Prove true, imagination, O
prove true.
Twelfth Night, Act 3, scene 4.
In my previous post, I described the recent Federal Court
decision in Yunupingu (link
here) as momentous. In this post, I attempt to draw out some of the
potential policy implications that might flow. I don’t purport to engage in detailed
legal analysis, and nor am I claiming to be comprehensive in surveying the potential
policy implications of the decision.
One obvious caveat of course is that the Federal Court decision
is subject to potential appeal, the outcome of which is unknown.
I propose to deal with two broad issues.
First, perhaps
the major policy shift arising from the decision is to expand the period of potential
invalidity and liability for compensation for Territory Government granted
titles (such as mining leases, pastoral leases and freehold) over native title.
In Mabo, the High Court found that native title was vulnerable to
extinguishment by inconsistent grant by the Crown. However, the existence of
the Racial Discrimination Act from 1975 meant that inconsistent grants without compensation
could lead to invalidity. The Native Title
Act 1993 includes provisions to validate all such grants made over native
title between 1975 and the date of the validation provisions on the condition
that just terms compensation would be paid (as is required for all other Australian
property owners whose titles are compulsorily acquired). Of course, when the
validation provisions were enacted, no-one knew where native title existed.
In Yunupingu, the
Federal Court confirmed that the constitutional requirement for the Commonwealth
to pay just terms continues to apply in the Territories (confirming the High Court
decision in Wurridjal). However it
also extended this principle to confirm that actions by a Territory Government
(established under s.122 of the Constitution) that extinguish native title (or
acquire property generally) must in turn provide for just terms compensation. Grants
of title without provision for just terms by a Territory Government that are
inconsistent with native title are thus invalid.
There appear to be three territories potentially affected
by this decision: the Northern Territory, the Australian Capital Territory, and
the Jervis Bay Territory. The Northern Territory was established in 1911, the
ACT in 1911 and Jervis Bay in 1915. Consequently, if Yunupingu is confirmed by the High Court, any inconsistent grants without
just terms compensation over native title from these dates to 1975 are
potentially invalid. Each of the three jurisdictions appear to require something
akin to just terms compensation for compulsory acquisitions (although I haven’t
done an historical analysis of the relevant acquisition laws), but may well
have made inconsistent grants over native title within the relevant dates
without just terms compensation.
The likely policy implications of this decision if upheld by
the High Court are that the Commonwealth will come under intense pressure to
validate all potentially inconsistent grants in the three territories from the relevant
dates to 1975 on the condition that where actual inconsistency is found to have
occurred, just terms compensation will be paid. A second implication will be
that the Commonwealth will come under pressure to fund or underwrite the costs
of any actual compensation payments awarded against the Territories. When the Native
title Act was first enacted, the Keating Government offered to pay 75 percent
of any native title compensation imposts on the states and territories, an
offer that was never taken up by the states and territories and which ultimately
lapsed.
A third policy implication (linked to the outcome of the
second implication) will be to encourage intensified impetus by the relevant territory
governments to reach native title settlements within their jurisdictions so as
to pre-empt litigation and the uncertainty that would necessarily follow. While
there has never been any formal confirmation, my strong intuition has long been
that the preparedness of the Western Australian Government to negotiate substantial
native title settlements is driven by internal advice that the state is
potentially liable for compensation arising from the grant of titles inconsistent
with native title after 1975. Examples include the Yawuru in Broome (link
here), with the Noongar people in the south west (link
here), and more recently the Tjiwarl native title agreement in the Goldfields
region (link
here).
Clearly the requirement to negotiate any such land use
agreements may well fall within the ambit of possible ‘treaty negotiations’ in
each jurisdiction.
The second
issue I wish to address briefly relates to the nature of native
title itself. The Federal Court spent some time discussing the nature of native
title; see paragraphs 444 to 459 in their judgment. This appears consistent
with the standard understanding, and the discussion cites extensively from
earlier cases, including Mansfield J in Griffiths, (but not the High Court in Griffiths). The discussion, which is
ostensibly directed at a discussion of the concept of inherent defeasibility versus plain defeasibility (I don’t propose to discuss the difference) concludes
with the following paragraph:
459.
What is extinguished by a grant of rights intended to be inconsistent with
native title in certain land is not the traditional laws and customs which give
rise to the claimants’ native title. The normative systems of First Nations
Peoples remain. Traditional laws and
customs are not dependent for their existence on any recognition by the Crown.
They have existed for generations prior to colonisation, they continue to
exist, and they can be enforced as between First Nations Peoples. They can
continue to have normative force amongst those who are bound by them. What (if
anything) is extinguished is the title to certain land; the “title” is the
nomenclature for what is recognised by Australian common law, and what may
cease to be recognised by Australian law, with the corresponding effect or
benefit that the burden on the Crown’s radical title is removed.
What the Federal Court is not saying here is that native title rights are equivalent to
freehold. A Straussian reading suggests that the Federal Court is laying down a
pathway to a future expansion of the underlying basis for the calculation of
compensation (one that I agree is both warranted and just). Such an expansion
would require a future High Court to adjust the High Court decision in
Griffiths (link
here) so as to move beyond the value of equivalent freehold titles as the metric
for establishing economic loss and as an implicit cap on the value of cultural
loss (which was based on as assessment of the standards of the Australian
community). The view that because an owner of a freehold title has expansive freedom
of action over the land does not mean that such ownership captures the full
extent of Indigenous relationships to an equivalent area or title. Clearly,
such an expansion of the basis for native title compensation will not occur in
the near term, and perhaps not even the medium term. However, the unanimous Full
Federal Court decision here appears to lay down a potential future path for the
development of native title compensation law.
In this context, I can’t help referencing Diane Smith’s 2001
prescient and insightful research paper, Valuing
native title: Aboriginal, statutory and policy discourses about compensation
(link
here), where she argues, inter alia:
native
title compensation is, like native title itself, sui generis, or unique. Native
title compensation will require an innovative jurisprudential approach that
acknowledges it as a fundamentally new creature, recognisable at the
intersection of Aboriginal and Western laws. A precondition for that innovation
will be the creation of a recognition space that ameliorates the legal
ethnocentrism of the common law, and addresses the intrinsic value to
Aboriginal people of their lands and waters.
Perhaps one of the most significant policy implications of
the Yunupingu case will be the future
development of a more innovative jurisprudential approach to the concept of
native title compensation.
Note: some minor typographical errors have been corrected.
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