(c) the Warden's Court did not deal with the above questions.
These grounds require an examination of the statute, but can be dealt with adequately without repeating at length the relevant provisions thereof.
66 Ground 3 of the Summons challenges the jurisdiction of the Minister to renew the exploration licence. The challenge is based on the provisions of s 113 and s 114 of the Mining Act which, in the case of s 113, does not seem to allow for a renewal for more than the area already held and which, in the case of s 114 of the Mining Act, prohibits renewal that includes land not previously covered by the licence and prohibits, except in special circumstances, renewal for more than half the units previously held.
67 The first of the bases submitted does not withstand scrutiny. As a matter of fact, the Minister had not cancelled EL 5358. The decision of the Warden's Court did not have that effect. If anything it had the opposite effect.
68 The power of cancellation is contained in s 125 of the Mining Act, which allows the Minister to cancel an exploration licence in certain specified circumstances. There was no positive decision on an application for the cancellation of EL 5358 and there was no decision to cancel and no cancellation was issued. Further, none of the circumstances that would give rise to a cancellation under s 125 of the Mining Act have been proved. It is unnecessary to detail those circumstances or to analyse them. As a matter of fact, there has been no cancellation of EL 5358 under the Mining Act, at any stage.
69 The second ground of invalidity depends upon a construction of the Act and in particular s 19(1)(a) of the Act. The submission of Midcoast Lime depends on the effect of the grant to Mr Walker of EL 6278 over Armidale Block 2697 Units C, D, H and J, which grant was made on 11 August 2004. Midcoast Lime submits that because EL 5358 was granted (and first renewed) covering Armidale Block 2697 Unit H, s 19(1)(a) of the Mining Act has the effect that the grant of EL 6278 (Mr Walker's later and broader exploration licence) either cancelled EL 5358 or vice versa. The submission is one of form over substance. Section 19(1)(a) prevents the grant of a licence over an area covered by another exploration licence "otherwise than … with the written consent of the holder of … that licence". If, as was the case, EL 6278 covered an area covered by EL 5358, EL 6278 was granted with the consent of the holder of the licence, Mr Walker. That consent was in writing.
70 The provisions of s 32 of the Mining Act make clear that an exploration licence subsequently granted supersedes, to the extent of overlap, a previous exploration licence. However, such supersession, in this case, does not involve the cancellation of EL 5358. It is the inclusion of the rights contained in EL 5358 into EL 6278. Further, and alternatively, when, as occurred, the First Warden's Court Decision declared EL 6278 invalid, it rendered it a nullity and void. EL 6278 was never validly granted and s 32 of the Mining Act never operated on EL 5358 in the manner submitted.
71 When the order declaring the invalidity of EL 6278 issued, the full status of EL 5358 was restored and, as restored, was capable of renewal.
72 Lastly, the First Warden's Court Decision did not expressly restore EL 5358, because such an express restoration was unnecessary. Nor did the First Warden's Court Decision set aside the cancellation of EL 5358. This is because there was never a cancellation of EL 5358.
73 Midcoast Lime also submits that EL 5358 expired on 8 October 2005 (the date of expiry under its terms as originally granted). The exploration licence, it is submitted, was not, therefore, capable of being renewed on 18 November 2005. This submission is inconsistent with a proper construction of the provisions of the Act.
74 Pursuant to the terms of s 113, Mr Walker applied for the renewal of EL 5358. This he did on 26 September 2002. Because of the intervention of the Warden's Court and the declaration of invalidity previously mentioned, that application was not finally dealt with until 18 November 2005. As a consequence, the provisions of s 117(1) of the Mining Act operate to continue EL 5358 in effect until the Minister or his delegate has finally dealt with the application for the renewal (i.e. in this circumstance, from 8 October 2005 until 18 November 2005).
75 Somewhat contradictorily, Midcoast Lime submits that the Minister exceeded his power in granting EL 6507 (which, when effective, would supersede the renewed EL 5358), because the power to grant the new exploration licence is restrained by the factors limiting renewal of a licence that are prescribed in ss 113 and 114 of the Mining Act. Essentially, the submission of Midcoast Lime misunderstands what has occurred.
