Ms Barlow's interest
6 I have dealt with the principles relating to the nature of the interest which would be sufficient to be joined pursuant to s 84(5) of the NTA in Braun on behalf of the Jirrbal People #4 v State of Queensland [2023] FCA 306, a matter to which Ms Barlow also sought to be joined pursuant to s 84(5) of the NTA. It is unnecessary to recite those principles.
7 As was the case in Jirrbal People #4, Ms Barlow does not explicitly assert native title rights in the claim applicant's claim area. Rather, she claims "[o]n behalf of the Ngai-kungo-i People being the Chair of the Ngai-kungo-i People inc" as "the direct descendants of the Ngai-kungo-i Tribe" being "[t]he Lost Tribe of the Atherton Tablelands": First Barlow Affidavit [1]-[3]; Third Barlow Affidavit Annexure 2. Ms Barlow submits that Ngai-kungo-i Peoples' existence has been ignored in respect of native title claims and that if the claim applicant obtains a positive native title determination, Ngai-kungo-i People "will be effectively erased".
8 Nevertheless, claims to native title exist within the framework of the NTA and it is only within that framework that Ms Barlow can advance a claim on behalf of the Ngai-kungo-i People. It is not clear that she has ever attempted to bring a substantive claim as opposed to a responsive claim. Nor had she had made any such attempt in relation to the Jirrbal People #4 claim.
9 Further, as was the case in Jirrbal People #4, Ms Barlow has failed to adduce any evidence of a native title holding group, the extent of such territory or group, or the content of traditional law and custom sufficient to raise even a prima facie case of the existence of native title, in the sense described by Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ in Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria (2002) 214 CLR 422 at [32] and [87]-[89]. There is nothing in any one of the three affidavits on which Ms Barlow relies that comes close to raising even a prima facie case that the persons on whose behalf she claims are the native title holders of an area, let alone the GWY claim area.
10 The Second Barlow Affidavit exhibits a map (Annexure 1) which purports to be a copy of the map of the area over which the Ngai-kungo-i Peoples assert an interest. It is a very large area, consistent with Ms Barlow's assertion that "the whole entire region from Cardwell to Cooktown would need to be reviewed". As submitted by the claim applicant, that affidavit does not identify specific locations or sites for cultural activities, nor does it identify the traditional laws and customs which defined, and continue to define, the group and its connection to specific country. The affidavit contains no more than speculation and assertion about several peoples who may have lived on and/or traversed the area identified by the map but with no stated basis for any of the assertions.
11 There is another, almost insurmountable hurdle to Ms Barlow's present application. On 1 April 2021, in Singleton on behalf of the Yirrganydji Peoples v State of Queensland [2021] FCA 316, Charlesworth J ordered that, pursuant to r 28.67 of the Rules, the whole of the Report of the referees, the Hon John Dowsett AM QC and Dr Paul Burke dated 6 March 2020, be adopted for the purpose of resolving the questions referred to the referees. As Allsop CJ said in Sheehan v Lloyds Names Munich Re Syndicate Ltd [2017] FCA 1340 at [9], the purpose of making a referral to a referee under s 54A of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) or r 28.61 of the Rules is to enable a partial resolution of the dispute. His Honour applied the following passage at [11] from Buckley v Bennell Design & Construction Pty Ltd (1978) 140 CLR 1 at 15 (Stephen J):
… such a reference "is a species of trial, and the decision is now equivalent to a form of judgment or verdict and not an award". In such a reference the court's procedures of adjudication are not abandoned in favour of extra-curial settlement of the dispute by arbitration. Instead, the court directs that, for the better resolution of the particular proceedings initiated before it, resort should be had to this special mode of trial which the legislation has made available.
12 One of the questions answered by the Report was which group or groups, immediately before the acquisition of sovereignty, held native title rights and interests in the specified area: Yirrganydji at [16]. The specified area is as described at [18] in Yirrganydji:
The specified area encompasses the city of Cairns and its surrounds. Its northern boundary runs along the Barron River from Freshwater Creek to the mouth of the river and extending a short distance into the estuarine waters of Trinity Inlet. The eastern boundary runs south, along the eastern edge of Trinity Inlet to Mackey Creek to just north of Gordonvale. From there, the study area extends west as far as the ridge formed by the Isley Hills and along the western bank of Lake Morris, north to Freshwater Creek.
13 The whole of the GWY claim area is within the specified area: Yirrganydji at [20]. The map annexed to the Second Barlow Affidavit shows an area that extends well into the GWY claim area, including to the foreshore of Trinity inlet.
14 The Report concluded that the groups holding native titles rights and interests immediately before the acquisition of sovereignty in the specified area were Yindinji totemic patriclans and Djabugay (including Bulway) and/or Yirrganydji totemic patriclans. The Report's conclusions were largely favourable to the GWY applicant, although their claim area has been reduced in accordance with the Report and its amended Form 1, for which leave to file was given on 6 July 2023.
15 The conclusions of the Report contradict Ms Barlow's assertions that large parts of the GWY claim area have always been Ngai-kungo-i country (Second Barlow Affidavit; Third Barlow Affidavit Annexure 5), and that the GWY People "did not exist as a group until the past decade or so": First Barlow Affidavit at [6]. Ms Barlow has not demonstrated any basis on which the Court's adoption of the Report should be set aside. It is not, therefore, open to her to contradict the findings in the Report.
16 For these reasons, I am not satisfied that Ms Barlow has an interest that may be affected by a determination of native title in favour of the claim applicant for the application area.