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R & R Fazzolari Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council; Mac's Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council [2009] HCA 12 (2 April 2009)
Last Updated: 2 April 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON AND KIEFEL JJ
Matter No S384/2008
R & R FAZZOLARI PTY LIMITED
APPELLANT
AND
PARRAMATTA CITY COUNCIL RESPONDENT
Matter No S385/2008
MAC'S PTY LIMITED APPELLANT
AND
PARRAMATTA CITY COUNCIL & ANOR
RESPONDENTS
R & R Fazzolari Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council
Mac's Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council
[2009] HCA 12
2 April 2009
S384/2008 & S385/2008
ORDER
Matter No S384/2008
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 11 June 2008 and in their place order
that:
(a) paragraph 2 of the orders of the Land and Environment Court of New South
Wales made on 28 September 2007 be set aside; and
(b) the appeal to the Court of Appeal be otherwise dismissed with
costs.
Matter No S385/2008
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 11 June 2008 and in their place order
that:
(a) paragraph 2 of the orders of the Land and Environment Court of New South
Wales made on 28 September 2007 be set aside; and
(b) the appeal to the Court of Appeal be otherwise dismissed with
costs.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
B W Walker SC with I J Hemmings for the appellants (instructed by Hunt &
Hunt Lawyers)
A Robertson SC with R J Carruthers and C R Ireland for the respondent in Matter
No S384/2008 and the first respondent in Matter No
S385/2008 (instructed by
Blake Dawson Lawyers)
Submitting appearance for the second respondent in Matter No
S385/2008
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
R & R Fazzolari Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council
Mac's Pty Limited v Parramatta City Council
Real property – Compulsory acquisition – Where Local Government
Act 1993 (NSW) ("LG Act"), s 186(1), provided that council may acquire
land "for the purpose of exercising any of its functions" – Where LG Act,
s 188(1) provided that council may not acquire land by compulsory process
if land being "acquired for the purpose of re-sale" – Relationship
between
purpose of exercising any council functions and purpose of re-sale –
Meaning of "purpose of re-sale" – Whether
acquisition of land by council
pursuant to development agreement requiring council to hold land acquired on
trust for private developer,
in exchange for money and money's worth, as part of
larger public-private partnership, is acquisition for purpose of
re-sale.
Real property – Compulsory acquisition – Where LG Act,
s 188(2)(a) provided that land may be acquired by compulsory process even
if acquisition for purpose of re-sale if land in question adjoins
or lies in
vicinity of other land acquired at same time under LG Act, Pt 1 of
Ch 8, for purpose other than purpose of re-sale – Where
adjoining land comprised public roads already vested in
fee simple in council
– Where Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991 (NSW),
s 7B provided that State authority authorised to acquire land by compulsory
process may do so even where land already vested in authority
– Whether
adjoining land nevertheless acquired under LG Act, Pt 1 of
Ch 8.
Statutes – Interpretation – Presumption that legislature does not
intend to interfere with property rights unless contrary
intention manifest
– Consequences for identification of purpose of
acquisition.
Words and phrases – "function", "public-private partnership", "purpose of
re-sale", "re-sale".
Local Government Act 1993 (NSW), ss 24, 26, 186, 187, 188, 400B(1),
400B(2).
Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991 (NSW), s 7B.
Roads Act 1993 (NSW), ss 7(4), 145(3), 146(1)(e).
FRENCH CJ
Introduction
- Parramatta
City Council ("the Council") is a council constituted for the area of the City
of Parramatta under the Local Government Act 1993
(NSW)[1] ("the
LGA"). It is "a body politic of the State with perpetual succession and the
legal capacity and powers of an
individual"[2].
Powers are conferred on the Council by the LGA. They include the power given by
s 186 for the Council to "acquire land ... for the purpose of exercising
any of its
functions"[3].
In the case of a compulsory acquisition, that power is constrained by
s 188(1), which provides:
"A council may not acquire land under this Part by compulsory process without
the approval of the owner of the land if it is being
acquired for the purpose of
re-sale."
The constraint is qualified:
"(2) However, the owner's approval is not required if:
(a) the land forms part of, or adjoins or lies in the vicinity of, other land
acquired at the same time under this Part for a purpose
other than the purpose
of re-sale".
The term "function" in s 186 includes "a power, authority and
duty"[4].
- On
1 June 2007 the Council sent proposed acquisition notices to the owners
of land in a block in the Parramatta city centre bounded by Smith, Darcy, Church
and
Macquarie Streets. The acquisitions were related to the redevelopment of the
block. It was to be called "Civic Place" upon completion.
The redevelopment
was to be carried out under a Public Private Partnership ("PPP") made pursuant
to the LGA between the Council
and two companies, Grocon (Civic Place) Pty Ltd
("GCP") and Grocon Constructors Pty Ltd ("GCPL") (together referred to as
"Grocon").
The PPP was to be effected by a development agreement between the
Council and Grocon. Under that agreement the Council would transfer
certain of
the acquired land to Grocon and receive substantial financial payments and other
consideration from Grocon.
- Two
owners, R & R Fazzolari Pty Ltd ("Fazzolari") and Mac's Pty Ltd ("Mac's")
(together referred to as "the appellants"), challenged
the proposed acquisitions
in the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales as being for the purpose of
re-sale and therefore
falling within the constraint on acquisition imposed by
s 188(1) of the LGA. Biscoe J in the Land and Environment Court held the
proposed acquisitions to be unlawful. Declarations were made and
injunctive
relief granted
accordingly[5].
- The
Council appealed to the Court of Appeal of New South Wales. On 11 June
2008, the Court of Appeal unanimously allowed the
appeals and set aside the
declarations and orders made in the Land and Environment
Court[6]. On 26
August 2008, the appellants were granted special leave to appeal against
the decisions of the Court of Appeal.
- The
resolution of these appeals depends upon the proper construction of the LGA in
so far as it defines the powers of a council to
acquire land by compulsory
process. In accordance with established principles of statutory interpretation
the preferable construction
is that which authorises the least interference with
private property rights. That requires a focus upon the purpose for which the
Council proposes to acquire each of the parcels of land the subject of its
notices.
- In
this case the Council proposes to dispose of the acquired land to the developer
and to receive consideration in money and other
benefits. It seeks to
characterise the purpose of the acquisition by reference to the larger ends of
the Civic Place development.
But it is what it intends to do with the
appellants' land which, in this case, defines the relevant purpose which is that
of re-sale.
- In
my opinion, the appeals should be allowed with costs. The declarations made by
the primary judge should be restored and further
orders made as proposed in the
joint judgment.
The statutory and contractual framework
- The
essential features of the statutory and contractual framework of the proposed
acquisitions are:
- The
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (NSW) ("EPAA") provides
for the making by the Minister of regional environmental plans in respect of a
region[7].
- The
Sydney Regional Environmental Plan No 28 – Parramatta ("SREP28")
was made under the EPAA.
- Clause
10 of SREP28 provides for the preparation by the Council of master plans
outlining, inter alia, detailed provisions relating
to development of land to
which the master plan applies.
- A
master plan for the Civic Place Development ("the Master Plan") was prepared by
the Council pursuant to SREP28, adopted on 14 May
2003 and came into effect on 1
June 2003.
- The
LGA provides that a council can enter into a PPP, being an arrangement between
the council and a private person for the purpose,
inter alia, of providing
public infrastructure and
facilities[8].
- The
LGA entitles a council entering into a PPP for a particular project "to proceed
with the carrying out of the project" under the
PPP[9].
- A
PPP was entered into by the Council with Grocon by way of an agreement entitled
the "Civic Place Development Agreement" ("the Development
Agreement") dated 21
July 2006.
- Conditions
precedent of the Development Agreement included the acquisition, in the name of
the Council, of Darcy Street and Church
Street[10],
vested in it under the Roads Act 1993 (NSW), and the freehold of
properties in those streets including land owned by the appellants.
- Pursuant
to the Development Agreement, Grocon was to construct a residential building of
31 storeys, known as Park Apartments, on
the land owned by Mac's and a 40 storey
commercial office tower, known as the Atria, on the land owned by
Fazzolari with one level of retail and four levels of car parking beneath the
surface of both areas of land.
- The
Development Agreement provided that a number of parcels of land, including the
appellants', would be consolidated and re-subdivided
with most of it
transferred to Grocon initially by a declaration of trust followed by
transfer of legal title according to progressive completion
of the
development.
- Under
the Development Agreement the Council was to receive from Grocon upfront
participation payments, a revenue share, council facilities
and public domain
and a housing cash contribution.
- The
Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991 (NSW) ("Just Terms
Act") sets up procedures for the compulsory acquisition of land but, generally
speaking, is not a source of power
to acquire
land[11].
There is a relevant exception to that general proposition. An authority of the
State which is authorised by law to acquire land
by compulsory process in
accordance with the Just Terms Act may so acquire the land if it is vested in
the authority
itself[12].
The Development Agreement and the Deed of Trust
- The
Development Agreement provided that, upon the requisite acquisitions of Darcy
and Church Streets and certain private properties,
the Council and GCP were
required to do anything that either might reasonably require to ensure that the
properties became part of
the defined trust
land[13]. The
trust land was to be included in the site of the proposed
development[14].
- The
appellants' properties, if acquired by Council, were to be subject to a
declaration of trust by the Council in terms of a Deed
of Trust exhibited to the
Development
Agreement[15].
