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Docket LA19009 Order LA19-03
IN THE MATTER of
an appeal by Brown's Volkswagen, Phillips Suzuki, Centennial Auto Group and Cathy Feener,
of a decision by the City of Charlottetown, dated June 21, 2019.
AND IN THE MATTER a Preliminary Hearing regarding the record to be filed by the City of
Charlottetown.BEFORE THE COMMISSION
ON Thursday, November 28, 2019.
J.
Scott MacKenzie, Q.C. Chair M. Douglas Clow, Vice-Chair John Broderick, Commissioner
Decision and Order
1.
This is a decision arising out of
the preliminary hearing that was held as a result of a request of the
Appellant for further documentation to be filed as part of the record of the
Respondent.
2. This matter is an appeal of a
resolution of the council of the City of Charlottetown ("City" or "Respondent") to amend Sec. 36 of the City of Charlottetown Zoning and
Development Bylaw ("Bylaw") to permit an asphalt, aggregate and concrete
plant and insert a definition for the said use of same under Appendix A to
the bylaw ("the Bylaw Amendment").
3. The Appellants have appealed the
Bylaw Amendment and as a result of the appeal, the City filed a record with
the Commission on August 5, 2019.
4. It is the position of the Respondent
that the record that was filed comprises the full record of the City with
respect the Bylaw Amendment.
5. The Appellants contend that the
record may not be complete and that there may have been much that transpired
at the City with respect to certain lands that are effected by the Bylaw
Amendment and, therefore, that the Appellants require further documents to
be filed as part of the City's record to adequately pursue their appeal.
6. The Commission, therefore, scheduled
a preliminary hearing to determine whether or not the City should be
required to file the further documents that the Appellant has requested.
7. In an appeal under the
Planning Act
for the granting of a building permit by a municipality, the record of the
municipality consists of all of the documents, minutes and resolutions of
the municipal council dealing specifically with the granting of the permit
that is the subject of the appeal.
8. This Commission in the decision of
an appeal by Smooth Coat Drywall1
dealt with the request of an appellant to have other documents and
records of the municipality provided as part of the record with respect to
the decision of the municipality to deny a building permit.
In that decision the Commission determined that the record for the
purposes of the appeal was restricted to the documents, minutes,
correspondence specifically related to the building permit that was being
applied for and found that other documents which were extraneous to that
application including previous decisions of the municipality, correspondence
from councillors, etc. did not form part of the record for the purposes of
the appeal.
9. However, this appeal of the matter
that is now before the Commission is not a simple appeal with respect to the
granting or the denial of the issuance of a building permit with respect to
a specific parcel of land. The
appeal at hand is one that deals with a bylaw amendment concerning the use
that may be made of lands within a particular section of the bylaw.
Counsel for the Appellant submits that the items and documents that
the Appellants have requested are all relevant to the decision that was made
by council to amend the bylaw.
Counsel submitted that all of the documents that have been requested are
referred to in the record that has been provided by the City of
Charlottetown, that the information is in the hands of councillors and that
the City itself has access to the documents.
Counsel has advised that there is a concern over the lack of
transparency of not providing these documents and that it is the City that
is trying to dictate what documents are or are not relevant to the
Appellants' appeal. Counsel
submits that the City has no right to make this determination.
10. Counsel for the City has taken the
position that the record of the City with respect to the Bylaw Amendment has
been filed in its entirety and that the documents that are being requested
are extraneous to the record of the City concerning the Bylaw Amendment.
Counsel suggests that this is a text amendment of a bylaw and that
any prior applications or document that the City has in its possession that
were in existence prior to the file dealing with this text amendment of the
bylaw are not relevant.
11. Counsel for the City filed a number
of cases in support of his position that the requested disclosure ought not
be ordered, on the basis that it was irrelevant.2
Counsel argued that the test for relevance was similar to that at a
civil trial, and something more than a semblance of relevance is necessary.
In response, counsel for the Appellants argued that the Commission is not
bound by the Prince Edward Island Rules of Civil Procedure and the civil
court standard for relevance does not apply to this planning appeal. Counsel
for the Appellants noted that the Commission's own
Rules of Practice and
Procedure provide a broader test for relevancy and, given this, all of the
documents requested by the Appellants are relevant.
