The arrangements for what occurred on 23 June 2015
19 On 15 May 2015, Ms Wood emailed Mr Weaver with a list of eight questions. She sought his confirmation that buses would now not be needed for a return trip between Carnarvon and Roebourne and that there was no need to book accommodation for 55 people in Roebourne on Monday 15 June. She asked whether he wanted swevents to organise lunch and a sausage sizzle in the morning at the 50 Cent Hall in Roebourne, at which the voting and meeting referred to in the notice were to take place, and, if so, for how many people. She noted that she had already arranged three cartons of bottled water to be delivered to the hall in advance of the meeting. She asked whether T-shirts were still required and, if so, how many and about their design, what arrangements swevents needed to make for electoral matters and what swevents in Carnarvon. Mr Weaver responded later that day, giving her further instructions on some of those matters.
20 Ms Davina Boyd is a community development consultant working for WMYAC. On about 17 May 2015, Ken Sandy instructed Ms Boyd to make the necessary arrangements to circulate the notice. She located a mailing list, with about 450 names and addresses, that she had used to circulate material on behalf of WMYAC to persons for the last annual general meeting of YAC that had occurred in September 2014. Ms Boyd said that she checked the Registers of the Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations for YAC and WMYAC "to check that names from both lists were included". She then used her checked list (that in fact contained 434 names with addresses) to send copies of the notice to the persons on the list. However, 10 persons on her list were deceased, and one was under 18, so that 423 eligible persons, relevantly, were sent the notice. She said that the telephone number at the foot of the notice was that of a mobile telephone that she was carrying with her throughout the period between about 25 May and 18 June 2015.
21 On 18 May 2015, the Adams applicant met and approved an application to register Yindjibarndi Native Title Aboriginal Corporation under the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act 2006 (Cth). That corporation is referred to in paragraphs 6, 7 and 8 of the notice.
22 Subsequently, on 21 May 2015, Mike McGreevy, FMG's group manager - security, spoke with Dan Wright of Executive Risk Solutions Pty Ltd (ERS) about providing three security officers for what Mr Wright said, in his email response of 22 May 2015, was "your event on 23 June 2015". Mr Wright provided a quotation of $10,780 to FMG for providing those services. FMG also appeared to have provided guidance and funds for the provision and manning of audiovisual and recording equipment at the 50 Cent Hall on 23 June 2015, at a cost of about $3,550.
23 On 25 May 2015, Mr Weaver approved a decision in an email exchange between only a number of lawyers, including Integra Legal, the lawyers acting for the Adams applicant, to engage Australian Electoral Company to conduct the voting processes proposed and provide its personnel to attend at the three venues in Roebourne, Carnarvon and Perth, at a cost of about $10,600.
24 On 26 May 2015, Mr Weaver responded to a request for instructions from Ms Wood. He told her that the date of the meeting had been changed, to 23 June 2015 between 10 am and 3 pm. Mr Weaver instructed Ms Wood that, among other matters, she had still to arrange "for the meeting" a marquee, staging and chairs, audio and a videographer, the printing of 20 large, 20 extra-large and 10 extra-extra-large white polo T-shirts "saying - "YES!" on [the] back in blue lettering" and water. He also told her that no meals were needed at that stage.
25 Ms Boyd placed advertisements of the notice in the local Roebourne newspaper, the Pilbara News, that appeared on 3 June 2015, a newspaper circulating State-wide in Western Australia but also particularly in Perth, The West Australian, that appeared on 8 June 2015 and the local newspaper in the Carnarvon area, The Northern Guardian, that appeared on 17 June 2015. There is no explanation as to why it took until 17 June 2015 for the latter advertisement to appear. She also arranged for the display of the notice in some public places around Roebourne. Ms Boyd said, as appears to be common ground, that in indigenous communities, such information is also spread by word of mouth.
26 In early June 2015, Ken Sandy had asked Mrs Karen Toby to help to prepare a list of persons who were Yindjibarndi and would be entitled to vote in an authorisation process. She worked for WYMYAC as a community liaison assistant. She is a member of both YAC and WMYAC. Mrs Toby looked through a mailing list used by WMYAC that was a compilation of membership lists for both YAC and WMYAC. She knew that some Yindjibarndi people were not members of either corporation and so used genealogies prepared by an anthropologist to add names to those on the mailing list she had. She looked for descendants of the 31 apical ancestors used to define the claim group in these proceedings and sought to exclude persons under 18. It is not clear whether the mailing list that Mrs Toby used at the start of her work was the same list as Ms Boyd's.
27 Her work resulted in a new list that, as Mrs Toby said, had "lots more names on it than were on the original mailing list". This new list was used by Australian Electoral Company to conduct the voting on 23 June 2015. It had 870 names on it, but there were no addresses recorded for 280 of those persons.
28 On 4 June 2015, Mr Weaver approved Ms Wood's requests for expenditure of $2,500 to order the 50 T-shirts with "YES!" printed on the back, of about $2,200 for the staging, a marquee and audio costs, and of about $3,500 for the videography costs. Subsequently, FMG also arranged flights and paid airfares and accommodation for a number of the persons involved in the logistical support for the meeting from Australian Electoral Company and others who were involved in the arrangements for the activities at Roebourne, Perth and Carnarvon on 23 June 2015.
