TRADITIONAL LAWS AND CUSTOMS
105. To demonstrate descent from the indigenous inhabitants of a particular area is but one step in establishing native title rights and interests. As the native title which (in the absence of extinguishment) the common law recognises reflects the entitlement of the indigenous inhabitants, in accordance with their laws and customs, to their traditional lands, (Mabo No 2 p 15) it is necessary to identify the nature of the entitlement which the indigenous inhabitants enjoyed in relation to their traditional lands in accordance with their laws and customs and the extent of the traditional lands. These two elements are really different aspects of the same question but can conveniently be considered separately.
106. The most credible source of information concerning the traditional laws and customs of the area from which Edward Walker's and Kitty Atkinson/Cooper's early forebears came is to be found in Curr's writings. He at least observed an Aboriginal society that had not yet disintegrated and he obviously established a degree of rapport with the Aboriginals with whom he came into contact. His record of his own observations should be accorded considerable weight. The oral testimony of the witnesses from the claimant group is a further source of evidence but being based upon oral tradition passed down through many generations extending over a period in excess of two hundred years, less weight should be accorded to it than to the information recorded by Curr. Much of what subsequent writers have said about early Aboriginal life is necessarily based upon other than original observation and much is mere speculation. Curr himself was not averse to a degree of speculation and to the extent that he indulged in that practice his opinion should not be accorded any weight but his record of his own observations and of what he was told by his Aboriginal informants, must be regarded seriously. As has been done in considering the question of descent from the indigenous inhabitants, it will be necessary to draw inferences from known facts concerning traditional laws and customs observed in the 1840s in order to relate back to the time at or prior to the first exercise of British sovereignty.
107. Kitty Atkinson/Cooper is said to have been of the Wollithiga tribe and it is assumed that her 1788 forebears were of the same group. Reference has previously been made to the country occupied by the Wollithiga as being between about the junctions of the Goulburn and Campaspe Rivers with the Murray. Curr's Tongala run was located on the south bank of the Goulburn at about the junction of that river with the Murray. Although his map published in The Australian Race (Vol III at p 566) shows Tongala as being in Kailtheban country it was close to the western boundary of that area and therefore close to the eastern limit of Wollithiga country. It may reasonably be inferred that Curr had contact with Wollithiga people.
108. Earlier in these reasons the area commonly referred to as Moira has been discussed. According to Curr's map, the area west of "Lake Moira" was the country of the Moitheriban, the Moira people (Curr, p 174). The Wollithiga were the southern neighbours of the Moitheriban. From this it may reasonably be concluded that Edward Walker's forebears were probably from the Moitheriban tribe although no such tribal allegiance is assigned to Edward in any of the evidence. Given the proximity of the adjacent countries of the Wollithiga and Moitheriban to Tongala it is reasonable to infer that Curr's observations as recorded in his writings reflect the life and culture of both of these Aboriginal groups.
109. The evidence does not require the Court to look beyond the general areas formerly occupied by the Wollithiga and the Moitheriban as it is only the traditional laws and customs in relation to the land of the antecedents of Edward Walker and Kitty Atkinson/Cooper that have been shown to be of relevance in this proceeding. The fact that a number of other tribal groups spoke the same or a similar language does not justify the expansion of the traditional rights of the Wollithiga and Moitheriban to include the traditional lands of all Bangerang speaking tribes. Indeed, Curr's observations (to which reference is made below) suggest the contrary.
110. Through his long and close association with the Aboriginal people of the area in which he lived, an area which largely coincides with the part of the claim area occupied by the forebears of Edward Walker and Kitty Atkinson/Cooper, Curr obtained some understanding of the laws and customs in relation to land of the indigenous people with whom he made contact and what he later wrote about these matters provides a useful basis from which to proceed.
