This article is about whether or not bodies corporate can use by-laws to ban holiday lettings.
A number of body corporate lawyers have recently published articles claiming that bodies corporate could use by-laws to ban holiday lettings, despite the Body Corporate and Community Management Act (BCCMA) prohibiting such by-laws.
The basis for the claim was a recent District Court decision which concerned a complex governed by the Building Units and Group Titles Act (BUGTA). The authors sought to apply the Judge’s comments to the term “residential use” where used in the BCCMA.
This article could lead to committees proposing by-laws banning not just Airbnb but all holiday and short term lettings, which could ultimately impact on the legitimate rights of owners, and the onsite managers, to utilise apartments for holiday letting.
Unfortunately this approach could lead to disputes between owners, bodies corporate and onsite managers – with no real winner other than body corporate lawyers. Many experts with far greater experience than us consistently maintain, justifiably, that the best community title schemes are those where the body corporate manager, the onsite manager and the committee work together for the benefit of all owners, not against each other.
In this article we discuss why we believe some author’s views – that bodies corporate under the BCCMA can enact by-laws to prohibit holiday or short term lettings – are wrong and that the meaning the District Court gave to the word “residential” is not the meaning a Court would give to the word when used in the context of the BCCMA.
What should be remembered is that this only considers the Body Corporate’s ability to impose its own rules relating to short term letting. The council still has the right and ability to prevent short term letting – it is just the mechanism to enforce that is outside the realm of the BCCMA.
Residential use
The crux of the issue is the term “residential use”. What exactly does that term mean?
The proper approach is to give the words of a statutory provision the meaning which the legislator is taken to have intended them to have. This is ascertained by consideration of the text (the actual section); context (the entirety of the BCCMA and its regulation modules); and purpose (here, BCCMA, sections 2 – 4). The interpretation that will best achieve the purpose of the Act is to be preferred to any other interpretation.
Text and context
The BCCMA does not define “residential use”. As Isaacs J said in The Australian Temperance & General Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd v Howe (1922) 31 CLR 290, 304:
…that [the word] “resident” and its cognate terms “reside”, “residing” and “residence,” are terms not of art or defined legal import but of very flexible meaning, acquiring whatever precision they have in any given case from their surroundings.
Some guidance of what the legislators intended might be gained from section 111C of the BCCMA which defines a residential lot as one the subject of (or immediately available to be the subject of) a lease or letting for accommodation for long or short term residential purposes.
Whilst that definition contemplates that there are long-term and short-term types of residential purposes it may not be entirely relevant as it is used in the context of a specified two lot scheme in a different part of the BCCMA, it is nevertheless indicative of what the term might encompass.
To the extent that there is any ambiguity as to the meaning of the term, the regulations may be used to construe the Act itself. The regulations likewise define an accommodation lot as one the subject of (or immediately available to be the subject of) a lease or letting for accommodation for long or short term residential purposes. Once again the legislators contemplated long-term and short-term types of residential purposes.
Purpose of BCCMA
In looking at the purpose of the BCCM Act, the primary object of the Act is expressed in section 2 as to provide for flexible and contemporary communally based arrangements for the use of freehold land, having regard to the secondary objects. One of the secondary objects expressed in section 4 is to encourage the tourism potential of community titles schemes without diminishing the rights and responsibilities of lot owners, and intending buyers of lots.
Parliament clearly intended tourism within community titles schemes.
This is reinforced in the explanatory note to the Body Corporate and Community Management and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2007 which reads in part:
Clause 4 recognises the important contribution the community titles sector makes to Queensland’s tourism industry, particularly through the provision of short-term holiday accommodation. The amendment in part encourages bodies corporate to consider tourism issues in the administration of their schemes. The acknowledgement of tourism issues is not intended to override or fetter existing rights of unit owners (for example, the right to object to, or vote against body corporate proposals that may have tourism benefits).
Similarly the explanatory note for the 2020 Accommodation Module includes this statement: The [new module] provides management processes designed for community titles schemes that are used predominantly for short or long-term letting purposes (including for example, holiday letting or serviced apartment operations) with the need for accommodation management.
It is clear from the secondary objects and the extrinsic material that Parliament intended for short-term holiday letting to be operated from a community titles scheme. It is also clear from the text of section 180(3) that Parliament thought there was more than one type of residential use.
But is short term holiday letting a residential use?
The dictionary suggests not. But as Isaacs J says, “resident” and its cognate terms “reside”, “residing” and “residence,” are terms not of art or defined legal import but of very flexible meaning. This is where section 14A of the Acts Interpretation Act comes to the fore. The interpretation to be preferred is that which best achieves Parliament’s purposes. Here, one of those purposes is to encourage “Queensland’s tourism industry, particularly through the provision of short-term holiday accommodation”. That is best achieved by interpreting short term holiday letting as a form of residential use.
BUGTA V BCCMA
BUGTA yields a different result because of the absence of sections 2 – 4 of the BCCMA. The Fairway Island decision involved the construction of a by-law and its validity. BUGTA does not have an equivalent of section 180(3) of the BCCMA and the validity question was determined by reference to the general lawmaking power in section 30(3) of BUGTA which has no equivalent of sections 2 – 4 of BCCMA. The issue in the Fairway Island case was a different question under different legislation.
It cannot be said that had the by-law in Fairway Island been made under the BCCMA, it would have been upheld for the same reasoning because the validity issue would be determined by reference to section 180(3) which would be given the meaning set out above. Hopefully bodies corporate will not embark on a mission of enacting by-laws to ban holiday or short term lettings. That will only lead to division, disputation and disruption with the body corporate not achieving what it hopes to.
Even putting aside section 180(3), the by-law would need to overcome sections 169 and 180(7) which prevent by-laws which are unreasonable, oppressive or those which prohibit otherwise lawful activities.
A more detailed technical analysis can be found in this article: WHAT IS RESIDENTIAL USE UNDER THE BCCM ACT
John Mahoney and Todd Garsden Mahoneys E: tgarsden@mahoneys.com.au P: 07 3007 3753
This post appears in Strata News #508.
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This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the Mahoneys website.
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