The issues in the parties' submissions
34 The issues identified in the written submissions on behalf of the Current Applicant, in support of the interlocutory application dated 13 February 2018 were as follows.
35 The Current Applicant submitted that the application for leave to appeal was an abuse of process and it had no reasonable prospects of success because:
a. the applicant for leave (the Former Applicant) had no authority to file the application for leave to appeal when it did, in circumstances where two of the 19 individuals who comprised the applicant were then deceased (two more having subsequently died) and another two of those 19 individuals did not provide instructions to the solicitor to file the application for leave to appeal;
b. the reinstatement as applicant in proceedings NSD2308/2011 of the 19 individuals who were formerly authorised as the applicant in NSD2308/2011 would be futile, as four of those persons were deceased and one did not provide instructions to appeal and opposed the reinstatement: the applicant as authorised by the claim group no longer exists;
c. unrelated to anything under the Native Title Act, the solicitor acting for the Former Applicant was acting without a retainer and without instructions.
Each of these was said to be a separate and distinct basis.
36 The Current Applicant submitted it was clear that as at the date when the application for leave to appeal was filed, two of the 19 persons who comprised the Former Applicant were deceased and one of those persons (Mr Jason Wilson) opposed that course. The Former Applicant's solicitor had filed an affidavit in which he stated that his instructions to pursue the appeal were obtained from only 15 of the 19 persons who comprised the Former Applicant (two were then deceased) and those instructions were received before the primary judge delivered his judgment. Specific authority was required to institute proceedings. An authority to institute proceedings extended to final judgment and execution but it did not authorise institution of an appeal without further express instructions.
37 The Current Applicant submitted that the authority that was conferred upon those 19 individuals by the native title claim group was conferred on them jointly not severally: ss 61(2)(c), 62A and 251B of the Native Title Act. The 19 individuals could not therefore have been authorised to commence appeal proceedings in circumstances where at least one of their number (Mr Jason Wilson) did not agree with that decision and another (Ray Welsh Snr) did not attend the meeting at which that decision was made. Secondly, four of the 19 individuals were deceased and there was disagreement within the claim group. In those circumstances, the 19 individuals were not authorised to bring the application for leave to appeal without first making an application under s 66B.
38 The Current Applicant submitted there was undisputed authority in this Court that the persons who comprise an applicant must act collectively in the sense that they must make decisions unanimously. The decision to bring this application for leave to appeal was not made unanimously by those living members of the applicant.
39 There was authority, the Current Applicant submitted, to suggest that in circumstances where some persons who comprised the applicant have passed away, in certain circumstances the remaining persons who comprised the applicant may continue to act. But that was not the case if there was disagreement within the group as to how the claim should proceed, or if the persons who were appointed as applicant were appointed to represent particular interests within the claim group.
40 The Former Applicant, the submission went, could not proceed in circumstances where two of the persons who comprised the Former Applicant did not give instructions for this proceeding to continue or to be commenced. One of those, Mr Welsh Senior, had subsequently passed away, but one of them, Mr Jason Wilson, was still alive. He was ready, willing and able to continue acting. In those circumstances the application for leave to appeal could not have been properly brought, because there was at least one of the living members of the applicant, ready, willing and able to continue acting as an applicant, who not only did not make that decision, but had indicated that, if he had been asked, he would have not made that decision.
41 Similarly, where, as here, there was disagreement within the group and the individual members of the applicant had been appointed as representatives of particular subgroups, this Court has said that there must be reauthorisation and there must be a s 66B meeting.
42 The Current Applicant submitted there was no authority to support the proposition that persons comprising the applicant may decide amongst themselves that they were going to make decisions by majority: all of the authorities were directly contrary to that proposition.