111. On the question of rights to land Curr wrote (Recollections, p 243-4):
Besides the fact that the Bangerang territory was parcelled out between the two sub-tribes, [Curr's Wongatpan and Towroonban] and that fishing weirs on the numerous channels which conducted the flood-waters back into the Murray were owned by individuals, and descended to their heirs, I recollect, on one occasion, a certain portion of country being pointed out to me as belonging exclusively to a boy who formed one of the party with which I was out hunting at the time. As the announcement was made to me with some little pride and ceremony by the boy's elder brother, a man of five-and-twenty, I not only complimented the proprietor on his estate, on which my sheep were daily feeding, but, as I was always prone to fall in with the views of my sable neighbours when possible, I offered him on the spot, with the most serious face, a stick of tobacco for the fee-simple of his patrimonial property, which, after a short consultation with his elders, was accepted and paid. On two other occasions, also, if I remember right, some Blacks objected to hunt with me over certain land, on the plea that it did not belong to them. That both individuals and families amongst the Bangerang had particular rights to certain lands I have no doubt, but practically they were little insisted on. Had, however, anyone not of the tribe attempted encroachments, it would have been an instant casus belli.
112. The social organisation of the Bangerang is a topic upon which Curr dwelt at some length. He wrote (Recollections, p 244):
Amongst the Bangerang there was not, as far as could be observed, anything resembling government; nor was any authority, outside of the family circle, existent. Within the family the father was absolute. The female left the paternal family when she became a wife, and the male when he took rank as a young man. The adult male of the Bangerang recognized no authority in anyone, under any circumstances, though he was thoroughly submissive to custom. Offences against custom had sometimes a foreign aspect, and brought about wars with other tribes. Within the tribe they usually amounted to wrongs of some individuals, and for every substantial wrong custom appointed a penalty.
After describing the practices adopted to ventilate grievances Curr continued (at p 245):
But, though there was no government, there were certain important practices among the Bangerang which deserve to be called laws. Some of the principal of these had reference to the transfer of the young from one class to another (particularized hereafter), the knocking out of their teeth, making the ornamental scars on their backs, breasts, and arms, and restrictions with respect to food. There were also others which had reference to females. In the latter case only did infractions occur with some frequency, on which occasions, as I have already noticed, the persons aggrieved, when they chose, made their complaints publicly in the camp, and publicly vindicated their rights, the offender being often constrained by custom to go through the ordeal of having a certain number of spears thrown at him, and so run the risk of death or wounds in satisfaction for the injury done.
113. Perhaps the most relevant portion of Curr's observations for present purposes, insofar as it touches upon the question of rights and interests in relation to land, is the following paragraph (Recollections, pp 246-7):
Though each section of the Bangerang was thoroughly independent within the limits of its own territory, they were virtually one for the purposes of war. As regards war, however, as in other matters, there was no attempt to coerce any individual to join in an onslaught, or to adopt any course to which he was disinclined. A common danger or a common desire led to meetings and consultations, and so simple and uniform were interests generally that measures were usually proposed which met with the approval of all; but if anyone did dissent from them, he was at liberty to take his own course, and there was no attempt at coercion; and as there was no government, or attempt to govern, so there was no opposition. With the Wollithiga and Kailtheban the Bangerang were on very intimate terms, so that for war purposes they might almost be said to be one people. In addition, they were bound in a lesser, though a stout, friendship with the other six Bangerang-speaking septs, which, together with themselves, were surrounded by a number of tribes which looked on them as foreigners, and hated them in common; spoke a language different from theirs, and cut off stray members as opportunity offered, each tribe on its own account. Nor were these Bangerang intimacies barren of effect, for, besides a good deal of intermarriage, they did not resort to witchcraft against each other, and in the hour of need one tribe was at liberty to seek refuge in the territory of the other. At the same time, suspicion was not entirely absent amongst themselves; and had a few Bangerang men been found on the territory of any of the six tribes without some feasible explanation to offer, they would, as likely as not, have lost their lives. However, I remember, in the very early days, several of these tribes meeting together and sending a strong body of fighting men to meet the Ngooraialum at the Protectorate Station, which occupied the present site of Murchison, and I am under the impression that alliances of the sort were frequent before the coming of the white man interfered with native policy.
