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Posted 30 March 2023
Category: Strata, By-Laws
The case of The Owners Strata Plan No. 2245 v Veney [2020] NSWSC 134 serves as an important guide for the interpretation of by-laws and exploring parking behaviour considered to be a nuisance in a strata scheme.
Background
Strata Scheme No. 2245 contains a total of 100 lots. The scheme is essentially comprised of 50 residential apartment lots and 50 car space lots, whereby each owner owned an apartment and car space lot.
The issue in dispute stemmed from use of the Lot 51 car space. When a car was positioned inside the Lot 51 car space, other owners were physically restricted from accessing their own car space due to both the design of the parking lot and the natural common property rockery adjacent to the Lot 51 car space.
In 1998, a special by-law was passed which granted exclusive use of a set area of the common property to the owner of Lot 51 to use as an alternate car space, thus resolving the accessibility issue. Importantly, whilst the by-law granted exclusive use of common property, it did not explicitly restrict access to Lot 51.
The owners corporation argued that the intention of the by-law was that access to Lot 51 would be restricted, and that intention should be relevant in interpreting a by-law.
Issue
The owners corporation argued that the context behind the by-law suggests an intentional restriction on the use of the Lot 51 car space. They asserted that historical context, physical characteristics of the land at the time of approval and the contents of a supplementary letter which detailed the proposed arrangement should all be taken into account in the interpretation process. As per their argument, use of the Lot 51 car space by the defendant created an actionable nuisance under section 153 of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015.
Interpretation
It was found that the:
This finding highlighted the importance of the actual words used and the drafting of by-laws.
Nuisance
As to the nuisance argument under section 153, it was interpreted as having the common law meaning given its lack of definition in the Act. As such, any liability for nuisance must consider “a balance… between the right of the occupier to do what he likes with his own land, and the right of his neighbour not to be interfered with.”
The Court affirmed the relatively high bar to private nuisance at common law, and that the ‘mere inconvenience’ faced by the affected owners was insufficient to establish a private nuisance.
Implications
All owners should be aware that by-laws must be explicit in their intent within the text of the by-law if they are to stand the test of time.
***The information contained in this article is general information only and not legal advice. The currency, accuracy and completeness of this article (and its contents) should be checked by obtaining independent legal advice before you take any action or otherwise rely upon its contents in any way.