Procedural history
6 The Warrwa Combined Application is the result of the combination of two native title determination applications made by the Warrwa People, being:
(a) Warrwa People Application filed on 16 September 2010 (WAD 262 of 2010); and
(b) Warrwa #2 Application filed on 3 October 2012 (WAD 258 of 2012).
7 By leave granted by the Court on 12 May 2014, the Warrwa People Application and the Warrwa #2 Application were amended. The amended application, known as the Warrwa Combined Application, was filed with the Federal Court on 24 September 2014 and continued under Federal Court file number WAD 258 of 2012. On 1 December 2014, the Native Title Registrar gave notice pursuant to s 66A(2)(a) of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) (NTA) of the combining of the Warrwa People Application and the Warrwa #2 Application to each person who, immediately before the combining, was a party to either proceeding. By order of the Court made on 16 January 2019, the Warrwa Combined Application was given a new electronic court file proceeding number WAD 33 of 2019.
8 On 1 December 2020, a determination of native title in respect of part of the land and waters covered by the Warrwa Combined Application was made by the Court by consent of the parties pursuant to s 87A: see Carter on behalf of the Warrwa Mawadjala Gadjidgar and Warrwa People Native Title Claim Groups v State of Western Australia [2020] FCA 1702 (Carter). The area covered by that determination was referred to as Part A, and the determination excluded three separate areas covered by the Warrwa Combined Application being:
(a) that part of the Warrwa Combined Application that is overlapped by WAD 598 of 2016 (the Overlap Area);
(b) that part of the Warrwa Combined Application known as "Big Springs"; and
(c) that part of the Warrwa Combined Application known as the "Area East of the Napier Ranges".
9 The applicant has actively prosecuted its claim in respect of the Overlap Area, which concerns an area encompassing the town of Derby in Western Australia. Preservation evidence was heard by the Court during November 2019 at various locations within and around the town of Derby from three Warrwa witnesses, namely Henry Ah Choo, Barry Lennard and Tommy May (now deceased). More recently, the Court made orders timetabling a hearing in respect of the Overlap Area in respect of a single question, being whether the descendants of a particular ancestor (Topsy Mouwudjala) possess native title rights and interests in the Overlap Area.
10 Although there was a long period of inactivity in respect of the Big Springs area, the Court has been informed that the applicant has been engaged in negotiations with a neighbouring Aboriginal group in respect of native title rights and interests in that area and it is expected that an application for the determination of native title by consent in respect of that area will be forthcoming.
11 As set out below, no substantive progress has been made in advancing that part of the Warrwa Combined Application that concerns the Area East of the Napier Ranges.
12 Recognising that the three remaining areas covered by the Warrwa Combined Application were progressing at different rates and through different procedures, and in order to give greater specificity to those areas, on 11 September 2023 orders were made separating the remainder of the Warrwa Combined Application into the following three parts:
(a) Part B - comprising the Overlap Area, being the area shown with purple hatching in the map at Annexure 3 to those orders;
(b) Part C - comprising the Big Springs area, being the area described in Annexure 1 to those orders and shown with pink hatching in the map at Annexure 3 to those orders; and
(c) Part D - comprising the Area East of the Napier Ranges, being the area described in Annexure 2 to those orders and shown with blue hatching in the map at Annexure 3 to those orders.
13 The remainder of these reasons concerns the Part D area. A copy of Annexure 3 to the orders of 11 September 2023, showing the Part D area, is annexed to these reasons.
14 As the Court noted in Carter at [32], the applicant decided to exclude the Area East of the Napier Ranges (and the Big Springs area) from the Warrwa Combined Part A determination area as a result of anthropological research which suggested that, in addition to native title rights and interests claimed by the Warrwa people, the area may be the subject of native title rights and interests held by neighbouring groups. The Court noted that the applicant intended to progress claims for native title in those areas separately and following consultation with the relevant neighbouring groups.
15 In a report filed on 4 September 2018, the applicant informed the Court and the parties that field-based research had been conducted by anthropologist, Dr Bill Kruse, in respect of the Part D area during August 2018, which had included consultations with members of the Warrwa claim group as well as persons who identify as Ngarinyin and Bunuba. The report noted that the outcomes from the field work, and recommendations regarding approaches to recognise rights and interests under the NTA, had been reported to a meeting of Wilinggin Aboriginal Corporation (WAC) (which represents the interests of Ngarinyin people) in August 2018, and would be reported to a meeting of Bunuba Dawangarri Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC (BDAC) (which represents the interests of Bunuba people) at the next available opportunity.
