(ii) The Applicants' claim to financial costs incurred in connection with their purchase of a replacement property
10 It is not in dispute that the Applicants purchased on 29 March 2003 a property at Badgerys Creek for a purchase price of $4,850,000. They purchased this property with the intention of relocating their existing poultry egg business. This occurred at a time during the extensive negotiations between the parties when it appeared the Respondent would purchase the whole of the Applicants' landholding.
11 It was only subsequent to the purchase of the Badgerys Creek property that negotiations between the parties broke down leading ultimately to the Respondent's compulsory acquisition on 13 February 2004 of part only of the Applicants' land (namely the acquisition of some 2.3 hectares comprising the Wallgrove Road frontage portion of the Applicants' land leaving a residue of 8.2 hectares upon which residue the existing poultry egg production development is located).
12 According to the affidavit sworn 13 May 2005 of the Applicants' solicitor, Mr Grellman, one of the Damjanovic family members has been residing at the Badgerys Creek property since it was acquired and it is the intention of Mr Damjanovic Senior to commence living at that property once the poultry egg business has been relocated to that property.
13 Section 59 of the Just Terms Act includes the following matters within the concept of "loss attributable to disturbance":
(c) financial costs reasonably incurred in connection with the relocation of those persons (including legal costs but not including stamp duty or mortgage costs),
(d) stamp duty costs reasonably incurred (or that might reasonably be incurred) by those persons in connection with the purchase of land for relocation (but not exceeding the amount that would be incurred for the purchase of land of equivalent value to the land compulsorily acquired),
(e) financial costs reasonably incurred (or that might reasonably be incurred) by those persons in connection with the discharge of a mortgage and the execution of a new mortgage resulting from the relocation (but not exceeding the amount that would be incurred if the new mortgage secured the repayment of the balance owing in respect of the discharged mortgage)
(f) any other financial costs reasonably incurred (or that might reasonably be incurred), relating to the actual use of the land, as a direct and natural consequence of the acquisition.
14 The Applicants claim an amount of $262,729.25 in respect of legal costs and stamp duty on the purchase of the Badgerys Creek property.
15 The Respondent submits that this claim is not recoverable pursuant to s59 of the Just Terms Act because the Court's determination of compensation for market value in the present case was based upon the assumption of a highest and best use of the acquired land and the residue land different from its existing use (i.e. poultry egg production) value, where that highest and best use would only be realisable by the termination of the existing use.
16 In so submitting the Respondent relies upon (i) s61 of the Just Terms Act and (ii) the decision of Talbot J in Walker Corporation Pty Ltd v Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority (2004) NSWLEC 535.
17 Section 61 of the Just Terms Act provides as follows:
If the market value of land is assessed on the basis that the land had potential to be used for a purpose other than that for which it is currently used, compensation is not payable in respect of:
(a) any financial advantage that would necessarily have been forgone in realising that potential, and
(b) any financial loss that would necessarily have been incurred in realising that potential.
18 In Walker Corporation Talbot J said at par 29:
The primary intention of the legislation in respect of disturbance is to further compensate an owner who is required to relocate an actual use where that actual use is the basis for assessment of compensation.
19 At par 38 his Honour held:
The present claim pursuant to s 59(f) fails primarily because the costs claimed have been subsumed by the amount of compensation payable in respect of market value assessed on the basis of the highest and best use.
20 Senior Counsel for the Applicants submit that their claim to disturbance loss is not excluded by the operation of s61 of the Just Terms Act or in consequence of the basis upon which compensation was awarded namely an underlying industrial zoning (see pars 104 to 110 of my earlier judgment). He submits that the compensation claimed is recoverable pursuant to s59(c), (d), (e) and (f) of the Just Terms Act in respect of the relocation of the Applicants' two residences which had been erected upon the compulsorily acquired land. It was emphasised that the relevant relocation of the Applicants was not of their business premises but of their place of residence which prior to the acquisition had been located on the compulsorily acquired land forming part of the Applicants' overall landholding upon which was developed the infrastructure for its poultry egg production business.
21 However, the Applicants submission must be assessed in the light of the undisputed evidence that the Applicants acquired the alternative property with the intention of relocating thereon their poultry egg production business, which intention also included the relocation of the Applicants' residences which were obviously used and occupied in conjunction with, and ancillary to, the carrying on of that business.
