Case Law[2024] ZASCA 112South Africa
Gannet Works (Pty) Ltd and Others v Middleton Sue NO and Another (492/2023) [2024] ZASCA 112; 2024 (6) SA 57 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 588 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
16 July 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Environmental law – Marine Living Resources Act 18 of 1998 (the Marine Act) – whether the use of remote-controlled motorised equipment for purposes of recreational angling is authorised by the Marine Act and its regulations.
Judgment
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## Gannet Works (Pty) Ltd and Others v Middleton Sue NO and Another (492/2023) [2024] ZASCA 112; 2024 (6) SA 57 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 588 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
Gannet Works (Pty) Ltd and Others v Middleton Sue NO and Another (492/2023) [2024] ZASCA 112; 2024 (6) SA 57 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 588 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
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sino date 16 July 2024
FLYNOTES:
ENVIRONMENT – Fishing –
Bait-carrying
drones for angling
–
Prohibition
adversely affecting appellants who sell drones –
Marine
Living Resources Act 18 of 1998
and regulations – Angling
defined in regulations and definition deemed to be included in Act
– Key word differentiating
angling from other fishing
activities is “manually” – Angler acquiring
permit for angling must use method
provided for in regulations –
Fishing by manually operating a rod, reel and line – To use
any method other than
authorised one would be unlawful –
Appeal dismissed.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 492/2023
In
the matter between:
GANNET
WORKS (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPELLANT
IARC
CC
SECOND APPELLANT
UNMANNED
SA (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
CDS
ANGLING SUPPLIERS CC
FOURTH APPELLANT
CEG
PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
APPELLANT
and
MIDDLETON
SUE NO
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF FORESTRY, FISHERIES
AND THE ENVIRONMENT
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Gannet
Works (Pty) Ltd
and Others v
Middleton Sue NO and Another
(Case no
492/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 112
(16 July 2024)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA, HUGHES, MEYER and WEINER JJA and COPPIN
AJA
Heard
:
22 May 2024
Delivered
:
The judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 16 July 2024 at 11h00.
Summary:
Environmental
law – Marine Living Resources Act 18 of 1998 (the Marine Act) –
whether the use of remote-controlled motorised
equipment for purposes
of recreational angling is authorised by the Marine Act and its
regulations.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Maumela J sitting as court of
first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa JA (Hughes,
Meyer and Weiner JJA and Coppin AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellants brought an application in the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (the high
court) seeking an order that: (a) a
declarator be issued that the use of drones, bait carrying remote
controlled boats and other
remotely operated devices, are not
prohibited in terms of the
Marine Living Resources
Act 18 of 1988 (the Marine Act)
and the regulations published
pursuant thereto; (b) the first respondent publicly withdraws the
public notice published on 24 February
2022; and (c) the first
respondent declares that the aforesaid public notice is of no legal
effect or consequences. The high court
dismissed the application. The
appeal is with leave of this Court.
The facts
[2]
The appellants are business entities who manufacture, import, market
and sell angling equipment,
such as bait carrying drones and other
remote-controlled bait-carrying devices. The first respondent is the
Deputy Director-General
for Fisheries Management of the Department of
Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (the DDG). The second
respondent is the Minister
of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment
(the Minister).
[3]
On 24 February 2022, the DDG published a notice in which members of
the public, recreational anglers
and suppliers of fishing equipment
were advised that the ‘use of motorised devises, such as, but
not limited to, bait-carrying
drones, bait-carrying remote-controlled
boats and other remotely operated vehicles, as well as motorised
electric reels’
are prohibited for angling.
[4]
The appellants alleged that the publication of the notice by the DDG
had a devastatingly adverse
and negative effect on their businesses.
They experienced a rapid decline in the demand for the drones and
other bait-carrying
devices. In some instances, orders which had
previously been placed for drones were cancelled and other clients
demanded that they
be reimbursed for past purchases.
In
the high court
[5]
The appellants contended that the notice issued by the DDG is
unlawful as, neither the Marine
Act, nor the regulations prohibit the
use of motorised devices such as drones in fishing. They contended
that the Minister/DDG
seeks to amend the Marine Act without following
the correct procedure. They submitted further that the word
‘angling’,
only appears in the regulations and not in the
Marine Act.
[6]
In explaining the use of a drone, the appellants contended that the
use of a remote-controlled
bait-carrying device such as drones does
not derogate from the fact that the anglers who use these devises
apply the old, recognised
method of fishing by manually operating a
rod, reel and a line with hooks, swivels and sinkers attached to the
line. The drone
enables the angler to fly the bait to the area where
he requires his bait to be dropped. The bait is attached to a hook
which is
attached to the fishing line that forms part of the fishing
rod and reel. Once the bait is released, the bait carrying device
(drone)
returns to the shore, and it plays no further role in the
fishing activity. Therefore, so the contention went, angling does not
exclude the use of drones to drop the bait.
