CONSIDERATION: APPLICATION FOR JOINDER
23 Principles applicable to the exercise of the Court's discretion under s 84(5) of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) are clear. As Mansfield J explained in Sumner v State of South Australia [2014] FCA 534:
12. The elements of s 84(5) are well established: Far West Coast Native Title Claim v State of South Australia (No 5) [2013] FCA 717 at [26] (Mansfield J) (Far West Coast (No 5)); Chippendale on behalf of the Wuthathi People #2 v State of Queensland [2012] FCA 310 at [14] (Greenwood J) (Chippendale); Barunga (Gilmour J); Akiba v Queensland (No 2) [2006] FCA 1173; (2006) 154 FCR 513 at 520 [32] (French J); Worimi Local Aboriginal Land Council v Minister for Lands (NSW) [2007] FCA 1357; (2007) 164 FCR 181 at 183-184 (Bennett J). An applicant for joinder must establish:
(a) whether the person has an interest;
(b) whether the interest may be affected by a determination in the proceedings; and
(c) whether, in any event, in the exercise of its discretion the Court should join the person as a party.
13. With respect to the "interest" in (a) and (b), it "need [not] be properly or even legal or equitable in nature" but must be "genuine", ... not indirect, remote or lacking substance ... [and] capable of clear definition" and "be affected in a demonstrable way": Byron Environment Centre Inc v Arakwal People (1997) 78 FCR 1 at 7E-G, 8A (Black CJ) (Byron) (emphasis added); Davis-Hurst v Minister for Land and Water Conservation (NSW) (2003) 198 ALR 315 at 316-317 (Branson J) (Davis-Hurst); Barunga at [165] (Gilmour J); Chippendale at [14] (Greenwood J); Far West Coast (No 5) at [28] (Mansfield J).
…
16. In determining whether an applicant for joinder satisfies the test identified in Byron, the Court does not embark on resolving contested questions of fact or seek to determine where the merits lie. Rather, the question is whether having regard to the assertions of fact contained in the application for joinder, the Court can be satisfied that the person's interests may be affected in a demonstrable way by a determination of native title. That is, there must be a factual foundation which demonstrates that a relevant interest is affected: Chippendale at [16] (Greenwood J).
17. As to the discretion, that must be addressed on a case by case basis: Far West Coast (No 2). While there is no doubt that the discretion conferred on the Court by s 84(5) is a broad one, that discretion is to be exercised with due regard to the statutory purposes and context of the NT Act read as a whole, including to ensure that the prosecution of native title claims is not occasioned by unnecessary delay caused by unreasonable interlocutory applications.
(see also Forrest on behalf of the Kakarra Part A Native Title Claim Group v State of Western Australia [2023] FCA 529, Wilson on behalf of the Wirangu People v South Australia [2022] FCA 829)
24 The applicant to a joinder application has the onus of satisfying the Court of each of the elements in s 84(5): Bromberg J in Forrest on behalf of the Kakarra Part A Native Title Claim Group v State of Western Australia [2023] FCA 529 at [14]
25 Importantly however a person cannot seek to be joined as a party to a Native Title claim in a representative capacity for the purpose of asserting native title rights on behalf of another group. As Rangiah J explained in Blucher on behalf of the Gaangalu Nation People v State of Queensland [2018] FCA 1369 at [21], this is because the combined effect of ss 13, 61, 213 and 225 of the Native Title Act is that an application for a determination of native title can only be made by a duly authorised applicant using the procedures in Pt 3 of the Native Title Act (see also Moses v Western Australia [2007] FCAFC 78; (2007) 160 FCR 148 at [18] and Commonwealth of Australia v Clifton [2007] FCAFC 190 at [2]).
26 As his Honour further observed at [21], while a member of another native title group may be joined as a respondent for the purpose of "defensively asserting" native title rights and interests, such a person is only permitted to pursue a personal claim to such rights and interests, namely to protect them from erosion, dilution or discount. (see also Reeves J in Bonner on behalf of the Jagera People #2 v State of Queensland [2011] FCA 321 at [18]-[21]).
