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On 13 March 2019, the High Court handed down its first decision on native title compensation in ‘Timber Creek’ [2019] HCA 7 (Timber Creek).
On 13 March 2019, the High Court handed down its first decision on native title compensation in ‘Timber Creek’ [2019] HCA 7 (Timber Creek).
The High Court’s decision is a measured reflection of the need for Australian law to evolve in a manner that acknowledges, recognises and accommodates the diversity and individuality of native title in Australia. The majority judgment sensibly navigates the difficult task of applying common law legal concepts, such as compensation, freehold value, economic loss and solatium, in the context of traditional rights and interests, and connection to country.
Resisting the temptation to apply a blanket approach, a 5:2 majority of the High Court instead affirmed a methodology to determine the appropriate, just and fair compensation to be awarded to native title holders for the impact of compensable acts on their distinct native title rights and interests.
Applying the methodology, the High Court determined that compensation should be paid for the extinguishment of the claim group’s non-exclusive native title rights and interests as follows:
On 20 July 2017, the Full Court of the Federal Court delivered its decision in Northern Territory of Australia v Griffiths [2017] FCAFC 106 (Full Court Appeal).
The Full Court assessed compensation as follows:
The Full Court also made an award:
The majority judges’ methodology involves a two-step process of:
Their judgment makes it clear that the application and outcome of the methodology are fact specific. There is no uniform formula that can be applied to determine the amount of compensation.
The High Court awarded 50% of the relevant land’s freehold value for economic loss. The discount reflected that the group’s native title did not include rights of admission, exclusion and commercial exploitation.
Assessing the economic value of the affected rights and interests requires identifying:
The High Court considered that just compensation depends on the exact incidents of the native title rights and interests affected:
The High Court upheld the trial judge’s award of compensation for non-economic loss of $1.3 million, stating that there was “nothing to suggest that the trial judge’s award would not be accepted by the Australian community as appropriate fair or just”.
The majority judgment explained the purpose of compensation for cultural loss as:
Compensation for the non-economic effect of compensable acts is compensation for that aspect of the value of land to native title holders which is inherent in the thing that has been lost, diminished, impaired or otherwise affected by the compensable acts. It is not just about hurt feelings, although the strength of feeling may have evidentiary value in determining the extent of it.
The claim group’s cultural loss comprised two parts:
The majority judgment referred to evidence given at the original hearing and the findings made by the trial judge.
The trial judge likened the damage to a single large painting. The earlier acts such as the grant of the pastoral lease (which were not compensable) punched holes in the painting. The subsequent compensable acts “punched further holes in separate parts of the one painting”. The “damage done was not to be measured by reference to the holes created by the compensable acts alone, but by reference to the effect of those holes in the context of the wider area”.
The High Court awarded interest amounting to $910,100. This interest was calculated on a simple interest basis on the economic loss from the date the entitlement to compensation arose.
Although simple interest was awarded here, the majority judgment commented that the basis upon which interest is calculated will be influenced by the claimant’s evidence and that there may be circumstances in which it would be just to award interest on a compound interest basis. These include where there is evidence that the claim group would have invested the compensation to create profit or applied it to the expenses of a business.
The decision will likely have limited immediate effect given the time it takes for compensation claims to determined. However, we can reasonably expect that in 5 years’ time the number of compensation claims will have increased and the law evolved further.
Native title compensation remains a potentially significant liability for the Commonwealth, States and Territories because responsibility for the payment of native title compensation typically rests with the Commonwealth, State or Territory. However, that liability can be (and regularly is) passed on to proponents through legislation or by contract. Proponents should consider:
The High Court only considered the following categories of compensable acts:
The High Court did not consider:
Despite this, we consider that the use of freehold value in calculating economic loss provides a useful guide that will substantially assist in understanding potential liabilities.
Finally, we consider that the challenge moving forward will be the issues that will arise in resourcing compensation claims in a system that is already at its limit, as well as securing evidence to demonstrate ‘cultural loss’. The native title claims system has itself been through seismic shifts in both the body that determines claims and the process through which determinations of native title are made. A specialist tribunal to assess ‘cultural loss’ may be something to consider.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2024
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