Should leave be granted to discontinue on conditions?
51 The final issue raised by the contentions of the parties on this application is: Should leave be granted to discontinue these proceedings on the conditions proposed by the State of Queensland?
52 Since I have decided not to grant the authorised Applicant leave to discontinue these proceedings, it is not strictly necessary for me to determine this issue. However, because the issues surrounding this discontinuance application and, specifically, the question whether conditions should be imposed on the grant of any leave to discontinue the proceedings are likely to arise for discussion within the Gold Coast NTCG in deciding whether to support, or oppose, any future application to discontinue these proceedings, it is appropriate that I express my views on some of those issues. In doing so, I will first mention two surrounding issues, before addressing the proposed conditions.
53 First, it is necessary to dispose of the claim that the Applicant would be forced to litigate against its will if these proceedings are not discontinued. In my view, that characterisation misstates the correct position. It is clear from the affidavit material presented in support of this application that the Applicant wants to litigate the question of the native title rights and interests that the Gold Coast NTCG claims to hold over this claim area. However, it wants to delay its litigation of that question until some unspecified time in the future of its choosing because it claims it does not have the necessary financial resources to litigate it now. Nonetheless, the fact is that the Applicant's counsel consented to the June 2013 trial dates being fixed and to the trial programming orders being made. So, the only things the Applicant is being forced to do are to litigate that question at a trial in June 2013, as it originally agreed to do, and to comply with the trial programming orders, as it also originally agreed to do.
54 Secondly, given the history of this claim and the previous claims lodged over the same claim area going back approximately 16 years, I do not consider it is either in the interests of the administration of justice, or the broader public interest, that this question about the native title rights and interests that the Gold Coast NTCG claims to hold over the claim area remains unresolved. In this respect, it is worth making three points. First, this current claim passed the registration test under Pt 7 of the NTA. As a consequence, the Native Title Registrar has accepted that this claim raises a prima facie question about the existence and extent of at least some of the native title rights and interests that are under claim: see s 190B(6) of the NTA. That being so, as long as that question remains unresolved, there is, as Mr Preston submitted, likely to be continuing uncertainty within the Gold Coast region, as to what parts of the claim area are affected by the future act provisions of the NTA. Secondly, the provisions of Pt VB of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) apply equally to native title proceedings as they do to all other litigation before the Court. These provisions include the overarching purpose of resolving disputes before the Court justly and as quickly, inexpensively and efficiently as possible. In my view, it would not be consistent with that overarching purpose to allow a dispute that has been proceeding in this Court on and off for more than 16 years, to continue unresolved. After all, as Rares J aptly observed (with respect) in relation to the unfortunate delays experienced in the Court's native title list, "[justice] delayed is justice denied": see Prior on behalf of the Juru (Cape Upstart) People v State of Queensland (No 2) [2011] FCA 819 at [32]. Thirdly, while the lack of opposition - indeed support in the case of the State of New South Wales - to this application from any of the respondent parties would ordinarily be a significant factor in favour of granting the leave the Applicant seeks, I consider that, in the circumstances of this case, it is outweighed by the various other factors I have adverted to above.
55 Finally, there is the question of the conditions proposed by the State of Queensland. In my view, the State of Queensland has identified a number of good reasons why the persons that comprise the Gold Coast NTCG should be restricted to a properly researched and articulated claim if they were to be permitted to discontinue these proceedings and commence similar proceedings over the same claim area at some unspecified time in the future. Those reasons are summarised at [32]-[33] above and do not require repeating here. Nonetheless, in the circumstances of this application, I do not consider the Court has the power to impose such conditions on the statutory right the Gold Coast NTCG has to file whatever future claim over the claim area it may be advised to.
56 My reasons for reaching this conclusion are as follows. First, the effect of the proposed conditions is to prevent a future claim being filed on behalf of the Gold Coast NTCG without the prior leave of the Court (see proposed condition 3(a) at [29] above). Further, the proposed conditions seek to prescribe in advance a relatively demanding set of conditions that have to be met in order to obtain the Court's leave to file such proceedings (see proposed conditions 3(b) and 3(c) at [29] above).
