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High Court of Australia |
SCURR v. BRISBANE CITY COUNCIL [1973] HCA 39; (1973) 133 CLR 242
Town Planning (Q.)
High Court of Australia
Barwick C.J.(1), McTiernan(2), Menzies(3), Gibbs(4) and Stephen(5) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Town Planning (Q.) - Development applications - Statutory requirements - Advertisement - Particulars - Adequacy - Whether mandatory or directory - Effect of inadequacy - Appeal by objector - Function of Local Government Court - City of Brisbane Town Planning Act, 1964-1971 (Q.), s. 22*.
* [1973] HCA 39; (1973) 133 CLR 242 at pp 250-251
HEARING
Sydney, 1973, March 13,14; September 24. 24:9:1973DECISION
September 24. McTIERNAN J. I agree with the reasons for judgment which Stephen J. will
hand down and would therefore allow the appeal. (at p245)
MENZIES J. I have had the advantage of reading the judgment prepared by
Stephen J. I agree with it. (at p245)
2. In determining an appeal brought to it under s. 22 of the City of Brisbane
Town Planning Acts, the Local Government Court should,
I think, include in its
consideration the question whether the application for consent has been made
in accordance with the procedure
laid down by the section. It is not my view
that any departure from the provisions of the section would, of itself,
require that
an appeal against a proposal of the council to give its consent
should be upheld. In his reasons, however, Stephen J. has, I think,
demonstrated that the departure from the requirements of the section which he
considers did occur here was of a critical character.
Indeed, as I read the
judgments in the Local Government Court, and the Supreme Court, the judges of
the State Courts would have
thought it proper to allow the appeal had it not
been their conclusion that the advertisement which had been published did
comply
with the requirements of the section. With regard to that matter, I
have, with respect, come to a different conclusion for the reasons
stated by
Stephen J. (at p246)
3. I would, therefore, allow the appeal. (at p246)
GIBBS J. I have had the advantage of reading the reasons prepared by my
brother Stephen. I am in full agreement with them. (at
p246)
2. The provisions of s. 22 of the City of Brisbane Town Planning Act,
1964-1969 (Q.) ("the Act") clearly had the effect that neither
the Brisbane
City Council nor its delegate could lawfully decide an application of the kind
referred to in the section unless public
notice of the application had been
given by advertisement in accordance with the provisions of the section. It
was therefore the
duty of the Council Registration Board as the delegate of
the Council, when an application of that kind came before it, to consider
whether such public notice had been given and if it formed the opinion that
the requirements of the section had not been complied
with, to refrain from
deciding the application. However, although in the first instance the Board
was bound to consider, amongst
other things, whether there had been published
an advertisement which set out particulars of the application, there is no
warrant
whatever in the section for holding that the Board's opinion on that
question was conclusive. If no public notice at all has been
given, clearly
the Board cannot proceed to make a valid decision. Where some public notice
by advertisement has been given, the
adequacy of the advertisement would have
to be decided in the first place by the Board and on appeal by the Court.
Neither the words
of s. 22, nor those of s. 28 or s. 30, of the Act contain
any indication that the jurisdiction of the Court should be confined in
such a
way as to prevent it from considering everything that the Board should
properly have considered when the application came
before it. (at p246)
3. In support of the submission made on behalf of the respondent Brisbane
City Council that the Board might validly deal with an
application
notwithstanding a failure to comply with the provisions as to public notice,
some reliance was placed on the decision
in Reg. v. Pine Rivers Shire Council;
Ex parte Raynbird (1967) Qd R 384 . That case was decided on the provisions
of s. 34 of the
Local Government Acts, 1936-1959 (Q), which were materially
different from those of the City of Brisbane Town Planning Act, but in
any
case there is nothing in the reasoning of the judgments in that decision that
supports the conclusion that s. 22 of the Act left
the sufficiency of the
advertisement to be determined conclusively by the Board and excluded it from
the consideration
of the Court
of appeal. (at p247)
4. On this aspect of the matter it remains to mention an argument put on
behalf of the respondent Myer Shopping Centres Pty. Ltd.
("Myer") that all
that is required of the public notice contemplated by s. 22 of the Act is that
it should give potential objectors
warning of the fact that an application has
been made and knowledge of the
fact that they can lodge objections to it. It
was further
said that an intending objector would have the right under s.