43 The Former Applicant submitted that resolution of the present controversy relating to whether an applicant may only act by unanimous decision of its members was a matter of construction of the Native Title Act as a whole. That Act did not state expressly how an applicant is to make decisions. Nor did that Act identify whether 'the applicant' had a separate legal personality from those persons which jointly constituted the applicant. Sections 61(1)(1), 61(2)(c), 66B(1) and 84D(1)(a) did no more than preclude a member of an applicant from acting severally, and implied that any liability an applicant incurred was likewise joint (and not several). The use of the word "jointly" in ss 61(2)(c) and 66B did not mean that those constituting the applicant must act jointly, but that jointly they were the applicant. There was nothing which implied that a multi-member body must make all decisions unanimously. If anything, the words "are jointly the applicant" suggested that each member should have an equal say (i.e. an equal vote) not that any one member might veto any decision on any basis. An individual right of veto is a several right, not a joint right.
44 It should not be overlooked, the Former Applicant's submission went, that, under the Native Title Act, the applicant became the body legally responsible for a vast array of decisions. It was notorious, at least now, that a claim group rarely spoke with one voice and often contained numerous competing interests. Unless one faction or subgroup 'has the numbers', applicants were often authorised on a 'least worst' basis, and individual members were often looked to by parts of the claim group to represent sectional interests. It would produce, in practice, intolerable delay and gridlock if every member of a multi-person applicant held a right of veto over every decision. In this respect ss 37M and 37N of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) should not be forgotten. A requirement of unanimity was not productive of efficiency. Minority interests would hold progress hostage.
45 The Former Applicant submitted that the concept of the identification of the applicant (or the registered native title claimant) should not be conflated with the manner of the decision-making of the applicant. The reasoning of Mortimer J in McGlade v Native Title Registrar [2017] FCAFC 10; 251 FCR 172 at [379] should not be followed. Because the applicant was construed by her Honour as a group of individuals acting jointly, her Honour considered (at [379]) that an action could not be taken merely by some of the individuals. However, that overlooked the possibility, as occurred here, that all members of the applicant may agree to make decisions by majority, with any subsequent majority vote being binding on all members of the applicant who must (all) then take the action decided upon.
46 The Former Applicant submitted the preferable view was that, if the persons comprising the applicant so decided, decisions could be made by a majority of those persons comprising the applicant, except where the applicant's authorisation under s 251B is subject to an express condition, imposed by the claim group, that it must make decisions unanimously. There was no such condition imposed here. To require a particular group of people to make decisions in the best interests of a larger group unanimously defied human nature and was spectacularly inefficient. There were a number of authorities to the effect that where one or more of those persons constituting the applicant in a native title claim died or was no longer willing to act in such capacity, the remaining persons constituting the applicant may continue to deal with all matters arising under the Native Title Act in relation to the applicant, that is, the remaining persons so authorised will continue to be "the applicant" for that purpose.
47 The Former Applicant submitted that if it was accepted that an applicant had no distinct legal personality, then it must follow that each of the 15 members of the Former Applicant:
a. were parties in their individual capacity in the primary claim; and
b. have given instructions to appeal in an individual capacity.
48 Once an order under s 66B had been regularly entered to replace an applicant, the Former Applicant submitted, the members of the Former Applicant were no longer obliged to act jointly. No longer were they, jointly, the applicant. It followed that the application for leave to appeal was regularly brought (or could be amended so as to regularise any deficiency), save in respect of those three persons who did not give instructions on account of illness or death, and in respect of Mr Wilson. There may also be an issue as to whether a person dying during the pendency of an appeal is, by their estate, entitled to maintain the appeal. The 14 members did not oppose the four deceased persons and Mr Wilson being removed as applicants; however, that would leave their application for leave to appeal (as applicants 1-14 inclusive) on foot.
49 The Former Applicant submitted that relevant decisions of the Court appeared to proceed on the basis that the applicant did not have a legal personality which was distinct from its members. However, those decisions should not be regarded as authoritative. The Former Applicant submitted that the Native Title Act did create a distinct legal personality at least because:
(a) Only 'the applicant' may commence and prosecute a claim (including favourable or adverse costs orders);
(b) The applicant must act jointly and has a single address for service;
(c) Although the membership of the applicant may change, 'the applicant' has an existence which transcends the tenure of any of its members; and
(d) The applicant may, by s 62A, deal with all matters arising in relation to the claim; not only did that embrace prosecution of the litigation and all its exigencies, but also the applicant may make a registration application under s 69(1) and s 190F(1); carry out the right to negotiate under subdivision P; enter into Indigenous Land Use Agreements and future act agreements; and possibly, represent the claim group's interests in other litigation.
