Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 983South Africa
Walker v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole and Others (38035/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 983 (5 December 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Walker v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole and Others (38035/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 983 (5 December 2022)
Walker v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services General KJ Sithole and Others (38035/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 983 (5 December 2022)
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sino date 5 December 2022
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG
DIVISION: PRETORIA)
(GAUTENG
DIVISION: PRETORIA)
Case
number: 38035/21
In
the matter between:
MARK
BRUCE
WALKER APPLICANT
AND
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES GENERAL KJ
SITHOLE
(IN
HIS CAPACITY AS REGISTRAR
OF
FIREARMS) 1ST
RESPONDENT
BRIGADIER
MABULE N.O.
HEAD
OF CENTRAL FIREARMS REGISTRY
(IN
HIS PERSONAL CAPACITY) 2ND
RESPONDENT
ADVOCATE
LUNGELWA CAROL SHANDI
N.O.
CHAIRPERSON OF APPEAL BOARD 3RD
RESPONDENT
THE
FIREARMS APPEAL BOARD 4TH
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF POLICE 5TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
#
#
# KHWINANA
AJ
KHWINANA
AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is a review application of the first respondent’s decision
to refuse amnesty
applications to the applicant for the following
firearms:
1.1
22 hornet Bolt Action Walter Rifle, serial no, 28037.
1.2
22 Remington Sako L46, serial no, 32749 (erroneously reflected by
third respondent
as 223 Remington)
1.3
7.65 Mauser 1914, serial no. 325812.
1.4
308 Winchester Churchill, serial no, 696929.
1.5
45-75 Winchester Centrefire, serial no. 43457
[2]
Alternatively, the reviewing and setting aside the decision of the
second and third respondents’
decision to refuse the
applicant’s appeal against the refusal to issue firearm
licenses to the applicant and deliver such
licenses to the police
station for collecting within 15(fifteen-days) from the date of
issue.
[3]
In addition, the applicant subsequent to the service of these papers
applies for review
and setting aside of refusal of:
3.1
Rossi M92 Puma, 38 Special/ 357 serial no, K062047.
3.2
30 30 Winchester Magnum, Model 91, serial no. 6133028.
3.3
Cogswell and Harrison, 375 Holland and Holland, serial no, 66854.
3.4
Westly Richards. 425 Magnum, serial no, 39885.
3.5
40 Snider rifle, serial no, WR118376.
[4]
The applicant seeks an order that the respondents pay costs jointly
and severally.
[5]
The respondent seeks that the review application be dismissed with
costs.
# BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
[6]
The applicant is an adult dentist with a degree in dental medicine
with identity number
700309 5070 08 9. He is a registered collector,
registered as such in terms of section 17 of the Firearms Control Act
with the
first respondent. He has numerous firearms licensed under
his name. He has not been accused nor convicted of any offence that
disqualify
him to own a firearm. He has a valid competency
certificate to collect firearms which expires on the 04th of December
2029. He
is compliant in terms of the competency provisions of the
Firearms Control Act.
[7]
He is a categorised C collector and all the firearms that are subject
of this review fall
within the C category. His competency category is
also that of C collector. He applied for amnesty at Randburg Police
Station in
May 2020. He says the firearms belonged to his father who
due to advancing age and ill-health had not renewed the licences
timeously.
He says the licenses were refused on the basis that
according to the deciding officer “You are not the current
holder of
surrendered firearm”.
[8]
The applicant says the decision is unreasonable and reviewable as the
appeal board stated
that the applicant’s case is incomplete
without merit which has not been explained. The applicant says the
appeal was based
on the following reasons firstly that there was
unfair administrative action. The board’s response is that the
appeal process
as part of the dispute resolution mechanism
sufficiently addressed his concern and that the applicant was
afforded the opportunity
to ventilate his issues and a further
hearing in that process.
[9]
The second reason advanced is that the request to argue the appeal
orally to wit the board
replied the issues were quite clear and could
be resolved without that. The applicant argues that the board is
scared of the public.
The third reason being that SAPS is obligated
to accept the applicant’s application and process it. The
applicant says the
application was considered but not assessed on
merits. The fourth reason is that being that an instruction was
issued by Lt General
Mkhwanazi that the matter had been dealt with
above as part of the subject of dismissal of this appeal, which the
applicant accepts
as correct.
