Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 434South Africa
Umlindi Security Services (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole N.O. and Others (42824/2021;44969/2021;43855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 434 (15 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Umlindi Security Services (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole N.O. and Others (42824/2021;44969/2021;43855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 434 (15 June 2022)
Umlindi Security Services (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole N.O. and Others (42824/2021;44969/2021;43855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 434 (15 June 2022)
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sino date 15 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 42824/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS
JUDGES: NO
REVISED
15/6/2022
In
the matter between:
UMLINDI
SECURITY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
Same
respondents as below
Case
No: 44969/2021
In
the matter between:
THORBURN
SECURITY SOLUTIONS
Applicant
PSIRA
REGISTRATION NO. 1684326
FAR
NO. 20377
And
Same
respondents as below
Case
No. 43855/2021
In
the matter between:
UNITRADE
1047 (PTY) LIMITED
TRADING
AS ISIDINGO SECUROTY SERVICES
CODE
OF BODY
15216
Applicant
And
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
GENERAL
KJ SITHOLE N.O
(IN
HIS CAPACITY AS REGISTRAR OF
FIREARMS)
First Respondent
MAJOR
GENERAL MAMOTHETI
(IN
HER CAPACITY AS HEAD OF THE FIREARMS,
LIQUOR
AND SECOND-HAND GOODS CONTROL
DEPARTMENT
“FLASH”)
Second Respondent
BRIGADIER
MABULE N.O
HEAD
OF CENTRAL FIREARMS REGISTRY
Third Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Fourth Respondent
THE
FIREARMS APPEAL
BOARD
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MADIBA
AJ
[1]
The applicant
instituted an urgent review application against the Respondents. The
relief sought is on the following basis
inter
alia
:
1.1
Dispensing with normal
rules contained in Rule 6 and Practice Directive of the above
Honourable Court to proceed on urgent basis.
1.2
That exceptional
circumstances do exist exonerating the applicant not to exhaust its
internal administrative remedies alternatively
to declare that no
such internal administrative remedy exists to be exhausted by the
applicant.
1.3
Seeking an order that
its Section 21 temporary authorisation for firearm listed in Schedule
“A” be deemed to have been
refused due to the lapse of
time.
1.4
Reviewing and setting
aside the refusal of Section 21 temporary authorisation.
1.5
Ordering the first,
second and third respondents to issue temporary authorisation for
firearm contained in Schedule “A”
for one year from date
of order.
1.6
Ordering the
respondents to approve, issue and deliver the permits to the
applicants within 15 days from the date of order.
1.7
Alternatively ordering
that the applicant’s firearm applications in terms of Section
20 of the Firearm Control Act under Section
“B” be deemed
to be refused.
1.8
An order reviewing and
setting aside such deemed refusal.
1.9
That the first, second,
and third respondents jointly and severally to issue such firearm
licences within thirty days of the date
of the order.
1.10
In the alternative, the
first, second, and third respondents be ordered to make a decision on
the application of the firearm licences
within five days from the
date of the order.
1.11
Ordering that such
firearm licences be delivered to the applicant within 15 days from
the date of the order.
1.12
That in the event of
some or all the applications being refused by the first, second and
third respondent an order that the applicant
approach the above
Honourable Court on the same papers duly supplemented, to review such
decision and to set down such review application
on urgent basis.
1.13
That the respondents
pay the costs of the application.
1.14
Further and/or
alternative relief.
[2]
The respondents
resisted the application by disputing urgency thereof and that the
application was instituted prematurely. It was
contended by the
respondents that the application has become moot and the costs order
sought against the respondents is not justifiable
under the
circumstances. The applicant’s urgent application was struck
off the roll for lack of urgency with costs on 14
October 2021.
Factual
Background
[3]
The applicant is a
security service provider registered as such with the Private
Security Industry Regulatory Authority and with
the Registrar. As
security service providers to various institutions, some institutions
need armed guards with firearms.
