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Cincotta v Huang and ors [2011] NSWLEC 1086 (8 April 2011)
New South Wales Land and Environment Court
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Cincotta v Huang and ors [2011] NSWLEC 1086 (8 April 2011)
Last Updated: 2 June 2011
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Land and Environment Court
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Case Title:
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Before:
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Decision:
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1.The application to remove the tree is dismissed;
2.The application for compensation of an amount of $162 for repairs to a
fence is dismissed; 3.The second and third respondents are to engage and pay
for an AQF level 3 arborist with appropriate insurance to remove the three
branches indicated by red bars on the photograph included in these orders as
Annexure A; 4.These branches are to be removed to the point at which they
arise from the relevant stem in accordance with AS4373:2007. 5.The work is
to be carried out in accordance with the WorkCover NSW Code of Practice for
the Amenity Tree Industry ; 6.The work is to be completed by 14 July
2011; 7.The first respondent is to reimburse the second and third
respondents the cost of the branch removal within 28 days of the service
on him
of a receipted tax invoice for the completed works; 8.The applicant is to
engage a licensed roofer or builder to undertake the repairs to the roof and
flashing of his garage; 9.The first respondent is to reimburse the applicant
a maximum of $748 for the roof repairs within 28 days of service on him of a
receipted tax invoice for the completed works; and 10.The roof repairs are
to be completed and a receipted invoice for the completed works is to be served
on the first respondent by
15 November 2011 otherwise order (9) lapses.
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Catchwords:
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Trees (neighbours); damage to property; failure of
service of one proposed respondent; tree property sale settling after service of
tree dispute claim; conduct of first respondent in failing to disclose claim;
leave to cross-claim granted to new owners (second
and third respondents);
reimbursement ordered to applicant for repairs to be carried out; pruning of
dead wood ordered to be undertaken
by second and third respondents; costs of
reimbursement of applicant and pruning costs of second and third respondents to
be paid
by first respondent.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Parties:
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N Cincotta (Applicant) G Huang (First respondent
and cross-respondent) S Huang (Second respondent and first
cross-claimant) Y Lui (Third respondent and second cross-claimant)
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Representation
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Applicant in person First respondent in
person Mr Dai, solicitor (Second and Third respondents)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
This decision was given as an extemporaneous decision. It has been
revised and edited prior to publication.
- This
dispute concerns a claim made under the Trees (Disputes Between Neighbours)
Act 2006 (the Trees Act). It is one that is, for disputes of this nature, of
a little procedural complexity involving matters dealing with
the failure of
service of the originating process on one proposed respondent and with a
cross-claim between respondents.
- The
difficulties with respect to service arise out of the fact that the applicant
filed his tree dispute application on 22 November
and endeavoured to serve the
persons named in that application as the first and second respondents, by
serving the documents on the
first respondent at the front door of his home. The
first respondent took those documents and, we are satisfied - accepting the
evidence
of Mr Cincotta on this point as we do, that:
the documents that were served comprised not merely the tree
dispute application, but also the supplementary material contained in
the
details of claim form;
this constituted valid personal service on the first respondent (if that were
not sufficient in the proceedings, the first respondent
has filed a notice of
appearance which he did on 6 April - we are therefore satisfied that he has been
validly served and is therefore
an appropriate and proper person against whom
orders may be considered to be made); but
With respect to the person originally named as the second respondent, who is
the wife of the first respondent, we are not satisfied
that there has been any
personal service on her of any of these documents.
- Although
a yellow post-it note was attached to the originals of the documents that the
applicant served on the first respondent and
contains the notation, we're not
interested in reading your doc you need to talk to new owner , that does not
constitute, as we are satisfied it is in the handwriting of the first
respondent, any acknowledgement by the putative
second respondent that she has
been validly served. As a consequence, we are satisfied that the first
respondent's wife has not been
validly served and is not a respondent to the
proceedings.
- Second,
during the course of the hearing, an application was made by Mr Dai, solicitor
on behalf of the second and third respondents
(who have been served as they are
now the owners of the property upon which the tree is located), to make a
cross-claim against the
first respondent should any orders be made that involve
the payment of monies or the incurring of expenses by the second and third
respondents, in satisfaction of any orders that might be made on the application
in the substantive proceedings.
- We
granted leave during the course of the proceedings for that cross-claim to be
made verbally as part of the proceedings. We also
granted leave to the applicant
to amend his claim for compensation to reflect a quotation dated 3 March 2011
(which claim he had
foreshadowed in his original application), this comprising a
quotation for the cost of works to his garage that are stated in that
quotation,
to be for repairs to damaged roof and flashing caused by falling tree branch
and removal of debris . We are satisfied that, as that quotation has
not been contested by any of the respondents, that that quotation stands.
