Australian Leisure and Hospitality Group Pty Ltd v Manly Council
[2012] NSWLEC 53
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Land and Environment Court (NSW)
Decision date
2012-03-15
Before
Preston CJ, Mr J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
A hotel's attempts to use footways of public roads for a restaurant
1The Australian Leisure and Hospitality Group Pty Ltd ("ALH") owns and operates the New Brighton Hotel at 71 The Corso, Manly. ALH has been endeavouring to expand and intensify the use of the hotel in various ways over many years. Manly Council ("the Council") has opposed ALH's proposals. ALH has needed to apply to this Court to obtain the statutory approvals needed to implement its proposals. 2One of ALH's proposals has been to use part of the footways of the public roads of The Corso and Sydney Road adjacent to the facades of the hotel as an outdoor eating area for the hotel's restaurant. Both The Corso and Sydney Road are pedestrian malls in the vicinity of the hotel. 3Use of the footways as outdoor eating areas was approved as part of the development consent granted by this Court in 2005: see Australian Leisure and Hospitality Pty Limited v Manly Council [2005] NSWLEC 316. The 2005 development consent approved 26 tables and 104 chairs on the footways of The Corso and Sydney Road adjacent to the hotel. 4However, because the approved outdoor eating area would be on public roads, approval was also required under s 125 of the Roads Act 1993 ("Roads Act"). ALH did not seek an approval under s 125 of the Roads Act at the time it sought development consent in 2005. 5Instead, after obtaining development consent from the Court in 2005, ALH applied to the Council, on a number of occasions, for approval under s 125 of the Roads Act to use those parts of the footways on The Corso and Sydney Road for the purpose of a restaurant, in accordance with the 2005 development consent. The Council, as the relevant roads authority, refused each application under s 125 of the Roads Act. ALH was unable to appeal these refusals because there is no statutory right of appeal against a refusal of an application under s 125 of the Roads Act. 6To overcome this problem, ALH sought to find a means of appealing to the Court, and then seeking for the Court to invoke its powers under s 39(2) of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 ("Court Act") to exercise the Council's functions to grant the needed approval under s 125(1) of the Roads Act. Section 39(2) provides: "In addition to any other functions and discretions that the Court has apart from this subsection, the Court shall, for the purposes of hearing and disposing of an appeal, have all the functions and discretions which the person or body whose decision is the subject of the appeal had in respect of the matter the subject of the appeal." 7This provision is clearly facultative - it facilitates the Court hearing and disposing of the appeal before it. But the facilitation is subject to limitations. 8One limitation is that the power applies only where the proceedings in the Court involve an appeal against a decision of a person or body. This limitation posed a problem in the second proceedings brought by ALH after obtaining development consent. ALH had sought for the Court to exercise the power under s 39(2) of the Court Act in proceedings it had commenced under s 96(8) of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 ("EPA Act"). ALH's proceedings under s 96(8) of the EPA Act involved a direct application to the Court to modify the 2005 development consent by adding a new condition declaring that approval is granted under s 125 of the Roads Act to use the footways adjacent to the hotel for restaurant purposes for seven years. No modification of the development, the subject of the development consent, was sought. 9After much preceding litigation, I determined that the Court, in hearing and disposing of ALH's proceedings involving a direct application to the Court under s 96(8) of the EPA Act to modify the development consent granted by the Court in 2005, instead of an appeal against a decision of the Council to refuse an application under s 96AA of the EPA Act to modify that development consent, did not have and could not exercise the function of the Council under s 125 of the Roads Act and I therefore dismissed the proceedings: Australian Leisure and Hospitality Group Pty Ltd v Manly Council (No 4) [2009] NSWLEC 226; (2009) 172 LGERA 1. 10ALH then changed tactics. It made an application to the Council under s 96AA(1) of the EPA Act to modify conditions 1 and 50 of the 2005 development consent so as to substitute a new plan for the outdoor eating area providing an additional three tables and 12 chairs along the Sydney Road footway, thereby increasing the total numbers to 29 tables and 116 chairs in the outdoor eating area. After waiting for the statutory period for the application to be deemed to be refused, ALH appealed under s 97AA of the EPA Act to the Court against the Council's deemed refusal of ALH's s 96AA application. 11On the hearing of the appeal, ALH applied for and was granted leave to amend its s 96AA application to delete one table and four chairs at the eastern corner of Sydney Road and The Corso, and to translocate two groups of five tables and 20 chairs, one group on each of Sydney Road and The Corso, further away from that corner, so as to reduce interference with pedestrian flow at the intersection of Sydney Road and The Corso and improve visibility to the hotel from those roads. The Council did not oppose these amendments. The amended proposal, therefore, is for 28 tables and 112 chairs spread along the two footways of Sydney Road and The Corso adjacent to and immediately in front of the hotel. 12On this appeal against the Council's deemed refusal of ALH's s 96AA modification application, ALH seeks for the Court not only to approve ALH's amended s 96AA application to modify the development consent to, in effect, change the number and location of chairs on Sydney Road and The Corso, but also, pursuant to s 39(2) of the Court Act, to exercise the Council's function under s 125 of the Roads Act to approve the use of all of the tables and chairs comprising the outdoor eating area on the footways of Sydney Road and The Corso. 13This raises the question of a second limitation of s 39(2) of the Court Act. The power under s 39(2) to exercise the functions and discretions of the Council whose decision under s 96AA of the EPA Act is the subject of the appeal under s 97AA of the EPA Act is available only "for the purposes of hearing and disposing of an appeal". The width or narrowness of the functions and discretions of the Council, which can be exercised by the Court for the purposes of hearing and disposing of the appeal, will therefore be governed by the nature and subject matter of the appeal. 14The nature of the current appeal is an appeal under s 97AA of the EPA Act against the decision of the Council under s 96AA of the EPA Act to refuse an application to modify a development consent, not an appeal under s 97 of the EPA Act against a decision under s 80 of the EPA Act to refuse a development application, and is therefore more confined. A modification of a consent is not the granting of a consent. The subject matter of the current appeal is confined to an application to modify two conditions of the development consent to substitute reference to an amended plan which changes the number and location of tables and chairs in the outdoor eating area approved by the development consent. 15The consequence is that the Court has under s 39(2) of the Court Act the functions and discretions of the Council, which include those under s 125 of the Roads Act to approve the use of a footway of a public road for restaurant purposes, for the purposes of hearing and disposing of the current appeal against the Council's decision to refuse ALH's application to modify the development consent to change the number and location of the tables and chairs in the outdoor eating area of Sydney Road and The Corso. 16Unlike in the earlier proceedings involving application directly to the Court under s 96(8) of the EPA Act, the Council has not raised any contention contesting the Court's power in this appeal under s 97AA of the EPA Act against the Council's deemed refusal of ALH's application under s 96AA of the EPA Act to exercise the Council's functions to grant approval under s 125 of the Roads Act to use both the footways on Sydney Road and The Corso for the purposes of the restaurant conducted in the hotel. I will proceed on the basis that the Court has the power. The application concerns one coherent outdoor eating area for one restaurant in the hotel and, as a result of the amendments at the hearing, modifications are sought to the number and locations of tables and chairs on both Sydney Road and The Corso.