Malone on behalf of the Clermont-Belyando Area Native Title Claim Group v State of Queensland
[2023] FCAFC 190
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)
Decision date
2023-12-12
Before
Mr J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 This appeal is from the judgment in Malone v State of Queensland (The Clermont-Belyando Area Native Title Claim) (No 5) [2021] FCA 1639 (PJ), which concerned two partially overlapping claims to native title in relation to a large area of land in Central Queensland. The claims were described by the parties as the J#3 claim and the CB claim. In his decision, the primary judge answered in the negative, two separate questions as to whether native title, as defined in s 223(1) of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) (NTA), exists in relation to any and, if so, what, land and waters of the claim area. 2 As was required by s 67 of the NTA, the two claims were heard together. Two separate appeals were filed against the judgment: one on behalf of the Clermont-Belyando People (CB Appeal); and the second on behalf of the Jangga People (J#3 Appeal). The two appeals were heard together, but the grounds of appeal in each claim are distinct. For that reason, it is convenient to deliver separate reasons in relation to each appeal. These reasons relate to the CB Appeal. 3 The primary judge summarised his main conclusions with respect to the CB claim at PJ[1220] in the following terms: (a) the CB applicant cannot rely upon the findings it claims were made, or the evidence ostensibly relied on, in the nine consent determinations upon which it sought to rely; (b) the CB claim group has failed to establish that the ancestors of its members comprised a society at effective sovereignty which acknowledged and observed traditional laws and customs giving rise to rights and interests in the land and waters of the claim area; (c) even if the CB applicant had established (b) above, it would have failed to establish that its current claim group constituted a normative society that is united in and by a body of laws and customs the acknowledgment and observance of which could sustain such rights and interests. (Emphasis added.) 4 Although the CB Appellant appealed against all of those findings, central to the determination of the CB Appeal is Ground 7 of the CB Appellant's Amended Notice of Appeal by which it challenges the primary judge's findings at PJ[1192]-[1213]. Those findings were as explained at PJ[1192]-[1193] that: Those changes [being the changes made by the CB Appellant to its claim over the years] show that the CB Appellant is not united in, and by, a body of laws and customs, the acknowledgement and observance of which could give rise to rights and interests in the land and waters of the claim area. Those changes therefore show that the CB claim group does not, as a group, constitute a normative society in the Yorta Yorta sense [Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v State of Victoria [2002] HCA 58; 214 CLR 422] such that it is capable of sustaining such rights and interests" (at [1192]). Consequently … the CB Appellant is not able to decide as a group what its traditional laws and customs are with respect to a number of critical elements. They include: whether there is a necessity for its members to identify with the name Wangan and/or Jagalingou; what the nature and content of its descent rule is and the related question whether an adopted person can gain rights and interests in land as a member of one of its rights holding groups. As a consequence of these disagreements, the CB claim group cannot say with any certainty who is, or is not, a member of that group. Hence, the five occasions where removals and/or reinstatements have been made to its listed apical ancestors. Further and relatedly, because it is not sufficiently organised, it has not developed a system which is capable of resolving disputes about the operation of its membership rule are resolved. 5 Unless the CB Appellant is able to successfully challenge these findings, it cannot succeed in the appeal and the remaining grounds of appeal will be moot. For that reason and in the circumstances which we further explain below, the Court ordered that Ground 7 of the Amended Notice of Appeal, to the extent that it alleges error in the findings at PJ[1192]-[1213] of the reasons of the primary judge, be heard and determined separately and before the other appeal grounds. This order did not preclude the CB Appellant from advancing any contention that relied in an evidential sense upon other determinations of native title in support of its claim. 