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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Buffeljagsbaai Marine Company (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Environment and Others (7633.2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 258 (9 September 2024)
Buffeljagsbaai Marine Company (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Environment and Others (7633.2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 258 (9 September 2024)
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sino date 9 September 2024
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case Number: 7633/2022
In the matter between:
BUFFELJAGSBAAI
MARINE COMPANY
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF
FORESTRY,
FISHERIES
AND THE ENVIRONMENT
First
Respondent
THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF
THE FISHERIES
BRANCH OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF FORESTRY,
FISHERIES
AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Second
Respondent
BUFFELJASBAAI SEA
WHALE
PRIMARY
CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED
Third
Respondent
Coram:
Heard:
Order granted:
Reasons requested:
Reasons delivered:
Wille, J
7 August 2024
23 August 2024
29 August 2024
9 September 2024
REASONS
WILLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant sought interim interdictory relief to restrain the
third respondent
from harvesting seaweed in a specified area pending
the outcome of a judicial review that the applicant had launched and
an internal
administrative appeal it had pursued. Both these are yet
to be decided.
[1]
[2]
The applicant also sought an order declaring that pending the
outcomes of the review
and appeal, it would be entitled to continue
harvesting seaweed in the concession area. A portion of this interim
relief was granted.
[2]
[3]
The applicant held a commercial fishing right to harvest seaweed in
the concession
area, which expired at the end of the medium-term
fishing rights allocation period. The applicant was, after that,
again granted
the right to harvest seaweed in the concession area in
the long-term fishing rights period, which has since also expired.
[3]
[4]
Subsequently, the applicant applied to renew its commercial seaweed
fishing right
in the long-term fishing rights allocation period and
through this process. Its application was refused, and the reason
given by
the delegated authority for rejecting the applicant’s
application was that the applicant had failed to use its fishing
right
throughout the long-term fishing period, optimally. Thus, the
applicant approached the court not only in its interests but also
in
the local community's interests. I accepted that the applicant also
acted in the interests of others concerning the alleged
infringement
of a constitutional right.
[4]
CONTEXT
[5]
The applicant appealed the rejection of its application and focused
on addressing
the delegated authority’s finding that it had
failed to optimally use its fishing right during the previous
long-term rights
period. Also, the applicant applied for an exemption
to enable it to continue harvesting seaweed in the concession area
until its
appeal had been decided.
[5]
[6]
An exemption was granted to it with a limited duration expiring at
the end of that
season. This limited exemption would endure until the
allocation of small-scale fishing rights or until the applicant’s
appeal
was granted.
[6]
[7]
In the interim period, the applicant applied for these limited
exemptions until about
six years ago, when the applicant's appeal was
formally rejected. The decision to refuse the applicant’s
appeal was not communicated
to the applicant despite the passage of
about five years.
[7]
[8]
Precisely because of this communication failure, the applicant was
granted another
exemption to harvest seaweed in the concession area
subject to the following conditions; (a) the exemption was only valid
for the
harvesting of seaweed in the concession area, (b) the
exemption was only valid until small-scale fishing rights were
allocated,
(c) the exemption would automatically expire as soon as
seaweed fishing rights were allocated to the small-scale fishing
sector,
and (d) the applicant was to apply for a permit to undertake
fishing of seaweed.
[8]
[9]
As alluded to earlier, the applicant applied for and was granted
annual permits to
harvest seaweed in the concession area for another
five subsequent annual fishing seasons. As soon as the applicant
learned of
the decision to refuse its appeal, the applicant brought
its application to review and set the decision aside.
[9]
[10]
About a year ago, the second respondent, the delegated authority in
the small-scale fisheries
sector, allocated long-term small-scale
fishing rights to the third respondent. The third respondent was
granted the right to harvest
several marine living resources. Among
these marine living resources rights, was the right to harvest some
of the seaweed in the
concession area.
