You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
High Court of Australia >>
2011 >>
[2011] HCA 19
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Limited v Mine Subsidence Board [2011] HCA 19 (1 June 2011)
Last Updated: 1 June 2011
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
JEMENA GAS NETWORKS (NSW) LIMITED APPELLANT
AND
MINE SUBSIDENCE BOARD RESPONDENT
Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Limited v Mine Subsidence Board
[2011] HCA 19
1 June 2011
S312/2010
ORDER
1. Appeal allowed.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 28 June 2010 and in their place order:
(a) That the appeal to that Court be allowed.
(b) Set aside the orders of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales
made on 17 July 2009 and in their place order that the
preliminary question of
law identified by Sheahan J of the Land and Environment Court of New South
Wales, namely:
Whether the Applicant is entitled to an amount under section 12A(1)(b) of the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) in respect of expenses that
it incurred in performing work on the Sydney to Moomba Gas Pipeline in
circumstances where subsidence
occurred at or near Mallaty Creek near
Campbelltown in or about October 2005, on the assumption that the Applicant can
establish
that, for the purposes of that section, the expenses incurred by it
were "proper and necessary",
be answered:
It being agreed that the applicant reasonably anticipated, based on expert
advice, that cumulative subsidence at Mallaty
Creek from approved longwall mining of Longwalls 30-32 was likely to cause
damage to its pipeline, the applicant was entitled under
s 12A(1)(b) of the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) to an amount from the Mine
Subsidence Compensation Fund to meet the proper and necessary expense of
preventing or mitigating
that damage.
(c) The Board to pay the appellant's costs of the hearing of the preliminary
question before the Land and Environment Court and of
the appeal to the Court of
Appeal.
- The
Board to pay the costs of the appellant of the appeal to this Court.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
R J Ellicott QC with J R Williams for the appellant (instructed by
Freehills)
S B Lloyd SC with S J Free for the respondent (instructed by Crown Solicitor
(NSW))
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Limited v Mine Subsidence
Board
Mining – Compensation – Section 12A(1)(b) of Mine Subsidence
Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) allowed claims by owners of improvements for
payment from Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund ("Fund") for proper and necessary
expense incurred or proposed in preventing or mitigating damage that, in opinion
of Mine Subsidence Board, owner "could reasonably
have anticipated would
otherwise have arisen, or could reasonably anticipate would otherwise arise,
from a subsidence that has taken
place" – Appellant made claim for costs
of preventative and mitigatory works performed on pipeline after receiving
expert advice
that such works would be necessary as result of certain
underground longwall mining – Whether appellant entitled to
compensation
from Fund under s 12A(1)(b) – Whether entitled to
compensation only if subsidence occurred before expense incurred in preventing
or mitigating damage –
Whether "from a subsidence that has taken place" in
s 12A(1)(b) refers to actual past occurrence or hypothetical future occurrence
of subsidence.
Words and phrases – "from a subsidence that has taken
place".
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW), ss 11, 12A(1)(b), 13A,
14.
- FRENCH
CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, CRENNAN AND KIEFEL JJ. This appeal relates to the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) ("the Act"). Section 10 of
the Act provides for the creation of a Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund ("the
Fund"). The Fund is administered by the respondent,
the Mine Subsidence Board
("the Board"). By s 8 of the Act, the Board has the wide powers of a commission
under the Royal Commissions Act 1923 (NSW), Pt 2 Div 1. Colliery
proprietors make compulsory contributions to the Fund (s 11). Claims may
be made by the owners of improvements for payment from the Fund of expenditures
in relation to subsidence-caused damage
to those improvements (ss 12 and
12A).
- The
appeal concerns the construction of s 12A(1)(b) of the Act. Section 12A(1)(b)
provides for compensation to be paid out of the Fund by the Board to the owners
of improvements on land for expense incurred in preventing
or mitigating damage
from subsidence caused by
mining[1]. It is
a difficult provision, which has occasioned considerable controversy in the
courts of New South Wales.
The factual background
- The
appellant owns and operates a gas pipeline which runs from Moomba to Sydney. It
is licensed to do so under Pt 3 of the Pipelines Act 1967 (NSW), and
hence it is a "licensee" for the purposes of that Act. The gas pipeline is the
main source of natural gas for the large
populations who live in the Sydney and
Newcastle metropolitan areas. For the most part the gas pipeline runs
underground, and it
does so at a point where it crosses Mallaty Creek. The
pipeline traverses an area of land which is subject to a mining lease relating
to the West Cliff Colliery. That mining lease is held by a subsidiary of BHP
Billiton Limited.
- The
pipeline runs above a series of parallel panels numbered 29-36. Those panels
have been proposed for longwall mining. Longwall
mining has been taking place
in them for some years. On 14 April 2003, longwall mining in Longwall 29 began.
In December 2003, expert
consultants predicted that there would be subsidence at
the point where the pipeline crosses Mallaty Creek when Longwall 30 was mined.
They also predicted that the subsidence would increase as subsequent longwall
panels were mined. In February 2004, other expert
consultants advised that no
works were needed to mitigate the cumulative effects of subsidence arising from
extraction from Longwall
30 and Longwall 31. But they advised that mitigation
works would be needed as a result of extraction from Longwall 30, Longwall
31
and Longwall 32.
- The
mining of Longwall 30 was completed on 4 June 2005, and of Longwall 31 on 11
December 2006. Between December 2005 and January
2007, work was done to
excavate the pipeline and the three other pipelines which pass along the same
easement, to decouple the four
pipelines from the soil, and to carry out
associated filling. On 20 December 2006, the cumulative subsidence was 42.3mm.
In February
2007, the mining of Longwall 32 commenced. By 30 April 2007,
the cumulative subsidence had risen to 140.4mm. By 28 August 2007,
the
cumulative subsidence had risen to 274.7mm. This broadly corresponded with the
predictions of the expert consultants.
- Meanwhile,
on 17 July 2007 the appellant made a claim for $2,770,664 against the Board
under the Act for the costs of preventative
and mitigatory works performed on
the pipeline on the northern side of Mallaty Creek. Section 12A(1)(b)
provides:
"(1) Subject to this section, claims may be made under this Act for payment from
the Fund of:
...
(b) an amount to meet the proper and necessary expense incurred or proposed by
or on behalf of the owner of improvements or household
or other effects in
preventing or mitigating damage to those improvements or household or other
effects that, in the opinion of the
Board, the owner could reasonably have
anticipated would otherwise have arisen, or could reasonably anticipate would
otherwise arise,
from a subsidence that has taken place, other than a subsidence
due to operations carried on by the
owner."[2]
- On
28 July 2008, the Board sent a letter to the appellant. It appeared to say that
in the Board's view no claim could be made unless
the whole of the subsidence
occurred before the expense of preventative works was incurred. It relied on
the reasoning in Mine Subsidence Board v Wambo Coal Pty Ltd ("the
Wambo
case")[3].
The proceedings
8 On 19 September 2008, the appellant instituted class 3 proceedings in the
Land and Environment Court of New South Wales against
the Board. Section 19(f1)
of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (NSW) provides that the
matters within class 3 of the Land and Environment Court's jurisdiction include
jurisdiction to hear and
dispose of "appeals under section 12B of [the
Act]"[4]. The
Court (Sheahan J) dealt with the following separate
question[5]:
"Whether the [appellant] is entitled to an amount under section 12A(1)(b) of the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) in respect of expenses that
it incurred in performing work on the Sydney to Moomba Gas Pipeline in
circumstances where subsidence
occurred at or near Mallaty Creek near
Campbelltown in or about October 2005, on the assumption that the [appellant]
can establish
that, for the purposes of that section, the expenses incurred by
it were 'proper and necessary'."
He answered that question:
"No"[6]. He
correctly regarded himself as bound to do so in view of the reversal of a
decision of Lloyd J in the Land and Environment Court
by the Court of Appeal of
the Supreme Court of New South Wales in the Wambo case.
- The
appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South
Wales. It unanimously dismissed the appeal, but
there were internal divisions
of reasoning. Since the appellant invited the Court to overrule its own earlier
decision in the Wambo case, five judges sat. Spigelman CJ (Allsop P and
Giles JA concurring) considered that the Wambo case was correct and
should be followed. Basten JA (with whom Macfarlan JA agreed in a short
judgment) held that the Wambo case was wrong, but that since it was not
"clearly or plainly
wrong"[7] it
should not be
overruled[8].
