Mabo v Queensland (No 2)


Mabo v Queensland was a landmark High Court of Australia decision in 1992 recognising native title in Australia for the first time. It acknowledged that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples had occupied the land before the arrival of British settlers, and had rights over the land.
The High Court held that the doctrine of terra nullius, which imported all laws of England to a new land, did not apply in circumstances where there were already inhabitants present – even if those inhabitants had been regarded at the time as "uncivilised". Consequently, the Court held that the rules of reception of international English law that applied were not those applicable where the land was barren and unprotected, but rather the rules that applied where an existing people were settled. The result was that existing customary laws which were present at the time of settlement survived the reception of English law to the extent not modified or excluded by subsequent inconsistent laws and acts of the British. Relevantly, that existing law included indigenous land title. As such, any Indigenous land rights which had not been extinguished by subsequent grants by the Crown continued to exist in Australia.
In so ruling, the High Court overturned Milirrpum v Nabalco Pty Ltd, a contrary decision of the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory.

The case

The plaintiffs, headed by land rights campaigner Eddie Mabo, sought declarations, inter alia, that the Meriam people were entitled to the Mer Islands "as owners; as possessors; as occupiers; or as persons entitled to use and enjoy the said islands".
Five judgments were delivered in the High Court, by Justice Brennan, Justice Deane and Justice Gaudron, Justice Toohey, Justice Dawson, the only dissenter, and Chief Justice Mason and Justice McHugh.
The decision was based on the findings of fact made by Justice Moynihan of the Supreme Court of Queensland: that the Mer Islanders had a strong sense of relationship to the islands and regarded the land as theirs. All of the judges, except Justice Dawson, agreed that:

On native title

The Mabo decision presented many legal and political questions, including:
In response to the judgment, the Parliament of Australia, controlled by the Labor Party led by Prime Minister Paul Keating, enacted the Native Title Act 1993, which established the National Native Title Tribunal to make native title determinations in the first instance, appealable to the Federal Court of Australia, and thereafter the High Court. Following Wik Peoples v Queensland, Parliament amended the Native Title Act with the Native Title Amendment Act 1998.
Ten years following the Mabo decision, Mrs Mabo claimed that issues remained within the community about land on Mer.
On 1 February 2014, the traditional owners of land on Badu Island received freehold title to in an act of the Queensland Government. An Indigenous Land Use Agreement was signed on 7 July 2014.

Definition of Aboriginality

In his judgment, Justice Brennan stated that the definition of a person's Aboriginal Australian identity, or Aboriginality, depends on a tripartite test:
This test was subsequently used in other cases, such as Love v Commonwealth of Australia; Thoms v Commonwealth of Australia, where two men who has thus been determined as Aboriginal, could not be deported as aliens under the provisions of the Migration Act 1958, after both had earlier been convicted of criminal offences and served time in prison until 2018.

Popular culture

A straight-to-TV film titled Mabo was produced in 2012 by Blackfella Films in association with the ABC and SBS. It provided a dramatised account of the case, focusing on the effect it had on Mabo and his family.
The case was also referenced as background to the plot in the 1997 comedy The Castle.
In 2009 as part of the Q150 celebrations, the Mabo High Court of Australia decision was announced as one of the Q150 Icons of Queensland for its role as a "Defining Moment".