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Dann on behalf of the Amangu People v Western Australia [2006] FCA 1249 (18 September 2006)
Last Updated: 19 September 2006
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Dann on behalf of the Amangu People v
State of Western Australia
[2006] FCA 1249
NATIVE TITLE – native title
determination application – parties – interest – industry
association –
insufficiency of direct interest based on members’
interests – participation of industry association in statutory committees
– whether sufficient interest – interest insufficient –
joinder refused – association able to act as agent
if so requested by
parties
Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) s
84
Fish Resources Management Act 1994 (WA)
Harrington-Smith on behalf of The
Wongatha People v State of Western Australia [2002 FCA 184 cited
Byron
Environment Centre Inc v Arakwal People (1997) 78 FCR 1 cited
Re An
Application for Native Title Determination by the Gunai People (unreported,
National Native Title Tribunal, 17 January 1997, French P) cited
Members
of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v State of Victoria (1996) 1 AILR
482 cited
Woodridge v Minister for Land and Water Conservation for the
State of New South Wales [2001] FCA 419; (2001) 108 FCR 527 cited
Adnyamatha People v
South Australia [2003] FCA 1377; (2003) 133 FCR 242 cited
RAYMOND DANN, BARRY
DODD, WAYNE WARNER AND OTHERS ON BEHALF OF THE AMANGU PEOPLE v STATE OF WESTERN
AUSTRALIA AND OTHERS
WAD 6002 OF
2004
ALEXANDER BROWN, CHARLIE
COPPIN, CLINTON COOKE AND JEFFREY BROWN ON BEHALF OF THE NGARLA PEOPLE v STATE
OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA AND OTHERS
WAD 77 OF 2005
FRENCH J
18 SEPTEMBER 2006
PERTH
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
|
RAYMOND DANN, BARRY DODD, WAYNE WARNER AND
OTHERS ON BEHALF OF THE AMANGU PEOPLEApplicant
|
|
AND:
|
STATE OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA AND
OTHERSRespondent
|
|
|
|
|
DATE OF ORDER:
|
|
|
WHERE MADE:
|
|
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
joinder of the Western Australian Fishing Industry Council (Inc) as a party is
refused.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the
Federal Court Rules.
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
|
WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT
REGISTRY
|
WAD 77 OF 2005
|
|
BETWEEN:
|
ALEXANDER BROWN, CHARLIE COPPIN, CLINTON COOKE AND JEFFREY BROWN ON
BEHALF OF THE NGARLA PEOPLE Applicants
|
|
AND:
|
STATE OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA AND
OTHERS
Respondent
|
|
JUDGE:
|
FRENCH J
|
|
DATE OF ORDER:
|
18 SEPTEMBER 2006
|
|
WHERE MADE:
|
PERTH
|
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
joinder of the Western Australian Fishing Industry Council (Inc) as a party is
refused.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the
Federal Court Rules.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
|
WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT
REGISTRY
|
WAD 6002 OF 2004
|
|
BETWEEN:
|
RAYMOND DANN, BARRY DODD, WAYNE
WARNER AND OTHERS ON BEHALF OF THE AMANGU PEOPLE
Applicant
|
|
AND:
|
STATE OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA AND
OTHERS
Respondent
|
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
|
WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT
REGISTRY
|
WAD 77 OF 2005
|
|
BETWEEN:
|
ALEXANDER BROWN, CHARLIE COPPIN, CLINTON COOKE AND JEFFREY BROWN ON
BEHALF OF THE NGARLA PEOPLE Applicants
|
|
AND:
|
STATE OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA AND
OTHERS
Respondent
|
|
JUDGE:
|
FRENCH J
|
|
DATE:
|
18 SEPTEMBER 2006
|
|
PLACE:
|
PERTH
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
ON JOINDER OF WESTERN
AUSTRALIAN FISHING INDUSTRY COUNCIL (INC) AS A PARTY AND SPRINGING ORDERS FOR
REMOVAL OF RESPONDENTS
- Case
management conferences were held on 31 July 2006 and 1 August 2006 relating to
native title determination applications in the
Pilbara and Geraldton regions
respectively. An unresolved question raised at those case management
conferences related to the joinder
of the Western Australian Fishing Industry
Council (Inc) (WAFIC) as a party. In addition, the representative body for the
two regions
proposed orders generally providing a mechanism for the removal of
inactive respondents in applications across the regions generally.
