RESOLUTION
17 For ease of reference, s 47B should be set out again:
Vacant Crown land covered by claimant applications
When section applies
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a claimant application is made in relation to an area; and
(b) when the application is made, the area is not:
(i) covered by a freehold estate or a lease; or
(ii) covered by a reservation, proclamation, dedication, condition, permission or authority, made or conferred by the Crown in any capacity, or by the making, amendment or repeal of legislation of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, under which the whole or a part of the land or waters in the area is to be used for public purposes or for a particular purpose; or
(iii) subject to a resumption process (see paragraph (5)(b)); and
(c) when the application is made, one or more members of the native title claim group occupy the area.
Prior extinguishment to be disregarded
(2) For all purposes under this Act in relation to the application, any extinguishment, of the native title rights and interests in relation to the area that are claimed in the application, by the creation of any prior interest in relation to the area must be disregarded.
Note: The applicant will still need to show the existence of any connection with the land or waters concerned that may be required by the common law concept of native title.
Effect of determination
(3) If the determination on the application is that the native title claim group hold the native title rights and interests claimed:
(a) the determination does not affect:
(i) the validity of the creation of any prior interest in relation to the area; or
(ii) any interest of the Crown in any capacity, or of any statutory authority, in any public works on the land or waters concerned; and
(b) the non-extinguishment principle applies to the creation of any prior interest in relation to the area.
Renewals and extensions of leases
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), if, after a lease covering an area expires or is terminated, the lease is bona fide renewed, or its term is bona fide extended, the area is taken to be covered by the lease during the period between the expiry or termination and the renewal or extension.
Defined expressions
(5) For the purposes of this section:
(a) the creation of a prior interest in relation to an area does not include the creation of an interest that confirms ownership of natural resources by, or confers ownership of natural resources on, the Crown in any capacity; and
(b) an area is subject to a resumption process at a particular time (the test time) if:
(i) all interests last existing in relation to the area before the test time were acquired, resumed or revoked by, or surrendered to, the Crown in any capacity; and
(ii) when that happened, the Crown had a bona fide intention of using the area for public purposes or for a particular purpose; and
(iii) the Crown still had a bona fide intention of that kind in relation to the area at the test time.
18 The applicant's submission about European cadastral boundaries not governing, or at least not constraining, the concept of "area" in s 47B is now squarely raised. I do not consider I can completely adhere to what I said in the principal reasons for judgment at [1217]-[1218], where I declined to express a view on this issue. I express at least a preliminary view that the applicant is correct to submit there is nothing in the text, or context, of s 47B to suggest that the use of the word "area" in s 47B(1)(a) is premised on areas only as defined by European cadastral boundaries.
19 Given the broader subject matter of Pt 2 of the NT Act (recognition, protection and extinguishment of native title), together with the express purposes of s 47B (see [1159] of the principal reasons for judgment), it is to be expected that this beneficial provision was intended to be capable of application to areas of land and waters defined not by European cadastral boundaries but rather defined by possessory entitlements of the requisite kind as asserted by one or more claim group members. This may well include possessory interests (or, to use the phrase from the authorities, ways of "being established in an area") that are defined in accordance with traditional law and custom, or established usage (whether strictly traditional or not) and which have little or no correlation to European cadastral boundaries: see, to similar effect, the principal reasons for judgment at [1220]. The beneficial purpose of s 47B is advanced by a construction of that kind: see the observations of the Full Court in Northern Territory of Australia v Alyawarr, Kaytetye, Warumungu, Wakaya Native Title Claim Group [2005] FCAFC 135; 145 FCR 442, referred to at [1159] of my principal reasons for judgment. An example from the facts of the current proceeding, modified somewhat, might be an area of land and waters where claim group members camped on a regular basis, because the area had special significance in accordance with their laws and customs. In the claimant application invoking s 47B(2), it seems to me there would be no necessity for this area to be defined, as in delineated, only by using European cadastral boundaries. While such boundaries (for example, of UCL parcels) will be necessary to be able to precisely identify the area, and map it accurately, there is no reason in principle, it seems to me, why the "area" could not be one comprising only part of a UCL, or including part of one UCL and part of another.
