Findings
28I do not accept Mr Tomasetti's primary submission that the development is permissible because the application is made under SEPP ARH and therefore the savings provision in cl 1.8A of LEP 2011 do not apply. The site is zoned under LEP 2011 and is within a named land use zone for the purpose of cl 10 of SEPP ARH.
29I have reached this conclusion on the basis that under s 76A, s 78A and the definition of "development application" in the EPA Act there is no requirement to elect which planning instrument an application is made under. Section 79C(1)(a)(i) of the EPA Act requires consideration of any environmental planning instrument of relevance to the application. Clause 8 of SEPP ARH does not give primacy to the policy, but rather, if there is an inconsistency between it and any other environmental planning instrument, SEPP ARH prevails to the extent of the inconsistency.
30The development application was made before the commencement of LEP 2011 and is in relation to land to which the Plan applies, therefore the savings provision in cl 1.8A of LEP 2011 mandates that the development application must be determined as if LEP 2011 had not commenced. The provisions of LEP 2001 therefore apply to the development application, to the extent that they are not inconsistent with SEPP ARH. Under LEP 2001 to site is zoned 2(a), which is not a named zone for the purpose of cl 10(1) of SEPP 2011.
31I also do not accept Mr Tomasetti's secondary submission that the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001 is an "equivalent zone" for the purpose of cl 10(1) of SEPP ARH.
32Clause 10(1) required that the land be within one of the named land use zones, or be "within a land use zone that is equivalent to any of those zones", provided that development for the purposes of dwelling houses, multi-dwelling housing or residential flat buildings is permissible within that zone. Dwelling houses were permissible in the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001, and so that proviso is satisfied.
33LEP 2001 was not made under s 33A(2) of the Act, and accordingly cl 5 of the SEPP ARH applies. It provides:
5 Interpretation - references to equivalent land use zones
(1) A reference in this Policy to a land use zone that is equivalent to a named land use zone is a reference to a land use zone under an environmental planning instrument that is not made as provided by section 33A (2) of the Act:
(a) that the Director-General has determined under clause 1.6 of State Environmental Planning Policy (Exempt and Complying Development Codes) 2008 is a land use zone in which equivalent land uses are permitted to those permitted in that named land use zone, or
(b) if no such determination has been made in respect of the particular zone, is a land use zone in which (in the opinion of the relevant authority) equivalent land uses are permitted to those permitted in that named land use zone.
(2) An assessment made by a relevant authority under subclause (1) (b) applies only in respect of the particular development that is proposed to be carried out and more than one such assessment may be made in respect of the same land use zone.
(3) In this clause, relevant authority means:
(a) the public authority proposing to carry out the development, or on whose behalf the development is proposed to be carried out, or
(b) if the development is to be carried out by or on behalf of a person other than a public authority, the consent authority.
Note. Land use zones that are named in this Policy are those set out in the standard instrument.
34It was common ground that the Director-General has not made a determination in regard to equivalent zones, and accordingly cl 5(1)(b) of SEPP ARH requires the Court to form an opinion as to whether the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001 is a land use zone in which equivalent land uses are permitted to those in a named land use zone under the Standard Instrument.
35In Chehade v Bankstown City Council [2012] NSWLEC 221 (Chehade No 2), Sheahan J upheld the approach taken in Chehade where Morris C at [26] states:
Determination of whether the site is within an equivalent zone for the purposes of SEPP ARH is a pre-condition to the grant of consent. The Director-General of the Department of Planning has not made a determination in relation to this issue and had that been the case, the applicant, council, the community and the Court would be well placed to understand the application of the policy. As this has not occurred, each application has to have regard to the provisions of clause 5. Clause 5(1)(b) requires the Court to form an opinion whether the 2(a) zone is a land use zone in which equivalent land uses are permitted to those zones named in clause 26. This requires a review of the land uses permitted in the four residential zones contained within the Standard Instrument - Principal Local Environmental Plan (the Standard Instrument) and those uses permitted in the 2(a) zone under the LEP, having particular regard to the definitions as these vary between the instruments. I have undertaken this review and have excluded the Medium Density R3 and High Density R4 zones as being equivalent to the 2(a) zone, particularly because dwelling houses are not permitted in the R3 zone, other than as attached housing which is three or more dwellings and the R4 zone permits residential flat buildings, neighbourhood shops and shoptop housing, uses prohibited in the 2(a) zone and uses that suggest higher density development than that permitted in that zone. Similarly, I have excluded the B1, B2 and B3 zones due to the considerable differences in permitted uses.