[4]
It is required in terms of the
Firearms
Control Act
60 of 2000 that firearms
issued for business purposes must be renewed every five years. This
entails that security service providers are to
replace, renew and
apply for licences for tools of their trade like firearms. The
Firearms Act
requires
that an application for renewal of firearms must be submitted at
least ninety days before lapsing of such licences.
[5]
The applicant submitted 100 authorisations
and 100 new firearm licences applications in terms of
Section 21
and
20
of the
Firearms Control Act
twenty
working days before instituting its urgent review application. It is
not disputed that it takes about a period of ninety working
days
alternatively one hundred and twenty days to deal with firearm
licence applications.
[6]
The respondents duly informed the applicant
on 4 October 2021 that the 100 new licences applications were under
consideration and
the temporary applications submitted by the
applicant are being processed. The Central Firearm Registry approved
100 firearm licences
of the applicant during 14 and 15 October 2021.
[7]
Section 21
temporary authorisations for the
100 firearm licences issued were provided to the applicant during 11
and 17 November 2021. The
temporary authorisation were to be valid
until the applicant receives the licence cards for the 100 firearm
licences approved.
The applicant received the printed licence cards
for all 100 firearms applied for thus rendering the temporary
authorisation no
longer necessary and were accordingly refused by the
Central Firearm Registry.
[8]
On 11 November 2021, the applicant
collected sixty temporary authorisations in respect of sixty firearm
licences application submitted
at Bellville Police Station. Despite
the applicant having collected one hundred and sixty temporary
authorisations and after the
striking off of the applicant’s
urgent review application, the applicant enrolled the application on
an opposed motion roll
on 14 February 2022.
Rule
6(5) (e) of the Uniform Rules of Court
[9]
The third respondent seeks a relief for an
order permitting and allowing the respondents to file their
supplementary affidavit in
view of the events and developments that
emanated prior to, during and after the urgent application was struck
off the roll. He
asks for costs on attorney and client’s scale.
The third respondent contends that he and other respondents were not
aware
of such events and developments at the time of the hearing.
Consequently, the relief sought by the applicant has become moot and
academic.
[10]
The purpose of the third respondent’s
application in terms of Rule 6(5) (e) is to place on record the facts
that renders the
relief sought by the applicant moot. The applicant
applied for the enrolment of its application on an opposed roll
during 25 October
2021. It came to the attention of the respondents
that the applications of hundred firearm listed in Schedule “B”
by
the applicant were issued on 14 and 15 October 2021 at the time
(14 October 2022) applicant’s urgent application was struck
off.
[11]
Since the 100 firearm applications by the
applicant were approved, there was no need for the 100 temporary
authorisation applications
for the same firearm application to be
approved, and were accordingly refused by the Central Firearm
Registry. The third respondent
issued 160 temporary authorisation due
to the delay in printing the licence cards during the 13 to 15
October 2021 prior and after
the urgent review application was struck
off.
[12]
According to the third respondent, the
relief sought by the applicant became moot and academic on 17
November 2021 with a full knowledge
of the applicant. It is alleged
that the applicant failed to comply with the Consolidated Directive
on 16 November 2021 and omitted
to disclose to the court that there
were no longer any dispute to be determined by the court. Despite the
non-compliance, he enrolled
the application on an opposed roll for 17
February 2022. As such the respondents moved for an order striking
off the applicant’s
application with a punitive costs order.
[13]
It is accepted that the standard of
considering an application for condonation is the interest of
justice. Whether it is in the
interest of justice to grant
condonation depends on the facts and circumstances of each case. See
Brummer v Govfil Brothers
Investment Pty Ltd and Others
[2000] ZACC 3
;
2000 (2) SA 837
CC
paragraph [3]
and [23].
[14]
I, under the circumstances of this matter,
find that it will be in the interest of justice to holistically deal
with the entire
application and condone non-compliance of the
Directives. I therefore direct that the application should proceed as
the respondents
would suffer no prejudice.
