Ms Spurling's application
28 In her affidavit, Ms Spurling deposed that she is a descendant of KB, who is her great-grandmother. Ms Spurling was born in Kalgoorlie and has spent most of her life in the Kalgoorlie-Boulder area.
29 Ms Spurling acknowledged in her affidavit that, in Strickland, the Court found that KB was a Western Desert person, that she observed Western Desert laws and customs during her lifetime and she held traditional rights and interests in the land and waters of the Maduwongga - Nyalpa Pirniku overlap area under those Western Desert laws. Ms Spurling deposed that:
I have inherited, in accordance with traditional law and custom, the same rights and interests as were recognised to be held by my great-grandmother KB in the Maduwongga and NP overlap area, as well as the rights and interests held by my grandfather Arthur Newland.
I assert those rights and interest in accordance with traditional law and custom to the land and waters in the Kalgoorlie and Coolgardie area which is currently the subject of a claim on behalf of the Marlinyu Ghoorlie claim group. …
30 I accept, as submitted by Counsel for Ms Spurling, that on this application Ms Spurling asserts that she holds native title rights and interests in part of the trial area under Western Desert law and customs. That assertion marks a significant change in the position taken by Ms Spurling's family in the Maduwongga claim. As discussed above, the Maduwongga claim was brought on behalf of a group of people who claimed to be a distinct land-holding group descended from one apical ancestor, KB, and who called themselves Maduwongga. As explained by Jackson J in Strickland (at [32]):
The Maduwongga applicant's main contention is that KB held rights and interests in the land and waters within the Maduwongga claim area under a normative system of laws and customs relating to land tenure that was distinct from and antithetical to any normative system of laws and customs observed by the peoples of the Western Desert. It also contends that KB's descendants comprise the only identifiable surviving members of the group who hold rights and interests in the land and waters in the Maduwongga claim area.
31 In Strickland, Jackson J rejected that claim and found that there was no distinct Maduwongga society (at [886]). Justice Jackson did not accept the evidence given by Mrs Strickland and Mrs Nudding that their father and aunties had used the name Maduwongga to refer to a distinct Aboriginal tribe (at [889]). Justice Jackson concluded that the use of the name was prompted by Mrs Strickland's discovery of Tindale's materials in the South Australian Museum in 1994 and not by any prior knowledge or use of the term in that way by her or her family (at [890]). Justice Jackson also found, on the balance of probabilities, that KB was not born at Edjudina (which is, in any event, east of Menzies and outside the Marlinyu Ghoorlie claim area), and that it is likely that KB came with her family at a young age into the Laverton and Burtville area, from spinifex country further to the east of there, and then later down into Edjudina (at [897]).
32 Although, by her affidavit, Ms Spurling has abandoned a claim based on being a member of a distinct group of people called the Maduwongga, and now appears to embrace the findings made in Strickland that her ancestor, KB, was a Western Desert person, the basis for her claim that she has native title rights and interests in the area around Kalgoorlie is less than clear. Ms Spurling continues to claim rights as a descendant of a single apical ancestor, KB, and not as part of a broader Aboriginal society. That claim is problematic in circumstances where the Court has recently found that KB was one of many members of a Western Desert society and came from country far to the east of the Marlinyu Ghoorlie claim area.
33 In support of her claimed interest, Ms Spurling exhibited to her affidavit a report prepared by Dr Christine Mathieu dated 16 October 2023 titled "Ethnohistorical enquiry regarding native title rights in the Goldfields of WA with special attention to the region between Coolgardie and Menzies". By her interlocutory application, Ms Spurling also seeks to file the report and have Dr Mathieu give evidence with the other expert witnesses in this proceeding in mid-December 2023. Dr Mathieu was an expert witness for the Maduwongga claimant and gave evidence in the hearing with respect to the Maduwongga - Nyalpa Pirniku overlap area. At that time, Dr Mathieu expressed the opinion that, during KB's time, the Maduwongga were a distinct land-holding group (Strickland at [133]).