[10]
[11]
Because of these competing rights in the local community, a meeting
was held in the local community
town hall to consider how to deal
with the grant of the small-scale fishing right to the third
respondent. Most of the community
members opposed the granting of
this right to harvest seaweed in the concession area to the third
respondent.
[11]
[12]
Shortly after the meeting, the applicant appealed against the second
respondent’s decision
to allocate the small-scale fishing right
to harvest seaweed in the concession area to the third respondent. It
also appealed against
the allocation of seaweed fishing rights to any
other persons in the concession area.
[12]
[13]
In its small-scale appeal application, the applicant suggested
benefitting the entire local community
by keeping the seaweed
resources traditionally used by fishing communities for that
community. This would mean that only a portion
of the resources
allocated to the third respondent for the harvesting of seaweed would
potentially be removed from their allocation
and some of these
seaweed allocation rights to be awarded to the applicant.
[13]
[14]
Because the decision in connection with the applicant’s appeal
remained outstanding, the
applicant applied for an annual permit to
harvest seaweed in the concession area for the current fishing
season. This application
was made in terms of the old exemption
regime. The applicant’s annual permit was refused on the basis
that this exemption
process was no longer valid and found no
application
because
of the allocation of small-scale fishing rights.
[14]
[15]
Despite the pending appeal against the second respondent’s
decision and the pending review
of the first respondent’s
decision, the second respondent issued a permit to the third
respondent to harvest seaweed in the
concession area for eight months
with no limit placed on the quantity of seaweed which the third
respondent could harvest (save
for fresh fronds).
[15]
CONSIDERATION
[16]
In this matter, only interim relief was granted, which did not
require that a right be established
on a balance of probabilities.
Where a right is infringed, which involves a review or appeal, the
prospects of success in the contemplated
review or appeal represent
the measure of the strength of the right which the applicant must
establish
prima
facie
to obtain interim relief. Thus, it is unnecessary to show in this
interdict application that the review (or appeal) will succeed.
[16]
[17]
The third respondent’s small-scale fishing right was granted to
it by the second respondent,
acting as a delegated authority. The
applicant was entitled to appeal against the grant of this right,
which it did insofar as
it related to the grant of a right to harvest
seaweed in the concession area. As an interim measure only, the
applicant sought
to interdict the harvesting of seaweed by the third
respondent in terms of the right allocated to it by the second
respondent.
[17]
[18]
The respondents took the position that the applicant’s pending
appeal against the second
respondent’s decision does not have
the effect of suspending that decision as a matter of law. This is
contrary to the principle
that the presumptive effect of an appeal
against an administrative decision is that the effect of the decision
is suspended. In
the absence of anything negating the common law
presumption, it must be accepted as applying, and it follows that the
third respondent
has no ‘cognizable’ entitlement to
undertake small-scale seaweed harvesting in the concession area
pending the appeal.
[18]
[19]
It seemed to me from a review of the papers that the grant of the
small-scale right to the third
respondent regarding its alleged right
to harvest seaweed was suspended by the lodging of the applicant’s
appeal, and its
permit to undertake seaweed harvesting was issued
only after that date. I reasoned that the issuing of this permit
after the third
respondent’s fishing right had been suspended
was on the face of it irregular.
[19]
[20]
Thus, the issue for consideration was whether this previous decision
by the second respondent
to award a small-scale right to harvest
seaweed to the third respondent in the concession area was unlawful
or not. What weighed
heavily with me in this connection was the
applicant’s harvesting of this seaweed over the past twenty
years and the benefits
the local community had enjoyed because of
this permission to harvest seaweed in this concession area.
[20]
[21]
After applying a constitutional lens to these facts, I was urged to
make a just and equitable
order and to grant the appropriate relief
concerning the alleged infringement of the rights held by both the
applicant and the
third respondent. I reasoned that it would have
been inappropriate and legally unsound to have weighed these
competing rights in
discrete compartments rather than adopting a
holistic approach. I say this because the applicant approached the
court in its interest
and on behalf of a broader public interest and
was accordingly
prima
facie
entitled to seek to interdict the third respondent from undertaking
the harvesting of seaweed in the concession area.