- The
two applications in which WAFIC seeks joinder are brought on behalf of the
Amangu and Ngarla People respectively. The Amangu
Peoples’ claim was
filed on 19 April 2004. Its named applicants include Raymond Dann, Barry Dodd
and other representatives
of the native title claim group. The area covered by
the application is approximately 27,388.48 square kilometres. It covers both
land and sea. The sea part of the application as presently defined extends 10
kilometres seaward of the coast from Jurien in the
south, to north of Geraldton.
The land component runs east to the Shires of Coorow, Perengori and Yalgoo. The
Court’s records,
reflected in a Status Report relating to the application,
show a total of 43 respondents as at 18 September 2006. They comprise
the State
and Commonwealth Governments, five local authorities, one indigenous respondent,
seven mining interest holders, 14 pastoral
lease holders, two persons claiming
fishing interests, 11 persons claiming leasehold interests and Telstra.
- The
Ngarla Peoples’ claim known as Ngarla People (No 2) was filed on 7 April
2005. It names as applicants Alexander Brown,
Charlie Coppin, Clinton Cooke and
Jeffrey Brown. The area of the claim is 524,779 square kilometres. It covers
land and sea areas
north of Port Hedland. There are 19 parties named as
respondents. They comprise the State and Commonwealth Governments, three
indigenous
respondents, five parties claiming mining interests, eight parties
claiming pastoral interests and Telstra.
- In
the Amangu matter WAFIC filed a notice of intention to become a party on 28 July
2005. It did so during the notification period
for which the Native Title
Act 1993 (Cth) (the Act) provides. The District Registrar referred the
question of its joinder to Nicholson J on 6 January 2006. Given my
absence for
the first three months of this year on long service leave, the matter was stood
over to the Geraldton Region case management
conference held on 1 August 2006
and judgment reserved until today.
- Although
WAFIC has been named as a respondent in some other native title determination
applications in Western Australia, the District
Registrar who received its
notice of intention to become a party to the Amangu application referred the
matter to a judge because
of a decision of Lindgren J refusing an application by
the Chamber of Minerals and Energy of Western Australia to be joined as a
party
in the Wongatha proceedings – Harrington-Smith on behalf of The
Wongatha People v State of Western Australia [2002] FCA 184.
- In
the notice of intention to become a party lodged by WAFIC on 28 July 2005, it
gave details of its interest thus:
Application may have an adverse effect on
the rights and interests of the Western Australian Fishing Industry Council
(Inc) as set
out in Attachment
A.’
Attachment A to the notice identified
WAFIC as the peak industry body for the fishing industry in Western Australia.
It referred
to its role of liaising with government on behalf of its members in
connection with the management of various fisheries. Some of
those fisheries
are located in the claim area. WAFIC’s role and function as liaison with
government in relation to policies
and issues concerning the fishing and
pearling industries was said to depend on:
the managed fisheries in a
particular area; the number of its members
operating in that area; and the ability of its
members to access the fisheries in that
area.’
- It
was submitted that the function of various committees and WAFIC’s role on
those committees constituted an interest capable
of being affected by the native
title claim. If the claim were made out WAFIC’s role in advising
government in relation to
issues raised by the committees would be affected as
the rights of its members would be affected by the declaration of co-existing
rights or by the declaration that no rights exist. It described its role in
those committees as ‘political’ in that
it plays a part in the
political process of lobbying or at least making recommendations to government.
- It
was further asserted that the business and economic interests of WAFIC would be
affected by the existence or otherwise of native
title over waters.
WAFIC’s ability to represent its members and the content of that
representation on various committees would
change depending on the outcome of
the case. It was said that the economic interests of WAFIC were linked to its
membership and
the health of the industry. A determination that native title
exists in the claim area in the terms claimed would detrimentally
impact on the
economic interests of WAFIC members and interests within the claim area.
- It
was also pointed out that pursuant to fishing industry legislation in Western
Australia there are about 1,500 fishing boat licences
and numerous pearling and
aquaculture licences in the State. Fishing boat licences allow fishing other
than in areas noted on such
licences. WAFIC submitted that there are in excess
of 1,500 individual fishing interests which could be affected by the claim.
