The declaration in relation to Portions 26-28 can be inferred
28 The road dedication issue essentially reduces to the question whether the presumption of regularity can be relied upon by the State to overcome the absence of any evidence to show that Portions 26-28 on Plan LE9 had been declared open for selection in accordance with s 75 of the Land Act 1897. The applicant claims that the State cannot rely upon the presumption of regularity because it only applies to the prerequisites that are anterior to the exercise of a statutory power. To advance this contention, it relied on the judgment of McHugh JA in Aboriginal Land Council. In that case, a question arose as to whether the Secretary of the Western Lands Commission, who had purported to grant permissive occupancy of certain land, was acting pursuant to a delegation made by the Minister for Natural Resources. McHugh JA (with whom Kirby P agreed at 157) concluded (at 164) that the presumption (or legal maxim) of regularity could be used to infer that the Secretary had the requisite authority to make the grants. In reaching that conclusion, his Honour made the following observations (at 164):
The natural home of the maxim is public law. Where a public official or authority purports to exercise a power or to do an act in the course of his or its duties, a presumption arises that all conditions necessary to the exercise of that power or the doing of that act have been fulfilled. Thus a person who acts in a public office is presumed to have been validly appointed to that office: M'Gahey v Alston (1836) 2 M & W 206 at 211150 ER 731 at 733; R v Brewer (1942) 66 CLR 535 at 548; ; Hardess v Beaumont [1953] VLR 315 at 318-319.
…
A particular application of the maxim which is relevant to this case is stated in Broom's Legal Maxims, 10th ed (1939) at 642 as follows:
"… where acts are of an official nature, or require the concurrence of official persons, a presumption arises in favour of their due execution. In these cases the ordinary rule is omnia praesumuntur rite et solenniter esse acta donec probetur in contrarium - everything is presumed to be rightly and duly performed until the contrary is shown."
29 Clarke A-JA reached the same conclusion (at 169), observing that:
In my opinion in this case it is appropriate to presume, in default of any reason to conclude to the contrary, that the Minister had duly delegated the relevant power under s 17A to the signatory of the document: Western Stores Ltd v Orange City Council [1971] 2 NSWLR 36 at 47; McLean Bros & Rigg Ltd v Grice (1906) 4 CLR 835 at 849-850.
30 I do not consider McHugh JA intended to limit the application of the presumption of regularity in the way contended for by the applicant. While the first example given by his Honour that the "presumption arises that all conditions necessary to the exercise of that power or the doing of that act have been fulfilled" does support this confined operation of the presumption, the other examples his Honour gave focus on the official duty involved and presume that it was "rightly and duly performed until the contrary is shown". The statement of the presumption by Clarke A-JA is in similar terms. Furthermore, this conclusion is, in my view, supported by the approach taken in Fourmile. In that case, Drummond J (with whom Burchett J agreed at 153) inferred (at 168) that a map prepared by the Surveyor-General showing the location of a road had been publicly exhibited as required by s 46 of the Crown Lands Act 1884 (the equivalent of s 84 of the Land Act 1897). His Honour held (at 168) that such could be inferred:
… by reason of that aspect of the presumption of regularity, which Wigmore on Evidence (1981 Rev ed), at 2534 calls the presumption of due performance of official duty, that, following the proclamation of 31 October 1890, the map showing the location of Lot 25 and the road in question, which the proclamation recorded had been prepared by the Surveyor-General, was publicly exhibited, as required by s 46.
31 It will be noted that Drummond J referred to the official duty concerned and did not express the presumption in the confined manner advanced by the applicant.
32 Taking into account these observations, in the circumstances of this case, I consider that an inference can be drawn that, in the absence of anything pointing to the contrary (and there is nothing), before Portions 26-28 were granted as agricultural farms, they had been officially and duly declared open for selection in accordance with s 75 of the Land Act 1897. To explain why I have reached this conclusion, it is appropriate to begin with an observation made by Drummond J in Fourmile. It was that, since the establishment of the State of Queensland, the valid alienation by grant of an interest in Crown land in the State required legislative authority. His Honour said (at 164):
Legislative authority has been essential to the validity of any dealing with Crown wastelands in Queensland at least since the enactment of s 40(1) of the Constitution Act 1867 (Qld), which vested in the Queensland legislature "the entire management and control of" those lands. This is an embodiment of the principle first applied to Australia by s 2 of the Land Sales Act 1842 (Imp) (5 & 6 Vict, Ch 36) that the wastelands of the Crown were to be thereafter dealt with only by legislative authority; previously, it was the prerogative power that had provided the authority for disposing of interests in the Crown's lands in Australia: see Wik Peoples at 461-462 and 477-478 (FCR) and Wik Peoples at 91, 139-140, 173-174 and 227 (CLR).