The trustee was the Council and the beneficiary was GCP. The recitation to the
Deed was in the following terms:
"A The Beneficiary is the trustee of the Grocon Parramatta
Trusts.
- The
Beneficiary has agreed to procure the development of the Trust Land on the terms
and conditions set out in the Development Agreement.
- Pursuant
to the terms of the Development Agreement, including payment of the Transfer
Consideration by the Beneficiary, the Trustee
has agreed to hold the Trust Land
and all Receipts and Rights on trust for the Beneficiary (in its capacity as
trustee of the Grocon
Parramatta Trusts) as provided in this
deed."
The term "Transfer Consideration" was not defined in the Deed of Trust or the
Development Agreement.
- Under
the Deed of Trust the Council agreed with GCP, inter alia, that it would
exercise its power to transfer or otherwise deal with
the trust land in any
manner that GCP
requested[16].
- The
general operation of the trust was set out in a document entitled "Outline of
Key Development Agreement Provisions", provided
to Council before it entered
into the Development Agreement. That explanation was in the following
terms[17]:
"The effect of the Land Trust is as follows:
(a) Council will transfer the equitable title of the site to GCP (that is an
effective transfer of title to GCP);
(b) Council will, however, remain registered as the owner on the land titles
register maintained by the NSW Land & Property Information;
(c) when the Council Related Works and the Open Space Works are completed, legal
title to those parcels will be progressively transferred
to Council;
(d) when the Development Component is completed and subdivided into each of the
individual parcels containing the different staged
office, retail, residential
and car park elements of the Development Component, Council will execute a
transfer of the legal title
in those parcels progressively to the Developer or
its nominee or will be changed as trustee of the trustee [sic] (so as to effect
that transfer);
(e) the Developer will indemnify Council for all costs arising from the Land
Trust, including any stamp duty, land tax, council or
other rates, insurance
costs or other costs; and
(f) if additional land is acquired by the Developer, such as the Australia Post
Site, this will be incorporated into the trust, at
the request of the
Developer."
- Various
payments were to be made by both Grocon and the Council under the terms of the
Development Agreement. These were summarised
in the outline document. The key
payments were:
- An
initial cash payment of $51 million (plus GST) by GCP to the Council ten
business days after the date on which the last of the conditions
precedent was satisfied or waived, subject to a proportionate reduction if the
grant of development consent did not achieve the minimum
acceptable floor space area.
- 3.8
per cent of project revenues to be paid by GCP to the Council.
- An
additional payment by GCP to the Council in relation to the residential
component of the project.
- An
additional payment to the Council by GCP in the event that total revenue from
the project exceeded the total cost of the project
by an agreed percentage
("Super Profit Share").
- A
payment by the Council to GCP of $29.7 million (plus GST) as a contribution to
defined "Council Related Works" on the date of expiry
of a fit-out period after
notice of practical completion and upon written notice by GCP indicating that
the project revenue exceeded
$400 million.
- A
payment by the Council not exceeding $8.87 million by way of rental covering a
three year period during which it is entitled to
remain in its existing
facilities or to new premises being constructed as part of the Council Related
Works.
Council's applications for compulsory acquisition
approval
- On
24 December 2003, the Council applied to the Department of Local Government
seeking ministerial approval for the compulsory acquisition
of private
properties in Darcy Street and on 24 November 2004 applied for approval for the
compulsory acquisition of Darcy Street
itself. The Darcy Street private
property included Fazzolari's land at 20-22, 24 and 26 Darcy Street.
Ministerial approval for
the acquisition of Darcy Street, the Darcy Street
properties and also 160 Church Street, the land owned by Mac's, was notified to
the Council by letter dated 15 December 2006 from the Director General of the
Department of Local Government.
- On
13 December 2006 the Council applied to the Department of Local Government
seeking ministerial approval for the compulsory acquisition
of part of Church
Street. Item 4 of Annexure 2 to that application was headed "Purpose of the
Acquisition". This required a statement
of the "public purpose" for which the
land was being acquired. Reference was made to the Development Agreement and
the provision,
pursuant to that Agreement, of 12,000 square metres of public
open space in the Parramatta CBD together with various other community
facilities. The Council said:
"The inclusion of part of Church Street will result in the delivery of an
additional 2,925 square metres of revitalised public open
space. The provision
of these public facilities will not be feasible without including Church Street
and Darcy Street."
Its statement continued:
"The purpose of acquiring the relevant part of Church Street is to enable
Parramatta City Council to:
. own the land free of encumbrances and interests;
. close this part of Church Street; and
. include part of Church Street in the overall Civic Place Development,
so that the Civic Place Development including the expected public facilities can
proceed."
Reference was also made to the acquisition of a substratum beneath Church Street
contiguous to the Civic Place site which would be
transferred to the developer,
GCP, at a later date for the purpose of construction of public car parking and
one level of retail
development.
- Annexure
1 to the application set out a checklist of information effectively requiring
references to be given to where that information
could be found in the text of
the completed application. One of the items of information
required was a "[s]tatement on why any resale proposal is ancillary to the
purpose of the acquisition". The Council identified Item
9.1 of Annexure 2 in
answering that request. Item 9.1 of Annexure 2 appeared under the heading
"Re-sale" and repeated the substance
of what appeared in Item 4 above.
- A
further requirement of the checklist was:
"(If acquisition is for re-sale) Indication of any intervening council
activity, such as prior subdivision approval by the council."
The Council referred to Item 9.2 and Attachment I of Annexure 2. Attachment I
referred to the transfer to GCP of the Church Street
substratum already covered
in Item 4. On 14 March 2007, the Council was notified by the Director General
of the Department of Local
Government of ministerial approval for the
acquisition of part of the Church Street road reserve.
- In
respect of the compulsory acquisition of part of Darcy Street, the General
Manager of the Council sent a proposed acquisition
notice to the Council itself.
The notice addressed to the Council began:
"The Parramatta City Council of New South Wales requires the whole of your
interest in the land comprising Darcy Street, Parramatta,
for a public purpose,
namely the Civic Place Development. A full description and title details of the
land are in the attached schedule."
The trial judge's findings
- The
primary judge, Biscoe J, reached the following principal conclusions:
- The
decision of the Council to acquire the appellants' properties compulsorily was
not made for the purpose of exercising any of its
functions within the meaning
of s 186(1) of the
LGA[18].
- The
decision of the Council to acquire the appellants' properties compulsorily was
not made for the purpose of exercising any of its
functions under s 186(2)(b) of
the
LGA[19].
- The
Council was seeking to acquire the appellants' properties compulsorily for the
purpose of re-sale within the meaning of s
188(1)[20].
- The
appellants' properties did not adjoin or lie in the vicinity of other land to be
acquired under the LGA for a purpose other than
a purpose of re-sale within the
meaning of s
188(2)(a)[21].
- The
primary judge found that the constraint imposed on the power of compulsory
acquisition by s 188(1) applied to the proposed
acquisition of the
appellants' properties. He
said[22]:
"In my opinion, a re-sale within the meaning of s 188 includes a transfer
of land for a consideration which includes money.
That is sufficient to cover
what the council intends to do with the applicants' land in the present
case."
- The
possibility under the Deed of Trust and the Development Agreement that the
properties could return to full ownership of the Council
if the project were to
cease was no answer to the application of s 188(1). His Honour
said[23]:
"Relevantly, s 188(1) is only concerned with whether the proposed
acquisition of the applicants' land is for 'the purpose' of
re-sale, not with a possibility that a re-sale contemplated by a contract
might not occur in the event that the contract does not go ahead."
(emphasis in
original)
- The
question which arose under s 188(2)(a) was whether the appellants'
properties adjoined or lay in the vicinity of other land
to be acquired at the
same time under the LGA for a purpose other than a purpose of re-sale within the
meaning of s 188(2)(a).
The Council argued that its acquisition of Church
Street and Darcy Street was other than for re-sale. A purpose of acquiring the
relevant part of Church Street was to "provide open space for giving effect to
the
development"[24].
A purpose of acquiring a part of Darcy Street was the creation of Station Square
which would also be open space. His Honour rejected
the Council's argument. He
held that the reference to "other land" in s 188(2)(a) is a reference to land
not already owned by the
Council. The Council was already the owner of Church
Street and Darcy Street. It could not rely upon the contemporaneous
"acquisition"
of its existing interest in those streets. In any event the
purpose for which Darcy Street and Church Street were to be acquired
included
re-sale as a substantial purpose.
- His
Honour made declarations that the proposed acquisitions were unlawful.
Injunctive relief was also granted preventing publication
of the proposed
acquisition notices in the New South Wales Government Gazette and
further steps to compulsorily acquire the properties.
The Court of Appeal judgment
- The
principal judgment in the Court of Appeal was delivered by Tobias JA, with
whom Hodgson JA and Palmer J agreed subject to
their own concurring
reasons[25].
Key conclusions in the judgment of Tobias JA were:
- The
implementation of the Master Plan was a function of the Council such that s
186(1) empowered it to acquire land for the purpose
of exercising that
function[26].
- The
Council's purpose in acquiring the appellants' properties was at all times, and
remained, the implementation of the Civic Place
project as contemplated by the
Master
Plan[27].
- The
primary judge's conclusion in relation to s 186(1) was
incorrect[28].
- The
s 186(2)(b) question did not
arise[29].
