Lot 35 - Stock dip
22 An affidavit of Mr Peter Hutchinson, a senior public servant in the Queensland Department of Natural Resources, explains the databases and records kept by the Department. He has produced various maps and tenure information concerning Lots 35, 36 and 44.
23 A Queensland Government Gazette notice published on 6 March 1915 reserved an area of five acres covering Lot 35 for a stock dip. The stock dip that was established there was known as the Stuart River Stock Dip.
24 With the agreement of the applicant and the State, Mr Dwyer's submissions as to factual matters were treated as evidence. He said that a stock dip on Lot 35 was constructed for or on behalf of the State and was operated by the State until 1988. He said that the State then entered an arrangement with the Wondai Shire Council to operate the dip as a "private dip", but it was still owned by the State. The dip closed in 2002.
25 There is a statement from Alan Franklin, a retired grazier, in evidence. Mr Franklin's father helped to build the stock dip in the 1920s. He refers to his father as being a "shareholder of the dip". The dip was part of a tick eradication program. Mr Franklin states that cattle were driven along the Ten Chain Road and held at the dip for about five days where they were dipped and inspected by a stock inspector.
26 There is also a statement from Mr Leo Seiler, a retired grazier. Mr Seiler states:
My father said a co-op was formed in about 1920 to build the dip and yards. My father built the dip with the help of other land owners in the area. This was to enable stock to be dipped out of the tick area and moved to clean areas for sale or to other properties.
27 Mr Seiler recalls a fenced area of about two acres around the dip to hold cattle there at night. During the day cattle grazed in what is now Lot 44. Mr Dwyer states that about five acres was fenced around the dip. That seems consistent with the total area of Lot 35 being five acres.
28 There is in evidence an agreement (entitled "Agreement for the Use of a Private Dip") between the Council of the Shire of Wondai and the State of Queensland dated 20 July 1989. The Council is described as the "Owner" and the "Dip" is defined as the "Wondai Shire Council Dip". Under the agreement, the State agreed, for five years, to supply the Council with tickicides and be responsible for the maintenance of the Dip, while the Council was entitled to levy, collect and retain fees for the use of the dip.
29 Mr Vince Knopke wrote a letter to the Wondai Shire Council dated 29 January 2002 indicating that the Stuart River Dip Committee had decided to close the Dip and disband the Committee. Mr Knopke was chair of the Dip Committee. The minutes of the Dip Committee indicate that the funds held by the Committee would be paid to the Council, with a recommendation that they be used to build a toilet block at the Stuart River rest area (ie. Lot 36) or donated to a fire brigade.
30 A letter from the Council to a Mr Pat Hansen dated 10 August 2005 stated that the funds were being held in trust to assist with the cost of constructing a toilet block at the Stuart River rest area, but that the project was dependant upon the provision of funding by the Department of Main Roads.
31 The applicant and the State submit that the stock dip is not a "public work" as defined in the s 253 of NTA because it was not constructed or established by or on behalf of the Crown or a local government authority. They have not submitted that it otherwise falls outside that definition. It appears to come within the description of a "structure…that is a fixture" or "major earthworks".
32 Lot 35 was permanently reserved by the State for a stock dip in 1915. There is evidence that the dipping of cattle at the Stuart River Stock Dip was supervised by stock inspectors as part of a tick eradication program aimed at preventing ticks from reaching "clean areas". I infer that the State government had substantial involvement in the operation of the stock dip.
33 While Mr Dwyer asserts that the stock dip was established for or on behalf of the State, he has not stated the source of his knowledge. In contrast, the evidence of Mr Franklin and Mr Seiler suggests that the dip was constructed or established by a co-operative of landowners. I accept the evidence of Mr Franklin and Mr Seiler.
34 Even though the stock dip was constructed or established on Crown land reserved for that purpose, the evidence does not demonstrate that the stock dip was established "by" the Crown or a statutory authority of the Crown. It is necessary, however, to consider whether the stock dip was established "on behalf of" the Crown or a statutory authority.
35 In King v Northern Territory of Australia (2007) 162 FCR 89, Moore J held at [183]:
183 ...The expression "on behalf of" has no fixed legal meaning: see R v Toohey; Ex parte Attorney-General (NT) (1980) 145 CLR 374 at 386. It may be used when speaking of an agency relationship or the relationship of trustee and beneficiary but can be used in relation to quite ephemeral relationships. The expression's meaning will be substantially determined by context. In my opinion, the expression "on behalf of" is, in context, intended to comprehend the construction or establishment of a public work where its construction or establishment is done by the Crown or an emanation of the Crown indirectly rather than directly. That is, the work is constructed by a person or body for the Crown or an emanation of the Crown.
36 The evidence does not demonstrate that the dip was constructed or established for the State or an emanation of the State.
37 By 1989, the Wondai Shire Council had become the "owner" of the stock dip. A committee of graziers apparently operated the dip on behalf of the Council. When the committee decided to close the dip, it returned the money it held to the Wondai Shire Council, which, I infer, came from the fees levied for the use of the dip as contemplated under the agreement between the Council and the State.
38 When Lot 35 was reserved for the purpose of a stock dip in 1915, Wondai Shire Council was not named as trustee. Lot 35 was gazetted as a reserve for "local government" and "stock control and health" in 1990, with the Wondai Shire Council as trustee. The Wondai Shire Council evidently acquired a proprietary interest in Lot 35 at some point before it entered the agreement with the State in 1989, but the full tenure history is not in evidence. In any event, it is apparent that the Wondai Shire Council became the trustee of Lot 35 before 23 December 1996.
39 The question becomes whether a work that was constructed or established by a private entity can be said be constructed or established "on behalf of" a local government authority which acquires the land before 23 December 1996, within s 23B and s 253 of the NTA.
40 The parties were unable to locate any authorities dealing with this issue. The ordinary meaning of the phrase "constructed or established by or on behalf of the Crown, a local government body or other statutory authority of the Crown" is against such a construction. As Moore J indicated in King at [183], the phrase requires that the construction or establishment of the work be done directly or indirectly "for" the Crown, a local government authority or an emanation of the Crown. A work that does not have this character when it is constructed or established does not acquire such a character when the land it is situated on is purchased or otherwise transferred to the Crown, a local government authority or a statutory authority of the Crown.
41 I find that the stock dip on Lot 35 does not fall within the definition of "public work" and is not a previous exclusive possession act.