Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 76South Africa
Puffin Fishing CC and Another v Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Enviroment and Others (11413/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 76 (11 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
11 March 2024
Headnotes
rights in the fishery during the period 2006 to 2020 for which it was re-applying,
Judgment
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## Puffin Fishing CC and Another v Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Enviroment and Others (11413/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 76 (11 March 2024)
Puffin Fishing CC and Another v Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Enviroment and Others (11413/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 76 (11 March 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 11413/2023
In the matter between:
PUFFIN FISHING
CC
First Applicant
RIVER QUEEN TRADING
499 CC
Second Applicant
and
MINISTER OF FORESTRY,
FISHERIES
AND THE ENVIRONMENT
First Respondent
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR-GENERAL: FISHERIES
MANAGEMENT
BRANCH
Second Respondent
ADVOCATE RADIA RAZACK
N.O.
Third Respondent
AND THE 4
th
TO 135
th
RESPONDENTS LISTED
IN ANNEXURE A TO THE
FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
12 February 2024, supplementary notes delivered on 14 and 19
February 2024
Delivered
electronically:
11 March 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE J
:
Introduction
[1] The
applicants (“Puffin” and “River Queen”
respectively) are close corporations
which conduct business in the
tuna pole fishing industry. On 12 July 2023 they launched this
application in two parts. In
Part A they sought certain interim
relief pending the determination of Part B. The Part A relief was
ultimately not pursued and
Part B came before me.
[2] In
their revised Part B they seek the review and setting aside of
certain decisions taken by the third
respondent delegated authority
(“DA”) and subsequently by the first respondent
(“Minister”) pursuant to
their internal appeals, together
with substitution relief. The application is opposed by the Minister,
second respondent and DA.
The other respondents are right holders in
the same industry. No relief is sought against them since according
to Puffin and River
Queen the orders sought do not impact on any of
their fishing rights or the number of crew they are presently
allocated. They are
thus cited merely as potentially interested
parties and they have not participated in these proceedings.
Relevant factual
background
[3]
On
28 January 2022 Puffin and River Queen each applied for
commercial tuna pole fishing rights for the period 1 March
2022
until 28 February 2037 in terms of s 18 of the Marine
Living Resources Act (“MLRA”)
[1]
in response to an invitation by the Minister issued in Government
Gazette 45504 of 19 November 2021. Both Puffin and River Queen
were
Category A applicants (i.e. one who held rights in the fishery
during the period 2006 to 2020 for which it was re-applying,
apparently extended until 31 December 2021 and thereafter until
31 March 2022).
[4] On
28 March 2022 Puffin was notified by the DA that its application was
unsuccessful since it scored
below the available effort allocated to
Category A applicants. “Available effort” means the
required measure of fishing
intensity based on historic performance.
The DA also provided a scoresheet in which she commented separately
(i.e. without
reference to any scoring) that ‘
[t]here
is a brother sister relationship between the applicant and another
Category C applicant, Hotline Fishing CC
[“Hotline”]
.
In accordance with the General Policy, a right may be granted to only
one such applicant. Hotline Fishing CC scored higher and
was granted
the right’.
[5] On
5 April 2022 Puffin lodged an internal appeal with the Minister in
terms of s 80 of the MLRA.
The Minister agreed with Puffin that
it was erroneously scored, but determined that the appeal should
nonetheless fail on the basis
that a brother-sister relationship
exists between Puffin and Hotline. She (incorrectly) found that the
DA made ‘
a decision’
on such a relationship, but
nothing much turns on this since it is common cause that an internal
appeal of this nature, being a
wide appeal, is essentially a
rehearing
de novo.
In particular the Minister determined that
‘
[i]n light of the shareholding of the two companies I am of
the view that the
majority shareholders have controlling
interests
in both entities which goes against the
intention in the General Policy’
(my emphasis). I will
accept that the Minister intended to refer instead to “close
corporations” and “members
interests”.
[6] On
22 March 2022 River Queen was notified by the DA that its application
had been excluded for failing
to effectively utilise its tuna
pole-line (“TPL”) right since it had not harvested the
required minimum of 25 tons
of tuna annually or a cumulative
amount of 175 tons over the period 2014 (when it was first
granted a right) until 2020.
