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Okanagan-Similkameen (Regional District) v ... - Rdosmaps.bc.ca

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2012 BCSC 63 <strong>Okanagan</strong>-<strong>Similkameen</strong> (<strong>Regional</strong> <strong>District</strong>) v. Leach<br />

year. The defendants live there themselves for approximately one to three months per year. The Property is<br />

va<strong>ca</strong>nt much of the time, and is used by the defendants’ friends and family about two weeks per year.<br />

[85] I am satisfied that the overall use of the Property as a private visitor accommodation is not the<br />

principal use.Rather it is a secondary use in conjunction with the defendants’ overall residential use of the<br />

Property.<br />

(iii) Does s. 7.19.6 require the residents to be on site<br />

[86] The <strong>Regional</strong> <strong>District</strong> forcefully asserts that the 2008 Zoning Bylaw requires the residents of a property<br />

to be on site during the provision of private visitor accommodation to ensure that the use of the property is<br />

consistent with a residential neighbourhood.<br />

[87] The essential question thus is whether or not in order for the use to qualify as private visitor<br />

accommodation, s. 7.19.6 requires that a resident be on site when they rent out their property. For the<br />

reasons set out below, I am not persuaded that the section <strong>ca</strong>n reasonably be interpreted to include such a<br />

requirement.<br />

[88] I first address the contention by the <strong>Regional</strong> <strong>District</strong> that private visitor accommodation is intended to<br />

refer exclusively to a bed and breakfast operation and therefore the residents are required to be on site<br />

during any short-term rentals.<br />

[89] With respect to the submission that the term “private visitor accommodation” is intended to refer<br />

exclusively to a bed and breakfast, I am not persuaded that this is a tenable proposition based on a plain<br />

reading of the 2008 Zoning Bylaw. The definition of “private visitor accommodation” describes a bed and<br />

breakfast operation as a form of private visitor accommodation. Likewise, s. 7.19 describes private visitor<br />

accommodation as including a bed and breakfast operation. The 2008 Zoning Bylaw clearly contemplates<br />

forms of private visitor accommodation beyond a bed and breakfast operation. I therefore reject the position<br />

taken by the <strong>Regional</strong> <strong>District</strong> that private visitor accommodation is intended to refer to bed and breakfasts<br />

exclusively.<br />

[90] There is no provision in the 2008 Zoning Bylaw which expressly stipulates that the residents of a<br />

property must be on site during the use of the property as a private visitor accommodation. On a plain<br />

reading of the definition of a private visitor accommodation, it is clear that only the residents of a principal<br />

dwelling unit may conduct the business of the private visitor accommodation. Similarly, s. 7.19.6 states that<br />

only the residents of the principal dwelling unit may <strong>ca</strong>rry on the private visitor accommodation on the site<br />

occupied by the principal dwelling unit. Does this require the residents to be “on site” Or does it simply<br />

mean that if someone is to be <strong>ca</strong>rrying on the private visitor accommodation on site, it <strong>ca</strong>n only be the<br />

residents that do so In my view, the words of the provision reasonably support the latter interpretation.<br />

[91] Section 7.19.6 plainly sets out a restriction on who may <strong>ca</strong>rry on a visitor accommodation on site, not<br />

on where the resident must be during the use of the property as a private visitor accommodation. There is no<br />

principled basis, either through statutory interpretation or by appli<strong>ca</strong>tion of the relevant jurisprudence, to<br />

http://www.courts.gov.<strong>bc</strong>.<strong>ca</strong>/jdb-txt/SC/12/00/2012BCSC0063cor1.htm[03/29/2012 10:23:44 AM]

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