- In
this Court the appellant maintains its challenge to the correctness of the
Wambo case.
The position of the judges and the appellant
- It
was common ground that the pipeline was an improvement, that the appellant was
its owner, and that damage would be caused by subsidence
unless some
preventative or mitigatory works were undertaken. The dispute turns on the
significance of the words "from a subsidence
that has taken place" in
s 12A(1)(b).
- The
majority of the Court of Appeal, in adopting the construction of
s 12A(1)(b) stated in the Wambo case, held that the words "from a
subsidence that has taken place" meant that there could be no claim unless the
subsidence had already
taken place by the time that the "expense" had been
"incurred or
proposed"[9]. On
that construction, the subsidence liable to cause damage to the appellant's
improvements which began in February 2007 had not
taken place before the expense
had been incurred from December 2005 to January 2007, and hence the Board was
correct in rejecting
the appellant's claim.
- The
minority in the Court of Appeal thought that that construction was wrong. In
its view, s 12A(1)(b) required only that the "subsidence" had taken place before
the Board formed its
opinion[10].
On that construction, since subsidence liable to cause damage to the appellant's
pipeline had taken place from February 2007, when
mining of Longwall 32 began,
which was before the Board communicated its rejection of the claim on 28 July
2008, it was wrong for
the Board to reject the claim.
- The
appellant relied on the minority construction as sufficient to bring it victory
in this appeal. But that was not its preferred
approach. The appellant
advocated another construction as its preferred approach. It does not appear to
have been advanced until
the Court of Appeal hearing in the present case. On
that construction, the words "from a subsidence that has taken place" do not
require that subsidence actually occur before a valid claim can be made or
decided. The appellant submitted that the words "damage
... from a subsidence
that has taken place" merely describe the character of the possible damage to
the prevention or mitigation
of which the expense is directed and to which the
inquiry about the owner's reasonable anticipation is to be directed.
The appellant's submission
- The
appellant's construction focuses attention on the requirement that the Board
form an opinion about what damage the owner could
reasonably have anticipated as
arising from a subsidence unless preventative or mitigatory works were
undertaken. Among the assessments
to be made by the Board is an assessment of
what the owner could reasonably have anticipated in relation to a future event
–
the future occurrence of damage to the owner's improvement. If, in the
opinion of the Board, the owner could reasonably have anticipated
or anticipate
that, without preventative or mitigatory work, damage would have arisen in the
future from subsidence in the future,
a claim may be made. The words "from a
subsidence that has taken place" refer not to some specific subsidence that
has happened, but to a subsidence which may not have happened but which
is anticipated to take place in the future, causing damage. The Board has to
consider
what the owner could reasonably have anticipated at a time after the
time of anticipation, but the Board's assessment of that question
may take place
at points in time before the future events which could reasonably have been
anticipated – subsidence and damage
– have taken place. The
provision creates a condition that "subsidence ... has taken place", but the
point of time at which
the condition must be satisfied is the time at which the
damage would otherwise arise if preventative or mitigatory works have not
been
undertaken. On the hypothesis that future damage could reasonably have been
anticipated from a subsidence, the subsidence will
necessarily have preceded or
accompanied the damage and will necessarily have caused that damage. At the
point in time at which
the anticipated damage occurs, it can correctly be said
that damage has arisen from a subsidence that has taken place.
- In
short, s 12A(1)(b) requires the Board to ask of an owner who has incurred or
proposed an expense to prevent or mitigate damage: "Could the owner reasonably
have anticipated that subsidence-caused damage would have arisen but for the
preventative or mitigatory expense?" or "Could the owner
reasonably have
anticipated that subsidence-caused damage would otherwise arise but for the
preventative or mitigatory expense?"
The difference between the two questions
is that the first directs itself to a reasonable anticipation that but for the
preventative
or mitigatory expense subsidence-caused damage will already have
arisen, before the time when the Board is forming its opinion.
The second
question directs itself to a reasonable anticipation that but for the
preventative or mitigatory expense, subsidence-caused
damage would arise after
the time when the Board is forming its opinion.
- Section
12A(1)(b) thus permits a claim to be made for payment from the Fund of an amount
to meet expense incurred by the owner of improvements in preventing
or
mitigating damage that, in the opinion of the Board, the owner could reasonably
have anticipated would otherwise have arisen,
or could reasonably anticipate
would otherwise arise, from a subsidence that has taken place prior to that
damage arising, even though
at the time when the expense is incurred or proposed
there has not yet been either subsidence or damage.
- The
appellant's preferred construction is correct. In giving the reasons for that
view, it is desirable to start by examining the
reasoning of the Court of Appeal
majority.
The reasoning of the Court of Appeal majority
- The
Court of Appeal majority rejected the appellant's construction for the following
reasons. It summarised the appellant's submission
thus[11]:
"the words 'subsidence that has taken place' encapsulate a hypothesis. The very
purpose of the clause ... is to permit the owner
to incur expenses to prevent or
mitigate damage which has not yet occurred. The reference to 'subsidence that
has taken place' should
be understood as a component part of the hypothesis,
being the damage which the owner of the improvements is seeking to prevent or
mitigate. The 'subsidence' to which the subsection refers is not actual
subsidence but a hypothetical subsidence.
The characterisation of the reference to 'a subsidence that has taken place' as
a 'hypothesis' ... carries with it the implication
that no subsidence needs to
take place. On this basis the reference remains hypothetical throughout
although, of course, in the
usual case there will be subsidence, the effects of
which have been avoided by the work carried out by the
owner."
The Court of Appeal majority said that this was contrary to the Wambo
case: that is true, but the correctness of the construction propounded in that
case is the very question in issue. The Court of
Appeal majority
continued[12]:
"It is clear that the purpose of the section under consideration is to prevent
or mitigate damage and, in that sense, there is a
hypothetical element in
s 12A(1)(b). There is no reason, however, to conclude that any other
element in the section is similarly hypothetical. Specifically the words
'that
has taken place' are ... intractable. They refer in their natural and ordinary
meaning to an actual, past event."
But, it will be suggested
below[13], it
is not only the "damage" which is hypothetical. The "subsidence" may also be
hypothetical, since it is part of the compound
expression "damage ... from a
subsidence that has taken place". The Court of Appeal majority then
said[14]:
"The interpretation of s 12A(1)(b) adopted in [the Wambo case] is
reinforced by the immediate textual context.
First, the use of the article 'from a subsidence that has taken place'
cannot be set aside as irrelevant. The phrase cannot be read as if it said
'from subsidence' (c/f
s 12(1)) or 'by reason of subsidence' (c/f
s 13A).
... there are numerous other references to 'subsidence' in the Act, some
unadorned by any preposition or article and others preceded
by prepositions such
as 'by' or 'from'. Section 12A(1)(b) is, however, the only example in which an
article is used. Together with the past tense of the phrase 'has taken place',
the formulation
suggests an actual, not a hypothetical occurrence.
This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that the article appears twice in
immediate successive clauses in s 12A(1)(b), namely: 'from a subsidence
that has taken place, other than a subsidence due to operations carried on by
the owner'. The identification
of a specific subsidence caused by the
'operations' of the owner is a further indication that what is involved is an
actual, rather
than a hypothetical, occurrence." (emphasis in
original)
These considerations do not take account of the need to concentrate on the fact
that the Board is to form an opinion about the reasonable
anticipation of future
events, one of which is "a" subsidence. The indefinite article is used to
describe something of which nothing
specific is known, but which is merely
generic and hypothetical.
- The
Court of Appeal majority referred to nine reasons given in the Wambo case
for the conclusion there reached, and in addition gave a tenth reason of its
own. Although the reasons in the Wambo case were directed in terms to a
rejection of Lloyd J's view in that case, which was also the view of the Court
of Appeal minority
in this case, the Board relied on them to refute the
construction propounded by the appellant as well. The Court of Appeal minority
exposed those reasons to considerable criticism, which, so far as it is
consistent with the appellant's construction, is
sound[15].
Many of the reasons in the Wambo case do no more than set out the
problem, or assume the correctness of a particular answer to it (for example,
the first three and
the
fifth)[16].
Others are neutral – for example, the fourth and
sixth[17].
Others are not determinative – for example, the seventh and
eighth[18].
