Case Law[2022] ZACC 16South Africa
Minister of Police and Others v Fidelity Security Services (Pty) Limited (CCT 195/21) [2022] ZACC 16; 2022 (2) SACR 519 (CC); 2023 (3) BCLR 270 (CC) (27 May 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
27 May 2022
Headnotes
Summary: [Sections 13 to 20 of the Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000] — [application for licence to possess firearm] — [lapsing of previous licence] — [no express or implied prohibition against new application] — [appeal dismissed]
Judgment
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## Minister of Police and Others v Fidelity Security Services (Pty) Limited (CCT 195/21) [2022] ZACC 16; 2022 (2) SACR 519 (CC); 2023 (3) BCLR 270 (CC) (27 May 2022)
Minister of Police and Others v Fidelity Security Services (Pty) Limited (CCT 195/21) [2022] ZACC 16; 2022 (2) SACR 519 (CC); 2023 (3) BCLR 270 (CC) (27 May 2022)
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sino date 27 May 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
CCT
195/21
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
First Applicant
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Second Applicant
ACTING
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER,
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE:
LIEUTENANT
GENERAL J K PHAHLANE
Third Applicant
and
FIDELITY
SECURITY SERVICES (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
and
SAKELIGA
NPC
First Amicus Curiae
NATIONAL
HUNTING AND
SHOOTING
ASSOCIATION
Second Amicus Curiae
PROFESSIONAL
HUNTING ASSOCIATION
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Third Amicus Curiae
GUN
OWNERS SOUTH AFRICA NPC
Fourth Amicus Curiae
Neutral
citation:
Minister of
Police and Others v Fidelity Security Services (Pty) Limited
[2022]
ZACC 16
Coram:
Zondo ACJ, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J,
Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Theron J and Tshiqi J
Judgments:
Majiedt J and Rogers AJ (unanimous)
Heard
on:
18 November 2021
Decided
on:
27 May 2022
Summary:
[Sections 13 to 20 of the
Firearms
Control Act 60 of 2000
] — [application for licence to possess
firearm] — [lapsing of previous licence] — [no express or
implied prohibition
against new application] — [appeal
dismissed]
ORDER
On
appeal from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division), the following
order is
made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed.
3.
The applicants must pay the respondent’s costs in this Court.
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT
J AND ROGERS AJ (Zondo ACJ, Madondo AJ, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ,
Theron J and Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
A
gun owner allows its licence to possess a firearm to lapse without
timeously seeking a renewal of the licence. Can the owner make
a new
application to possess the firearm, or has the owner irretrievably
lost its right to ever regain lawful possession of the
firearm? That
is the crisp question in this application for leave to appeal. The
answer lies in a proper interpretation of the
Firearms Control Act
[1]
(Act). The High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division (High
Court) held that the gun owner may not bring a new application
to
possess the firearm. The Supreme Court of Appeal reversed that
decision.
[2]
The
gun owner in this case is the present respondent, Fidelity Security
Services (Pty) Limited (Fidelity). It was the applicant
in the High
Court. The applicants before us were the respondents in the High
Court. They are the Minister of Police, the Minister
of Justice, and
the Acting National Commissioner, South African Police Service
(Commissioner) respectively. We shall refer to them
collectively as
the State parties. In terms of section 123 of the Act, the
Commissioner is the Registrar of Firearms (Registrar).
[2]
In this Court, four organisations were admitted as amici curiae:
Sakeliga NPC (Sakeliga),
[3]
Gun
Owners South Africa NPC (GOSA),
[4]
the National Hunting and Shooting Association (NHSA)
[5]
and the Professional Hunting Association of South Africa (PHA).
[6]
In what follows, we use the expression “possession licence”
to refer to a licence issued in terms of the Act and entitling
the
holder of the licence to possess a firearm.
Background
[3]
Fidelity
is one of the largest security service providers in South Africa,
with 60 offices in major cities and towns countrywide.
Given the
nature of its business, its possession of firearms is indispensable.
It owns more than 8 500 firearms, used by its security
officers to
execute their tasks. Because Fidelity is a juristic person, it is
required by section 7 of the Act to nominate a natural
person to make
applications on its behalf to possess its firearms, and the nominated
person must be identified on the licence as
the responsible
person.
[7]
[4]
In compliance with section 7,
Fidelity nominated Mr S G Yssel as the responsible person.
Mr Yssel left Fidelity’s
employ on 1 February 2016 and was
replaced by another Fidelity employee, Mr J C Wentzel.
When Mr Wentzel took
over, he discovered that the possession
licences of some 700 firearms had not been renewed timeously in
terms of section 24
of the Act and that these licences had terminated
by operation of law as contemplated in section 28 of the Act.
[5]
On
18 April 2016, Fidelity belatedly attempted to renew the expired
licences in terms of section 24 by making application to the
Registrar (that is, the Commissioner). Section 24(1) requires a
renewal application to be made at least 90 days before the date
of
expiry of the licence. A circular issued by the Commissioner on
3 February 2016 (circular) stated that renewal applications
would be considered if lodged after the 90 day cut-off date,
provided reasons for the lateness were provided. This purported
relaxation was made subject to the qualification that if the previous
licence had already expired, the holder was to be informed
that his
or her possession was no longer lawful and that the firearm had to be
surrendered to the nearest police station.
[8]
As required by section 24(2)(a), the renewal applications were
delivered to the relevant Designated Firearms Officer (DFO),
being
the DFO at the Florida police station.
[9]
Despite threats of litigation from Fidelity’s attorneys, the
police refused to consider the renewal applications. This led
to the
present litigation.
In
the High Court
[6]
Fidelity
launched an application in the High Court in which it sought
extensive relief, namely orders: (a) challenging the
constitutionality
of sections 24 and 28 of the Act as well as the
circular; (b) compelling the Registrar to accept the late renewal
applications,
alternatively to accept new licence applications;
(c) directing the police to issue Fidelity with temporary
authorisations
until renewed or new licences were issued; and
(d) seeking an interdict restraining the police from seizing the
firearms whose
licences had terminated, pending the issuing of
renewed or new licences. It later abandoned the constitutional
challenges in the
light of this Court’s decision in
SA Hunters
[10]
where sections 24 and 28 of the Act were held to be constitutionally
valid.
[11]
[7]
The
High Court dismissed the application with costs on a punitive scale,
on the basis that Fidelity had, notwithstanding the decision
in
SA
Hunters
,
persisted in asking the Court to order the authorities to consider
the applications for renewed or new licences.
[12]
The High Court considered that the decision in
SA
Hunters
held this not to be possible. The High Court also held that
Fidelity’s belated attempt to rely on section 22 of the
Constitution was misplaced. With the leave of the High Court,
Fidelity appealed that decision to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
In
the Supreme Court of Appeal
[8]
The issues before the Supreme Court
of Appeal were considerably narrowed when Fidelity abandoned most of
the relief it had sought
in the High Court. Ultimately, what remained
for determination was one question only, namely whether Fidelity was
entitled to submit
applications for new possession licences. The
Supreme Court of Appeal understood this to mean that if this question
were answered
in the affirmative, the Commissioner would be obliged
to accept such new applications and deal with them in the ordinary
course
of the provisions of the Act.
[9]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal considered and applied established statutory
principles of interpretation. It found the State parties’
reliance on
SA
Hunters
to be misplaced. Based on that case, the State parties had argued
that to grant relief to Fidelity would be tantamount to the Court
granting its imprimatur to an illegality, namely the unlawful
possession of unlicenced firearms in contravention of section 3 of
the Act. For that submission, the State parties primarily relied on
this Court’s statement in
SA Hunters
that “the gun owner knows that he must apply in time for
renewal [of the licence] or dispose of the firearm before expiry.
