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Edwards v Santos Limited [2010] FCA 34 (4 February 2010)
Last Updated: 5 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Edwards v Santos Limited [2010] FCA
34
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Citation:
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Parties:
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NOELENE MARGARET EDWARDS, CLANCY MCKELLAR, IONA
DAWN SMITH, ERNEST (HOPE) EBSWORTH, ROSEMARY (ROSE) ANNE WILSON, MARGARET ANNE
COLLINS,
SHARLEEN LOUISE KNIGHT and ARCHIE ALFRED EBSWORTH v SANTOS LIMITED (ACN
007 550 923), STATE OF QUEENSLAND and DELHI PETROLEUM PTY
LIMITED (ACN 007 854
686)
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File number:
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QUD 86 of 2009
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Judge:
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COLLIER J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – application
for order that leave to appeal application be heard by Full Court pursuant to
O 52 r 2AA(a) Federal Court Rules – s 25(2)
Federal Court Act 1976 (Cth) – consideration of principles relating
to referral of leave to appeal application to Full Court – factors
relevant
to exercise of Court’s discretion which justify departure from
prima facie position that application for leave to appeal be heard by
single judge – whether the judgment relates to “minor interlocutory
squabble” – whether prima facie hopeless case inappropriate
for referral to Full Court to hear leave application – whether factors
including cost, efficiency
and public importance warrant referral of leave to
appeal application to Full Court
Held: application for leave to appeal referred to a Full Court and,
subject to any contrary direction of the Full Court, the application
for leave
to appeal be heard concurrently with, or alternatively, immediately before the
appeal
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Brisbane
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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16
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Counsel for the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Applicants:
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Mr J McCarthy QC with Mr J Kildea
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Counsel for the First and Third Respondents:
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Mr G Coveney
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Solicitor for the First and Third Respondents:
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Blake Dawson
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Counsel for the Second Respondent:
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Mr P Flanagan SC
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Solicitor for the Second Respondent:
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Crown Law
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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NOELENE MARGARET EDWARDSFirst
Applicant
CLANCY MCKELLAR Second Applicant
IONA DAWN SMITH Third Applicant
ERNEST (HOPE) EBSWORTH Fourth Applicant
ROSEMARY (ROSE) ANNE WILSON Fifth Applicant
MARGARET ANNE COLLINS Sixth Applicant
SHARLEEN LOUISE KNIGHT Seventh Applicant
ARCHIE ALFRED EBSWORTH Eighth Applicant
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AND:
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SANTOS LIMITED (ACN 007 550
923)First Respondent
STATE OF QUEENSLAND Second Respondent
DELHI PETROLEUM PTY LIMITED (ACN 007 854 686) Third
Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
application for leave to appeal be heard by a Full Court of this Court.
- Subject
to any contrary direction of the Full Court, the application for leave to appeal
be heard concurrently with, or alternatively,
immediately before the appeal.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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QUD 86 of 2009
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BETWEEN:
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NOELENE MARGARET EDWARDS First Applicant
CLANCY MCKELLAR Second Applicant
IONA DAWN SMITH Third Applicant
ERNEST (HOPE) EBSWORTH Fourth Applicant
ROSEMARY (ROSE) ANNE WILSON Fifth Applicant
MARGARET ANNE COLLINS Sixth Applicant
SHARLEEN LOUISE KNIGHT Seventh Applicant
ARCHIE ALFRED EBSWORTH Eighth Applicant
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AND:
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SANTOS LIMITED (ACN 007 550 923) First Respondent
STATE OF QUEENSLAND Second Respondent
DELHI PETROLEUM PTY LIMITED (ACN 007 854 686) Third
Respondent
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JUDGE:
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COLLIER J
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DATE:
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4 FEBRUARY 2010
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PLACE:
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BRISBANE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- In
December 2009 his Honour Logan J delivered judgment in Edwards v Santos
Limited [2009] FCA 1532. In that judgment his Honour found against the
applicants before him, who are also the applicants to the notice of motion
before me.
Those applicants have filed an amended notice of motion seeking leave
to appeal against his Honour’s decision. However at the
hearing before me
last Friday the applicants pressed only for two orders, namely:
- A direction
under O 52 r 2AA(a) of the Federal Court Rules that the
application for leave to appeal be referred to a Full Court; and
- A direction
that, subject to any contrary direction of the Full Court, the application for
leave to appeal be heard concurrently with,
or alternatively, immediately before
the appeal.
- In
my view the applicants are entitled to those orders.
Relevant legislation
- Section
25(2)(a) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) states that an
application for leave to appeal to the Court may be heard and determined by a
single Judge or by a Full Court.