The ninth reason was that the Wambo construction was not
irrational[19];
that may be accepted but is not to the point. Section 12A(1)(b) is, as already
remarked, a difficult provision, and the issue is which of the proffered
constructions is to be accepted over the
others, none of which manifests such an
absence of reason as to be irrational. The tenth reason – that since the
indefinite
article was used before "subsidence" the language pointed to a
"specific, past
subsidence"[20]
– has already been dealt with.
- Overall
the reasoning in the Wambo case is flawed by its inattention to the
significance of the words "in the opinion of the Board" in s 12A(1)(b).
The Board's primary argument
- The
parties engaged in numerous peripheral or indecisive battles.
- Thus
the Board relied on the contrast drawn in the Wambo case between the
words "subsidence that has taken place" in s 12A(1)(b) and "by reason of
subsidence" in s 13A: it was said that the latter words relate to anticipated
subsidence but the former do
not[21]. The
Court of Appeal minority rejected that inference from the
contrast[22]:
"Undoubtedly the wording [in s 13A] is different from that in s 12A(1)(b), but
so is the principal purpose of the provision, focussing on the comparative cost
to the Fund of different courses of action."
In addition, it is not possible to
find consistency in the numerous references to "subsidence" in the Act. If that
type of analysis
were to be employed, one inference from the contrast between
the words "actual subsidence" in the definition of "subsidence" in s 4 and the
absence of the word "actual" in the phrase "subsidence that has taken place" in
s 12A(1)(b) is that s 12A(1)(b) does not require actual subsidence.
- Both
parties took the Court to the Second Reading Speech, but it casts no useful
light on the
controversy[23].
- The
Board argued that even if the appellant was not able to recover under s
12A(1)(b) of the Act, it could recover under s 265(1) of the Mining
Act 1992 (NSW). Assuming, which is controversial, that the appellant could
recover under s 265(1), the argument casts no light on the question whether the
appellant is able to recover under s 12A(1)(b).
- Both
parties also advanced many other arguments that need not be considered in detail
because they are not central. All that need
be considered is the decisive
collision between the Board's claim that the appellant's construction would
create unacceptable linguistic
incongruity and the appellant's claim that the
Board's construction was irrational.
- The
Board submitted that the mischief attacked by s 12A(1)(b) was that before
it was enacted, by reason of the narrowness of s 12(1), there was no method
by which owners of improvements carrying out preventative or mitigatory works in
advance of damage could recover
from the Fund. It submitted that the enactment
of s 12A(1)(b) met that mischief, subject to a condition. The condition
was that a subsidence must have occurred before the expense was incurred
or
proposed, even though that subsidence had not yet led to damage. It accepted
that the words "would otherwise have arisen" and
"would otherwise arise"
indicated that the provision called for hypothetical reasoning, but contended
that the weak link in the appellant's
construction was to require the hypothesis
to extend to subsidence. That extension, according to the Board, was precluded
by the
words "subsidence that has taken place".
- The
Board submitted that the appellant's construction might have been sound if the
provision had omitted the words "that has taken
place". It might have been
sound if the provision had said "anticipated subsidence" or "expected
subsidence". It might have been
sound if the provision had read "a subsidence,
if that were to take place", as was suggested by the Court of Appeal
minority[24].
The Board's submissions placed considerable weight on these linguistic
incongruities as a flaw in the appellant's preferred construction.
- It
may be that the words "or could reasonably anticipate would otherwise arise"
were inserted at a late stage, without any corresponding
modification to the
words "that has taken place". The words "or could reasonably anticipate would
otherwise arise" look to the future,
and do not fit well with the words "from a
subsidence that has taken place" if that expression is construed as looking
exclusively
to the past. The Board conceded that its construction would be more
acceptable if the provision had said "from a subsidence that
had or has taken
place", but submitted that the words "has taken place" were sufficiently
"flexible" to deal with all temporal possibilities.
- There
are linguistic difficulties in the appellant's construction. But there are
linguistic difficulties in all possible constructions.
The construction in the
Wambo case, preferred by the Board, involves inserting the word "already"
or "beforehand" after "that has taken place". And, as the Court
of Appeal
minority said, if the words "in the opinion of the Board" are to be downplayed
or ignored, the words "subsidence that has
taken place" should read "subsidence
'that had then taken
place'"[25].
In these circumstances it is necessary to look for the least irrational
construction.
Section 12A as a quid pro quo for s 14
- One
fundamental support for the appellant's construction stems from s 14 of the Act,
which provides:
"(1) The proprietor of a colliery holding who:
(a) is not in arrears with the contributions payable by the proprietor to the
Fund under this Act, and
(b) observes or performs every covenant or stipulation relating to the method
or extent of the extraction of coal or shale contained
in any instrument through
which the proprietor derives title to mine such coal or shale,
shall not be liable for any damage to improvements or household or other effects
occasioned by subsidence.
(2) Nothing in this section shall relieve a proprietor of a colliery holding
from liability for damage caused by subsidence where
the subsidence is due to
the negligence of the proprietor of the colliery holding or the proprietor's
servants."
- If
the Act had not been enacted, and if no provision corresponding to s 14 existed,
at common law the proprietor of a colliery holding, although not liable for a
mere withdrawal of support, and not liable
merely for subsidence caused by that
withdrawal of support, would be liable in nuisance for a withdrawal of support
creating subsidence
which caused actual
damage[26].
This is because the owner of land has a right to the support of that land in its
natural state from the adjacent and subjacent
land of neighbouring owners
(including lessees). The right is a natural incident of the ownership. There
is no natural right of
support for structures (as distinct from the natural
right of support for land in its natural state) but damages for injury to a
structure flowing from subsidence caused by a withdrawal of support (as distinct
from the additional weight of structures on the
land) are
recoverable[27].
The depreciation in the market value of the property attributable to the risk of
future subsidence cannot be taken into
account[28].
But each successive subsidence causing damage creates a fresh cause of action,
even though there has been no new
excavation[29].
- Although
the remedy of damages at law is not available until the subsidence has caused
injury to a landowner's
property[30],
in equity the landowner may apply for a negative injunction (interlocutory or
final) against conduct causing subsidence in future,
whether or not there has
been any subsidence, whether or not there has been any injury caused by
subsidence, and indeed whether or
not mining has
begun[31]. And
the landowner may apply for a mandatory injunction (interlocutory or final) of a
quia timet kind, compelling the defendant
to take positive steps to prevent
subsidence-causing
injury[32]. It
is not necessary to explore the details of the hurdles in the landowner's path
in taking those courses: depending on the circumstances,
they may be
significant but they are not insurmountable.
- In
addition, under s 9 of the Equity Act 1901 (NSW), the equivalent of Lord
Cairns's Act, which is now s 68 of the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW), the
court had jurisdiction to award damages in addition to or in lieu of an
injunction in the case of an injury which was
threatened but had not yet
occurred[33].
- Section
14 is thus an extremely important provision. In its absence, the proprietors of
colliery holdings would be exposed to the risk of repeated
actions for damages
and applications for negative and mandatory injunctions. This is particularly
so where, as is the case in parts
of New South Wales, the operations of mining
for the vital resource of coal are conducted in districts with many buildings
used by
a large population, or through which pipes of various kinds pass, or
both. The legislature struck a compromise in s 14. On the one hand,
s 14(2) left the proprietors of colliery holdings liable for damage caused
by subsidence where the subsidence resulted from their negligence
or that of
their employees. On the other hand, s 14(1) gave the proprietors an
immunity from action where there was no negligence. In return for that
immunity, the proprietors were obliged
to contribute to the Fund under s 11, and
those who otherwise could have sued for damages or injunctive relief were given
a right to claim against the Fund. It was for
reasons of this kind that in
Alinta LGA Ltd v Mine Subsidence
Board[34]
this Court described s 14 as the "statutory quid pro quo for the contributions
of colliery proprietors to the Fund". There is a close relationship between
what the colliery proprietors gained under s 14 and what they lost under s 11.
It is for that reason that the Alinta case referred to the Act as
disclosing "an accommodation, on particular terms, between the interests of
colliery proprietors and
the owners of damaged
improvements."[35]
- Section
14 thus takes away the legal rights of those who could otherwise prevent damage
to themselves by obtaining negative or mandatory
injunctions, or who could get
compensation for any damage caused. Those were rights which were of
considerable utility to those
who had them, but which posed considerable risks
for those who owed the corresponding duties.