If
he does not, he will be guilty of an offence”.
[13]
The Supreme Court of Appeal held, however, that there was nothing in
the Act or the Firearms Control Regulations
[14]
(Regulations) to suggest that someone whose licence has terminated by
operation of law is, as a result, forever precluded from
applying for
a new licence.
[10]
The Supreme Court of Appeal held
that to interpret the Act in the manner contended for by the State
parties would be to cross the
divide between interpretation and
legislation. That Court noted that the Act provides that anyone
wanting to own a firearm must
apply for and obtain a licence in order
to lawfully possess the firearm. It held further that first-time
applicants and repeat-applicants
alike are eligible to apply for a
possession licence. Once an application has been submitted, it is up
to the Commissioner, as
the Registrar, to satisfy himself that the
applicant meets the requirements stipulated in the Act and
Regulations.
[11]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal held that this interpretation was reinforced
by section 149 of the Act, which provides that a firearm
may
only be destroyed as prescribed, and that it “remains the
property of the owner thereof until such destruction”.
Ultimately, the Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the appeal and found
that Fidelity was entitled to apply afresh for new licences
to
possess the firearms. It also made an order directing the applicable
DFO to accept such applications and deal with them in terms
of the
Act. Lastly, the Supreme Court of Appeal found that an interpretation
of the Act – that firearm owners whose possession
licences have
expired are prevented from applying for a new licence, and are
required to buy new firearms only for the same application
to be
considered for a new licence as envisaged in section 3 and
regulation 13 – was neither sensible nor businesslike.
[15]
[12]
On costs, the Supreme Court of
Appeal held that Fidelity was entitled to its costs attendant upon
the hearing of the appeal on 11
March 2021, but was not entitled to
costs up to 5 March 2021. This was the date on which Fidelity
abandoned certain parts of the
relief previously sought. Until that
date, the State parties had been required to expend resources in
resisting the appeal. Fidelity
was therefore ordered to pay the costs
of the appeal up to 5 March 2021.
In
this Court
State parties’
submissions
[13]
The State parties submit that this
application raises a constitutional issue regarding the
interpretation and application of the
Act, and has far-reaching
implications in relation to the government’s constitutional
duty in regulating the use and possession
of firearms. They submit
that a further constitutional issue relates to the interpretation of
the Act in relation to the police’s
powers to deal with
firearms with expired licences, particularly where the holders of
such firearms have not renewed their licences
within the time limits
imposed by legislation. Alternatively, if the appeal does not raise
constitutional issues, they submit that
it raises an arguable point
of law of general public importance which ought to be considered by
this Court, namely whether, within
the legislative framework of the
Act read with the Regulations, the police are enjoined to accept and
process new applications
for Fidelity’s firearms where the
previous licences for those firearms expired due to Fidelity’s
oversight and were
not renewed on time as prescribed by the Act.
[14]
The State parties contend that it is
in the interests of justice for this application to be heard, as the
Supreme Court of Appeal’s
decision has the effect of imposing
an obligation on public officials to perform functions not permitted
by the Act. They contend
that once a possession licence has expired
and not been renewed, it becomes unlawful for anyone to possess the
firearm, since the
law requires it to be surrendered to the police.
In their view, what the Supreme Court of Appeal’s judgment
effectively does
is to require public functionaries to act contrary
to the law.
[15]
The crux of the State parties’
case is that since the Act criminalises the unlawful possession of
firearms, and prescribes
that they must be disposed of, Fidelity is
precluded from applying for licences in respect of firearms whose
licences have not
been renewed in accordance with the Act. They
contend that the decision of this Court in
SA
Hunters
is
dispositive on this question. They submit that the Supreme Court of
Appeal interpreted the Act in a manner that negates the
offence
committed by Fidelity, and instead elevates Fidelity’s
financial prejudice above the prescripts of the Act.
[16]
Lastly, the State parties set out
the various policy considerations undergirding the scheme of the Act
that requires the surrender
and destruction of firearms whose
licences have expired. These considerations include ensuring public
safety, the effective regulation
of the circulation of firearms, and
the prevention and reduction of illicit trade in firearms. The State
parties stress that the
regulation of firearms by government is an
important constitutional matter that goes to the heart of the
security of the nation.
[17]
In
his oral submissions at the hearing, lead counsel for the State
parties made a surprising
volte-face.
He conceded that there is merit in Fidelity’s primary argument
and in the Supreme Court of Appeal’s central finding
that the
Act
does not expressly prohibit the submission of a new application to
possess a firearm licence where the previous licence has
expired.
[16]
This unexpected concession effectively amounted to an extirpation of
the only real issue between the parties. However, after the
hearing,
the State parties filed a response to the application by GOSA to be
admitted as an amicus curiae, and that response did
not reflect the
concession made at the hearing; on the contrary, the State parties
clung to the contention that a new application
cannot be made after
the expiry of a previous licence. This raises doubt as to whether the
concession was intended by the State
parties. This manner of
litigating is not useful to this Court and must be deprecated. At any
rate, and even if the concession
was intended, a concession on a
question of law does not relieve this Court of the task of
investigating the issue on its merits.
Fidelity’s
submissions
[18]
Fidelity
does
not appear to dispute that this Court’s constitutional
jurisdiction is engaged. On the merits, it submits that the issue
to
be determined is whether a person has a right to apply for, and
whether there is a duty on the Registrar to accept, process,
and
consider new applications for firearms whose previous licences
expired. Fidelity contends that this Court, in
SA
Hunters
,
did not determine that if a possession licence expires without
renewal, the firearm must be surrendered for destruction. It merely
held that the firearm must be handed over to the police.
[19]
Fidelity
suggests
that there is a nuanced distinction between “ownership”
and “possession”, and argues that the Act
applies to
possession and not ownership. Accordingly, the lapsing of a
possession licence does not terminate the owner’s
ownership.
Instead, the firearm remains the owner’s property until it is
destroyed. What this means in practice, so the argument
goes, is that
there is no requirement for the relevant firearms to be destroyed.
The handing over of such firearms to the police
terminates the
owner’s possession but not its ownership. According to
Fidelity, various sections of the Act, read with section 139
of
the Act, support this approach, and do not support the State parties’
submission that what is required is a surrender
of the firearms for
the purposes of destruction, without any possibility of applying for
new licences in respect of the firearms.
Ultimately, Fidelity avers
that there is nothing in the Act that expressly prohibits the
submission of a new application. Therefore,
Fidelity contends that
the Supreme Court of Appeal was correct in its findings.
[20]
Fidelity
further
submits that the State parties’ interpretation of the Act is
not sustainable and is in direct conflict with one of
the objectives
of the Act, that is to limit the proliferation of firearms. And it
could not have been Parliament’s intention
that the surrendered
firearms would have to be destroyed. This would be neither logical
nor businesslike, as the Supreme Court
of Appeal correctly found.
Fidelity accepts that the Commissioner retains a discretion whether
to grant or refuse the new licences.
The point is merely that the Act
does not preclude a person from applying for a new licence where a
previous licence expired by
effluxion of time. Fidelity also contends
that the refusal by the authorities to process applications for new
licences is a breach
of the fundamental right to just administrative
action.
