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QLD: QCAT considers short term letting by-laws

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This article about body corporate insurance has been supplied by Frank Higginson, Hynes Legal.

Governments create laws. Courts and tribunals interpret those laws when they make decisions on disputes. We all then rely on those interpretations as gospel in terms of what the legislation actually means.

Industry always holds its breath when what has been a long-standing practice or assumption is appealed. Higher authorities can overturn the decisions of lower ones. Take the deck dispute that went all the way to the High Court, with opposing decisions along the way.

The other recent example was the decision on the timing for commencement of proceedings for recovery of body corporate debts. A lower court interpreted a time frame that no one had operated by, but that was overturned on appeal.

The whole argument about short-term letting in Queensland strata law hinges on section 180(3) of the BCCM Act. Adjudicators have been very consistent in their interpretation of that so far as it relates to whether short-term letting is a residential use. We wrote about that previously here: Can a Queensland body corporate stop Airbnb?

The Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT), which is where adjudicators’ rulings get appealed, has now conclusively determined whether the interpretation adopted by adjudicators has been right.

The legal position has not changed from when we first wrote about this issue, but there is some more meat on the legal bones as to why that remains so.

The QCAT matter was an appeal by a body corporate about a decision made by an adjudicator in Hilton Park. That decision was consistent with previous rulings that said a body corporate could do nothing to restrict short-term letting under its by-laws.

The body corporate’s arguments were relatively novel, which makes the decision all the more interesting.

The key sections of the BCCM Act that were considered were 180(3) and 180(4). These are:

The body corporate argued that the use letting of a lot (be that for short or long term) was a commercial purpose, not a residential one. If that was the case, the body corporate was not prevented from being able to regulate the use of the lot in terms of having a minimum length of tenancy (which was proposed as six months, which therefore killed off any short-term letting).

For us there are some key takeaways:-

You can read the decision here: Body Corporate for Hilton Park CTS 27490 v Colin Robertson [2018] QCATA.

Frank Higginson Hynes Legal E: frank.higginson@hyneslegal.com.au P: 07 3193 0500

This post appears in Strata News #220.

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This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the Hynes Legal website.

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