- Legislation
is commonly construed not to expropriate or extinguish rights unless just terms
are provided in their place. That is
because there is a common law rule of
statutory interpretation requiring that "clear and unambiguous words be used
before there will
be imputed to the legislature an intent to expropriate or
extinguish valuable rights relating to property without fair
compensation."[36]
The Act does provide substitutes for the rights taken away. Before 1969, the
substitutes were found in ss 12 and
13[37]. In
1969, further substitutes were added – ss 12A, 13A and 13B. Section
51(xxxi) of the Constitution, providing for just terms when property is acquired
pursuant to Commonwealth legislation, is to be construed with
liberality[38].
Similarly, non-constitutional legislation which, in accommodating conflicting
public and private interests, provides substitutes
for what private interests
must lose, is to be construed amply. The need for it to be construed amply is
reinforced by reflection
on the damage to the coal industry which would be
caused if s 14 did not exist and colliery proprietors had to fight continual
outbreaks of litigation in conducting their businesses. That amplitude
of
approach applies as much to provisions enacted in 1969, eight years after s 14
was originally enacted, like s 12A, as it does to those enacted
contemporaneously with s 14. A purposive construction of ss 10, 12 and 12A is
that they give to the owners of improvements advantages broadly commensurate
with what they lost by reason of s 14. Broadly speaking, it may be said that
the scheme of the Act is to convert all relevant rights to sue for damages or
seek injunctions
into money claims against the Fund. For colliery proprietors,
s 14 is a very beneficial provision. For owners of improvements,
s 12A is thus
properly to be seen as a beneficial provision, not to be restricted by a close
and technical reading. To do so would
arbitrarily restrict rights of
compensation offered in substitution for the rights destroyed by s 14. And it
is questionable whether
a construction of s 12A which gives compensation to
owners of improvements for some of their losses but not all is sound. On the
Board's preferred construction of the Act, the owners of improvements would have
had all their common law and equitable rights in
relation to non-negligent
nuisance removed, but with no corresponding right against the Fund in relation
to some of those rights.
- The
Board submitted that "there is no common law equivalent to the entitlement to
payment which the appellant says now arises from
s 12A(1)(b)." The submission
fastens on the appellant's contention that it can claim an amount to meet the
expense of preventative
or mitigatory measures even before mining has begun, or
subsidence has taken place. If by "common law equivalent" the submission
means
"general law equivalent apart from the Act", that is not so. Under Lord
Cairns's Act damages may be awarded in addition to
or in lieu of an injunction,
and an injunction may be obtained quia timet, whether or not any mining or
subsidence or damage has
yet taken place.
- Those
conclusions are not affected by the fact that the Act replaced the Mine
Subsidence Act 1928 (NSW), which also curtailed common law rights. The
previous existence of those rights would have affected the construction
of the
1928 Act, and it is equally relevant to the construction of its
replacement[39].
Nor is there any incongruity in the fact that the rights given affected owners
in 1961 were less extensive than those additionally
conferred in 1969, which
included the right conferred by s 12A.
Section 12A as a means of minimising damage
- A
second fundamental point is that one function of the Act is to minimise damage.
That function is not limited to providing means
by which maximum damage can be
caused by the activities of colliery owners, so long as the Fund pays for it
after it has been caused.
The Act operates rather to prevent or reduce damage
before it is caused. Prevention may be cheaper than cure, and more efficient
than cure. The appellant advanced a telling example from the facts of the
Wambo case. In that case the improvement owner predicted that planned
underground longwall mining would cause subsidence of the land on
which its
surface drift coal conveyor was located and inevitably damage the conveyor. The
owner was faced with two possible courses
of action. The first, which it took,
was the prudent and sensible course of dismantling and relocating the conveyor
before the predicted
subsidence occurred, which in due course it did. The
second was to wait until the predicted subsidence occurred and then, if the
conveyor was not already damaged, to seek to dismantle and relocate it before
damage resulted. The former course was likely to be
much more inexpensive than
the latter, for the latter might have left the conveyor extensively damaged by
the subsidence. A construction
which would deny the owner's claim when it took
the former, sensible, option rather than the latter, riskier, one is a
construction
having irrational effects. On those grounds it ought to be
rejected. In short, as the appellant correctly submitted, having regard
to the
serious consequences of subsidence, if the function of the Fund is to allow
owners to make claims for expenditure for preventative
or mitigatory works, they
should be able to do this before the subsidence occurs. That would not expose
the Fund to undue perils,
for the Fund remains protected by the requirements
that the Board be of the opinion that the owner could reasonably anticipate
damage
from the subsidence and that the expense incurred be proper and
necessary. Further, the Fund is also protected by s 13A, which provides:
"The Board may carry out, or cause to be carried out such works as, in its
opinion, would reduce the total prospective liability
of the Fund by preventing
or mitigating damage that the Board anticipates would, but for those works, be
incurred by reason of subsidence,
whether or not the damage anticipated is
damage to improvements or household or other effects on the land on which the
works are
to be carried out."
That too suggests a construction of the Act as operating so as to assist in the
prevention of damage rather than merely compensating
for damage after it has
happened. Section 13A contains very clear language to that effect. That is
consistent with selecting a
construction for the less clear words of s 12A(1)(b)
which effectuates the same function.
- Further,
s 13A strengthens the suggestion that the power of owners of improvements to
recover an amount from the Fund to meet the
expenses of preventative or
mitigatory work under s 12A(1)(b) is ample: for if the Board will not assist
under s 13A, the owners
of improvements must assist themselves. If
s 13A had created a duty on the Board to undertake preventative or
mitigatory work, the
room for arguing that the scope of s 12A was narrower would
have been increased, because the scheme could then be seen as one in
which the
initiative lay with the Board with a view to reducing the total sum spent on
preventative or mitigatory works by several
owners of improvements. But s 13A
does not create a duty on the Board: it only grants a power.
Section 12A in relation to the duties on the appellant
- Section
26 of the Pipelines Act 1967 (NSW) provides that a licensee (ie the
appellant) shall not permit or suffer the waste or escape of any substance from
the pipeline
or any part thereof, on pain of a criminal sanction of 40 penalty
units for each day on which the offence occurs. A penalty unit
is
$110[40].
Section 27(b) provides that a licensee (ie the appellant) "shall maintain the
pipeline in good condition and repair", on pain of a criminal sanction
of 40
penalty units for each day on which the offence occurs. On the construction
advanced by the Court of Appeal majority, in emergencies,
or even crises falling
short of emergency, pipeline owners would be obliged to make expenditures for
preventative or mitigatory purposes
without the possibility of recompense under
s 12A(1)(b). If they wanted to keep that possibility alive they would have to
wait until
a subsidence had actually occurred.
- Underlying
ss 26 and 27(b) are the gravest considerations of public safety – for gas
can be a very dangerous substance – and public convenience
– for
interrupting the supply of a necessity like fuel in the form of gas is very
serious for the many people and businesses
reliant on it. In addition, the
potential commercial consequences to the appellant of its pipeline being out of
order because of
damage caused by subsidence, and the potential consequences to
be feared from the Government of New South Wales, are likely to be
grave.
The incongruity of the Board's construction
- The
construction advocated by the Board, if accepted, would have several
inappropriate consequences in the conduct of practical affairs.
First, it would
prevent owners of improvements, who may not have unlimited liquidity, from
obtaining from the Fund an amount to
meet expenses to prevent or mitigate
damage, leaving owners much worse off under the Act than they would have been
under the general
law.
- Secondly,
the Board's construction inhibits owners of improvements, such as the
appellant's gas pipeline, from responding early to
the strong pressures of the
criminal law and of commercial and political considerations, by taking steps to
protect their interests
by dealing with threats to the safety of the
improvements, rather than waiting on a decision by the Board under s 13A.
- On
the other hand, the preferred construction of the legislation by the appellant
does not carry these consequences.
The meaning of anticipation of "damage" from a subsidence that has taken
place
- At
times the arguments seemed to rest on an assumption that "anticipate" meant
"expect as probable or likely". But the important
functions which
s 12A(1)(b) performs suggest that its meaning is much wider and that it
accommodates outcomes of much lower degrees
of certainty. In s 12A(1)(b)
"anticipated" is used in the sense described as the ninth meaning of
"anticipate" in the Oxford English
Dictionary[41]:
"To look forward to, look for (an uncertain event) as certain." The
anticipation referred to in s 12A(1)(b) is a looking forward
to an uncertain
event, and treating it as certain even though it is not.
