CHARLESWORTH J
1 The respondent, Santos NA Barossa Pty Ltd ACN 109 974 932 has made an application for leave to issue subpoenas to three addressees, the Environmental Defenders Office Ltd (EDO Lawyers), Mr Gareth Lewis and Dr Mick O'Leary.
2 These reasons are to be read in conjunction with two other judgments previously published in this matter, namely: Munkara v Santos NA Barossa Pty Ltd (No 3) [2024] FCA 9 (Munkara 3) and Munkara v Santos NA Barossa Pty Ltd (No 4) [2024] FCA 414 (Munkara 4). Some phrases employed in those judgments will be employed here without further introduction.
3 For the reasons given in Munkara 3, the applicants' originating application was dismissed. The applicants have been ordered to pay Santos' costs of and incidental to it. Santos does not seek to vary or revoke the costs order as against the applicants themselves.
4 On 22 April 2024, Santos filed a costs application against EDO Lawyers, the firm of solicitors that represented the applicants through to and for some time following the delivery of judgment in Munkara 3. The costs application was foreshadowed at a hearing on 5 April 2024.
5 Given the complex history to the proceeding, the Court invited submissions from the addressees as to whether leave should be granted, with a view to avoiding multiple motions for the subpoenas to be set aside.
6 Mr Lewis and Dr O'Leary are experts engaged by EDO Lawyers to prepare reports and give evidence in support of the applicants' case. The categories of documents in the proposed subpoenas addressed to them overlap with the categories of documents in the proposed subpoena addressed to EDO Lawyers. They have each informed the Court that they do not seek to make submissions on the question of leave, but abide the outcome of the application as it relates to EDO Lawyers.
7 By way of further background, for reasons given in Munkara 4, on 24 April 2024 the Court granted leave to Santos to issue subpoenas against three activist organisations (Jubilee Australia Research Centre Ltd, Environment Centre (N.T.) Inc (ECNT) and The Sunrise Project Australia Limited) but refused to grant leave to issue a subpoena to a fourth organisation (Market Forces Ltd). Santos' argument in support of that application was principally that the documents would (among other things) assist it to decide whether to bring additional costs applications against those entities. Also on 5 April 2024, Santos handed up a document titled "Respondent's propositions about orders sought on 5 April 2024" (Proposition Statement) setting out the basis of the costs application it then foreshadowed it would make against EDO Lawyers. It contained the following:
…
3. There are three limbs to the Respondent's position against the EDO.
4. The first is that the EDO funded at least parts of the applicants' proceedings. Production of documents by the EDO to date has not been fulsome, for example the date range provided commences in October 2023 when it is clear work had been progressing for many months beforehand. Production has also been recent, the last tranche being on 28 March 2024. The respondent has not had time to fully consider all of the documents produced but it is obvious that production by the EDO needs to be supplemented. Leaving those issues aside, the respondent's position is set out in the affidavit of Ms Fox which has been provided to the Court as explained above.
5. The second is the role of the EDO in the conduct of the proceedings. As was ventilated in the respondent's submissions at the hearing, the EDO was intimately involved with the discredited 'cultural mapping' which was the foundation of the applicants' case, that the pipeline route would impact cultural features by damaging spiritual connection; i.e. intangible cultural heritage. As well as distorting indigenous instructions, e.g. [2024] FCA 9 at [1169], that process undermined lay evidence to the extent that it also could not be accepted by the Court. The EDO prepared the assumptions given to each of Mr Lewis and Drs O'Leary and Kearney about the cultural narratives that ought underpin their respective opinions; being the 'Tiwi Cultural Stories Summary'. The EDO also provided the 'Marie Munkara Sea Country Narratives' to the experts - in relation to which the Court inferred that Ms Munkara had regard to Dr O'Leary's maps when she prepared her narratives so as to match the narratives to the submerged landscape [[2024] FCA 9 at 1177]. In short, the EDO was an actor in the putting forward of both expert and lay evidence which could not be relied upon by the Court.
6. Broadly speaking, the respondent's position is that the EDO's role in, at least, this regard was unreasonable and ought to attract costs consequences.
7. It will be necessary for the respondent to seek additional production from the EDO and the applicants' experts so as to fully ventilate the ambit of the EDO's conduct. The respondent has provided the Court and the EDO with draft subpoenas to the EDO, Dr O'Leary and Mr Lewis that it seeks leave to issue. The relationship between the EDO and the experts, and between the experts, and the timing of their engagement with the Tiwi Islanders may be critical to the respondent's arguments about the extent of the EDO's agency in these proceedings. The respondent anticipates that those subpoenas will raise issues of privilege, and its waiver.
8. The third plank to the respondent's position is that the EDO had a substantial interest in the outcome of the proceedings as an activist organisation. As recorded at [1320] of the Judgment, Santos did not argue in the proceedings that the EDO was the principal proponent of the action pursuing an ideological agenda. For the purposes of costs, the respondent does put that the benefit to the EDO of the proceedings, should they have succeeded, would have been fundamentally different to the usual solicitor client relationship. The justice of the case in all its unique circumstances lies with the EDO bearing the burden of the loss; at least equally with its client. This argument will also be further developed after production.
9. The respondent's position with respect to each of the ECNT, Jubilee Australia, Market Forces and the Sunrise Project is that further production is required before it forms a view about whether it wishes to seek third party costs orders. As set out in the submissions prepared in relation to the application to set aside the subpoenas issued, the availability of such a claim is 'on the cards' on the current material but the respondent seeks additional information. Once that information is received, the respondent will expeditiously form a view about whether to file an application. This is provided for in the respondent's draft orders.
8 Following judgment in Munkara 4, each of Jubilee Australia, ECNT and Sunrise Project sought leave to appeal from the judgment. On the day of argument on the present application, Santos informed the Court that it "does not press" the subpoenas addressed to those entities. In light of that withdrawal, the Court granted those organisations a limited audience in respect of one category of documents now sought by the proposed subpoena addressed to EDO Lawyers.