[7] On
4 May 2022 River Queen lodged an internal appeal with the
Minister in terms of s 80 of the
MLRA. Its grounds of appeal
were essentially that, as submitted in its application to the DA, its
catches were lower than the required
minimum because (a) it targets
tuna for the sashimi and high-end international markets as was clear
from its fishing plan, and
as such its fishing strategy and targets
are not ‘
volume driven but quality driven’
; (b)
given its ‘
business and financial models’
it spent
considerable time, finances and resources sourcing and gearing the
right type of vessel over a period of 4 years, until
finally by 2021
a vessel was successfully deployed and produced 26 tons of high
quality tuna over a period of 90 days of fishing;
and (c) the
‘
rigid implementation’
of an annual minimum of
25 tons failed to recognise these factors.
[8] The
Minister found that River Queen ‘
did not deal with the
reasons for its poor catch records. This is ultimately the reason for
its exclusion.’
It is unclear from the appeal decision
whether the Minister was referring to the alleged failure to provide
reasons for the poor
catch records or to the poor catch records
themselves. The Minister noted that River Queen had caught a
cumulative total of 69
tons or an average of 10 tons per annum
during the period of the previously allocated right.
[9]
She
also noted the Sector Policy
[2]
provides that applicants who have failed to effectively utilise their
TPL right for the relevant period will be excluded ‘
unless
exceptional and compelling reasons exist’
;
River Queen had raised the changing of vessels but failed to provide
her with supporting documentation on how this impacted its
fishing
performance. She determined that:
‘
2.2.14
I
find that the Appellant has not furnished exceptional and compelling
circumstances which warrant its exemption of the application
of
paragraph 6.1(d) of the Sector Policy. To the contrary, the Appellant
seems to labour under the impression that it should be
exempt from
the Sector Policy due to its perceived unique selling proposition,
being the international markets it purportedly supplies.
2.2.15 Therefore,
I am of the view that the Appellant has failed to provide me with the
necessary evidence
demonstrating why it failed to effectively utilise
its Tuna Pole-Line right.
2.2.16 I
accordingly find that there are no exceptional and compelling
circumstances which warrant the decision
of the Delegated Authority
being overturned.’
Puffin review
[10] In
paragraph 8.3 of the Tuna General Published Reasons (“GPR”)
issued earlier by the DA
on 28 February 2022 she listed all
those entities ‘
which are suspected of having brother-sister
relations amongst them’.
Puffin and Hotline were not on
that list.
[11]
Clause
8.6.2 of the General Policy
[3]
provides that:
‘
8.6.2
Brother-Sister Cooperation
If two or more
companies which are owned and controlled by the same shareholders
apply for a commercial fishing right in any fishing
sector, the
Delegated Authority will consider allocating a fishing right to one
of the companies if two or more of the brother-sister
companies
qualify for a fishing right in that particular sector. The Delegated
Authority may also consider dividing one fishing
right between the
brother-sister companies if they all qualify for a fishing right in
the fishing sector applied for.’
[12] In
the case of Puffin there are five members, three of whom are Mr
Jendrik Heyn (10%), Ms Pauline Braun
(30%) and Mr David Dawson (10%).
Accordingly in total they make up 50% of Puffin’s members
interest. In the case of Hotline
there are three members, Mr Jendrik
Heyn (20%), Ms Pauline Braun (60%) and Mr David Dawson (20%), who
thus make up 100% of the
members interest.
[13]
According
to the DA and Minister, Puffin and Hotline are owned and controlled
by the same members, namely Heyn, Braun and Dawson.
The Minister
relied squarely on this reason in dismissing Puffin’s appeal.
However in the answering affidavit deposed to
by the second
respondent she maintained that ‘
the
significant overlap’
between Puffin and Hotline is also supported by the fact that they
share the same physical and postal addresses. This could not
have
been a reason for the Minister’s dismissal of the appeal since
it does not feature in her decision. It is thus fair
to infer that it
is an attempt to construct an
ex
post facto
rationalisation for a decision, which is not permissible.