- The
Board must form one of two opinions if a claim is to succeed. One is an opinion
that there might be damage which the owner could
reasonably have looked forward
to as an event which was, though in fact uncertain, certain in the sense that it
was treated as certain
– one which would have arisen had preventative or
mitigatory measures not been taken. The other is an opinion that there might
be
damage which the owner could reasonably have looked forward to as an event which
was, though in fact uncertain, certain in the
sense that it was treated as
certain – one which would arise had preventative or mitigatory measures
not been taken. The uncertainty
surrounding damage has two ingredients: there
is uncertainty as to whether there would be subsidence, and, even if there were,
there
is uncertainty as to whether it would cause damage. When the Board
inquires into what it is that the owner could reasonably have
anticipated, what
is the object of the verb "anticipated"? Not just damage, but "damage ... from
a subsidence that has taken place".
As the appellant submitted, those words
refer to a compound future event: damage which has not yet occurred (and may
never occur
if forestalled by preventative or mitigatory measures) arising from
subsidence which has not yet taken place (and may not). There
is no reason to
limit the hypothetical analysis which the Board concedes must be applied to one
part of the compound conception,
"damage", and not employ it in relation to the
other part, "subsidence that has taken place".
Simultaneity between subsidence and damage
- Finally,
there is another difficulty in the Board's argument. It arises in relation to a
reasonable anticipation of a subsidence
which causes damage simultaneously with
its occurrence. If the subsidence has not taken place at the time when the
Board enters
upon its task, on the Board's construction the claim must fail.
Hence if an owner of improvements could reasonably have anticipated
a certain
type of damage, there will be a valid claim if the damage is caused slowly by a
subsidence that happened before the claim,
but no valid claim if the same damage
is caused simultaneously with, or very soon after, a reasonably anticipated
subsidence that
happened after the claim. This would be, as the appellant
submitted, a capricious and unfortunate result.
Orders
- The
above reasoning suggests an affirmative answer to the separate question. There
was debate about whether answering it with a
bare affirmative was sufficient, or
whether a fuller answer should be given. The appellant proposed the following
answer:
"It being agreed that the applicant [ie the appellant in this Court] reasonably
anticipated, based on expert advice, that cumulative
subsidence at Mallaty Creek
from approved longwall mining of Longwalls 30-32 was likely to cause damage to
its pipeline, the applicant
was entitled under s 12A(1)(b) of the Mine
Subsidence Compensation Act to an amount from the Mine Subsidence Compensation
Fund to meet the proper and necessary expense of preventing or mitigating that
damage."
The Board put no submission against that answer being appropriate if the
appellant's preferred construction were accepted. That
answer should be the
answer given.
- The
following orders should be made.
1. Appeal allowed.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 28 June 2010 and in their place order:
(a) That the appeal to that Court be allowed.
(b) Set aside the orders of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales
made on 17 July 2009 and in their place order that
the preliminary question of
law identified by Sheahan J of the Land and Environment Court of New South
Wales, namely:
Whether the Applicant is entitled to an amount under section 12A(1)(b) of the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) in respect of expenses that
it incurred in performing work on the Sydney to Moomba Gas Pipeline in
circumstances where subsidence
occurred at or near Mallaty Creek near
Campbelltown in or about October 2005, on the assumption that the Applicant can
establish
that, for the purposes of that section, the expenses incurred by it
were "proper and necessary",
be answered:
It being agreed that the applicant reasonably anticipated, based on expert
advice, that cumulative subsidence at Mallaty Creek
from approved longwall
mining of Longwalls 30-32 was likely to cause damage to its pipeline, the
applicant was entitled under s 12A(1)(b) of the Mine Subsidence Compensation
Act 1961 (NSW) to an amount from the Mine Subsidence Compensation Fund to
meet the proper and necessary expense of preventing or mitigating
that
damage.
(c) The Board to pay the appellant's costs of the hearing of the preliminary
question before the Land and Environment Court and of
the appeal to the Court of
Appeal.
- The
Board to pay the costs of the appellant of the appeal to this Court.
- BELL
J. The factual background and the issues raised by this appeal are set out in
the majority reasons. I have come to a different
conclusion from that reached
by their Honours concerning the interpretation of s 12A(1)(b) of the
Mine Subsidence Compensation Act 1961 (NSW) ("the Act"). In my view, the
ordinary grammatical meaning of the provision confines valid claims for payment
from the Mine
Subsidence Compensation Fund ("the Fund") to those made by owners
of improvements for proper and necessary expense incurred or proposed
for works
to prevent or mitigate damage ("preventative works") in circumstances in which,
at the time the expense is incurred or
proposed, a subsidence has taken place.
It is an interpretation that I consider to be consistent with the intended
operation of
the statutory scheme. For the reasons that follow, I would dismiss
the appeal.
Section 12A(1)(b)
- The
provision is set out in the majority reasons. However, it is convenient to set
out the material parts of the section again at
this juncture:
"(1) Subject to this section, claims may be made under this Act for payment from
the Fund of:
...
(b) an amount to meet the proper and necessary expense incurred or proposed by
or on behalf of the owner of improvements or household
or other effects in
preventing or mitigating damage to those improvements or household or other
effects that, in the opinion of the
Board, the owner could reasonably have
anticipated would otherwise have arisen, or could reasonably anticipate would
otherwise arise,
from a subsidence that has taken place, other than a subsidence
due to operations carried on by the owner.
(2) A claim under subsection (1):
...
(b) shall be made, in the case of a claim for payment of an amount under
subsection (1)(b), within three months after the day on
which the expense
to which the claim relates became known to the claimant or, where some other
time within which such a claim may
be made is prescribed by the regulations,
within the time so prescribed ..."
- Section 12A(1)(b)
authorises the making of claims in either of two circumstances: where the
expense has been incurred or where the
expense is proposed. In either
circumstance a valid claim is dependent upon the Mine Subsidence Board ("the
Board") forming the
requisite opinion. In the circumstance of expense incurred
the requisite opinion is that the owner could reasonably have anticipated
that
but for carrying out the works, damage to the improvement would have arisen. In
the circumstance of a claim for payment of
an amount proposed the requisite
opinion is that the owner could reasonably anticipate that but for carrying out
the proposed works
damage to the improvement would arise. As a matter of
grammatical structure I do not read the penultimate subordinate clause as
forming part of a compound expression, namely, "damage ... from a subsidence
that has taken
place"[42].
The conjunction "from" links the penultimate clause to the preceding two
clauses. In my view it is strained to read the penultimate
clause as forming
part of the hypothesis upon which the Board's opinion is formed. Moreover, it
is a construction that gives no
work to the indefinite article, or the words
"has taken place", in the clause.
- The
Board must ask in the case of expense incurred: "could the owner have
reasonably anticipated that, but for carrying out the
preventative works, damage
would have been caused to the improvement?" In the case of expense proposed the
Board must ask: "could
the owner reasonably anticipate that, but for carrying
out the preventative works, damage to the improvement would be caused?" The
second question necessarily looks to the future because it is concerned with
expenditure that is proposed. However, in each case
the anticipation is of
damage "from a subsidence that has taken place". There is no linguistic
incongruity in the requirement, in
the case of proposed expense, that the Board
form an opinion as to the reasonable anticipation of the prevention of damage in
the
future arising from an event that has occurred. Nor is there a need to read
the word "already" or the word "beforehand" after the
words "has taken place" to
give the provision meaning.
- The
Court of Appeal minority concluded that the time to which the penultimate clause
of s 12A(1)(b) speaks is the time at which the
Board forms its
opinion[43].
Their Honours considered that construction to be consistent with the use of the
present perfect tense of the verb, "has taken place".
They said that the past
perfect tense, "had taken place", would have been appropriate had the Board been
required to form an opinion
as to "the reasonableness of the claimant's conduct
in incurring the expense, when it was incurred, and so as to exclude reference
to anticipated
subsidence"[44].
It followed, in the Court of Appeal minority's opinion, that it is necessary
that a subsidence "has taken place" but only by the
time the Board forms its
opinion[45].
It will be recalled that under s 12A(2)(b) a claim must be made within
three months after the date on which the expense to which
the claim relates
became known to the claimant. The Court of Appeal minority's construction is
one that results in a valid claim
being dependent upon the serendipity of
whether the threatened subsidence occurs in the time between the expense
becoming known and
the Board forming its opinion.