[21]
Fidelity
also
asks this Court to interfere with the costs order granted by the
Supreme Court of Appeal. Fidelity contends that
the
Supreme Court of Appeal misdirected itself because the interpretation
and application of the relevant legal principles are matters
of
general public interest. Fidelity should, so it was submitted, have
been entitled to its costs, alternatively the principles
in
Biowatch
[17]
should have been applied.
Amici’s
submissions
[22]
All the amici were admitted and
allowed to make written submissions, as this Court was satisfied that
they would provide clarification
and elucidation in a specialised
area of the law and, to some extent also of fact, based on its
operation in practice. In their
written submissions the amici largely
supported Fidelity’s approach on the merits. Sakeliga echoes
Fidelity’s argument
on the difference between ownership and
possession, and also argues that where firearms are used for
self-defence, the State parties’
approach limits
sections 10, 11, 12 and 25 of the Constitution, and more
broadly section 7(2). Sakeliga further
argues that it is
inequitable for firearm owners whose licences have expired to be
barred from making new applications, in circumstances
where this is
not the case for people that have been declared unfit to possess
firearms. GOSA argues that the Minister of Police
previously
instituted an amnesty process that allowed firearm owners whose
licences had expired the opportunity to make new licence
applications
while their firearms were held by the police. It suggests that there
is no reason why a similar process cannot be
crafted to address the
present problem.
[23]
NHSA and PHA, who applied together
to be admitted as amici, similarly point to amnesty processes to show
that there is precedent
for new applications being made for firearms
in respect of which previous possession licences expired. They argue
that the Act
does not prohibit new applications being made when
licences have expired, and that the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
approach
would provide a solution for the thousands of firearm owners
whose licences have expired since
SA
Hunters
declared sections 24
and 28 of the Act constitutional. PHA also argued that the
section 22 constitutional rights of their
members are implicated if
their firearms must be surrendered and destroyed. Generally, all the
amici endorsed the reasoning of
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
Jurisdiction
and leave to appeal
[24]
The proper regulation of firearms
implicates a variety of rights in the Bill of Rights. These include
the general constitutional
duty resting on the State in section 7(2)
of the Constitution to respect, protect, promote and fulfil the
rights in the Bill
of Rights. This general constitutional duty is
amplified by the specific duty resting on the South African
Police Service
(SAPS) in section 205(3) of the Constitution, which
provides that the objects of the SAPS are to “prevent, combat
and investigate
crime, to maintain public order, to protect and
secure the inhabitants of the Republic and their property, and to
uphold and enforce
the law”. The interpretation of the Act
bears on the role of the SAPS – a public body constitutionally
mandated to
ensure public safety and security – in
administering the Act and in enforcing the law on firearm regulation.
It also bears
on the rights of gun owners, particularly their
property rights, something which implicates section 25 of the Bill of
Rights.
[25]
In any event, the case raises an
arguable point of law of general public importance, namely whether a
gun owner whose possession
licence has expired is entitled to make a
new application for a possession licence. This is a question on which
the High Court
and Supreme Court of Appeal differed. In part, the
difference of judicial opinion which this question has elicited is
attributable
to differing views on the scope of what this Court
decided in
SA Hunters
,
and this is a difference of opinion which has persisted in the
competing arguments addressed to this Court. These points are
arguable. And they are undoubtedly of general public importance,
since the answer will affect the position of many gun owners, not
just Fidelity.
[26]
We are satisfied, in the
circumstances, that it is in the interests of justice for this Court
to grant leave to appeal, in the exercise
of both its constitutional
and general jurisdiction.
The
merits
Relevant
statutory provisions
[27]
Section 3 of the Act compels a
person to hold a licence in order to possess a firearm. It states
that “[n]o person may possess
a firearm unless he or she holds
a licence, permit or authorisation issued in terms of this Act for
that firearm”.
[28]
Section 6 deals, in general terms,
with the power of the Registrar to grant
competency
certificates, licences, permits and authorisations. This includes the
power to grant a possession licence. The section
reads
:
“
(1)
The Registrar may issue any competency certificate, licence, permit
or authorisation contemplated in this
Act—
(a)
on the receipt of an application contemplated in the prescribed form,
including a full set of fingerprints
of the applicant; and
(b)
if the applicant complies with the applicable requirements of this
Act.
(2)
Subject to section 7, no licence may be issued to a person who is not
in possession of the relevant
competency certificate.
(3)
Every application for a competency certificate, licence, permit or
authorisation must be accompanied
by such information as may be
prescribed.”
[29]
Possession licences are dealt with
in Chapter 6 of the Act. Sections 13 to 20 set out the different
types of possession licences
which the Registrar may issue, depending
on the nature of the firearm and the purpose for which possession is
sought. In terms
of section 21, the Registrar may issue temporary
authorisations to possess firearms.
[30]
Section 24 of the Act regulates the
renewal of firearm licences, and provides:
“
(1)
The holder of a licence issued in terms of this Chapter who wishes to
renew the licence
must at least 90 days
before the date of expiry of the licence
apply to the Registrar for its renewal.
(2)
The application must be:
(a)
accompanied by such information as may be prescribed; and
(b)
delivered to the Designated Firearms Officer responsible for the area
in which the applicant ordinarily
resides or in which the applicant’s
business is, as the case may be.
(3)
No application for the renewal of a licence may be granted unless the
applicant shows that he or she
has continued to comply with the
requirements for the licence in terms of this Act.
(4)
If an application for the renewal of a licence has been lodged within
the period provided for in subsection
(1), the licence remains valid
until the application is decided.” (Emphasis added.)
[31]
The termination of firearm licences
is regulated by section 28 of the Act. It reads:
“
(1)
A licence issued in terms of this Chapter terminates—
(a)
upon the expiry of the relevant period contemplated in section 27,
unless renewed in terms of section 24
;
(b)
if surrendered by the holder of the licence to the Registrar;
(c)
if the holder of the licence becomes or is declared unfit to possess
a firearm in terms of section
102 or 103; or
(d)
if it is cancelled in terms of this Act.
(2)
The Registrar may, by notice in writing, cancel a licence issued in
terms of this Chapter if the holder
of the licence—
(a)
no longer qualifies to hold the licence; or
(b)
has contravened or failed to comply with any provision of this Act or
any condition specified in the
licence.
(3)
A notice contemplated in subsection (2) may only be issued if the
Registrar has—
(a)
given the holder of the licence 30 days’ notice in writing to
submit written representations as
to why the licence should not be
cancelled; and
(b)
duly considered any representations received and all the facts
pertaining to the matter.
(4)
(a) If a notice contemplated in subsection
(2) is issued, the former
holder of the licence must dispose of the
firearm in question through a dealer or in such manner as the
Registrar may determine.
(b)
The disposal must take place within 60 days after receipt of the
notice.
(5)
If the firearm is not disposed of within 60 days, it
must
be
forfeited to the State and the former holder of the licence
must
surrender it immediately at such place and in such manner as the
Registrar may determine.” (Emphasis added.)
[32]
If
a possession licence terminates, the gun holder’s continued
possession of the firearm will, by virtue of the prohibition
in
section 3(1), be unlawful. In terms of section 120(1)(a), a
person is guilty of an offence if he or she contravenes or
fails to
comply with any provision of the Act.
[18]
Section 103(1)(a) of the Act provides that a person becomes
unfit to possess a firearm if convicted of unlawful possession
of a
firearm or ammunition, unless the court determines otherwise.
[33]
As stated above, sections 13 to 20
of the Act deal with the issuing of possession licences for varying
purposes. Section 20 applies
to firearms required for business
purposes. It is thus applicable to Fidelity. The section provides:
“
(1)
(a) A firearm in respect of which a licence
may be issued in terms of
this section is any firearm other than a
prohibited firearm.