[4]
[14] On
the plain wording of clause 8.6.2 there are two prerequisites for a
brother-sister relationship,
namely: (a) ownership; and (b) control,
by the same shareholders. Again, I accept that “shareholders”
may reasonably
be construed to also mean “members”. The
point however is that Puffin and Hotline do not meet the Minister’s
own requirement since the three members of Hotline cumulatively hold
50%, and no more, of the members interest in Puffin. Put differently
a cumulative 50% members interest in an entity would at best confer a
right to veto a decision, resulting in a deadlock. This does
not
equate to control.
[15]
In
the founding affidavit Puffin asserted that the Minister’s
decision on this score was unlawful since it was ‘
factually
and legally unsustainable’.
The specific ground in s 6 of PAJA
[5]
was not identified, and is often the case in PAJA reviews, the court
is left in the unenviable position of having to “box”
the
ground of complaint into one or more of the s 6 grounds. However
on the facts it appears that s 6(2)(e)(i) is most
apposite,
namely that the decision was taken for a reason not authorised by the
empowering provision (i.e. clause 8.6.2 of
the General Policy).
[16] Another
ground of complaint, not pursued with any vigour in argument, was
that the Minister ‘
irrationally and unlawfully failed to
ensure that the appeal process she adopted was fair and compliant
with section 33 of the Constitution’
in that she was
allegedly required to provide ‘
access to competitor
applications, evaluations and scoresheets and regulation 5(3) appeal
reports’
which somehow apparently constituted a ‘
fatal
violation’
of Puffin’s right to a fair and rational
appeal process.
[17] The
short answer to this is that Puffin singularly failed to motivate why
it was entitled to those records
and how the so-called failure to
provide them adversely impacted on its internal appeal. Moreover as
Puffin itself was constrained
to point out, on appeal the Minister
increased
its total score from 62.24% to 66.61% ‘
confirming
further that Puffin Fishing more than qualifies for a tuna-pole
fishing right’.
It follows that this ground of complaint is
devoid of merit.
[18] The
last ground of complaint was that its fishing right application was
impermissibly delegated to the
DA to determine, since she was not
qualified to do so on the basis that she was ‘
certainly no
expert in the field of fisheries management, let alone the tuna-pole
fishing sector’.
This complaint also has no merit because
on Puffin’s own version the DA relied on experts in the
industry approved by Puffin
itself to assist her in reaching her
decision.
River Queen review
[19] The
same grounds of complaint in respect of procedural fairness and
impermissible delegation were raised
by River Queen and my findings
in relation to Puffin pertain equally to these grounds.
[20] The
pertinent complaint of River Queen is encapsulated in the founding
affidavit as follows:
‘
52.
Had
the Delegated Authority considered River Queen’s fishing plan
which was appended to its application form as Annexure 5.1
(and
appended hereto marked “FA11”), it would have been
patently clear that River Queen’s entire business and
operating
model is predicated on the harvesting of tunas for the high-end
sashimi export markets. Its focus is not bulk harvesting
of tunas but
the selected harvesting of specific tunas for a very specific
market.’
[21] It
is contended that had the DA done so, a non-rigid and flexible
interpretation of clause 6(1)(d) of
the Sector Policy would have been
applied. The PAJA grounds relied on are 6(2)(e)(iii), i.e. the
failure to take relevant considerations
into account, and
s 6(2)(f)(ii)(cc), i.e. the decision was not rationally
connected to the information before her. A similar
complaint is made
in respect of the Minister’s decision to dismiss the appeal but
on the broader basis that she failed to
consider the reasons advanced
in the appeal as well as the fishing plan.
[22] Clause
4 of the Sector Policy sets outs its objectives, amongst others ‘
the
need to ensure
optimal, long-term and justifiable use
of marine living resources in order to ensure sustainable development
of the fishing sector to achieve inclusive economic growth…
and
to create sustainable employment
consistent
with the development objectives of National Government…’
(my emphasis). The MLRA obliges the responsible authorities to
achieve these objectives. In turn, one of the specific goals for
the
allocation of fishing rights in the tuna pole-line industry is the
improvement of catch performance to promote increases in
future
allocations (clause 4(c)).