76 The submission is based upon the proposition that "there is no provision in the Act for a renewal, which expands the area of the licence". This may be so. But the Mining Act does not restrict the capacity of the Minister, relevantly, to grant a new licence over areas not previously covered by a licence. Such a grant would not be a renewal and would, therefore, not be subjected to the conditions otherwise applicable to the renewal of a licence. The submission of Midcoast Lime has no merit. Once the Minister determined to expand, by the grant of a new licence, the area covered by an exploration licence to Mr Walker, it was no longer a renewal of EL 5358 (at least in the areas beyond EL 5358) and no limitations applying to renewals can apply to the grant of a new licence of such kind. The ground is rejected.
Grounds 4, 6 And 7: Error In The Application Of Judicial Review Principles
77 There is a degree of overlap between the issues raised in grounds 4, 6 and 7 in the summons and that raised in ground 2, with which the Court has already dealt.
78 At its highest, if the Court were convinced that the Warden's Court misapplied the principles in Peko-Wallsend or, relevantly, misunderstood them, that may not of itself ground the issue of orders.
79 Grounds 4, 6 and 7 of the Summons are almost particulars of Ground 2 thereof, but raise the failure of the Minister to take into account the matters listed in the nine-page complaint and/or the matters in dispute. The matters, of which complaint was made, are set out in [58] above and generally particularise allegations of conduct that is in breach of the conditions of the licence or contravention of the Act. Such breach or contravention is a criterion for the exercise of the discretion of the Minister to cancel a licence already granted (s 125 of the Mining Act). Further, if the conduct in contravention of the Act led to a conviction, such conviction would be a consideration in the exercise of the Minister's discretion to renew a licence.
80 I have already determined that the issues raised by Midcoast Lime do not amount to criteria that the Minister was bound to consider.
81 The Act must be construed bearing in mind the need to give effect to harmonious goals: Project Blue Sky, supra, at 381-382.
82 As earlier stated, if the Minister were to take into account the criteria in s 125 that are required grounds for the cancellation of a licence, in determining not to renew EL 5358 or not to grant EL 6507, they would not have been irrelevant considerations. It would be inconsistent with the purposes of the Act to require the Minister to grant or renew a licence in circumstances where the Minister could, immediately, cancel it. But it is a different question to require the Minister not to grant the licence in such circumstances.
83 The Minister, as has already been stated, had each of these considerations before him at the time that these decisions were made and took them into account. Even if that were not to have been the case, the provisions and criteria in s 125 of the Act, which expressly deal with the cancellation of licences, are not "mandatory considerations" in the determination to grant or renew a licence. Such a grant or renewal is conditioned by an express requirement, which does not apply, namely if Mr Walker had been convicted of an offence against the Mining Act or the regulations or other relevant offence: see s 22(2) of the Mining Act. It is unnecessary for me to decide, but there is strong argument, that where "conviction" for an offence is a consideration the Minister is bound to consider, conduct that could, but has not, led to a conviction is irrelevant.
84 In essence the submission of Midcoast Lime would amount to the proposition that even though the Act (s 22) requires the Minister to take into account a conviction, the provisions of s 114 of the Mining Act require him to take into account conduct that, if proved, would amount to a contravention of the Act and amount to contraventions of the conditions of a licence. It would have been extremely easy for the legislature to have expressly mandated such considerations, instead of expressing a much narrower consideration on the grant or renewal of a licence.
85 As stated, now more than once, the Minister, in fact, took into account the issues raised. Further, the Warden's Court found, as a matter of fact, that all persons involved in the decisions were cognisant of the issues in dispute. That finding of fact should not be disturbed and, if it were open to the Court to do so, the Court would find to the same effect.
86 Midcoast Lime submits that because the Minister did not, in writing, make findings about the allegations raised in the opposition to the grant of the exploration licence, that was a refusal to take such opposition into account. This is an extension, by Midcoast Lime, of the principles associated with the requirement to take into account all relevant considerations and is not warranted. For that argument to succeed, there must be found in the legislation an implied obligation on the Minister to issue reasons and to make findings on every allegation or consideration that was taken into account. There is no legislative basis for the imposition of such a duty and there is no factual basis for an assertion that the Minister did not give consideration to the issue: see, by way of analogy, Foster v Minister for Customs and Justice [2000] HCA 38; (2000) 200 CLR 442 at 452 [23] (per Gleeson CJ and McHugh J).
87 These grounds of appeal are also rejected.