Raymond William Ashwin & Others on behalf of Wutha and GTI Resources Ltd

Case

[2018] NNTTA 61

16 October 2018


NATIONAL NATIVE TITLE TRIBUNAL

Raymond William Ashwin & Others on behalf of Wutha and GTI Resources Ltd [2018] NNTTA 61 (16 October 2018)

Application No:

WO2017/0858

IN THE MATTER of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth)

- and -

IN THE MATTER of an inquiry into an expedited procedure objection application

Raymond William Ashwin & Others on behalf of Wutha (WC1999/010)

(native title party)

- and -

GTI Resources Ltd

(grantee party)

- and -

State of Western Australia

(Government party)

DECISION TO DISMISS OBJECTION APPLICATION

Tribunal:

Ms H Shurven, Member

Place:

Perth

Date:

16 October 2018

Catchwords:

Native title – future act – proposed grant of exploration licence – expedited procedure objection application – failure to comply with directions – objection application dismissed.

Legislation:

Native Title Act1993 (Cth) ss 29, 148(b)

Cases:

Teelow v Page [2001] NNTTA 107; 166 FLR 266 (‘Teelow v Page’)

Representative of the native title party: Mr Ron Harrington-Smith
Representative of the grantee party: Ms Kathleen Daniels, Mining Access Legal
Representatives of the Government party:

Ms Bethany Conway and Mr Michael McMahon, Department of Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety

REASONS FOR DECISION TO DISMISS OBJECTION APPLICATION

Background

  1. On 13 December 2017, the State Government of Western Australia gave notice under s 29 of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) of its intention to grant exploration licence E51/1556-I (AM 516908) to GTI Resources Ltd. The area of the proposed licence is wholly overlapped by the Wutha claim group’s native title claim (WC1999/010).

  2. By including the expedited procedure statement in the public advertisement of the licence, the State has asserted the grant can be made without negotiation between Wutha, the State and GTI Resources.

  3. On 21 December 2017, the Wutha claim group lodged an objection with the National Native Title Tribunal against the application of the expedited procedure to the grant of the licence. To answer the question of whether the licence can be granted in such an expedited way, I was appointed by the former President of the Tribunal, Raelene Webb QC, to be the Member conducting the inquiry in this matter.

Should the inquiry proceed or should the matter be dismissed?

  1. I made directions requiring all parties to produce contentions and evidence for the conduct of the inquiry to determine whether or not the expedited procedure was attracted to the grant. These directions were sent to all parties on 14 August 2018.  The Wutha claim group was directed to provide a statement of contentions, documentary evidence and witness statements, verified where possible by affidavits, on or before 19 September 2018.

  2. Neither contentions nor evidence were received from the Wutha claim group by


    19 September 2018.  

  3. The Tribunal wrote to all parties on 5 October 2018 advising that the Wutha claim compliance date group had passed and as such they failed to comply with the dates set for the inquiry into these matters. The Tribunal further advised that if a native title party does not lodge any materials within the given timeframe, they are at grave risk of having their objection dismissed. I directed that, for the sake of procedural fairness, if any party had any comment in relation to the lack of compliance or in relation to the possibility of dismissal, they should submit such comment on or by 12 October 2018, for my consideration.

  4. The Tribunal did not receive any communication from any party, including the Wutha claim group, in regards to the request for dismissal.

  5. In considering this dismissal, I have regard to the applicable principles set out by the Tribunal in Teelow v Page (at [13]). In particular, I note the Tribunal is required to proceed as expeditiously as possible when conducting an inquiry into an expedited procedure objection.

  6. In the circumstances, the Wutha claim group has been given sufficient opportunity to comply with directions set by the Tribunal, and it would be unfair to prejudice the other parties with further delays. I do not need to answer the question of whether the licence can be granted in an expedited way because I have concluded the objection should be dismissed.

Decision

  1. The objection application against exploration licence E51/1556-I (AM 516908) is dismissed, according to s 148(b) of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth).

Ms Helen Shurven
Member
16 October 2018

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