6 This appeal is by way of re-hearing. Such an appeal allows for the possibility of further evidence being adduced in the course of appeal, if appropriate: Western Australia v Ward (2002) 213 CLR 1 at [70]-[71]. None was sought to be adduced. The focus of an appellate court nevertheless remains on whether there has been error established but only after making proper allowance for the advantages of the trial judge: Fox v Percy [2003] HCA 22; 214 CLR 118 at [27]-[28]. In order to succeed, it is necessary in accordance with well-established principles for the CB Appellant to identify findings which show that the primary judge disregarded incontrovertible facts or uncontested evidence, or that the findings made by the primary judge were glaringly improbable or contrary to compelling inferences: Fox at [29] (Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Kirby JJ). The importance of the reasons of Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Kirby JJ in Fox were recently explained by the Full Court in Frigger v Trenfield (No 3) [2023] FCAFC 49 at [138] as follows, namely that: …they expressed and reconciled the important features of an appeal by way of rehearing: That it is a real review looking at the whole of the record, but it is conducted within the constraints marked out by the appellate process and the advantages of the trial judge, including the evaluation of a witness's credibility having seen and heard the person at trial, and the advantage of seeing the evidence unfold during the trial and over a period of time, and that its purpose is the correction of error. That reconciliation, to be found in particular at 214 CLR 127 [27], involved, importantly, the recognition that the advantages of the trial judge do not derogate from the obligation of the appeal court to conduct a real review by way of rehearing according for the purpose of correction of error. If, from this review, and after making due allowance for the advantages of the trial judge, the appeal court concludes that an error has been shown, effect must be given to that conclusion. 7 The Full Court also highlighted an important passage from the judgment of Kirby J in Earthline Constructions Pty Ltd (in liq) [1999] HCA 3; 160 ALR 588 at [89]-[91] where his Honour "explained the advantages, subtle but real, of a trial judge hearing a long case and being able to assess and place all the evidence in its context as it unfolds and as witnesses (truthful, reliable or not) deal with it": Frigger at [142]. 8 While not altering the role of the appellate court, the need for appellate caution is particularly compelling in the context of native title where it is accepted that the trial judge enjoys a "significant advantage … in respect of the overall weighing of the totality of the evidence" involving matters of judgment based on an evaluative assessment of a wide array of evidence given by Aboriginal witnesses and experts, extensive documentary material, and the relationship between that evidence: Banjima People v Western Australia [2015] FCAFC 84; 231 FCR 456 at [57]-[58]; Starkey v South Australia [2018] FCAFC 36; 261 FCR 183 at [18]; Moses v Western Australia [2007] FCAFC 78; 160 FCR 148 at [308]-[309]. That is particularly so in a case such as this where, as in Banjima, the primary judge heard substantial evidence on country, observed the lay witnesses give their evidence, including on occasion concurrently, and was able to assess the performance of the expert witnesses in concurrent sessions. 9 For reasons that will be explained below, the appeal must be dismissed. While no criticism is directed to the CB Appellant, and it may be accepted, as did the primary judge, that the indigenous lay witnesses gave their evidence truthfully, the conclusion reached by the primary judge was inevitable in the circumstances. It is regrettable that the members of the CB Appellant have endured almost two decades of litigation since the original proposal to file this claim was put to them by the Gurang Land Council. Again, that is not to direct any criticism at the Gurang Land Council. Rather it is to observe that, although the evidence revealed that many individuals had some knowledge learned or observed from elders whose ancestors were from and around the claim area, the native title claimant community or group had failed to establish that they "have rights and interests possessed under the traditional laws acknowledged and the traditional customs observed by that community or group": De Rose v South Australia (No 2) [2005] FCAFC 110; 145 FCR 290 at [58] (emphasis in the original). That is a question of fact which directs attention to "whether the community or group, as a whole, has sufficiently acknowledged the relevant traditional laws and customs" (ibid), bearing in mind that the reference to "traditional laws and customs" in s 223(1)(a) of the NTA is a reference to pre-sovereign laws and customs (as held in Yorta Yorta at [83] and [86]). In turn, as Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ held in Yorta Yorta at [42]: the rules which together constitute the traditional laws acknowledged and traditional customs observed, and under which the rights or interest are said to be possess, must be rules having normative content. Without that quality, there may be observable patterns of behaviour but not rights or interests in relation to land or waters. Further, "[t]o speak of rights and interests possessed under an identified body of laws and customs is … to speak of rights and interests that are the creatures of the laws and customs of a particular society that exists as a group which acknowledges and observes those laws and customs": Yorta Yorta at [50]. 10 The primary judge was not satisfied that the CB Appellant had established these elements of native title. For the reasons we explain below, the CB Appellant has not demonstrated that the primary judge erred in reaching that conclusion.