envi­ron­ment Court to grant devel­op­ment con­sent fol­low­ing a s.34 con­cil­i­a­tion conference.

Back­ground

In May 2020, Gemaveld Pty Ltd (Gemaveld), the reg­is­tered pro­pri­etor of land (Land) locat­ed in Blake­hurst, lodged a devel­op­ment appli­ca­tion (DA) with Georges Riv­er Coun­cil (Coun­cil) seek­ing devel­op­ment con­sent for the demo­li­tion of the exist­ing build­ing and the erec­tion of a new dwelling house, swim­ming pool and land­scap­ing works. In Octo­ber 2020, Coun­cil refused the DA.

In Octo­ber 2021, Gemaveld com­menced Class 1 pro­ceed­ings in the Land & Envi­ron­ment Court (LEC) appeal­ing the refusal of the DA.

A sig­nif­i­cant point of con­tention between Gemaveld and Coun­cil was the height of the pro­posed dwelling. The devel­op­ment stan­dard for height that applied to the Land was 9 metres (Height Con­trol) as spec­i­fied in the (since repealed) Kog­a­rah Local Envi­ron­men­tal Plan 2012 (Kog­a­rah LEP). The Land was unique in that it sloped steeply and uneven­ly down from street lev­el towards the Georges Riv­er, mak­ing the approved height dif­fi­cult to iden­ti­fy. Ulti­mate­ly, Gemaveld pro­vid­ed plans which indi­cat­ed that the pro­posed dwelling com­plied with the Height Control.

On this basis, Gemaveld and the Coun­cil reached an agree­ment at a Sec­tion 34 con­cil­i­a­tion con­fer­ence and the Com­mis­sion­er of the LEC grant­ed devel­op­ment con­sent with­out the mat­ter pro­ceed­ing to a hearing.

In July 2022, the neigh­bour­ing landown­ers (Neigh­bours) com­menced pro­ceed­ings seek­ing judi­cial review of the LEC deci­sion. The Neigh­bours claimed that the grant of con­sent was not a deci­sion that the Com­mis­sion­er of the LEC could have made in the prop­er exer­cise of its func­tions — with­in the mean­ing of s 34(3) of the Land and Envi­ron­ment Court Act 1979 (NSW) (Court Act) — as the Height Con­trol had not been com­plied with and no appli­ca­tion had been made to vary the Height Control.

After a two-day hear­ing in the Supreme Court it was held that the pro­posed devel­op­ment exceed­ed the Height Con­trol, but this had not been evi­dent on the plans put before the Com­mis­sion­er of the LEC. The pro­ceed­ings were dis­missed. The Neigh­bours con­se­quent­ly appealed that deci­sion to the NSW Court of Appeal.

Court of Appeal

The ques­tion before the Court of Appeal was whether com­pli­ance with the Height Con­trol in the Kog­a­rah LEP was a pre-con­di­tion (or 'juris­dic­tion­al fact') nec­es­sary to enliv­en the Court's pow­er under s 34 of the Court Act to grant con­sent to the DA.

In con­sid­er­ing the issue, the Court of Appeal referred to the deci­sion in Ross v Lane [2022] NSW­CA 235, in which it was held that it is a mat­ter for the con­sent author­i­ty to deter­mine whether a plan­ning instru­ment is engaged, and that the Court can­not inter­fere in that deter­mi­na­tion when it depends on the for­ma­tion of a state of sat­is­fac­tion or opinion.

The Court of Appeal held that com­pli­ance with the Height Con­trol was not a juris­dic­tion­al pre­req­ui­site to the pow­er to grant devel­op­ment con­sent. The Height Con­trol was instead a manda­to­ry con­sid­er­a­tion that the Com­mis­sion­er of the LEC was required to have regard to in mak­ing a deter­mi­na­tion that the s.34 agree­ment between the par­ties was one that the LEC could have made in the prop­er exer­cise of its functions.

Impli­ca­tions

When grant­i­ng devel­op­ment con­sent fol­low­ing agree­ment at a s.34 con­cil­i­a­tion con­fer­ence, a Com­mis­sion­er of the LEC must have regard to the rel­e­vant devel­op­ment stan­dards in plan­ning instru­ments to deter­mine whether an agree­ment between the par­ties is one that the Court could have made, but com­pli­ance with those stan­dards is not a pre­con­di­tion to the grant of consent.

For further information please contact:

Matthew Cole, Partner
Phone: +61 2 9777 8371
Email: mxc@swaab.com.au

Chloe Howard, Associate

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

See More Popular Content From

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More