That I could forget what I
have been!
Or not remember what I must be
now!
Richard II, Act three, Scene
three.
In May 2023, the Federal Court handed down a decision (Commonwealth of Australia v Yunupingu on behalf of the Gumatj Clan or Estate Group) that
mapped out a trailblazing path forward in relation to potential native title
compensation issues in the NT and the Territories more generally. I published two
posts on the case (link
here and link
here) which I recommend readers revisit for the background to the subject
of this post.
As I wrote in the first of those posts:
Today’s Federal
Court Decision is momentous insofar as it decides that the native title holders
of the Gove Peninsula will be entitled to compensation for any native title
mineral rights they held prior to the grant of mineral leases, pastoral leases
and a mission lease. This arises from the Court’s finding (against the
arguments of the Commonwealth) that any native title mineral rights which
existed (and which are yet to be determined) were not extinguished by the
grants of pastoral leases and mineral leases over the relevant land on the Gove
Peninsula, and that the requirement for the Commonwealth to pay just terms
compensation for such extinguished native title rights continues in the
Northern Territory.
The Commonwealth appealed to the High Court and has now lodged
a submission (link
here) outlining its arguments as to why the Federal Court’s decision should
be overturned in this matter. These arguments are highly technical and complex,
and I don’t propose to offer a legal critique. Instead, I will merely summarise
them (as best I can bearing in mind I am not a lawyer, let alone a constitutional
expert), and then draw out some of the non-legal policy implications.
The core of the Commonwealth’s concern is that the Federal Court
ruling, if it stands, extends back (in the case of the NT) the period for which
compensation for extinguishment of native title by the grant of inconsistent
interests would be payable from 1975 (when the RDA was passed) to 1911 when the
NT was transferred to the Commonwealth from South Australia (see para 2 of the submission).
As the Commonwealth notes (in para 3):
If the Full Court is correct, then for almost
seven decades a vast but indeterminate number of grants of interests in land in
the Territory would have been invalid.
Further, upon the validation of those grants by the Native Title Act
1993 (Cth) (NTA), the Commonwealth would have become liable to pay compensation
of a vast but presently unquantifiable amount (including interest, potentially
going back to 1911).
In essence, the Commonwealth has three lines of argument
aimed at avoiding this outcome.
First, they argue that the scope of
s 51(xxxi) (which requires the Commonwealth to pay just terms for the acquisition
of property) does not extend to laws solely supported by s 122 (which allows
the Commonwealth to make laws for the government of a territory) because the
text and context of s 51(xxxi) shows it applies only to laws made by the
Commonwealth when acting as the Commonwealth, not the Commonwealth acting as a
territory. See paras 12 to 19 for a summary of this argument.
Second, the Commonwealth argues,
relying on Justice Gummow’s judgement in the Newcrest Case (supported by
Justices Toohey, Gaudron and Kirby):
that native title was
inherently defeasible to the Crown granting new rights that were inconsistent
with native title. When that occurred,
there was no acquisition of property within the meaning of s 51(xxxi) because
the extinguishment of native title upon that occurrence was something inherent
in, and integral to, the property itself.
The import of this argument is that compensation does not
attach to native title property rights per se but is only required due
to the application of the Racial Discrimination Act enacted in 1975. See paras.
57 to 59 for a summary.
The third line of argument relates to the
reservation to the Crown of all mineral rights in the Northern Territory Crown
Land Act 1890 (SA) which was incorporated into a pastoral lease over the claimed
land issued in 1903. The Commonwealth argues (para.132), citing Justice Gageler
(who is now the Chief Justice) in a 2016 case, that the reservation of minerals
in the Crown Land Act:
“had the consequence of
creating rights of ownership in respect of the land in question, in the Crown”
so that the Attorney General “would still have had the possession necessary to
found an action for intrusion”.
See paras. 130 to 132 for a summary.