[21]
[22]
The applicant has been prevented from harvesting seaweed in the
concession area solely because
of the grant of the small-scale
fishing right to the third respondent. Put another way, the
applicant’s exemption would have
remained in place because the
applicant’s exemption would continue to apply for so long as
small-scale rights to harvest
seaweed were not allowed to be
exercised in the concession area.
[22]
[23]
I reasoned that the applicant,
prima
facie
at least, was legally positioned to have the second respondent’s
grant of a small-scale seaweed fishing right to the third
respondent
set aside. Because of this prospective relief being granted (
prima
facie
),
the applicant was also legally positioned to be given a right to
harvest seaweed following its review of the first respondent’s
decision.
[23]
[24]
The extent and nature of the relief under the just and equitable
umbrella also bore scrutiny
because of the importance of effectively
vindicating rights that have been ostensibly violated. I was enjoined
to provide practical,
enforceable, and effective relief concerning
what I perceived to have been an infringement of a constitutional
right.
[24]
[25]
The third respondent had to adequately address why it should be
allowed to harvest seaweed in
the concession area rather than the
applicant, who had previously done so for over two decades to its
benefit and the benefit of
the local community. To have refused the
interim relief would have perpetuated the notion that the applicant
and the local community
should abandon their rights (or had no
rights) despite their pending review and pending appeal.
[25]
[26]
Because constitutional rights were in issue, the most appropriate
effective remedy in the circumstances
would be to allow the applicant
to continue harvesting seaweed in the concession area in the way it
had historically been allowed
to do so, pending the determination of
its review proceedings and its appeal. No other remedy was available
to the applicant. The
first and second respondents would not suffer
any real harm if interim relief was granted. I say this because this
harm (if any)
could only manifest in a short delay in harvesting
seaweed in the concession area. After all, the third respondent was
awarded
other small-scale fishing rights and not only the right to
harvest seaweed in the concession area.
[26]
[27]
Put another way, if the third respondent was permitted to continue to
harvest seaweed in the
concession area and after that, the
applicant’s appeal or review was to succeed, the relief
available to the applicant would
then self-evidently be limited by
the additional prejudice which the third respondent would be able to
rely on in consequence of
its continued operations, potentially
rendering the applicant’s appeal and review proceedings an
exercise in futility.
[27]
[28]
To the extent that interdictory relief restrains the constitutional
and statutory powers and
duties of a state functionary, the test must
also be applied in a manner that is mindful of the separation of
powers. However,
this does not change the ordinary test for interim
relief. It merely requires that where a party seeks to restrain an
organ of
state from conducting statutory powers, there must be some
assessment of the separation of powers when determining the issue of
the balance of convenience.
[28]
[29]
The relief sought in this application did not prevent the respondents
from exercising their statutory
power. Even if I were wrong, and it
did, the balance of convenience dictated that the interim relief
should have been granted.
I say this because the applicant's
constitutional rights (and, to a lesser extent, those of the local
community and the third respondent)
featured prominently in this
application. Thus, the balance of convenience dictated the protection
of those rights. Further, if
there is uncertainty about the harm that
may be suffered, a risk-averse and cautious approach must be
followed.
[29]
[30]
By elaboration, the applicant advanced the position that it could
potentially be allocated small-scale
fishing rights under its review
of the first respondent’s decision. This was so because the
review focused on the first respondent’s
failure to deal with
the applicant’s appeal, which had focused on the reason given
by the delegated authority for having
denied it a fishing right.
[30]
[31]
Thus, the argument is that the first respondent should have engaged
with this ground of appeal.
The only explanation is that the second
respondent suggests that the first respondent refused the applicant’s
appeal because
the concession area was reserved for the small-scale
fishing sector.