[23] Clause
6.1 of the Sector Policy provides that the DA
will
exclude
applicants that fail to meet certain requirements ‘
unless
exceptional and compelling circumstances exist’
. One of
these exclusionary criteria is clause 6.1(d) which reads in relevant
part as follows:
‘
(d)
Non-utilization
Category A Applicants
that failed to effectively utilise their Tuna Pole-line fishing right
between the period 2014 to 2020 and/or
have not collected a catch
permit for any particular reason will be excluded.
Effective utilisation
shall mean activation and be issued with a permit to undertake
commercial fishing for tuna by means of the
pole-line method, landing
of catch and subsequent submission of catch data for at least six
years during the period 2014-2020.
In addition, during the same
period, previous Tuna Pole-line right holders will be expected to
have landed at least a total of
25 tonnes of large pelagic species
(tuna) for every fishing season that they were active or a cumulative
catch of ≥ 175
tonnes…’
[24]
The
founding affidavit makes clear that, in respect of the DA’s
determination, River Queen relies only on its fishing plan.
It
did not annex its full application which served before the DA, and
merely annexed its fishing plan to the founding affidavit
without
identifying the portions thereof upon which reliance was placed. This
is impermissible, as is established law.
[6]
The fishing plan is comprised of four pages. After setting out its
harvesting process, on-board handling and storage, offloading
and
processing methods, River Queen described its target market and
pricing as follows:
‘
Target market
Premium quality Yellowfin tuna is aimed at the high end sushi market.
There is both a local and international client
base for this.
Longfin tuna also has
a large fresh export component. The Longfin that gets frozen and
shipped to Spain is manufactured into tinned
tuna.
Pricing Our whole
process revolves around the delivery of the best possible fish so
that we can achieve the best possible financial
returns to make sure
our boat investments are sustainable.’
[25] It
is hardly surprising, in these circumstances, that the DA reached the
decision she did, since what
is contained in River Queen’s
fishing plan is skeletal at best. In its appeal to the Minister,
River Queen submitted in relevant
part that:
‘
Our client’s
application form (section 5) demonstrates that
[it]
applied
for its fishing permits, reported its catches and submitted all catch
levy returns. Its catches are lower than the annual
minimum of 25
tons for the following reasons:
·
Our
client targets tunas for the sashimi and high-end international
markets
as is clear from its fishing plan
. As
such, its fishing strategy and fishing targets are not volume driven
but quality driven. The rigid implementation of a minimum
annual
catch of 25 tons is irrational and unreasonable as it fails to take
into account that smaller vessels like that owned by
our client
targets a very high value, high-end tuna buyer and customer.
·
The
rigid implementation of an annual minimum of 25 tons fails to
recognise that (and demonstrates that the delegated authority
and her
advisers do not know or understand the tuna pole fishery) the fishery
essentially comprises two categories of boat owners.
Those large
vessels that target tunas principally for the frozen tuna and canned
tuna markets; and those smaller boat owners like
the applicant that
targets yellowfin tunas for the sashimi markets.
This
latter category of fisher does not target volumes as it would harm
access to the high value sashimi market
.
·
Finally,
because the applicant’s business and financial models are to
produce tunas for a sashimi market, it spent considerable
time,
finances and resources sourcing and gearing the right type of vessel.
This occurred over a period of 4 years as it first
attempted to use
the MFV Amber Rose which proved financially unviable. The applicant
thereafter refitted the 40ft Northern Star
but that vessel failed to
perform adequately. By 2021, the MFV Maverick was finally
successfully deployed and produced 26 tons
of high quality tunas over
a period of 90 days of fishing.
What is apparent is
that the DA failed to reasonably and properly apply her mind to our
client’s application and read our
client’s submissions in
Sections 1 and 5.’
[emphasis supplied: The
reference to ‘
Sections 1 and 5’
are presumably to
the application itself, which as previously stated was not placed
before the court.]