(b)
Despite paragraph (a), a licence in respect of a prohibited firearm
may be issued to a person contemplated
in subsection (2)(c) but such
person may only provide the prohibited firearm for use in theatrical,
film or television productions
and then only if he prior written
approval of the Registrar has been obtained and on such conditions as
the Registrar may impose.
(2)
The Registrar may issue a licence in terms of this section to—
(a)
a security service provider;
(b)
a person who is accredited to provide training in the use of
firearms;
(c)
a person who is accredited to provide firearms for use in theatrical,
film or television productions;
(d)
a person who is accredited as a game hunter;
(e)
a person who is accredited to conduct business in hunting; or
(f)
any person who is accredited to use firearms for such other business
purpose as the Registrar
may determine.
(3)
A licence issued in terms of this section must specify the business
purpose in respect of which it is
issued.
(4)
A firearm in respect of which a licence was issued in terms of this
section may only be used as specified
in the licence.
(5)
(a) The holder of a licence issued in terms
of this section may
only provide the firearm for use by another
person subject to such conditions as may be prescribed.
(b)
A security service provider which holds a licence to possess a
firearm for business use may only provide
the firearm to a security
officer in its service who holds a competency certificate.
(6)
Every holder of a licence issued in terms of this section must—
(a)
keep a register of all firearms in its possession containing such
information as may be prescribed;
and
(b)
store and transport the firearms as may be prescribed.
(7)
The holder of a licence issued in terms of this Act must, at the
request of a police official, produce
for inspection—
(a)
any firearm and ammunition in its possession or under its control;
and
(b)
every licence issued in terms of this section.”
Approach
to interpretation
[34]
The
interpretation of the Act must be guided by the following
principles:
[19]
(a)
Words in a statute must be given their ordinary grammatical meaning
unless to do so would result in
an absurdity.
(b)
This general principle is subject to three interrelated riders: a
statute must be interpreted purposively;
the relevant provision must
be properly contextualised; and the statute must be construed
consistently with the Constitution, meaning
in such a way as to
preserve its constitutional validity.
(c)
Various propositions flow from this general principle and its riders.
Among others, in the case of ambiguity,
a meaning that frustrates the
apparent purpose of the statute or leads to results which are not
businesslike or sensible results
should not be preferred where an
interpretation which avoids these unfortunate consequences is
reasonably possible. The qualification
“reasonably possible”
is a reminder that Judges must guard against the temptation to
substitute what they regard as
reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the words actually used.
(d)
If reasonably possible, a statute should be interpreted so as to
avoid a
lacuna
(gap) in the legislative scheme.
The
implications of SA Hunters for this case
[35]
SA Hunters
dealt
with the possession of firearms, not with their ownership. This Court
held, in the context of the
consequences
for the
possessor
of a firearm when the relevant licence expires
:
“
The
provisions [of the Act] are not . . . vague themselves. They cannot
be clearer. It is an offence to
possess
a firearm without a licence obtained in terms of the Act. Once one
has obtained a licence one needs to renew it at least 90 days
before
the date of expiry. If that is done timeously the licence remains
valid until the application is decided.
If
that is not done the licence terminates and possession of the firearm
constitutes an offence and is subject to criminal penalties”.
[20]
(Emphasis added.)
[36]
In
response to what should occur in respect of
the
right of possession where the licence has expired, this Court stated
that “there is a short answer to this: the gun holder
must
get rid of the firearm”.
[21]
Fidelity does not take issue with this – it accepts that to
remain in possession of the impugned firearms, in the face of
the
licences having expired, would render their possession unlawful. It
also accepts that upon expiry of the licences, it must
surrender the
firearms to the SAPS. However, Fidelity disputes that in doing so it
surrenders ownership, in other words, that the
firearms must be
surrendered for destruction.
SA
Hunters
was unquestionably concerned with the issue of “handing the
firearm over to the police after termination” of the
licence
[22]
and did not deal at all with any requirement of subsequent
destruction. In fact, this Court tellingly remarked:
“
[T]he
complaint is that the police will or must destroy the firearm . . .
[This] may infringe on the other rights that the gun-owner
may have,
like section 25 protection of property, but that is part of a
different enquiry.”
[23]
[37]
A
further allegation in
SA
Hunters
was that “the absence of a regime for surrendering the firearm
for value amounted to a violation of the right to property
in terms
of section 25”.
[24]
This
allegation was addressed by this Court in what appears to be obiter
remarks.
[25]
While
SA Hunters
was clear on the fact that an owner without a licence is in unlawful
possession and must surrender the firearm, that case did not
make a
finding on the central issue before us, namely whether a firearm
owner is permitted to or precluded from applying for a
new possession
licence, nor did it expressly state that, upon surrender, those
firearms must inevitably be destroyed.
Ownership
and possession
[38]
Ownership
,
as the most comprehensive real right a legal subject can have in
relation to a thing, is accorded recognition and protection in
terms
of article 17 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and
domestically in section 25 of the Constitution. Possession
is one of
the entitlements that traditionally flows from ownership,
[26]
and
it is constituted when “a person has physical control
(
detentio
)
of a thing together with the mental attitude (
animus
possidendi
)
that includes a consciousness of that control”.
[27]
Possession
in itself, though, is something entirely different from ownership.
Possession is characterised by being in control of
an object, and the
right to possession is far more limited than a person’s
ownership rights over an object.
[39]
It is through the limitation of
possession that the Act potentially qualifies or limits ownership in
the public interest. Once a
possession licence has expired without
renewal, continued possession is unlawful in terms of the Act.
However, this unlawfulness
does not necessarily impact a person’s
ownership or the lawfulness of continued ownership. The owner can be
viewed as retaining
a qualified form of ownership, which excludes the
right to possess the firearm.
[40]
The
general scheme of the Act, and particularly sections 3, 20, 24 and
28, which are the key provisions for present purposes, concern
possession, not ownership.
In
our view, although the Act refers to both possession and ownership at
various times,
[28]
in
essence it really only regulates possession. A person can
become
the owner of a firearm in various ways, including inheritance,
purchase, barter, or donation. That person may, however, not
take
possession of the firearm without being in possession of a competency
certificate and possession licence.
[41]
The
Act
does not purport to regulate or remove ownership. To the contrary,
section 149(2)(b) of the Act confirms ownership of even
a
forfeited firearm, as it stipulates that “the firearm remains
the property of the owner until destruction”. This
supports a
reading of the Act that the expiry of a licence is not itself
tantamount to forfeiture for the purposes of destruction.
Fresh
licence applications - the statutory context
[42]
The termination of possession
licences is regulated by section 28. Unless terminated sooner by
virtue of one of the circumstances
specified in section 28(1)(b),
(c) or (d), a possession licence terminates, in terms of
section 28(1)(a), upon expiry
of the relevant period for that
type of licence as set out in section 27. If the Registrar by notice
cancels a licence in terms
of section 28(1)(d) read with
section 28(2), the gun holder must dispose of the firearm
through a dealer or in such way
as the Registrar may determine. Save
for termination in this way, section 28 says nothing about what is to
be done with the firearm
upon termination of the licence. In its own
terms, the section simply provides for the termination of the
licence.
[43]
If
a possession licence terminates, the gun holder’s continued
possession of the firearm will, by virtue of the prohibition
in
section 3(1), be unlawful unless the expired licence is replaced by
another licence. A gun holder who wishes to retain seamless
lawful
possession of the firearm can do so by exercising the right,
conferred by section 24, to apply for renewal of the licence.
