Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 283South Africa
Ex Parte Viking Fishing A Division of Sea Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others (AC16/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 283 (30 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
30 September 2024
Judgment
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## Ex Parte Viking Fishing A Division of Sea Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others (AC16/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 283 (30 September 2024)
Ex Parte Viking Fishing A Division of Sea Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others (AC16/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 283 (30 September 2024)
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sino date 30 September 2024
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town
(In
the exercise of its admiralty jurisdiction)
Case
No: AC16/2024
In
the
ex parte
application of:
VIKING
FISHING A DIVISION OF
SEA
HARVEST CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
ANTHEA
MELISA THOMPSON
Second
Applicant
GAIL
CHARLEEN KLEINSMIDT
Third
Applicant
LYLE
LILIAN COETZEE
Fourth
Applicant
ALISON
MINNIES
Fifth
Applicant
GERTRUDE
FARO
Sixth
Applicant
ELMINA
TATUM TITUS
Seventh
Applicant
FAIEKE
CHARLES
Eighth
Applicant
JENOBIA-LEE
SWIERS
Nineth
Applicant
VERONICA
FRANCES BOUKERS
Tenth
Applicant
EDINE
BENELIZE SIAS
Eleventh
Applicant
LENA
ISSACS
Twelfth
Applicant
In
re: application for an order presuming the death of the below
mentioned seafarers
(“the missing crew”)
onboard
mfv
LEPANTO
on 17 May 2024: -
Ashwell
Solomon Peter Thompson
Christian
Steven Kleinsmidt
Jeremia
Coetzee
Jeremy
Neil Minnies
Johan
Faro
Marshall
Titus
Mohammad
Faadiel Groenewald
Wilfred
Johannes Swiers
William
Frank Boukers
Eusibio
Cornelius Sias
Johnwill
Leonard Issacs
Heard:
18 September 2024
Delivered
(electronically): 30 September 2024
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
1.
Introduction
[1]
This is an
ex parte
application for the presumption of death
of eleven crew members who were on board the mfv
Lepanto
when
this Vessel suddenly capsized and sank at sea on 17 May 2024 at
approximately 14h30 about 34 nautical miles off Hout Bay.
The
applicants pray for a final order declaring that the missing
seafarers in respect of this application be presumed dead. In
the
alternative, the applicants sought an order that a rule nisi be
issued, calling for interested parties to appear on a date
to be
determined by this court and say why an order for final relief should
not be granted.
2.
Background Facts
[2]
On 17 May 2024, the seafarers
("the missing crew")
of the mfv
Lepanto
disappeared at sea when their Vessel
suddenly capsized and sank at 14h30 approximately 34 nautical miles
off Hout Bay. Pursuant
thereto, the applicants brought this
application for an order that the missing crew on board the Vessel be
presumed dead. The first
applicant is Viking Fishing, a division of
Sea Harvest Corporation (Pty) Ltd, a company duly incorporated in
accordance with the
company laws of South Africa, with its registered
address at South Arm Road, Table Bay Harbour, Cape Town, Western
Cape. Sea Harvest
is the registered owner of the Vessel that
disappeared on 17 May 2024 with the missing crew. Viking operated the
Vessel at the
time that it capsized and sank.
[3]
At the time of their disappearance, the missing crew were employed by
Viking in terms
of temporary employment contracts. Given that the
missing crew were employed on board the Vessel of Viking, Viking
brought this
application to assist the missing crew's families to
obtain a final order from this Court presuming the missing crew dead
so that
death certificates can be obtained from the Department of
Home Affairs. The second to the tenth applicants are the respective
family
members of the missing crew in respect of this application.
[4]
The applicants assert that the missing crew set sail from Table Bay
Harbour on 14
May 2024. The survivors of the tragedy on board the
Lepanto
reported that after the fishing operations were
completed on Friday, 17 May 2024, and at approximately 14h30, the
crew were working
the fish away, and the Skipper was steaming. The
Vessel thereafter suddenly listed to starboard, capsized and then
sank at the
stern. The surviving crew inflated one of the life rafts
and made their way into it before the Vessel sank.
[5]
According to the National Sea Rescue Institute
("NSRI")
report dated 22 May 2024 and the South African Maritime Rescue
Coordination Centre
("MRCC")
report dated 21 June
2024, when this tragedy unfolded, the FV ARMANO was approximately 1
nautical mile away and saw the
Lepanto
Vessel sink. The FV
ARMANO radioed the MRCC a mayday relay. At 15h39, the NSRI received a
call from the Emergency Operations Centre
regarding a Mayday radio
message. The MRCC immediately triggered an emergency response, with
all vessels in the vicinity of the
sinking vessel proceeding to the
location of the casualty to carry out a search. The MRCC provided the
Vessels with a search pattern
and deployed life rafts and fishing
boats in the area to search for survivors. More fishing Vessels
responded to assist with the
rescue.
[6]
Around 16h03, the FV ARMANO reported that more fishing Vessels
responded to assist
with the rescue. At 16h06, it was reported that
of the 20 total crew in the sinking Vessel, 9 had been recovered onto
the FV ARMANO,
and 11 were still missing or unaccounted for. At
16h48, the FV ARMANO reported that the crew rescued from the Vessel
had been removed
from the life raft and were on deck. The search for
the missing crew continued diligently until 18 May 2024 by the MRCC
and NSRI,
and the missing crew were not found. The MRCC and NSRI
reports show that an extensive search and rescue operation was
activated
following the Mayday relay received from the FV ARMANO.