16(1) (ii) of the Local Government Act of 1936 (Q.) (as amended), read
in the
light of the definition of "open to inspection" in s. 3(1) of that Act, to
inspect, without payment of any fee, the minute
books of the Council and of
the Board relating to the application,
and that this right would extend to the
inspection of any documents
referred to in the minutes (cf. Wilson v. Evans
(1962) 2 QB 383,
at p 399 ) so that there would be a right to inspect the
application
itself. The submission apparently was that s. 22 of the Act would
be satisfied if an intending objector could eke out whatever meagre
information as to the application that the advertisement
might provide by
making an inspection of the application in that way or
by obtaining discovery
after he had instituted an appeal.
Section 16(1) (ii) of the Local Government
Act applies only to the minutes
of proceedings of a local authority "and of
every committee appointed by the local authority". It is
unnecessary to
consider whether
the Council Registration Board, which is constituted by Ch.
59 of the Ordinances of the Brisbane
City Council, answers that description,
or whether an interested person would have any other right, statutory or
otherwise, to inspect
the application, because the question
whether
particulars of the application might be obtained in that way, or by means of
discovery
and inspection after proceedings had
been commenced, is quite
irrelevant. Section 22 of the Act requires that the advertisement itself
should contain the necessary particulars,
and it is not enough for the
advertisement
merely to inform those interested of the existence of an
application the particulars of
which might be obtained from some other source.
(at p247)
5. For the reasons given by my brother Stephen the Local Government Court
should have held that the advertisement in the present
case fell far short of
setting out particulars of the application as required by s. 22 of the Act and
should for that reason have
allowed the appeal. In failing to do so it erred
in law within s. 28(3) of the Act. (at p248)
6. This is sufficient to dispose of the appeal which should in my opinion be
allowed. (at p248)
STEPHEN J. This is an appeal from a decision of the Full Court of the
Supreme Court of Queensland upholding the decision of his
Honour Judge Mylne
sitting as a judge of the Queensland Local Government Court. Before Judge
Mylne was an appeal brought by the
present appellants pursuant to the City of
Brisbane Town Planning Acts, 1964-1969 against the proposal of the Council of
the City
of Brisbane to grant an application made by Myer Shopping Centres
Pty. Ltd. (Myer) for consent to the use of some twelve and a half
acres of
land in the Brisbane suburb of Mt. Gravatt as the site of a proposed shopping
centre. (at p248)
2. The site forms part of almost twenty-seven acres of land at Mt. Gravatt
known as the Mt. Gravatt Showground which has long been
owned by the Brisbane
City Council and which was during 1969 and, presumably, for a considerable
period before that time leased to
the Mt. Gravatt Agricultural, Horticultural
and Industrial Society. (at p248)
3. Early in the year 1970 the council, following investigation of a proposal
for the redevelopment of the showground site for other
purposes and the
relocation of the showground in Mt. Gravatt Park, Upper Mt. Gravatt, decided
to invite tenders for the sale of some
twelve and a half acres of the
showground site. An invitation to tenderers was advertised in May 1970, it
being a condition of tender
and sale that the successful tenderer should take
immediate steps to obtain consent for such use of the subject land as the
council
might approve pursuant to the provisions of its town plan and
Ordinances. This condition was necessary because the whole of the
showground
site was zoned under the town plan as "Special Uses 'A'", the effect of which
was to enable it to be used without the
consent of the council only as a
showground but, with the consent of the council, for any other use whatever.
(at p248)
4. Myer lodged a tender dated 19th June 1970, specifying as the use which it
proposed to make of the land:
"The construction and operation of a Target Discount
Shopping Centre which will consist of a single level airconditioned
building containing 120,000 square feet -
85,000 square feet as a Target Discount Store
25,000 square feet as a Target Supermarket
10,000 square feet as a Target Restaurant and Target Take
Away Foods.