This Court held in
SA
Hunters
that
the right to apply for renewal in terms of section 24 cannot be
exercised after the licence has expired.
[29]
SA
Hunters
did
not hold that a gun holder whose licence has expired, and who wishes
to lawfully possess the firearm, may not apply, in terms
of the
applicable provision in sections 13 to 20, for a licence to possess
the firearm. That question was not before the Court.
[44]
The fact that the gun holder may
not, once the licence has expired, apply to renew the licence in
terms of section 24 does not in
itself mean that the gun holder may
not apply for a licence in terms of the applicable provision in
sections 13 to 20. Section 24
does not contain such a
prohibition, and as we shall presently explain, neither do
sections 13 to 20. Applying for a licence,
and applying to renew
an existing licence, are different processes, governed by different
provisions of the Act. The Act largely
leaves the procedures for
administrative applications to the Regulations promulgated by the
Minister in terms of section 145(1).
It would not be unreasonable to
expect that the process for applying for the renewal of a currently
valid licence would be less
exacting than the process for applying
for a licence when no valid licence exists, otherwise there would be
no purpose in treating
them separately in the Act. This is indeed
what one sees in the Regulations and prescribed forms: an application
for a licence
is more detailed and more expensive than an application
for a renewal.
[45]
It is not only in relation to
possession licences (Chapter 6) that the Act distinguishes
between applications for licences
and applications for renewals. The
same distinction is drawn in relation to competency certificates
(Chapter 5) and licences
issued to dealers, manufacturers and
gunsmiths (Chapter 7). The fact that a person has allowed their
competency certificate,
or their licence to act as a dealer,
manufacturer or gunsmith, to lapse without seeking renewal cannot
mean that such a person
may not at a later date again apply for a
competency certificate or for a licence to act as a dealer,
manufacturer or gunsmith.
[46]
In
the case of a lapsed possession certificate, the continued possession
of the firearm would be unlawful. This in itself does not
compel the
conclusion that the owner may not apply for a licence to possess the
firearm. The absence of a licence means only that
the owner’s
possession will be unlawful unless and until a possession licence is
issued. If the owner continues to possess
the firearm pending the
outcome of an application for a possession licence, it will be guilty
of an offence.
[30]
The firearm
would be liable to seizure by the police.
[31]
The Act does not impose any express statutory obligation on the owner
to surrender the firearm to the police, but such a step might
be the
only way in which a law-abiding owner could avoid committing an
offence. Counsel for Fidelity told us, at the hearing of
this matter,
that Fidelity has surrendered the firearms in question to the police,
though counsel for the State parties disputed
this. Be that as it
may, and whether a firearm is seized by or voluntarily surrendered to
the police, the owner retains its ownership,
as explained earlier.
[47]
In
SA
Hunters
, counsel for the gun holders
asked rhetorically what a gun holder was to do, as the expiry
date approached, if a timeous renewal
application were no longer
possible. The rhetorical question was met with a pragmatic answer by
this Court: the gun holder
must “get rid of”
the firearm. The gun holder can be expected to know when the licence
expires. This Court did not
appear to regard, as a realistic
possibility, that the gun holder would be prosecuted for the offence
of unlawful possession while
taking the firearm to the police for
surrender. The Court, in our view, was simply providing a practical
answer to a practical
problem, a problem which included the prospect
of criminal prosecution for unlawful possession of the unlicensed
firearm. The Act
itself, as we have said, contains no express
provision requiring the owner of a firearm to surrender it to the
police once the
possession licence has expired.
Jurisdictional
prerequisites of applications for possession licences
[48]
Turning to applications for
possession licences in terms of Chapter 6, we shall focus on
section 20, but what we say also applies,
with necessary
modifications of formulation, to sections 13 to 19. Section 20
circumscribes the jurisdictional prerequisites for
an application
under that section with reference to “what” and “who”:
what items may be the subject of
an application, and who may make the
application.
[49]
As
to the “what”, section 20(1)(a) provides that a firearm
in respect of which a licence may be issued in terms of that
section
is “any firearm other than a prohibited firearm”. The
term “firearm” is defined in section 1 with
reference to
the physical characteristics of an object. Each component of the
definition is introduced by the word “any”.
Section 4
deals with “prohibited firearms”.
[32]
A
“firearm” as defined in section 1 is a “prohibited”
firearm in terms of section 4 if it has the special
physical
characteristics specified in the latter section. A firearm lacking
the prohibited characteristics is not a “prohibited
firearm”
just because the person currently in possession of it does not hold a
possession licence.
[50]
The
expression “any firearm” in section 20(1)(a) is wide and
unqualified, and the definition of “firearm”
itself
contains the wide and unqualified word “any”.
[33]
The definition of “firearm” in section 1, and the
expression “any firearm” in section 20(1)(a), are
concerned with the physical characteristics of an object, not with
whether it is now, or was in the past, lawfully or unlawfully
possessed by anyone. The ordinary meaning of section 20(1)(a) is
that any object which has the physical characteristics specified
in
the definition of “firearm” may be the subject of an
application under that section unless it has the physical
characteristics of a “prohibited” firearm. It has never
been suggested that the items at issue in this case are not
“firearms” or that they are “prohibited”
firearms.
[51]
As to the “who”, section
20(2) states that the Registrar may issue a licence under that
section to a person falling
within one or other of the categories
specified in paragraphs (a) to (f) of the subsection. Paragraph
(a) specifies “a
security service provider”. That
expression is defined in section 1. Fidelity is a security service
provider as defined.
[52]
There is nothing in section 20 which
excludes from its scope a firearm which an applicant currently or
previously possessed unlawfully
or a firearm in respect of which an
applicant previously held a licence which expired. An application for
a possession licence
in terms of section 20 is the same kind of
application, whether or not the applicant previously held a licence
for the same
firearm. The jurisdictional requirements contained in
section 20 are “blind” to the current or previous
possession
of the firearm and to expired licences previously issued
in respect of the firearm. One is simply dealing with an application
to
possess a firearm for business purposes.
[53]
Many
regulatory regimes provide that certain objects may not be possessed,
or certain activities may not be performed, without a
licence or
permit issued pursuant to an administrative application. Those
regimes often make provision for the licence or permit
to be renewed
upon application. The fact that the holder has allowed the licence or
permit to lapse without applying for renewal
has never, to our
knowledge, been held to preclude such person from applying for a new
licence or permit; indeed, the contrary
position has been taken for
granted.
[34]
The correct
position is that section 20 on its plain and ordinary meaning
entitles a person specified in section 20(2) to
apply for a licence
in respect of any “firearm” that is not a “prohibited”
firearm. Since Fidelity meets
these requirements, it is entitled to
make section 20 applications in respect of the firearms at issue in
this case unless this
is expressly or impliedly prohibited. Since
there is no express prohibition, the remaining question is whether
there is an implied
prohibition.
An
implied prohibition?
[54]
Words
cannot be read into a statute by implication unless the implication
is necessary in the sense that, without them, effect cannot
be given
to the statute as it stands and to the ostensible legislative
intent.
[35]
In our opinion,
the case for an implied prohibition fails this test and is at odds
with the general principles of statutory interpretation
summarised
earlier. Effect can be given to the Act as it stands, without
reading into section 20 an implied prohibition barring
an application
for a possession licence by a person who previously held a possession
licence which terminated without renewal in
terms of section 24. The
ostensible legislative intent would not be defeated if one were to
refrain from implying such a prohibition.
