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Federal Court of Australia |
Last Updated: 10 February 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Gale on behalf of the Darug Tribal Aboriginal Corporation v New South Wales Minister for Land and Water Conservation [2011] FCA 77
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Citation:
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Gale on behalf of the Darug Tribal Aboriginal Corporation v New South Wales
Minister for Land and Water Conservation [2011] FCA 77
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Parties:
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File number(s):
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NSD 6061 of 1998
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Judge:
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JAGOT J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Gale v The Minister for Land and Water
Conservation for the State of New South Wales [2004] FCA 374
Close on behalf of the Githabul People (No. 2) v State of Queensland [2010] FCA 828 McKenzie v State of South Australia [2006] FCA 891 |
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Place:
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Sydney
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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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Ms R Grant of Eddy Neumann Lawyers
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Counsel for the Secretary of the Darug Tribal Aboriginal Corporation
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Mr L Apostle (appeared with leave)
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Counsel for the First and Second Respondents:
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Mr J A Waters
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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Crown Solicitor for New South Wales
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Solicitor for the Third Respondent:
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Mr D Beckett of Chalk & Fitzgerald Lawyers
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Solicitor for the Fourth Respondent:
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Ms S Davis of Australian Government Solicitor
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Solicitor for the Fifth Respondent:
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Mr A Bentancor of Bruce Stewart Dimarco Lawyers
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Counsel for the Sixth Respondent:
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The respondent did not appear
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AND:
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NTSCORP LTD
Second Respondent DEERUBBIN LOCAL ABORIGINAL LAND COUNCIL
Third Respondent THE COMMONWEALTH
Fourth Respondent MOUNT BOYCE NURSERIES
Fifth Respondent TELSTRA LTD
Sixth Respondent AND OTHERS
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
(a) in relation to an area that is or becomes the subject of a non-claimant application, provided that it is made within the period specified in the notice issued about the non-claimant application pursuant to s 66 of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth); or
(b) in response to a notice given under s 29 of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) in relation to the area that will be affected by the act the subject of that notice provided that the claimant application is made within four months of the notification day specified in the notice.
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.
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 6061 of 1998
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BETWEEN:
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COLIN REX GALE, GORDON WILLIAM MORTON AND ANGELA MARTIN ON BEHALF OF THE
DARUG TRIBAL ABORIGINAL CORPORATION
Applicants |
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AND:
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NEW SOUTH WALES MINISTER FOR LAND AND WATER CONSERVATION
First Respondent NTSCORP LTD
Second Respondent DEERUBBIN LOCAL ABORIGINAL LAND COUNCIL
Third Respondent THE COMMONWEALTH
Fourth Respondent MOUNT BOYCE NURSERIES
Fifth Respondent TELSTRA LTD
Sixth Respondent AND OTHERS
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JUDGE:
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JAGOT J
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DATE:
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2 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
THE ISSUE
(2) A party who represents any other person in the proceeding shall not discontinue his claim for relief under subrule (1) without the leave of the Court.
BACKGROUND
(1) The Deerubbin Local Aboriginal Land Council is to notify the other parties with a copy to the Court [...] of:
(a) the conditions it contends should be imposed on any grant of leave to discontinue the proceeding; and
(b) the costs order it seeks
by 8 December 2010.
(2) Any other party may file and serve any evidence in response by 22 December 2010.
(3) List the application for leave to discontinue on 2 February 2011 at 10.15 a.m.
[135] Despite the usual, requisite and exhaustive processes undertaken to attract to the proceedings anyone who might have an interest in the claimed land, nobody but the claimant group represented by the applicant has come forward to assert native title in respect of that land.
[136] In those circumstances and for the foregoing reasons, there is no adequate reason why I should not make a determination (see s 225) that native title does not exist in relation to the subject land.
His Honour: Mr Neumann, the other case raises the same community interconnection issues.
I interpolate here that “the other case” in this sentence is the present proceedings. His
Honour continued:
If you can’t get up on that one, you would never get up in this one.
Mr Neumann: That’s right, your Honour.
His Honour: The costs of doing anything in relation to anything concerned with tenure in connection with this matter is such that it shouldn’t be countenanced unless there is some reasonable probability of success, I would have thought.
Mr Neumann: Yes, your Honour.
DEERUBBIN’S CONTENTIONS
(5) The applicant has acknowledged that the claim as currently framed suffers from a fatal defect, namely, there is not a proper description of the claim group so as to properly identify the claim group, in that the members of the claim group are not listed or described by reference to apical ancestors and instead is described as the members of Darug Tribal Council Aboriginal Corporation, a corporation duly established under the Aboriginal Councils and Associations Act 1976.
(6) The applicant has been unable to obtain the agreement of all relevant parties to a process to amend the claim group description to remove the defect.