114. It appears that in the Bangerang society the role of women was subservient to men. Curr records that in domestic life man was "despotic in his own mia-mia or hut" (Recollections p 247); that children belonged to the tribe of the husband (p 249); and that prior to the coming of the whites the Bangerang, as a rule, "enforced constancy on the part of their wives, and chastity on their unmarried daughters" (p 249).
115. With regard to their practices relating to the use of food resources, Curr wrote (Recollections, p 262):
It is a noteworthy fact connected with the Bangerang, … that as they neither sowed nor reaped, so they never abstained from eating the whole of any food they had got with a view to the wants of the morrow. If anything was left for Tuesday, it was merely that they had been unable to consume it on Monday. In this they were like the beasts of the forest. To-day they would feast - aye, gorge - no matter about the morrow. So, also, they never spared a young animal with a view to its growing bigger.
And at p 263:
I have often seen them, as an instance, land large quantities of fish with their nets and leave all the small ones to die within a yard of the water.
The same subject matter is again touched on at p 265:
When out hunting, the game captured by each was his own property. If one of the party returned unsuccessful, he rarely asked for a share of another's game, nor did he take it ill if none were given him; but, if a bachelor, he would get some roots from any female relative he might have in the camp. If an individual killed a kangaroo without assistance, it belonged to him, though it would certainly be shared with many others; but if several assisted in the capture, the animal was divided amongst the party, the man who first drew blood, I believe, receiving the skin (which was valuable) in addition to his share of the meat.
116. One further topic calls for comment, notably, that of burial practices. At p 286 Curr wrote:
The Bangerang mode of burial had nothing remarkable about it. The dead were rolled up on their opossum-rugs, the knees being drawn up to the neck with strings, when the corpse was interred in a sitting posture, or on its side, generally in a sand-hill, in which a grave about four feet deep had been excavated. A sheet of bark was then placed over the corpse, the sand filled in, and a pile of logs about seven feet long and two feet high was raised over all. Round about the tomb it was usual to make a path, and not unfrequently a spear, surmounted by a plume of emu feathers, stuck at the head of the mound, marked the spot where rested the remains of the departed. Women were interred with less ceremony.
117. The foregoing extracts from Recollections are not intended to be a comprehensive survey of the laws and customs of the Bangerang as observed by Curr in the 1840s. Rather, they have been selected with a view to providing an indication of what Curr observed in relation to a number of aspects of Bangerang life and culture that may have some bearing upon the traditional laws and customs of the ancestors of the claimant group which are said to have constituted a burden on the radical title of the British Crown at the time it claimed sovereignty in respect of the colony of New South Wales. By the 1860s the disturbance of the way of life of the Aboriginal people to which Curr referred was further advanced. When Daniel Matthews settled in Echuca in 1864 he found people of many different tribal groups living in the area. Matthews himself was the architect of further disruption of traditional life. His practice of attracting Aboriginals from various parts of the country to Maloga and the policies adopted by him in suppressing the use of indigenous languages and the observance of traditional practices (including on occasions forcing people to marry contrary to customary laws) no doubt accelerated the process of disintegration of the former way of life of the people with whom he came into contact.
118. The evidence is silent concerning the continued observance in Matthews' time of those aspects of traditional lifestyle to which reference is made in the passages quoted from Curr. Whether the former territorial areas of the various tribal groups were still recognised and protected as described by Curr is not something upon which there is any evidence. What the evidence does demonstrate is that the land on either side of the Murray had been taken up for pastoral purposes and that there had been both severe dislocation of the indigenous population and a considerable reduction in its numbers due to disease. Furthermore, there is no evidence to suggest that either Edward Walker or Kitty Atkinson/Cooper, or their immediate descendants continued to acknowledge the traditional laws or observe the traditional customs of their forebears in relation to land.