- The
Board's opinion is as to the reasonableness of the owner's anticipation of what
"would otherwise have arisen" or "would otherwise
arise" as the case may be.
The present perfect tense is used to convey that the event (subsidence) has
occurred in a period up to
the time of incurring or proposing the expense. In
my view the tense is not inconsistent with the Court of Appeal majority's
construction
of the provision. That construction is to be preferred to one that,
when read with s 12A(2)(b), produces a result that is anomalous.
58 The appellant submits that its preferred construction (that the words "a
subsidence that has taken place" form part of the hypothesis)
gains support from
the use of the indefinite article, signifying that this is a subsidence about
which nothing is known, as distinct
from an actual subsidence. The appellant
draws attention to the words "actual subsidence" in the definition of
"subsidence"[46]
and submits that had it been the intention to condition the making of a valid
claim on the occurrence of actual subsidence those
words might have been used.
To this it must be said that, if the drafter's intention were to refer to
hypothesised future subsidence,
it is not easy to see why the words "has taken
place" were chosen to convey that idea. The definition of "subsidence" does not
assist
the appellant. Sections 12A and 13A were both inserted into the Act in
1969[47] ("the
1969 amendments"). At the date of the 1969 amendments the definition of
"subsidence" did not use the words "actual
subsidence"[48].
A new definition containing those words was introduced into the Act by later
amendment[49].
The words "actual subsidence" in the definition serve to distinguish the
ordinary meaning of "subsidence", which is the sinking
of ground, from the
extended meaning for the purposes of the Act, "all vibrations or other movements
of the ground", which includes
upwards movement of the ground, a phenomenon
apparently known within the coal-mining community as "upsidence".
59 The difference between the language of ss 12A and 13A, which, as noted
above, were both inserted into the Act at the same time,
suggests that the
appellant's preferred construction should not be accepted. Section 13A
confers power on the Board to carry out
works to prevent or mitigate damage that
the Board anticipates would otherwise be incurred "by reason of subsidence".
The expression
"by reason of subsidence" is apt to include actual and
anticipated
subsidence[50].
Had the intention been to provide for claims under s 12A(1)(b) for
preventative works respecting actual and anticipated subsidence
it is to be
expected that the drafter would have adopted the words used in s 13A to
convey that intention. The fact that s 13A conditions
the power on the
Board's opinion that the conduct of the preventative works would reduce the
total prospective liability of the Fund
does not lessen the force of this
textual indication.
- The
drafting of s 12A(1)(b) may be awkward, but I agree with the Court of
Appeal majority that the words "that has taken place",
in their natural and
ordinary meaning, refer to an actual, past
event[51] and
do not form part of the hypothesis upon which the Board's opinion is formed.
An unreasonable result?
- The
construction that I favour produces the result that no provision is made under
the Act for payment from the Fund of amounts expended
by owners on preventative
works respecting threatened subsidence. It is said to be an unreasonable result
in that it requires the
owner of improvements to stand by in circumstances
where, as here, the occurrence of subsidence from the mining operations could
be
predicted with confidence. It is not in issue that it is better to carry out
preventative works than to wait until damage is
done. The good sense of this
proposition was the reason for the introduction of the 1969 amendments.
However, the question is not
whether it is unreasonable to take no remedial
action against threatened subsidence. It is whether the scheme introduced into
the
Act by the 1969 amendments confers that power on the Board alone. In my
opinion the language of ss 12A and 13A makes clear that
the answer to that
question is that it does. It is a conclusion that is reinforced by reference to
the legislative history and extrinsic
material[52].
- The
Minister for Mines identified the purpose of the 1969 amendments in his speech
on the second reading for the Bill in this
way[53]:
"The bill will provide also for the carrying out of works by the board to
prevent or mitigate subsidence damage before it occurs.
Proposed new section
13A will empower the board to carry out such works where the total prospective
liability of the fund will thereby
be reduced.
... As the Act stands at present the board can carry out works only after
damage to improvements by subsidence has arisen. This
power to repair is to be
supplemented by power to carry out preventative works, as the costs of
prevention are often cheaper than
of cure.
It is recognized also that emergencies may occur when it might be necessary for
the owner to carry out works to prevent or mitigate
damage arising from a
subsidence. In such cases proposed new section 12A(1)(b) will empower a
claim to be made for the proper and
necessary expense so
incurred."
63 The Minister referred in the course of his speech to an instance in which
the Board had carried out works to a residential property
to avoid the damage
that was likely to result from a subsidence. The mischief that the 1969
amendments were intended to redress
was the lack of statutory authority for the
Board to carry out such works. Section 12A(1)(b) is not limited to claims
respecting
"emergencies" but its language is consistent with the intention that
claims by owners be limited to circumstances of some exigency
in that damage is
reasonably anticipated from a subsidence that has taken
place[54].
The appellant's loss of common law rights
- The
appellant's submissions on the hearing of the appeal were principally directed
to its loss of common law rights, relevantly to
quia timet injunctive relief,
occasioned by the statutory immunity conferred on colliery proprietors. The
loss of rights is said
to speak to the improbability of a legislative intention
to circumscribe owners' recourse to self-help. The submission requires
consideration of the complex provisions of the Act that disclose the particular
terms of the legislative accommodation struck between
the interests of colliery
proprietors and the owners of improvements in mine subsidence
districts[55].
Before considering how that accommodation was affected by the 1969 amendments,
it is useful to say something about the history
of the legislative adjustment of
the rights of the two groups.
- The
first scheme to provide redress to owners of improvements damaged by subsidence
was introduced by the Mine Subsidence Act 1928 (NSW) ("the 1928
Act")[56]. The
1928 Act was enacted in the aftermath of episodes of severe subsidence caused by
extensive coal-mining activity around Newcastle
and Wallsend. Streets had been
disrupted and houses
damaged[57].
Banks were refusing to lend money on property in areas affected by coal-mining
activity[58].
Against this background the legislature adopted a scheme of compulsory
insurance. The 1928 Act constituted the Mine Subsidence
Board[59] ("the
former Board") and provided for the proclamation of mine subsidence insurance
districts[60].
Every owner of land within a mine subsidence insurance district was required to
insure with the former Board against the risk of
subsidence-caused damage to
improvements[61].
Mine owners operating mines within the boundaries of a mine subsidence insurance
district were required to insure with the former
Board against damage to
improvements caused by
subsidence[62].
Owners of land could obtain payment from the former Board for subsidence-caused
damage to their improvements. The quid pro quo
for mine owners who were subject
to the requirement of compulsory insurance was that they were relieved of
liability for subsidence-caused
damage to improvements resulting from their
non-negligent mining
activity[63].
- The
scheme imposed an unfair burden on owners of land located within mine subsidence
insurance districts whose land was unlikely
ever to be undermined, as they were
nonetheless required to insure with the former
Board[64]. The
recognition of this unfairness informed the current Act, which introduced a
scheme based upon the principle that the coal-mining
industry should bear the
costs of repairing subsidence-caused damage. Under the scheme as enacted, every
colliery proprietor was
required to contribute to the Fund. In return for their
contributions colliery proprietors were relieved of liability for
subsidence-caused
damage (other than that occasioned by the proprietor's own
negligence)[65].
- The
proclamation of mine subsidence districts under the Act resulted in the owners
of improvements on land losing common law rights
to support and injunctive
relief in respect of subsidence-caused damage from non-negligent mining
activity. It was a loss of rights
that, as the Court of Appeal majority
observed, was based on a model that had applied in mine subsidence insurance
districts for
many
years[66].
Owners of improvements received benefits under the regime enacted by the Act
that were superior to those conferred on owners of
land under the 1928 Act.
Their right to compensation was not dependent upon the obligation to insure or
otherwise to contribute
to the Fund. Compensation was authorised
notwithstanding any covenant or stipulation restricting the recovery of damages
for damage
arising from
subsidence[67].
The scheme which yielded these benefits to the owners of improvements conferred
extensive powers on the Board, which had the effect
of restricting owners'
freedom to deal with their property. Persons could not erect or alter any
improvement on land located within
a mine subsidence district without the
approval of the
Board[68].
Approval could be subject to prescriptive
conditions[69].
