A local council has won the right to clear a Bondi home where a family of hoarders has been storing rubbish for years.

Mary Bobolas and her two daughters Elena and Liana went to the Supreme Court today to try and stop Waverley Council in Sydney's east entering their home and clearing away piles of decaying refuse.

Court papers reveal the Bobolas' Boonara Avenue property has piles of rotting garbage, plastic containers, tins, jars, containers and wrappers, cushions, furniture, foam, live and dead vegetation, disused electrical items and miscellaneous matter "likely to afford harbourage for vermin and insects".

The front garden of the premises is piled high with plastic bags of rotting food and household items.

Justice Julie Ward ruled in the council's favour, with cleaners set to enter the property at 7:00am (AEDT) on Monday morning.

"The council's conduct in pursuing the orders for removal of the items on the property appears to me to be wholly consistent with a concern as to public health issues," Justice Ward said.

The family argued council had a plan to charge them for the removal of rubbish and in turn take the house from them.

Rubbish in the front garden of the house at Bondi. ( Sue Daniel, ABC News )

But Justice Julie Ward said she does not believe that, adding that council seems concerned only for the public health of residents on the street.

She says it is not unreasonable for the council to charge the family for the rubbish removal.

The Bobolas family were originally ordered to remove the garbage in December 2012, but after they refused, the council took the women to the Land and Environment Court in June 2013, which ordered a clean-up of the home.

Elena Bobolas says Waverley Council has played a part in exacerbating her mother's psychological problems which cause her to hoard, but the court has ruled there was no evidence to substantiate the claim.

This will be the fifth time Waverley Council has cleared out the home.

The council says it has spent about $300,000 in legal and cleaning costs pursuing the matter since 2005.