20 However, this preliminary view does not assist the applicant in the answer to the present issue. That is because I accept the respondent's submissions that the determining factor is how a given applicant has identified the "area" for the purposes of s 47B(1)(a) in making the claim that s 47B(2) is engaged. However an applicant chooses to identify "the area" to which they contend s 47B(2) applies, it is that area which first, must not be subject to any of the exclusions in s 47B(1)(b), and second, must be "occupied" within the meaning of s 47B(1)(c). In my opinion, this must mean the whole of the area identified; otherwise the words "or parts of the area" would have been included in s 47B(1)(c).
21 In other words, the "area" in s 47B(1)(a) is a reference to the area of land or waters to which the applicant contends s 47B(2) applies. As I have noted at [18] above, my preliminary view is that area may be land or waters delineated by cadastral boundaries, or it may not be. That is because the beneficial terms of s 47B turn on occupation (in the expanded sense of that word set out in the authorities) by Indigenous people at specified times, and that occupation may or may not align with European cadastral boundaries.
22 The use of the phrase "in relation to" in s 47B(1)(a) supports this construction. There must be the requisite connection between the land and waters included in the claimant application and the land and waters contended to be covered by s 47B(2) - the latter being included in the former. What is critical is that the land and waters contended to be covered by s 47B(2) is identified by an applicant. Once identified, that enables the exclusions in s 47B(1)(b) to be applied, and it also enables the assessment of evidence about occupation of the area as identified.
23 In the present case, the State is correct that the applicant identified the "area" in a way which covered all of UCL 11.
24 At [77] of the applicant's statement of facts, issues and contentions in relation to extinguishment and "other interests" (filed on 11 September 2015), the applicant contended that s 47B:
requires any prior instances of extinguishment to be disregarded in the areas of Unallocated Crown Land (UCL) within the boundaries of the claim area. Particulars of those areas of land and waters to which section 47B applies are identified in Part 6 of the Schedule to this document.
25 In Pt 6 of the Schedule to that document, at [107]-[112], this was how the applicant described the relevant "area" they contended was covered by s 47B:
Tjiwarl
When the Tjiwarl native title claim application was made on 11 June 2011, the area of UCL 11 was partly covered by Mining Lease M36/660, Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191 and Exploration Licence E36/717.
The Applicant accepts that by virtue of section 47B(1)(b)(i), section 47B of the Native Title Act 1993 has no application to the part of UCL 11 covered by the external boundaries of Mining Lease M36/660. The Applicant says that Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191 and Exploration Licence E36/717 are not any of the interests or processes set out in section 47B(1)(b)(i) - (iii), such that section 47B requires that prior extinguishment in the area of UCL 11 be disregarded.
In the alternative, if it is found that Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191 and Exploration Licence E36/717 are included in sections 47B(1)(b)(i) - (iii) (which is denied) the Applicant says that the remaining part of UCL 11 that is not covered by, or subject to, any of the interests or processes set out in section 447B(1)(b)(i) - (iii), is such that section 47B requires any prior extinguishment in that part be disregarded.
Tjiwarl #2
When the Tjiwarl #2 native title claim application was made on 22 June 2015, the area of UCL 11 was partly covered by Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191.
The Applicant denies that sections 47B(1)(b)(i) - (iii) apply to Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191 and says that section 47B applies to the area of UCL 11 to disregard prior extinguishment.
In the alternative, if it is found that Miscellaneous Licences L36/96 and L36/191 are included in sections 47B(1)(b)(i) - (iii) (which is denied) the Applicant says that the remaining part of UCL 11 that is not covered by, or subject to, any of the interests or processes set out in section 47B(1)(b)(i) - (iii), is such that section 47B requires any prior extinguishment in that part be disregarded.
26 It is clear that the "area" identified by the applicant for the purposes of engaging s 47B was the whole of the area of UCL 11. No smaller parts of the Yakabindie Homestead block were identified, in particular no smaller parts that were contended to be occupied by Ms Wonyabong and Mr Allison, in contrast to the whole of the block.