- The
Development Agreement did not propose a "re-sale" of the appellants' land within
the meaning of s 188(1). The primary judge's
conclusion in relation to s 188(1)
was
incorrect[30].
- It
was unnecessary to deal with the subsidiary questions arising under
s 188(2)(a)[31].
- There
is no issue on the appeal to this Court about the conclusion of the Court of
Appeal that, subject to any constraint imposed
by s 188, the Council had
power to make the proposed acquisitions under s 186. It is sufficient
therefore to refer briefly
to the reasoning of Tobias JA on the s 188
questions.
- Tobias
JA held that the critical question not answered by the primary judge was whether
the purpose, which he found the Council had,
of transferring the appellants'
land to Grocon for consideration, was its substantial
purpose[32].
He
found[33]:
"The documentary history of this matter makes it clear in my view that the
Council proposed and needed to proceed with the acquisition,
if necessary by
compulsory process, of the [appellants'] land irrespective of whether it was
ultimately transferred to Grocon or
any other
developer."
His Honour adopted what he
called[34] "the
test adumbrated by the High Court in CC Auto Port Pty
Ltd[35]"
requiring identification of "'the initiating and abiding purpose' of the
proposed acquisition". He
said[36]:
"On the basis of that test, in my opinion the purpose of the proposed
acquisition of the [appellants'] land was not one of
re-sale."
- Tobias
JA also rejected the proposition that the proposed acquisitions involved a
re-sale of the appellants' land. He relied upon
Chan v Dainford
Ltd[37]
for the proposition that the ordinary meaning of "sale" is the exchange of
property for money. He acknowledged that the word "sale"
must take its meaning
from its statutory context and that its ordinary meaning could be extended
expressly or by implication. There
was nothing in s 188(1) to extend that
ordinary meaning either expressly or by necessary implication. There was
nothing to extend
it to the complex financial arrangements the subject of the
Development
Agreement[38].
- A
difficulty with this aspect of his Honour's reasoning is that the invocation of
the "complex" nature of the financial arrangements
the subject of the
Development Agreement does not expose a basis for rejecting their
characterisation as "re-sale" in so far as they
involve the transfer of the
appellants' land to Grocon and the payment by Grocon of consideration to the
Council in relation to that
transfer (albeit without specific allocation of any
part of the consideration to the appellants' lots). Where compulsory
acquisition
of a number of parcels of land as part of some overarching
development scheme is concerned the general proposition nevertheless applies
that "[t]he validity of the acquisition of each parcel depends upon the facts
concerning that
parcel"[39].
Grounds of Appeal
- The
grounds of appeal set out in the notice of appeal for each of the appeals,
amended by leave at the beginning of the hearing,
were as follows:
"2. The New South Wales Court of Appeal erred by construing the expression
'purpose of re-sale' in sub-section 188(1) of the Local Government Act
1993 (New South Wales) to require re-sale to be the dominant purpose
when the Act as a whole means that re-sale could only ever be subservient
to
some other authorised purpose or statutory function proposed to be carried out
by the respondent.
2A. The New South Wales Court of Appeal erred by not characterizing the proposed
eventual transfer to Grocon (Civic Place) Pty Ltd
and Grocon Constructors Pty
Ltd or their nominee or nominees, in return for money and money's worth, of land
including the appellant's
land as, in the circumstances, a proposed 're-sale'
within the meaning of subsec 188(1) of the Local Government Act 1993
(NSW)."
- The
grounds as amended identify two issues. The first, embodied in ground 2A, is
whether the transfer of land, including the appellants'
land, and the receipt of
payment would be a "re-sale" of the appellants' land for the purposes of s
188(1). The second is whether the proposed acquisition was for the purpose of
re-sale of the land.
Notice of Contention
- By
its notice of contention, the respondent sought to uphold the decision of the
Court of Appeal on the ground:
"That the Court below failed to decided [sic] that if the appellants' land was
to be acquired for the purpose of re-sale within the
meaning of s 188(1),
then the exception to s 188(1) contained in s 188(2)(a) would apply on the basis
that the appellants' land forms part of, or adjoins or lies in the vicinity of,
other land to be acquired
at the same time under Part 1 of Chapter 8 of the
Local Government Act 1993 (NSW) for a purpose other than the purpose of
re-sale, such other land being the Darcy Street and Church Street road reserves
or
in the alternative each part of that land that is to be in Council
ownership."
Legislative history
- It
is helpful to refer briefly to the legislative history leading up to the
enactment of s 188.
- In
Thompson v Randwick
Corporation[40]
this Court held that powers of compulsory acquisition conferred by the Local
Government Act 1919 (NSW) could only be exercised with respect to land
purchased or resumed for a purpose authorised elsewhere in that Act. Where
a
council attempted to resume more land than required to construct a proposed
road, it was held not to be acting in good faith but
actuated substantially by
the purpose of profit-making by sale of the land not so required. The proposed
resumption was therefore
not for the purpose of the undertaking by the council
of the statutory function of "improvement and embellishment of the area" within
the meaning of s 321(d).
- In
the following year, the Court held in Minister for Public Works v
Duggan[41]
that a council was not empowered by the Local Government Act 1919 to
acquire land in excess of what it required to fulfil a statutory purpose then
resell the excess and use the proceeds to defray
the costs of the proposed
scheme. In the course of its judgment, the Court
said[42]:
"The question when the whole of a person's lands may be acquired although part
only is required for some undertaking so that the
residue may be resold at a
profit has frequently arisen in England. English legislation often specifies
the lands that may be resumed
for the statutory purpose. Even so, if the land
is resumed for the benefit of a body trading for private gain, such as a railway
company, the body may usually be restrained from resuming more of the land so
specified than is actually required for the particular
work. Public bodies
usually may resume the whole of such lands although parts only are required for
the particular purpose with
a view to re-selling the residue at a profit. But
these are all cases where the public body is on the face of the statute
authorized
to acquire the whole of the land and then empowered to re-sell the
surplus land."
It is important to note the use by the Court of the term "re-sell" to describe a
sale following upon a compulsory acquisition.
- Following
the decision in Duggan, the Local Government Act 1919 was
amended by the Local Government (Land Acquisition) Amendment Act 1951
(NSW). The amendment extended the powers of councils with respect to the
acquisition of land (including acquisition by resumption)
by providing that
lands acquired under the 1919
Act[43]:
"may be so acquired for sale or re-sale and applying the proceeds thereof in
defraying in whole or in part the expenses incurred
by the council in carrying
out any work upon lands:–
(i) acquired for any purpose of this Act; and
(ii) of which the lands acquired under paragraph (a) of subsection two of this
section form part, or which adjoin or are in the vicinity
of land acquired under
paragraph (b) of that subsection."
- In
the Second Reading Speech it was said, inter alia, that the Bill was designed to
ensure that land could be acquired for re-sale
and for recoupment in whole or in
part of a council's expenditure on work done on land acquired in the same way,
as was believed
to be permissible under the existing provisions of the 1919 Act
before the decisions of this Court in Thompson and
Duggan[44].
The Minister referred to "the principle of recoupment" as "well established in
local government law in both England and this
country"[45].
- Major
changes to the law relating to local government in New South Wales were
introduced with the enactment of the LGA. In the Second
Reading Speech the
Minister for Local Government described as one of the main features of the
legislation that it involved "a fundamental
shift from prescriptive to a
permissive expression of local government law". This was said to be evidenced
by "the conferral of
broad general powers on councils accompanied by specific
constraints on power – rather than vice
versa."[46]
- The
acquisition of land was not mentioned in the Second Reading Speech but
explanatory notes tabled with the Speech stated, in relation
to the Chapter of
the LGA which includes ss 186 and
188[47]:
"The chapter begins with setting out the purposes for which council may acquire
land. The provisions are generally a re-enactment
of the Local Government
Act 1919 in that councils may acquire land by agreement or compulsory
process in accordance with the Land Acquisition (Just Terms) Compensation
Act 1991. However, a major variation occurs in the creation of a
limitation on compulsory acquisition by council for the purpose of re-sale.
A
council may not acquire land by compulsory process without the approval of the
owner if it is being acquired for the purpose of
re-sale, as re-sale is not
strictly a legitimate Local Government purpose.
- The
Bill lapsed in 1992 and was reintroduced in a revised form in 1993. However, it
was not suggested that any revisions in 1993
relevantly affected s 188 or
rendered any less relevant the observations contained in the Second Reading
Speech for the 1992
Bill. Importantly, in my opinion, the character of
s 188(1) as a specific constraint on a broad power does not preclude the
application to it of established approaches for the interpretation of statutes
affecting property rights.
The approach to interpretation
- Private
property rights, although subject to compulsory acquisition by statute, have
long been hedged about by the common law with
protections. These protections
are not absolute but take the form of interpretive approaches where statutes are
said to affect such
rights.
- Blackstone
said that the common law would not authorise the "least violation" of private
property notwithstanding the public benefit
that might
follow[48]. He
accepted however that the legislature could compel acquisition and in so doing
wrote[49]:
"All that the legislature does is to oblige the owner to alienate his
possessions for a reasonable price; and even this is an exertion
of power, which
the legislature indulges with caution, and which nothing but the legislature can
perform."
It was and has remained the case in England and Australia that compulsory
acquisition and compensation for such acquisition is entirely
the creation of
statute[50].
- The
attribution by Blackstone, of caution to the legislature in exercising its power
over private property, is reflected in what
has been called a presumption, in
the interpretation of statutes, against an intention to interfere with vested
property rights.