Car parking facilities for 1,100 cars as shown in the plans
submitted." (at p249)
5. This tender was expressed to be conditional upon the land being rezoned by
the Brisbane City Council from its existing zoning
to a "general retailing" or
similar zoning. (at p249)
6. It would appear from a letter of 3rd July 1970 from Myer to the council
that general agreement had by then been reached upon
the proposed purchase by
Myer of the area tendered for. By an application, also of that date, Myer
applied to the council, not for
any rezoning of the land but instead for
permission to erect a building on the land for the purpose of "Target Discount
Shopping
Centre". In this application details were given of the use involved;
the proposed building was stated to be a single storey brick,
steel and glass
building approximately thirty-four ft high with external facades of one storey
and high ceilings, the building to
occupy not more than twenty-five per cent
of the total site of some twelve and a half acres; some 400 persons were to be
employed
and car parking space for 1,100 customers' vehicles and 50 employees'
vehicles was to be provided, receiving docks being included
in the design for
the purpose of loading and unloading goods. The estimated cost of the
proposed development was stated to be over
$3 1/2m. A site plan was included
in the application which disclosed a proposed building measuring some 235 ft
by 534 ft set back
some 340 ft from the frontage of the site to Logan Road.
(at p249)
7. Following receipt of this application and in purported compliance with s.
22 of the City of Brisbane Town Planning Acts (The
Acts) an advertisement was
published in the Brisbane "Courier-Mail" on 7th July 1970
and a copy of that
advertisement was exhibited
on the land in question. The terms of that
advertisement are relevant; it read as
follows:
"CITY OF BRISBANE TOWN PLANNING ACT OF 1964
Notice is hereby given that an application has been made
for the consent of the Brisbane City Council to erect a
building on the land described as Lot 1 or (sic) proposed
Subdivision of Subs. 2 & 3, & Resub. 28 of Sub. 1 of Portions
332 & 333 County of Stanley Parish of Bulimba Logan Road,
Mt. Gravatt for the purpose of a shop (Target Discount
shopping Centre). No machinery. The building will be of
ONE storey.
Objections in writing to the granting of the application
may be lodged with the Town Clerk on or before the 17th
July, 1970, but these must set the grounds of objection and
the facts and circumstances relied on by the objector." (at p250)
8. A large number of objections were received during the ten days following
the appearance of this advertisement and, after consideration
of these
objections, the council's Planning Advisory Committee on 3rd August 1970
decided that from a planning point of view it would
raise no objections to the
proposal, which was thereupon referred to the Establishment and Co-ordination
Committee. Then, on 1st
September 1970, the Council Registration Board, being
the appropriate body to grant permits under the town plan, decided that Myer
be advised that it proposed to grant consent to the erection of a building for
the purpose of a Discount Shopping Centre on the land
and it set in train the
notification of its proposal to all objectors. On the following day the
council wrote to Myer stating that
it had agreed to accept Myer's offer to
purchase the land for the sum of $1,010,000, subject however to certain
additional conditions
which the council set out in that letter. The council
at the same time confirmed that it had consented, as registered proprietor
of
the land, to Myer making application for use of the land as a shopping centre.
(at p250)
9. Certain of the objectors, on being informed of the proposal to grant
consent to Myer's proposed use of the land, availed themselves
of their right,
pursuant to s. 22(3) of the Acts, to appeal to the Local Government Court and
this appeal, which came on for hearing
on 25th October 1971, was disposed
of
by the judgment of his Honour Judge Mylne delivered on 17th December 1971. (at
p250)
10. Before his Honour and on appeal both to the Full Court and then to this
Court it was contended that the public notice of Myer's
application did not
satisfy the requirements of s. 22 of the Acts; s. 22 reads as follows:
"22. Objection to application to use land or building or
or other structure
(1) Where under the Plan any building or other structure
may be erected or used for any purpose on land in any Zone
only with the consent of the Council or its delegate or land
in any Zone may be used for any purpose only with the consent
of the Council or its delegate, the Council or its delegate,
before deciding any application to erect or use such building
or other structure or to use such land for such purpose, shall
cause public notice to be given of the application by advertisement
published at least once in at least one newspaper
circulating in the City and by posting a copy of the advertisement
on the land in question.
The copy of the advertisement on the land shall be not
less than two feet in height, not less than six square feet
in area, and all lettering thereof shall be not less than one
inch in height, and the copy shall be posted not more than
six feet from the road alignment of the land and so as to be
clearly visible from the road and shall be kept so posted at all
times during the period of seven days next preceding the date
stated in the advertisement as the date on or before which
objections may be lodged with the Town Clerk.
Such advertisement shall set out particulars of the applicationto grant an
and shall state that objections to the granting of the
application may be lodged with the Town Clerk on or before
the date specified in the advertisement (which date shall be
not earlier than seven days after the date of the publication
of the advertisement).