34 There are a number of difficulties with Ms Spurling's reliance on Dr Mathieu's 16 October 2023 report in support of her application for joinder.
35 First, Dr Mathieu was found to be an unsatisfactory witness by Jackson J in Strickland (at [134]). Justice Jackson's findings were as follows:
(a) Dr Mathieu's academic career does not place her in the mainstream of Australian Aboriginal anthropology (at [135]). Dr Mathieu has not acted as an expert witness in relation to any native title claims other than the Maduwongga claim (at [139]). Dr Mathieu's place outside the mainstream of expertise in Australian Aboriginal anthropology meant that she lacked a thoroughgoing grounding in the theoretical frameworks which have come to be accepted in the field and that this meant that her interpretations of the data were idiosyncratic ones which were not informed by a reliable body of knowledge (at [142]).
(b) Dr Mathieu did not present as a disinterested, objective witness who understood that her first duty was to the Court. Rather, she was partial and partisan. By the time the Maduwongga - Nyalpa Pirniku overlap matter was heard, Dr Mathieu had worked with the Maduwongga for over eight years. At times Dr Mathieu seemed to have a close emotional identification with the Maduwongga claimants (at [144]). Justice Jackson formed the overall impression that Dr Mathieu was trying to fit her data into an interpretation which supported the Maduwongga claim (at [149]).
(c) Dr Mathieu's evidence was not accompanied by any formal brief or instructions (at [150]). Justice Jackson formed the impression that Dr Mathieu's work was the result of an iterative process of working up reports to support the Maduwongga claim (at [151]), and that Dr Mathieu was looking for a "socio-linguistic group", rather than addressing open ended questions as to whether such a group existed during KB's time and, if it did, whether it observed and acknowledged a normative system of laws and customs giving rise to rights and interests in relation to land and waters distinct from that of the Western Desert. Justice Jackson concluded that the lack of transparency in how Dr Mathieu's reports came to be produced undermined confidence in their reliability (at [152]).
36 Second, like the report prepared by Dr Mathieu for the Maduwongga - Nyalpa Pirniku overlap matter, the 16 October 2023 report was not prepared in response to a proper letter of instructions. An annexure to the 16 October 2023 report reproduces what purports to be a letter of instructions to Dr Mathieu from Ms Spurling's solicitors, Civic Legal, dated 13 October 2023, three days before Dr Mathieu finalised her report. Self-evidently, Dr Mathieu's report was not prepared pursuant to that letter of instructions. Indeed, Dr Mathieu's report discloses that the "report represents over 1400 hours of work undertaken between September 2022 and October 2023". The preparation of such letters, which falsely purport to be letters of instruction to expert witnesses, should be denigrated. By reason of the false letter of instructions, the basis on which Dr Mathieu was originally instructed to prepare her 16 October 2023 report is not disclosed in a transparent manner. As observed by Lee J in BrisConnections Finance Pty Ltd (Receivers and Managers Appointed) v Arup Pty Ltd (2017) 252 FCR 450 (at [71], emphasis in original):
The point of a letter of instruction being annexed to a report is not to act out a stylised ritual, but to provide to the Court with a transparent indication of what has been provided to the expert and the questions that the expert was actually asked to address. It should be able to be read literally without being silly. As is (at the very least) implicit in [Part 23 of the Federal Court Rules 2011], the work of the expert is to attend to the questions "the expert was asked to address", not to invert the process by using the expert's specialised knowledge in order to identify the questions that should have been asked and the assumptions that should have been given. … The integrity of the expert evidence process and the independence of experts is best facilitated by transparency in what is being asked of experts prior to, or at the time, they are forming their opinions and, if the questions need to change because they are misdirected, a record being made by way of supplementary instructions as to what has changed.
