Validity of the development consent
3 Clause 9 of the Liverpool Local Environmental Plan 1997 ("the LEP") provided (where it had a tick I use the symbol "v", for want of a tick in available symbols) -
" 9. Development which is allowed or prohibited within a zone
(1) Unless otherwise provided by this plan, the Table to this clause specifies for each zone:
(a) development which may be carried out without consent where "v*" is shown corresponding to that development, and
(b) development which may be carried out only with consent, where "v" is shown corresponding to that development.
(2) Development referred to in the Table to this clause is prohibited in a zone if "v*" or "v" is not shown corresponding to that development.
(3) Development which is not referred to in the Table to this clause may be carried out only with consent (except within the 6(c) zone, in which any such development is prohibited).
(4) The Council may grant consent to development only if the Council has regard to the following:
(a) the general objectives and other objectives of this plan,
(b) the objectives of the zone in which it is proposed to be carried out, and
(c) the other provisions of this plan."
4 In the Table to cl 9 ("the Table") there were set out columns for the various zonings, and against a list of forms of development there was indicated by a tick or a tick and an asterisk for each zoning the forms of development which could be carried out without development consent or only with development consent, or (by no entry), forms of development which were prohibited.
5 The property was zoned 4(b) Industrial-Special ("the zone").
6 Amongst the listed forms of development ticked for the zone was "Bulky goods sales or showrooms". The definitions in cl 6 of the LEP included -
" Bulky goods salesroom or showroom means a building or place used for the sale by retail or auction, or the hire or display, of any of the following:
(a) furniture, or
(b) electrical goods, or
(c) toy and sporting equipment, or
(d) office furniture, or
(e) hardware, or
(f) outdoor products, or
(g) floor coverings, or
(h) automotive parts and accessories, or
(i) lighting, or
(j) antiques and second-hand goods, or
(k) kitchen or bathroom showrooms, or
(l) tiles (floor, ceiling or wall)."
7 On 18 September 2001 the Council granted development consent for the property for "refurbishment of existing industrial building and conversion into 8 units for bulky goods/warehousing". It was common ground that this was intended to, and did, engage the permitted form of development last mentioned.
8 The listed forms of development also included "shops". That form of development was not ticked or ticked and asterisked for the zone. It was therefore prohibited. "Shop" was defined in cl 6 of the LEP -
"Shop" means a building or place used for selling items, whether by retail or auction, or for hiring or displaying items for the purpose of selling or hiring them (whether the items are goods or materials)."
9 On 15 November 2002 the Council granted development consent for the property for "change of use from existing bulky goods warehouse to a warehouse clearance outlet". "Warehouse clearance outlet" was not a listed form of development.
10 The judge found -
"The building has been subdivided into approximately 63 tenancies ranging from about 24 square metres to about 1,000 square metres, from which a vast range of merchandise is sold, including clothing, footwear, kitchenware cutlery and china, crystal and glassware, Manchester, jewellery, haberdashery, toys, sporting goods, and perfume, cosmetics and accessories. The tenants include such well-known names as Fletcher Jones and Staff Pty Ltd, David Jones Ltd, Reuben F Scarf (Retail) Pty Ltd, Oroton Group (Australia) Pty Ltd and Bohemia Crystal Pty Ltd. The building was officially opened as a warehouse clearance outlet by the Minister for Infrastructure and Planning and Minister for Natural Resources, the Hon Craig J Knowles MLA, at a ceremony on 21 November 2003 by the unveiling of a plaque and the cutting of a cake."
11 Gazcorp conceded that the use of the property as a warehouse clearance outlet fell within the definition of "shop" through the activities of many of the traders selling merchandise, although postulating that the activities of some of the traders might not have been in accordance with the development consent and quarantining that from the question of validity of the development consent.
12 Gazcorp submitted that the use of the property as a warehouse clearance outlet was nonetheless not prohibited. In its submission, it was open to the Council to grant the development consent for use as a warehouse clearance outlet pursuant to cl 9(3) of the LEP, because it was a form of development "not referred to in the Table". It described use as a warehouse clearance outlet as an innominate form of development, and said that the purpose of cl 9(3) was to permit the Council to grant development consent to such unlisted forms of development if it saw fit provided that cl 9(4) was satisfied.
13 Gazcorp pointed out that some discrete forms of development were permitted although falling within the definition of "shop". For example, the listed forms of development included "convenience stores", meaning a shop selling a variety of small grocery goods, "local shops", meaning a small shop trading principally in groceries, smallgoods and associated convenience items and primarily serving the surrounding residential area, and "service stations", meaning a building or place used for the sale by retail of motor vehicle fuels and lubricants. A bulky goods salesroom or showroom is another example. These can be regarded as species of a genus.
14 Gazcorp submitted that this showed that use of the property falling within the definition of "shop" was not irretrievably prohibited. The purpose of cl 9(3) of the LEP, it said, was to add to this express recognition of discrete and listed forms of development by enabling the Council to consent to other discrete but unlisted forms of development, whereby there could be flexibility in planning control. It referred to the Strathfield Local Environmental Plan No 86 ("the Strathfield LEP") as an illustration of a general prohibition expressly subject to stated permitted forms of development and to a general power to consent to forms of development "which by virtue of their nature, the services provided, or the products produced, distributed or sold, are in the opinion of the Council, appropriately located in this zone". It said that cl 9 was a poorly drafted attempt to achieve the same objective.
15 Whatever other planning instruments might seek to achieve and say, we must adhere to the words of the LEP. It may be said, however, that cl 9(4) of the LEP would not provide control over granting of consent pursuant to cl 9(3) equivalent to the already attenuated control over the general power in the Strathfield LEP. Clause 9(3) is understandable as an attempt to deal with the unforeseen, but its generality stands against it being a widely available dispensing power.
16 That listed species of shop were expressly permitted although falling within the definition of "shop" does not mean that other unlisted forms of development were open to development consent pursuant to cl 9(3). Rather, it suggests to the contrary: where species of a genus were permissible, the species were listed.
17 A warehouse clearance outlet could have been listed as another species of shop. It was not. The fact that it was not does not mean that it was a form of development not referred to in the Table. The planning function of cl 9 and its Table can not be avoided by armchair creation of unlisted forms of development as species of a listed genus. As the judge said, acceptance of Gazcorp's submission could lead to absurdities -
"If the submission be correct, then a supermarket, which is not referred to in the table, would be permissible with consent pursuant to cl 9(3). Similarly, a department store, which is not referred to in the table, would be permissible as a discrete type of development. Even a specialised kind of shop, such as a pharmacy, would be permissible. But all of these uses are kinds of shops. The submission would make nonsense of the definition of a shop."
18 Clause 9(3) is readily explicable as an attempt to deal with the unforeseen, doing work other than that for which Gazcorp contended. The listing of forms of development did not purport to be exhaustive. Even if the author of the LEP had striven for completeness, experience would have taught that completeness might not have been achieved. Forms of development can be postulated which did not fall within any of those listed. Two arising in argument were an aquarium and a crematorium. There was inconclusive debate over an aquarium being within the listed form of development of an educational establishment and a crematorium being within the listed form of development of business premises. Other suggestions were made. That this occurred fully endorsed the role of cl 9(3) as a provision for the unforeseen, obviating strained interpretations of listed forms of development. The words "not referred to in the Table" did not mean carved out of a form of development listed in the Table.