[55]
As we have said, a statute should be
interpreted, as far as reasonably possible, to avoid creating a
lacuna
in
the legislative scheme. Such a gap would be exposed if one were to
interpret the Act as prohibiting applications for a new licence
by a
person whose licence expired without renewal. Although the firearm
might be seized by or surrendered to the police, such person
would
(as section 149(2)(b) explicitly recognises) retain ownership. One
must assume that the lawmaker preserved ownership for
a purpose. Yet,
in the period from seizure or surrender to destruction, the person’s
ownership would appear pointless, since
there would be no means by
which the owner could recover lawful possession prior to destruction.
By giving section 20 its
plain and ordinary meaning, the
supposed gap disappears. To interpret section 20 as being
inapplicable to an owner in Fidelity’s
position gives rise to a
result which is neither businesslike nor sensible, and such an
interpretation is to be avoided if reasonably
possible.
Constitutional
considerations
[56]
The
interpretation we propose better accords with constitutional values,
in particular the property rights guaranteed in section
25 of the
Bill of Rights, since it provides a means by which the owner of a
firearm can potentially recover lawful possession of
it. The right to
possess is the primary incident of ownership. In
U�ukauskas
,
[36]
the European Court of Human Rights held that there was an
interference with the Protocol’s protection of property
[37]
where, pursuant to the revocation of a person’s licence to
possess firearms, he was required by national law to surrender
the
firearms to the authorities, albeit in exchange for money.
[38]
This conclusion is even stronger in our regime, where the authorities
are not even obliged to compensate the owner. The harshness
of this
deprivation would be ameliorated if it were recognised that the owner
is entitled to apply for a new licence.
[57]
The Act regulates firearms in the
public interest. The increased availability and abuse of firearms and
ammunition have contributed
significantly to the high levels of
violent crime in our society. People have the right to life and the
right to security of the
person, including the right to be free from
all forms of violence. The State has a constitutional duty to
respect, protect, promote
and fulfil the rights in the Bill of
Rights. All of this is recorded in the Act’s preamble. These
considerations do not,
however, impel a Court to read an implied
prohibition into section 20. The interpretation adopted by the
Supreme Court of Appeal,
and which we support, means only that a
person in Fidelity’s position has the right in terms of section
20 to lodge an application
for possession licences and that the
Registrar has a corresponding duty to assess such an application.
[58]
Although the Registrar must assess
such an application on its merits, he or she is not obliged to grant
the application. The applicant’s
record as a gun owner, the
circumstances giving rise to the expiry of previous licences, any
unlawful possession which then ensued,
and the steps the applicant
took to remedy the position, could all be expected to feature in the
Registrar’s assessment.
The Act has entrusted to the Registrar
the task of assessing applications for possession licences, and this
supervision in the
public interest will be exercised whether the
applicant for a possession licence is a first time applicant or
a person who
previously held a now-expired possession licence.
Section
103 and fitness to possess firearms
[59]
Section
103 of the Act does not militate against this interpretation. The
proposition that unlawful possession of a firearm results
in the
unlawful possessor being rendered unfit to possess a firearm is
subject to two significant qualifications: first, unfitness
to
possess a firearm follows only if the person has been convicted; and
second, the convicting court is empowered to determine
that, despite
the conviction, the person shall not become unfit to possess a
firearm.
[39]
[60]
It
is not a foregone conclusion that the prosecution authorities will in
every case institute criminal proceedings against a person
whose
possession has become unlawful due to innocent or negligent
oversight. If a prosecution is instituted, the person may be
acquitted. This may depend, among other things, on whether the
offence is one of strict liability or, if it is not one of strict
liability, whether fault in the form of negligence suffices.
[40]
Where, as in the present case, the owner is a company, the question
may also arise as to whether unfitness to possess firearms
attaches
to the company or to the responsible person contemplated in section 7
of the Act – if the unfitness applies only
to the responsible
person, the company could nominate another suitable person to hold
new licences for its firearms.
[61]
As
to the convicting court’s discretion to direct that the
convicted person shall not become unfit to possess a firearm, there
is at least a prospect that, in a case such as the present, the trial
court might exercise the discretion in favour of the company.
The
assumption that a company such as Fidelity inevitably becomes unfit
to possess firearms would be far-reaching. Unfitness to
possess a
firearm is general; it is not confined to particular firearms. If
Fidelity became unfit to possess a firearm, all current
competency
certificates, licences, authorisations and permits held by it would
cease to be valid, and it would have to surrender,
to the nearest
police station, all these documents together with all firearms and
ammunition in its possession, not merely those
at issue in the
present case.
[41]
Fidelity
would not be able to apply for licences, in respect of new firearms,
for a period of five years.
[42]
In short, Fidelity would have to close down business. On the face of
it, this is a very drastic consequence for what may have been
a
single employee’s oversight.
Forfeiture
and destruction
[62]
The
provisions in the Act providing for the destruction of firearms after
forfeiture do not militate against our interpretation
of the Act.
Section 149(2) requires that any firearm or ammunition “forfeited
to the State in terms of this Act” must
be destroyed within six
months of the date (a) of forfeiture; or (b) after all possible
appeals have been concluded; or (c) after
the date for noting an
appeal has passed without an appeal having been noted, whichever
occurs last. The Act contains various express
provisions for
forfeiture in particular circumstances,
[43]
but none of them is applicable to the situation under consideration
in the present case.
[63]
In
terms of section 110(1) of the Act, Chapter 2 of the Criminal
Procedure Act
[44]
applies, with the necessary changes, to the entry of premises, search
for and seizure of firearms and ammunition. Sections 31,
32, 34 and
35 of the Criminal Procedure Act provide for forfeiture of
seized items in various circumstances. In addition,
section 110(3)
of the Act states that, despite sections 30 and 31 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, any article lawfully
seized by the State
in terms of section 110(1) “may be dealt with or disposed
of in accordance with the provisions of
this Act”. It can
be assumed, for present purposes, that seizure under these provisions
might eventually result in forfeiture
to the State as contemplated in
section 149(2). The acceptance by the police of the voluntary
surrender of firearms could
be regarded as a form of seizure.
[64]
On this basis, the period from the
seizure or surrender of the firearm to its eventual destruction is
likely to be significant.
Some months may pass before the seized or
surrendered firearm in law becomes forfeited to the State. That is
the earliest date
from which the six-month period runs. If an appeal
is brought against the forfeiture order, the running of the six-month
period
is further delayed until the appeal is finalised. There would
be more than enough time for an application for a possession licence
to be finalised. To this it may be added that forfeiture in terms of
the Criminal Procedure Act generally operates only where
no
person may lawfully possess the seized item. A firearm may lawfully
be possessed by its owner, provided he or she has a possession
licence. The fact that there is a pending application for a
possession licence may be the very basis on which a forfeiture
decision
is appealed.
Amnesty
provisions
[65]
We
do not consider that the amnesty provisions of section 139 tell
against our interpretation.
[45]
On the contrary, section 139(4)(a) supports our interpretation.
It provides that a person who has surrendered a firearm in
compliance
with an amnesty notice “may apply in terms of this Act for a
licence in respect of that firearm”. The application
in
question would be made in terms of the applicable provision in
sections 13 to 20 of the Act. Section 139(4)(a) thus
acknowledges that applications for possession licences may be made in
terms of sections 13 to 20 even though the applicant,
prior to
surrender, unlawfully possessed the firearm. Such unlawful possession
could include the case where a previous licence
lapsed.
