CHAPTER 5

Seventh Report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund
TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER 5

Conclusion

5.1 Minority Recommendation 1 is that the following be inserted in the Native Title Amendment Bill 1996:

5.2 The apparent intention of this provision is to reverse the usual rule that where there is a conflict between general and specific provisions, the specific provisions prevail. [1] By contrast, s.7 of the Native Title Act [2] (which was inserted with the agreement of the Keating Government) [3] does yield to other provisions of the Native Title Act in the event of conflict. [4] The minority recommendation therefore seeks to hold the Howard Government to a more strict standard than that to which the Keating Government's legislation was held in relation to the RDA.

5.3 While the amendments to the Native Title Act should be consistent with the principles of non-discrimination in the RDA, it is difficult to see any need for the provision given advice by the Attorney-General's Department that the amendments are consistent with the RDA. [5] Even if there were a discrepancy between the amendment bill and the RDA, there are significant concerns about the means chosen to resolve it in the minority report. There is an important principle relating to the proper role of parliament at stake. The proposed clause sounds high-minded, but its very generality means that its operation would be unpredictable in the event of a conflict between the amendments and the RDA. In particular, doubt could arise over those sections only partly amended by the amendment bill. [6] This makes for bad legislation. Would it invalidate specific provisions in the Native Title Amendment Bill 1996? Or would it merely modify their operation in particular factual situations? To what extent would the Registrar be required to consider difficult issues of statutory interpretation in performing her (essentially administrative) duties?

5.4 In proposing this kind of amendment, there is an implied admission in the minority report that it is uncertain how the RDA clause would apply in particular situations. If the minority members were certain, then in the interests of responsible statute-making they would have dealt with the issue by suggesting specific, and more predictable, amendments to achieve the desired end.

5.5 The RDA clause would result in the courts having to piece together a legislative jigsaw puzzle. While it is proper for the courts to play a role in interpreting legislation, it is wrong for parliament to pass legislation that is manifestly unpredictable in the hope that the courts will make sense of it. This would abdicate responsibility to unelected judges. It would also prove to be a recipe for litigation and confirm the impression that lawyers are the prime beneficiaries of the Native Title Act. When asked about this matter on 27 November 1996 the Deputy General Counsel of the Attorney-General's Department advised the Committee:

The Committee accepts this view and the parliament's obligation to legislate. Subject to its sixth report, the Committee endorses the Native Title Amendment Bill 1996 and the Exposure Draft amendments.

 

Senator Eric Abetz

Chair

 

Footnotes

[1] (Generalia specialibus non derogant:): Pearce D.C. and Geddes R.S., Statutory Interpretation in Australia, (Third Edition), p.83.

[2] Section 7(1) provides that nothing in the Native Title Act affects the operation of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975. Subsection (2) provides that this does not affect the validation of past acts by or in accordance with the Native Title Act.

[3] Senate Hansard 17 December 1993, p.5029.

[4] Western Australia v. the Commonwealth 183 CLR 375 at 483-484.

[5] Evidence, pp.3206 to 3214 (18 October 1996).

[6] Evidence, p.3606.

[7] Evidence, p.3602.