El-Ammar v Cheaitani
[2023] NSWLEC 1475
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Land and Environment Court (NSW)
Decision date
2023-04-28
Catchwords
- [2012] NSWLEC 192 McDonald v Sheehan [2022] NSWLEC 1159 Tenacity Consulting v Warringah (2004) 134 LGERA 23
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (12 paragraphs)
This decision was reserved.
- COMMISSIONER: Anthony and Diane El-Ammar, the applicants, occupy a two-storey dwelling on sloping land in Greenwich, from which they gain views of the Sydney CBD and their heavily vegetated district, across the respondent's property. They share a side boundary with the respondents, Atef Cheaitani and Diana Cheytani. Mr and Mrs El-Ammar purchased their two-storey property in 2003, and claimed that since then, trees in the respondent's property had grown to create a severe obstruction of views from their dwelling.
- An application by the El-Ammar's was heard by Gray C on 27 January 2023 and published in El-Ammar v Cheaitani [2023] NSWLEC 1034 (El-Ammar). At [5] of El-Ammar, Commissioner Gray described the trees as, "Leighton Cypress trees, with trunks that are evenly spaced and roughly perpendicular to the boundary fence, beside a shed that is to the rear of the property".
- Commissioner Gray determined that four Cypress trees had been planted to form a hedge in 2005, but when three of the four trees were removed before the hearing, there was no longer a hedge, thus the application was dismissed.
- At [17] of El-Ammar, Commissioner Gray, stated; "17 As a result, in the present circumstances, the state of affairs of being planted so as to form a hedge does not continue to the present, contrary to the requirement created by the wording of s 14A(1)(a) of the Trees Act. This means that the jurisdictional precondition contained in s 14A(1)(a) is not met, as the trees are not, at present, planted so as to form a hedge."
- Informed by the initial hearing, Mr and Mrs El-Ammar redefined the hedges in the respondents' back yard for the purpose of a second application to the Land and Environment Court (LEC), pursuant to s 14B of the Trees (Disputes Between Neighbours) Act 2006 ("the Trees Act"), which proposed pruning of hedges in the respondent's rear yard to remedy a severe obstruction of views from their dwelling.