[7]
The respondents opposed the application and contended that the notice
issued by the DDG does not
amount to a new law. It is a notification
to the public that the use of motorised devices such as drones, are
not permitted when
undertaking recreational angling. According to the
respondents, lawful recreational angling may only be conducted by
manually operating
a rod, reel and line on one or more separate lines
to which no more than ten hooks are attached per line. They argued
that the
interpretation of the statutory requirement for lawful
recreational fishing endorsed for angling alleged by the appellants
conflicts
with the purposive interpretation of the provisions of the
Marine Act and its regulations.
[8]
The respondents contended that the regulations prescribe the
different categories and methods
of fishing which may be authorised
under the Marine Act. They contended that ‘recreational
fishing’ is recognized as
a discreet fishing category, subject
to the acquisition of a recreational fishing permit, which is then
endorsed with the type
or method of fishing permitted. Angling falls
within this definition. The endorsement of the permit issued for
recreational fishing,
so the contention went, determines what method
of fishing is authorised in terms thereof. The method of recreational
fishing and
the type of permit required is chosen by indicating
either ‘angling’ or ‘spearfishing’ or
‘cast/throw
net’ on the application form.
[9]
According to the respondents, as angling is defined in regulation 1
to mean ‘recreational
fishing by manually operating a rod, reel
and line or one or more separate lines to which no more than ten
hooks are attached per
line’, any method that falls outside of
the ‘manual operation’ of a rod, reel and line is not and
cannot be permitted
as recreational fishing endorsed for angling.
[10]
The respondents requested the high court to appreciate that the
subject matter of fisheries management is
a policy-laden and
polycentric provision that entails a degree of specialist knowledge
and expertise that very few judges may be
expected to possess. They
contended that a court has no discretion to declare that the lawful
obligations imposed by the relevant
legislation should not be
complied with.
[11]
In dismissing the application, the high court held as follows:
‘
In
this case, conditions and circumstances involving fishing have come
into scrutiny. The legislature has not left room for any
ambivalence
where it regards what constitute “legally permissible
fishing”.’
The
high court continued and concluded that:
‘
Consideration
of judicial deference also comes leaning towards a purposive
interpretation of the word “angling” in the
“Regulations”. That, coupled with the fact that the
definition of “this Act” in section 1 of the Act
“
includes
any regulation or notice made or issued under this Act
”
has the effect that the court inclines towards dismissing this
Application with costs’.
In
this Court
[12]
The issue to be determined is whether the appellants have made out a
case for the declaration that the use
of remote-controlled motorised
equipment such as drones, for purposes of recreational angling is
authorised by the Marine Act and
therefore that the notice issued by
the DDG was unlawful and should be set aside.
[13]
The appellants allege that the high court erred in identifying the
nature of the application as similar to
review rather than the one
requiring interpretation of the Marine Act. They contend that, had
the high court engaged upon an interpretive
exercise, it would have
found that the prohibitions listed in s 44 of the Marine Act
[1]
do not include bait-carrying drones or other bait-carrying devices.
[14]
The key question to determine is whether the Marine Act and its
regulations prohibit the use of bait-carrying
drones for purposes of
recreational angling. To answer this question, an interpretive
exercise is required.
[15]
The principles applicable to statutory interpretation are trite.
Regard must be had to the text, context
and purpose of the provision,
and the provision must be within the lens of the Constitution.
[2]
Furthermore, the historical context within which the provision was
enacted may be relevant to the process of interpretation. I
find it
apposite to outline the relevant sections in the Marine Act that
provide for fishing, the background and the purpose of
those
sections.
[16]
Fishing activity in South Africa is regulated by the Marine Act and
its regulations. Section 24
(b)
of the Constitution imposes a
legal obligation on the Minister to protect the environment for the
benefit of the present and future
generations through reasonable
legislative and other measures that ‘prevent ecological
degradation; promote conservation;
and to secure ecologically
sustainable development and use of natural resources while promoting
justifiable economic and social
development’.
[17]
Section 2 of the Marine Act outlines the objectives and purpose of
the Act as follows:
‘
The
Minister and any organ of the state shall in exercising any power
under this Act, have regard to the following objectives and
principles:
(a)
The need to achieve optimum utilisation and ecologically sustainable
development of marine living resources;
(b)
the need to conserve marine living resources for both present and
future generations;
(c)
the need to apply precautionary approaches in respect of the
management and development of marine resources;
(e)
the need to protect the ecosystem as a whole, including species which
are not targeted for exploitation;
(f)
the need to preserve marine biodiversity;
.
. .
(j)
the need to restructure the fishing industry to address historical
imbalances and to achieve equity within all branches of the
fishing
industry.’