[66]
Section 139 is designed to encourage
persons who would otherwise break the law either to surrender their
firearms for destruction
or to regularise their possession in terms
of sections 13 to 20. Section 139(4)(a) simply emphasises the
point that a person
who takes advantage of the amnesty does not lose
his ownership, and may apply for a possession licence. But for this
provision,
gun owners might have been reticent about coming forward.
It is common ground that law-abiding owners who surrender their
firearms
without the inducement of an amnesty do not lose their
ownership. On what rational basis could the legislature have intended
to
place law-abiding owners in a less favourable position than those
who require the inducement of amnesty?
Conclusion
on the merits
[67]
As we mentioned earlier, what we
have said in relation to section 20 applies equally to
sections 13 to 19. There is nothing
in those provisions which
precludes a former licence holder from applying for another licence
in terms of the appropriate provision.
All of the sections are framed
widely, using the phrase “any firearm”. Broadly speaking,
the only jurisdictional prerequisites
are that the firearm should
have the characteristics, and that the application should be made for
the purpose, identified in the
relevant section.
[68]
In the light of the above
discussion, Fidelity’s case based on its right to just
administrative action falls away, and was
in any event misconceived.
By the time the matter was argued in the Supreme Court of Appeal,
Fidelity had conceded that it was
not entitled to apply for licence
renewals in terms of section 24, from which it follows that the DFO
and Registrar were not only
entitled but obliged to refuse to process
the renewal applications. As to applications for new licences in
terms of section 20,
those have not yet, on our understanding,
been made. If, on a proper construction of the Act, Fidelity was not
entitled to make
section 20 applications for new licences, the DFO
and Registrar would again be entitled and obliged to refuse to
process the applications.
But if, as we have found, Fidelity is
entitled to make applications for new licences under section 20,
there is nothing to
suggest that the authorities will nevertheless
refuse to process them. To date, the State parties’ attitude on
new applications
has been based on their view that applications for
new licences are not, as a matter of law, permitted.
Costs
[69]
Although
the present applicants will be granted leave to appeal, the appeal
itself will be dismissed. Since the applicants are State
actors and
Fidelity is a private party,
Biowatch
[46]
dictates that the State parties should pay Fidelity’s costs in
this Court.
[70]
At the hearing, counsel for Fidelity
argued that the Supreme Court of Appeal had misdirected itself by
ordering Fidelity to pay
the State parties’ costs up to 5 March
2021. These submissions cannot be entertained. Fidelity did not file
an application
in this Court for leave to cross-appeal. In Fidelity’s
affidavit, opposing the State parties’ application for leave
to
appeal, its deponent stated that if this Court were to grant the
State parties leave to appeal, Fidelity “will submit
a
cross-appeal in respect of certain elements of the cost order made by
the Supreme Court of Appeal”. No such cross appeal
was
submitted. If Fidelity wished to cross-appeal, it was required by
rule 19(5)(a) of the Rules of this Court to file such
an
application for leave to do so within 10 days of the lodging of
the State parties’ application for leave to appeal.
It did not
do so. The propriety of the Supreme Court of Appeal’s costs
order was, moreover, not addressed in any of the written
submissions.
Order
[71]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed.
3.
The applicants must pay the respondent’s costs in this Court.
For the
Applicants:
G Shakoane SC and D D Mosoma instructed by the State Attorney,
Pretoria
For the
Respondent:
M Snyman SC instructed by MJ Hood and Associates
For the First
Amicus:
J G C Hamman instructed by Kriek Wassenaar and Venter Incorporated
For
the Second and Third Amici:
H H Cowley instructed by Juan Kotze Attorneys
For
the Fourth Amicus:
Larry Marks Attorneys
[1]
60
of 2000.
[2]
Section
123 of the Act provides that “[t]he National Commissioner is
the Registrar of Firearms”. Section 124
of the Act lists
the functions of the Registrar, including that he or she must
“monitor the implementation of this Act”.
[3]
Sakeliga
is a non-profit company which represents the businesses and business
people that are its members, and lobbies to promote
a free market
and favourable business environment.
[4]
GOSA
is a non-profit company with a large membership base of around 96
000 members who are firearm owners. It therefore has an
interest in
firearm licensing.
[5]
NHSA
is an association of firearm owners, accredited as a hunting
association and a sport shooting association. It participates
in the
administration of the Act, given its role as a hunting and sport
shooting association.
[6]
PHA
is an accredited professional hunting association, representing more
than 3 000 professional hunters. Like NHSA, it participates
in the
administration of the Act, given its role as a hunting association.
[7]
Section
7 reads, in relevant part:
“
(1)
When a juristic person wishes to apply for a licence, permit or
authorisation in terms
of this Act, it must nominate a natural
person to apply on its behalf.
(2)
The person so nominated must be identified on the licence, permit or
authorisation
as the responsible person.
(3)
A responsible person who holds any licence, permit or authorisation
issued in terms
of this Act pursuant to an application contemplated
in subsection (1) on behalf of the juristic person must for purposes
of this
Act be regarded as the holder of the licence in question.
(4)
If it becomes necessary to replace a responsible person for any
reason, the juristic
person must in writing—
(a)
nominate a new responsible person who must be in possession of the
relevant competency
certificate; and
(b)
notify the Registrar of the nomination within seven days from the
date of the nomination.”
[8]
The
circular, in relevant part, reads:
“
Application
for renewal of firearm licences must be lodged at least 90 days
before the expiry of the licence. Applications for
renewal may,
however be considered if the application is lodged in less than 90
days, in which case reasons for the late application
must be
provided on the application form . . . In the case where a person
wants to renew or apply for a licence, but the validity
of the
licence has already expired, the person must be informed that he/she
is not anymore in lawful possession of the firearm
and that the
firearm must be surrendered to the nearest police station.”
[9]
Fidelity’s
head office is in Roodepoort, Gauteng, and the Florida police
station is the nearest one to it.
[10]
Minister
of Safety and Security v South African Hunters and Game Conservation
Association
[2018] ZACC 14
;
2018 (2) SACR 164
(CC);
2018 (10) BCLR 1268
(CC) (
SA
Hunters
).
[11]
Id
at para 32.
[12]
Fidelity
launched its application in the High Court in May 2016. This Court’s
judgment in
SA
Hunters
was
delivered in June 2018. Fidelity’s application was argued in
the High Court in February 2019.
[13]
Id
at
para 19.
[14]
Firearms
Control Regulations, GNR
345, 26 March 2004.
[15]
In
this regard, the Supreme Court of Appeal cited
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012
(4) SA 593
(SA) (
Endumeni
)
at
para
18.
[16]
This
concession appears to accord with an averment in paragraph 33 of the
applicants’ founding affidavit that “the
Minister does
not contend that someone whose licence has terminated by operation
of the law is forever precluded from applying
for a new licence”.
[17]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources
[2009]
ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC);
2009 (1) BCLR 1014
(CC) (
Biowatch
).
[18]
In
terms of
section 121
read with the table in Schedule 4, a person
convicted of a contravention of
section 3(1)
would be liable to
imprisonment of up to 15 years.
[19]
In
respect of points (a) to (c), see
Road
Traffic Management Corporation v Waymark Infotech (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZACC 12
;
2019 (5) SA 29
(CC);
2019 (6) BCLR 749
(CC)
(Waymark)
at
paras 30-2 and
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[2014] ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) at para
28. See also
Endumeni
above
n 15 at para 18, a passage frequently cited with approval in
this Court: see
,
e.g,
Airports
Company
South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd
[2018]
ZACC 33
;
2019 (5) SA 1
(CC);
2019 (2) BCLR 165
(CC) at para 29
and
Diener
N.O. v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
[2018] ZACC 48
;
2019 (4) SA 374
(CC);
2019 (2) BCLR 214
(CC) at fn
35.