119. Apart from any conclusions which may be drawn from the absence of evidence of continued observance of traditional laws and customs in the period after the establishment of Maloga, there is positive evidence emanating from the Aboriginals themselves to the same effect. As evidence of one of what were said to be 12 significant attempts by the Yorta Yorta people to assert proprietary interests in their land (reference to which is made in paragraph 61) senior counsel for the applicants tendered in the course of his opening a copy of a petition to the Governor of New South Wales signed in 1881 by 42 Aboriginals, many of whom are known to have been resident at or otherwise connected with Maloga. The text of the petition (which is also reproduced in Appendix 10 to Mister Maloga) stated:
To His Excellency Lord Augustus Loftus, G.C.B., Governor of the colony of New South Wales - The humble petition of the undersigned Aboriginal natives, residents on the Murray River in the colony of New South Wales, members of the Moira and Ulupna tribes, respectfully showeth:
1. That all the land within our tribal boundaries has been taken possession of by the Government and white settlers; our hunting grounds are used for sheep pasturage and the game reduced and in many places exterminated, rendering our means of subsistence extremely precarious, and often reducing us and our wives and children to beggary.
2. We, the men of our several tribes, are desirous of honestly maintaining our young and infirm, who are in many cases the subjects of extreme want and semi-starvation, and we believe we could, in a few years support ourselves by our own industry, were a sufficient area of land granted to us to cultivate and raise stock.
3. We have been under training for some years and feel that our old mode of life is not in keeping with the instructions we have received and we are earnestly desirous of settling down to more orderly habits of industry, that we may form homes for our families.
We more confidently ask this favour of a grant of land as our fellow natives in other colonies have proved capable of supporting themselves, where suitable land has been reserved for them.
We hopefully appeal to your Excellency, as we recognise in you, The Protector specially appointed by Her Gracious Majesty the Queen "to promote religion and education among the Aboriginal natives of the colony", and to protect us in our persons and in the free enjoyment of our possessions, and to take such measures as may be necessary for our advancement in civilization.
And your petitioners, as in duty bound will ever pray.
The 42 signatories were:
Bobby Wilberforce (Cooper) George Aben
Richard (X, his mark) Bradshaw
Thomas Williams Harry Fenton
Aaron Atkinson Thomas Fenton
George Charles Alowidgee
Freddy Walker Johnny Galway
Daylight Charlie Stewart
David Berrick Ted Robertson
Peter Stuckey Rochford Robertson
Jacky Wilberforce (Cooper) Gibson Platt
Jimmy Turner Jackie John
Sydney Tommy Hawke
George Keefe Robertson
James Coghill Boney Cockie
Sampson Barber Barralta
Bagot Morgan Harry
John Atkinson Jimmy Martin
Peter Blucher
Robert Taylor Dick Richards
David Taylor James Edgar
Jasper Angus Whyman McLean
120. A number of observations can be made concerning the petition and the signatories. The petition was presented in 1881, some two years before the reserve at Cummeragunja was declared and whilst Maloga was still in operation. The petitioners are described as members of the Moira and Ulupna tribes, a description which is not found in Curr's writing but suggests that the individuals concerned identified with the two main pastoral properties in the region rather than as Bangerang or any of the other sub-groups referred to by Curr. The petition contains a frank acknowledgment that "all land within (the petitioners') tribal boundaries has been taken possession of by the government and white settlers" a state of affairs which no doubt gave rise to their desire to change "our old mode of life" in favour of "settling down to more orderly habits of industry". A number of the signatories, who apparently subscribed to these sentiments were persons who are either named in the applicants' list of the 18 known ancestors or were the children of persons so named. George Charles, Sampson Barber and Bagot Morgan are three of the 18; Freddy Walker was the son of Edward Walker; and Bobby Wilberforce (Cooper), Aaron Atkinson, Jacky Wilberforce (Cooper) and John Atkinson were children of Kitty Atkinson/Cooper. Other signatories who are readily identifiable with names on Treseder's 1891 list, prepared some 10 years after the petition, include James Coghill, Whyman McLean and Peter Stuckey.