[15]
The general rule is that the parties should
abide by the requirements that three affidavits are permitted to be
filed unless the
court in exercising its discretion, permit further
sets of affidavits. The court will only exercise its discretion if a
full explanation
is furnished as to why it is necessary to file
supplementary affidavits. The court will consider if it is fair and
just to do so
and that the other party will suffer no prejudice. I
find that it is in the interest of justice that the supplementary
affidavit
be allowed as the applicant will not suffer any prejudice.
In any event the applicant does not dispute that the application has
become moot and academic. The supplementary affidavit is accordingly
admitted.
[16]
The only issue for determination under the
circumstances is the issue as to who has to bear costs in this
matter. The applicant’s
contention is that an adverse costs
order should be granted against the respondents. It is alleged that
the respondent only reacted
to attend to the applicant’s
application after applicant was forced to institute the application
presently before the court.
The applicant argues that its notice of
set down dated 15 November 2021 was served on the respondents on 16
November 2021 before
the delivery of the temporary authorisation on
17 November 2021.
[17]
According to the applicant, it is the
respondents’ case that relief sought became moot on 17 November
2021 due to the approval
of the licence application and subsequent
approval thereof. Since the application was launched before the
approval of the licence
applications on 17 November 2021, the issue
of mootness cannot be raised. The applicant submitted that the
respondents complied
with their obligations after service of the
review application and by the time the notice was delivered,
respondents only partially
complied with their obligation. It will
therefore be fair and just if the order for costs is granted against
the respondent so
argued the applicant.
[18]
The respondents averred that the
application for the review by the applicant was launched prematurely
and was therefore not urgent.
The respondents submitted that
applicant’s Section 20 applications (firearm licence
applications) were approved 49 days well
before the period prescribed
for consideration of applicant’s new firearm licences
applications which is 90 working days
alternatively 120 working days.
The respondents alleged that the applicant was as early as 4 October
2021 informed that the Central
Firearm Registry will consider 100 new
firearm licence applications and not the temporary applications as
they were being processed
at the Midrand Police Station.
[19]
It is common cause that the applicant’s
review application was struck off the roll for lack of urgency on 14
October 2021.
It is on this date (14 October 2021) that the Central
Firearm Registry approved 60 of applicant’s new firearm
licences and
the remaining 40 were approved on 15 October 2021. Since
applicant’s 100 firearms new licences were approved the 100
temporary
authorisations were refused. It is contended that since
there was a delay printing and distributing firearm licence cards,
the
third respondent deemed it necessary to issue 160 temporary
authorisation for the firearm licences issued to the applicants
during
13 – 15 October 2021. Accordingly, the applicant was
issued with 100 printed licence cards and rendering the temporary
authorisations
invalid and irrelevant. The respondents’
submitted that the relief sought by the applicant became moot and
academic and therefore
had no practical effect or result.
Consequently, the respondents pray for the dismissal of the
applicant’s application with
a punitive costs order.
Mootness
of a matter
[20]
It is generally accepted that a court
hearing a matter would not accept an invitation to adjudicate on
issues which are of such
a nature that the decision sought will have
no practical effect or result. See
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs
2000 (2) SA 1
CC
paragraph 21.
[21]
In
JT
Publishing (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Safety and Security
and Others
[1996] ZACC 23
;
1997 (3) SA
514
CC
paragraph 17, the court
stated that:
“
There can
hardly be a clearer instance of issues that are wholly academic, of
issues exciting no interest but an historical one,
than those on
which our ruling is wanted have now become.”
[22]
The courts have been vested with a
discretion to hear a matter even when it was moot. In
Independent
Electoral Commission v Langeberg Municipality
[2001] ZACC 23
;
2001 (3) SA 925
CC
paragraph [11],
the court held that:
“…
a
prerequisite for the exercise of the discretion is that any order
this court may make will have some practical effect either on
the
parties or on others”
[23]
The respondent argued that the matter was
moot and academic as it was not urgent and was instituted
prematurely. Careful reading
of the papers before the court reveal
that the respondents complied with the issuing and approving of the
applications for new
firearm licences within the prescripts of
Section 21 of the Firearm Act of 60 of 2000. That is to say the
respondents were expected
to deal with the firearm applications
within a period of 90 working days alternatively 120 working days.