In
respect of point (d), see
Shiva Uranium (Pty) Limited (In
Business Rescue) v Tayob
[2021] ZACC 40
;
2022 (2) BCLR 197
(CC)
at para 38 and the cases cited in fn 14 thereof.
[20]
SA
Hunters
above
n 10 at para 16.
[21]
Id
at para 19.
[22]
Id at para 20.
[23]
Id at para 21.
[24]
Id
at para 5.
[25]
Id
at paras 29-32.
[26]
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974
(3) SA 13
(A) at 20B.
[27]
Mostert
et al
The
Principles of the Law of Property in South Africa
(Oxford
University Press Southern Africa, Cape Town 2010) at 66. The
elements of possession have been exhaustively considered
by the
courts. See for example
Marcus
v Stamper
and
Zoutendijk
1910
AD 58
at 61;
Meyer
v Glendinning
1939
CPD 84
;
Welgemoed
v Coetzee
1946
TPD 701
at 720;
Underwater
Construction and Salvage Co (Pty) Ltd v Bell
1968
(4) SA 190
(C);
Strydom
v De Lange
1970
(2) SA 6
(T) at 11-2;
Mbuku
v Mdinwa
1982
(1) SA (Tk); and
De
Beer v Zimbali Estate Management Association (Pty) Ltd
2007
(3) SA 254 (N).
[28]
Sections
24
and
28
of
the Act make reference to possession of a firearm.
Section 149(2)(b)
and (3)(b) of the Act refer to ownership; however, the reference is
somewhat incomplete as the concept of “ownership”
seems
to be mentioned in very specific terms here, even though it is not
mentioned beforehand.
[29]
SA
Hunters
above n 10 at para 19.
[30]
Section
120(1)(a)
of the Act.
[31]
Section
110
of the Act read with Chapter 2 of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
.
[32]
Section
4
of the Act provides:
“
(1)
The following firearms and devices are prohibited firearms and may
not be possessed or
licenced in terms of this Act, except as
provided for in
sections 17
,
18
(5),
19
and
20
(1)(b):
(a)
Any fully automatic firearm;
(b)
any gun, cannon, recoilless gun, mortar, light mortar or launcher
manufactured to
fire a rocket, grenade, self-propelled grenade, bomb
or explosive device;
(c)
any frame, body or barrel of such a fully automatic firearm, gun,
cannon, recoilless
gun, mortar, light mortar or launcher;
(d)
any projectile or rocket manufactured to be discharged from a
cannon, recoilless
gun or mortar, or rocket launcher;
(e)
any imitation of any device contemplated in
paragraph (b), (c) excluding
the frame, body or
barrel of a fully automatic firearm, or (d);
(f)
any firearm-
(i)
the mechanism of which has been altered so as to enable the
discharging of
more than one shot with a single depression of the
trigger;
(ii)
the calibre of which has been altered without the written permission
of the
Registrar;
(iii)
the barrel length of which has been altered without the written
permission of
the Registrar;
(iv)
the serial number or any other identifying mark of which has been
changed or removed
without the written permission of the Registrar.”
[33]
See
Waymark
above
n 19 at para 33, approving the proposition that “[i]n its
natural and ordinary sense ‘any’ – unless
restricted by the context – is an indefinite term which
includes all of the things to which it relates”. See also
Kham
v Electoral Commission
[2015] ZACC 37
;
2016 (2) SA 338
(CC);
2016 (2) BCLR 157
(CC) at
para 39.
[34]
See,
for example,
Ebrahim
v Licensing Board, Ladysmith
(1911) 32 NPD 148
;
Winkelbauer
and Winkelbauer
t/a
Eric’s Pizzeria v Minister of Economic Affairs and Technology
1995
(2) SA 570
(T);
Montagu
Springs (Pty) Ltd t/a Avalon Springs Hotel v Liquor Board, Western
Cape
1999 (4) SA 716
(C); and
Gauteng
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development v Interwaste (Pty)
Ltd
[2019] ZASCA 68
;
[2019] 3 All SA 344
(SCA) at paras 28-9.
[35]
Electoral
Commission v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional
Affairs
[2021] ZACC 29
;
2022 (5) BCLR 571
(CC) at para 187 and the
authorities collected in fn 72 of that case.
[36]
U�ukauskas
v Lithuania
,
no 16965/04, § 2, ECHR 2010.
[37]
Article
1 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, 20 March 1952
(Protocol).
[38]
U�ukauskas
above n 36 at para 38. In Northern Ireland, it has been held that
the interference in property rights was
de
minimis
(trivial)
where the owner had to surrender a firearm which he used only for
sporting purposes and which he was free to sell to
some other person
with a firearm certificate:
EH,
Re Judicial Review
[2017] NIQB 107
at para 71.
[39]
Section
103(1)
of the Act provides: “
Unless
the court determines otherwise
,
a person becomes unfit to possess a firearm
if
convicted of
. . . ” (emphasis added).
[40]
In
S
v
Potwane
1983
(1) SA 868
(A) the Appellate Division held that
mens
rea
(a
guilty mind) was necessary to sustain a conviction for unlawful
possession of a firearm in contravention of section 2
of the
Arms and Ammunition Act 75 of 1969. The Court left open the
question whether fault in the form of
culpa
(negligence)
sufficed, or whether
dolus
(unlawful
intent) was required. This approach was followed by the Supreme
Court of Appeal, also in relation to the Arms and Ammunition
Act, in
S
v
Majikazana
[2010] ZASCA
29;
2012 (2) SACR 107
(SCA) at para 22.
[41]
See
sections 104(1) and (2) of the Act. The documents, firearms and
ammunition would also, in terms of section 103(4), become
liable to immediate seizure.
[42]
Section
104(6) of the Act.
[43]
See
sections 8(5), 28(5), 42(5), 56(5) and 104(3)(b) of the Act.
[44]
51
of 1977.
[45]
Section
139 of the Act deals with these amnesty provisions and provides:
“
(1)
The Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, declare an amnesty if—
(a)
the amnesty may result in the reduction of the number of illegally
possessed firearms
in South Africa; and
(b)
it is in the public interest to do so.
(2)
A notice contemplated in subsection (1)—
(a)
will only be valid if it is approved by Parliament;
(b)
must specify the period during which persons may apply for amnesty;
and
(c)
must specify the conditions under which amnesty may be granted.
(3)
A person who surrenders a firearm or ammunition in compliance with a
notice published
in terms of subsection (1), may not be prosecuted
in relation to—
(a)
the firearm, for having been in possession of that firearm without
the appropriate
licence, permit or authorisation; or
(b)
the ammunition, for having been in possession of that ammunition
without having
been in lawful possession of a firearm capable of
discharging the ammunition.
(4)
(a) A person who
surrenders a firearm
in compliance with a notice published in terms
of subsection (1) may apply in terms of this Act for a licence in
respect of that
firearm.
(b)
If a licence is granted, the firearm and ammunition, if any,
surrendered in terms
of this Act must be returned to the holder of
the licence.
(5)
The Registrar must dispose of any firearm or ammunition surrendered
in compliance
with a notice in terms of subsection (1) in such
manner and after the expiry of such period as may be prescribed.”
[46]
Biowatch
above
n 17.
sino noindex
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