121. Whilst there can be little doubt that Matthews would have played a part in the composition and presentation of the petition it has not been suggested in this proceeding that the general thrust of the statements attributed to the petitioners was factually inaccurate or in any way misrepresented their views or their aspirations. In fact, the copy of the petition was tendered in the course of the applicants' counsel's opening address as evidencing a long history of efforts to obtain land. It is clear that by 1881 those through whom the claimant group now seeks to establish native title were no longer in possession of their tribal lands and had, by force of the circumstances in which they found themselves, ceased to observe those laws and customs based on tradition which might otherwise have provided a basis for the present native title claim; and the dispossession of the original inhabitants and their descendants has continued through to the present time. Although many of the claimant group reside within the claim area, many do not. No group or individual has been shown to occupy any part of the land in the sense that the original inhabitants can be said to have occupied it. The claimant group clearly fails Toohey J's test of occupation by a traditional society now and at the time of annexation (Mabo No 2, p 192) a state of affairs which has existed for over a century. Notwithstanding the genuine efforts of members of the claimant group to revive the lost culture of their ancestors, native title rights and interests once lost are not capable of revival. Traditional native title having expired, the Crown's radical title expanded to a full beneficial title (Mabo No 2 per Brennan J at p 60). It is however appropriate that some mention should be made of the evidence concerning the current beliefs and practices of the claimant group.
122. The main thrust of contemporary activity by members of the claimant group has to do with the protection of what are regarded as sacred sites and the proper management of the land. Oven mounds, shell middens and scarred trees were described by a number of witnesses as sacred and deserving of protection. Curr (Recollections, pp 236-9) describes the construction and function of ovens which, understandably, were used to cook food. Some were still in use in his time whereas others showed evidence of protracted disuse. From the size and location of the ovens Curr drew conclusions as to the density of population in earlier times. These mounds are regarded by contemporary Yorta Yorta people as sacred. So too are shell middens, which are nothing more than accumulations of the remains of shell fish frequently found on the banks of rivers. Trees from which bark has been removed to make canoes or other objects, such as coolamons, are also treated as sacred by some, and significant by others. Curr (at p 169 quoted above) refers to fine old red gums "off which we noticed many a canoe had been stripped in old days". There is no doubt that mounds, middens and scarred trees which provide evidence of the indigenous occupation and use of the land are of considerable importance and indeed, many are protected under heritage legislation, but there is no evidence to suggest that they were of any significance to the original inhabitants other than for their utilitarian value, nor that any traditional law or custom required them to be preserved.
123. Another contemporary practice which is said to be part of the Yorta Yorta tradition is the conservation of food resources. A number of witnesses gave evidence that they hunt and fish on the land and in the waters of the claim area and to some limited extent, gather "bush tucker" for their personal consumption. Of these activities fishing appears to be by far the most popular but is currently engaged in as a recreational activity rather than as a means of sustaining life. It is said by a number of witnesses that consistent with traditional laws and customs it is their practice to take from the land and waters only such food as is necessary for immediate consumption. This practice, commendable as it is, is not one which, according to Curr's observations, was adopted by the Aboriginal people with whom he came into contact and cannot be regarded as the continuation of a traditional custom.
124. In earlier times, following European settlement in the area, it was the practice to remove skeletal remains located at Aboriginal burial sites and take them to Melbourne, and elsewhere, for scientific examination. In more enlightened times many such remains have been returned into the custody of representatives of the Aboriginal people for reinterment in the areas from which they were removed. In the claim area reburials have been conducted since about 1984. There can be no question about the importance of the returning of remains to the appropriate country but the modern practices associated with their reburial are not part of the traditional laws and customs handed down from the original inhabitants.