[26] Although
in this review River Queen relies only on its fishing plan and
subsequent motivation furnished
to the Minister, annexed to the
answering affidavit was its “application form”. The
second respondent pointed out that
when regard is had to that form,
it is apparent that River Queen has only two permanent, and four
part-time, employees in the fishing
industry. Also annexed to the
answering affidavit were copies of River Queen’s annual
financial statements for the years
ended February 2019 to February
2021 inclusive, and it was further pointed out that, when considered
cumulatively, River Queen
had been trading at a loss since 2016. This
is relevant to what the DA stated in the regulation 5(3) report:
‘…
the
rationale behind the policy is to exclude recreational
fishers/fishers who catch TPL as a side business, who go out a few
times
and take in big catches and don’t fish regularly. They
should be relying on the fishery for income and creating stable
permanent
employment by going out to fish consistently. This is why
the Policy set criteria for applicants to meet the catch threshold of
175 tons cumulative and 25 tons annual (which is very low) and
for utilisation for at least 6 years out of the 7, which shows
commitment to the fishery.’
[27] The
undisputed evidence of the second respondent was further that the
amount of 25 tons was determined
based on the average cumulative
catch in the tuna pole-line fishery during the previous FRAP (Fishing
Right Allocation Process)
period, and also taking into account that
many previous right holders rarely utilised their commercial tuna
pole-line fishing rights.
The 25 tons are therefore a tonnage that
can be achieved by the average vessel in the fishery. While dependent
on the fishing vessel,
25 tons can be achieved within 5 trips.
Evidently, very little is required of a right holder to meet the
effective utilisation
requirement.
[28] According
to the Minister she took into account that the Sector Policy aims to
address the issue of
under-utilisation as well as inefficient
utilisation of the resource given the poor performance during the
previous period. She
determined that consistent application of the
exclusionary criteria is important. She was of the view that it is
not punitive but
has a broader important policy objective meant to
ensure that South Africa remains competitive internationally, and
further that
recreational fishers are excluded. As set out in her
appeal decision, the Minister determined that River Queen failed to
provide
exceptional and compelling circumstances which warrant its
exemption from the application of clause 6.1(d) of the Sector Policy
for the reasons contained therein.
[29]
Given
that there is a review before me, not an appeal, I can do no better
than repeat what was held by the Constitutional Court
in
Bato
Star
:
[7]
‘
[48]
In
treating the decisions of administrative agencies with the
appropriate respect, a court is recognising the proper role of the
executive within the Constitution. In doing so a court should be
careful not to attribute to itself superior wisdom in relation
to
matters entrusted to other branches of government. A court should
thus give due weight to findings of fact and policy decisions
made by
those with special expertise and experience in the field…
Often a power will identify a goal to be achieved, but
will not
dictate which route should be followed to achieve that goal. In such
circumstances a court should pay due respect to the
route selected by
the decision-maker. This does not mean however that where the
decision is one which will not reasonably result
in the achievement
of the goal, or which is not reasonably supported on the facts or not
reasonable in the light of the reasons
given for it, a court may not
review that decision…’
[30] On
the evidence before me I am unable to find that either the DA or the
Minister took a decision which
would not: (a) reasonably result in
the achievement of the objectives contained in the Sector Policy; (b)
reasonably be supported
on the facts; or (c) be reasonable in light
of the reasons given. This dispenses with the contention that both
the DA and the Minister
should have applied a more flexible approach.
[31] However
for the sake of completeness I deal briefly with River Queen’s
related complaint that
in two other instances the Minister overturned
the DA’s decision to exclude another historic right holder for
failing to
adequately utilise its tuna pole fishing right. The first
is that of Gold Medallion Investments (Pty) Ltd; but since River
Queen
singularly failed to provide the court with even a broad
overview as to why this entity’s appeal was successful, I am
unable
to consider it.
[32] The
other is Pelagic Trading (Pty) Ltd. It is clear however from the
relevant appeal decision that the
Minister determined the existence
of exceptional and compelling circumstances since ‘
the
Appellant was only allocated a right on appeal and started fishing in
2017 and thereafter managed to land an average catch of
25 tons
annually. I am convinced that this is evidence of the existence of
exceptional and compelling circumstances that warrant
the Appellant
to be exempted from the application of clause 6.1(d) of the Sector
Policy’.