- WAFIC’s
application was supported by an affidavit of Guy Leyland, its Executive Officer,
sworn 20 December 2005. It referred
to an earlier affidavit in the matter of
the Ngaluma and Ingibandi Peoples’ claim which comprised WAG 6017 of 1996
and part
WAG 127 of 1997. That affidavit set out, inter alia, the Constitution
of WAFIC. In his affidavit Mr Leyland affirmed the currency of the affidavit
filed in the Ngaluma and Ingibandi matter. He said
that in relation to the
claim area covered by the Amangu application there are a number of
‘managed fisheries’ or ‘interim
managed fisheries’ under
the Fish Resources Management Act 1994 (WA) (the FRMA). Some 13 such
fisheries were named. The affidavit also reaffirmed that the claim covers water
in which a large
number of fishermen licensed under the FRMA are entitled to
fish and fishermen that have a specific endorsement on their licence
to fish.
- Mr
Leyland also said that a number of companies and licensed fishermen had
refrained from seeking joinder or requesting WAFIC to be
their agent under s
84(b) of the Act on account of their expectation that WAFIC would be made a
party to the native title claim. Three fishermen were named
as well as another
person, acting on behalf of the Geraldton Fishermen’s Co-operative, which
has a sizeable number of members
who fish for rock lobster. Mr Leyland pointed
out that WAFIC was joined as a respondent in the Ngaluma Ingibandi claim by
Nicholson
J. There were no published reasons for that decision nor for the
decision of Lee J joining WAFIC as a party in the Bardi Jawi application.
Statutory framework
- Section
61 of the Act makes provision for applications to be made to the Federal Court
for native title determination. Section 63 provides that an application filed
under s 61 must, as soon as practicable, be given, by the Registrar of the
Federal Court to the Native Title Registrar. Section 66 sets out the
obligations of the Registrar to give notice of the application. The Registrar
is required to give copies of the application
to the relevant Minister of a
State or Territory where any of the area covered by the application is within
the jurisdictional limits
of that State or Territory. A copy of the application
must also be given to representative bodies for areas which it covered. In
addition the Registrar is to give notice containing details of the application
to the various classes of persons or bodies set out
in s 66(3) which include
‘any local government body for any of the area covered by the application
...’ (s 66(3)(a)(vi)). The Registrar is required to ‘notify the
public in the determined way of the application’ (s 66(3)(d)).
- In
the case of a claimant application the notice requirements imposed by s 66(3)
are not to be complied with until the Registrar has decided, under s 190A,
whether or not to accept for registration the claim made
in the application (s
66(6)). The notice given under s 66(3)(a) or (d) must specify a date known as
the ‘notification day’ (s 66(8)).
- The
notification provisions are to be read with s 84 of the Act which deals with
parties to proceedings in relation to applications to which s 61 applies.
Section 84 provides, inter alia:
This
section applies to proceedings in relation to applications to which section 61
applies.Applicant
The applicant is a party to
the
proceedings.PersonsAnother
person is a party to the proceedings if: any of
the following applies:
(i) the person
is covered by paragraph 66(3)(a); (ii) the
person claims to hold native title in relation to land or waters in the area
covered by the application; (iii) the
person’s interests may be affected by a determination in the proceedings;
and the person notifies the Federal Court, in
writing, within the period specified in the notice under s 66, that the person
wants to be a party to the
proceeding....The Federal Court may at
any time join any person as a party to the proceedings, if the Court is
satisfied that the person’s
interests may be affected by a determination
in the proceedings.’The following
subsections are not material for present purposes.
Whether WAFIC has a
relevant interest
- The
crucial question in this case is whether WAFIC is a party whose interests may be
affected by a determination in the proceedings.
- The
leading case on the range of ‘interests’ which confer standing under
the Act is Byron Environment Centre Inc v Arakwal People (1997) 78 FCR 1.
That case concerned the party provisions of the Act in effect before the 1998
amendments. They were ss 68 and 69. The decision, however, remains
authoritative for the similarly worded party provisions in s 84. In that
decision the Full Court held that the interests which could be affected by a
determination in relation to an application
for native title and thus give rise
to an entitlement to party status are not confined to the interests in land or
waters which are
referred to in s 253 of the Act.