50 The parties relied principally on the following authorities, which I list in chronological order: Anderson v Western Australia [2003] FCA 1423; 134 FCR 1; Butchulla People v Queensland [2006] FCA 1063; 154 FCR 233; Doolan v Native Title Registrar [2007] FCA 192; 158 FCR 56; Chapman v Queensland [2007] FCA 597; 159 FCR 507; Coyne v State of Western Australia [2009] FCA 533; Lennon v South Australia [2010] FCA 743; 217 FCR 438; Tigan v Western Australia [2010] FCA 993; 188 FCR 533; Anderson on behalf of the Wulli Wulli People v Queensland [2011] FCA 1158; 197 FCR 404; Weribone on behalf of the Mandandanji People v State of Queensland [2011] FCA 1169; 197 FCR 397; Far West Coast Native Title Claim v South Australia (No 2) [2012] FCA 733; 204 FCR 542; KK v Western Australia [2013] FCA 1234; 217 FCR 115; Gomeroi People v Attorney-General of New South Wales [2016] FCAFC 75; 241 FCR 301 and McGlade (above).
51 The Current Applicant submitted that the leave application was a futility because the collective "applicant" that was authorised to act for the native title claim group at the May 2013 authorisation meeting no longer existed. Four of them, each appointed to represent a particular region, were deceased and the circumstances were such that there was disagreement within the group. There was nothing the remaining members of the Former Applicant could do. They needed fresh authorisation.
52 The Former Applicant submitted that there were three reasons why success on the appeal would not be a futility. First, if the Former Applicant's contention concerning majority decision-making was accepted, the 14 remaining members could outvote Mr Wilson, and then require him to act in concert with them. If he refused to act in concert, that would be grounds for a s 66B application to remove him from the ranks of the applicant (without the need for a claim group meeting). Second, if the Former Applicant's contention concerning majority decision-making were rejected, the 14 remaining members would simply have to work with Mr Wilson to find a unanimous basis to progress the claim (which may or may not have, as its first step, an application to remove the deceased persons as members of the Former Applicant). Third, if the second scenario proved impossible in practice, a further claim group meeting could be held. The Former Applicant submitted that "all of the 14 appellants" had a legitimate interest in restoring the 'status quo' in any of the above three scenarios. In each scenario they would have at least a real chance to participate in carrying out all the tasks "with which the Native Title Act charges the applicant".
53 In oral submissions the Former Applicant said that when Rangiah J handed down judgment on 7 December 2017, those constituting the Former Applicant ceased to be members of the applicant so that they could no longer jointly do anything. So those 14 people since that time had had no role or status within the Gomeroi native title claim group, beyond being members of the Gomeroi native title claim group. In drawing the application for leave and the notice of appeal, the Former Applicant had not properly appreciated the corporate character of the Former Applicant and the effect of Rangiah J's decision, which was that the Former Applicant thereafter had no corporate character. In the result it was necessary to amend the application for leave to appeal to show that the persons there named sought to appeal in their personal capacity.
54 If that amendment were successful, it was submitted, the Court need go no further to consider the controversial issue of unanimity or majority of those constituting the applicant being required in the decision-making process.
55 The futility argument, it was submitted, must be tested against the background of both the application for leave and the appeal proper being successful, because in those circumstances Rangiah J's order of 7 December 2017 would be set aside and in lieu thereof the s 66B application that was before his Honour would be dismissed. Those people would then resume being the applicant in these proceedings. The issues arising from the four deaths and from the position of Mr Wilson could then be overcome by s 66B or by a claim group authorisation meeting.