(7) The applicant has made it clear that if the ILUA cannot proceed, the applicant would seek leave to withdraw the claim with no order as to costs.
(8) The applicant has been unable to obtain the agreement of Darug Tribal Aboriginal Corporation to proceeding with the proposed ILUA or amending the claim group description to cure the defect set out in paragraph 3 [sic 5] above.
If the proceedings are discontinued or alternatively dismissed, it would be unjust to Deerubbin Local Aboriginal Land Council, having suffered 12 years of native title claim proceedings that stood no chance of success and which had a tangible impact upon its interests, for the applicant to carry no responsibility and for the same claims to remain open to people identifying as Darug in the future. A repetition of the present proceedings would also be contrary to the interests of the administration of justice and the public policy in se 22 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976.
(1) Unless the Federal Court orders otherwise, each party to a proceeding must bear his or her own costs.
(2) Without limiting the Court's power to make orders under subsection (1), if the Federal Court is satisfied that a party to a proceeding has, by any unreasonable act or omission, caused another party to incur costs in connection with the institution or conduct of the proceeding, the Court may order the first-mentioned party to pay some or all of those costs.
(a) The proceeding has been maintained when it was clearly defective.
(b) The proceeding has been maintained with the knowledge that there was no reasonable prospect of success since at least 31 March 2004.
(c) The maintenance of the proceeding has amounted to an abuse of process since at least that time.
(d) The proceeding has been maintained despite the applicant’s knowledge that there was a serious defect in its authority since at least May 2009.
PRINCIPLES
The Court has a general discretion under s 43 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) to make cost orders. The principles informing the Court's discretion in such cases are well known: see e.g. Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 155 FCR 229 at par 234. However, when costs are sought in discontinuance proceedings, somewhat different considerations obtain to those that obtain under s 43. It has been recognised that the underlying policy of the Rules is that the discontinuing party should be liable to pay the other party's costs unless the Court orders otherwise: see e.g. Grundy v Lewis [1998] FCA 563. That policy, though, has not itself solidified into a principle which parallels the usual rule under s 43 of costs following the event. The Courts have indicated that, on a motion for discontinuance, the conduct of the parties in the matter and the reasons for the discontinuance can bear heavily on the exercise of the discretion as to costs: see O'Neill v Mann [2000] FCA 1680 at par [13].
[7] The consideration of an award of costs in this particular proceeding must, of course, be seen under the shadow of s 85A(1) and (2) of the Native Title Act...
[8] The most authoritative statement of the matters which should inform the exercise of discretion in awarding costs in light of this section was given by Lee J in Ward v Western Australia [1999] FCA 580; (1999) 93 FCR 305, in comments later endorsed by the Full Court in De Rose v State of South Australia (No 2) [2005] FCAFC 137. His Honour noted first, that s 85A(1) is intended to remove the expectation that costs will follow the event but that despite this, the Court retains its discretion as to costs unlimited by subrule (1); secondly the “unreasonable conduct” of the parties is not a jurisdictional fact which preconditions the exercise of the discretion and, conversely, s 85A(2) will not control or limit the discretion in subrule (1); thirdly, whilst the exercise of the discretion when making a costs order should be judicial, the starting point is that each party will bear their own costs.
The respondents have had to perform a tutelary function in relation to the conduct of this proceeding to date.
... The discontinuance is made under O 22 of the Federal Court Rules by reason of the named applicants’ representative position with respect to the claimant group. Leave of the Court is required under subrule (2): see Ankamuthi People v State Government of Queensland (2002) FCA 897. Where leave to discontinue is sought in a proceeding, the Court normally will allow an applicant to discontinue if he or she wants to, provided no injustice will be caused to the defendant: Covell Matthews & Partners v French Wools Ltd [1977] 1 WLR 876 at 879 which has been adopted in a number of cases in this Court. I have determined that discontinuance in this matter will occasion no injustice, subject to the question of costs.
DISCUSSION
This is the category of land in Deerubbin LALC’s area most likely to be claimable under s 36 of the [Aboriginal Land Rights Act]. However, because these lands are subject to a native title claim that has been registered, these lands are not claimable under that provision (see s 36(1)(d) of the [Aboriginal Land Rights Act]). As a result, Deerubbin has had claims to such lands refused by the Minister.
Further, Deerubbin LALC has a strong interest in this present proceeding being determined with finality. This is because the [Aboriginal Land Rights Act] provides that:
(a) grants of land under s 36 of the [Aboriginal Land Rights Act] are “subject to any native title rights and interests existing in the lands immediately before the transfer” (s 36(9) [Aboriginal Land Rights Act] – applying to land claimed under s 36 after 28 November 1994); and
(b) a LALC is prohibited from dealing with such land “unless the land is the subject of an approved determination of native title” (s 42 [Aboriginal Land Rights Act]).
Dated: 9 February 2011
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