Liverpool City Council v Maller Holdings Pty Ltd trading as Sydney Horse Transport
[2014] NSWCCA 299
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Criminal Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2014-10-15
Before
Macfarlan JA, Fullerton J, Bellew J, Pain J
Catchwords
- 180 LGERA 343 Bardsley-Smith v Penrith City Council [2013] NSWCA 200
- 201 LGERA 116 Chamwell Pty Ltd v Strathfield Council [2007] NSWLEC 114
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
HEADNOTE [This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment] The respondent, Maller Holdings Pty Ltd, carries on business under the name "Sydney Horse Transport" on and from a property located at Warwick Farm in Sydney. Commencing in the 1960s, various development consents had been granted under relevant environmental planning instruments authorising the use of the property for "stables". By summons filed in Class 5 of the Land and Environment Court's jurisdiction (environmental planning and protection summary enforcement) the appellant prosecutor, the Liverpool City Council, alleged that from June 2010 until about 20 June 2012 the respondent used the property in a manner prohibited by the currently applicable environmental planning instrument, the Liverpool Local Environmental Plan 2008 - namely, to conduct a horse transport business. By judgment of 19 September 2013, Pain J found that the appellant had failed to prove the charge ([2013] NSWLEC 154). However, her Honour deferred the making of final orders and acceded to the appellant's request to submit for determination by the Court of Criminal Appeal the following questions of law arising in the proceedings: (1) Having found (at Judgment [127]) that the use of the property in the charge period can be characterised as being for the purpose of horse transport business, did I err in not finding that the Defendant did something which it was forbidden to do by the [Environmental Planning and Assessment] Act because part of that use was authorised by historic consents? (2) Having found (at Judgment [127]) that the use of the property in the charge period can be characterised as being for the purpose of horse transport business, did I err in finding that the use described in the existing consents as 'stables' (Judgment [130]-[133]) was available for the purposes of s. 109B of the [Environmental Planning and Assessment] Act to cover the use of the stables buildings during the charge period? (3) Having found (at Judgment [127]) that the use of the property in the charge period can be characterised as being for the purpose of horse transport business, and having found (at Judgment [132]) that the part of the business undertaken at the property during the charge period which relies on bringing and taking horses to and from the property is part and parcel of the stabling of horses, did I err in finding that that part of the business however described is permissible under the existing consents because of my finding (at Judgment [90]) that s. 76B and s. 109B operate concurrently? Held (per Macfarlan JA; Fullerton and Bellew JJ agreeing): Answering Questions 1 and 2 in the affirmative and answering Question 3 "Does not arise": (1) Both for the purpose of determining whether the use of the property was prohibited by the Liverpool LEP and for the purpose of determining whether the use of the property was authorised by the historic consents, the primary judge needed to find "what, according to ordinary terminology, is the appropriate designation of the purpose being served by the use of the premises" in the charge period ([41]). This was a single task that did not involve determining the use of the property twice. Shire of Perth v O'Keefe [1964] HCA 37; 110 CLR 529, applied. (2) The primary judge erred in not simply asking herself whether use of the property as "stables" was in substance the same as the use to which she found the property to have been put, namely, use as a horse transport business. In light of her factual findings, the answer to this question would necessarily have been in the negative ([45]). (3) Authorisation by the historic consents of part of the actual use of the property was not sufficient to result in failure of the prosecution. There remains in such circumstance a use of the property that is unauthorised and that is the use, as charged, for the purpose of conducting a horse transport business ([46]). (4) Whether the part of the use identified in Question 3 of the Stated Case was authorised would turn on whether that use was for an independent purpose of stabling, or whether the activities in question, whilst constituting stabling, were subsumed in the overall horse transport business such that they were not in substance carried out for the purpose of stabling but for the purpose of the horse transport business. This would have been a question of fact for determination by the primary judge if it had been relevant ([48]).