- Black
CJ held that the interest sufficient to give a person the right to become a
party to an application should be greater than that
of a member of the general
public. They must be genuine and the possible effect must be genuine. The
Parliament could not have
contemplated that the rights given to persons as
parties would have other than a genuine foundation. His Honour said (at
7):
nature and content of the right to
become a party to proceedings for the determination of native title, with the
power as a party
in effect to veto the process of mediation and conciliation
which the Act favours, suggests that the interests with which s 68(2)(a) and the
related sections dealing with parties are concerned are interests that are not
indirect, remote or lacking substance. The
nature and content of the right also
suggests that the interests must be capable of clear definition and, equally
importantly, that
they are of such a character that they may be affected in a
demonstrable way by a determination in relation to the application.’
The requisite interest did not need to be
proprietary, legal or equitable. He said (at 7):
the interests must be
genuine and not indirect, remote or lacking substance, there is no indication
that, for example, a person who
has a special, well-established non-proprietary
connection with land or waters which is of significance to that person is not be
regarded as having interests that may be affected by a determination. To the
contrary, the consensual objects of the Act would seem
to be advanced if a
person with genuine interests of that nature that might or would be affected did
have the rights of involvement
in the process of native title determination
given by the Act to a person who is a party. Each case will of course turn on
its own
facts and whether or not interests will or may be affected will depend
upon an assessment of the interaction between the interests
asserted by a person
who wants to be a party and the nature and extent of the native title rights and
interests claimed.’The concept of
interest did not extend to interests of ‘an emotional conscientious,
ideological or intellectual kind only’.
Relevantly his Honour also said
(at 9):
formation of an association
or the incorporation of a body with particular objects will not, of itself,
create interests that may
be affected for the purposes of provisions in the Act
relating to parties. ...a body that
represents the interests of others whose members have interests that may be
affected, does not, for that reason alone,
become a person whose interests are
affected; such interests as it thereby has are wholly
indirect.is not to deny that a corporation may
have interests that may be affected by a determination of native title if, for
example, its
activities might be curtailed or otherwise significantly affected
by the determination.’
- Lockhart
J, like Black CJ, rejected a construction of the party provisions of the Act
which would limit their application to persons
with legal or proprietary
interests. His Honour said (16):
who may
not have a right or interest in the land in a proprietary sense, but
nevertheless have an interest in a broader sense, will
be entitled to have a say
in the matter and be able to negotiate some arrangement to accommodate their
interests if they are parties
to the application, which is the question arising
in this case.’
His Honour referred,
without disapproval, to my decision, as President of the National Native Title
Tribunal, in relation to the Gunai
Peoples’ native title determination
application in 1997 allowing joinder of the Lake Tyers Beach Sport and Angling
Club which
comprised:
65 members who use the
waters and surrounding areas of Lake Tyers daily for recreational
fishing.’An Application for Native Title
Determination by the Gunai People (unreported, National Native Title
Tribunal, 17 January 1997, French P)Lockhart J said
that the standing provision was not to be encased in technical rules. The class
of interests for which it provides
is wider than that defined by s 253 and it
would be impossible and unwise to attempt to define the class in any definitive
sense.
It would depend on the facts and circumstances of each case (at 19):
interest must be above that of an ordinary member of
the public, and must be not that of a mere intermeddler or busybody. The person
must have some interest that may be affected by the native title determination.
The persons who sought the status of parties before
French J in the Gunai
application provide a good example of persons with a relevant interest for the
purposes of s 68(2)(a). If it be said that this is too broad an analysis and
that the floodgates will open, then I must say that over the past 18 years
on
the Bench of this Court I have never seen the floodgates open in any matter,
despite dire predictions to the
contrary.’
- Merkel
J referred to the joinder by Olney J of the Victorian Field and Game Association
as a party in the Yorta Yorta application – Members of the Yorta
Yorta Aboriginal Community v State of Victoria (1996) 1 AILR 482. His
Honour also referred to the joinder of the persons and organisations referred to
in the Gunai Peoples’ case. He observed that the 10 groups of
persons and organisations admitted as parties in that case included frequent
recreational users
of the land and waters covered by the claim, commercial
entities said to be dependent for their livelihood upon continuing recreational
use of the claimed area by local persons and visitors, property owners entitled
to free access to parts of the area claimed and sporting
and angling clubs or
associations which are the conducted sporting, shooting or angling activities in
parts of the claimed areas
or had members who frequently or habitually engaged
in such activities.
- In
relation to the standing of organisations representing persons whose interests
might be affected, Merkel J said (at 43):
an individual lacks the requisite interest
the position cannot be improved or altered by an application to be a party being
made by
an organisation representing many such
individuals.’
