Case Law[2023] ZASCA 72South Africa
Outdoor Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Police and Another (344/2022) [2023] ZASCA 72 (24 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 (the FCA) – whether regulation 67 of the Firearm Control Regulations entitles one firearms’ dealer to store firearms at its licensed premises on behalf of another firearms’ dealer – properly construed neither regulation 67 nor the FCA permits one dealer to provide storage for firearms to another dealer.
Judgment
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## Outdoor Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Police and Another (344/2022) [2023] ZASCA 72 (24 May 2023)
Outdoor Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Police and Another (344/2022) [2023] ZASCA 72 (24 May 2023)
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sino date 24 May 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 344/2022
In
the matter between:
OUTDOOR
INVESTMENT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
INYATHI
SPORTING SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
SECOND
APPELLANT
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER FOR THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Outdoor Investment
Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Another v The Minister of Police &
Another
(Case No 344/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 72
(24 May 2023)
Coram:
SALDULKER
and CARELSE JJA and NHLANGULELA, KATHREE-SETILOANE and UNTERHALTER
AJJA
Heard
: 3
March 2023
Delivered
: 24
May 2023
Summary:
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 (the FCA) –
whether regulation 67 of the Firearm Control Regulations entitles one
firearms’
dealer to store firearms at its licensed premises on
behalf of another firearms’ dealer – properly construed
neither
regulation 67 nor the FCA permits one dealer to provide
storage for firearms to another dealer.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Noncembu AJ, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs including those of two counsel.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Kathree-Setiloane AJA
(Saldulker and Carelse JJA and Nhlangulela and Unterhalter AJJA)
concurring:
[1]
This appeal concerns the question of whether one firearms’
dealer licensed to
trade in firearms and ammunition under the
Firearms Control Act (FCA
)
[1]
read with the Firearm Control Regulations (the regulations)
[2]
may store firearms on behalf of another licensed firearms’
dealer.
Background
[2]
The first appellant is Outdoor Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd t/a
Safari Outdoor (Safari
Outdoor), and the second appellant is Inyathi
Sporting Supplies (Pty) Ltd (Inyathi).
[3]
Each of them has been issued with dealer’s licences in terms of
the FCA to trade in firearms and ammunition.
[4]
Safari Outdoor conducts the business of a retailer in firearms and
ammunition. It has five branches situated in Johannesburg (Rivonia),
Pretoria (Lynnwood), Stellenbosch (Koelenhof), the East Rand
(Boksburg) and the West Rand (Krugersdorp).
[3]
Inyathi is a wholesaler in firearms and ammunition. A significant
portion of the business
of Inyathi is to provide storage facilities
for firearms it sells to other retailers who are unable to take
immediate delivery.
[4]
When Safari Outdoor sells a firearm to a purchaser, the purchaser is
required to apply
for a licence to possess the firearm in terms of
the FCA.
[5]
The purchaser cannot
take delivery of the firearm until he or she has been issued with a
licence to possess the firearm. Safari
Outdoor is, therefore,
required to store the firearm until this happens. In terms of the
sale agreement which Safari Outdoor and
the purchaser typically enter
into, if the purchaser does not apply for a licence to possess the
firearm as required under the
FCA, he or she will be liable to pay a
standard storage fee per month until the application is made.
However, once the purchaser
has applied for a licence to possess the
firearm, Safari Outdoor will store the firearm free of charge for a
period of 12 months.
[5]
Safari proffered 3 reasons, in its founding affidavit, for storing
firearms it sold
at Inyathi’s storage facilities. These were
that: (a) due to a backlog in the office of the National Commissioner
of Police
(National Commissioner),
[6]
at the time, it took anything between six to eighteen months to
finalise a licence to possess a firearm; (b) as a result of the
volume of firearms it sold to members of the public, it became
‘practically impossible’ to store all of them at its
premises; and (c) storing these firearms at its premises (retail
space) was significantly more expensive than storing them in
Inyathi’s bulk storage facilities.
[6]
When Safari Outdoor receives its stock of firearms, each firearm is
duly recorded
in its firearm stock register in terms of s 39(3) of
the FCA read with regulation 37 of the regulations. I reference these
provisions
later in the judgment.
[7]
A designated firearm officer (DFO), who is a representative of the
Registrar of Firearms,
regularly visits the respective business
premises of Safari Outdoor and Inyathi. During one such visit at its
Lynnwood Bridge branch,
Safari Outdoor was, in essence, informed that
it is impermissible for Inyathi to store firearms on behalf of Safari
Outdoor.
In the high court
[8]
The appellants, consequently, brought an application in the Gauteng
Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (the high court) seeking a
declaratory order in the following terms:
‘
It
is declared that [Safari Outdoor] is entitled to store firearms
legally in its possession, in terms of Regulation 67 of the
[Regulations, at the premises of [Inyathi]], provided that the
removal of the firearms from the premises of [Safari Outdoor] were
recorded in [Safari Outdoor’s] Firearm Stock Register and that
the firearms stored at the premises of [Inyathi] be recorded
in the
Firearm Safe Custody Register of [Inyathi].’