27 Mr Kerr faces immediate problems in his application for joinder as a Yilba person, claiming descent from Cissy McGregor. Cissy McGregor has already been recognised as a Gudjala apical ancestor in numerous determinations of this Court. In particular I note Dodd on behalf of the Gudjala People Core Country Claim #1 v State of Queensland (No 3) [2014] FCA 231, Dodd on behalf of the Gudjala People Core Country Claim #1 v State of Queensland [2016] FCA 1505, and Dodd on behalf of the Gudjala People Core Country Claim #2 v State of Queensland [2016] FCA 1506 - in each of these determinations the Gudjala People were described as descendants of, inter alia, Cissy McGregor. As a descendant of Cissy McGregor, it appears that Mr Kerr is a Gudjala person.
28 In the present case, it is plain that Mr Kerr seeks joinder in a representative capacity for the purpose of asserting native title rights on behalf of the Yilba People, whom he claims are the true Native Title holders of land overlapping the Jangga #2 claim area. That this is the case is demonstrated by various materials and submissions before me.
29 First, Mr Kerr's interlocutory application filed 18 November 2022 relevantly seeks an order:
1. that Yilba People apical decendent Lawrence Flinders Kerr join to the proceeding as Yilba People Respondent….
30 Second, I note evidence of Mr Kerr, in particular his affidavit filed 18 November 2022 in which he deposed:
6. The 24 March 2020 notice included Gudjala and other's who assert rights and interest. The minutes of the 24 march 2020 will testify my interest to become a respondent for Yilba.
7. As other's, at the 24 March 2020, I asserted my interest's for the Yilba People, as the apical for Gudjala they use my Greatgrandmother Cissy McGregor, the only problem was, Cissy McGregor's mother and grandmother and greatgrandmother belong to Yilba sovereignty, not Gudjala. Cissy born old St Pauls Station in Yilba country.
…
12. On the 27 October 2022, I forwarded an Application for Assistance to North Queensland Land Council Aboriginal Corporation/RNTBC (Special Services) for the larger country claim of Yilba which overlaps Jangga #2 and a small area south left.
13. Yilba sovereign apical of Bela decendents,, have authorised myself in requesting that through lore', the process I have engaged for the recognition of Yilba,follow the law's of colonal Courts to be recognised and argue Yilba's case of continuity.
14. I, Lawrence Flinders Kerr decendent of apical Bela, being Yilba, make an application to be joined to the Proceeding as a respondent pursuant to s 84(5) of the Native Title Act I now respectfully seeks the leave of the Court to join the Proceeding as a respondent for Yilba People.
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16. Documents testify Yilba People's interest 2017, including apical connection, rights and interests to tradition, spirituality, culture, custom, enjoyment over lands & waters.
(errors in original)
31 Third, there is further evidence before me that Mr Kerr has earlier asserted that native title in the relevant claim area was Yilba. Ms Cheryl Thomson in her affidavit filed 21 April 2023 deposed:
8. At the Community Meeting, those Gudjala people attending appointed from their number the Gudjala respondents and Mr Kerr as respondents to protect the native title interests of the Gudjala people in this proceeding. Mr Kerr was appointed to represent the descendants of Gudjala Apical Ancestor, Cissy McGregor. Each of the Gudjala respondents, including Mr Kerr, accepted their appointed roles.
9. At the meeting Mr Kerr first told the meeting that the Jangga #2 claim was over Yilba country and not Gudjala country. This was not supported at the meeting and another person came forward to represent the descendants of Cissy McGregor and protect Gudjala interests in the proceeding. When this occurred, Mr Kerr put himself forward as the representative of the descendants of Cissy McGregor to be joined to protect Gudjala interests in this proceeding. Mr Kerr was then accepted by the Gudjala people at the meeting.
32 Fourth, in his written submissions filed 23 May 2023 Mr Kerr plainly purported to advance arguments on behalf of Yilba People, rather than in respect of his personal interests. In particular I note the following submissions:
4. At this, I put my proud exclusive (meaning possessed) and my stubbened stance fell, and sharing Yilba's exclusive traditional lores and customs has to be shared if Yilba communal estates have to get protected from anyone with intention's to harm or use whatever instrument for gain, and not for culture. The Yilba map with dots have Possessed Exclusive Knowledge.
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23. Jangga elder Colin McLennan, let us view the history to exclusive knowledge I know about you, as a Applicant to 1). Birri 2001, 2) Birriah 2013, 3) Jangga #1, 4) Jangga #2, 5) Jangga #3, busy is Mr Colin McLennan, and to be Applicant for so many, there must be a wealth of exclusive rights and interests, traditional lore and customs possessed for all your responsibilities, and yet, my Yilba scares the Jangga People. Jangga with all their resources, still can't ask me about Yilba's Possessed lores and customs, and Dr Clarke tries to discret my apical's along with NQLC's Dr Louis, feel free to come and interview me, I will talk.
