HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
The owners corporation of a strata scheme brought proceedings in the Civil and Administrative Tribunal of NSW ("the Tribunal") against the caretaker of that strata scheme ("the Caretaker"), appointed pursuant to a Caretaker Agreement entered into in 2001 ("Caretaker Agreement"). The owners corporation sought and was granted, orders under s 72 of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 (NSW) ("2015 Act"), including an order terminating the Caretaker Agreement under s 72(1)(a).
The Caretaker appealed, including by grounds 1 and 2 which contended that s 72 did not confer jurisdiction as regards the Caretaker Agreement which was entered into before the 2015 Act came into effect. On 27 July 2022, the Appeal Panel of the Tribunal ("Appeal Panel") decided that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the matter on account of the concurrent proceedings in the Supreme Court of NSW. The Appeal Panel remitted the matter to the Tribunal without considering any of the other grounds of appeal before it on the basis that it was not necessary for them to do so.
On that same day, the owners corporation wrote to the Appeal Panel stating that they wished to draw to its attention, under s 63 of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013 (NSW) ("the Tribunal Act"), a failure to deal with the grounds of appeal which went to jurisdiction under s 72 of the 2015 Act. On 27 October 2022, the Appeal Panel decided that it should make a direction under s 63 of the Tribunal Act and directed that the Registrar forward its decision of 27 October 2022 to the parties to be read in conjunction with its decision of 27 July 2022. The Tribunal, in its decision of 27 October 2022, rejected grounds 1 and 2, and thus decided that it did not need to amend its orders made on 27 July 2022.
The Caretaker appeals from the Appeal Panel's decision of 27 October 2022. The primary issues on appeal were:
(i) Whether the Appeal Panel had the power to make that decision; and
(ii) Whether the Appeal Panel erred in concluding that the Tribunal had jurisdiction under s 72 of the 2015 Act to make orders in relation to the Caretaker Agreement.
The Court (Meagher JA, Stern JA, Basten AJA) granting leave to appeal and dismissing the appeal, held:
As to issue (i)
By Basten AJA (Meagher JA agreeing):
(1) To the extent that the Appeal Panel considered that it was exercising power under s 63 of the Tribunal Act it was in error. The criterion contained in s 63(1) of "an obvious error" was not wide enough to permit the reopening of a decision in order to address substantive issues which had not been previously addressed: [1], [154], [159].
(2) The reopening decision made by the Appeal Panel was clearly correct. Such a power falls within the breadth of procedural powers conferred on it under Tribunal Act, s 38. That conclusion flows from the obligation imposed by the guiding principle in s 36(1) to facilitate the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in the proceedings: [1], [90], [160]-[162].
By Stern JA:
(3) Section 63 must be construed having regard to the objects of the Tribunal: s 3 of the Tribunal Act and in a manner that seeks to ensure that it facilitates the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues: s 36 of the Tribunal Act. That is consistent with the approach taken by Spigelman CJ in Newmont Yandal Operations v The J Aron Corporation & The Goldman Sachs Group Inc (2007) 70 NSWLR 411; [2007] NSWCA 195: [54], [63].
(4) The Appeal Panel made an error arising from an accidental omission within s 63(3)(b) and jurisdiction under a rule such as s 63 is available where an order is deliberately made but an error was made by the Court, as is clear from Newmont Yandal, Ivanhoe Gold Corporation Ltd v Symonds (1906) 4 CLR 642; [1906] HCA 71 and Lambourne v Baker (No 3) [2022] NSWCA 25. The decision to remit the matter to the Tribunal was inconsistent with the Appeal Panel's observations in its reasons that it was unnecessary to consider any further grounds of appeal within s 63(3)(d). The decision to correct its error could not be properly characterised as the exercise of an independent discretion beyond the ambit of s 63 of the Tribunal Act, construed in its statutory context: [70], [74], [82].
As to issue (ii)
By Basten AJA (Meagher and Stern JJA agreeing):
(5) The Appeal Panel was correct to find that the Tribunal had power under s 72 of the 2015 Act to consider the termination application with respect to the Caretaker Agreement. A purposive construction of the provisions in Sch 3 to the 2015 Act requires that Sch 3, cl 15 picks up that limited category of agreements where the caretaker is not entitled to exclusive possession of a lot, while the bulk of caretaker agreements covered by the Strata Schemes Management Act 1996 (NSW) are picked up by Sch 3, cl 3: [1], [137], [185].
(6) This Court should be comfortably satisfied that the reasoning in [340] and [341] of Australia City Properties Management Pty Ltd v The Owners - Strata Plan No 65111 (i) was not based upon careful consideration of the detail of the legislative scheme, (ii) was expressed tentatively and was not dispositive, (iii) has not been followed in later cases, and (iv) is, on a more extensive consideration, not correct and should not be followed: [1], [190].
Australia City Properties Management Pty Ltd v The Owners - Strata Plan No 65111 [2021] NSWCA 162, not followed