However it is clear from the terms of O 52
r 2AA of the Federal Court Rules that, prima facie, hearing
and determination of such an application is by a single Judge. An application of
this nature is heard and determined by
the Full Court only if there is a
direction by a Judge to that effect. More specifically, so far as relevant
O 52 r 2AA
provides:
Exercise of Appellate Jurisdiction (Act s
25)
2AA An application mentioned in subsection 25(2) of the Act must be heard and
determined by a single Judge unless:
(a) a Judge directs that the application to be heard and determined by a Full
Court; or
(b) ...
Background
- The
applicants are registered native title claimants under the Native Title Act
1993 (Cth) in respect of land in south-west Queensland and north-west New
South Wales (“the relevant land”). No native title
determination has
yet been made in respect of the applicants’ claim concerning the relevant
land. The first respondent and
the third respondent are the holders of an
authority to prospect the relevant land (ATP 259P) issued under the Petroleum
Act 1923 (Qld) (“Petroleum Act”). A function of officers of the
second respondent is the issuing of petroleum leases under the Petroleum
Act.
- At
the substantive judgment Logan J observed that the institution of the
substantive proceedings originated from a difference of
opinion between the
applicants on the one hand, and the first and third respondents on the other, in
the course of negotiations between
them concerning the making of an Indigenous
Land Use Agreement, as to whether the issuing of petroleum leases would
constitute pre-existing
rights based acts for the purposes of Pt 2
Div 3 Subdiv 1 of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth). His Honour
also noted that a related controversy was whether any such petroleum leases
would then not be subject to the “right
to negotiate” provisions of
the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) (Edwards v Santos Limited [2009]
FCA 1532 at [8]).
- Before
his Honour the applicants had sought the following orders:
(a) a
declaration that the grant of a petroleum lease to the first or third
respondents in respect of any land covered by ATP 259P
would not be a
pre-existing rights based act within the meaning of Subdiv 1 of Div 3
of Pt 2 to the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth);
(b) a declaration that the grant of a petroleum lease to the first or third
respondents in respect of any land covered by ATP 259P
would not be valid
pursuant to s 24ID of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) unless the
requirements of Subdiv P of Div 3 of Pt 2 of that Act had been
satisfied; and
(c) an order restraining the State of Queensland from granting a petroleum
lease to the first or third respondents in respect of any
land covered by ATP
259P.
- The
first and third respondents had sought orders that the application be dismissed
on the basis that the Court had no jurisdiction
to entertain the application,
and/or that in any event the application had no reasonable prospects of success.
The first and third
respondents submitted, inter alia, that for the
substantive proceedings to have any prospect of success, the Court would need
first to determine the existence or otherwise
of the native title rights of the
Wongkumara People (on whose behalf the applicants had commenced the proceedings)
in respect of
the relevant land.
- His
Honour dismissed the substantive application. In summary, his Honour found that
the applicants had no reasonable prospect of
success within the meaning of
s 31A of the Federal Court Act, and further that the Court had no
jurisdiction to entertain the
State law aspect of the applicants’ claim.
In so finding his Honour relied in particular on the decision of the Full Court
in The Lardil Peoples v Queensland [2001] FCA 414; (2001) 108 FCR 453.
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applicants filed an application for leave to appeal against his Honour’s
decision, supported by the affidavit of Mr Neumann,
the solicitor for the
applicants, annexing a draft notice of appeal. If leave to appeal were to be
granted the applicants nominate
eleven grounds of appeal identifying bases upon
which his Honour erred in reaching his decision, including that his Honour erred
in finding that the decision in The Lardil Peoples [2001] FCA 414; (2001) 108 FCR 453 was
not distinguishable from the present case.
Direction pursuant to Order 52 rule 2AA
- Clearly
there must be grounds justifying a departure from the prima facie
position that applications for leave to appeal are be heard and determined by a
single Judge. Issues relevant to the exercise of
the Court’s discretion
include the following:
- Factors of
efficiency. As a general rule applications for leave to appeal which are
relatively straightforward will be more efficiently
dealt with by a single Judge
than by a Full Court.
- Whether orders
the subject of the application for leave to appeal could properly be
characterised as a “minor interlocutory
squabble” (TS Production
LLC v Drew Pictures Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 1329 at [7]), or whether important
and final consequences for the parties followed from the orders (irrespective
whether substantive rights were
determined).
- Whether the
applicant’s claims raise issues of novel and general importance which
should be the subject of consideration by
a Full Court.
- Whether,
prima facie, it can properly be said that there are arguments of
substance supporting the contention that the primary judgment is attended by
sufficient doubt to warrant reconsideration by the Full Court, or substantial
injustice, on the basis that a hopeless application
should not be referred to
the Full Court (Allphones Retail Pty Ltd v Weimann [2009] FCA 849 at
[13]). While clearly it is premature at the point of considering the appropriate
Court to hear an application for leave to appeal to give
detailed consideration
to the question whether the applicant can substantiate its case for leave to
appeal to be granted, conceptually
it is difficult to separate the issue of
appropriate forum from the more substantive question whether leave to appeal
from the primary
judgment should be granted. This was reflected during
the hearing before me where extensive submissions were made by Counsel as to the
merits of
the primary judgment of his Honour.