His Honour went on, however,
to say that (at 43):
problem arising in respect of an organisation
representing members who have interests that may be affected by a determination
is that
the interests of the organisation are indirect. Put another way, it is
the interests of members, rather than those of an organisation
representing
them, that may be affected.’
His Honour
further observed (at 43):
different situation might arise if such organisations
themselves conduct activities in the area covered by the claim which may be
curtailed, interfered with or otherwise affected by a determination. In such
cases there is no reason in principle why such organisations
may not be persons
whose interests may be affected by a
determination.’
- In
Woodridge v Minister for Land and Water Conservation for the State of New
South Wales [2001] FCA 419; (2001) 108 FCR 527, Katz J considered the proposed joinder of
the New South Wales Farmers’ Association pursuant to a notification
under
s 84(3)(b) of the Act. His Honour denied the Association party status on the
basis that it had failed to establish its possession of interests
which might be
affected by a native title determination in either sense of:
(a) proprietary or contractual interests in the land the subject of
the application; or
(b) conducting activities which may be adversely affected
by such a determination.
His Honour held, following the judgments in
Byron Environment Centre that a body that represents the interests of
others whose members have interests that may be affected does not, for that
reason alone,
become a person whose interests are affected. Katz J distinguished
the Gunai decision and its acceptance by Lockhart J on the basis that the
Lake Tyers Beach Sports and Angling Club was not a legal person,
separate from
its individual members. His Honour said that to recognise ‘the
Club’ as a party was simply an informal
method of recognising its
individual members as parties. He observed that Lockhart J appeared to be
conscious of the Club’s
unincorporated status.
- In
Harrington-Smith, Lindgren J referred to the Byron Environment
Centre case and the Woodridge decision and said (at 2):
do not find it necessary to refer to the
discussion of the matter in those cases, beyond noting that they establish that
a society,
organisation, association or other body which voices, protects or
promotes the concerns and interests of its members does not, by
reason of that
circumstance alone, have “interests [which] may be affected by a
determination in the proceedings” for
the purposes of subs 84(5) of the
Act.’
Applying that proposition to the
position of the Chamber of Minerals and Energy of Western Australia, his Honour
refused its application
for joinder. See also Adnyamatha People v South
Australia [2003] FCA 1377; (2003) 133 FCR 242 (Mansfield J).
- In
the present case WAFIC does not take issue with what Lindgren J drew from
Byron Environmental Centre and Woodridge. Rather, WAFIC contended
that its factual position differed from that of the Chamber of Minerals and
Energy in a material way.
It relied in particular upon WAFIC’s
representation on, and participation in, advisory committees established under
the FRMA.
This participation, it was said, included representing the interests
of its members by presenting and promoting its members’
views with respect
to fishery management and protection policy and acting as an intermediary
between government and industry. It
referred to the formulation of cohesive
industry policy. It was contended that WAFIC’s participation in these
committees is
essentially in its own right and on behalf of
‘industry’ and not merely on behalf of any particular member of
WAFIC.
An impact on fisheries in the claim area would or could have an effect
on management of fisheries outside or partly outside the
claim area.
- WAFIC
submitted that the cases which suggest that an industry body does not have an
entitlement to participate in the native title
claim in its own right have not
dealt with an industry body with statutory functions in resource management
under existing statutes.
It also referred to Nicholson J’s decision to
allow WAFIC’s application to be joined in Ngaluma Ingibandi and it was
submitted that unless the view was formed that Nicholson J was clearly in error
in allowing WAFIC’s notice, then WAFIC ought
to be joined as a party to
the claim. However, the basis upon which his Honour made the joinder order is
not evident as there were
no reasons published for the decision.
- In
the alternative, WAFIC submitted that it should be ‘... joined as a party
as agent for specified parties under s 84B of the Native Title Act’. This
submission misconceives the operation of s 84B which provides:
A party to a proceeding may appoint a
society, organisation, association or other body to act as agent on behalf of
the party in relation
to the proceeding.
The
same body may act as agent for 2 or more parties in the same
proceeding.’The status of
‘agent’ under s 84B of the Act is qualitatively different from that
of party.
- It
is clear from the authority of the Full Court decision in Byron Environment
Centre that WAFIC cannot acquire party status by reason of the possible
effects of a native title determination on the interests of its members.