37 Third, Dr Mathieu states in her 16 October 2023 report that she has "taken into account the rulings of Jackson J". Despite that statement, Dr Mathieu has maintained her opinion that:
There existed a group of people who were autochthonous and who held native title under traditional laws and customs in the region between Coolgardie and Menzies at effective British sovereignty [1890s]. The Nudding-Strickland families are the descendants of these people and they hold the common rights and group rights comprising the native title in this region.
38 There is considerable difficulty in Dr Mathieu purporting to take into account Jackson J's findings in Strickland, particularly with respect to KB, while maintaining that, at the time of the assertion of British sovereignty, there existed a distinct socio-linguistic group in the country surrounding Kalgoorlie in which KB held rights and interests and, by descent, in which the Strickland-Nudding families now hold rights and interests. In her report, Dr Mathieu does not abandon her opinion with respect to the existence of a Maduwongga society, notwithstanding the findings of the Court in Strickland. For example, at paragraph 415 of her report, Dr Mathieu expresses the opinion that the evidence she recounts "strongly suggests that there was a distinct 'Maduwongga society' in the region between Coolgardie and Menzies". Later, at paragraph 655, Dr Mathieu expresses the opinion that:
The evidence also confirms the place of Maduwongga society at a ritual cross-road, in a social and ecological transitional zone on the margins of the Desert. The sources explored in this chapter confirm Maduwongga country at the southwestern end of the Desert ceremonial sphere. ...
39 In support of her joinder application, Ms Spurling submitted that her native title rights and interests are wholly inconsistent with the native title rights of exclusive possession claimed by the Marlinyu Ghoorlie applicant throughout the entire Marlinyu Ghoorlie claim area, including the right to control access, protect and make decisions about sites and to take and use resources from the entire claim area. Ms Spurling submitted that she is not claiming a determination of native title for her or her family, but to defensively assert and protect her native title rights and interests from erosion, dilution or discount by a determination in favour of the Marlinyu Ghoorlie claim group. Ms Spurling submitted that there is sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case that she has a genuine and substantial interest in this proceeding because a determination of native title in the proceeding is in rem and will bind her and her family. No further application for determination can be made with respect to the same determined area.
40 With respect to the interests of justice, Ms Spurling submitted that her joinder would assist the Court in reaching a just determination. As to the delay in making the joinder application (following the decision in Strickland on 27 March 2023 and the consequential dismissal of the Maduwongga claim on 28 April 2023), Ms Spurling deposed that:
(a) Just before Justice Jackson delivered his judgement, the Maduwongga's solicitors at the time, Corser & Corser Lawyers, went into liquidation on or around 8 March 2023.
(b) After the judgment and the dismissal of the Maduwonnga claim, the Maduwongga applicant needed to seek advice on the decision, including to find new lawyers and to find sources of funding to engage new lawyers. Lack of funds and funding was a significant issue for the Maduwongga claim group.
(c) Ms Spurling needed to personally engage lawyers to represent her in this application.
(d) Ms Spurling's lawyers required time to get up to speed on the matter and prepare a brief to Dr Mathieu with very limited access to relevant documents in the Maduwonnga claim which were in the possession of Corser & Corser and the appointed liquidator.
(e) Dr Mathieu required time to prepare and finalise the 16 October 2023 Report.
41 Ms Spurling submitted that her joinder would cause minimal prejudice to the other parties. If joined, Ms Spurling would seek to rely on: the evidence given by her mother, Mrs Strickland, in the Maduwongga - Nyalpa Pirniku overlap proceeding; the evidence given by her aunt, Mrs Nudding, by way of preservation evidence in this proceeding; and the 16 October 2023 report of Dr Mathieu. Ms Spurling submitted that the other parties to this proceeding attended the hearing of Mrs Nudding's preservation evidence and have had access to Mrs Strickland's evidence, and therefore receipt of that evidence will cause little prejudice. In relation to Dr Mathieu's evidence, Ms Spurling submitted that there is sufficient time for Dr Mathieu to participate in the expert conferral process and give evidence with the other experts in the week of 11 December 2023.