36Sheahan J accepted the submission that the Commissioner had applied the correct test under cl 5(1) being:
Once land uses which are permitted within the identified zones are identified, the task prescribed in clause 5(1)(b) is for the consent authority (in this case the Commissioner) to form the opinion that in the Residential 2(a) Zone 'equivalent land uses are permitted'. The comparison exercise involves, firstly, identifying what those land uses are that are permitted in the Residential 2(a) Zone, and then forming an opinion as to equivalents with the identified zones.
37Sheahan J accepted the Macquarie Dictionary definition of "equivalent" namely something that is "equal in value, measure, force, effect, significance" or "corresponding in position, function etc " rather than the same or identical. Further, that in forming the opinion as to equivalence involves a "component of comparison, but also a component of value judgment".
38In this case, both parties have undertaken a comparison of the permitted land uses in the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001 against the permitted uses in the Standard Instrument. However, in undertaking this task, the parties have compared a different set of land uses.
39The applicant has compared the permissible uses in the 2(a) zone against the same (or equivalent uses) in the R1 zone under the Standard Instrument. The additional permissible uses in the R1 zone such as attached dwellings, residential flat buildings and multi-dwelling housing have not been included. The applicant has also included uses, which in accordance with Direction 5 of the Standard Instrument, cannot be included in a land use table, but are uses that, in Mr Tomasetti's submission, can be carried out in a R1 zone.
40Whereas, the council has compared the permissible uses in the 2(a) zone against those in the R1, R2, R3 and R4 zone in the Standard Instrument. It appears to be common ground that the 2(a) zone is not equivalent to the R2, R3 or R4 zone. In comparing the permissible uses in these zones with those in the 2(a) zone, I accept that they are not equivalent.
41I do not accept the Applicant's approach to the comparison of uses in the 2(a) zone with the R1 zone. Clause 5(1)(b) of SEPP ARH refers to "land uses" in the plural. It is therefore necessary to make a judgment as to whether the set of land uses permitted in the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001 is equivalent to the set of uses permitted in the R1 zone in the Standard Instrument. It is also necessary to take into consideration the land uses that are not common between the 2(a) zone and the R2 zone in order to form an opinion as to the equivalence of the two zones. There is no basis to limit the consideration of the land uses permissible in the land use zone under consideration to only those uses which have an equivalent use in the Standard Instrument.
42While different definitions are used in the Standard Instrument and LEP 2001 the nature of some uses is equivalent. For example local shops (LEP 2001) and neighbourhood shops (Standard Instrument) and housing for older people and people with a disability (LEP 2001) and seniors living (standard instrument) and public buildings (LEP 2012) and public administration building (Standard Instrument).
43The following table compares the land uses permissible in the 2(a) zone under LEP 2001 with those in the R1 zone in the Standard Instrument. Permissible uses (with or without consent) in each zone are marked by a dot. The uses that Mr Tomasetti submits are equivalent by virtue of Direction 5 and which do not fall within a separate definition under the Standard Instrument are marked by a cross. The table equates land uses which are described differently, but which are in substance equivalent.
USE 2(a) R1
Attached dwellings ●
Bed and breakfast establishments ●
Boarding houses ● ●
Car parking spaces ● x
Centre based child care centres (Child care centre) ● ●
Community facilities ● ●
Demolition ● x
Drainage (other than minor drainage works) ● x
Dual occupancies ●
Dwelling houses ● ●
Educational establishments ●
Granny flats ● ●
Group home ●
Home based child care services ● x
(Home based child care)
Home businesses (Home occupations) ● ●
Hospitals ●
Hostels ●
Housing for older people or people with a disability (Seniors housing) ● ●
Local shops (Neighbourhood shops) ● ●
Medical consulting rooms ●
Multi-dwelling housing ●
Places of public worship ● ●
Portable recycling facilities ●
Public buildings (public administration building) ●
Public utility installations (other than gas holders and generating works) ● x
Public transport facilities (passenger transport facilities) ●
Recreation areas ●
Recreation facilities ●
Residential flat building ●
Respite day care centres ●
Roads ● ●
Semi detached dwellings ●
Shop top housing ●
Subdivision ● x
Telecommunications facilities ● x