the applicable principles
5 Section 66B of the NT Act provides:
"(1) One or more members of the native title claim group (the claim group) in relation to a claimant application, or of the compensation claim group (also the claim group) in relation to a compensation application, may apply to the Federal Court for an order that the member, or the members jointly, replace the current applicant for the application on the grounds that:
(a) either:
(i) the current applicant is no longer authorised by the claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it; or
(ii) the current applicant has exceeded the authority given to him or her by the claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it; and
(b) the member or members are authorised by the claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it.
(2) The Court may make the order if it is satisfied that the grounds are established.
(3) If the Court makes the order, the Registrar of the Federal Court must, as soon as practicable, notify the Native Title Registrar of the name and address for service of the person who is, or persons who are, the new applicant.
(4) If the claim contained in the application is on the Register of Native Title Claims, the Registrar must amend the Register to reflect the order."
Section 66B received careful consideration by French J in Daniel v State of Western Australia [2002] FCA 1147 (Daniel). The submissions in this matter proceeded upon the basis that French J there laid down the appropriate principles for consideration of an application under s 66B of the NT Act. I respectfully agree with his Honour's views. I can therefore proceed largely by adopting the approach his Honour took in Daniel. French J also followed those principles in Holborow v State of Western Australia [2002] FCA 1428.
6 Daniel concerned the unwillingness in two separate instances of one of the registered claimants of a native title claim group to execute an agreement reached (as his Honour found) between that native title claim group and the State of Western Australia for the acquisition of certain native title rights and interests in exchange for benefits. The orders sought in each instance included the removal of the current registered applicants and their replacement with all the current registered applicants excluding in each instance the one dissident registered applicant (and certain deceased registered applicants), on the ground that the dissident applicant in each case was no longer authorised by the relevant native title claim group to make the application or to deal with matters arising in relation to it.
7 French J at [11] said:
"It is of central importance to the conduct of native title determination applications and the exercise of the rights that flow from their registration, that those who purport to bring such applications and to exercise such rights on behalf of a group of asserted native title holders have the authority of that group to do so. Prior to the 1998 amendments there was no requirement under the Native Title Act that an applicant have such authority. The absence of that requirement led, in some cases, to conflicting and overlapping claims all carrying with them the statutory right to negotiate in respect of the grant of mineral tenements and the compulsory acquisition by Commonwealth or State Governments of native title rights and interests. Although many aspects of the 1998 amendments were the subject of controversy in the public and parliamentary debates that preceded their enactment, the need for communal authorisation of claims was largely a matter of common ground."
His Honour's observations in that regard echo observations approved by the Full Court in Western Australia v Strickland (2000) 99 FCR 33 at 52 and by Wilcox J in Moran v Minister of Land and Water Conservation for New South Wales [1999] FCA 1637.
8 Hence, as s 66B recognises, a native title claim group which according to its traditional laws and customs has authorised particular persons as members of the native title claim group to make and deal with matters in relation to a native title determination application may also withdraw that authority, and to act where its authority has been exceeded.
9 The term "native title claim group" is defined in s 253 of the NT Act relevantly in the following terms:
"In relation to a claim in an application for a determination of native title made to the Federal Court - the native title claim group mentioned in relation to the application in the table in subsection 61(1)."
The table in s 61(1) provides, in relation to a native title determination application, that those persons who may make the application are those persons authorised by:
" … all the persons (the native title claim group) who, according to their traditional laws and customs, hold the common or group rights and interests comprising the particular native title claimed, provided the person or persons are also included in the native title claim group; or …"
Section 61(4) requires the native title claim group to name the persons authorised to make and conduct the native title determination application, or at least describe those persons so that it can be ascertained whether any particular person is one of those authorised persons.
10 Section 251B deals with the concept of "authorisation" referred to in s 61(1) and, by inference, s 66B of the NT Act. It was introduced by the NT Amendment Act. It provides:
"For the purposes of this Act, all the persons in a native title claim group or compensation claim group authorise a person or persons to make a native title determination application or a compensation application, and to deal with matters arising in relation to it, if:
(a) where there is a process of decision-making that, under the traditional laws and customs of the persons in the native title claim group or compensation claim group, must be complied with in relation to authorising things of that kind - the persons in the native title claim group or compensation claim group authorise the person or persons to make the application and to deal with the matters in accordance with that process; or
(b) where there is no such process, the persons in the native title claim group or compensation claim group authorise the other person or persons to make the application and to deal with the matters in accordance with a process of decision-making agreed to and adopted, by the persons in the native title claim group or compensation claim group, in relation to authorising the making of the application and dealing with the matters, or in relation to doing things of that kind."
I observe that s 251A, introduced at the same time, concerning the authorisation of Indigenous Land Use Agreements is in similar form.
