Robertson v Wingecarribee Shire Council
[2018] NSWLEC 1157
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Land and Environment Court (NSW)
Decision date
2018-03-21
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (17 paragraphs)
Introduction
- The applicants, Bruce and Fiona Robertson own a rural property at 11 Ormond Street, Sutton Forest (the site). It contains an historic homestead called "Montrose" which is "Heritage Item 1006" within Schedule 5 of the Wingecarribee Local Environmental Plan 2010 (WLEP). The site is lawfully used as a berry farm and a venue for wedding receptions.
- The wedding reception function is authorised in certain spaces within the homestead and its garden curtilage, pursuant to a development consent granted by the Council in 1988 (the 1988 Consent). I note that the parties are at issue about the extent of the reception use approved in the garden under the 1988 development consent - in particular, whether it included approval of a reception in a marquee in the garden, if required.
- There is also a "barn" erected on the site. On 7 April 2016, after a hearing, the Court granted development consent (14/1329) authorising the temporary use (for a period of 36 months) of this building as a wedding venue. This time limited consent was facilitated by cl 2.8 of the WLEP which provides for "temporary use of land if the use does not compromise future development of the land, or have detrimental economic, social, amenity or environmental effects on the land".
- Adjacent to and separated approximately 1.7m from the barn, is a recently approved building referred to in the evidence as the "farm building". It contains an open floor area (constructed of cavity brickwork) underneath a pitched gable, colourbond roof and a timber-framed and clad storeroom on the southern elevation under a shallow, sloping roof.