(c) Section 47A (1)(b)(i)
78 When the NT Act was first enacted, it is fair to say that its approach was relatively straightforward. Substantively, Part 2 dealt with native title. Sections 10 and 11 provided for the recognition of native title, and that it may not be extinguished contrary to the NT Act. In Division 2, in comparatively brief terms, it set out the status and effect of past acts of the Commonwealth by ss 14-15 and s 16 preserved native title where the past act might otherwise affect land reserved for the benefit of Aboriginal peoples or the rights and interests of Aboriginal peoples. It provided by s 19 for State or Territory legislation parallel to ss 15 and 16. Division 3 (ss 21-44) dealt with future acts and native title. Division 4 contained "Other provisions relating to native title", relevantly s 47 dealing with pastoral leases held by native title claimants.
79 Section 47 provides that the extinguishment of native title by the grant of a pastoral lease, or by the doing of acts under a pastoral lease, must be disregarded but the lease and entitlements under the lease have priority and the non-extinguishment principle defined in s 238 applies. It is accepted that s 47 does not "cover the field" of the relationships between native title and pastoral leases and rights under pastoral leases: see the remarks of Sundberg J in Neowarra at [699]-[703].
80 The 1998 NT Amendment Act extensively amended the NT Act, including provisions relating to extinguishment of native title in Division 2 of Part 2. It added Division 2A concerning the validation of intermediate period acts and Division 2B concerning the confirmation of past extinguishment of native title by certain valid or validated acts. There were also extensive changes to, and additions to, Division 3 dealing with future acts and native title.
81 The point to be made from those amendments, for present purposes is the thoroughness of the topics covered by that series of amendments and the obvious care and detail reflected in the amendments. That is, in part, the context relevant to the construction and application of ss 47A and 47B (both introduced by the 1998 NT Amendment Act). Section 44B was added in Division 4 of the NT Act at the same time.
82 The focus of the applicant in this matter, at least in part, is upon the meaning of the term "grant of the freehold estate or lease" in s 47A(1)(b)(i). Section 44H is said to avoid doubt. It prescribes that the rights under a "lease, licence, permit or authority" and their exercise have priority over native title rights. Section 44H(a) refers to the valid "grant, issue or creation of a lease, licence, permit or authority". The wording used, namely "grant, issue or creation", does not readily encompass a focus on particular rights or restrictions or limitations on those rights by an agreement effecting, or supporting, or being effective conditional upon, the transfer of a lease. Whilst the relevant wording in s 47A(1)(b)(i) is a little different, relating to a freehold estate or a lease, it cannot easily be said that the grant of a lease as there used is intended to encompass the transfer, or the circumstances surrounding the transfer, of a lease. In essence, that is the applicant's first contention, namely that the term "grant" covers the transfer of leases issued under the Crown Lands Act 1929 (SA) or its predecessors.
83 In my view, the text of s 47A(1)(b)(i) supports the specific technical conveyancing meaning for "grant".
84 There are three types of interest in the claimed area provided for in this subclause: a freehold estate, a lease, or a "vesting" of the area. The extent to which the word "vesting" might assist in the proper construction of the subclause requires separate consideration.
85 In the case of freehold land, the relevant part of the adjectival phrase limiting the description or defining the circumstance in which s 47A will apply are the words: "if the grant of the freehold estate … took place under legislation that makes provision for the grant … of such things only to, in or for the benefit of Aboriginal peoples". That is, the grant must take place under legislation of a particular character. The focus, in my view, is upon the nature of the legislation under which the grant of the freehold estate took place.
86 That is consistent with the views expressed in Hayes and Risk, and as assumed in Neowarra and in Moses. There is nothing in Rubibi to suggest to the contrary.
87 In the case of leased land, the apposite wording from s 47A(1)(b)(i) is that the lease comes within the provision if the grant of the lease took place under legislation that makes provision for the grant of the lease only to, in or for the benefit of Aboriginal peoples. It is clear that the word "lease" is used as a noun and the description is relevantly of the nature of the tenure in force at a particular time and the word "grant" catches the way in which that tenure (freehold estate or lease) took place.