22 Accordingly the relocation of the Applicants' places of residence to the recently acquired alternative property must be understood to be part and parcel of the Applicants' intention to relocate to that property their existing poultry egg production business. That was the principal intention for the Applicants' acquisition of the alternative property and the relocation thereto of the Applicants' place of residence was ancillary to that intention.
23 But even if the alternative property had been acquired by the Applicants merely to relocate their places of residence I do not consider that the compensation claimed for disturbance is recoverable in the present case. This is because of the operation of s61 of the Just Terms Act in the present case where the market value of the compulsorily acquired land was determined in my earlier judgment upon the basis that "the land had potential to be used for a purpose other that that for which it is currently used and where in realising that potential (both in respect of the compulsorily acquired land and the residue land) the financial advantage of continuing the existing development (i.e. the poultry egg production business and the ancillary dwelling places) "would reasonably have been foregone" in the same way that any financial loss of having to relocate that business and those dwelling places "would reasonably have been incurred in realising that potential".
24 In so holding I would refer to and apply my exposition of the effect of s61 of the Just Terms Act in Peter-Croke Holdings Pty Ltd v Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW (1998) 101 LGERA 30 at 36 to 43 inclusive. That extended passage includes at 43 citation of the following extract from the judgment of the High Court of Australia in Crisp & Gunn Co-Operative Ltd v Hobart Corporation (1963) 110 CLR 538 at 547-548 which in my opinion illumines the effect of s61 and is particularly apposite to the Applicants' disturbance claim:
Further we are of the opinion that the requirement of the statute that regard should be had in assessing compensation to a number of factors including 'disturbance and any other matter not directly based on the value of the land' does not justify the award of any amount for disturbance in addition to the market value of the land where, as here, that value exceeds the 'present use' value by an amount in excess of any loss resulting from disturbance.
25 Although the major component of the compensation awarded in my earlier judgment represents the injurious affectation caused to the residue lands by the compulsory acquisition (vide s55(f) of the Just Terms Act) it is the fact that the compensation awarded in respect of the market value of the compulsorily acquired land based upon a higher potential use of the land far exceeds the combined amount reflecting (i) market value based upon its current and existing use and (ii) the Applicants' disturbance claim, that attracts the operation of s61 of the Act the effect of which is to deny recovery of the claimed compensation for disturbance. For the same reason that compensation for disturbance in respect of the relocation of the poultry egg production business was not recoverable in the present case, so the Applicants' far lesser disturbance claim limited to legal costs and stamp duty incurred in respect of the acquisition of the alternative property is not recoverable. There is nothing unfair or unjust in such a conclusion in the present case where the compensation awarded for market value based upon a higher potential use far exceeded its value based upon the current or existing use of the poultry egg production business.
26 Senior Counsel for the Applicants placed reliance upon the decision of Lloyd J in Fitzpatrick Investments Pty Ltd v Blacktown City Council (No. 2) 108 LGERA 417 to support the Applicants' disturbance claim based upon s59(c), (d) and (f) unaffected or unqualified by s61. It is true that Lloyd J's judgment makes no reference to s61 of the Just Terms Act (nor do the judgments of the Court of Appeal affirming the decision - (2001) NSWCA 259) but this is not surprising since it is difficult to appreciate how s61 could apply to the facts of that case where in addition to compensation for market value of the compulsorily acquired land, compensation for disturbance was awarded in respect of legal costs and stamp duty incurred in the acquisition of a replacement property because it was held that the claimant was engaging in the business of subdividing land and by virtue of the compulsory acquisition it had lost the opportunity to subdivide the land and if it wished to continue in its business it had to acquire replacement land for the purpose of its business. In my judgment the decisions of Lloyd J and the Court of Appeal in Fitzpatrick Investments do not support (even by their silence) the Applicants' submission that the entitlement to compensation for disturbance as provided by s59 of the Just Terms Act is immunised from the operation of s61 of that Act. Such an interpretation of the Just Terms Act, in my opinion, involves a serious misconstruction. On the other hand as I have earlier noted in Peter Croke Holdings I expressly held that any entitlement to compensation for disturbance in accordance with s59 was subject to the operation of s61 and I adhere to that view.
27 For all of the foregoing reasons I hold that the disputed component of the Applicants' disturbance claim is not recoverable.