12. The Commission agrees with the
position of counsel for the Appellants. The Commission is not a court, and a
planning appeal is not a discovery nor a trial. The Rules of Civil Procedure
in this province with respect to the admission of evidence do not apply to
planning appeals before the Commission. The Commission's own
Rules of
Practice and Procedure clearly provide that it is not bound by the formal
rules of evidence and can receive all relevant evidence, even where it may
not be admissible in court.3 As
the Commission is not bound by the same rules, it cannot be and is not bound
by the same test for admissibility of evidence.
13. The Commission's own rules permit it
to request further information or documents that the Commission considers
necessary for a complete understanding of an issue in a hearing.4
Given the nature of this proceeding (a planning appeal) where the
Respondent municipality files the Record and has knowledge of the documents
and information in its own files (and the Appellant does not), Rules 33 and
34 of the Commission's Rules of Practice and Procedure weigh in favour of
disclosure of the requested information, particularly at this pre-hearing
stage. The parties will, of course, have the opportunity to argue as to the
appropriate weight the Commission ought to afford to the documents at the
hearing proper.
14. The Commission is satisfied that the
documents requested by the Appellants in the disclosure request, are
relevant to the Commission's determination of this matter or, alternatively,
will assist the Commission in obtaining a complete understanding of the
issues raised in the Notice of Appeal;
1
In the matter of an appeal by Smooth Coat Drywall, IRAC Order
LA19-02, dated July 5, 2019.
2
Re IRAC, [1997] 2 P.E.I.R. 40 (PESCAD), Mullin v.
PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2004 PESCTD 23, Jay v. DHL Express.
3
Rule 43.0.
4 Rule 44.0.
Order
NOW THEREFORE pursuant to the
Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission Act
and the
Planning Act;
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
The City provide
disclosure of the following records in its possession as referenced in the
disclosure request of counsel for the Appellants dated September 3, 2019
(the "disclosure request"):
1.
A copy of inquiries and/or applications relating to the construction
of an asphalt, aggregate and/or concrete plant within the City (Item 1 of
the disclosure request) limited to the applications / inquiries referred to
by Robert Zilke at the March 4, 2019 Planning Board meeting;
2.
Complete records of any communication between City employee(s) and
any potential developer (or the representative of any potential developer)
regarding an asphalt, aggregate and/or concrete plant within the City,
further particulars of which are noted in Item 2(a) of the disclosure
request;
3.
Complete records of any communication between City Councillor(s) and
any potential developer (or the representative of any potential developer)
regarding an asphalt, aggregate and/or concrete plant within the City,
further particulars of which are noted in Item 3 of the disclosure request;
4.
Complete records of any communication between City employee(s) and
any potential developer (or the representative of any potential developer)
regarding the amendment to the Zoning Bylaw which is currently under appeal
(Item 4 of the disclosure request);
5.
Complete records of any communication between City Councillor(s) and
any potential developer (or the representative of any potential developer)
regarding the amendment to the Zoning Bylaw which is currently under appeal.
(Item 5 of the disclosure request);
6.
The particulars of items 6, 7 and 8 of the disclosure request to the
extent such particulars have not yet been disclosed;
7.
Records relating to the 2018 application made by Chapman Bros.
Construction Ltd. to construct an asphalt plant within the City, limited to
the identified particulars set out in item 11 of the disclosure request.
DATED
at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island,
this 28th day of November, 2019.
BY THE COMMISSION:
J. Scott MacKenzie, Q.C., Chair
M. Douglas Clow, Vice-Chair
John Broderick, Commissioner
Notice:
Section 12 of the
Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission Act
reads as follows:
12.
The Commission
may, in its absolute discretion, review, rescind or vary any order or decision made by it,
or rehear any application before deciding it.
Parties to this proceeding seeking a review of the
Commission's decision or order in this matter may do so by filing with the Commission, at
the earliest date, a written Request for Review,
which clearly states the reasons for the review and the nature of the relief sought.
Sections 13.(1)
and 13(2) of the
Act provide as follows:
13.(1) An appeal lies from a decision or order of
the Commission to the Court of Appeal upon a question of law or
jurisdiction.
(2) The appeal shall be made by filing a notice of
appeal in the Court of Appeal within twenty days after the decision or
order appealed from and the rules of court respecting appeals apply with
the necessary changes.
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