125. Similar considerations apply to the extensive involvement of Yorta Yorta people in activities associated with the conservation of the timber and water resources of the area. The advent of extensive logging of, and the introduction of cattle into, the forests in the claim area together with the interference with the natural flow of the river systems for irrigation purposes are all matters about which contemporary Yorta Yorta have expressed concern and sought to be consulted. To some extent their concerns have been recognised by government authorities. But these are issues of relatively recent origin about which the original inhabitants could have had no concern and which cannot be regarded as matters relating to the observance of traditional laws and customs.
126. The question of obtaining permission to enter upon or use the resources of the claim area was raised by a number of witnesses. The traditional position, according to Curr (Recollections, p 244), was that both individuals and families amongst the Bangerang had particular rights to certain lands but in practice they were rarely insisted on except in the case of an encroachment of a person not of the tribe. The evidence concerning current practices was not entirely consistent from one witness to the next. Some witnesses said that the earlier rules concerning seeking permission to enter the country of another clan no longer applied and that all Yorta Yorta now have rights in all parts of the traditional lands (Ella Anselmi (T 5887); Kenneth Briggs (T 4924-5)). Alfred Turner said that 20-30 years ago each sub-group would ask permission to go onto the land of another subgroup but that tradition is no longer observed (T 3578). Neville Atkinson (Jr) said that the Yorta Yorta can determine who will come onto Yorta Yorta land (T 3054-5) and Gary Nelson said that a lot of Aboriginal people ask permission before entering Yorta Yorta country (T 4143). But many of the senior members of the claimant group gave no evidence of any existing practice concerning the assertion of any rights to exclude others from the claim area and no-one suggested that even the former practices extended to excluding non-Aboriginals. There is overwhelming evidence that Aboriginals and non-Aboriginals alike enter, travel through, live, fish and hunt within the claim area without seeking permission other than such as may be required by State or Commonwealth law. The tide of history has undoubtedly washed away any traditional rights that the indigenous people may have previously exercised in relation to controlling access to their land within the claim area.
127. The applicants readily concede that they and their forebears have long since ceased to observe traditional practices in relation to initiation or to perform other ceremonial activities which are frequently, in other Aboriginal societies, indicative of spiritual attachment to the land. On one occasion Colin Walker gave evidence concerning a site (Boat Rock - ID 905) which he claimed had been a ceremonial ground associated with male initiation and which he asserted was off-limits to females, but his evidence proved only that in about 1989 he and another (now deceased) senior Aboriginal had decided it to be so even though women had in the past had free access to it. I do not regard Mr Walker as a reliable witness but rather as one prone to avoid direct answers to straightforward questions. He is one of the witnesses whose credit is called into question in relation to an incident referred to in paragraph 21. Another senior applicant, Mr Ken Briggs, who I found to be a thoroughly honest gentleman and a credible witness, gave evidence that he knew of places, the location of which was not disclosed, which he said were secret men's sites. This evidence was elucidated as the result of cross-examination and does not appear to have been a fact upon which the applicants relied as part of their case. No other relevant evidence was given concerning those sites and no conclusions, one way or the other, can be drawn from the evidence that was given.
128. Preservation of Aboriginal heritage and conservation of the natural environment are worthy objectives the achievement of which may lead to a more ready understanding and recognition of the importance of the culture of the indigenous people but in the context of a native title claim the absence of a continuous link back to the laws and customs of the original inhabitants deprives those activities of the character of traditional laws acknowledged and traditional customs observed in relation to land and waters which is a necessary element of both the statutory and the common law concept of native title rights and interests.