It was expressed by Griffith CJ in Clissold v
Perry[51],
a land resumption case,
thus[52]:
"In considering this matter it is necessary to bear in mind that it is a
general rule to be followed in the construction of Statutes
such as that with
which we are now dealing, that they are not to be construed as interfering with
vested interests unless that intention
is manifest."
The presumption has been restated on more than one occasion in this
Court[53].
That does not, of course, authorise the court to put to one side "the
unambiguous effect of the words which the Parliament has
seen fit to
use"[54].
- The
terminology of "presumption" is linked to that of "legislative intention". As a
practical matter it means that, where a statute
is capable of more than one
construction, that construction will be chosen which interferes least with
private property rights.
That approach resembles and may even be seen as
an aspect of the general principle that statutes are construed, where
constructional choices are open, so that they do not encroach
upon fundamental
rights and freedoms at common law. It operates in the United Kingdom as
a manifestation of a "principle of legality" and has been described in Australia
as an aspect of the rule of
law[55].
- In
its application to property rights this long-standing interpretive principle is
consistent with international developments in
the recognition of human rights
since World War II. Although not specifically protected by the International
Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, or the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the right to property was recognised in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in various other international
instruments[56].
Discrimination, based on race, in relation to the enjoyment of property rights
is prohibited by Art 5 of the International Convention
on the Elimination of all
Forms of Racial Discrimination
1965[57].
- The
constraint imposed by s 188 on the power conferred by s 186 is to be read
conventionally according to the ordinary meaning
of the words of the section
having regard to their context and purpose and, in this case, having regard to
the established rules
for the construction of statutes affecting property
rights. That has a particular consequence for the way in which the purpose of
the relevant acquisition is identified. That identification will focus on the
use to which the particular land to be acquired is
to be put rather than larger
developmental objectives involving other parcels of land.
Whether the Development Agreement involved re-sale of the appellants'
land
- The
first question to be addressed is whether the proposed transfer of the
appellants' land to GCP, coupled with the proposed payments
to Council, would
constitute a "re-sale" of the land within the meaning of that term in
s 188(1).
- The
word "re-sale" in s 188(1) is directed to sale by the council following
compulsory acquisition of the land. It is used
on the assumption that the
antecedent compulsory acquisition by the council is to be treated as a forced
sale to the council by the
owner of the land. That usage is consistent with the
use of the term "re-sell" in the passage quoted from Duggan. It is a
usage which was reflected in the 1951 amendments to the Local Government Act
1919.
- The
question which then arises is whether the proposed transfer of the appellants'
land to Grocon is a "sale" of that land to Grocon.
If so then, putting to one
side the distinct question of the purpose of the proposed acquisition of the
land by Council, it would
be a "re-sale" by the Council within the meaning of
s 188.
- The
relevant ordinary meaning of the word "sale"
is[58]:
"the exchange of a commodity for money or other valuable
consideration."
This Court in Chan v Dainford
Ltd[59]
in construing s 71 of the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)
observed[60]:
"The primary meaning of sale is an exchange of property, the subject of the
sale, for money."
That cannot be taken to exclude the possibility that a sale of land may involve
its transfer for money and/or other valuable consideration.
The constraint,
protective of property rights, imposed by s 188 cannot be limited to cases
in which the proposed re-sale is for money. Such a construction would
artificially limit the scope of
the word "re-sale" to one aspect of the ordinary
meaning of the word "sale". It would also allow transactions to be structured
by
local authorities in such a way as to avoid the constraint imposed by s 188
while perpetrating the very mischief it is designed to prevent.
- The
Development Agreement required the Council to transfer the appellants' land to
Grocon. In consideration of the Council performing
its obligations it was to
receive money and other benefits from Grocon. It is not to the point that no
element of the consideration
moving from Grocon was allocated to the appellants'
properties. The land was to be transferred, along with other land, in exchange
for money and other consideration. The land was therefore to be the subject of
a "re-sale" by the Council within the meaning of
s 188.
Whether the proposed acquisition was for the purpose of
re-sale
- The
Development Agreement necessarily involved the re-sale by the Council of the
appellants' properties to Grocon. The question
therefore arises whether the
proposed acquisition of those properties was "for the purpose of re-sale" within
the meaning of s 188(1).
- The
conclusion is inescapable that re-sale was one of the purposes of the proposed
acquisitions, albeit it was said to have been
in aid of the larger purpose of
the redevelopment of Civic Place in Parramatta. Whether they were acquisitions
for the purpose of
re-sale within the meaning of s 188(1) depends upon the
proper construction of that sub-section. One constructional question is whether
the purpose of re-sale necessary
to attract the constraint imposed by
s 188(1) must be:
(i) the sole purpose or;
(ii) the dominant purpose or;
(iii) a substantial purpose;
or whether it suffices that a purpose of re-sale be one among a number of
purposes of the acquisition.
- That
question can distract from a more important aspect of the operation of the
section. The purpose with which the section is concerned
is the purpose of the
acquisition of the particular land to be acquired. Where a number of parcels of
land are to be acquired in
aid of some large scale redevelopment, it is
nevertheless the purpose of the acquisition of each such parcel of land that is
to be
considered in determining whether it is within or beyond power. The
constraint imposed by s 188(1) upon the general power conferred upon
Council by s 186 to acquire land for the purpose of exercising any of its
functions is a constraint which requires "the approval of the owner of the
land
if it is being acquired for the purpose of re-sale". The acquisition upon which
the constraint operates is that of a particular
parcel of land. The question
which it poses is whether that parcel of land is being acquired for the purpose
of re-sale.
- The
primary judge found
that[61]:
"In the present case the purpose of the proposed acquisition of the applicants'
land is not to use any part of their land for any
public purpose, but rather to
transfer the whole of it to Grocon, or to allow Grocon to develop it in order to
make a profit."
This finding, made in the context of the s 186(1) question, was sufficient to
support his Honour's conclusion that s 188(1) applied to the
acquisition.
- Given
that the compulsory acquisition of land for re-sale will almost always be
supported by reference to some larger public purpose,
it cannot be a necessary
condition of the application of s 188(1) that the purpose of re-sale be the
sole or even the dominant purpose of acquisition. It should suffice that it is
a substantial,
ie non-trivial purpose. These alternative constructions,
however, tend to become indistinguishable in their practical application
when
the inquiry is, as it should be, focussed on the purpose for which the
particular parcel of land is to be acquired from its
owner without that owner's
approval. That purpose will be assessed by what the council intends to do with
the land, ie whether it
intends to re-sell it or to do something else with it in
the exercise of its functions. It was in support of this proposition that
the
trial judge
quoted[62] the
following passage from Gleeson CJ's judgment in Woollahra Municipal Council v
Minister for the
Environment[63]:
"In the context of planning law, a statement of the purpose for which land is
being used is a description or characterisation of
what is being done with, or
upon, the land, not an account of the motives of the persons involved in that
activity. The question
in the present case is whether the use to which the land
is being put, which is to be identified by reference to the nature of the
activity being conducted upon it, is a use for a purpose authorised by the Act."
- The
Council submitted that, having regard to the context provided by the Development
Agreement, its purpose should not be characterised
solely by reference to what
would occur to a specific lot. The "integrated" nature of the development of
Civic Place was invoked.
In the circumstances it was said to be "inapt to
suggest that Council's 'purpose' would have differed had the ultimate design
resulted
in a library or Council's chambers being erected upon [the appellants']
lands".
- The
appellants in reply said that the Council's argument wrongly ignored the
fundamental focus of the statutory power of acquisition
upon individual pieces
of land with individual owners. It was the purpose of acquisition of each
owner's "lot" which had to be characterised
in order to know whether the power
could be exercised regardless of the owner's consent. In my opinion, for the
reasons already
given, the appellants' submission in this respect is
correct.
- The
Council's purpose in relation to the appellants' lots is the purpose of re-sale.
If it be necessary to say so, it is a substantial
purpose and indeed the
dominant purpose in relation to those particular parcels of land. It follows
that, subject to the possible
application of s 188(2)(a), the proposed
acquisition of the appellants' properties is caught by s 188(1) and lies
beyond
the power of the Council.
Whether the proposed acquisition of the appellants' properties was valid
under s 188(2)(a)
- The
Council sought to support the decision of the Court of Appeal on the basis that
the qualification in s 188(2)(a) upon the
constraint imposed by
s 188(1) was applicable to this case.
- As
outlined earlier in these reasons, the learned primary judge held that
s 188(2)(a) could not apply because it did not extend
to the acquisition by
the Council of "other land" already owned by the Council. In this case the
"other land" to be acquired by
the Council comprised the parts of Church and
Darcy Streets which were the subject of its applications for compulsory
acquisition
approval in November 2004 and December 2006 respectively. In any
event, the learned primary judge held that the acquisition of those
parts of the
streets included re-sale as a substantial
purpose[64].
- The
Court of Appeal, having found that his Honour was mistaken in his answers to the
earlier question about s 186(1), held that
the application of
s 186(2)(b) did not
arise[65].
- The
appellants submitted that the proposed acquisition by the Council of Darcy
Street and parts of Church Street would necessarily
be made pursuant to
s 7B of the Just Terms Act. That section provides:
"An authority of the State that is authorised by law to acquire land by
compulsory process in accordance with this Act may so acquire
the land even if
the land is vested in the authority
itself."