Any such objection shall be in writing, shall be addressed
to the Town Clerk and shall set out the grounds of objection
and the facts and circumstances relied on by the objector in
support of those grounds. (2) If the Council or its delegate proposes
application whereof public notice has been given, the Town
Clerk shall notify accordingly every person who has duly
lodged with him an objection to the granting of the application.
The notification shall contain or be accompanied by a copyobjected to
of this section. (3) Subject to this Act, a person who has duly
the granting of an application whereof public notice has
been given may appeal to the Court against the proposal of
the Council or its delegate to grant the application.
Such appeal shall be instituted within thirty days after the
date of the notification given to such person by the Town
Clerk, but not later.
Additionally to the Council the applicant shall be deemed
to be a respondent to the appeal.
(4) Where a person has duly objected the Council or its
delegate shall not decide the application -
(a) until the time for institution of an appeal has expired;
or
(b) if an appeal is duly instituted, until the appeal is
determined.
In the case of an appeal, in making its decision the Council
or its delegate shall be bound by the determination of the
appeal.
The Council shall make its decision and the Town Clerk
shall notify the applicant thereof within seven days after the
time for institution of an appeal has expired or, if an appeal
has been duly instituted, after the determination thereof.
The notification shall state the grounds of the decision.
(5) The applicant shall pay to the Council the costs of
the advertisement prescribed by this section and shall accompany
his application with the amount of such costs." (at p251)
11. This section secures the attainment of two important goals. It provides
the council with the views of those who oppose an application;
written grounds
of objection will be before it, supported by relevant facts and circumstances
and it will thus be relieved of the
special burdens associated with
decision-making when only one side of the argument is known. It also provides
objectors with an
opportunity both to make their views known and, if their
objections are unavailing, then to appeal to the Local Government Court
against the proposed decision of the council. (at p252)
12. Each of these goals depends for its attainment upon the giving of public
notice of an application and the importance which the
legislation attaches to
this is evident from the care with which the precise modes of giving that
notice are prescribed. (at p252)
13. The section requires that the advertisements by which public notice is
given "shall set out particulars of the application".
These words should, I
think, be given a meaning consistent with the important role played by these
advertisements; unless adequate
particulars are advertised potential objectors
will scarcely be able to comply with the requirement of s. 22(1) that
objections must
set out "the grounds of objection and the facts and
circumstances relied on by the objector in support of those
grounds". A
consequence
will be that the council will be deprived of the benefit of
worthwhile objections when considering an application.
(at p252)
14. Moreover, unless adequate information is contained in advertisements not
only will effective objection be rendered difficult
but the very need to
object may not be sufficiently appreciated; a failure to object within the
seven days or longer permitted by
the section produces serious consequences
since the right of appeal to the Local Government Court conferred by sub-s.
(3) is limited
to those who have "duly objected". Accordingly inadequacy of
public notice renders nugatory the twin purposes of s. 22, of assisting
the
council to fulfil its task as a responsible planning authority and of
providing those who may be affected by the
granting of
applications with
opportunity to exercise their statutory rights of objection and appeal. (at
p252)
15. These considerations provide substantial grounds for concluding that the
reference to "particulars of the application" in sub-s.
(1) should not be
given any narrow meaning. (at p252)
16. I have already set out the terms of the advertisement used in the present
case; it does not specify in any intelligible form
on what part of the whole
twenty-six acres of the showgrounds the proposed structure is to be built or
how much of the total site
will be taken up by the "shop", as it is called.
It does not reveal the identity of the applicant nor does it give any details
of
the use to be made of whatever area is involved, or of the intensity of
that use, other than by referring to the erection of a one
storey building
"for the purpose of a shop (Target Discount shopping Centre)". The
advertisement says, in effect, that a one storeyed
shop is to be erected. The
use of the word "shop" is said to be justified both because that is the
description given in the application,
of which the advertisement is to provide
particulars, and because "shop" is defined in the town plan so as
appropriately to describe
Myer's proposal. (at p253)
17. Neither of these contentions is of substance. In fact the application
did not restrict itself to "shop" in describing the proposed
structure;
instead it provided ample details to enable the planning authority properly to
consider the application, details which
the advertisement did not, however,
disclose to potential objectors. Far from providing particulars of the
application, the description
of this major new retailing venture, estimated to
cost over $3 1/2 million, as "a shop" was positively misleading. Nor can its
description
as a shop be justified by reference to the definition of that term
in cl. 1 of the town plan; cl. 1 defines terms for the purposes
of the plan
but has no more general application and unless a term used elsewhere is
expressed to be there employed in the sense defined
in the plan it will not
carry that defined meaning. (at p253)
18. Then it is said that both the application and the advertisement went
further than was strictly necessary in expanding the meaning
of the word
"shop" by adding the words in parentheses. To my mind these added words only
confuse the matter; I doubt very much whether,
in common parlance of the
present day, a single shop is ever described as a shopping centre yet the
advertisement uses these two
conflicting descriptions of what is to be erected
on the site; the words "Target Discount" do nothing to clarify the matter.
