Discretionary factors
39 Ms Kidson submitted that joinder was in the interests of justice, as it would protect the Hill applicants from serious consequences, viz the possible loss of their asserted native title rights and interests. At the same time, she submitted their joinder would not prejudice the Wongkumara applicant as the substantive proceedings were not presently progressing towards a consent determination. Ms Kidson emphasised that each of the Hill applicants sought only to be joined in their individual capacity and their interests could not be protected by any mechanism other than joinder. She submitted that while some time had elapsed between the commencement of these proceedings and the date that her clients' application was filed, in their affidavits they had provided sufficient explanations for that delay. She submitted that, if the Hill applicants were joined as parties to these proceedings, it would allow them to negotiate directly with the other parties, particularly the Wongkumara applicant. She also suggested that the question of the Hill applicants' status as Wongkumara People could, with the Wongkumara applicant's consent, be referred to the National Native Title Tribunal for determination. Alternatively, she suggested that the question could be determined as a separate question in these proceedings before any consent determination is made.
40 On this latter aspect, Ms Kidson submitted that the status of the Hill applicants as Wongkumara People was a matter that is capable of determination by this Court. She submitted this particular dispute was not an intramural dispute, such as that discussed by Mansfield J in Starkey v State of South Australia (2011) 193 FCR 450; [2011] FCA 456 (Starkey). That was so, she submitted, because the Hill applicants were not presently accepted as being members of the claim group, whereas in Starkey, Mr Starkey definitely was. Ms Kidson also relied upon the recent Full Court decision of Graham as authority for the proposition that the Court is required to determine who the persons are who hold native title, if that matter is put in issue in native title determination proceedings. Further, she submitted that, in the present circumstances, "a grant of leave [to be joined] is readily made", relying upon Starkey at [68] and Butterworth v Queensland (2010) 184 FCR 397; [2010] FCA 325 at [29].
41 Mr Tokley submitted that the Hill applicants should not be joined as parties to these proceedings because the dispute between them and the Wongkumara claim group is not one that the Court can resolve in these proceedings. He submitted there was therefore no utility in joining them as parties. In making this submission, Mr Tokley particularly relied upon what Dowsett J said in Aplin on behalf of the Waanyi Peoples v Queensland [2010] FCA 625 (Aplin) at [256] and [267] as follows:
256 Inevitably, these requirements lead to the conclusion that for the purposes of the Native Title Act, it is the claim group which must determine its own composition. Any final decision in that regard must be taken pursuant to either of the alternative processes identified in s 251B. The claim group must assert that, pursuant to relevant traditional laws and customs, it holds Native Title over the relevant area. It is not necessary that all of the members of the claim group be identified in the application. It is, however, necessary that such identification be possible at any future point in time. A claim group cannot arrogate to itself the right arbitrarily to determine who is, and who is not a member. As to substantive matters concerning membership, the claim group must act in accordance with traditional laws and customs. As to matters of process the claim group must act in accordance with traditional laws and customs or, in the absence of relevant laws and customs, pursuant to such process as it may adopt.
…
267 … As a matter of fact I have held that Minnie identified as a Waanyi person (believing that she was descended from at least one Waanyi parent) and was accepted by Waanyi people at Burketown and at Lawn Hill as being Waanyi. However the case really addresses the entitlement of Minnie's descendants to Waanyi identity. That question depends upon group acceptance of each of them as being of Waanyi descent which question, in turn, depends primarily upon whether the present Waanyi people accept that Minnie was a Waanyi person. As the applicant asserts, the claim group must determine that question. To date they have refused so to recognize her. I cannot take that decision for them. Nor can I find that during her lifetime, the Waanyi people, as a whole, accepted her as being Waanyi. My findings as to such acceptance are limited to the position as it was at Lawn Hill and at Burketown. It is for the claim group to determine whether that is a sufficient basis for accepting that she was a Waanyi woman, descent from whom is a basis for Waanyi identity. However I should make a few comments about how the matter might be addressed.