Nothing to this effect was contended by River
Queen and moreover the successful Pelagic Trading appeal demonstrates
that despite
effective utilisation remaining an important
consideration, the Minister considered each appeal on its particular
facts, which
lends credence to her assertion that she applied her
mind in the exercise of her discretion in the instant matter. It
follows that
the River Queen review must fail.
Puffin:
substitution or remittal, and if remittal whether to Minister or DA
[33] In
the founding affidavit it was submitted that should the reviews be
upheld the court should substitute
‘
the impugned decision’
with one granting Puffin and River Queen a commercial tuna pole
fishing right ‘
on the same terms as those determined by the
Minister as being applicable to current right holders’
together with an order directing that permits to this effect be
issued within 10 days.
[34] Given
my findings in respect of River Queen it is only necessary to
consider whether it would be appropriate
to make such an order in
relation to Puffin. During argument counsel for Puffin appeared to
accept that the court cannot do so,
since according to the second
respondent there are presently 131 right holders in the fishery who
are cumulatively permitted to
operate 140 vessels, and this court has
no idea of what the terms of their fishing rights are.
[35] In
any event, in my view this is one of those cases where a substitution
of this nature would definitely
cross the line in breach of the
separation of powers doctrine, since by no stretch of the imagination
could I be considered in
as good a position as the functionary
concerned to determine the terms of a tuna pole fishing right for a
Category A applicant.
The furthest I can go is to grant Puffin a
right in terms of s 18 of the MLRA and defer (i.e. remit)
to the functionary
what its terms should be (including allocation of
effort and permit conditions in terms of s 13 of the MLRA). This
is particularly
so given the level of expertise required and
policy-laden nature of these allocations.
[36] Counsel
for Puffin submits that I should remit to the Minister since it is
she who corrected the DA’s
erroneous scoring and granted Puffin
an increased final score of 66.61%. This makes sense since at least
to this extent the DA
is
functus officio
, and it was not the
DA, but the Minister, who made the determination on the
brother-sister relationship. I thus disagree with counsel
for the
Minister, second respondent and DA that I should instead remit to the
DA for, amongst others, Puffin and Hotline ‘
to be rescored’
,
given also that Hotline elected not to participate in the review
despite surely having been aware that Puffin scored higher on
appeal.
In any event it is Puffin which has willingly forfeited its right to
any internal appeal against a determination by the
DA in seeking a
remittal only to the Minister, and which will again be limited to
approaching court for a further review if dissatisfied
with the
outcome.
Costs
[37] The
applicants have only been partially successful. In addition various
points and grounds of complaint
were effectively abandoned during
argument, and for reasons which are unexplained both applicants took
it upon themselves to make
unseemly and unwarranted
ad hominem
attacks on both the DA and the Minister. In the circumstances the
appropriate order to make is the one that follows.
[38]
The
following order is made:
1.
The
decision by the first respondent to refuse the first applicant a
commercial tuna pole fishing right on the basis that it is
related by
application of the “brother-sister” relationship
criterion to Hotline Fishing CC is reviewed and set aside;
2.
The
first applicant is granted a commercial tuna pole fishing right in
terms of section 18 of the Marine Living Resources Act 18
of 1998
(“MLRA”) for the period 1 March 2022 until 28 February
2037 on such terms as the first respondent may determine
in terms of
section 13 of the MLRA;
3.
Save
as aforesaid the application is dismissed; and
4.
Each
party shall pay their own costs.
J I CLOETE
For applicants
:
Adv S Moolla
Instructed by
:
Smith & Associates (Mr D Smit)
For first to third
respondents
: Adv J De Waal SC with Adv R Matsala
Instructed by
:
State Attorney (Mr L Manuel)
[1]
No 18 of 1998.
[2]
Tuna Pole-Line Fishery Policy: 2021.
[3]
General Policy on the Allocation of Fishing Rights:
2021 published in GG 45504 of 19 November 2021, also referred
to in
relation to the invitation at para 3 of this judgment.
[4]
National
Lotteries Board and Others v South African Education and Environment
Project
2012
(4) SA 504
(SCA) at para [27].
[5]
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[6]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v Government of the Republic of South Africa
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 324F-G, since followed consistently in a long line
of cases.
[7]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (7) BCLR 687
(CC).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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