129. Brennan J observed in Mabo No 2 (at p 58) that "it is necessary to ascertain by evidence the nature and incidents of native title" and accordingly the resolution of this proceeding must depend upon the conclusions of fact which are supported by the evidence adduced. The evidence does not support a finding that the descendants of the original inhabitants of the claimed land have occupied the land in the relevant sense since 1788 nor that they have continued to observe and acknowledge, throughout that period, the traditional laws and customs in relation to land of their forebears. The facts in this case lead inevitably to the conclusion that before the end of the 19th century the ancestors through whom the claimants claim title had ceased to occupy their traditional lands in accordance with their traditional laws and customs. The tide of history has indeed washed away any real acknowledgment of their traditional laws and any real observance of their traditional customs. The foundation of the claim to native title in relation to the land previously occupied by those ancestors having disappeared, the native title rights and interests previously enjoyed are not capable of revival. This conclusion effectively resolves the application for a determination of native title.
EXTINGUISHMENT AND RELATED ISSUES
130. Many of the difficulties inherent in litigating a complex native title determination application have been highlighted by what has occurred in this proceeding. A substantial portion of the enormous mass of evidence presented to the Court, prepared at considerable expense to the parties, deals with matters relating to the extinguishment of native title rights and interests, an issue which only arises in the event that the observance and acknowledgment of traditional laws and customs in relation to land are shown to have survived. As it has happened, in the light of the conclusion expressed above, it is unnecessary to embark upon a consideration of whether, and to what extent, native title rights and interests have been subjected to extinguishing events, nor does the question of the coexistence of native title and other rights arise. The time and expense expended in the preparation and presentation of a large part of the evidence has proved to be unproductive, a circumstance which calls into question the suitability of the processes of adversary litigation for the purpose of determining matters relating to native title.
131. Earlier in these reasons I have expressed my concurrence with the opinion of Demack J in Re Mining Lease Application No 70149 to the effect that except in a case where there has been necessary extinguishment (for example by a freehold grant or an exclusive possession lease) the existence and nature of the claimed native title rights and interests must first be established before any question relating to inconsistent non-native title rights can be resolved. The logic of such a conclusion is obvious. It must necessarily follow that in a case in which native title has not been found to exist, there is no occasion to embark upon any further inquiry.
132. The Native Title Amendment Act 1998 deals extensively with matters relating to the extinguishment of native title. Section 23B now defines the concept of "a previous exclusive possession act". Section 23C confirms the extinguishment of native title by previous exclusive possession acts attributable to the Commonwealth while s 23E authorises States and Territories to adopt similar provisions in respect of previous exclusive possession acts attributable to the State or Territory. The effect of the extinguishment of native title is dealt with in s 237A which provides:
237A The word extinguish in relation to native title, means permanently extinguish the native title. To avoid any doubt, this means that after the extinguishment the native title rights and interests cannot revive, even if the act that caused the extinguishment ceases to have effect.
133. New sections 47A and 47B require that in some circumstances the prior extinguishment of native title is to be disregarded. One of the circumstances which triggers the operation of each section is that when the application is made, one or more members of the native title claim group occupy the area in question. It is unnecessary to recite the provisions of these sections as the only purpose in making reference to them is to draw attention to a note following subsection (2) of each section, which states:
Note: The applicant will still need to show the existence of any connection with the land or waters concerned that may be required by the common law concept of native title.
The clear intention of ss 47A and 47B is to ameliorate the effect on native title of acts which would otherwise have an extinguishing effect. Neither section provides a basis for the creation of native title rights which either did not previously exist in relation to the land or which by reason of a circumstance other than an extinguishing act had ceased to exist. In the present case there is no scope for either section to have any application.
CONCLUSION
134. For the reasons expressed above the Court determines that native title does not exist in relation to the claimed land and waters.
I certify that this and the preceding
71 pages are a true copy of the
Reasons for Judgment of the
Honourable Justice Olney.