[10]
The fifth reason being that the decision of the deciding officer was
irrelevant in terms of section 139(4),
the Sternberg Court Order and
the directive of the National Commissioner. The decision by the board
being that the matter had already
been dealt with and was the subject
matter of the dismissal of the appeal. The applicant invites the
appeal board to amplify the
reason herein. The sixth reason being
that the lawyer of the applicant should be contacted in the event of
a query on contents
for further information before an adverse
decision was made. The board opined that the applicant’s case
was clear and did
not require any further information before making
the decision. The applicant says the board should provide a precise
reason as
to why this is relevant.
[11]
The eighth reason is that the board has a duty assist the applicant
and the board acknowledged its duty but
found no reason nor
circumstances that would have called for same as it was not aware of
unknown requirements imposed on the applicant.
The applicant opines
that the application required amplification and the board failed to
advise the applicant. The ninth reason
is that of audi alteram and
deciding on basis of unknown internal policy or as a result of
documents in the board’s possession.
The board ruled that the
applicant was sufficiently heard on a clear resolution based on an
interpretation of the law and facts
before them.
[12]
The applicant says the Appeal board has failed to set out reasons for
the refusal of the appeal, despite
that he complied with the
requirements of the amnesty and the Firearms Control Act. The
applicant says the third and the fourth
respondent came to the
decision based on different reasons which were not disclosed. He
opines that same is irrational and unreasonable,
therefore falls to
be reviewed and set aside. The applicant says he will supplement his
hounding affidavit upon receipt of the
record. He says the
application for 22 Remington rifle has been approved. This the
applicant submits is a capricious inconsistent
decision on the part
of the first respondent because the same documents were submitted.
[13]
The respondents delivered a notice to oppose the application on the
02nd of September 2021. The applicant
caused an email to be
transmitted to the respondents’ attorneys on the 14th of
October 2021. The email stated that the period
within which the
opposing papers were to be filed had expired and the applicant was
allowing the respondents to deliver their answering
affidavit within
five days failing which an application to compel with an order of
punitive costs was going to be brought against
the respondent. On the
12th November 2021 an email was again transmitted to the respondents’
attorneys that notice to compel
and the founding affidavit is annexed
and receipt thereof was to be acknowledged.
[14]
On the 20th January 2022 the application was heard before the
Honourable Justice Van der Schyff wherein the
respondent was ordered
to file the record within ten days of service of this order, that the
respondent must file their answering
affidavit by no later than 15
days after the applicant files amended founding affidavit if
applicable and the respondent to pay
costs at attorney and client
scale.
[15]
The applicant has filed a supplementary affidavit pursuant to the
delivery of the record herein. The applicant
states that the appeal
was refused on the 17th of May 2021. The decision signed by four
members of the board states that “You
are not the current
holder of the surrendered firearm”. The applicant says a letter
dated 27th day of May 2021 states that
the decision of refusal was
based on the fact that the application lacks merit which is by the
third, fourth, and fith respondents.
The applicant says thus the
request for a punitive costs order as that is untrue.
[16]
On the 7th day of April 2021, the applicant says he requested the
fourth respondent’s file which has
not been provided. In the
record provided the is no original document submitted by the second
respondent. The applicant opines
that it was impossible for the third
and fourth respondents to make a decision on the basis that the
application was defective
because they did not have my original
submissions to consider. The applicant says the reasons by the third
and fourth respondents
are simply false and unsustainable. The
applicant says the respondents cannot raise new reasons whereas he
was not allowed to address
the board. He says he has been advised
that punitive costs order is warranted in this matter.
[17]
The third respondent has deposed to an answering affidavit wherein
she states that she is the major female
member of the appeal board
appointed by the Minister of Police. The third respondent raises a
defence of misjoinder against second
respondent who was cited without
laying a basis as to why he is a party to these proceedings and what
remedy he seeks from him.
The respondent says it is not clear which
decision or administrative act he wishes to review or set aside on
the part of the second
respondent. The respondent submits that
citation should be viewed as frivolous and vexatious with punitive
costs.
[18]
The applicant seeks to review and set aside of prayers 2 and 3 to
refuse the appeal as there is no basis
in law or facts for such
refusal. The respondents state that prayer 2 and 3 lack legal merit
and are to be found to be frivolous
and vexatious. The second
misjoinder is that of duplication of citing the Chairperson in her
representative capacity of the board
and further joining the board
separately, the adverse effect being costs payable jointly and
severally. The third respondent is
cited in her personal capacity
without laying any basis as to how she has been singled out of other
members of the board despite
that a collective decision was taken.