- We
also note, in passing, that, during the course of the proceedings this
afternoon, we rejected a document that purported to be a
report by an arborist
that had been filed by the applicant, because it was made after the date of the
making of directions requiring
the appropriate expert acknowledgement to be
incorporated in the document as required by the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules
2005 and the Expert Witness Code of Conduct and that that document
had not been so prepared. That document was therefore excluded.
- We
turn first to deal with the issue of the tree. We are put in the position where
we have evidence, physically present, of a fallen
branch that we are satisfied
has come from the tree. It is presently resting in the south-eastern corner of
the tree property, behind
a small garden shed. It is unquestionably a branch
that has come from the tree that is the subject of the proceedings - the tree
being a Eucalyptus nicholii located approximately in the centre of the
rear of the back garden of the property upon which it is situated. The branch,
it is clear
to us from examining its stub end, has not been cut from the tree,
but has fallen from the tree as its departure from the tree trunk
is best
described as a rip, rather than as a neat severing.
- It
is Mr Cincotta's evidence that this branch is the branch that fell on the roof
of his garage in early September 2010, and that
that caused him to write a
letter to the first respondent that set out his concern about the tree and
requested - putting the first
respondent on notice - that Mr Cincotta would
claim for the cost of repairs, those repairs being the ones to which we have
earlier
adverted as the amended claim of 3 March 2011.
- Mr
Huang contests the fact that that branch could have fallen on Mr Cincotta's
property and damaged his garage. He asks us to conclude
that this is improbable,
because of the size of the branch and the location of the tree. Faced with that
submission, we have, first
Mr Cincotta's uncontested evidence, that, as a matter
of fact, the branch so fell and that he put it back over the fence, and, second,
that it happened at a time of high wind. It is not improbable that that which is
said by Mr Cincotta to have occurred, actually occurred,
and as Mr Huang does
not give evidence from personal observation, we are unable to accept his
postulated version of events.
- The
consequence of all of that is, that we are satisfied that the first test in s
10(2)(a) of the Trees Act is satisfied, in that
a branch from the tree has
fallen and has caused damage to Mr Cincotta's property. We now must proceed to
consider, in light of that
finding, what orders, if any, we should make with
respect to the tree.
- We
have carefully examined the tree and note that it contains a deal of dead wood.
The dead wood is located in the perimeters of the
canopy of the tree and is not
confined to being in the perimeter adjacent to Mr Cincotta's boundary. However,
the present owners
of the tree express no concern to us concerning dead wood in
the canopy of the tree that might fall on their property. We are thus
left to
deal with the question of whether or not we should require the undertaking of
any interference with, or removal of the tree,
based on the past damage and
possible future damage to Mr Cincotta's property.
- We
have carefully examined the tree and consider that it is a typical specimen of
that type of Eucalypt . It is likely that, on a continuing basis, parts
of its canopy may die but that there is no basis, upon our present examination
of
the tree, to order its removal in its entirety. We are satisfied that there
are three branches of considerable dimension that are
dead and that are in the
direction of Mr Cincotta's property. We consider it appropriate to order the
removal of all three of those
branches, at the point of attachment to the
adjacent trunk and those have been marked by us digitally on the photograph that
appear
immediately below [as was foreshadowed would be done to the parties
during the giving of this decision and the decision amended (as
also
foreshadowed at that time) to reflect the subsequent marking up of that
photograph] and the photograph incorporated in the orders
we propose to make.
Image 1
- The
order that we propose with respect to the tree is, that each of these three
branches should be removed at the point of attachment
to the main trunk, that
they should be removed by arborist with AQF level 3 qualifications and
appropriate insurances; that they
should be removed within 90 days of the date
of these orders, that is of today; and that that work should be undertaken by
the second
and third respondents to the proceedings.
- We
also have considered the question of payment, both of past damage and for the
costs of the works that we have just ordered. It
is first convenient to turn to
the question of the repair of damage to Mr Cincotta's garage. Mr Cincotta, we
note had earlier claimed
the sum of ~ $160 for damage to the fence between the
properties, but has not provided any receipts or justification for that claim
and that claim has been excluded from our consideration.
- We
do consider it is appropriate to order that Mr Cincotta be reimbursed for the
repairs to the roof of his garage, to a maximum of
$748, upon the presentation
of a receipted order for works, demonstrating that the works have been
undertaken and that they have
been paid for. That reimbursement should be by
payment to him by the responsible person, within 28 days of the date of service
by
him of such a receipted invoice on that person.
- We
note that as these are orders of the Court, if the person who is ordered to be
responsible for such payment fails to do so, it
is our understanding that it
becomes a debt recoverable in proceedings in a Local Court if necessary.
- We
now turn the question as to who should make the payments for both the works to
the tree and for the repairs to the property. We
are of the view that, in each
instance, that financial burden should fall on the first respondent.