The
position is further confused because it transpires that what Myer proposed
to erect was, in the jargon of retail merchandising, not
a shopping centre but
what its executive director described in evidence as a discount departmental
store and what Judge Mylne called
a departmental discount store, something
which his Honour said witnesses had described as a relatively new concept in
retailing.
Even potential objectors well abreast of the latest developments
in retailing terminology would, it seems, have been misled by the
description
"discount shopping centre". Be that as it may, the term "a shop (Target
Discount shopping Centre)" does little if anything
to convey to readers of the
advertisement the nature and dimensions of the building and very extensive
associated car parking facilities
which Myer was applying for permission to
construct on the site. The inadequacy of the advertisement is striking when
viewed in
the context of s. 22, which requires objectors to state facts and
circumstances upon which they rely in support of their specific
grounds of
objection.
(at p254)
19. The paucity of information contained in the advertisement is not to be
explained by any lack of information available to the
council; the council
was, in this instance, supplied with quite detailed information concerning the
proposed shopping centre even
if attention be restricted solely to what
appeared in Myer's formal application. This included the precise location of
the site,
its area, the identity of the applicant, the height and other
dimensions of the building, its estimated cost, the estimated number
of
employees and the very large number of motor cars provision for the parking of
which was to be made. The advertisement could and,
if it were to serve the
function which the legislation intended, should have provided considerably
more by way of particulars than
it did. (at p254)
20. While the phrase "particulars of the application" may have no constant
meaning from case to case, instead depending in each
instance upon the facts
of the particular application in question, the more extensive and elaborate a
particular proposal and the
greater its likely impact upon local amenity, the
greater will be the need for particulars. In the present case the application
was one which, if granted, might have a marked effect on the character of the
vicinity. I say this without forming any view as to
whether that effect would
be, on balance, beneficial or detrimental, it is sufficient to note the
magnitude of the proposal. Moreover
it involved the introduction into the
locality of a significant new land use which might well be thought likely to
affect local amenity
and which would obviously attract large numbers of motor
cars into the adjacent road system. Each of these factors should have
suggested
to a planning authority that here, if ever, was a case in which its
statutory obligation to give public notice of the application
called for a
high degree of particularity in informing that public of the application being
made to it. When, in these circumstances,
the notice to the public refers only
to the erection "of a shop (Target Discount shopping Centre)" this does not,
in my view, satisfy
the requirement of setting out particulars of the
application. (at p254)
21. How the wording of the advertisement came to be adopted does not appear
from the evidence. It was stressed on behalf of Myer
that it was the council
and not Myer which was charged with the task of advertising the particulars of
the application and s. 22(1)
does require the council to "cause public notice
to be given", sub-s. (5) providing for payment by the applicant of the
council's
expenses of advertising. However in a letter from Myer to the
council of 3rd July 1970 it was said that "the necessary advertisements
on the
land and in the press will be carried out immediately" and it would seem from
this that Myer itself effected the advertising,
although not necessarily
responsible for its wording. (at p255)
22. What, then, is the effect upon this appeal of what I regard as the
inadequacy of public notice of Myer's application? In argument
two distinct
aspects of this question were discussed, the first being whether the
requirements of s. 22(1) concerning the content
of advertisements was
mandatory or only directory, the second being whether, whatever the nature of
those
requirements, any shortcomings
in the advertisements could be relied
upon in the proceedings before the Local Government Court.
The applicable
principles determining
the choice between a mandatory and a directory
interpretation are well settled and are succinctly
stated in a passage from
Maxwell
on the Interpretation of Statutes, 12th ed. (1969), pp. 314-315, which
has been referred to with
approval in a number of the authorities;
in S.S.