Associate:
Dated: 18 December 1998
Counsel for the applicants: Mr B.A. Keon-Cohen QC
Mr K.R. Howie
Mr T.P. Keely
Solicitors for the applicants: Arnold Bloch Leibler
Counsel for the State of Victoria, Mr H. McM. Wright QC
Goulburn Valley Region Water Authority, Ms M. Sloss
Goulburn-Murray Rural Water Authority, Mr S.G.E. McLeish
and North East Region Water Authority:
Solicitors for the State of Victoria, Victorian Government Solicitor
Goulburn Valley Region Water Authority,
Goulburn-Murray Rural Water Authority,
and North East Region Water Authority:
Counsel for the State of New South Wales: Mr V.B. Hughston
Mr J. Waters
Solicitors for the State of New South Wales: New South Wales Crown Solicitor's
Office
Counsel for Murray Irrigation Limited, Mr G. Hiley QC
Field and Game Australia Inc , Mr G.J. Moloney
Graeme Ross McPherson,
Greater Shepparton City Council,
Campaspe Shire Council,
Moira Shire Council,
Estate of Christopher Stephen Ryan
decd
and C.R. and K.R. Moorse:
Solicitors for Murray Irrigation Limited,Suzanna Sheed & Associates
Field and Game Australia Inc ,
Graeme Ross McPherson,
Greater Shepparton City Council,
Campaspe Shire Council,
Moira Shire Council,
Estate of Christopher Stephen Ryan
decd
and C.R. and K.R. Moorse:
Counsel for Emat Industries Pty Ltd, Mr A. Neal
V. Grima and K. Lord:
Solicitors for Emat Industries Pty Ltd, Scott Thompson & Co
V. Grima and K. Lord:
Counsel for Barmah Forest Mr T. Brennan
Cattlemen's Association & Ors: Mr M. Love
Solicitors for Barmah Forest Corrs Chambers Westgarth
Cattlemen's Association & Ors:
Counsel for Mulwala & District Mr J.E. Curtis-Smith
Services Club Limited,
Mulwala Water Ski Club Limited,
Yarrawonga Border Golf Club Limited,
Berrigan Shire Council,
Corowa Shire Council,
Murray Shire Council,
and J.B. and G.A. Gorman:
Solicitors for Mulwala & District Hargraves
Services Club Limited,
Mulwala Water Ski Club Limited,
Yarrawonga Border Golf Club Limited,
Berrigan Shire Council,
Corowa Shire Council,
Murray Shire Council,
and J.B. and G.A. Gorman:
Counsel for Murray Darling Basin Mr R.S. Osborn QC
Commission: Ms M.L. Warren QC
Solicitors for Murray Darling Basin Blake Dawson Waldron
Commission:
Counsel for Telstra Corporation Ltd: Mr P.J. Hanks
Solicitors for Telstra Corporation Ltd : Holding Redlich
Counsel for State of South Australia: Mr M.P. Walter QC
Mr R. Smith
Solicitors for State of South Australia: South Australian Crown Solicitor's
Office
Counsel for New South Wales Mr J. Basten QC
Aboriginal Land Council:
Solicitors for New South Wales Andrew Chalk & Associates
Aboriginal Land Council:
Dates of Hearing: 8 - 9 October 1996
28 - 31 October 1996
4 - 7 November 1996
11 - 14 November 1996
18 - 21 November 1996
25 - 28 November 1996
3 - 5 December 1996
9 - 12 December 1996
10 - 13 February 1997
18 February 1997
24 - 27 February 1997
11 - 13 March 1997
17 - 20 March 1997
24 - 27 March 1997
17 April 1997
5 - 7 May 1997
12 - 16 May 1997
19 - 21 May 1997
27 June 1997
4 - 8 August 1997
11 - 14 August 1997
25 - 29 August 1997
1 - 3 September 1997
8 - 11 September 1997
15 - 18 September 1997
22 - 25 September 1997
13 - 16 October 1997
20 - 23 October 1997
27 October 1997
29 - 30 October 1997
4 - 8 May 1998
11 - 15 May 1998
2 November 1998
4 November 1998
Date of Judgment: 18 December 1998