[31]
[32]
In addition, if the first respondent had relied on a different reason
for refusing the applicant
a seaweed harvesting right in the
concession area, it was done without allowing the applicant to
address the first respondent for
this different reason. This would
have been procedurally unfair, rendering the applicant’s right
of appeal illusory.
[32]
[33]
The only ground that remained for disputing the validity of the
applicant’s review was
predicated on what the first and second
respondents perceived to have been the applicant’s unreasonable
delay in launching
its review application. It did, however, seem
doubtful that the applicant was ever provided with the first
respondent’s decision
letter, and, accordingly, the applicant
had no reason to believe that the first respondent had decided its
appeal. Aside from the
fact that the second respondent failed to
notify the applicant of the outcome of its appeal, it facilitated the
applicant’s
belief that no decision had been taken by
continuing to issue exemptions and annual permits to the
applicant.
[33]
CONCLUSION
[34]
I did not grant the relief sought by the applicant that the first and
second respondents issue
the applicant with further permits pending
the determination of the review, alternatively, the appeal, as in my
view, this could
or would have amounted to impermissible judicial
overreach. These are my reasons for granting a portion of the interim
relief sought
by the applicant.
[34]
E.D. WILLE
Cape Town
[1]
The
specified area is “Concession Area 5” (from now on
referred to as the “concession area”).
[2]
The
relief directing the respondents to issue the necessary permits to
harvest seaweed was refused.
[3]
This
expired in 2015.
[4]
Freedom
Under Law v Acting Chairperson: Judicial Service Commission
2011 (3)
SA 549 (SCA).
[5]
This
exemption was granted for a limited period only.
[6]
The
exemption was to endure until the end of 2017.
[7]
The
decision was only communicated to the applicant on 30 March 2023.
[8]
The
applicant was obliged to apply for a permit for each subsequent
season.
[9]
The
application was piloted on 22 August 2023.
[10]
The
applicant’s members and the third respondent’s members
were members of the same local community.
[11]
It
seemed to me that the local community was divided or undecided on
the rights granted to the third respondent.
[12]
There
seemed to be no undue delay by the applicant.
[13]
The
third respondent had been awarded other fishing rights in its
“basket” of allocation.
[14]
This
effectively prevented the applicant from applying for an annual
permit.
[15]
With
effect from 8 April 2024 to 28 February 2025.
[16]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association [2022] ZACC at
para [213].
[17]
This
relief was only piloted as interim relief.
[18]
It
was submitted that the third respondent had no such entitlement at
all.
[19]
On
8 April 2024.
[20]
Nersa
v PG Group
2020 (1) SA 450 (CC).
[21]
Kommissaris
van Binnelandse Inkomste v Van der Heever
1999 (3) SA 1051 (SCA).
[22]
The
applicant’s review application is focused on this small-scale
rights grant.
[23]
The
third respondent had been granted other marine resource harvesting
rights.
[24]
Tswelopele
Non-profit Organisation and Others v Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
2007 (6) SA 511
(SCA).
[25]
Candid
Electronics v Merchandise Buying Syndicate
1992 (2) SA 459
(C) at
464I-465D.
[26]
The
harvesting of seaweed was but one of the rights in their fishing
rights basket.
[27]
Van
der Westhuizen and Others v Butler and Others
2009 (6) SA 174 (C).
[28]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
2012 (6) SA 223
CC.
[29]
WWF
South Africa v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and
others
2019 (2) SA 403
(WCC) at [104].
[30]
Namely,
the
failure
to “optimally utilise’” its fishing right in the
long-term rights period
[31]
I
reasoned that the applicant should be given an opportunity to deal
with this “new” ground for the refusal.
[32]
Sections
3(1), 6(2)(b), 6(2)(c), 6(2)(d), 6(2)(e)(iii), 6(2)(e)(vi), 6(2)(f),
6(2)(h) and 6(2)(i) of PAJA.
[33]
The
respondents did not adequately deal with or engage with this issue.
[34]
Only
portion of the interim relief requested was granted.
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