Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 811South Africa
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Bleskop Code of Body 3160 v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services Sithole N.O and Others (016405/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 811 (12 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 August 2024
Headnotes
and the application dismissed with costs. 15] In its Replying Affidavit, the Applicant sets out that it indeed was allocated a firearm owning code of body 3160 and that any change of this code of body to any other entity is unlawful as it has not been done with its consent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rustenburg Platinum Mines Bleskop Code of Body 3160 v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services Sithole N.O and Others (016405/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 811 (12 August 2024)
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Bleskop Code of Body 3160 v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services Sithole N.O and Others (016405/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 811 (12 August 2024)
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sino date 12 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 016405/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: N0
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
12 AUGUST 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
RUSTENBURG PLATINUM
MINES BLESKOP
CODE
OF BODY
3160
Applicant
And
THE NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF THE
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE
SERVICES
GENERAL K.J. SITHOLE
N.O.
(IN HIS CAPACITY AS
REGISTRAR OF
FIREARMS)
First
Respondent
COLONEL PN SIKHAKHANE
(IN HER CAPACITY AS
ACTING SECTION HEAD,
CENTRAL
FIREARMS REGISTRY)
Second
Respondent
MAJOR GENERAL
MAMOTHETI
(IN HER CAPACITY AS
HEAD OF THE FIREARMS,
LIQUOR AND SECOND HAND
GOODS CONTROL
DEPARTMENT
“FLASH”)
Third
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Fourth
Respondent
THE
FIREARMS APPEAL BOARD
Fifth
Respondent
This judgment is issued
by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of this
judgment is deemed to be 12 August 2024.
JUDGMENT
COLLIS J
INTRODUCTION
1] On 19 August 2023 the
Applicant issued a Notice of Motion seeking the following relief:
“
1.
An order in so far as it is necessary, that the Applicant has no
internal appeal available to it alternatively that exceptional
circumstances exists that they are entitled to approach the above
Honourable Court directly and without exhausting the internal
appeal
set out in
Sections 133
and
91
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of
2000
.
2. An
order declaring that the Applicant’s firearm licence renewals
under code of body 3160 dated the 4
th
of September 2018 be deemed to be refused as per the Schedule of
firearms attached as
“NOM1” hereto.
3. An order reviewing and
setting aside such deemed refusals.
4. An
order ordering the issue of licences for such firearms and the
physical delivery of such firearm licences within
10
(ten) days from date of an order to this effect by the above
Honourable Court to the Rustenburg Police Station.
5. In
the alternative, for an order ordering the Respondents to make a
decision on the renewal applications within 10 (ten) days
from date
hereof and to deliver the licences if so approved within 10 (ten)
days from date thereafter to the Rustenburg Police
Station.
6. An order in so far as
it may be necessary, if any applications are refused by the
Respondents, to approach the above Honourable
Court on these papers
duly supplemented to review and set aside such refusal.
7. Costs only in the
event of opposition.”
2] The present
application is premised in terms of Section 3 (a) (iii) of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act in that the
administrative
official concerned i.e. the National Commissioner of the South
African Police Services who is the Registrar of Firearms
by virtue of
Section 123
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
, has failed to
take a decision within a reasonable time to approve or refuse the
Applicant’s renewal of its firearm licences.
PRELIMINARY ISSUES
REQUIRING DETERMINATION
3] The Respondents have
raised a number of preliminary issues namely:
3.1 Whether the first
point in limine
that the Applicant’s application is
premature should be upheld?
3.2. Whether the second
point in limine
of non-joinder of Sibanye-Stillwater Ground
should be upheld?
3.3. In addition, this
Court was called upon to determine whether to permit the Applicant to
file a further affidavit and to rule
on the condonation application
filed.
3.4. This Court was also
called upon to rule on the reserved costs of the proceedings set down
on 28 August 2023.
Premature nature of
the application.
4] The defence that the
application is premature, is premised on the fact that there are no
applications in the records of the Respondents
of renewal
applications submitted by the Applicant as the holder of a firearm
licence under code of body 3160.
5] This defence the
Applicant contends is contradicted if one considers the contents of
annexures “FA7” and “FA8”,
annexed to the
founding affidavit.
6] In this regard the
Applicant argues that a receipt can only be issued once the
application has been submitted and once the application
has been paid
for. Once done, it is then entered into the SAPS 86 register which is
a manual register that records renewal applications.
A copy of such
register is annexed to the founding affidavit as “FA7”.
7] The Applicant herein
has also served a
Rule 35
(12) notice on the Respondent, which notice
remains unanswered to date. It is the Applicants’ contention
that a reply to
this notice will illustrate that the Applicant
timeously applied to renew its licences.
