Weriton Finance Pty Ltd v Wollongong City Council
[2010] NSWLEC 1313
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Land and Environment Court (NSW)
Decision date
2010-10-22
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
The applicant's chain of reasoning 6 In making his submissions that a single assessment is required, as we understood them, Mr. Pickles relies on a sequential process flowing from a number of provisions of the LEP identified by him. That process is set out below. 7 Although not set out in the order that he presented his submissions, both in chief and in reply, we understood Mr. Pickles to be putting these propositions to us: o the application that was made with respect to each of the seven allotments with which we are now dealing was a composite application for bed and breakfast accommodation - comprising the erection of a dwelling on the relevant allotment and its use for bed and breakfast accommodation; o the classification of the various classes of development in the land use table are set by virtue of clause 9(2) of the LEP and that the development, as specified in the introductory words to this provision comprises the totality of the development for which the application has been made and that, as a consequence of the relevant provisions in the 6(c) Tourism Zone, bed and breakfast accommodation, being, on Mr. Pickles submission, the totality of the composite development described above, all falls within cl 9(2)(b) as requiring development consent only and, as it is such a composite development, does not fall within cl 9(2)c) and thus invoke application of cl 11; o the definitions provision of the LEP, cl 6, in addition to defining a number of specified terms [several which are discussed elsewhere in this decision] makes it clear , in cl 6(2), that a reference to a building or place used for a purpose includes a reference to a building or place intended to be used for the purpose and that this assists in enabling a composite application to be made of the nature he contends it has been provided for in these bed and breakfast accommodation applications; o the definition of development contained in s 4 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (the Planning Act) includes, amongst other things, the use of land and the erection of a building. We understood him to be submitting that the fact that the six elements in this definition being put in the conjunctive means that, generally and in this specific case, the use of land and the erection of a building can be aggregated into a composite, single application; and o the effect of s 81A(1) of the Planning Act is that by making such a composite application as earlier described enables the authorisation of the use proposed in this composite application. The terms of s 81A(1) are as follows: (1) Erection of buildings A development consent that enables the erection of a building is sufficient to authorise the use of the building when erected for the purpose for which it was erected if that purpose is specified in the development application, ……….. The council's chain of reasoning 8 Mr. Galasso, on the other hand, advances a much less complex proposition. This submission arises from the definition in the LEP of the term "bed and breakfast accommodation". This definition is in the following terms: bed and breakfast accommodation means the use [emphasis added] of a dwelling-house, part of a dwelling-house, or any ancillary building to a dwelling-house, for the purpose of offering short term (maximum of one month) paid accommodation and homestyle hospitality to visitors, by the permanent residents of the dwelling-house, where: (a) a maximum of 2 bedrooms are used for that use, and (b) the number of occupants of the establishment, including the permanent occupants, does not exceed 7 at any one time, and (c) breakfast is available for visitors. 9 Mr. Galasso's chain of reasoning is a simple one. It is that: o for a dwelling house to be permitted to be used as bed and breakfast accommodation, first there must be a dwelling house; and o for there to be a dwelling house, unless there is an existing dwelling house within the 6(c) Tourism Zone, there must be an approval for a dwelling house; o an application for approval for a dwelling house in the 6(c) Tourism Zone is designated by the landuse table in cl 10 of the LEP to be advertised development; and o consequently, for there to be an approval for a dwelling house in this zone, the requirement is that the assessment of such an application must be carried out by the process of assessment applying the various tests for advertised development that arise pursuant to cl 11 of the LEP.