[9]
The Police Commissioner (Registrar of Firearms) opposed the
application on the basis
that Inyathi is not legally entitled to
provide storage for firearms on behalf of Safari Outdoor. The high
court dismissed the
application on the basis that the appellants had
failed to make out a case for the declaratory relief sought. The
appeal is before
us with the leave of the high court.
The appeal
[10]
The question for determination is whether Inyathi may provide storage
for firearms on behalf
of Safari Outdoor. The appellant’s case
is that, based on the ordinary grammatical meaning of the words in
regulation 67(3)
of the regulations, a dealer may provide storage for
firearms to another dealer, in the safe or strong room specified in
the former’s
licence. Regulation 67 provides:
‘
(1)
Where a person provides storage facilities for firearms or ammunition
to another person, such storage facilities must conform
to the
applicable requirements for a safe or strong room as set out in SABS
Standard 953-1 or 953-2.
(2) Storage may only be
provided to a person who may lawfully possess the firearm or
ammunition.
(3) a holder of a dealer
or gunsmith’s license may provide storage for firearms and
ammunition in the safe or strong room
specified on the dealer’s
or gunsmith’s licence.
(4) during the storage of
a firearm, it must be –
(a)
uploaded;
(b)
not readily accessible to unauthorised use;
(c)
securely attached with a secure locking device to
a non- portable structure in such a manner that it cannot readily be
removed.’
[11]
Regulation 67 must be interpreted in the context of the FCA and the
regulations. The rules of
interpretation, as pronounced by this Court
in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[7]
for legislation and other documents, apply to the interpretation of
the provisions of the FCA and the regulations.
[12]
Part 1, chapter 7 of the FCA provides the framework for licences
issued to,
inter alia
, dealers to trade in firearms and
ammunition. Section 31 provides that no person may trade in any
firearm, muzzle loading firearm
or ammunition without a dealer’s
licence. Section 32(1) provides that a dealer’s licence must be
issued to a person
who is a fit and proper person to trade in
firearms and ammunition. Section 32(2) provides that any natural
person who engages
in trading on behalf of a dealer must hold a
competency certificate to trade in firearms and ammunition.
[13]
Section 33 of the FCA authorises the Minister of Safety and Security
to prescribe:
(a)
conditions in respect of the issue of a dealer’s licence which
the Registrar of Firearms may impose on a dealer;
[8]
and (b) specifications in respect of the business premises of a
dealer.
[9]
Section 34 of the
FCA, in turn, provides that the dealer’s licence must: (a)
specify the premises in respect of which the
licence is issued; (b)
specify the conditions contemplated in s 33; and (c) contain such
other information as may be prescribed.
[10]
[14]
Section 39 stipulates the duties of a dealer. It provides:
‘
(1)
A dealer may trade in firearms or ammunition only on premises
specified in the dealer’s licence;
(2) A dealer may not
permit any person to trade in firearms or ammunition on his or her
behalf unless the person is in possession
of the appropriate
competency certificate.
(3) A dealer must keep
such registers as may be prescribed and containing such information
as may be prescribed at the premises
specified in the dealer’s
licence.
(4) A dealer must keep
his or her dealer’s licence on the premises specified in the
licence.
(5) A dealer must, at the
request of any police official, produce for inspection-
(a) any firearms or
ammunition that the dealer may have in stock;
(b) his or her dealer’s
licence; and
(c) any register or
electronic data kept by the dealer in terms of Part 1 of this
Chapter.
. . .
(9) A dealer must comply
with any condition imposed under section 33 and specifications
prescribed under that section.’
[15]
Chapter 9 of the FCA provides for the storage, transport and carrying
of firearms and ammunition.
Section 83, which is found in that
chapter, provides that firearms and ammunition must be stored and
transported in the prescribed
manner. Section 145(1)
(a)
of the
FCA provides that the Minister of Safety and Security, may by notice
in the Gazette, make regulations regarding,
inter alia
,
anything that may or must be prescribed in terms of the FCA.
[16]
I now deal with the interpretation to be ascribed to regulation 67.
The word ‘person’
in regulation 67 is neither defined in
the regulations nor in the FCA. The word ‘person’ in
regulation 67(1) is, however,
a reference to a holder of a dealer’s
or gunsmith’s licence, who provides storage facilities for
firearms and ammunition.
This much is clear from regulation 67(3),
which provides that a ‘holder of a dealer’s or gunsmith’s
licence may
provide storage for firearms and ammunition in the safe
or strong room specified in the dealer’s or gunsmith’s
licence’.
In terms of regulation 67(3) ‘such storage
facilities must conform to the applicable requirements for a safe or
strong room
as set out in the SAB Standard 953-1 or 953-2’.