The term "authority of the State" is defined in s 4 of the Just Terms Act
to include "a council or a county council within the meaning of the Local
Government Act 1993".
- The
appellants argued that it is by virtue of s 7B of the Just Terms Act that
the Council is expressly authorised compulsorily to acquire land from itself.
This would mean that the power of compulsory
acquisition in respect of such land
is made under s 7B, and not under the LGA nor covered by
s 188(2)(a).
- It
is not contentious that the Council's interest in Church and Darcy Streets
derives from the Roads Act 1993. That Act provides, inter
alia[66]:
"All public roads within a local government area (other than freeways and Crown
roads) are vested in fee simple in the appropriate
roads
authority."
The dedication of land as a public
road[67]:
"does not authorise the owner of the road to dispose of any interest (other than
an easement or covenant) in the land ..."
The Act also provides that the council of a local government area is the roads
authority for all public roads within the area save
for exceptions which are
immaterial for present
purposes[68].
- While
the Just Terms Act deals with procedures for the compulsory acquisition of land
by authorities of the State and compensation on just terms for the owners
of
such land, s 7B goes beyond those procedures. It is a substantive source
of power not conferred upon the Council by the LGA, to acquire an unencumbered
interest in land vested in the Council itself, in this case the land known as
Church and Darcy Streets.
- Because
the qualification in s 188(2)(a) upon the constraint imposed by
s 188(1) is only engaged where the "other land"
acquired by the Council is
acquired "under this Part", that is under Pt 1 of Ch 8 of the LGA,
it does not apply where the other land is, as in this case, acquired under
s 7B of the Just Terms Act.
Conclusion
- For
the preceding reasons each of the appeals to this Court should be allowed with
costs. I agree with the proposal in the joint
judgment that the declarations
made by the learned primary judge should be restored. I agree with the orders
proposed in the joint
judgment.
- GUMMOW,
HAYNE, HEYDON AND KIEFEL JJ. In July 2006, the respondent, Parramatta
City Council ("the Council") made an agreement
("the development agreement")
with Grocon (Civic Place) Pty Ltd ("GCP") and Grocon Constructors Pty Limited
(together, "Grocon")
to effect the development of an area bounded by Smith,
Darcy, Church and Macquarie Streets, Parramatta, which will be called "Civic
Place". The appellant in each of these appeals owns land in that area. R &
R Fazzolari Pty Limited ("Fazzolari") owns three
pieces of land in Darcy Street
(known as 20-22, 24 and 26 Darcy Street); Mac's Pty Limited ("Mac's") owns the
land known as 160 Church
Street. In June 2007, the Council gave notice to the
appellants that it intends to acquire each appellant's land compulsorily.
- The
appellants allege that the compulsory acquisition of their land, proposed by the
Council, is not authorised by the provisions
of Pt 1 of Ch 8
(ss 186-190) of the Local Government Act 1993 (NSW) ("the LG Act").
They submit that their land is being "acquired for the purpose of re-sale"
within the meaning of s 188(1) and that the Council may therefore not
acquire the land under Pt 1 of Ch 8 by compulsory process, without the
approval of the owner. The Council denies that the land is being acquired for
the
purpose of re-sale and says that, in any event, s 188(2)(a) of the LG
Act is engaged. That sub-section provides that the owner's consent is not
required for acquisition if the land to be acquired "adjoins
or lies in the
vicinity of, other land acquired at the same time under [Pt 1 of Ch 8]
for a purpose other than the purpose
of re-sale". The "other land" identified
is Darcy Street and Church Street, which the Council intends to acquire
compulsorily at
the same time as it acquires each appellant's land.
- In
this Court, the appellants seek orders restoring declarations made in the Land
and Environment Court of New South
Wales[69] that
the compulsory acquisition of each appellant's land, proposed by the Council, is
unlawful. These reasons will show that the
appellants are entitled to that
relief. The Fazzolari land and the Mac's land is being acquired for the purpose
of re-sale. The
Council does intend to acquire, at the same time as the
appellants' land, the land now forming Darcy Street and Church Street, but
that
acquisition will not be made under Pt 1 of Ch 8 of the LG Act.
The facts
- The
area which it is intended will become Civic Place has an area of about 32,000
square metres of which the Council owned about
50 per cent. The area
adjoins the Parramatta Railway Station and Transport Interchange. It contains
the Council's administrative
offices, its council chambers, town hall, library
and community meeting rooms.
- In
2003, the Council adopted a Master Plan which applied to the proposed Civic
Place site. That Master Plan recorded that the redevelopment
of the site "will
reposition Parramatta as the capital of western Sydney and a centre of business,
tourism, entertainment, culture
and heritage".
- Development
of the site in the manner proposed would be too expensive for the Council to
undertake alone. In July 2006, the Council
made the development agreement with
Grocon. The development agreement established what the LG Act refers to as a
"public-private partnership". So far as now relevant, the LG Act
defines[70] a
public-private partnership as:
"an arrangement between a council and a private person for the purposes of:
(a) providing public infrastructure or facilities (being infrastructure or
facilities in respect of which the council has an interest,
liability or
responsibility under the arrangement)".
The term "arrangement" is
defined[71] in
the LG Act as including "a contract or understanding (whether or not involving
the formation of an entity)" and "entity" is
defined[72] as
meaning "any partnership, trust, corporation, joint venture, syndicate or other
body (whether or not incorporated)".
- As
the breadth of the definitions of "arrangement" and "entity" indicate, the
expression "public-private partnership", when used
in the LG Act, can apply to
many forms of contract or understanding between a council and a "private
person". Just as "[t]he term 'joint venture'
is not a technical one with a
settled common law
meaning"[73],
the expression "public-private partnership" cannot be understood as having any
technical meaning separate from the meaning the LG Act gives it. The content of
the rights and obligations created by or subsisting under an arrangement
constituting a public-private
partnership will depend upon the terms of the
particular arrangement.
- Section 400E
of the LG Act provides that a council must not enter into, or carry out any
project under, a public-private partnership except in accordance with
Pt 6
of Ch 12 of that Act. Part 6 of Ch 12 contains a number of
provisions for assessing a proposed project and makes
particular
provision[74]
for the project to be reviewed by the Project Review Committee if it is a
"significant project" or if, in the opinion of the Director-General
of Local
Government, it has a "high risk". The Project Review Committee is
comprised[75]
of senior State government officials or their nominees. The development
agreement between the Council and Grocon recorded that the
Project Review
Committee had approved the entry by the Council into the agreement pursuant to
s 400I of the LG Act.
- The
development agreement provided that the Council granted Grocon the right to
carry out the development of the "Site" and obliged
Grocon (at Grocon's cost) to
finance, design, construct and commission the "Works" in accordance with the
agreement. The "Site"
was defined in the agreement and included what was called
the "Trust Land". The "Trust Land" included what was referred to in an
attachment to the agreement as the "Darcy Street Properties (as acquired by
Compulsory Acquisition)". Those properties included
the Fazzolari land and the
Mac's land. The "Works" comprised not only buildings and facilities which the
Council would use or make
available for use by the public, but also residential,
commercial and retail buildings which Grocon would own and be able to dispose
of
as those companies saw fit.
- Clause 2.1
of the development agreement provided that until certain conditions precedent
were satisfied or waived, the rights
and obligations of the parties under the
agreement, apart from some that were specifically identified, would not become
binding.
One of the conditions precedent was the acquisition, in the name of
the Council, of the freehold of the "Darcy and Church Street
Properties". Those
properties included the Fazzolari land and the Mac's land but also included
Darcy Street and Church Street.
- The
use in the development agreement of the expression "Trust Land" reflects the way
in which the development agreement provided
for that land to be dealt with. The
development agreement provided that, upon acquisition by the Council of the
Darcy and Church
Street Properties, the Council and GCP were each bound to do
anything that either might reasonably require to ensure that the appellants'
land (and certain other land) "become part of the Trust Land". That was to be
done by the Council executing a Trust Declaration
(in a form annexed to the
development agreement) at the same time as GCP paid to the Council an amount
fixed according to a formula
set out in the agreement.
- The
agreed form of Trust Declaration provided for the Council to declare that it
holds the Trust Land on trust for GCP (in its capacity
as trustee for certain
other trusts). The Trust Declaration recorded that the Council, as Trustee,
agrees with GCP that it would
not sell, encumber or otherwise dispose of the
Trust Land, or any interest in it, and that it would exercise its powers,
including
the power to transfer or otherwise deal with the Trust Land, "in any
manner [GCP] ... from time to time requests in writing and not
otherwise". And
the Trust Declaration further recorded that in certain circumstances GCP might
remove the Council as Trustee, and
appoint a new trustee. For present purposes,
it is sufficient to observe that one such circumstance is the completion of the
Council
and Community Facilities referred to in the agreement as "Council
Works", and GCP procuring the creation, by plan of subdivision,
of a separate
stratum parcel registered under the Real Property Act 1900 (NSW) for the
Council Works.
The relevant provisions of the LG Act
- Disposition
of the present matter turns particularly upon the proper construction and
application of s 188(1) and (2)(a) of the LG Act. To put those provisions
in their proper context, however, and to follow the course of proceedings in the
courts below, it is necessary
to consider s 186. The text of the relevant
provisions is as follows:
"186 For what purposes may a council acquire land?