33 In this case, the general legislative authority concerned was contained in s 12 of the Land Act 1897. It provided that:
The Governor in Council may, in the name of Her Majesty, subject to the provisions of this Act, grant in fee-simple, or demise for a term of years, any Crown Lands within the Colony of Queensland.
34 Then, the specific legislative authority relating to the grant of Country Lands was contained in Part IV of the Land Act 1897, headed "Selections" (ss 75 to 162), and particularly s 75 thereof, appearing under the heading "General provisions relating to all Selections". The expression "Country Lands" was defined in s 4 as: "all Crown lands which are not town lands or suburban lands". In essence, these provisions required that, before a person could apply to the Crown for the grant of an area of Country Lands, the land in question had to be declared open for selection. As can be seen above (see at [10]), s 75 provided for two kinds of declaration that Country Lands were open for selection: as unsurveyed lands, or as surveyed lands. In this matter, the applicant accepted that it can be inferred from the information recorded on Plan LAB4012 that the lands, including Portion 11v (the portion from which Portions 26-28 were subsequently subdivided) were declared open for selection as surveyed lands. The information from which this could be inferred included the fact that Plan LAB4012 reveals that a survey of those lands had been undertaken pursuant to s 77 of the Land Act 1897; that a certificate had been issued by the surveyor on 24 February 1900 (see at [13(a)] above); that following that survey, Plan LAB4012 was duly examined and charted on 28 August 1900 (see at [12(c)] above); and, most importantly, that all of these acts occurred before the publication of the proclamation of the declaration pursuant to s 75 of the Land Act 1897 on 6 October 1900 (see at [14] above). It is worth adding at this point that this inference disposes of the applicant's contention at the end of [24] above. Once the lands comprising Portion 11v were declared open for selection as surveyed lands, this necessarily meant that those lands were from that time onwards surveyed lands. Even if, as s 75 of the Land Act 1897 provided, they were subsequently withdrawn from selection at some point prior to the grant of Portion 26 in 1908, that did not, in my view, alter their character as surveyed lands.
35 However, as the applicant correctly observed, the October 1900 proclamation and declaration did not bring about the dedication of the road in question because it was not recorded on Plan LAB4012. Instead, as Mr McClelland said in his affidavit, the existence of the road was inserted on Plan LAB4012 at some later date (see Mr McClelland's evidence at [12(g)] above). Nonetheless, both the subdivision of Portions 26-28 from Lot 11v and the three chain road along the western boundary of Portion 26 are shown on Plan LE9. Furthermore, that plan does contain a certificate in almost identical terms to the one issued in relation to Plan LAB4012, suggesting that both were surveyed under the same statutory provision, namely s 77 of the Land Act 1897 (compare [13(a)] with [16(a)] above). Further still, the "Particulars" table at the top of Plan LE9 shows the grant of Portion 26 as an agricultural farm to L.A. Peeck (see at [16(b)] above). To have achieved that grant, it can be inferred that the grantee, L.A. Peeck, complied with the requirements of Part IV of the Land Act 1897 providing for the grant of Country Lands that had been declared open for selection (see at [34] above). Finally, and significantly for present purposes, s 91 of the Land Act 1897 prescribed how one may apply for a selection of Country Lands. It stated, among other things, that:
The application shall be for a portion, as specified in the Proclamation, and when the land is open for selection in alternative modes shall state precisely which mode of selection is desired.
(Emphasis added)
36 It can therefore be inferred that Portion 26 would not have been granted to the grantee, L.A. Peeck, unless he or she specified the Proclamation relating to that portion being declared open for selection in his or her application. That being so, it can also be inferred that the officials concerned had performed their duty to publish the Proclamation of a declaration under s 75 of the Land Act 1897 to the effect that the lands, including Portion 26, were open for selection. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the applicant has produced no evidence to suggest that any of the official duties mentioned above was not performed.
37 For these reasons, I infer that, subsequent to the charting of Plan LE9 and before Portion 26 was granted to L.A. Peeck, a Proclamation of a declaration pursuant to s 75 of the Land Act 1897 was duly made to the effect that Portions 26-28 were open for selection. It follows, based on the ruling in Fourmile, that the land marked as a road on Plan LE9 constituted the dedication of that area of land as a public road and that road is therefore a "public work" as defined in s 253 of the NTA. It follows further that this dedication, made as it was prior to the commencement of the RDA, was valid and therefore operated as a previous exclusive possession act under s 23B(7) of the NTA to extinguish all native title rights and interests that existed in the area of land comprising that road.