42 The import of these observations, so Mr Tokley submitted, was that the Court could determine factual issues relating to ancestry, descent and associated historical matters, but it could not determine whether the descendants of a particular Aboriginal person were accepted by a present day society of Aboriginal people to be members of that society. He submitted that, in this case, the Wongkumara applicant does not dispute the former factual issues, viz that the Hill applicants are each descended from a Wongkumara apical ancestor, however the Wongkumara applicant does dispute the latter issue, viz whether the Hill applicants are accepted as Wongkumara persons by the present day Wongkumara People. He submitted the Wongkumara claim group is the only body that is able to determine this latter question. Indeed, he submitted, the Wongkumara claim group had already made that decision by the unanimous representative vote taken in late 2013 to the effect that the Hill applicants were not Wongkumara People (see at [9] above).
43 Mr Tokley submitted that Graham was not authority for the proposition that the Court is required to determine disputes regarding the composition of a native title claim group, once that matter is put in issue in native title determination proceedings. He submitted that in Graham, the error identified by the Full Court was not a failure by the trial judge to determine whether certain descendants of an apical ancestor should have been accepted as members by the claim group, but rather a failure to determine the factual question: whether a particular apical ancestor should have been excluded from the claim group? He submitted that, in Graham, the Full Court concluded that the anthropological evidence clearly stated that the particular apical ancestor concerned was not of Ngadju descent and/or had not been adopted into the Ngadju community. Accordingly, he submitted, the Full Court had concluded that, since these were the undisputed criteria for inclusion as a member of the Ngadju People based on Ngadju traditional laws and customs, the descendants of the particular apical ancestor concerned should not have been included as Ngadju persons.
44 Mr Tokley submitted there were other reasons why the Court should not exercise its discretion to join the Hill applicants as parties to these proceedings. One was that, despite the age of the proceedings, no satisfactory explanation had been given by the Hill applicants for their delay in bringing their applications for joinder. Another was that joining the Hill applicants was likely to delay the resolution of the proceedings, because they were unlikely to agree to any consent determination.
45 In reply, Ms Kidson submitted that it was implicit in the Full Court's decision in Graham that the trial judge had made findings as to the content of the traditional laws and customs governing the rights and interests of the Ngadju People in their land. She submitted that, given the decision in Graham, the remarks of Dowsett J in Aplin cannot be viewed as a correct statement of the law. Alternatively, she submitted, his Honour's remarks in Aplin had to be confined to the specific factual context of that case. In that respect, she relied upon a subsequent decision of Dowsett J in Brooks (on behalf of the Mamu People) v Queensland (No 3) [2013] FCA 741 (Mamu), which also predates Graham, where his Honour stated (at [123]):
In [Aplin], the description of the claim group differed from the description in the present case. In particular, the amended description required descent from apical ancestors, together with self-identification and group recognition. Adoption was also recognized as conferring group membership. In the present case membership of the claim group depends solely on descent from identified ancestors. Nonetheless, there can be no doubt that it is for the claim group to determine its own membership.
46 Further, Ms Kidson relied upon the decision of Jagot J in Wyman on behalf of the Bidjara People v State of Queensland (No 2) [2013] FCA 1229 (Bidjara). In Bidjara, her Honour was required to determine, among many other issues, whether members of two competing groups were all members of the Karingbal People. Members of one of the groups were all descended from one ancestor, Jemima of Albinia. Jagot J identified the content of traditional laws and customs relating to membership at sovereignty (see [531]) and held that Jemima was not a Karingbal person, and therefore her descendants were not Karingbal persons (at [533]). Her Honour also considered whether there had been continuity in the traditional laws and customs relating to membership of the groups in the context of considering (at [534]) "whether there has been continued acknowledgement and observance of pre-sovereignty laws and customs of that continued society". Ms Kidson therefore submitted that Bidjara was authority for the proposition that the Court is able to determine the content of traditional laws and customs relating to the membership and composition of a native title claim group when that arises as an issue in native title determination proceedings.