The approval of the applicant
was approved with 49 days working days
after submissions of the said application on 5 August 2021. In other
words, the applicant’s
new licence applications, right to
temporary possess the firearms pending the printing of the licence
cards and receipts of the
printed licence cards for all 100 firearms
were processed within the required timeframe.
[24]
The expiry date for respondents’
compliance with applicant’s application was 13 December 2022.
The applicant instead
received the printed licence cards for all 100
firearms of the applicant on 24 November 2021. At the time, the
applicant’s
urgent review application was struck off the roll
on 14 October 2021, the respondents considered and approved the
firearm licences
(i.e on 14 – 15 October 2021). The temporary
authorisation were delivered to the applicant on 11 and 17 November
2021.
[25]
When the applicant served the notice of set
down on 16 November 2021, the respondents had already considered it
and approved the
applicant’s firearm licences during 14 –
15 October 2021. It is indeed so that on 11 and 17 November 2021 the
applicant
was provided with temporary licences issued to the
applicant on 14 and 15 October 2021. The respondents had until 13
December 2021
alternatively 27 January 2022 to be compliant with the
prescripts of the Firearm Act.
[26]
I am of the view that by 17 November 2021,
the applicant’s application became moot and academic.
Consequently, the relief
sought by the applicant had no practical
effect or result as it has become moot. In light of the above, the
point of mootness of
the application raised by the respondents stands
to be sustained.
[27]
Both the applicant and respondents seek a
costs order against each other on a punitive scale albeit for
different reasons as aforementioned.
It is argued by the applicant
that the respondent only complied with their obligations to issue and
approve the Section 20 and
21 of the Firearms Act after the service
of the review application and later on, partially adhered to their
obligation as required.
As a result of the respondents’
non-compliance with their obligations, the applicant incurred
unnecessary legal costs. The
respondents are therefore liable for
applicant’s costs on a punitive scale. In a nutshell, the
respondents contend that the
applicant’s application was
launched prematurely and has become moot and academic.
[28]
The issue whether to award costs is
primarily based on two basic rules namely:
a)
That the award of costs is a matter of
judicial discretion by the court; and
b)
That the successful party should as a
general rule be awarded costs. See
Ferreira
v Levin N.O and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
CC
at 624 and
Fripp
v Gibbon and Company
1913
AD
at 354 – 357.
[29]
The purpose of an award of costs to a
successful litigant is to indemnify him for the expense which he has
be unnecessarily put
through. Costs on attorney and client (punitive
scale) will only be awarded in appropriate and exceptional
circumstances. A punitive
cost order may be awarded in the event
among others, that a litigant has been dishonest, reckless,
vexatious, frivolous and fraudulent.
Such an order may also be
granted where the exceptional circumstances and consideration justify
that a punitive cost order be awarded.
See
Nel
v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko – Operatiewe Ereeniging
1945 AD 597
.
[30]
The facts of each and every case has to be
considered by the court when exercising its discretion and has to be
fair and just to
all the parties. In this matter, the contents of the
respondents’ supplementary affidavit relating to the mootness
of the
applicant’s application remains unchallenged by the
applicant.
[31]
The court may dismiss a matter where the
relief sought will have no practical effect or result. I therefore
find that the respondents
should not have been put through the
process of the dealing with this application as it was only for
academic purpose with no practical
effect or result.
[32]
After careful consideration of the facts
and circumstances of this application, it cannot be said that there
is a flagrant misconduct
of any sort or recklessness on the part of
the applicant that warrant an award of costs on a punitive scale.
Order
[33]
I therefore make the following order:
33.1
The applicant’s application is
dismissed with costs.
S.S
MADIBA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT
: ADV. H.J BASSON
INSTRUCTED
BY
: MJ HOODS AND ASSOCIATES
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENTS
:
ADV I ELLIS (SC)
INSTRUCTED
BY
: THE STATE
ATTORNEY
DATE
OF HEARING
:
18
FEBRUARY 2022
DATE
JUDGMENT RESERVED
: 18 FEBRUARY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: ___ JUNE 2022
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