A purchaser of land on which there was an unapproved improvement had a statutory
right to cancel any contract for sale and to recover
not only the deposit but
also reasonable costs and
expenses[70].
Importantly, no claim for compensation was to be entertained, and no payment
made under the Act, respecting improvements that were
altered or erected without
the Board's approval or otherwise than in conformity with the conditions
specified in the
approval[71].
- The
evident purpose of conferring these powers on the Board is to enable it to
reduce the prospective liability of the
Fund[72]. They
allow the Board to require that an improvement is constructed or altered in
accordance with conditions that are designed to
enable the improvement to
withstand subsidence, or to minimise the extent of damage from subsidence and
the cost of repairs to the
improvement. Persons owning an improvement that has
been erected or altered otherwise than in accordance with the conditions of
the
Board's approval suffer the loss of rights resulting from the statutory
immunity, and yet have no recourse against the Fund.
In this respect there is
the potential for the scheme to operate harshly in individual cases. However,
it is the choice that the
legislature has made in devising a scheme that seeks
to adjust rights arising out of competing land uses.
The Board's power under s 13A
- Threatened
subsidence may be anticipated to cause damage to improvements located on parcels
of land owned by many owners. On the
appellant's preferred construction of
s 12A(1)(b), each owner might choose to carry out preventative works
without consultation with
the Board and recoup the proper and necessary expense
of the works, notwithstanding that the Board might have carried out works for
the benefit of all owners for a lesser sum. The facts of this appeal may
illustrate the point.
- The
appellant's pipeline, the Central Trunk Pipeline, is located in the same
easement as: an ethane pipeline, operated by Gorodok
Pty Limited ("Gorodok"); a
natural gas pipeline, owned by Jemena Eastern Gas Pipeline (1) Pty Ltd and
Jemena Eastern Gas Pipeline
(2) Pty Ltd (formerly owned by members of the Duke
Energy group ("Duke") ("the Eastern Gas Pipeline")); and a low-pressure water
pipeline. After original approval was obtained for longwall mining respecting
Longwalls 29 to 33, the appellant, Duke and Gorodok
entered into the
Pipeline Undermining Mitigation Project agreement ("the PUMP agreement"). The
principal purpose of the PUMP agreement
was to allow the parties to undertake
mitigatory or preventative works in common so as to pool their expertise and to
reduce costs.
The four pipes in the easement cross Mallaty Creek within the
area of Longwall 32. The appellant's claim on the Board was in respect
of the
costs attributable to it for the preventative works carried out on the northern
side of Mallaty Creek. These works consisted
of the excavation of the four
pipelines, decoupling the pipelines from the soil, and associated filling. The
Board approved the
expenditure of $6.2 million on preventative works in
respect of the Eastern Gas Pipeline in September 2006. This was before the
appellant's preventative works on its pipeline were carried out. The works that
the Board carried out on the Eastern Gas Pipeline
were similar to the works
undertaken by the appellant. At no time did the appellant approach the Board to
ask it to carry out preventative
works for the benefit of its pipeline. It may
be that the cost of the conduct of similar works to protect the two gas
pipelines
lying in the same easement could have been less overall than the
combined cost of the Board's works and the appellant's
works[73].
Whether that is so is not known. However, considerations of this character are
consistent with a legislative intent to confer
the power on the Board alone to
carry out preventative works with respect to anticipated subsidence.
- The
appellant submits that two related considerations indicate the legislature did
not intend that s 13A should be the sole source
of power to take action
respecting threatened subsidence. First, s 13A authorises the conduct of
remedial works only if the Board
is of the opinion that the works would reduce
the total prospective liability of the Fund. What the appellant did not
identify were
circumstances in which damage to improvements might reasonably be
anticipated as the result of threatened subsidence, but where the
Board might
consider that taking preventative steps would not reduce its prospective
liability. As earlier explained, the 1969 amendments
were introduced, inter
alia, to address the Board's lack of power to carry out the preventative works
that it had been doing. The
second consideration is that the legislature chose
to confer a power and not a duty on the Board in this respect. To these
considerations
may be added a third, that no provision is made to appeal against
the Board's refusal to exercise its powers under s 13A. However,
it remains
that the legislature has conferred a broad power on the Board for the conduct of
works of a remedial kind in a case in
which damage to improvements (or household
or other effects) by reason of subsidence is anticipated. The Board may be
expected to
exercise its powers reasonably. In the event that it does not an
aggrieved owner would have recourse to judicial review.
- The
Fund is made up of the compulsory contributions that are exacted from colliery
proprietors. Provision is made for the Fund to
receive by way of loan or grant
such sums as may from time to time be provided for that purpose out of the
Consolidated
Fund[74]. It
is a public fund serving public purposes. The mechanism for its dispersal in
connection with preventative works respecting
threatened subsidence is confined
to work carried out, or caused to be carried out, by the Board under s 13A.
The Court of Appeal
majority was right to conclude that that choice does not
produce an anomalous result in the context of this statutory
scheme[75]. In
my view, there is no warrant to depart from the ordinary meaning of the
provision by the adoption of a construction that gives
no work to the indefinite
article in the penultimate and final clauses, or the words "has taken place".
Causation
- The
appellant submitted that even if the issue of construction were resolved
adversely to it, there remained an issue of causation
raised by the Court of
Appeal's decision. Submissions were made on the hearing of the appeal in
support of the contention that the
extraction of coal by means of longwall
mining is a process and not an event. A number of the appellant's submissions
concerning
the process of longwall mining raise questions of fact. The
proceedings in the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales were
conducted
on the basis that the separate
question[76]
could be answered solely by reference to legal principles of statutory
construction[77].
The appellant's challenge on the causation issue may have shown that assumption
to be erroneous, as Basten JA
noted[78]. The
appeal to the Court of Appeal was on a question of
law[79]. As I
am in the minority, it is sufficient to observe that the agreed facts on which
the separate question was determined were that
the appellant did not anticipate
that subsidence arising from the extraction of Longwalls 30 and 31 was
likely, in the absence of
further mining of Longwalls 32 and following, to
result in damage to the pipeline. The works that were the subject of the
appellant's
claim were carried out in order to prevent damage to its pipeline
from subsidence that was anticipated to result from the mining
of Longwall 32
and not from a subsidence that "has taken place".
- I
would dismiss the appeal.
[1] See below at [6].
[2] Section 12A(1)(b), introduced in
1969, may be compared with s 12(1)(a) and (b), which provide:
"(1) Claims may be made under this Act for payment from the Fund of:
(a) compensation for any damage to improvements that arises from
subsidence, except where the subsidence is due to operations carried
on by the
owner of the improvements,
(b) an amount to meet the proper and necessary expense incurred or to be
incurred as a result of such damage in [listed respects]".
Section 13 provides that in lieu of making payments in respect of claims
under s 12, the Board has power to purchase the damaged
land or restore
it.
[3] [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60.
[4] Section 12B of the Act
provides:
"A person claiming compensation under section 12 or 12A may appeal to the
Land and Environment Court against the decision of the Board:
(a) as to whether damage has arisen from subsidence or could reasonably have
been anticipated, or
(b) as to the amount of the payment from the Fund."
[5] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v
Mine Subsidence Board [2009] NSWLEC 106; (2009) 167 LGERA 308 at 310 [2].
[6] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v
Mine Subsidence Board [2009] NSWLEC 106; (2009) 167 LGERA 308 at 319 [56].
[7] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v
Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 47 [168].
[8] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v
Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 48 [172].
[9] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW) Ltd v
Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 24-25 [28], 27-28 [42]-[44], 32
[71] and 35 [95].
[10] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 35-50 [99]- [186]. This
view seems to have been that adopted by Lloyd J, the primary judge in the
Wambo case, whose decision was reversed by the Court of Appeal: see
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2006] NSWLEC 528; [2006] NSWLEC 528; (2006) 147 LGERA 457.
[11] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 31 [63]- [64].
[12] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 31 [66].
[13] At [48].
[14] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 31-32 [67]- [70].
[15] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 43-46 [145]- [161].
[16] Mine Subsidence Board v
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60 at 67 [28]- [30] and 68-69
[33]-[38].
[17] Mine Subsidence Board v
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60 at 67-68 [31]- [32] and 69-70
[39]-[43].
[18] Mine Subsidence Board v
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60 at 70 [44]- [45].
[19] Mine Subsidence Board v
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60 at 70-71 [46].
[20] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 28 [44].