[19]
The respondent submits that in terms of Rule 17(4) of the Uniform
rules applicant cited the third respondent
without joining the board,
which constitute misjoinder and the request that application be
dismissed with punitive costs order.
[20]
The third respondent raises a point in limine of locus standi in that
she says the applicant lacked the legal
standing to apply for amnesty
in terms of section 139 (4) (a) and cannot seek in law that
appeal be reviewed and set aside.
The respondent submits that
granting prayer 1 will result in granting the applicant a right and
remedy he did not have in law,
that is applying for amnesty of
firearms that had a licence holder at the time of application for
amnesty was still alive and no
evidence of his incapacity to manage
his own affairs was submitted. In terms of section139(4)(a) “A
person who surrenders
a firearm in compliance with a notice published
in terms of subsection(1) may apply in terms of the Act for a licence
in respect
of that firearm”. The respondent submits that the
applicant must have been the person as per the Gazette. The
respondent
says the applicant is not that person as in there is no
averment in the papers that the applicant surrendered the firearms as
prescribed.
[21]
The applicant does not enjoy the protection under section 139(4)(a)
as he is not the license holder that
as envisaged. His father was
still alive and the allegation is that he developed dementia. There
is however no evidence that he
was unable to obtain the licenses for
firearms as their possession had become illegal in terms of section
28 of the Act. The guidelines
were issued on the 08th December 2020
after the applicant had lodged his amnesty application and appealed.
The requirement that
one was to physically surrender the firearms
within the validity period had not been met. The application did not
fall within the
ambit of deceased estates. The applicant was applying
for transfer of ownership of the said firearms whereas the licence
was issued
to another person.
[22]
The respondent contends that the applicant did not have the legal
standing to bring this application. The
application and the appeal
was dismissed on the said grounds of law that the applicant was not
the current holder of a licence
of the said firearms. The respondent
also submitted that additional guidelines allowed acceptance of
amnesty applications on the
basis that the person surrendering
firearms could not prove ownership of such firearm, which was said
not to extend to the applicant
either.
# LEGAL
MATRIX
LEGAL
MATRIX
[23]
Erasmus Superior Court Practice says, ”As a general rule the
requirements for locus standi in judicio
are as follows:
(a)
the plaintiff/applicant for relief must have an adequate interest in
the
subject matter of the litigation, which is not a technical
concept but is usually described as a direct interest in the relief
sought;
(b)
the interest must not be too far removed;
(c)
the interest must be actual, not abstract or academic;
(d)
the interest must be current interest and not hypothetical one
The
question whether a litigant is sufficient to clothe it with
locus
standi in judicio
must
be determined in light of the factual and legal circumstances of the
case.”
[1]
[24]
Schippers
JA said “The plaintiff must have an adequate interest in the
subject matter of the litigation, usually described
as a direct
interest in the relief sought; the interest must not be too remote;
the interest must be actual, not abstract or academic;
and it must be
a current interest and not a hypothetical one. The duty to allege and
prove locus standi rests on the party instituting
the
proceedings.
[2]
” and
enforcement of legislation pertaining to the control of firearms.”
[25]
The word “interest” in rule 28(1) has been interpreted to
mean a direct and substantial interest
which a person is required to
have in the subject matter before he or she can be said to have locus
standi in such a matter or
before such a person may be joined or be
allowed to be joined in proceedings. Direct and substantial interest
is a direct and substantial
interest in the order that a court is
asked to make in a matter. It is not enough if a person has an
interest in a finding or in
certain reasons for an order. The
interest must be in the order or the outcome of the litigation.
[26]
Froneman
J said “Gun ownership is not a fundamental right under our Bill
of Rights. It is a privilege regulated by law, under
the Firearms
Control Act 60/2000.”
[3]
The purpose of the Act is to: “(a) enhance the constitutional
rights to life and bodily integrity; (b) prevent the proliferation
of
illegally possessed firearms and, by providing for the removal of
those firearms from society and by improving control over
legally
possessed firearms, to prevent crime involving the use of firearms;
(c) enable the state to remove illegally possessed
firearms from
society, to control the supply, possession, safe storage, transfer
and use of firearms and to detect and punish the
negligent or
criminal use of firearms; (d) establish a comprehensive and effective
system of firearm control and management, and
(e) ensure the
efficient monitoring and enforcement of legislation pertaining to the
control of firearms.”