Commentary
I am not in a position to make an assessment of the legal
merits of the Commonwealth arguments. It strikes me however that the Commonwealth
is seeking to hold back the tide of much recent jurisprudence, and a broader
concern in the community that the rationale for the appropriation of Indigenous
lands without compensation does not entirely stack up. Having said that, the
High Court will likely adopt a cautious and careful approach to these issues.
What I find intriguing however is how the arguments
developed by the Commonwealth in litigation such as this is so strongly at odds
with the public perception that our nation strives for inclusivity, for fairness,
and for openness, and so strongly at odds with the policy narratives endorsed
by both the current and previous Governments (think co-design, voice process, Makarrata,
truth telling and treaty). Instead, these arguments addressing an important and
potentially far-reaching judicial decision by the Federal Court are driven
almost entirely by the narrowly legalistic lens through which the Attorney Generals
portfolio operates, and the financial lens applied by the Department of
Finance.
For example, at various places in the submission, the Commonwealth
argues (by implication if not directly) that the Commonwealth requires flexibility
to govern a territory such that it is not required to pay just terms; and that
the Federal Court decision would leave to differential treatment between Indigenous
native title holders in a territory and in a state, while ignoring the differential
treatment being supported between native title holders and other property
holders. Moreover, the submission argues explicitly for the narrowest reading
of the nature of native title (ie that it does not amount to property for the
purposes of the Constitution).
Perhaps the most obvious issue raised in the submission, but
not directly addressed by Commonwealth Ministers is the issue of compensation
for native title rights extinguished in the Territories between 1901 and 1975.
We now have a Federal Court decision raising the issue directly, and all the Commonwealth
can do is raise the financial consequences, contextualise it as a financial
threat (liability to ‘pay compensation of a vast but presently unquantifiable
amount (including interest, potentially going back to 1911’) without any public
acknowledgement or recognition, let alone public discussion, that the obverse of
this ‘coin’ was the loss without compensation of Aboriginal land and other
property rights.
Of course, these are legitimate public policy positions for
the Commonwealth to argue, and indeed one might argue that they are central to
the implicit ‘grand bargain’ that underlies the High Court decision in Mabo
No.2. But the fact is that instead of ensuring a public discussion, the Commonwealth
has framed them entirely as technical legal issues, without any justification
by relevant Ministers for why the Government is adopting the position it has. Neither
the Attorney General nor the Minister for Aboriginal Australians has issued a media
release announcing the Commonwealth submission. The Prime Minister recently
stated that treaties were a matter for the states and territories (link
here) seemingly oblivious to the fact that his Government is arguing against
the recognition and compensation for Indigenous rights extinguished by Commonwealth
executive action.
While the merits of the Federal Court decision are as yet undecided
and will turn on complex and technical legal reasoning abstracted from everyday
experience, the issues raised are real and are as yet unaddressed. The
determination of our nation’s political leaders and elites to avoid policy substance
and importantly, to neglect their democratic responsibilities to lead public
discussion of these issues is to my mind both disrespectful to the wider
community they purport to represent, and dangerous insofar as it creates an environment
that encourages extremist views to flourish without context. This negligence reminds
me of Bill Stanner’s comments in his Boyer lectures in 1968, over fifty years
ago:
"What may well have begun
as a simple forgetting of other possible views turned into a habit and over
time into something like a cult of forgetfulness practised on a national scale.
It's a structural matter, a view from a window which has been carefully placed
to exclude a whole quadrant of the landscape."
The Commonwealth submission in Yunupingu, and its presentation,
reflects more than it intends: it is simultaneously a sophisticated legal
argument, a study in bureaucratic caution and conservatism, a reflection of
political timorousness and timidity, not to mention short-sightedness, and irrefutable
proof that the nation’s cult of forgetfulness continues to permeate our public
policymaking and our political institutions.
16 April 2024
Exactly, Michael. Very well put! Let's hope the HCA can read the need for good public policy outcomes, and not just a narrow nitpicking argument based on historical legal and constitutional technicalities. After all, isn't Australia a signatory to UNDRIP? Pity it's not mandatory!
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