(1) A council may acquire land (including an interest in land) for the
purpose of exercising any of its functions.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), a council may acquire:
(a) land that is to be made available for any public purpose for which it is
reserved or zoned under an environmental planning
instrument, or
(b) land which forms part of, or adjoins or lies in the vicinity of, other
land proposed to be acquired under this Part.
(3) However, if the land acquired is, before its acquisition, community land
vested in a council, the acquisition does not discharge
the land from any
trusts, estates, interests, dedications, conditions, restrictions or covenants
that affected the land or any part
of the land immediately before that
acquisition.
...
- Restriction
on compulsory acquisition of land for
re-sale
(1) A council may not acquire land under this Part by compulsory process
without the approval of the owner of the land if it is being
acquired for the
purpose of re-sale.
(2) However, the owner's approval is not required if:
(a) the land forms part of, or adjoins or lies in the vicinity of, other land
acquired at the same time under this Part for a purpose
other than the purpose
of re-sale".
The proceedings below
- The
proposed acquisition notices which the Council gave the appellants on
1 June 2007 were given under s 11 of the Land Acquisition (Just
Terms Compensation) Act 1991 (NSW) ("the Acquisition Act"). Each notice
related to a separate parcel of land and stated that the Council required the
whole of the appellant's interest in
that land "for a public purpose, namely the
Civic Place Development". After the notices were given, each appellant
commenced a proceeding
in the Land and Environment Court seeking declarations
that the acquisitions proposed by the Council are unlawful, and seeking
interlocutory
and permanent injunctions restraining the Council from effecting
the acquisitions. Mac's brought its proceeding against not only
the Council but
also the Minister administering the LG Act. No relief was granted against the
Minister at first instance. The Minister filed a submitting appearance in this
Court. It is
not necessary to refer further to this aspect of the matter.
- Each
appellant alleged, in the Land and Environment Court, not only that the proposed
compulsory acquisition would be in breach of
s 188(1) of the LG Act
(because the land is being acquired for the purpose of re-sale) but also that
the proposed acquisition
is beyond the Council's powers because it is not for
the purpose of exercising any function of the Council but rather for the purpose
of benefiting Grocon, a third party. This second argument is not maintained in
this Court. The Council submitted that s 188(1)
does not apply, first,
because the acquisitions were not "for the purpose of re-sale", and secondly,
because s 188(2)(a) is
engaged.
- At
first instance, Biscoe J
held[76] that
each appellant was entitled to the declarations and injunctions it sought
against the Council. His Honour
concluded[77]
that the Council proposed to acquire the land for the purpose of re-sale. In
his Honour's
opinion[78]
"'the' purpose of the acquisition of the [appellants'] land is to transfer it to
Grocon for the consideration" of money and other
benefits which the development
agreement obliges Grocon to provide to the Council.
- On
the issue presented by s 188(2)(a) of the LG Act, Biscoe J
concluded[79]
that the appellants' land did not adjoin, or lie in the vicinity of, "other land
acquired at the same time ... for a purpose other
than the purpose of re-sale".
Two separate reasons were given for that conclusion. First, Biscoe J
held[80] that
the reference to "other land acquired at the same time" should be construed as a
reference to land not already owned by the
Council, and the Council is already
the owner of Darcy Street and Church Street. Secondly, Biscoe J
held[81] that
the purpose for which Darcy Street and Church Street are each to be acquired
"includes re-sale as a substantial purpose".
- The
Council appealed to the Court of Appeal in each matter. That Court (Hodgson and
Tobias JJA, Palmer J)
allowed[82] the
Council's appeals, set aside the declarations made and injunctions ordered by
Biscoe J, and in their place, ordered that
the proceedings in the Land and
Environment Court be dismissed.
- The
principal reasons of the Court of Appeal were those of Tobias JA. Each of
Hodgson JA and Palmer J agreed substantially
with the reasons of
Tobias JA but added short reasons dealing separately with one or more
aspects of the matter.
- In
the Court of Appeal a deal of argument was directed to whether the Council is
given power by s 186(1) of the LG Act to acquire the appellants' land.
That question turned upon whether the Council sought to acquire the land in
question "for the purpose
of exercising any of its functions". Reference was
made, in that connection, to the provisions of s 24 of the LG Act. That
section provides:
"A council may provide goods, services and facilities, and carry out activities,
appropriate to the current and future needs within
its local community and of
the wider public, subject to this Act, the regulations and any other
law."
The Council noted that the dictionary provided in the LG Act said that
"function includes a power, authority and duty" and argued that
its proposed acquisition of the land was for the purpose of exercising its
function
under s 24 to "carry out activities, appropriate to the current
and future needs within its local community and of the wider public". It would
seem, however, that little attention was directed in argument in the Court of
Appeal to the effect of the limiting words at the end
of s 24: "subject to
this Act, the regulations and any other law".
- Because
the appellants accepted, in this Court, that the acquisitions which the Council
proposed were for the purpose of exercising
its function of carrying into effect
the public-private partnership with Grocon, it is not necessary to examine any
question about
the proper construction of s 24 or whether s 24 is
engaged in any relevant way. It is important, however, to notice that
the
reasoning adopted in the Court of Appeal on the issues tendered in this Court
must be understood against a background provided
by the need to identify the
relevant function of the Council and the Council's reliance upon arguments which
identified that function
at the level of generality and abstraction in which
s 24 of the LG Act is expressed.
- Identifying,
for the purposes of s 186(1), the relevant function of the Council
as being to "provide ... services and facilities ... appropriate to the current
and future needs within its local community
and of the wider public" appears to
have been an important step towards the conclusions reached by Tobias JA
about the application
of s 188(1) and, in particular, the purpose of the
acquisitions. First, Tobias JA
concluded[83]
that "the Council's sole or dominant purpose" in making the development
agreement with Grocon was to implement the Civic Place project.
And upon that
footing Tobias JA reached the further
conclusion[84]
that the "financial structure" adopted by the Council and recorded in the
development agreement was not "'the purpose' for which
the [appellants'] land
was acquired". Rather, Tobias JA
concluded[85]
that the Council's purpose in acquiring the appellants' land (and the other
Darcy Street properties) "was at all times and remained
the implementation of
the Civic Place project as contemplated by the Master Plan".
- It
will be observed that the reasoning proceeds from a conclusion about the
Council's functions (a question relevant to the Council's
power under
s 186(1) to acquire the land) to a conclusion about the Council's purpose
in making the development agreement. This latter purpose is then
treated as
being the purpose of the acquisition of the land. But as will later be
explained, to ask what function the Council is
exercising when it seeks to
acquire land does not answer, at least in these cases, the different question
posed by s 188(1), which is whether the acquisition of the land is for the
purpose of re-sale.
- In
his separate reasons, Hodgson JA
concluded[86]
that to engage s 188(1) the purpose of re-sale "must be the dominant
purpose, or at least a substantial element of the dominant purpose or a
substantial
purpose which is independent of the dominant purpose that satisfies
s 186(1)". In these cases, Hodgson JA
[87]that
"re-sale is neither the dominant purpose nor a substantial element of it, nor is
it a substantial purpose independent of ...
the dominant purpose of putting into
effect the substance of the Master Plan". Palmer J
agreed[88] with
the reasons of Tobias JA and the additional reasons given by
Hodgson JA about the question of purpose.
- Because
the Court of Appeal held that the primary judge had erred in concluding that the
land was being acquired by the Council for
the purpose of re-sale, it was not
necessary for that Court to reach any conclusion about the issue posed by
s 188(2)(a): whether the appellants' land adjoins or lies in the vicinity
of other land acquired at the same time under Pt 1 of Ch 8 for a
purpose other than the purpose of re-sale.
Acquired for the purpose of re-sale?
- The
expression "acquired for the purpose of re-sale", when used in s 188(1),
identifies a class of acquisitions of land that a council may not effect by
compulsory process without the approval of the owner
of the land. It identifies
that class by focusing attention upon whether the purpose of the acquisition was
a specific purpose –
"re-sale" – rather than whether the purpose can
be described as being an exercise of the Council's functions, the question
posed
by s 186(1). As noted earlier, it was accepted that the acquisitions of
the appellants' land was for the purpose of exercising the Council's
function of
carrying the public-private partnership into effect. To ask which function or
functions of the Council would be being
exercised if the Council acquired either
the Fazzolari land or the Mac's land does not assist in deciding whether, under
s 188(1), the acquisition was for the purpose of re-sale.
- It
is not necessary in these cases to decide whether "the purpose" spoken of in
s 188(1) is to be defined more precisely: whether as the sole
purpose, or the dominant purpose, or in some other way. That is not
necessary because the proposed acquisition of both the Fazzolari land and the
Mac's land
is for only one purpose: the purpose of re-sale of the appellants'
land to Grocon.
- The
purpose of the acquisition can be expressed at different levels of generality
and abstraction. So, for example, it can be described
as being for the purpose
of the Civic Place development, or for the purpose of fulfilling the development
agreement, or for the purpose
of the Council performing its obligations under
that agreement. Perhaps there are other expressions of the purpose that could
be
adopted. But whatever level of generality or abstraction is chosen when
identifying the purpose of the acquisition, closer examination
of that purpose
will always reveal that, upon the land being acquired, the Council is to declare
itself trustee of the land in return
for Grocon's provision of money and money's
worth. For that is the means that is stipulated in the development agreement as
the
means of achieving whatever more general or abstract statement of purpose is
adopted.