[7]
All fishing Vessels in the immediate vicinity of the
Lepanto
and helicopter services were utilized during the search and rescue
operation. No sign of life for the missing crew was found during
the
search and rescue operation, and only a few pieces of debris were
spotted and retrieved. Despite an extensive two-day search
and rescue
operation, there was no sign of the missing crew. The search and
rescue operation were called off at 21h00 on 18 May
2024.
3.
Principal submissions by the Applicants’ Counsel
[8]
At the hearing of this matter, the applicants' Counsel implored the
court to grant
a final order so that the applicants can have closure.
Counsel submitted that a
rule Nisi
would lead to a delay in
the registration and administration of the estate of the missing
crew. Counsel further submitted that this
matter is different in that
it is known that the missing crew perished at sea, and it is unlikely
that the missing crew are alive.
The applicants' Counsel prayed that
the court grant the final order sought in the notice of motion.
4.
Applicable Legal Principles
[9]
This is a maritime claim as contemplated in section 1(1)(f) and (s)
of the Admiralty
Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983. This Court
accordingly has jurisdiction in terms of section 2(1) of this Act.
More so,
it is common cause that the missing crew with respect to
this application were domiciled within the jurisdiction of this
Court.
[1]
This is the
appropriate court with jurisdiction to consider this application and
grant the relief sought.
[10]
The applicants seek an order that the missing crew be presumed to
have died on 17 May 2024. A
court may, in certain circumstances, upon
the application of any interested party, presume the death of a
missing person and grant
an order to that effect. The Court requested
to presume the death of a person will not do so unless it is
satisfied that such can
rightly and should, therefore, be inferred on
a preponderance of probabilities from the evidence adduced in the
proceedings.
[2]
Whether the
inference can rightly be drawn in any given case is always a question
of fact, the answer to which depends on its own
particular
circumstances. The applicant must prove on a balance of probabilities
that the missing person is dead.
[3]
[11]
A person’s death is not presumed lightly, and it is thus
required that the applicant bring
all relevant facts and
circumstances to the attention of the court.
[4]
Whether an order presuming the death of a person will be granted
depends on the circumstances of each case. Factors which may be
of
importance in this regard are the age, occupation of the missing
person, the risk to which he was exposed and the circumstances
under
which he disappeared.
[5]
The
fact that a person disappeared in an intrinsically dangerous
situation or area will usually tip the scale in favour of granting
a
presumption order that he is dead.
5.
Discussion
[12]
It is common cause that the missing crew in this matter were on board
Lepanto
Vessel when it sunk and disappeared 34 nautical miles
off Hout Bay. Their names appear on the crew list marked TR1 attached
to
the applicants' application. They worked for the first applicant,
and their employment contracts were also attached to the application.
From the available evidence, 20 crew members were on board the sunken
Vessel and 9 of them survived the tragedy. Despite the diligent
search, to date, no other Vessel or person has reported any sighting
of any of the missing crew, nor have their bodies been sighted
or
retrieved. When the Vessel sank, the surviving crew managed to
inflate one of the life rafts and made their way into it before
the
Vessel sank. However, the missing crew were not located following the
sinking of the Vessel.
[13]
In my view, it is extremely unlikely that the missing crew would have
survived a swim to shore,
particularly in the very cold water. It has
been four months since the tragedy, and no one has seen them. No sign
of life was found
during the search and rescue operation, and only a
few pieces of debris were spotted and retrieved. The missing crew, in
my view,
disappeared at sea, an intrinsically dangerous area. They
were involved in an occupation that endangered life. In my view,
their
disappearance at sea tips the scale in favour of granting the
applicants' application.
[14]
At the hearing of this application, I thought of acting
ex
abudanti cautela
by granting an interim order calling upon
interested parties (if any) to show cause on the return date why a
final presumption
order of death regarding the missing crew should
not be granted. However, after considering the circumstances of this
matter, the
crew list attached to the application, their employment
contracts, and the reports of the MRCC and NSRI, I am of the view
that
such an order would only serve to delay matters and would serve
no purpose other than incurring further expenses associated with
the
publication and the second appearance of Counsel on the return date.
From the available evidence, it is apparent that the missing
crew
were together with the surviving crew at sea when the disaster
occurred. The applicants, with the assistance of the surviving
crew,
have explicitly explained how the accident leading to the
disappearance of the missing crew occurred.
[15]
Despite the extensive search at sea that lasted for two days, there
was no sign of life for the
missing crew. The overwhelming evidence
from the surviving crew is that after fishing operations were
completed on Friday, 17 May
2024, at approximately 14h30, the crew
were working the fish away, and the Skipper was steaming. Their
Vessel, suddenly listed
to starboard, capsized and sank at the stern.
Evidently, the missing crew were exposed to a dangerous and
life-threatening accident.
In my view, the probabilities are
irresistible that the missing crew were sadly lost with the Vessel
when it sank on 17 May 2024
at 14h30 in the afternoon. There is
overwhelming evidence, in my opinion, to infer on a preponderance of
probabilities that their
death has, in fact, occurred when their
Vessel sunk.
[16]
Consequently, the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn in the
circumstances is that the missing
crew perished at sea.
6.
Order
[17]
In the result, the missing crew listed hereinabove are presumed to
have died at sea on 17 May
2024.
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant: Adv Cooke
Instructed
by: Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
[1]
Ex
Parte Maclean
1968
(2) SA 644
(C) at 645-6).
[2]
Ex
Parte Govender
1993
(3) SA 721
(D) at 722G.
[3]
Ex
Parte Rungasamy
1958
(4) SA 688
(D) at 690-691.
[4]
Ex
Parte Parker
1947
(3) SA 285
(C) at 287.
[5]
Ex
Parte Pieters
1993
(3) SA 379
(D) at 382.
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