11 Counsel for the proposed applicants drew attention to s 77A of the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 (Cth) (the Land Rights Act). It refers to the circumstances in which the consent of the traditional Aboriginal land owners of an area of land may be taken to have consented to a particular thing. It provides:
"Where, for the purposes of this Act, the traditional Aboriginal owners of an area of land are required to have consented, as a group, to a particular act or thing, the consent shall be taken to have been given if:
(a) in a case where there is a particular process of decision making that, under the Aboriginal tradition of those traditional Aboriginal owners or of the group to which they belong, must be complied with in relation to decisions of that kind - the decision was made in accordance with that process; or
(b) in a case where there is no such process of decision making - the decision was made in accordance with a process of decision making agreed to and adopted by those traditional Aboriginal owners in relation to the decision or in relation to decisions of that kind."
12 I note that, as its terms suggest, s 77A of the Land Rights Act appears to be the genesis of s 251B of the NT Act. Section 77A was introduced by the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Amendment Act 1987 (Cth). Prior to that amendment Muirhead J in Alderson v Northern Land Council (1983) 67 FLR 353, (1983) 29 NTR 1 was confronted with an issue about the authority of the Northern Land Council on behalf of traditional owners of certain Aboriginal land granted under the Land Rights Act to negotiate with certain mining interests to extend mining leases over the land. A majority of the traditional owners of the land, but not all of them, supported the Northern Land Council conducting those negotiations. Muirhead J refused to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining the Northern Land Council from conducting the negotiations.
13 Section 23(3) of the Land Rights Act was the provision critically under consideration. It provides:
"In carrying out its functions with respect to any Aboriginal land in its area, a Land Council shall have regard to the interests of, and shall consult with, the traditional Aboriginal owners (if any) of the land and any other Aboriginals interested in the land and, in particular, shall not take any action, including, but not limited to, the giving of consent or the withholding of consent, in any matter in connexion with land held by a Land Trust, unless the Land Council is satisfied that -
(a) the traditional Aboriginal owners (if any) of that land understand the nature and purpose of the proposed action and, as a group, consent to it; and
(b) any Aboriginal community or group that may be affected by the proposed action has been consulted and has had adequate opportunity to express its view to the Land Council."
Muirhead J did not consider that the dissenting traditional owners had made out an arguable case as he regarded s 23(3) in the context of the Land Rights Act as a whole as authorising the relevant land council to determine whether consent under s 23(3) had been given, including whether a majority decision should be accepted or rejected as a consent.
14 Both s 77A of the Land Rights Act, and s 251B of the NT Act, appear to respond to the observations of his Honour at 8 to the following effect:
"References have been made to the decision of the majority, to the circumstances when a person may achieve the status of a "primary spokesperson" or "number one man". It is a delicate and complex area as is the task of finally determining who are traditional Aboriginal owners. It may be a long process, especially in the face of competing claims or conflicting anthropological advice, but it is a task the law vests in the Land Council, being as I have said an Aboriginal body with access to expert advice and recognized by the Act as the only determinative body. By reason of the very complexity of the problems and the necessity of consultation the Land Council cannot make quick decisions which may go to the future user of Aboriginal land. The nature of its relationship with Aboriginals, Land Trusts and the like are matters which cannot be sharply defined by the statute. Inevitably, especially in the consultative area, understanding and consideration of Aboriginal lore, traditions, observances, customs and beliefs is required."
15 The following propositions may be extracted from Daniel:
(1) Although the definition of "authorise" in s 251B does not in terms cover withdrawal of authorisation, s 251B is an appropriate means of identifying the decision making processes by which authorisation may be withdrawn for the purposes of s 66B.
(2) The cessation of the authority conferred to make and deal with matters in relation to a native title determination application must therefore be effected by some further decision by the native title claim group, unless the original authority was limited so as to cease upon the happening of some event without any further decision of the native title claim group.
(3) The authority conferred to make and deal with matters related to a native title determination application will be exceeded only if:
(a) the authority so conferred was subject to some expressed limitation or restriction which has been exceeded; or
(b) the authority so conferred was subject to the continuing supervision and direction of the native title claim group and there is some resolution or direction of the native title claim group which has not been complied with; or
(c) the authority so conferred has, by some further decision of the native title claim group, been made subject to some expressed limitation or restriction which has been exceeded, or has been made subject to the continuing supervision and direction of the native title claim group and there is some resolution or direction of the native title claim group which has not been complied with.
Thus, as French J said at [16], the "ultimate authority of the native title claim group" can be maintained.
(4) The conditions which must be satisfied by those making an application under s 66B of the NT Act are:
(a) there is a claimant application;
(b) each applicant for an order under s 66B is a member of the native title claim group;
(c) the persons to be replaced are no longer authorised by the claim group to make the application and to deal with matters arising in relation to it;
(d) alternatively, the persons to be replaced have exceeded the authority given to them by the native title claim group; and
(e) the persons making the application under s 66B are authorised by the native title claim group to make or maintain the native title determination application and to deal with matters arising under it.
(5) The decision making processes required by those conditions are those provided for by s 251B of the NT Act, namely relevantly the decision by the native title claim group as recognised under Aboriginal law and custom as constituting the group and its members in the manner provided for by its customary law.