[21] Mine Subsidence Board v
Wambo Coal Pty Ltd [2007] NSWCA 137; (2007) 154 LGERA 60 at 67-68 [32].
[22] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 44 [148].
[23] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 2 October 1969 at
1550-1551.
[24] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 37 [111].
[25] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 47 [166] (emphasis in
original).
[26] Bonomi v Backhouse
(1859) El Bl & El 646 [120 ER 652]; Backhouse v Bonomi [1861] EngR 764; (1861) 9 HLC
503 [11 ER 825]; Dalton v Angus (1881) 6 App Cas 740 at 808.
[27] Brown v Robins [1859] EngR 214; (1859) 4
H & N 186 [157 ER 809]; Stroyan v Knowles [1861] EngR 163; (1861) 6 H & N 454
[158 ER 186]; Pantalone v Alaouie (1989) 18 NSWLR 119 at 129.
[28] West Leigh Colliery Co Ltd v
Tunnicliffe & Hampson Ltd [1908] AC 27.
[29] Darley Main Colliery Co v
Mitchell (1886) 11 App Cas 127.
[30] Midland Bank plc v Bardgrove
Property Services Ltd [1992] 2 EGLR 168 at 172.
[31] Redland Bricks Ltd v
Morris [1970] AC 652 at 664.
[32] Redland Bricks Ltd v
Morris [1970] AC 652; Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 Pty Ltd v
Maritime Union of Australia [1998] HCA 30; (1998) 195 CLR 1 at 31 [33]; [1998] HCA 30.
[33] Leeds Industrial
Co-operative Society Ltd v Slack [1924] AC 851.
[34] [2008] HCA 17; (2008) 82 ALJR 826 at 830 [18]
per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ; [2008] HCA 17; 244 ALR 276 at 280; [2008] HCA
17.
[35] [2008] HCA 17; (2008) 82 ALJR 826 at 829 [14]
per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ; [2008] HCA 17; 244 ALR 276 at 280.
[36] Mabo v Queensland [No 2]
[1992] HCA 23; (1992) 175 CLR 1 at 111 per Deane and Gaudron JJ; [1992] HCA 23.
[37] See above at [6] n 2.
[38] ICM Agriculture Pty Ltd v
The Commonwealth [2009] HCA 51; (2009) 240 CLR 140 at 212-213 [185]- [186]; [2009] HCA
51.
[39] Cf Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 33 [83].
[40] Crimes (Sentencing
Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW), s 17.
[41] 2nd ed (1989), vol 1 at
522.
[42] At [19].
[43] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 43 [144] per Basten JA,
51 [189] per Macfarlan JA.
[44] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 43 [143] per Basten JA,
51 [189] per Macfarlan JA.
[45] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 43 [144] per Basten JA,
51 [189] per Macfarlan JA.
[46] Mine Subsidence Compensation
Act 1961 (NSW), s 4.
[47] Mine Subsidence Compensation
(Amendment) Act 1969 (NSW).
[48] A definition of "subsidence"
was inserted into s 4 of the Act by the Mine Subsidence Compensation
(Amendment) Act 1967 (NSW), s 2(1)(a):
"'Subsidence' means subsidence due to –
(a) the extraction of coal or shale; or
(b) the prospecting for coal or shale carried out within a colliery holding
by the proprietor thereof."
[49] Mine Subsidence Compensation
(Amendment) Act 1989 (NSW), Sched 1(1):
"'Subsidence' means subsidence due to:
(a) the extraction of coal or shale; or
(b) the prospecting for coal or shale carried out within a colliery holding
by the proprietor of the holding,
and includes all vibrations or other movements of the ground related to any
such extraction or prospecting (whether or not the movements
result in actual
subsidence)."
[50] Mine Subsidence Compensation
Act 1961 (NSW), s 13A:
"Works for prevention or mitigation of damage from subsidence
The Board may carry out, or cause to be carried out such works as, in its
opinion, would reduce the total prospective liability of
the Fund by preventing
or mitigating damage that the Board anticipates would, but for those works, be
incurred by reason of subsidence,
whether or not the damage anticipated is
damage to improvements or household or other effects on the land on which the
works are
to be carried out."
[51] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 31 [66] per Spigelman CJ
(Allsop P concurring at 35 [97], Giles JA concurring at 35 [98]).
[52] Interpretation Act 1987
(NSW), s 34.
[53] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 2 October 1969 at
1550-1551.
[54] The Explanatory Note to the
Mine Subsidence Compensation (Amendment) Bill 1969 listed the objects of the
Bill as:
"(a) to authorise the Mine Subsidence Compensation Board, in certain
circumstances, to refuse a claim for damage to improvements used
in connection
with the carrying on of an extractive industry such as quarrying;
(b) to authorise that Board to reduce the prospective liability of the Mine
Subsidence Compensation Fund by carrying out works to
prevent or mitigate
anticipated damage from subsidence and to enable to Board to pay compensation
for damage due to the carrying
out of any such works;
(c) to enable the Board to reimburse persons for expense incurred in
preventing or mitigating anticipated damage from a subsidence
that has
occurred;
(d) to make provisions consequential upon or ancillary to the foregoing."
[55] Alinta LGA Ltd v Mine
Subsidence Board [2008] HCA 17; (2008) 82 ALJR 826 at 829 [14] per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon,
Crennan and Kiefel JJ; [2008] HCA 17; 244 ALR 276 at 280; [2008] HCA 17.
[56] There was provision under s 155
of the Mining Act 1906 (NSW) (in force at the date of the 1969
amendments) for the warden to assess compensation to be paid by the holder of a
miner's
right (or other entitlement to occupy or enter lands) for loss caused or
likely to be caused to improvements on that land or adjoining
land by works
carried out in pursuance of the right. Similar provision is now made by
s 265 of the Mining Act 1992 (NSW).
[57] New South Wales, Legislative
Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 20 December 1928 at 3095.
[58] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 20 December 1928 at 3122.
[59] Mine Subsidence Act 1928
(NSW), s 7(1).
[60] Mine Subsidence Act 1928
(NSW), s 3(1).
[61] Mine Subsidence Act 1928
(NSW), s 4(1).
[62] Mine Subsidence Act 1928
(NSW), s 4(4).
[63] Mine Subsidence Act 1928
(NSW), s 6.
[64] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 9 March 1961 at 3079.
[65] Section 14 of the Act provided
that relief from liability under the section was restricted to proprietors of
colliery holdings who
were not in arrears in their contributions to the Fund,
and who had duly observed relevant operational covenants and stipulations.
[66] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 33 [83].
[67] Section 12(5) of the Act.
In his speech on the second reading of the Bill for the Act in the Legislative
Council, the Minister
for Labour and Industry said: "The presence of covenants
or stipulations of this kind has often caused grave hardship and it is
unjust
that people who have purchased land in good faith should be penalised because of
a severance of land and mineral ownerships,
mostly years ago." New South Wales,
Legislative Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 15 March 1961
at 3183.
[68] Section 15(2) of the Act.
[69] Section 15(3) of the Act.
[70] Section 15(5)(a) of the
Act.
[71] Section 15(5)(b) of the
Act.
[72] Each of the powers enumerated
above may be found in ss 14 and 15 of the current version of the Act.
[73] It is not known what made up
the costs incurred by the Board. It appears that the Board's preventative works
were undertaken on
both the southern and northern sides of Mallaty Creek. The
appellant's claim was confined to its costs of the works on the northern
side of
Mallaty Creek. The claim for work that it carried out on the northern side was
not precluded under s 15(5)(b) of the Act
because at the date of the
construction of the pipeline the South Campbelltown mine subsidence district,
which is on the northern
side of Mallaty Creek, had not been proclaimed. The
southern side of Mallaty Creek lies within the Appin mine subsidence district.
It had been proclaimed under the Act some years before the appellant's pipeline
was constructed and in respect of which it would
seem no approval had been
obtained from the Board.
[74] Section 10(5) of the Act.
[75] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 34-35 [92].
[76] At [8].
[77] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 20 [2] per Spigelman CJ,
38-39 [114]-[120] per Basten JA.
[78] Jemena Gas Networks (NSW)
Ltd v Mine Subsidence Board [2010] NSWCA 146; (2010) 175 LGERA 16 at 40 [125]- [127].
[79] Land and Environment Court
Act 1979 (NSW), s 57(1).
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2011/19.html