16 In the ensuing years, the applicant had limited success in engaging with both WAC and BDAC in relation to how native title may be recognised in respect of the Part D area.
17 From at least October 2018, the Court regularly ordered case management timetables in respect of the Part D area. Those timetables contemplated community meetings with Warrwa claimants regarding further fieldwork, meetings with WAC and BDAC as well as with senior Ngarinyin and Bunuba people, and family group meetings between Warrwa, Ngarinyin and Bunuba native title holders to discuss the future progress of the Warrwa claim in respect of the Part D area. On multiple occasions, the applicant advised the Court that it would be unable to comply with the timetable due to difficulties experienced in securing the engagement of the neighbouring groups in terms of responding to correspondence and meeting requests.
18 Given the lack of progress in respect of the Part D area over many years, on 29 September 2022 I made orders requiring the applicant to file and serve an affidavit identifying each of the Aboriginal persons or bodies with whom the applicant had held discussions and who, to the knowledge of the applicant, claim native title rights or interests in the land and waters comprising the Part D area and providing a chronology of the discussions or communications with each of those persons or bodies. In compliance with that order, Scott Howieson, a Legal Officer of Kimberley Land Council Aboriginal Corporation (KLC), affirmed an affidavit on 28 October 2022. In the affidavit, Mr Howieson listed a number of Ngarinyin and Bunuba people who assert native title rights and interests and WAC, BDAC and Wanjina-Wunggurr (Native Title) Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC (which is the trustee prescribed body corporate for Ngarinyin native title holders) as relevant bodies representing the interests of Ngarinyin and Bunuba people. Mr Howieson's affidavit also presented a chronology of attempts by the Warrwa applicant, and the KLC on behalf of the Warrwa applicant, to engage with the above persons and bodies in respect of the Part D area. Relevant events include:
(a) between 14 and 15 August 2018, Dr Kruse conducted fieldwork in the Part D area with Warrwa, Ngarinyin and Bunuba representatives;
(b) on 7 and 8 May 2019, the KLC attended a BDAC board meeting to discuss the Warrwa claim in respect of the Part D area;
(c) on 29 May 2020, the Warrwa applicant wrote to the BDAC and the WAC requesting advice whether the Bunuba and Ngarinyin people respectively assert native title rights and interests in respect of the Part D area;
(d) on 29 July 2020, the KLC attended a BDAC board meeting at which the BDAC confirmed that Bunuba people assert native title rights and interests in the Part D area;
(e) on 14 December 2021, the Warrwa applicant wrote again to the WAC requesting advice whether Ngarinyin people assert native title rights and interests in respect of the Part D area;
(f) on 13 January 2022, the WAC wrote to the Warrwa applicant confirming that Ngarinyin people assert native title rights and interests in the Part D area and that WAC would not support a Warrwa native title claim in respect of the Part D area;
(g) on 1 July 2022, the Warrwa applicant wrote to the BDAC and the WAC proposing a meeting of representatives to discuss options for the ways in which native title may be recognised in the Part D area; and
(h) on 1 July 2022, the WAC replied by email stating that it was unlikely the WAC board's position, as stated in its letter of 13 January 2022, had changed.
19 On 21 November 2022, I made further orders requiring the applicant to send letters to each of the Aboriginal persons or bodies whom the applicant has reason to believe may claim native title rights and interests in the Part D area and notifying them, amongst other things, of a further scheduled hearing on a date in 2023 and that the Court would consider making an order at that hearing precluding any person from making an application under s 84(5) of the NTA to be joined as a party to the proceeding without the leave of the Court. The order was intended to provide a procedure by which other Aboriginal persons, particularly Ngarinyin and Bunuba people, could come forward and participate in the present proceeding in respect of the Part D area.
