Native Title Update: Federal Court Ruling on Notification of Claims
19 March 1997
Author: |
Peter van Hattem
Partner, Freehill, Hollingdale & Page (Barristers & Solicitors)
|
Issue: |
Volume 4, Number 1 (March 1997)
|
Summary of the decision
- The Federal Court has decided that the Native Title Registrar
is obliged to notify the holders of mining leases
and other
mining tenements of the acceptance of native title claims. The
decision, WMC Resources Ltd
and Central Norseman Gold
Corporation Ltd v. Lane (Native Title Registrar) was delivered
in Perth on
19 March 1997. Justice RD Nicholson held that the
Registrar is required to give written notice to people whose
interests may be affected by accepted claims, and that failure
to do so affects the validity of subsequent
procedures under
the Native Title Act. The decision could have significant
implications for many
of the native title claims which have
been accepted - approximately 400 throughout Australia as at
mid
March, of which 16 have been referred to the Federal Court
for determination.
Background to the case
- One of the objects of the Native Title Act is to establish a
mechanism for determining claims to native title. The
process
involves the lodgement of a claim, the acceptance of the claim,
notification of affected parties,
mediation of the claim and
referral of the claim to the Federal Court for determination.
- Section 66(1)(a) of the Native Title Act provides that if a
native title claim is accepted, the Registrar must give
notice
to all persons whose interests may be affected by a
determination in relation to it.
Section 66(2) provides a
means of giving notice. The right of an affected person to
become a party
in relation to the claim, so as to participate
in mediations and subsequent Federal Court proceedings, arises
under section 68, and can depend on being notified by the
Registrar. Being excluded from the process
can be highly
prejudicial if significant interests are likely to be affected.
- The Ngadju native title claim (WC 95/17) was lodged on 30 June
1995, and accepted on 25 September 1995. It covered an
area of
approximately 104,000 km2 in the eastern goldfields region of
Western Australia. At that time,
approximately 1,600 mining
tenements and 18 pastoral leases were affected. The Registrar
decided not
to notify each of the tenement holders
individually, having regard to the time and expense involved in
identifying and notifying each of them.
- Two mining companies with a large number of mining leases and
other tenements in the area became aware of the acceptance
of
the claim after the time had expired for notifying the
Registrar that they wanted to be
parties. There was no
procedure by which they could become parties at that stage
unless they received
formal notification of the claim from the
Registrar. They therefore requested the Registrar to formally
notify them of the acceptance so as to reopen the time period
and permit them to become parties. The Registrar
refused.
Their application to the Federal Court under the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act
for review of that decision was
successful.
Implications of the decision
Obligation to give notice
- Justice Nicholson held that the Registrar must give notice to
all persons whose interests may be affected and can not
avoid
giving notice to the people specified in section 66(2)(a), who
include the holders of proprietary
interests registered in a
register of interests in land maintained by the Commonwealth, a
State or a Territory.
His Honour noted that there was
potential for argument on whether certain mining tenements came
within
that description, but as the Registrar had made no
submissions on that point, his honour concluded that the obligation
to
give notice was not confined to mining leases, but extended to
other tenements.
- It appears to follow that every holder of a mining tenement
affected by a claim at the time it is accepted is entitled
to
notice. The right may extend beyond holders of direct
interests, to include mortgagees, option
holders and farminees
under registered dealings. Consequently, notifying every
tenement holder
might not be enough to discharge the
Registrar's duty. It might also be necessary to search the
register more fully, to identify the holders of registered
derivative interests in tenements. Those who acquire
interests
subsequent to the acceptance of the claim, for example by the
grant of a new tenement, the grant
of a new derivative interest
or the transfer of an existing tenement, might not be entitled
to notice.
- The entitlement to notice may extend to holders of other types
of interests who have not been notified. For example,
the
holders of registered fishing, pearling and other rights, and
registered mortgagees and sub-lessees
of pastoral and other
interests, may also have a statutory right to individual
notification as a
result of the decision.
Failure to give notice
- The immediate effect of Justice Nicholson's decision is that
the two companies concerned are entitled to receive
written
notice of the claim from the Registrar, and within the time
specified in the notice become
parties in relation to it.
It follows that others with registered interests, who have not
been formally
notified of the acceptance of a claim and who
wish to become parties, can request formal notification from
the Registrar. Although there may be cases in which the
circumstances are distinguishable, there
are probably many
cases where people, particularly the holders of mining leases,
have not been properly
notified and have not been able to
become parties.
Further consequences
- Of wider and far reaching significance is his Honour's
observation that:
"Examination of the language of s66(1)(a) and the scope
and object of the Act lead to the conclusion the paragraph
is mandatory in the sense that subsequent acts done under
the Act are invalid if there is non-compliance
with it."
- The consequence appears to be that where the Registrar has not
given notice to all registered interest holders as
required,
all proceedings under the Native Title Act subsequent to the
giving of notice are invalid.
Their invalidity does not depend
on an interest holder seeking to be notified after the notice
period
has closed, but on the failure of the Registrar to give
the requisite notices in the first place.
- The proceedings subsequent to the giving of a notice include
mediation conferences, the referral of contested claims
to the
Federal Court, and proceedings in the Federal Court culminating
in an approved determination of
native title. Sixteen claims
have been referred to the Federal Court for determination.
This decision
raises the possibility that they might be
fundamentally flawed, and may have to be remitted to the
National Native Title Tribunal for further notification and
mediation.
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