Constructions Pty. Ltd. v. Ventura Motors Pty. Ltd. [1964] VicRp 32; (1964) VR 229 , Gillard J.
undertook
a quite detailed consideration of
the application of those
principles to a situation not unlike the present. His Honour was there
concerned with a notice requirement
appearing in Victorian town planning
legislation and, although details of that legislation differ
significantly
from the terms of
s. 22, his Honour's discussion of the principles affecting a
choice between a mandatory and a directory interpretation are, I think,
in
point in the present case. (at p255)
23. I have already referred to the important part played by the advertising
of the making of an application and to the extent to
which the working of the
statutory provisions depends upon its adequacy; there can, I think, be no
doubt but that it is mandatory
that there must be a giving of public notice by
means of advertisements and that those advertisements must contain some
particulars
of the application. The legislation employs mandatory language,
makes the giving of public notice a condition precedent to any consideration
of the application by the council and the section is wholly dependant upon the
giving of public notice for the attainment of its
objects. (at p255)
24. I doubt, however, whether, in the present case, a distinction of any
substance exists between a mandatory and a directory interpretation
of the
requirement that the public notice contain particulars of the application. It
is well established that a directory interpretation
of a statutory requirement
still necessitates, as a condition of validity, that there should be
substantial compliance with the requirement;
Cullimore v. Lyme Regis
Corporation (1962) 1 QB 718 provides a modern instance of this. When the
requirement is that "particulars
of the application" should be given by public
advertisement and when once it is accepted that there must be an advertisement
which
gives some such particulars, it is difficult to discern any distinction
between a strict observance of this requirement, such as
a mandatory
interpretation would call for, and the substantial observance of it, as called
for by a directory interpretation. The
situation is quite different from that
encountered when some formality of time or procedure has been neglected, or
when some question
of waiver arises, as it did in Edward Ramia Ltd. v. African
Woods Ltd. (1960) 1 WLR 86; (1960) 1 All ER 627 . That which the statute
calls for is not compliance with precise and detailed formalities, some of
which might be omitted without affecting substantial compliance;
substantial
compliance can in this case only be achieved by giving adequate particulars
and strict compliance calls for no more than
the giving of those same adequate
particulars. The particulars of the advertisement will either be sufficient
to effect the legislative
purpose of giving notice to the public of the
application or, if not, will not amount even to a substantial compliance with
the statute.
I have found the particulars in the present instance to be
inadequate and, whether as a result of a mandatory interpretation or of
a
directory one, the outcome will be the same; the council, or its delegate,
here proceeded to a determination of the application
without either strict or
substantial compliance with relevant statutory requirements and the formation
of its proposal to grant the
application has thereby been vitiated. (at p256)
25. The consequences of this call for some detailed consideration of the
terms of s. 22. Because of the terms of sub-s. (4), the
council, once
objections are received, cannot, pending the expiration of time for
institution
of an objector's appeal, proceed any
further than the proposal
stage. If an appeal is then duly instituted this restraint upon action
by the
council will be prolonged
until the Local Government Court determines the
appeal; indeed it is, I think, more correct to describe
the effect of an
objector
instituting an appeal not as merely prolonging the period of
restraint but rather as involving a vacation
by the council of the field
of
decision-making in favour of the Local Government Court. The Court determines
the appeal and the
council is then bound to give
effect to the Court's
determination - sub-s. (4); the council is thus deprived of all independent
power
of consideration and decision-making
and this is assumed by the Court.
(at p257)
26. This substitution of the Court for the council as the true arbiter of
applications under s. 22 once an appeal is instituted
is significant for the
light it throws upon the role of the Court. The Court has before it no final
decision of the council on which
to adjudicate but merely a proposal which
will never of its own force become operative but will,
whatever the outcome of
the appeal,
be superseded by the Court's determination of the appeal, to which
the council can only give
effect by a formal decision reflecting
that
determination. (at p257)
27. In these circumstances the wording of sub-ss. (2) and (3) and the
discriminating use of the word "duly" in those sub-sections
is significant; it
is only those objections which have been "duly" lodged or which result in a
person having "duly objected" which
produce statutory consequences. However,
neither the formation of a proposal by the council nor the prior giving of
public notice
is qualified by reference to those acts having been "duly"
performed; so that, under sub-s. (3), an appeal to the Court lies only
where a
person has "duly objected" but will, I think, lie regardless of whether or not
the giving of public notice by the council
or the formation by it of a
proposal has been effected duly, that is, in accordance with law; a purported
giving of public notice
or a purported formation of a proposal will suffice.