20 By a further affidavit made on 25 July 2023 in accordance with the further orders of the Court, Mr Howieson deposed that, on 19 July 2023, the Warrwa applicant arranged a meeting at the Civic Centre in Derby between Warrwa and Ngarinyin people in relation to the recognition of native title in the Part D area. The Warrwa applicant also invited Bunuba people to attend the meeting but, shortly before the meeting, the BDAC advised that relevant Bunuba people had sorry business for a Bunuba elder, and would not be available to attend. Mr Howieson deposed that the attendees at the meeting were unable to agree on a way forward to progress the native title claim over the Part D area.
21 At a case management hearing conducted on 2 August 2023, a legal representative of the BDAC attended but no representative of the Ngarinyin people attended. Mr Mumford on behalf of the applicant informed the Court that Ngarinyin people considered that native title rights and interests in the Part D area are not shared with the Warrwa people, and that Ngarinyin people were proposing to take their own steps in relation to that area. Ms Myers on behalf of the BDAC attended the hearing and informed the Court that Bunuba people considered that they hold native title rights and interests in the Part D area, but were willing to meet with Warrwa people later in August 2023 to discuss the Warrwa claim in respect of that area. The State informed the Court that it was concerned that, although the Warrwa claim in respect of the Part D area had been on foot for many years, the State had not received any material supporting the Warrwa claim in respect of the Part D area. The State indicated its view that the time may be approaching where a summary dismissal application may need to be made. At the hearing, I informed the parties that, if the claim in respect of the Part D area was not able to be progressed, the Court would consider whether it should be summarily dismissed. The case management hearing was then adjourned to 12 September 2023, and an order was made for the Warrwa applicant to give a copy of the order to the general manager of the WAC.
22 At the case management hearing on 12 September 2023, Ms Myers on behalf of the BDAC attended but no representative of the Ngarinyin people attended. Mr Howieson for the Warrwa applicant informed the Court that a meeting had occurred between the Warrwa applicant and representatives of the BDAC on 23 August 2023. Following that meeting, the BDAC wrote the Warrwa applicant informing them that BDAC intended to lodge a separate native title claim over the Part D area and that its position was that Warrwa people did not have rights and interests in the area. That position was confirmed by Ms Myers at the hearing. In circumstances where it was clear that the Warrwa applicant's claim in respect of the Part D area could not progress to any form of consent determination (as it was opposed by the Ngarinyin and Bunuba people), I indicated to the Warrwa applicant that the Court would require them to propose a timetable for progressing the claim to a hearing, failing which the Court would need to consider whether the claim should be summarily dismissed. The case management hearing was adjourned until 14 November 2023 to enable the Warrwa applicant and the State to confer about a timetable to progress the matter to hearing.
23 On 20 October 2023, the applicant provided the State with an affidavit of Nathan Lennard affirmed 12 October 2023. Mr Lennard is a member of the Warrwa claim group (and a native title holder in respect of the Part A native title determination). The affidavit set out Mr Lennard's evidence in support of the Warrwa people's claim to native title in respect of the Part D area. Upon provision of the affidavit, the applicant informed the State that it did not anticipate being in a position to provide any further evidence in support of the Warrwa people's claim to the Part D area. By letter dated 8 November 2023, the State informed the applicant that Mr Lennard's affidavit did not, in the State's view, provide a sufficient basis upon which the State could support the continuation of the Part D claim, and that this was particularly so in circumstances where the applicant had indicated that it did not intend to provide any further evidence in support of the claim.
24 At a further case management hearing on 14 November 2023, Mr Howieson for the applicant confirmed that the applicant had provided Mr Lennard's affidavit to the State but that it did not anticipate being in a position to provide any additional evidence in respect of the Part D area. Mr Howieson also informed the Court that his instructions were to proceed with the claim in respect of the Part D area, however the applicant was unable to propose any programming orders to progress it. Mr Howieson candidly and appropriately informed the Court that, although he did not have positive instructions from the applicant that there will not be any further evidence on the claim, given the length of the matter and his discussions with the applicant so far, he did not anticipate being in a position to provide any further evidence. The State informed the Court that, in the circumstances, it supported the making of an order for the applicant to show cause why the claim ought not be dismissed. Ms Kilpatrick for the BDAC informed the Court that it had secured funding from the KLC to progress a claim in respect of the Part D area. In the circumstances, I made orders for the determination of the question whether Part D of the proceeding should be summarily dismissed pursuant to s 31A of the FCA Act on the ground that the applicant has no reasonable prospect of successfully prosecuting that part of the proceeding.