24. I notice both Gudjala and Jangga only attack myself, and nevr disprove Yilba existance as historical evidence even on language map.
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31. By coerceive litigation, I am forcefully sharing Yilba's exclusive knowledge for the World to abuse or use to benefit and to rape Yilba's exclusive possessed rights and interests that will distroy customs and lore for whatever intent.
32. In sharing the above Dr Clarke, Dr Mayo, and espically you Dr Mayo, what is the stance to your evidence of Common Law requirements for Gudjala, given Dr Hagen and DOWSETT J 2009 dismissal of Gudjala#2 bassed on apical's and common law and customs requirements. The fact that Dr Mayo is leaving all commetery to Dr Louis Lopez in house NQLC anthropologist and the the expert for the Court, smells of desperation.
33. Imagine if NQLC aproved Yilba's application for assistance 27 October 2022, would this litigation I am putting have substance and exposure of Intent Bad Faith or the Strenght for Yilba and possessed exclusive rights and interests and traditional lores and customs I really Want to share to all Dots on Map.
…
45. The Burra groups to the Yilba language is exclusive and must get recognition, to protect and handed down, as did the anthropologist who filed it on the Australian Map of language, and to the knowledge with Dr Clarke and Dr Mayo who acknowledge the name Yilba .. amongst other fellow colleages in their field.
46. Does Yilba have a tenable defence, Yilba believe it has and until Dr Clarke and Dr Mayo produce tenable evidence against the name Yilba not known to historians, we must consider the fact of evidence today, and accept my Joiner application as a party to the Jangga#2 application if justice in approving any consent determination to exclusive possessed right and intresrs, with traditional lores and customs, and factual proof given to the Federal Court of Australia and not word of mouth from Anthropologist Court experts running throught the motions.
(errors in original)
33 Finally, at the hearing before me on 24 November 2023, Mr Kerr submitted as follows:
MR KERR: Cissy McGregor and that - the Jangga #2 claim area is Yilba country, that's what I assert. Not Gudjala company. The Gudjala submission takes into issues - Mr Kerr's claims, and so does Mr Masso in his submission. I believe that statement is not so, because Mr Masso is not here, and ---
(transcript p 25 ll 7-10)
34 Later during the hearing, the following exchange took place:
HER HONOUR: Okay. But Mr Kerr, we have to have some organisation with the way in which litigation is conducted. Because otherwise, if it's just open slather, things would never get resolved. So…
MR KERR: This is where the authorisation meeting comes in.
HER HONOUR: Yes.
MR KERR: You can only express that when the authorisation meeting comes in and who is involved. But you can't get that first instance. You're like me. You have all this knowledge and you can't give it out to people because you can't trust them. Now, these facts I have shown to Dr Mayo, but he didn't want to take the paperwork, he just took photographs of it. And his actual words to me both in 1 November - 1 September 2020. "What, Lawrie, do you want all this country for yourself?" And other facts I've got here, your Honour, like I will as saying, I only - if I do present them, I only want you to see it, because you're the one that's making the decision, not the people, but this sensitive information that I've kept as a cultural person, to keep peace. But I am - I am forced and it's all about - I can't say, but …
HER HONOUR: All right.
MR KERR: If you wish to look at them, and…
HER HONOUR: Hang on, just so everybody is clear. You want to produce additional evidence for me to see without the other side seeing; is that right?
MR KERR: Yes, your Honour. It's just that - because you're the one that's making the decision.
HER HONOUR: That's right.
MR KERR: And if - and I will leave it to your discretion.
HER HONOUR: No, well…
MR KERR: If you want them to see it, I will leave it to you, your Honour.
MR ATHANASIOU: Your Honour, I would object to that.
HER HONOUR: And why is that Mr Athanasiou?
MR ATHANASIOU: ..... adduce further new evidence in the proceedings ..... and it's too late.
HER HONOUR: All right. Mr Carter, what do you say?
MR CARTER: We would object also, your Honour. I took your Honour previously to your orders, your Honour's orders in relation to production of evidence. Those dates are well past.
