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Transport Construction Authority v Parramatta City Council.

País/Territorio
Australia
Tipo de la corte
Otros
Fecha
Nov 18, 2010
Fuente
UNEP, InforMEA
Nombre del tribunal
Supreme Court of New South Wales
Juez
Gzell.
Número de referencia
[2010] NSWSC 1168
Idioma
Inglés
Materia
Cuestiones jurídicas, Tierra y suelos
Palabra clave
Manejo de tierras Responsabilidad/indemnización
Resumen
In 2004 Parramatta City Council (“the council”) sought compensation for land compulsorily acquired by the Transport Construction Authority (“TCA”) in the Land and Environment Court. In 2006 these proceedings and others were settled by a deed of release and discontinued. In 2010 Parramatta City Council made a second claim for compensation outside the 90 day period prescribed for objection to the amount of compensation offered. A notice of motion seeking leave to file outside of the 90 days was pending in the Land and Environment Court. This gave rise to a dispute as to whether the sections of road acquired were the subject of the first proceedings. TCA opposed the motion on the basis that the council’s claim was answered by the deed. The council disputed this on the basis that the intention of the parties in forming the deed was that it applied to land adjacent to the road and did not include the road. TCA sought a declaration in the Supreme Court that the deed between the parties settling the earlier proceedings in the Land and Environment Court was a bar to current proceedings between the parties in the Land and Environment Court. The council filed a notice of motion seeking that the proceedings be transferred to the Land and Environment Court. Transferring the matter to the Land and Environment Court, the Judge held: (1) the proceedings in both the Supreme Court and the Land and Environment Court were related because the matters which they dealt with were so closely associated as to form part of the same controversy; (2) the Land and Environment Court was the most appropriate forum having exclusive jurisdiction to determine compensation for compulsory acquisition of land, the deed being executed in respect to proceedings in the Land and Environment Court and the relief sought in the Supreme Court was with respect to the current proceedings in the Land and Environment Court; and (3) there was no impediment to the Land and Environment Court deciding the issue raised in the proceedings in the Supreme Court of whether the deed was a bar to the current proceedings in the Land and Environment Court.
Texto completo
COU-156806.pdf