CONSIDERATION
13 As Mansfield J pointed out in Sumner (at [12]), to succeed in his application for joinder, Mr Wharton must establish three things:
(a) that he has an interest for the purpose of s 84(5) of the NTA;
(b) that that interest may be affected by a determination of native title in this proceeding; and
(c) that it is in the interests of justice for him to be joined as a party to this proceeding.
For the reasons that follow, I consider Mr Wharton has established (a) above, but not (b) and (c).
14 Dealing first with (a) above, it is necessary at the outset to bear in mind that an applicant like Mr Wharton need only establish his interest on a prima facie basis. Next, it is important in this matter to record that Mr Wharton is a senior Kooma man who has been closely involved in most of the proceedings under the NTA over approximately the past two decades concerning the region of western Queensland in which both Kooma and Gunggari lands are located. Against this background, it is necessary, next, to turn to the particular interest Mr Wharton claims to have in this proceeding. This interest is stated at [27]-[28] of his affidavit (see at [5] above). In essence it is that under the "protocols and culture" of both Gunggari and Kooma People, Mount Moffatt and the surrounding area has been "used for meetings" for thousands of years. This interest is, in my view, sufficiently clearly defined and it could not be said to be "indirect, remote or lacking [in] substance". Furthermore, the Gunggari applicant did not seek to cross-examine Mr Wharton on its genuineness. Having regard to all these factors, I find that Mr Wharton has a sufficient interest in this proceeding for the purposes of s 84(5) of the NTA.
15 Turning then to (b) above, it is convenient to begin by identifying the native title rights and interests the Gunggari People seek to have determined over the claim area in the Gunggari People #4 application. They are set out in the entry relating to that application on the Register of Native Title Claims maintained by the National Native Title Tribunal as follows:
The Gunggari People claim the non-exclusive rights to:
(a) access, be present on, move about on and travel over the [a]pplication [a]rea;
(b) camp on the application area and, for that purpose, erect temporary shelters on the application area;
(c) take (including by hunting and gathering) and use traditional natural resources from the application area for personal, domestic and non-commercial communal purposes;
(d) conduct religious and spiritual activities and ceremonies on the application area;
(e) maintain places of importance and areas of significance to the native title holders under their traditional laws and customs and protect those places and areas, by lawful means, from physical harm;
(f) teach on the application area the physical and spiritual attributes of the application area; and
(g) light fires on the application area for domestic purposes including cooking, but not for the purposes of hunting or clearing vegetation;
(h) hunt and fish in or on, and gather from, the water for personal, domestic and non-commercial communal purposes; and
(i) take and use the water for personal, domestic and non-commercial communal purposes.
16 A determination of native title in these terms in this proceeding will not, in my view, affect Mr Wharton's interests as set out above. That is so because, first, the rights and interests sought are non-exclusive rights. Furthermore, by their terms, none of these rights and interests will interfere with the ability of Mr Wharton or members of the Kooma People to have meetings at Mount Moffatt or the surrounding area. This applies to the rights in (a), (d) and (e) above which come closest to affecting the holding of such meetings.
17 Finally, as to (c) above, even if I had not reached the conclusion concerning (b) above, I do not consider it is in the interests of justice to join Mr Wharton to this proceeding at this late stage. On this aspect, first, I do not consider Mr Wharton's statement that he only became aware of this issue recently provides a satisfactory explanation for this application being made approximately two and a half weeks before the final hearing in the Gunggari People #4 application. The Gunggari People #4 application was filed on 10 October 2012. Immediately thereafter, it was subject to the extensive notification provisions of s 66 of the NTA. Given his close involvement with native title proceedings in the region of western Queensland to which the Gunggari People #4 claim relates, as mentioned above, I consider it is highly likely that Mr Wharton became aware of the claim at that time. Assuming he did, the public records of the claim would have allowed him to ascertain that it, in part, covered the area surrounding Mount Moffatt.
18 In addition, I consider the competing prejudices that Mr Wharton and the Gunggari People may suffer if he is joined as a respondent party in this proceeding, stand against that course being taken. Mr Wharton's counsel frankly stated that, if he is joined as a respondent party, he intends to oppose any determination of native title being made over the area surrounding Mount Moffatt. That position is very likely to result in a vacation of the hearing date for the Gunggari People #4 application. While there is a procedure in ss 87(10) and (11) of the NTA which would allow a party's opposition to an agreement to be considered and rejected, that procedure would not avail Mr Wharton and the Gunggari applicant in this matter because it includes a notification period of at least 21 days.
19 Finally, on this aspect, I consider the confined nature of Mr Wharton's interests as discussed above is significant. It is also important to note that the area surrounding Mount Moffatt comprises a small fraction of the Gunggari People #4 claim area. On the other hand, if Mr Wharton becomes a respondent party to this proceeding and succeeds in having the hearing on 2 September 2019 vacated, I consider the Gunggari People stand to suffer much greater prejudice. Apart from the costs that will be wasted in vacating that hearing, the recognition of their native title rights and interests over the Gunggari People #4 claim area will be further delayed.