8]
In raising the
point
in limine
,
the Respondent had argued, that the
Applicant in this matter has invoked the review Application to renew
a firearm licence under code of body 3160.
[1]
9]
Section 24 of the Firearms Control Act No 60 of 2000 (‘
Firearms
Control Act&rsquo
;) provides that the Holder of a licence issued in
terms of this chapter who wishes to renew the license must at least
90 days before
the date of expiry of the licence apply to the
Registrar for its renewal.
10]
On behalf of the Respondent it was argued that this review
application was prematurely lodged on the basis that the Respondents’
record reflects that there is no application for the renewal of a
licence in terms of
section 24
which was received from the Applicant
as the holder of a firearms licence under code of body 3160.
11]
The Respondents’ records reflect that the application of a
licence renewal was effected by Sibanye Gold Protection Services
Limited in terms of which the latter is not the lawful owner of the
firearms owned by the Applicant.
12]
Sibanye Gold Services Limited has its own code of body 5330 which is
substantially different from the code body of the Applicant
in this
matter.
13]
It is on this basis that counsel for the Respondent had argued that
the Applicant’s possession of the firearms is currently
unlawful on the basis of the 90 days’ period contemplated by
section 24(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act has
already lapsed without
receiving application for renew of a licence under code of body 3160.
14]
For this reason it was contended, that the present application is
premature and that the
point in limine
should be upheld and
the application dismissed with costs.
15]
In its Replying Affidavit, the Applicant sets out that it indeed was
allocated a firearm owning code of body 3160 and that any
change of
this code of body to any other entity is unlawful as it has not been
done with its consent.
16]
If one however considers annexure ‘FA6’ annexed to the
Founding Affidavit, it reflects a reporting date of 27 September
2021, depicting an identification number 3160, allocated to
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Bleskop. This period however falls outside
to the period in question being 2018. Furthermore, annexure ‘FA8’
also being placed reliance upon, depicts proof of
payment indeed
issued to Rustenburg Plantinum Mines, dated 25 May 2020 in respect of
firearm licence renewals, but which period
also however falls outside
the relevant period in question. In addition, the further proof of
payment depicted in annexure ‘FA7’
reflects the payment
date of 4 September 2018, setting out the beneficiary as Rustenburg
Platinum Mines but here no reference is
made for payment of renewal
in relation to code of body 3160.
17]
Given the exposition as set out above, the inescapable conclusion to
be drawn is that the Applicant has failed to present before
this
Court objective proof that indeed application for renewal of firearm
licence was made by the Applicant, 90 days prior to its
expiry in
respect of code of body 3160 as is required in terms of
section 24
of
the
Firearms Control Act.
18]
Absent
such proof, the
point in limine
that the application is
premature, must as a result be upheld with costs.
Non-joinder
Sibanye-Stillwater Group
19]
In addition to the first
point in limine,
the Respondents had
also raised the non-joinder of Sibanye-Stillwater Group as a second
point in limine.
20]
In Absa Bank Ltd v Naude NO
2016 (6) SA 540
(SCA) the test for
joinder was restated by Schoeman A.J.A to be the following:
“
The test
whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a direct
and substantial interest in the subject-matter of the
litigation
which may prejudice the party that has not been joined. In Gordon v
Department of Health, Kwazulu Natal
[2008] ZASCA 99
;
2008 (6) SA 522
(SCA) it was held
that if an order or judgment cannot be sustained without necessarily
prejudicing the interests of third parties
that had not been joined,
then those third parties have a legal interest in the matter and must
be joined.”
21]
The relevant principles governing non-joinder in general were
summarised in Rosebank Mall (Pty) Ltd and Another v Cradock Heights
(Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 353
(W) as follows:
“
[11] It is
important to distinguish between necessary joinder (where the failure
to join a party amount to a non-joinder), on the
one hand, and
joinder as a matter of convenience (where the joinder of a party is
permissible and would not give rise to a misjoinder),
on the other
hand. In cases of joinder of necessity the Court, may even appeal,
mero motu raise the question of joinder to safeguard
the interests of
third parties, and decline to hear the matter until such joinder has
been effected or the court satisfied that
third parties have
consented to be bound by the judgment of the court or have waived the
right to be joined.
[12] The submission of
the appellants that informal notice to a party not cited in judicial
proceedings, coupled with mere non-intervention
or even an intimation
of non-intervention does not amount to a representation that such
third party will submit and be bound by
any judgment given, is
well-founded (Amalgamated Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949
(3) SA 637
(A) at 661-3.)