57 Secondly, as I have already noted above (see at [41]), the members of the Gold Coast NTCG have a right under ss 13 and 61 of the NTA to authorise a person to make an application to have its claim to "hold the common or group [native title] rights and interests" over this claim area, determined by this Court. Once that right is exercised and the proceedings have been duly commenced, there are, of course, various requirements of the NTA and the Federal Court Rules 2011 that must be met in order to maintain those proceedings to a final determination: see, for example, the requirements of s 61 relating to the authorisation of the applicant, s 62 prescribing the content of the application and its supporting affidavits, and s 84C providing for the striking out of proceedings that fail to comply with these provisions. However, the NTA only contains one express restriction on the exercise of the right to make that application. That restriction is that the claim area cannot include any area for which there already exists an approved determination of native title: see ss 13(1) and 61A(1) of the NTA. That restriction does not arise in this matter. Otherwise, there is no time bar, or any other similar limitation on the right of a native title clan to file a native title claim under the NTA.
58 In Ramsey v Skyring (1999) 164 ALR 378; [1999] FCA 907, Sackville J said of O 21 r 1 of the former Federal Court Rules, allowing for certain litigants to be declared vexatious, that (at [51]):
FCR, O 21, r 1 must be applied having regard to a fundamental principle of the legal system. It is that every person has a right of access to a court to seek remedies in consequence of an alleged infringement of his or her rights: Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau Und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corporation Ltd [1981] AC 909 at 977, per Lord Diplock. Because an order made under a provision such as O 21, r 1 denies a litigant this right, it has been treated as an "extreme" remedy: Attorney-General v Wentworth (1988) 14 NSWLR 481 at 484, per Roden J. As Kirby J has pointed out in one of the many cases involving the respondent, "it is regarded as a serious thing in this country to keep a person out of the courts": Re Attorney-General (Cth); Ex parte Skyring (at 323).
(Emphasis added)
59 Similar principles were expressed by the High Court in Commonwealth Trading Bank of Australia v Inglis (1974) 131 CLR 311 (at 318-9) in relation to a person's right to file a notice of appeal in the High Court (this was before special leave to appear was introduced to the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth)) as follows:
In our opinion, the Court should hold that it has no power to make an order, on the application of the present applicant, that no legal proceedings should be instituted by the respondents or either of them without leave of a Justice of the Court.
In so far as the notice of motion refers to the lodging of appeals, we are of the opinion that there is no inherent power to make an order requiring the respondents to obtain leave for the lodging of an appeal. The bringing of an appeal to this Court from the decision of certain other courts is regulated by s. 35 of the Judiciary Act, 1903-1969. An appeal from an order of a Justice exercising the original jurisdiction of the court may be brought as provided by s. 34 of the same Act. In our opinion, the Court has no inherent power to make an order which would negate or modify the operation of those provisions or of other statutes which provide for appeals to this Court and set out the conditions in which such appeals are available. Clearly, it would have no such power to make an order inconsistent with s. 73 of the Constitution.
But the making of unwarranted and vexatious applications in an action which is pending in the court is, in our opinion, a matter over which there is an inherent power in the court to exercise control. There is an essential difference, in our opinion, between regulating the conduct of such an action so as to prevent the court's process from being abused, on the one hand, and impeding a particular person in the exercise of a right of access to the court, on the other hand.
60 See also Attorney-General v Wentworth (1988) 14 NSWLR 481; Jones v Skyring (1992) 109 ALR 303 at 311 per Toohey J; Hunter v Leahy (1999) 91 FCR 214; [1999] FCA 1075 per French J and MZXOT v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2008) 233 CLR 601; [2008] HCA 28 at [197].
61 There is no suggestion in this matter that the authorised Applicant, or the persons who comprise the Gold Coast NTCG, could be characterised as vexatious, or that it would involve an abuse of the processes of this Court if they were to file a further native title determination application over the same claim area, should these proceedings be discontinued. That being so, the authorities I have referred to above indicate that this Court does not have the power to impede their undeniable right to exercise the jurisdiction of this Court. Since the proposed conditions, if imposed, would, in the circumstances outlined above (see at [56]), impede that right, I do not consider this Court has the power to impose them. Thus, if I had been required to decide this issue, I would not have imposed the conditions proposed by the State of Queensland on the grant of leave to the Applicant to discontinue these proceedings.
62 Before leaving this issue, I should add this. None of the authorities I have referred to above (at [58]-[60]) appears to have been raised with the Court in either Close or Gale. This may be explained by the fact that those decisions both appear to have involved a potential abuse of the processes of the Court. Thus, they would fit into the exception mentioned in those authorities. However, if I am incorrect in this assessment, for the reasons I have given above I would respectfully disagree with those decisions insofar as they may be taken to express the view that, absent a situation involving a vexatious litigant or a potential abuse of the processes of the Court, this Court has the power to impose conditions impeding the right of a native title claim group to file a native title determination application under the NTA.