47 I have recorded the submissions of the parties on this question in some detail, in order to attempt to highlight the point of departure between the Wongkumara applicant and the Hill applicants on the Court's power to determine the composition of the Wongkumara native title claim group. Both parties agree that the Court can determine factual questions related to the Hill applicants' ancestry, descent and associated historical matters. This is what Dowsett J did in Aplin. However, the Wongkumara applicant relies upon what Dowsett J said at [267] of Aplin to argue that the Court cannot determine the question whether a Wongkumara descendant is accepted by the present day Wongkumara People to be a Wongkumara person. It argues that that question can only be determined by the Wongkumara People themselves, according to their traditional laws and customs. On the other hand, the Hill applicants claim the Court necessarily has to decide this question and many others in order to determine the range of issues that have to be considered under the NTA when making a determination of native title. These include the content of the claim group's traditional laws and customs to determine who holds the native title rights and interests over the area of land and waters under claim. The Hill applicants argue that this necessarily requires a consideration of those matters when an issue arises about the composition of the group that holds the native title rights and interests.
48 This is a vexed question, but I do not consider I have to decide it to determine this application. That is so because the amended Wongkumara application does not presently identify what the criteria for membership of the Wongkumara native title claim group are. It does not, for example, identify whether membership is based solely on descent from identified apical ancestors, as was the case in Mamu, or whether it is based on descent from apical ancestors together with self-identification and group recognition, as in Aplin, or some combination of these criteria, or, indeed, a different set of criteria entirely. Until such time as the criteria for membership of the Wongkumara native title claim group are properly spelled out in the Wongkumara application, it is not possible to determine whether any disputes about the membership of that group fall into the factual category identified above, or into, what I will refer to as, the intra-jural category about which there exists the vexed question I have mentioned above. In fact, it is possible that there may be no dispute at all if the sole criterion for membership of the Wongkumara claim group turns out to be Wongkumara descent, as the Hill applicants claim it is. Accordingly, while the criteria for membership of the Wongkumara claim group remains an open question, I do not consider there is any justification, at this stage, and on that ground, to refuse to exercise my discretion to order that the Hill applicants be joined as parties to these proceedings.
49 As to the question of delay, the affidavit material filed by the Hill applicants demonstrates that two of the five applicants, viz Ms Maureen Mavis Hill and Ms Kathleen Edith Rodgers (see [1] above) only discovered at the June and/or July 2013 Dubbo meetings that they were not members of the Wongkumara claim group. In relation to the remaining three, the affidavit material is unclear as to when Ms Lynette Joyce Mieni discovered she was not a member of the Wongkumara claim group, however she deposes to leaving telephone messages for Mr Neumann, applying for membership of associated Aboriginal Corporations and attending the June and July 2013 Dubbo meetings. Ms Christine Margaret Murphy states that while she found out that she was not part of the Wongkumara claim group about four years ago, she subsequently made inquiries and was informed she would be included if she provided a signed authority. She did so recently, but was not subsequently included in the Wongkumara claim group. Mr James Charles Taylor discovered that his identity as a Wongkumara person was in question when he made enquiries about being included in the Wongkumara claim group in "recent years".
50 While this brief review of the evidence demonstrates that some of the Hill applicants have not explained their delay in bringing this application in any great detail, or with much clarity, given the potential significance of refusing joinder, I do not consider their application should be dismissed because of their delay in filing it. In any event, I do not consider any delay that may have occurred in filing the application has prejudiced the Wongkumara applicant. Despite Mr Tokley's submissions regarding the effect joinder will have on any consent determination, these proceedings have not been listed for a consent determination, nor have any of the respondents confirmed they will agree to a consent determination. Furthermore, it seems quite unlikely that these proceedings can proceed to that stage until such time as the Wongkumara applicant has resolved the question about the description of the Wongkumara claim group discussed above. For these reasons, I consider it is in the interests of justice that the Hill applicants be joined as parties to these proceedings.