[27]
Section
139(4)(a)
[4]
A person who
surrenders a firearm in compliance with a notice published in terms
of subsection (1) may apply in terms of the Act
for a licence in
respect of that firearm.
# ANALYSIS
ANALYSIS
[28]
The applicant must have locus standi in order to bring an application
for amnesty. The applicant
in casu
has applied for amnesty
without surrendering the firearms. This is therefore not in line with
the procedure as outlined by the Minister.
It is so that one does not
have to be the owner of the said firearms. However
, in casu
what
is evident is that the firearms herein belonged to the father of the
applicant, who is alleged to suffer from dementia and
therefore is
the unlawful possessor of the firearms as his licence had expired.
[29]
There is no medical report submitted in so far as the said condition
is concerned. The respondent raises
the fact that the father of the
applicant was within his right to bring the application considering
that it has expired and accordingly
was the person with the locus
standi to bring the application. The respondent opines that this
would amount to giving the applicant
rights that he did not have in
law. I am inclined to agree as the father of the applicant is within
his right to bring the application.
There is no evidence that he has
been stripped of his rights and powers to bring the application.
[30]
It
was not the intention of the legislature to dispossess owners of
their right to ownership. The applicant’s father is alleged
to
be having a medical condition that has not been substantiated with
medical evidence. If it were to be accepted that that is
the
condition of the owner to wit the respondent has now become privy to.
The law is clear as per Rule 57 of the Uniform Rules
of Court.
[5]
There
is no evidence that the applicant has been granted permission to deal
with his assets. The respondents should put themselves
in a position
wherein they will have disowned the applicant’s father who if
recovers from the condition might sue the respondents
for the
diminished value of his estate.
[31]
In casu
there is information regarding the owner of the
firearms whom is related to the applicant. The taking of these
firearms will definitely
be transfer of ownership which will affect
the estate of the father of the applicant. It will be unheard of. The
applicant relies
on the caselaw by Van der Schyff however I do not
see a similarity in the matter. The application has been accepted, it
is not
of a deceased estate and the firearm herein is that of the
applicant’s father. The fact that the application has been
submitted
does not automatically mean that it has succeeded. The
applicant argues that the first respondent was not entitled to refuse
to
process the application on the basis that the applicant was not
the owner. The question that arises is can the respondents simply
disown the father of the deceased his firearm on the basis that his
son the applicant has brought an application for amnesty in
terms of
section 139(4)(a) of the Firearms Control Act.
[32]
The applicant’s attorney has mentioned one of the reasons being
that the third and fourth respondents
referred to policies unknown to
the applicant to wit the respondents applied. It is unheard of that
the applicant should approach
an institution and not familiarize
themselves with the legal principles that is applied. The reasoning
that was alluded to by the
applicant equates to one saying I did not
know. Ignorance of the law is not an excuse.
[32]
The applicant says there was a misinterpretation of the law by the
respondents thus some
are cited in their personal capacity without
following the rules. I am unable to find justification for the
joinder of the second
and the third respondents in their personal
capacity and costs order on a punitive scale.
# ORDER
ORDER
[33]
In a result, the application is dismissed with attorney and client
costs.
# ENB
KHWINANA
ENB
KHWINANA
ACTING
JUDGE OF NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants: Advocate
Snyman SC
Instructed
by: MJ
Hood Associates
For
the Respondents: Advocate
Job Molapo
Instructed
by: State
Attorney
Date
of Hearing 06
September 2022
Date
of Judgment 05
December 2022
[1]
D1-187 Vol 2 Van Loggerenberg
[2]
Four Wheel Drive CC v Leshni Rattan NO (1048/17)
[2018] ZASCA 124
(26 September 2018)
[3]
Minister of Safety and Security v South African Hunters and Game
Conservation Association
[2018] ZACC 14
[4]
Firearms Control Act.
[5]
(1) Any person desirous of making application to the court for an
order declaring another person (hereinafter referred to as
'the
patient') to be of unsound mind and as such incapable of managing
his affairs, and appointing a curator to the person or
property of
such patient shall in the first instance apply to the court for the
appointment of a curator ad litem to such patient.
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