27 That this was how the applicant intended to make their claim under s 47B for the Yakabindie Homestead block is confirmed by [36] of the amended parties' agreed statement of issues regarding extinguishment and "other interests", filed on 9 November 2015. This is the way the issue about the Yakabindie Homestead Block is identified:
Part of UCL 11 (Yakabindie)
The Applicants contend that one or more members of the native title claim group occupied this area on 17 June 2011 and/or 22 June 2015.
28 It is the case, as I have set out in my principal reasons for judgment at [1221] by reference to the Full Court decision in Moses v Western Australia [2007] FCAFC 78; 160 FCR 148 that the established interpretation of "occupy" in s 47B(1)(c) allows for a spectrum of conduct in relation to an area, and certainly does not require constant presence over every part of land and waters said to be covered by s 47B(2). The relevant passage from Moses at [216], which I also set out at [1221], is:
The word "occupy" is not defined in the NTA. It has a common meaning of being established in a place. In contemporary society, a person may occupy all of a house even though that person does not regularly enter every room and may never have entered a particular room or a particular part of a room; a pastoralist may occupy all of the area of a pastoral lease even though that person does not regularly visit every part of the area of the pastoral lease and may never have visited parts of it or have used parts of it for pastoral purposes: see eg per Lord Denning in Newcastle City Council v Royal Newcastle Hospital (1959) 100 CLR 1 at 4. In ss 47A and 47B, as the authorities point out, the context requires that the word "occupy" denotes some physical presence or activity by one or more members of the claim group from time to time, not necessarily continuously, and a presence or activity in the area so that as a matter of practicality that presence or activity involves the assertion of being established over the area itself. The occupation must be contemporaneous rather than historical. If the native title rights and interests over the area were exclusive, so there was a right to control access to the area, the exercise of the right to exclude strangers from the area would indicate its occupation. To occupy an area under the NTA, given its purposes and context, involves the exercise of possessory rights over the area, but the exercise of those rights does not require their continuous exercise, or their exercise at the precise time of the application because the occupation of which ss 47A and 47B speak is a state of affairs which must exist rather than the precise activity which illustrates the existence of the state of affairs.
29 So that, on different facts, even with a homestead block of the kind in issue, living from time to time in a house on the bock, as Ms Wonyabong did, and continuing through the relevant period to treat the home as her own and to assert possessory rights over it, or believe she had possessory rights to it, could well have been sufficient. Despite the flexibility of the meaning of "occupy", the factual difficulty for the applicant here is that the largest proportion of UCL 11 was, at all relevant times, occupied by individuals who were not from the claim group, to the exclusion of Ms Wonyabong (and Mr Allison), and those other individuals treated the homestead block as their own, establishing and maintaining buildings on it, storing machinery on it, and using it in the usual way a working homestead block on a large station would be used. This was not otherwise unoccupied land where the flexibility of the meaning of "occupy" would have a role to play.
30 In the current factual circumstances, given the way the applicant has identified the "area" for the purposes of s 47B(1)(a) (as UCL 11), the applicant has to prove occupation (according to the meaning given in the authorities) by a member of the claim group on 17 June 2011 and/or 22 June 2015 of the whole of UCL 11.
31 Therefore, I accept the State's submissions that the disposition of the issue about the Yakabindie homestead block turns on how the applicant identified the claim under s 47B in relation to this area. The applicant has not discharged its burden of proving a member of the claim group occupied the whole of UCL 11 at either or both of 17 June 2011 and 22 June 2015. At best, as I have found, they have proven that two different members of the claim group occupied small parts of UCL 11 at those times. This finding involves an application of the broad meaning of "occupy" found in the authorities. However, this "occupation" is insufficient to engage the beneficial effect of s 47B(2) to disregard extinguishment of native title rights and interests over UCL 11.
32 I consider this approach to be consistent with the approach taken by Merkel J in Rubibi (No 7). It is not inconsistent with Sundberg J's observations in Neowarra either. As I have noted, I do not consider that an "area" in relation to a claimant application identified by an applicant for the purposes of engaging s 47B(2) need be identified solely by European cadastral boundaries. The key point is: however the area is identified by an applicant, the applicant will bear the onus of proving occupation (within the meaning given to that concept by the authorities) of the whole of the area identified.
I certify that the preceding thirty-two (32) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Mortimer.