Print this page | ||
Northern Territory of Australia & Anor v Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust & Ors (2008) HCA 29 (Blue Mud Bay Case) | ||
Category: | Case Law | |
Binomial Name: | High Court of Australia | |
Date: | 30 July 2008 | |
Sub Category: | Case Law | |
Place: | Northeast Arnhem Land, Gulf of Carpentaria | |
Click this link to search this location with google maps | ||
State/Country: | Northern Territory, Australia | |
Click this link to search this location with google maps | ||
Schedule 1 of the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 lists the dispute area. The Yolgnu of Blue Mud Bay (approximately 200km south of Yirrkala) were the initial litigants, however the Court's judgment affects 84 per cent of the Northern Territory coastline. This includes some 90,000 square kilometres of the mainland of the Northern Territory between the mouth of the East Alligator River in Van Diemen Gulf (in the west) and the mouth of the Roper River in the Limmen Bight (in the east) but excluding Cobourg Peninsula. The other grant, the Arnhem Land Islands Grant ("the Islands Grant"), concerned all the islands (except Groote Eylandt) in the Northern Territory generally adjacent to the land the subject of the Mainland Grant. ([2008] HCA 29 at 2) | ||
Legal Reference: | [2008] HCA 29 | |
Alternative Names: | ||
Subject Matter: | Aquaculture | Fishing | Land Use | Marine | Recognition of Native Title or Traditional Ownership | Recognition of Traditional Rights and Interests | |
URL: | http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2008/29.html | |
Summary Information: | ||
Northern Territory of Australia & Anor v Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust & Ors (2008) HCA 29.
| ||
Detailed Information: | ||
Claim History
High Court Decision
The issue was whether the grants enabled a right to exclude those with a valid fishing permit issued under the Fisheries Act 1988 (NT) from the intertidal area. The Director of Fisheries (NT) argued that tidal waters were not part of Yolngu 'land' and fishing licences granted over that area validly authorised fishing (High Court Media Release). The respondents alternatively argued that the boundary defined by the grant also includes the water that ebbs and flows upon it and can therefore exclude people within the boundary, whether there is water upon it or not. The majority of the court held that for the purposes of proprietary rights, the grants are defined by their geographical boundaries and not by whether any land is 'dry' or covered by water. Heydon and Kiefel JJ in dissent found that water is not land within the traditional sense and the rights relate only to the seabed, not to the adjacent waters. For the minority, the right to exclude disappears once the water is above the land and the right returns as the tide goes out.
The Fisheries Act is subject to, not invalidated by the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern territory) Act 1976 (Cth). | ||
Outcomes: | ||
This decision now enables the Indigenous land holders through the Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust and Northern Land Council to issue fishing permits in exchange for a licence fee.
|
| ||||
| ||||
|
Was this useful? Click here to fill in the ATNS survey