MR KERR: May I state, your Honour, I've introduced this evidence to Dr Mayo, and if he didn't forward it on - but I still have the right to let you see what he has seen and don't report it. It has been introduced
HER HONOUR: Well, if it's already - so there are several issues here. One is lateness of production of evidence; secondly, an application to withhold evidence from the other side and only for the judge to see. Mr Kerr, I've heard what you're saying in relation to this evidence. The problem is that it is very late. The Gudjala respondent and the Jangga applicant object. I can understand why. I am not - the third thing is I'm not sure to what extent this evidence, which I have not seen, would assist me anyway. There may be something which - there may be relevant material in there. I don't know. But the points which have been raised today by Mr Athanasiou and Mr Carter are real in relation to joinder and removal. Even if you say - even if, just say, that evidence points towards the existence of a Yilba group, just say, a group of people who can be described as Yilba, as far as joining the Jangga native title claim, that doesn't help you because to join, you have to show interests, basically, of your own, not representing some other group.
So just say you say, "Your Honour, there is a group there, Yilba. It's actually Yilba country", one possible immediate response from me would be, "Well, Mr Kerr, go and file a claim as Yilba. That's what you should be doing, not seeking to join with them, the Jangga people. File your own claim." There's a lot of case law which says you can't disguise a native title claim, what's actually a native title claim, by joining with somebody else. That doesn't work that way. The courts have been like, "No, we're not going to let you do that." If you say there's a claim, go and get a claim. Go to the Native Title Tribunal. Get it authorised. Come to the court. You can't just disguise it - you know, it's masquerading as a joinder when it's actually a claim. Can I just ask if anything that I've said then is anything to which the respondents object or the native title applicant objects?
MR ATHANASIOU: I don't object, your Honour, but I just point out that I think Mr Kerr's problem will be authorisation.
HER HONOUR: Well, that's another - that's a completely different question. That is not something for me to be concerned about.
MR ATHANASIOU: No.
HER HONOUR: I'm simply saying what you would have to do. So the law is clear. If what you are actually asserting is a native title claim, you can't get that across the line by masquerading as a joinder. Do you understand what I'm saying?
MR KERR: Yes.
HER HONOUR: And I'm not being - when I say "masquerading", I don't mean anything particularly malicious. I'm just saying people sometimes get confused, and they think joinder is the correct approach, but what they should be doing is bringing a native title claim. It's quite limited. To be able to join, you have to be able to show individual interests. So that's a very long-winded way, Mr Kerr, of saying I don't think that the evidence which you have described, which you have carefully and tentatively described, would help me and is a reason - and should be accepted. So it wouldn't help me. The other side objects. It's too late. They're all reasons to say no at this stage. And 4, you probably should be doing a claim, if that's what you're saying.
MR KERR: Yes, your Honour, and I appreciate it. My question to the court is if it's impossible for me to…
HER HONOUR: I'm not saying anything is impossible at this stage, Mr Kerr. I'm still hearing you.
MR KERR: Yes. I
HER HONOUR: I'm just making observations.
MR KERR: I've done the right process of trying to get assistance for the claim in 2017 with no success, and the reasons that were given to me and the only reason that was given to me that - why my application for assistance was declined: because I tried to remove Cissy McGregor. Within that time period, no one came to me to find my strength, my weaknesses and new information. I've done that process. I appreciate the court letting me know that, but I've done that, and no one - with no avail to the assistance.
35 It appears plain from the materials before me that Mr Kerr's application for joinder to the Jangga #2 claim followed, and was in substitution for, his unsuccessful attempts to obtain assistance from representative bodies in respect of his claim of native title rights over the claim area in the Yilba People.
36 As I explained to Mr Kerr at the hearing, to the extent that he sought recognition of his claim that land encompassed by the Jangga #2 claim was actually "Yilba" country, the appropriate avenue was by way of an application for Native Title, either wholly or partially overlapping with the area the subject of the Jangga #2 claim. Mr Kerr's application for joinder on behalf of the Yilba People was not one which s 84(5) of the Native Title Act recognises.
37 It follows that, to the extent that Mr Kerr seeks joinder to the Jangga #2 proceedings on behalf of the Yilba People, his application should be refused.
38 It further follows that, to the extent that Mr Kerr seeks an order that he join the proceedings as Yilba People Respondent replacing any other existing respondents to the Jangga #2 claim (including Mr Masso), his application should be refused.
39 Mr Kerr's interlocutory application filed 18 November 2022 should be dismissed.