[13] In the absence of
joinder of the third parties referred to above, and in the absence of
judicial notice to and clear evidence
of waiver by such third parties
of any right to be joined in the proceedings before the Court a quo,
the relevant question is whether
any of such third parties fall into
the category of parties who should have been joined, as necessary
parties, in these proceedings.”
22]
In
casu
the application for renewal of a licence was, effected
by Sibanye Stillwater Group with its own code of body 5330, which is
different
to the Applicants code of body 3160.
Further
in paragraph 7.1.11, of the Answering Affidavit, the Respondents’
alleges that its system was changed on the 10
th
of May 2021 to reflect Rustenburg Platinum Mines Bleskop as
Sibanye-Stillwater Limited.
23]
It is on this basis that they contend that the Sibanye Stillwater
Group should have been joined as a joinder of necessity on
the ground
that it has a direct and substantial interest in this matter.
24]
In its Replying Affidavit, in answer, the Applicant denies that it
did not submit applications for renewal in its own name and
it
further denied that it applied to change the name of firearm owning
code of body 3160.
[2]
25]
The Applicant further denies the existence of an entity such
as
Sibanye-Stillwater Group. It asserts that Sibanye-Stillwater is a
listed entity and has a number of legal entities that it controls
through a comprehensive management structure.
26] One such entity is
Sibanye Gold Protection Services (Pty) Limited with code of body 5330
which has its own separate corporate
existence and houses the
management and administration of all security services within the
Sibanye-Stillwater Group.
27] Rustenburg Platinum
Mines Bleskop, although a separate trading entity of
Sibanye-Stillwater, falls under the direct control
of Sibanye Gold
Protection Services.
28] Support for this
averment is found in the Founding Affidavit where the deponent Mr.
Lutchman states in paragraph 4 as follows:
“
I
am the executive in charge of all Sibanye-Stillwater security
activities. This includes the operations of Rustenburg Platinum
Mines
situated at Bleskop which operates as a separate security component
and entity within the Sibanye-Stillwater Group operations.”
29] He goes further on to
state in paragraph 7 that:
“
The
security element of the Applicant, which trades as Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Bleskop falls under my direct authority and control,
although Sibanye-Stillwater Limited owns Bleskop Platinum Mine.”
30] It is on this basis
that counsel for the Applicant had argued that it is thus quite clear
that Mr. Lutchman was the appropriate
person to depose to and bring
the application on behalf of Sibanye Gold Protection Services (Pty)
Limited because that is where
the authority and control over the
Applicant vests.
31] Herein, the authority
of Mr Luchman was not being challenged. In fact, his authority is
beyond reproach as proof of such authority
was annexed to the
founding papers as annexure ‘FA1.’
32]
What is being challenged is whether Sibanye Stillwater Group should
have been joined in these proceedings as an interested party?
By Mr.
Lutchman’s own admission, Sibanye Gold Protection Services
Limited is the security component of the Sibanye-Stillwater
Group.
[3]
On this basis alone, Sibanye-Stillwater Group would have a direct and
substantial interest in the outcome of these proceedings
and as such
it should have been joined in these proceedings.
33] Consequently, I
therefore conclude that the second
point in limine
should also
be upheld with costs.
34] The
points in
limine
so raised in my view is dispositive of the application and
as such this Court will not express an opinion on the remainder of
the
merits of the application.
PREVIOUSLY RESERVED COSTS
35] Both parties also
addressed the Court on the previously reserved costs when the
application was enrolled on 28 August 2023 and
subsequently removed
by notice dated 23 August 2023. No clear indication was given to this
Court as to the reason why the costs
were previously reserved when
the application was removed by notice. To my mind these costs should
follow the result of this application.
ORDER
36] Consequently, the
following order is made:
36.1 The first
point
in limine
raised by the Respondents is upheld with costs.
36.2 The second
point
in limine
raised by the Respondents is upheld with costs. In as
far as costs is concerned, I do not think a punitive costs order is
warranted
in the circumstances.
36.3 The Respondents are
further awarded the costs previously reserved on 28 August 2023.
37] Once the
points in
limine
is addressed by the Applicant the application can once
again then be re-enrolled on a future date for the adjudication on
the merits
of the application.
C.COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv.
M Snyman SC
Instructed
By
M
J Hood and Associates
Counsel
for Respondents:
Adv.
N M Seleso
Instructed
By:
Office
of the State Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
14
February 2024
Date
of Judgment
12
August 2024
[1]
Answering Affidavit para 6 Caselines 004-3.
[2]
Replying Affidavit para 7 Caselines 009-5 to 009-7.
[3]
[3]
Para 3 Founding Affidavit Caselines 001-15.
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