It
asserts, however, that it has an affected interest by reason of its
participation in statutory committees advising government
in relation to managed
fisheries, some of which exist in the claim area. It does not appear to me
however that this function, carried
out on the part of WAFIC, can be compared to
that of a statutory authority with direct responsibility for the management of
an area
the subject of a native title determination application. WAFIC’s
involvement as described in its submissions and supporting
evidence, seems to
relate to advice to government on policy for the management of the relevant
fisheries. No evidence is shown which
logically link the economic interests of
WAFIC as an organisation to a native title determination in the claim area. Nor
am I satisfied
that the evidence discloses any real basis upon which
WAFIC’s capacity to participate in the committees to which it has referred
would be affected.
- In
so saying, I accept that WAFIC has been joined as party in some applications
without any contention and has acted as agent in others.
It has played a
valuable role in the submissions that it has made in such cases, not least in
the Bardi Jawi case which I heard as trial judge, albeit WAFIC had been
joined by order of Lee J. In my opinion however, I am bound by the authority
in
Byron Environment Centre to reject WAFIC’s application for joinder
as a party. It may of course act as agent on behalf of a party in relation to
the
proceeding. That does not require the intervention of the Court. Under s
84B a party to a proceeding can appoint an organisation as its agent.
WAFIC’s application for joinder is therefore refused.
- The
same considerations arise in relation to the Ngarla Peoples’ claim and
again, WAFIC’s application for joinder in that
claim will be refused.
- I
note that among the proposals for amendments to the Act arising out of the
recent Commonwealth Government review is a proposal under
which industry bodies
could be joined as parties. In my opinion, provided that their participation is
confined to the representation
of their member interest holders in matters
directly relevant to the impact of a native title determination on those
interests, then
the capacity to effect such a joinder may be a useful
facility.
General springing orders to remove inactive
respondents
- The
representative body in the Pilbara and Geraldton regions, that is the Yamatji
Land and Sea Council, sought orders in a form made
by Siopis J on 12 April 2006
in the Central West Goldfields Peoples’ claims. The orders are designed
to remove from the party
list respondents who do not wish to play an active part
in the proceedings. The proposed orders are in the following terms:
All respondents to the proceedings complete
a Notice of Address for Service, desirably including an email address and return
it to
the Western Australia District Registry of the Court within 3 weeks of the
service of these orders.
- Parties
who fail to comply with order 1 cease to be parties to the proceedings.
- Service
of these orders be effected by the District Registrar sending the orders to each
party to the proceedings by prepaid post.
- Service
in accordance with order 3 is deemed to be effected one week from the date on
which these orders were posted by the District
Registrar.
- Any
party removed pursuant to order 2 shall be reinstated as a party upon making, by
(a specified date) a request in writing to the
Court to that effect, accompanied
by an address for
service.’
- In
its submissions in support of these orders the representative body
said:
The proposed orders are likely to
reduce the number of respondents to those who wish to play an active part in the
proceedings as
there are numerous respondents to proceedings who have never
appeared at any directions hearings or hearings of other applications
and who
may have no interest in receiving information about such
matters.
- This
will involve substantial savings in expenses and time for the court and the
parties as it will significantly reduce the number
of parties who need to be
served with documents and notices of the proceedings and interlocutory
applications and directions hearings
in the proceedings.
- Respondents
who wish to keep informed of the proceedings will not be prejudiced as all they
will need to do is to file a notice of
address for service.
- The
reduction in the number of parties will make it feasible to reach agreements on
determinations and other matters in the proceedings
where the agreement of all
the parties is
required.’
- I
am not prepared to make a global order of this kind for any particular region.
In my opinion such orders may be helpful in respect
of particular applications
where evidence is put before the Court to support the practical utility and
justice of such a direction.
The application for springing orders will be
refused. This allows for the possibility that such applications may be made in
respect
of particular applications in the future.
I certify that the preceding thirty-two (32)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice French.
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Associate:
Dated: 18
September 2006
Counsel for the
Applicants:
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Solicitor for the Applicants:
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Yamatji Land and Sea Council
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Counsel for the Western Australian Fishing Industry Council (Inc):
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Solicitor for the Western Australian Fishing Industry Council (Inc):
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Date of Hearing:
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31 July 2006 and 1 August 2006
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Date of Judgment:
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