88 It is correct to observe, as the applicant does, that Div 4A of the ATSI Act, containing s 191A referred to above, was introduced in 1995 only a relatively short time before the 1998 Amendment. Thus, the argument ran, the use of the word "grant" in those provisions - which clearly encompasses the transfer of a leasehold interest in land (either to or by the ILC) - should be given the same meaning in ss 47A of the NT Act. In my view, there are three reasons why that is not the case, in addition to the general constructional considerations to which I have referred.
89 The first is contextual. If the legislature had intended that to be the case, being mindful of the way the word "grant" is used in Div 4A of the ATSI Act, that could have been made clear quite readily. The second is textual. There is a difference between the wording of s 191A and like provisions of the ATSI Act, where what is addressed is the "grant" of an interest in land, and of s 47A where the "grant" refers to the freehold grant itself or to the lease itself.
90 The third and more significant step in that analysis, as a complement to the first of those reasons, arises from the term "vested" or "vesting" in s 47A(1)(b)(i).
91 In my view, the separate treatment of the concept of vested or vesting in s 47A(1)(b)(i) is significant. The state of affairs it provides for is that, at the time of the application, the area in question is vested in the person. The vesting event itself then must have the requisite characteristic of having taken place under legislation of the specified kind.
92 In other words, there are three states of affairs or types of circumstances which must exist at the time of the application:
(1) the existence of a freehold estate;
(2) the existence of a lease in force; or
(3) the existence of the area being vested
in a person (here, VYAC). Then the subsection requires that the event by which that statement of affairs arose (and continued to the time of the application) be:
(1) the grant of the freehold estate;
(2) the grant of the lease; or
(3) the taking place of the vesting.
Its focus is upon the time at which that state of affairs arose. The subsection requires that the event, when it took place, have a particular characteristic: that it was under legislation that makes provision for such grants or vesting only to, in or for the benefit of Aboriginal peoples.
93 The consequence of that analysis of the wording of s 47A(1)(b)(i) is that I do not accept the applicant's contention that both the freehold land and the perpetual lease land are covered by that subclause in respect of the grant of either the lease or the freehold titles.
94 Both the freehold land and the perpetual lease land, it is accepted, were originally the subject of the various perpetual leases listed in Column E of Attachment 3 and it is further accepted that they were not granted under legislation that made provision for those grants only to, in or for the benefit of Aboriginal peoples. That legislation was the Crown Lands Act 1929 (SA).
95 I do not consider that the subsequent dealings with the perpetual lease land and the freehold land engage s 49A(1)(b)(i) the way primarily contended by the applicant, that is by the proposition that "grant" in s 47A(1)(b)(i) includes the processes by which the perpetual lease land and the freehold land came to be held by VYAC.
96 In the case of the perpetual lease land, the relevant transfers of the leases were firstly to ILC in February 2000 and then by ILC to VYAC on 5 February 2001 subject to the caveat to ILC (other than the lease over the land in Item 4 of Attachment 3, which was transferred by ILC to VYAC on 17 June 2002). For the reasons I have given, those transfers did not constitute the grant of the leases within that provision.
97 I do not think that the wording of s 47A(1)(b)(i) is expressed widely enough to encompass the transfer of the perpetual leases to VYAC by ILC, or to encompass the processes by which the freehold land came to be granted to VYAC.
98 In relation to the perpetual leases, those vested in VYAC at the time of the application must have the quality of being granted under legislation of a particular character. The word "grant" would not have a different meaning when applied to freehold land from that when applied to leasehold land. The grant of the freehold estate by the State to VYAC in 2009 was not made under legislation of the required character. Typical legislation where that would arise would include the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 (Cth) and in South Australia the Aboriginal Lands Trust Act 1966 (SA), Anangu Pitjantjatjara Land Rights Act 1981 (SA) and Maralinga Tjaruta Land Rights Act 1984 (SA).