- We
turn first to the question of damage to the garage. We are satisfied on Mr
Cincotta's evidence that, since at least January of
2010, he has expressed his
concern to the first respondent about the risk of damage to his property,
occasioned by the tree. Whilst
we have his oral evidence that he has given such
warnings since a period considerably prior to January 2010, it is unnecessary
for
us to deal with the contest over whether or not that is correct or not; it
is simply sufficient for us to note that, since at least
January 2010, the first
respondent has been on notice of Mr Cincotta's concerns relating to the risk of
damage from the tree.
- In
September 2010, Mr Cincotta expressly wrote to the first respondent informing
him of the damage and indicating that the claim would
be made against him for
that purpose. We are satisfied that there was proper, prior notice; that the
first respondent took no steps
to remove the dead wood from the tree, the dead
wood subsequently fell and caused damage to Mr Cincotta's property, and as a
consequence
the first respondent should meet the costs of that.
- The
orders will therefore provide that the first respondent is to pay the applicant
up to $748 for the cost of repairs to the damaged
roof and flashing caused by
falling tree branch, and the removal of debris within 28 days of being served
with a receipted invoice
for the completion of those works.
- We
now turn to the question of who should bear the costs for removal of the dead
wood. We are satisfied again that this cost should
be met by the first
respondent. We consider that the material that is disclosed in the affidavits
provided on behalf of the second
and third respondents discloses expressly that
the first respondent failed to disclose the possibility of a dispute existing
between
him and Mr Cincotta, despite being requested to doing so during the sale
process. In particular, we note that in the reply by the
first respondent's
solicitor to requisitions that were made during the sale process, there is an
express disavowal in the response
given to requisitions 18 A and 18 D, that
there is any dispute concerning a dividing fence with any neighbouring property.
- The
tree dispute application clearly makes it obvious that there is a dispute about
damage caused by the tree to the fence. Although
we have not ordered
compensation, it is Mr Cincotta's uncontested evidence that the branch had
fallen on the fence and displaced
it. We are satisfied that that constitutes a
dispute concerning damage to the fence, as contained in the tree dispute
application
[s 10(2)(a) of the Trees Act]. We also consider that, on the
correspondence trail that is provided in the affidavits read in these
proceedings on behalf of the second and third respondents, that there is one
conclusion only to be drawn from the conduct of the
first respondent in these
proceedings, and that is to describe it as being "slippery" at best.
- There
was we also note, no responsibility or duty on behalf of the applicant in the
tree dispute to provide information to, or notification
of, the dispute to the
incoming purchasers. We are satisfied that there is absolutely no reasonable
basis upon which we could require
the present owners of the property to meet the
costs of the works that we require to be undertaken to the tree. As a
consequence
of that, the first respondent will be ordered to reimburse the
second and third respondents within 28 days of the receipt of the
service upon
him of a receipted invoice for the removal of the branches that we have ordered
be removed, by paying to the second
and third respondents, the costs of those
works.
- As
it was going to take us two or three days to provide the photographs and the
orders to the parties [see (12) above], we indicated
we would make the operative
date of the orders one week from the date of the hearing, so that the periods of
time being allowed for
the removal of the branches which are we earlier noted,
would run from that time.
- Finally,
it is appropriate to note that we will require that the repair work, to be
undertaken to the applicant's garage, should be
undertaken within a reasonable
period of time, so that if the work subject of the claim to the garage is not
undertaken within six
months of the date of the orders in these proceedings, and
the receipted invoice is not served on the first respondent within one
month of
the completion of those works - that is a maximum period of seven months from
the date of the orders - the obligation on
the first respondent to meet the
costs of repairs to the applicant's garage will lapse.
- The
orders of the Court therefore are:
1. The application to remove the tree is dismissed;
2. The application for compensation of an amount of $162 for repairs to a
fence is dismissed;
3. The second and third respondents are to engage and pay for an AQF level 3
arborist with appropriate insurance to remove the three
branches indicated by
red bars on the photograph included in these orders as Annexure A;
4. These branches are to be removed to the point at which they arise from the
relevant stem in accordance with AS4373:2007.
5. The work is to be carried out in accordance with the WorkCover NSW Code
of Practice for the Amenity Tree Industry ;
6. The work is to be completed by 14 July 2011;
7. The first respondent is to reimburse the second and third respondents the
cost of the branch removal within 28 days of the service
on him of a receipted
tax invoice for the completed works;
8. The applicant is to engage a licensed roofer or builder to undertake the
repairs to the roof and flashing of his garage;
9. The first respondent is to reimburse the applicant a maximum of $748 for
the roof repairs within 28 days of service on him of a
receipted tax invoice for
the completed works; and
10. The roof repairs are to be completed and a receipted invoice for the
completed works is to be served on the first respondent by
15 November 2011
otherwise order (9) lapses.
Tim Moore
Senior Commissioner
Judy Fakes
Commissioner of the Court
a ANNEXURE A REFERRED TO IN ORDER (3)
Image 1
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