My Reasoning
12 The authorities, from the earliest days of the operation of the ADJR Act, show that the expression "a person who is aggrieved" is not to be given a narrow construction - see, for example, Tooheys Limited v Minister for Business and Consumer Affairs (1981) 54 FLR 421 at 437.
13 In Right to Life Association (NSW) Inc v Secretary, Department of Human Services and Health & Anor (1995) 128 ALR 238 at 252 Lockhart J said:
"In order that an applicant may show that he is a person "aggrieved", the element of "grievance" must be special to the applicant. He must suffer more greatly or a different way than other members of the community. It is to be noted that the definition of "a person aggrieved" by a decision is inclusive of a person whose interests are adversely affected by the decision. It is not exhaustive and the extent of its ambit will depend on the interpretation that the courts place on the expression in the light of the "intention to be gathered from the provision as a whole": YZ Finance Co Pty Ltd v Cummings (1964) 109 CLR 395 at 402; applied in Buckle v Josephs (1983) 47 ALR 787 at 792-3.
. . .
But the applicant must establish that, if successful in the proceeding, he will gain a benefit or advantage greater than the benefit or advantage thereby conferred upon ordinary members of the public; or, in the alternative, that success in the proceeding would relieve the applicant of a disadvantage or detriment to which he would otherwise have been subject to an extent greater than ordinary members of the public: [citing Onus v Alcoa ofAustralia Ltd (1981) 149 CLR 27 per Brennan J at 75]."
14 In Strickland v The Native Title Registrar [1999] FCA 1089 French J had to decide whether, in an application under the ADJR Act to review the Registrar's refusal to register a claim, the State of Western Australia had sufficient interest to be joined as a respondent to those review proceedings. I accept that the question is a different one from the question whether the State is a person aggrieved by a decision to grant registration. However, at para 23 his Honour said this:
"In my opinion, on an application of this kind, whether or not the State is a necessary party, it is a party whose interests will be affected by the outcome of the application. If the application is restored to the Register of Native Title Claims, the State, in its capacity as grantor of mining tenements and other forms of interest affected by Subdivision P of the Act, will be subject to the obligations to invite submissions, to negotiate in good faith and to submit itself to the arbitral process that are imposed by that Subdivision. These are not indirect or consequential effects. They impose statutory obligations on the State in respect of any grant of an interest affected by Subdivision P in the area of the claim. On the other hand it can be said that the issue upon which the application is made to this Court is one not of direct interest to the State as it relates to whether registration was properly refused on the basis of a prior overlapping application with some common membership. However the subject of overlapping claims itself is a matter of considerable and legitimate interest to the State. It is notorious that the prevalence of overlapping claims is a matter which has impacted upon both the mediation of native title claims in Western Australia and other parts of Australia and also the administration of the right to negotiate process. I consider therefore that the State does have a proper interest justifying its joinder because of the content of the application. And certainly it is directly affected by the outcome."
15 Mr G M McIntyre, counsel for the second respondents in application W6004 of 1999 which was heard at the same time as these applications and whose submissions were adopted by the second respondents in these applications, submitted that the above observations were obiter dicta and that the real basis for joinder of the State to those proceedings was so that there would be a contradictor to the review application. That is not how I view his Honour's reasons. His Honour referred to that matter (at para 24) as being "Another consideration which is relevant in this case …". In any event, I respectfully agree with his Honour's views as set out above.
16 The second respondents (again by adopting the second respondents' submissions in application W 6004 of 1999) sought to draw an analogy between the registration of a native title claim and the registration of an estate in fee simple. They submitted that in the latter case, in the event that the State wished to give notice of compulsory acquisition of title, it would be obliged to engage in statutorily prescribed obligations. Such an obligation did not, so it was put, give rise to "person aggrieved" status. It is difficult to think of a factual situation in which that question would arise, but in any event I do not think that the analogy is sufficiently strong. Registration of a native title claim is simply statutory recognition that the claimants have a prima facie case. Registration of a fee simple is of course of far greater significance. In any event, assuming, as the second respondents' submission would appear to require, that a Commonwealth authority had vested in it power to register title to an estate in fee simple (perhaps in substitution for a leasehold estate) in a particular State, against the opposition of that State, I think it would be more than likely that the particular State would be a "person aggrieved" by that decision. I do not find the analogy at all helpful.
17 As an alternative submission, the second respondents submitted that there was no change affecting the interests of the applicant as an outcome of the Registration Decision. That was because, so it was put, the claims were already registered under the Act prior to the 1998 amendments. I reject that argument because it ignores the fact that, unless the application had been accepted for registration as complying with the conditions introduced by those amendments, it was the Registrar's duty to remove the claim from the Register - see Item 11(9) of Table A to the Act.
18 In my view, the registration of a claim to native title adversely affects the applicant's rights and interests, within the meaning of s 3(4)(a) of the ADJR Act. It affects and restricts the capacity of the applicant, as owner of the land concerned, to deal with its proprietary interests. Amongst other things, as French J pointed out in the above passage, the applicant becomes obliged by s 31(1) of the Act to invite submissions from all native title parties, to negotiate in good faith with the claimants with a view to obtaining the agreement of the native title parties to the doing of the particular act in question, and to submit itself to the arbitral process imposed by Subdivision P of Division 3 of Part 2 of the Act. There is evidence [AB26-82] from which I infer that the State has given numerous notices, under s 29 of the Act, that it intends to do future acts in relation to land comprised within the area claimed by the second respondents.
19 In my opinion, the applicant is a person aggrieved within the meaning of that expression in the ADJR Act. The applicant has an interest as the absolute beneficial owner of the land subject to claim or, alternatively, as the holder of radical title in that land. The Registration Decision has significant implications for the ability of the applicant to deal with interests in its land.
20 In reaching my conclusion that the applicant is a "person aggrieved" I have tried to make an assessment of the importance of the concern which it has with the registration of the second respondents' claims and the closeness of the applicant's relationship with that subject matter - see Onus v Alcoa (1981) 149 CLR 27 at 42. My assessment is that the importance of the applicant's concern over whether claims are to be registered over substantial areas of the State is considerable and certainly sufficient to entitle it to challenge the legality of the Registration Decision. The applicant has governmental authority and responsibility for the subject land. That authority and responsibility is to be used, broadly speaking, for the public benefit. In my view, it is appropriate for the Court to give substantial weight to the applicant's concerns about the restraints upon the development and use of the land, being restraints which the Act imposes as a consequence of the Registration Decision. The applicant, as the government primarily responsible for much of the development and manner of use of the land, clearly has a very close relationship with the subject matter of the Registration Decision. The Parliament has recognised this by, for example, the requirement in s 66(2) of the Act not only that it be notified of the application for registration, but that it also be supplied with all affidavits and other documents. To characterise a State as a "person aggrieved" by a decision to register a native title claim is consistent with the statutory recognition in s 84(4) of the Act of the State as being a party to the concomitant application to this Court for a determination of native title. Even at the earlier, perhaps legally less critical, stage of registration the applicant has a special interest in the subject matter of the Registration Decision. I hold that it is a person aggrieved by that decision.