(at p257)
28. The fact that once an appeal is instituted by an objector the Court
assumes from the council the task, initially the council's,
of considering an
application and the objections to it raises a strong inference that the Court
should, in undertaking that task,
be directly concerned to assure itself that
all the requirements of the giving of public notice in due form have been
complied with.
Their non-observance will effectively prejudice the Court's
proper consideration of the matter in a number of respects; first, it
will
result in it having before it a council proposal to which it would no doubt
ordinarily wish to pay some regard as to the expression
of the views of the
responsible planning authority but which it will know has been arrived at
without necessarily having benefited
from a proper presentation to the council
of objectors' views; this is an aspect to which I have already referred.
Secondly, it will
know that there may be persons who might have objected but
who have, by reason of defective public notice, been deprived of the
opportunity
of qualifying as objectors. Thirdly, it will be aware of the fact
that the objections which have been lodged come in response to
a defective
public notice of the application and may accordingly be misconceived in their
grounds or in the facts and circumstances
set out in support of those grounds.
(at p258)
29. In those circumstances and faced with what I conclude were defective
advertisements the substance of which did not comply with
the statutory
requirements of public notice the Court should, in my view, have acted in the
same way as it would have been proper
for the council to act had it
appreciated the true effect of the defective notices; it should have rejected
the application, not
because of any particular objections based upon
considerations of a town planning nature but rather because the public notice
requirements
of s. 22 had not been observed. Such a rejection would not, of
course, prejudice the making of a further application in the same
terms
immediately
after that rejection, to be followed by fresh public notice,
objection and the remainder of the s. 22 procedure.
(at p258)
30. This view of the effect of s. 22 involves the proposition that the Local
Government Court when hearing an appeal is not to be
restricted exclusively to
the planning
considerations raised by the application but should also consider
whether there was compliance
with the requirements of the giving
of public
notice; these matters of public notice are properly within the purview of the
Court.
The fact that sub-s. (3) describes
the appeal to the Court as one
"against the proposal of the Council" does not, in my view, run
counter to
this. It is, in fact, the
notification by the council to objectors of its
proposal, not, be it noted, its decision, which
is the occasion of the appeal;
in
any event it is clear that no appeal in any conventional sense is involved,
the procedure is sui
generis since what the Court does,
although described as
the determination of an appeal, is to take the application and objections
in
hand, consider them de novo, hear
for the first time the objectors and arrive
at its own conclusion, whereupon the council for
the first time makes a
decision in conformity
with that conclusion. (at p258)
31. Judge Mylne had before him objections which included an objection to the
form of public notice and his Honour referred, in his
judgment, to the
submission made to him that there was a defect in the giving of public notice,
particularly concerning the supply
of particulars of the application. His
Honour took the view that the requirements of s. 22 were, in this regard,
mandatory but concluded
that the public notice was adequate and, accordingly,
did not give effect to that objection.
The defective public notice was
adverted
to in a number of the grounds of appeal to the Full Court and was
raised in argument before
the Full Court; the Chief Justice in
his reasons for
judgment concluded that the advertisements were adequate in their
particularity
and he rejected that ground of appeal.
Hoare J. took the view
that the provisions of s. 22 were directory only and concluded that there had
been substantial compliance
with the public notice requirements. (at p259)
32. Differing as I do, with respect, from the view taken in the courts below
as to the adequacy of public notice I consider that
on that ground this appeal
should be allowed. The appellants also contended that, on other, quite
distinct grounds, involving what
was said to be the wrongful exclusion of
evidence by the Local Government Court and its failure to have regard to
particular considerations
of a planning nature, their appeal should succeed;
in the circumstances I find it unnecessary for the decision of this appeal to
deal with any of these additional grounds. (at p259)
33. I would allow this appeal. (at p259)
ORDER
Appeal allowed with costs. Order of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Queensland set aside and in lieu thereof order that the appeal from the Local Government Court be allowed with costs, and further order that the appeal to the Local Government Court be allowed with costs.
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