- No
doubt the acquisitions of the Fazzolari land and the Mac's land are only two
steps in a much larger arrangement recorded in the
development agreement. And
the development agreement can be described as being directed to the end of
implementing the Master Plan
for the development of Civic Place. It is
therefore possible to describe each of the steps for which the development
agreement provides
as a step towards implementing the Master Plan or effecting
the development of Civic Place. But when the Council gave proposed acquisition
notices to Fazzolari and to Mac's, the Council had made the development
agreement with Grocon. The development of Civic Place for
which the appellants'
land was to be acquired is for the development as the Council and Grocon
stipulated in the development agreement. Stating the purpose of the
acquisition as being to implement the Master Plan or to develop Civic Place, or
at some other similar
level of generality, must not be permitted to obscure the
fact that when the acquisitions were proposed a precise form of development
had
been agreed. Very particular terms governing both acquisition and disposition
of the appellants' land had been stipulated in
the development agreement.
- The
steps which the development agreement requires to be taken, of the Council
declaring itself trustee of the Trust Land (including
the Fazzolari land and the
Mac's land) on the terms stipulated, in return for Grocon providing the agreed
consideration, are properly
described as a "re-sale" of the land. Of course the
word "re-sale" suggests the need to identify a prior sale to the Council. But
it is important to recognise that "re-sale" is used in the context of
acquisition by compulsory process. The compulsory acquisition
of the land by
the Council is an acquisition for which the Council must pay monetary
compensation. The disposition of the land by
the Council to Grocon is a
disposition in return for the money and money's worth which the development
agreement obliges Grocon to
provide. That disposition is properly called a
"re-sale".
- It
may be observed that the provisions of the development agreement which stipulate
the parties' obligations are more elaborate than
a simple agreement to buy an
identified piece of land for a stated price. But neither the elaboration of the
agreement, nor the
attachment to it of the descriptive title of "financial
structure", denies that the development agreement provides for the Council
to
first acquire the Fazzolari land and the Mac's land by compulsory process, and
then to dispose of the land to Grocon in return
for money and money's worth.
Neither the elaboration of the terms nor the identification of the arrangement
as providing a financial
structure detracts from the conclusion that the
disposition to Grocon is a "re-sale" of the land.
- For
these reasons it follows that Biscoe J was right to hold that the purpose
of the acquisitions, in these cases, was to transfer
the land to Grocon for the
stipulated consideration. That is, the land was to be acquired for the purpose
of re-sale.
- It
then is necessary to consider the question presented by s 188(2)(a). Do
the Fazzolari land and the Mac's land adjoin or lie in the vicinity of other
land the Council acquires at the same time under
Pt 1 of Ch 8 for a
purpose other than the purpose of re-sale? As noted earlier, the "other land"
in these cases is the land forming
Darcy Street and Church Street.
Acquiring Darcy Street and Church Street
- Both
Darcy Street and Church Street are public roads. The Roads Act 1993
(NSW) ("the Roads Act")
provides[89]
that, subject to some exceptions which are not engaged in these matters, all
public roads within a local government area "are vested
in fee simple in the
appropriate roads authority". The Council
is[90] the
"appropriate roads authority". Section 146 of the Roads Act provides for
what the heading to the section describes as the "Nature of ownership of public
roads". For present purposes, it is
important to notice only s 146(1)(e),
and its provision that dedication of land as a public road "does not authorise
the owner of the road to dispose of any interest (other than an easement
or covenant) in the land" (emphasis added).
- Although
the Roads Act vests Darcy Street and Church Street in the Council in fee simple,
the development agreement between Grocon and the Council obliges
the Council to
acquire Darcy Street and Church Street by compulsory process. That step, of the
Council acquiring by compulsory process
land which is already vested in it, is
permitted by s 7B of the Acquisition Act which provides that:
"An authority of the State that is authorised by law to acquire land by
compulsory process in accordance with this Act may so acquire
the land even if
the land is vested in the authority itself."
- A
consequence of the Council acquiring the two streets by compulsory process would
be that each street would cease to be a public
road[91]. Upon
each street ceasing to be a public road the Council would be freed from the
limitation on its powers now provided by s 146(1)(e) of the Roads Act
– that its ownership of the two streets does not authorise the Council to
dispose of any interest in the land other than an
easement or covenant.
- Most
of the land which forms Darcy Street, and a stratum of land beneath Church
Street (the precise identification of which is to
be agreed by the Council and
GCP), is to be dealt with under the development agreement as Trust Land. Some
of the area of what is
now Darcy Street will be incorporated within commercial
and residential buildings to be built by Grocon. Some will be returned to
the
Council for use as a public road and as public space. As
Biscoe J[92]
found:
"[t]he surface and subsurface of this land will in part form part of publicly
available arcades and a retail concourse linking the
Civic Place development
with the Parramatta Transport Interchange. A deeper subsurface stratum will be
part of the publicly available
subsurface
parking".
- Most
of the area of what is now Church Street is to be refurbished by Grocon and
returned to the Council as open space. The stratum
to be transferred to Grocon
is for the construction of a public car park and one level of retail
development.
- Is
the land comprising the two streets to be "acquired at the same time under this
Part" as the Fazzolari land and the Mac's land
"for a purpose other than the
purpose of re-sale"?
- The
appellants submitted that there were two separate reasons to conclude that the
land comprising the two streets did not meet the
description given in
s 188(2)(a). First, they submitted that the land comprising the streets
was not "acquired ... under this Part". Secondly, they submitted that
the land
comprising the streets was not acquired for a purpose other than the purpose of
re-sale.
- The
first point made by the appellants in this connection (that the land was not
"acquired ... under this Part") is a point not previously
taken in the
litigation. The point is one of law. It is not a point which, if taken
earlier, might have altered what evidence was
adduced, or otherwise affected the
course of the
litigation[93].
The appellants should not now be precluded from taking the point.
- The
land comprising the streets is not to be acquired under Pt 1 of Ch 8
of the LG Act. Section 187(1) of the LG Act provides: "Land that a
council is authorised to acquire under this Part may be acquired by agreement or
by compulsory process in
accordance with the [Acquisition Act]." The Council
proposes to acquire the two streets in question by compulsory process in
accordance
with the Acquisition Act. The power to do that derives only from
s 7B of the Acquisition Act. The Council submitted that s 7B of the
Acquisition Act "points beyond itself as the source of the power of compulsory
acquisition by a council of its own land, and thus ss 186 and
187(1) of the
[LG Act] are the source of the power". The answer to the submission is that
while s 186 describes the purposes
for which a council may acquire land,
s 187(1) describes the methods by which it is to be acquired. The sole
method of acquiring
by compulsory process is that given by s 7B.
- It
may be accepted that, as the Council pointed out, s 186(3) of the LG Act
contemplates the acquisition, by a council, of "community land vested in a
council". Section 186(3) provides that such an acquisition "does not
discharge the land from any trusts, estates, interests, dedications, conditions,
restrictions
or covenants that affected the land or any part of the land
immediately before that acquisition".
- A
public road vested in a council, however, is not what the LG Act identifies in
its Dictionary as "public land", and a public road is therefore not "community
land"[94].
Section 186(3) of the LG Act thus has no application to either of Darcy
Street or Church Street. Even accepting for the purposes of argument that
s 186 of the LG Act authorises a council to acquire, from itself, what the
LG Act identifies as community land, it does not follow that the Council's
acquisition by compulsory process of public roads that are vested
in it are
acquisitions under Pt 1 of Ch 8 of the LG Act. Rather, each is an
acquisition made under s 7B of the Acquisition Act, not an acquisition of
the land comprising the relevant street under Pt 1 of Ch 8 of the LG
Act.
- It
is not necessary, in these circumstances, to decide whether the second argument
advanced by the appellants about the application
of s 188(2)(a) is right.
It may be observed, however, that the appellants' argument that s 188(2)(a)
is not engaged in relation to the acquisition of their land proceeded on the
footing that the provision requires the identification
of a single purpose as
the relevant purpose of acquiring the "other land" which is part of, or adjoins
or lies in the vicinity of,
the subject land and is acquired at the same time as
the subject land. That is, the argument assumed that s 188(2)(a) requires
choosing between the acquisition of that other land being for the purpose of
re-sale or "a purpose other than the purpose
of re-sale".
- By
contrast, the Council's arguments about the engagement of s 188(2)(a)
assumed that an acquisition of the other land could be undertaken for more than
one purpose and that s 188(2)(a) was engaged if one of the several purposes
of that acquisition was a purpose other than the purpose of re-sale. Thus, the
Council
submitted that it was important to recognise that not all of the land
which now comprises Church Street is to be acquired by Grocon;
only a stratum
beneath the surface is Trust Land which passes to or at the direction of Grocon.
And the Council pointed out that
part of Darcy Street (at Station Square) will
ultimately remain in Council ownership. It followed, so the Council submitted,
that
a purpose of the acquisition of the two streets was a purpose other
than transferring to Grocon those parts of the land which are to
be dealt with
in that way.
- Particular
attention was directed to how s 188(2)(a) would apply in the case where the
land that is to be acquired "forms part of ... other land acquired at the same
time ... for a purpose
other than the purpose of re-sale". This, in turn, was
seen as directing attention to whether the word "land" was used, in the
reference
to "other land" in s 188(2)(a), as identifying a part of the
terrestrial globe, or was used as referring not to a physical area but to a form
of real property interest.