99 The wider legislative context referred to by the applicant, in my view, does not point to a different conclusion.
100 On the other hand, I do not see why the third alternative, namely that the perpetual lease land was vested in VYAC at the time of the application is not enlivened. There was little debate in submissions about the scope of the words "took place". They are not technical words. In a technical sense, the transfer of the perpetual leases took place under the Real Property Act 1886 (SA), because that is the legislation which provides for the transfer of interests in land registered under that Act. In a colloquial sense, they took place either under the ATSI Act because it was the ILC exercising its powers under the ATSI Act which enabled it to transfer the perpetual leases to VYAC. It is clear enough that such a vesting under the ATSI Act is a vesting that meets the further requirement of s 47A(1)(a)(i), namely that it makes provision for the vesting of such things only to, or for the benefit of, Aboriginal peoples.
101 That approach gives work to the alternative of "vesting" in s 47A(1)(a)(i), whereas that alternative would have little work to do if it is treated simply as the mirror image of the word "grant" used in its conventional conveyancing sense. It gives effect to the reality that ILC, by the exercise of its powers and functions under the ATSI Act, is in fact ensuring that such land is held for the purposes contemplated. It fits with the contention of the applicant that the legislature would have had in mind the purpose and effect of the ATSI Act, more specifically the functions and powers of the ILC as introduced in 1995, when it introduced ss 47A and 47B into the NT Act by the 1998 NT Amendment Act. More generally, it would seem to accord with the beneficial purpose of the legislative provisions.
102 The position is a little more complex in relation to the freehold land. The grant of the freehold title was made in a technical or formal sense under the Real Property Act 1886 (SA). Immediately before the grant, VYAC held the leasehold interest in circumstances where the vesting of that interest from the ILC satisfied s 47A(1)(b)(i) for the reasons just given. That interest was surrendered, albeit upon the terms and in the circumstances referred to above.
103 For the reasons given above, in my view the grant of the freehold estate by the State, in pursuance of that arrangement, was not a grant of the freehold estate which took place under legislation of the character required by s 47A(1)(b)(i). Nor do I think that the vesting of the freehold estate took place under such legislation. The vesting took place under the documentary arrangement referred to. That documentary arrangement was secured by the ILC apparently exercising its powers under the ATSI Act, but the freehold interest of VYAC was not vested directly by any action of VYAC. VYAC, for its part, agreed to limit the bundle of rights and interests which it obtained as the holder of the freehold estate, by the terms of the Deed of Consent and Grant of Money between the ILC and VYAC. That is an inter partes arrangement between the ILC and VYAC. That Deed was imposed by the ILC as a condition of the surrender by VYAC of its leasehold interest in the freehold land (then held as perpetual lease land) under s 191S(2) of the ATSI Act. That is not, on its face, a Deed to which the State is a party. By the Deed, the ILC made a grant of money under s 191D(1)(c) to cover the State's costs of accepting the surrender of the leases, and of granting the freehold title. The Deed was therefore an integral step in the process by which the vesting of the freehold land took place. There is much to be said, in the circumstances, for adopting a wide constructional choice for the words "took place" in s 47A(1)(b)(i). However, having regard to the alternative provided by s 47A(1)(b)(ii), I do think the words "took place" should be construed as applying to, and limited to, the instrument by which the vesting took place, rather than to extend to the instruments which set the scene for that vesting. That preserves the focus which s 47A(1)(b)(i) has upon the direct way in which the vesting took place.
104 Consequently, I conclude that the freehold estate held by VYAC at the time of the application (albeit charged to the ILC under the terms of that Deed) was not granted by the ATSI Act, and the vesting of that interest did not take place under the ATSI Act. The freehold land does not therefore attract the application of s 47A by the application of s 47A(1)(b)(i).