To
achieve this statutory obligation, the Minister has to put reasonable
legislative measures in place, such as the statutory system
of
fisheries management provided in the Marine Act and its regulations.
This would include the manner in which the fishing activities
are
performed. This is done to ensure that the effects of fishing are
such that the fish populations remain stable for the benefit
of all
South Africans. With this prelude, I now set out the statutory
systems for fishing activities and their definitions.
[18]
The Marine Act defines fishing to mean:
‘
(a)
searching for, catching, taking or harvesting fish or an attempt to
any such activity;
(b)
engaging in any other activity which can reasonably be expected to
result in the locating, catching, taking or harvesting of
fish;
(c)
placing, searching for or recovering any fish aggregating devise or
associated gear, including radio beacons;
(d)
any operation in support or in preparation of any activity described
in this definition, or
(e)
the use of an aircraft in relation to any activity described in this
definition. . .’
[19]
‘Aircraft’ is defined as ‘any craft capable of
self-sustained movement through the atmosphere
and includes a
hovercraft’. ‘Recreational fishing’ is defined as
‘any fishing done for leisure or sport
and not for sale,
barter, earnings or gain’. ‘Angling’, on the other
hand, is defined in the regulations as ‘recreational
fishing by
manually operating a rod, reel and line or one or more separate lines
to which no more than ten hooks are attached per
line’.
[20]
The appellants contend that the word angling is foreign as it is not
mentioned in the Marine Act. Whilst
this is correct, the definition
of ‘this Act’ in section 1 of the Marine Act ‘includes
any regulation or notice
made or issued under this Act’. This
therefore means that, although angling is defined in the regulations
and not in the
Marine Act, its definition is deemed to be included in
the Marine Act.
[21]
The key word in the definition of angling which differentiates the
fishing activity of angling from other
fishing activities is, in my
view, ‘manually’. The Oxford Dictionary defines manually
to mean ‘by hand rather
than automatically or electronically.’
[22]
Section 13 of the Marine Act provides that:
(1)
‘No person shall exercise any right granted in terms of s18 or
perform any other activity in terms of this Act unless
a permit has
been issued by the Minister to such person to exercise that right or
perform that activity.’
(2)
Any permit contemplated in subsection (1) shall –
(a)
…
(b)
be issued subject to the conditions determined by the Minister in the
permit;’
[23]
Once the fisherman chooses a permit for angling as the type of
fishing, the method to perform angling, as
defined in the
regulations, comes into play. The respondents contend that a permit
for recreational fishing endorsed for angling
authorizes only fishing
by manually operating a rod, reel and line. They point out that a
method for ‘recreational angling’
is clearly defined in
very specific terms as the ‘manual operation’ of a rod,
reel or line. This definition implicitly
excludes the use of
remote-controlled, motorized equipment, such as drones.
[24]
Counsel for the appellants argues however that once a fishing permit
has been issued to an angler, the angler
is then at liberty to engage
in any form of fishing activity using whatever methods that may be
available, provided the method
used is not specifically prohibited in
terms of the Marine Act or the regulations. He contends that the
activity of fishing, by
definition, includes the use of aircraft such
as drones.
[25]
In my view, the above argument is ill-conceived. First, the
Marine Act and its regulations not only
specify the type of fishing
activity, but also the method to be used in performing such fishing
activity. Second, lawful fishing
can only be authorised by means of a
s13 permit. As stated earlier, once the angler has been issued with
the permit for angling,
the angler is not at liberty to use any
method other than the one that is provided for in the regulations
that is, fishing by manually
operating a rod, reel and line or one or
more separate lines to which no more than ten hooks are attached per
line. To use any
other method other than the authorised one would be
unlawful.
[26]
For these reasons, I find that the appellants failed to make out a
case for the relief sought. Therefore,
the appeal must fail.
[27]
In the result, the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
F E MOKGOHLOA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
R
Stockwell SC with W Carstens
Instructed
by:
Otto
Krause Inc Attorney, Roodepoort
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
J
Rust SC
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Prohibited
fishing methods
44
.
(1) No person shall-
(a)
use, permit to be used, or attempt to use any explosive, fire-arm,
poison or other noxious substance for the purpose of killing,
stunning, disabling or catching fish, or of in any way rendering
fish to be caught more easily;
(b)
carry or have in his or her possession or control any explosive,
fire-arm, poison or other noxious substance for any of the
purpose
referred to in paragraph (a); or
(c)
engage in a fishing or related activity by a method or in a manner
prohibited by the Minister by notice in the
Gazette.
(2) No person shall
land, sell or possess any fish taken by any means in contravention
of this Act.
[2]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[2014]
ZACC 16
; SA
2014 (4) SA 474
CC;
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC).
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