But no matter which of those readings is to be
preferred over the other, the more fundamental question of construction that is
presently
relevant is whether s 188(2)(a) requires identification of the
purpose of acquisition of the other land, and classification of that purpose
as either re-sale, or a purpose other than the purpose
of re-sale. Deciding
whether "land" is to be understood as a physical area or as a real property
interest does not assist in resolving
that more fundamental question.
- Section 188(2)(a)
stands as an exception to the requirement of s 188(1) that the approval of
the owner of "the land" is required "if it [the land] is being acquired for the
purpose of re-sale". As noted
earlier, it is not necessary to decide in these
cases whether "the purpose of re-sale" that is mentioned in s 188(1) is to
be understood as the "sole", the "dominant", or the "substantial" purpose in
question. That is not necessary in these cases
because the purpose of
the acquisition of the appellants' land was to put the Council in a position to
fulfil its obligations to Grocon by reselling
the appellants' land to Grocon.
But where, as is the case with both Darcy Street and Church Street, only part of
the land is to
be resold and part is to be retained by the Council, the better
view may well be that the land comprising those streets is acquired
for more
than one purpose. The more natural meaning of s 188(2)(a) applied to such
a case would appear to be that those streets, if they were "other land" acquired
at the same time as the appellants'
land, were each acquired for a purpose other
than the purpose of re-sale.
- It
is, however, not necessary to resolve these questions. It is sufficient to
decide in these cases that neither Darcy Street nor
Church Street is land that
would be acquired at the same time as the appellants' land under Pt 1 of
Ch 8 of the LG Act.
Conclusion and orders
- Each
appeal to this Court should be allowed with costs.
- Because
the proposed acquisition notices given by the Council to Fazzolari and Mac's are
no longer current, it is neither necessary
nor appropriate to reinstate the
injunctive orders made at first instance. It is appropriate however to restore
the declarations
that were made by Biscoe J. As the Council pointed out,
the argument that neither Darcy Street nor Church Street is land that
would be
acquired at the same time as the appellants' land under Pt 1 of Ch 8
of the LG Act was not put in the courts below. Nonetheless, costs should follow
the event not only in this Court but also in the courts below.
It follows that
in addition to the orders dealing with the appeals to this Court there should in
each matter be the further consequential
orders: Set aside the orders of the
Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales made on 11 June
2008 and in their
place order that paragraph 2 of the orders of the Land
and Environment Court of New South Wales made on 28 September 2007
is set
aside but the appeal to the Court of Appeal is otherwise dismissed with
costs.
[1] LGA, s 219.
[2] LGA, s 220(1).
[3] LGA, s 186(1).
[4] LGA, Dictionary.
[5] Mac's Pty Ltd v Minister
Administering Local Government Act 1993 [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362.
[6] Parramatta City Councill v R
& R Fazzolari Pty Ltd; Parramatta City Council v Mac's Pty Ltd (2008)
162 LGERA 1.
[7] EPAA, s 51.
[8] LGA, ss 400B and 400I. Councils
entering such partnerships must comply with the requirements of Pt 6 of Ch 12 of
the LGA.
[9] LGA, ss 400I and 400E – the
entitlement is subject to Div 2 of Pt 6 of Ch 12 of the LGA.
[10] The Development Agreement
refers to Darcy and Church Streets. The Council, however, applied for approval
to acquire Darcy Street
and parts of Church Street.
[11] Just Terms Act, s 7.
[12] Just Terms Act, s 7B.
[13] Development Agreement
cl 5.3(b).
[14] See Attachment 4 to Exhibit F
of the Development Agreement identifying the trust land which included the
appellants' properties.
[15] Development Agreement Exhibit
Z.
[16] Trust Deed cl 6.1(b).
[17] Trust Deed cl 3.2.
[18] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 443
[227], 449 [245].
[19] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 449
[247], 457 [277].
[20] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 457
[278], 460 [292].
[21] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[293], 461 [298].
[22] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[290].
[23] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[291].
[24] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[294].
[25] (2008) 162 LGERA 1.
[26] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 38
[143].
[27] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 43
[176].
[28] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 43
[177].
[29] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 43-44
[178].
[30] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 46
[196].
[31] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 46
[197].
[32] In the sense used in
Thompson v Randwick Corporation (1950) 81 CLR 87; [1950] HCA 33.
[33] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 45
[186].
[34] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 45
[188].
[35] CC Auto Port Pty Ltd v
Minister for Works [1965] HCA 55; (1965) 113 CLR 365 at 381; [1965] HCA 55.
[36] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 45
[188].
[37] [1985] HCA 15; (1985) 155 CLR 533 at 537;
[1985] HCA 15.
[38] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 46
[195].
[39] Estates Development Co Pty
Ltd v State of Western Australia [1952] HCA 42; (1952) 87 CLR 126 at 142; [1952] HCA
42.
[40] [1950] HCA 33; (1950) 81 CLR 87.
[41] (1951) 83 CLR 424; [1951] HCA
29.
[42] [1951] HCA 29; (1951) 83 CLR 424 at
449-450.
[43] This amendment was effected by
the insertion of s 532(3).
[44] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 November 1951 at 4591.
[45] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 November 1951 at
4593.
[46] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 November 1992
at 10387.
[47] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 27 November 1992 at
10411.
[48] Blackstone, Commentaries on
the Laws of England, (1765), bk 1, c 1 at 135.
[49] Blackstone, Commentaries on
the Laws of England, (1765), bk 1, c 1 at 135.
[50] Rugby Joint Water Board v
Shaw-Fox [1973] AC 202 at 214 per Lord Pearson, cited with approval in
Walker Corporation Pty Ltd v Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority [2008] HCA 5; (2008)
233 CLR 259 at 270 [29]; [2008] HCA 5.
[51] (1904) 1 CLR 363; [1904] HCA
12.
[52] [1904] HCA 12; (1904) 1 CLR 363 at 373, Barton
and O'Connor JJ concurring at 378.
[53] Greville v Williams
(1906) 4 CLR 694; [1906] HCA 97; Wade v New South Wales Rutile Mining Co
Pty Ltd (1969) 121 CLR 177; [1969] HCA 28; Clunies-Ross v The
Commonwealth (1984) 155 CLR 193; [1984] HCA 65 and see generally Pearce and
Geddes, Statutory Interpretation in Australia, 6th ed (2006) at 179-180
[5.18].
[54] Nintendo Co Ltd v Centronics
Systems Pty Ltd [1994] HCA 27; (1994) 181 CLR 134 at 146; [1994] HCA 27.
[55] K-Generation Pty Limited v
Liquor Licensing Court [2009] HCA 4; (2009) 83 ALJR 327 at 338 [47]; [2009] HCA 4; 252 ALR 471 at 481;
[2009] HCA 4.
[56] Universal Declaration of Human
Rights 1948, Art 17; American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man 1948,
Art 23; European
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms 1950, Protocol 1, Art 1; American Convention on Human Rights
1969, Art
21; African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights 1981, Art 14.
[57] See also Arts 15 and 16 of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women 1979.
And generally: Jayawickrama,
The Judicial Application of Human Rights
Law, (2002) at 908-920; and Martin et al, International Human Rights and
Humanitarian Law: Treaties, Cases and Analysis, (2006) at 911-936; Sieghart,
The International Law of Human Rights (1983) at 252-258.
[58] Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary, 3rd ed (1973), vol 2 at 1876-1877.
[59] [1985] HCA 15; (1985) 155 CLR 533.
[60] [1985] HCA 15; (1985) 155 CLR 533 at 537.
[61] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 448
[241].
[62] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 444
[234].
[63] (1991) 23 NSWLR 710 at
714-715.
[64] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460-461
[295]- [298].
[65] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 43-44
[178].
[66] Roads Act 1993, s
145(3).
[67] Roads Act 1993, s
146(1)(e).
[68] Roads Act 1993, s
7(4).
[69] Mac's Pty Ltd v Minister
Administering Local Government Act 1993 [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362.
[70] s 400B(1). References to
the applicable provisions are to the form they took at the relevant time.
[71] s 400B(2).
[72] s 400B(2).
[73] United Dominions Corporation
Ltd v Brian Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 49; (1985) 157 CLR 1 at 10 per Mason, Brennan and
Deane JJ; [1985] HCA 49.
[74] s 400F(3).
[75] s 400J.
[76] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362.
[77] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 457-458
[281].
[78] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 457-458
[281].
[79] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460-461
[293]- [298].
[80] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[295].
[81] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 460
[296].
[82] Parramatta City Council v R
& R Fazzolari Pty Ltd (2008) 162 LGERA 1.
[83] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 38-39
[147].
[84] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 39
[148].
[85] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 43
[176].
[86] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 6
[6].
[87] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 6
[6].
[88] (2008) 162 LGERA 1 at 47
[202].
[89] s 145(3).
[90] Roads Act 1993 (NSW)
("the Roads Act"), s 7(4).
[91] Roads Act, s 41.
[92] [2007] NSWLEC 623; (2007) 155 LGERA 362 at 369
[12].
[93] Suttor v Gundowda Pty Ltd
(1950) 81 CLR 418; [1950] HCA 35; Coulton v Holcombe (1986) 162 CLR
1; [1986] HCA 33.
[94] Local Government Act
1993 (NSW), s 26.
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