Consideration
54 There is no evidence before the Court substantiating any interest of Mr McNamara or Ms Richards in the Nauo 2 claim area. The only material before the Court is the following.
55 First, in their respective Forms 5 filed with the Court on 18 December 2017 under s 84(3) of the Native Title Act, each of Mr McNamara and Ms Richards claimed to be a local Aboriginal person "whose ancestors have held traditional native title interests in the area which would be affected by a claim filed by Nauo or a determination in favour of the Nauo".
56 Second, by their notices dated 31 January 2022 given in purported response to the orders of the Court made on 26 November 2021, each of Mr McNamara and Ms Richards referred to Aboriginal heritage interests in the claim area which they would seek to have protected in any consent determination, being:
(a) archaeological artefacts, including fish traps, weapons, and evidence of campsites;
(b) ethnographic sites related to stories including the Seven Sisters story and a Whale story;
(c) burial sites;
(d) flora and fauna of particular spiritual significance, including plovers; and
(e) the specific localities of the above heritage include Wanna, Whalers Way, Memory Cove and Sleaford.
57 It is apparent that the claims made by Mr McNamara and Ms Richards are stated at the highest level of generality. They do not state the source or basis for the alleged interests. The interest claimed in the Forms 5 appears to be a native title interest, but the Aboriginal society holding the claimed traditional native title interests is not identified. Nor are the interests defined in any way. The claimed Aboriginal heritage interests are equally vague, failing to identify the interests, or their basis, with any degree of specificity. Neither respondent took up the opportunity to substantiate, or elaborate upon, their claimed interests in the Nauo 2 claim area by way of evidence or submissions.
58 On the evidence before me, I consider that Ms Richards and Mr McNamara are Barngarla people. In the case of Mr McNamara, this is confirmed by the evidence he gave in the Barngarla proceeding and his participation as a named applicant in the Barngarla SEP claim. In the case of Ms Richards, this was confirmed by her oral submissions during the hearing, in which she confirmed that she is descended from the apical ancestors named in the Croft No 2 determination, and that she was a named applicant in the Barngarla SEP claim. As such, each holds native title rights and interests in the area north of the Nauo 2 claim area by reason of their identity as Barngarla people (as determined by Mansfield J in Croft and Croft 2).
59 I also consider that the claims that have been made by Mr McNamara and Ms Richards in this proceeding, as stated in their respective Forms 5 and the 31 January 2022 notices referred to above, are claims that are made as Barngarla people asserting interests derived from being Barngarla people. As Barngarla people, Mr McNamara and Ms Richards oppose the native title claim made by the Nauo claim group. As a result of the decisions in Croft and McNamara, I consider that Mr McNamara and Ms Richards do not have maintainable native title rights and interests in the Nauo 2 claim area as Barngarla people.
60 There is no other material that has been placed before the Court that would support a claim by either Mr McNamara or Ms Richards to have interests in the Nauo 2 claim area in any capacity other than as Barngarla people. For example, there is no evidence before the Court to suggest that either Ms Richards or Mr McNamara carries a status among the Barngarla people that carries with it custodial responsibilities in respect of sites of significance to the Barngarla people in the Nauo 2 claim area, such that they might be said to have a personal interest in the Nauo 2 proceeding: cf Croft on behalf of Barngarla Native Title Claim Group v State of South Australia (Port Augusta Proceeding) [2020] FCA 888. There is no evidence before me to suggest that the kind of interests to which Mr Croft and Mr McNamara referred in their notices of 31 January 2022 are in fact different to the native title rights and interests in the Port Lincoln area that the Barngarla people unsuccessfully sought to establish in Croft and McNamara.
61 There is no evidence before me to provide any foundation for Ms Richards' claim, made during the hearing, that she has an interest in the Nauo 2 claim area as a descendant of Nauo (or Wirangu) peoples. I accept that Ms Richards has Nauo and Wirangu forebears, namely her great-great-grandfather Bob Eyles (whose mother was Nauo), and her great-grandfather Fred Richards, who was a Wirangu man. I also accept the possibility, and indeed likelihood, that other forebears were Nauo or Wirangu peoples. However that fact does not lead to a conclusion that Ms Richards is Nauo or Wirangu, or that she holds native title rights and interests in the Nauo 2 claim area as a Nauo person. Beyond the explanation of Ms Richards' ancestry that she provided at the hearing of this application, there is no evidence before the Court to support a finding that Ms Richards identifies as a Nauo person and acknowledges and observes the traditional laws and customs of the Nauo people by which she has a connection to the claim area. In the more than twenty years that the oldest of the Nauo proceedings have been in progress, no member of the Richards family, including Ms Richards, has ever claimed to be Nauo; nor have they advanced any claim that the Nauo claim groups are defined too narrowly in excluding the Richards family. Further, I do not understand Ms Richards to now be making that submission.
62 To the contrary, it is apparent that Ms Richards' objective in remaining as a respondent to the proceeding, as expressed in the 31 January 2022 notices referred to above and in her oral submissions at the hearing, is for the purpose of opposing the Nauo people's claim to the Nauo 2 claim area. The opposition is based on Ms Richards' belief that the claim area is in fact Barngarla country. Ms Richards' submissions at the hearing revealed frustration with the judicial decisions that have been made with respect to the Nauo 2 claim area, as well as frustration with aspects of the agreements that were reached between the Nauo and Barngarla claimants over time.
63 The fact that Ms Richards opposes the Nauo 2 claim does not establish that she has an interest that may be affected by a determination in the proceeding.
64 For these reasons, I am satisfied that neither Ms Richards nor Mr McNamara has interests that may be affected by a determination in this proceeding. As Jagot J observed in Gomeroi at [24], the Native Title Act vests a party to the proceedings with significant rights and obligations which have the capacity to substantially interfere with the timely and efficient resolution of the matter - that status should accordingly be afforded only to those whose interests are genuinely and demonstrably affected by a determination of native title. There is no probative evidence before me to suggest the existence of such an interest.
65 I consider that it would be contrary to the interests of justice to allow Mr McNamara and Ms Richards to remain parties to the proceeding in circumstances where they do not have a discernible interest in the claim area and their ongoing involvement in the proceeding is likely to prejudice any potential for Nauo 2 to otherwise proceed to a consent determination. While the State and Commonwealth do not currently have instructions to progress the matter toward a consent determination, I am satisfied that, if Mr McNamara and Ms Richards were to be removed as parties to this proceeding, there is a likelihood that the proceeding would be resolved by way of consent determination, in a similar manner to the other Nauo and Wirangu proceedings. I consider that if Mr McNamara and Ms Richards were permitted to remain respondents to the proceeding, they would likely impede any potential resolution of the proceeding by consent.
66 In the circumstances of this proceeding, it is appropriate that I make orders removing Mr McNamara and Ms Richards as respondents to the proceeding. Such an order will enable the remaining parties to progress discussions concerning a consent determination, together with the other Nauo and Wirangu proceedings. The order is consistent with the objects of the Native Title Act and the overarching purpose of civil litigation in this Court as stated in s 37M of the FCA Act.