- Factors of cost.
If the Court directs that the application for leave to appeal is to be heard by
the Full Court concurrently with
the appeal the parties will be put the expense
of preparation for an appeal notwithstanding that leave to appeal may be
refused.
The flip side of this particular coin is that, in the absence of such a
direction, there is the potential for considerable duplication
in submissions to
the Full Court, in the sense that much of the same material will be covered
during both the hearing of the application
for leave to appeal and the actual
appeal hearing. Such a direction is, of course, subject to any contrary
direction by the Full
Court itself.
- Other factors
relevant to the justice of the particular case or the interests of the
particular parties, including the urgency of
a hearing and determination in
individual circumstances.
- A
number of these factors emerge from cases including Optiver Australia Pty Ltd
v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 47, TS Production LLC [2008] FCA
1329, Zegarac v Pitcher Partners [2009] FCA 1061, Allphones Retail Pty
Ltd [2009] FCA 849 and Harding v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
[2008] FCA 1516; (2008) 172 FCR 469.
Consideration
- In
light of the detailed and extensive consideration given by his Honour to the
application before him it is not obvious to me at
this stage of the proceedings
that his Honour’s decision is attended by sufficient doubt to warrant it
being reconsidered by
the Full Court as explained in The Decor Corporation
Pty Ltd v Dart Industries Inc [1991] FCA 655; (1991) 33 FCR 397. However Mr McCarthey
QC for the applicants submitted strongly that not only was his Honour in error,
but that the application
for leave to appeal should be referred to the Full
Court because, in summary:
- A conclusive
interpretation of s 31A of the Federal Court Act by the Full Court is
desirable in light of a range of views of
the Court at first instance.
- The litigation
between the parties did not represent a “minor interlocutory
squabble”. Rather, his Honour’s decision
put an end to the
litigation between the parties, and the applicants were prejudiced as a
result.
- His Honour was
wrong in his application of the decision in The Lardil Peoples [2001] FCA 414; (2001) 108
FCR 453.
- The case raises
issues of public importance in relation to the Native Title Act 1993
(Cth).
- For
the purposes of the application before me, Mr McCarthey’s submissions
are, to varying degrees, helpful. Following
the decision of the Full Court in
Kowalski v MMAL Staff Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd (2009) 178 FCR 401
where the Full Court examined s 31A, the importance of the Full Court so
soon thereafter revisiting the origins, meaning and
effect of s 31A is not
clear to me. Further, as I observed to Mr McCarthey QC during the
proceedings, the mere fact that
an order had been made pursuant to s 31A
summarily dismissing a substantive application for want of reasonable prospects
of
success (and thus bringing an end to the litigation) does not in itself
warrant automatic referral of an application for leave to
appeal to the Full
Court – else all applications for leave to appeal from decisions made
pursuant to s 31A should properly
be directed to the Full Court. Section 25
of the Federal Court Act and O 52 r 2AA clearly do not contemplate
that outcome.
However:
- I consider that
there is potentially some merit in Mr McCarthey’s extensive
submissions concerning the application of the
decision The Lardil Peoples v
Queensland [2001] FCA 414; (2001) 108 FCR 453 in the context of the primary judgment;
- I accept that
these proceedings did not constitute a “minor interlocutory
squabble”, but that his Honour’s orders
resulted in important
consequences for the parties; and
- I accept that
the case potentially raises issues of public importance.
- While
Mr Flanagan SC for the second respondent pressed his submission that indeed his
Honour’s findings were correct in their
entirety, and that accordingly it
was appropriate that any application for leave to appeal should be heard by a
single Judge, the
complexity of the issues in question in the substantive
proceedings are such that Counsel’s written submissions in support
of that
single issue were themselves extensive. In my view, prima facie, the
application for leave to appeal does not represent a hopeless case inappropriate
for referral to the Full Court, and there appear
to be issues which are quite
properly suitable for consideration by the Full Court.
- I
note the submissions of the respondents concerning the cost implications of the
proceedings being referred to the Full Court both
for hearing the application of
leave to appeal as well as the appeal itself. On balance however I consider that
the potential costs
and inefficiency of duplication of arguments should the
application for leave be heard by a single Judge and the matter then proceed
to
appeal support an order that both the application and the hearing of the appeal
be heard and determined concurrently by the Full
Court. This direction is, of
course, subject to contrary ruling by the Full Court itself.
- In
my view the appropriate directions are those sought by the applicants,
namely:
- A direction
under O 52 r 2AA(a) of the Federal Court Rules that the
application for leave to appeal be referred to a Full Court; and
- A direction
that, subject to any contrary direction of the Full Court, the application for
leave to appeal be heard concurrently with,
or alternatively, immediately before
the appeal.
I certify that the preceding sixteen (16)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Collier.
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Associate:
Dated: 4 February 2010
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