29 Ms Boyd said that, on a date she did not specify, Ken Sandy asked her to circulate what she called "a newsletter" and two voting instruction sheets which he gave her. One of the voting sheets had instructions to vote "Yes" for all 8 resolutions, all of which appeared in it in full, and the other with instructions to vote "Yes" for resolutions 1, 7 and 8.
30 The "newsletter" was headed in block letters "YINDJIBARNDI NATIVE TITLE AUTHORISATION MEETING AND VOTE" under which appeared "TUESDAY 23 JUNE FROM 10 AM". Immediately under these headings a banner appeared in smaller print that stated: "Yindjibarndi people are invited to attend a meeting and secret ballot to elect an applicant group, PBC and agent that represents all Yindjibarndi people" (emphasis added). Below that, the document set out five dot points under the heading "Why is your vote important?", the second and third of which stated:
• We need new applicants to represent our people for the Yindjibarndi #1 claim and YAC has shown it does not deserve to play any role in this claim or as a prescribed body corporate.
• Native Title is an important issue for us all and should be treated responsibly and with fairness.
31 The reverse page of the "newsletter" had a box at the top headed "MEETING AND VOTING DETAILS", below which appeared the date and the heading "Where you can vote," with details of the three locations together with the statement: "Information session: 10 am, 50 Cent Hall, Roebourne" followed by "Morning tea and lunch available". Below the box, on the right hand side, appeared:
Information session
A non-compulsory information session meeting will be held on Tuesday 23 of June 2015 at 50 Cent Hall, Roebourne.
At the session you can find out more about the proposed resolutions and Yindjibarndi People can speak for and against the resolutions. You do not need to stay for all or any of the meeting to be able to vote.
______________________________________________________________
How can I make sure my vote is accepted?
All YAC and WMYAC members are already on the voting list.
All members of the Yindjibarndi #1 native title claim group are eligible to vote on resolutions (1) - (7) above.
All Yindjibarndi native title holders under the Ngarluma Yindjibarndi determination (WCD2005/001) are eligible to vote on the resolutions (1), (7) and (8) above.
32 The newsletter repeated on its first page the summary of the resolutions in the notice, but the voting instruction sheets actually set out the full text of the proposed resolutions for the first time. Relevantly, the full text of resolutions 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 is as follows:
1. How decisions about the resolutions are to be made
I agree and adopt a decision making process for making decisions about these resolutions, which is that Yindjibarndi People who are eligible to vote on each resolution can mark on a ballot paper whether they vote 'yes' or 'no' to each resolution. Voting will be open between 10.00am and 3.00pm on 23 June 2015 in Roebourne, Carnarvon and Perth. Each resolution will be passed if a simple majority of the votes cast in relation to the resolution vote 'yes'.
2. Replacing the Yindjibarndi#1 claim applicant
In accordance with section 66B of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth):
(a) the current applicant [TJ-name withheld for cultural reasons], Stanley Warrie, Joyce Hubert, Pansy Sambo, Jean Norman, Esther Pat, Judith Coppin and Maisie Injie (current applicant) is no longer authorised by the Yindjibarndi # 1 (WAD 6005/03) claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it; and
(b) Ken Sandy, Rodney Adams, Francis Phillips, Allery Sandy, Diana Smith, Sylvia Allen and Maudie Jerrold (replacement applicant) are authorised by the Yindjibarndi # 1 (WAD 6005/03) claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it.
3. Applicants remain authorised if one or more unable to continue
In the event that a member of the replacement applicant passes away or is unable or unwilling to remain a member of the applicant or in the event that any member of the replacement applicant is no longer authorised to make the Yindjibarndi#1 application and to deal with matters in relation to it, the remaining members of the replacement applicant remain authorised to make the Yindjibarndi#1 (WAD 6005/03) application and to deal with matters in relation to it.
4. Revoking previous conditions
The conditions to which the authorisation of the current applicant (on 24 March 2012) was subject, including the appointment of Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation RNTC as the agent of the applicants, do not apply to the replacement applicant.
5. 66B order and consent determination of Yindjibarndi#1 claim
The replacement applicant is authorised and directed by the Yindjbarndi#1 native title claim group to:
(a) apply to the Federal Court under section 66B of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) to replace the current applicant as soon as practicable; and
(b) consent to a determination of native title like the Ngarluma Yindjibarndi determination (WCD2005/001), but with such modifications as are necessary because of the different tenure history and 'other interests' in the Yindjibarndi#1 claim area and such other minor modifications as the replacement applicant considers appropriate.
33 Notably, resolution 2(a) did not include the last four names of the members of the current applicant, whom I identified at [1] above.
34 The voting instruction sheets do not appear to have been in any final form, before at least late on the evening of 12 June 2015, when Ms Tavelli, of Integra Legal, sent them to Australian Electoral Company by email. Ms Boyd did not say when she did any of that work and Mr Sandy did not give evidence of giving Ms Boyd the newsletter or voting instruction sheets.
35 On 16 June 2015, Mr Weaver spoke with Ms Boyd and told her:
Lunch and morning tea are not required as there is no meeting. We will run a sausage sizzle from 1030-1330 instead. (emphasis added)
36 Mr Weaver confirmed those instructions in a subsequent email to her and gave both Ms Wood and Ms Boyd other instructions about arranging urns for tea, coffee and the like.