[17]
The term ‘another person’ as used in regulation 67(1) is
a reference to ‘a
person who may lawfully possess the firearm
or ammunition’ as contemplated in regulation 67(2) of the
regulations. This sub-regulation
provides that ‘[s]torage may
only be provided to a person who may lawfully possess the firearm and
ammunition’. The
appellants argue that because a dealer’s
licence authorises a dealer to possess firearms for the purposes of
trading in them,
the phrase ‘a person who may lawfully possess
a firearm and ammunition’ in regulation 67(2) must be construed
as including
a holder of a dealer’s or gunsmith’s
licence. They contend that on this construction, regulation 67
permits a holder
of a dealer’s licence to provide storage
facilities to another holder of a dealer’s licence.
[18]
Regulation 86 deals with the safe custody of firearms and ammunition
by, on the one hand, dealers
and gunsmiths and, on the other, an
individual holder of a firearm licence, authorisation or permit to
possess a firearm. Regulations
86(1) and (2) provide:
‘
(1)
When a firearm or muzzle loading firearm is not under the direct
personal and physical control of a holder of a licence, authorisation
or permit to possess the firearm or muzzle loading firearm, the
firearm or muzzle loading firearm and its ammunition must be stored
in a safe place or storeroom that conforms to the prescripts of SABS
Standard 953-1 and 953-2, unless otherwise specifically provided
in
these regulations.
(2) Subject to regulation
36(2) a dealer or gunsmith must store firearms or muzzle loading
firearms and ammunition in a safe or
strong room that conforms to the
prescriptions of SABS Standard 953-1 and 953-2, at the place of
business specified on the applicable
licence, authorisation and
permit, as the case may be.’
[19]
To interpret the words ‘a person who may lawfully possess the
firearms and ammunition’
in regulation 67(2) so as to include
dealers, would be to contradict regulation 86(2), which expressly
provides that a dealer or
gunsmith must store,
inter alia
,
firearms in a safe or strong room that conforms to the prescriptions
of SABS Standard 953-1 and 953-2 at the place of business
specified
in the licence. This duty is peremptory and applies across the board
to all dealers.
[20]
In terms of regulation 86(2), there is a nexus between storage of the
firearms and ammunition
and the place of business specified on the
dealer’s licence. This connection to the place of business
specified in the dealer’s
licence, is consistent with the
provisions of s 39(1) of the FCA, which provides that ‘[a]
dealer may trade in firearms or
ammunition only on premises specified
in the dealer’s licence’. It is arguable that on the
ordinary grammatical meaning
of the word ‘trade’, it is
limited to the activity of buying and selling firearms and
ammunition. However, on a contextual
interpretation that has regard
to the provisions of the FCA, the business premises specified in the
dealer’s licence is intrinsically
connected to both the trade
in, and storage of, firearms and ammunition by a dealer. Textual
indicators in the FCA that confirm
this connection are found in:
(a) section 33
(b),
which provides that the Minister may prescribe ‘specifications
in respect of the business premises of a dealer’;
(b) section 34, which
provides that the dealer must specify the premises in respect of
which the licence is issued;
(c) section 39(4), which
provides that a dealer must keep such registers as prescribed and
containing such information as prescribed
at the premises specified
in the licence;
(d) section 39(5), which
provides that the dealer must keep his or her dealer’s licence
at the premises specified in the licence;
(e) section 39(9), which
makes it mandatory for a dealer to comply with any, condition (in the
licence) imposed under s 33 and,
specification prescribed under the
section.
[21]
In relation to the storage of firearms and ammunitions, s 83 of the
FCA provides that they must
be stored and transported as prescribed.
Prescribed means prescribed by regulations in terms of s 145 of FCA.
Regulation 86(2)
then connects the storage of firearms and ammunition
to the place of business specified in the dealer’s licence. As
indicated,
this sub-regulation obliges a dealer to store firearms and
ammunition in a prescribed safe or strong room at the place of
business
specified in the licence. Thus, having regard to the
peremptory nature of regulation 86(2), the phrase ‘may only be
provided
to a person who may lawfully possess the firearm or
ammunition’ in regulation 67(2) must be construed as a
reference to an
individual holder of a licence, authorisation or
permit to possess a firearm or ammunition.
[22]
Regulations 86(1), 86(4)
(a)-(f)
[11]
and 86(11)
(b)
[12]
of the regulations deal with the safe custody of, and access to,
firearms in relation to an individual holder of a licence,
authorisation
or permit to possess a firearm or ammunition. These
sub-regulations use the term ‘person who may lawfully possess a
forearm,
muzzle loading firearm or ammunition’ interchangeably
with ‘holder of a licence, authorisation or permit to possess’
or ‘person who holds a licence to possess a firearm’.
However, properly construed, each of these terms refer to an
individual holder of a licence to possess firearms or ammunition, as
opposed to a holder of a dealer’s licence, which authorises
it
to trade in firearms and ammunition.
[23]
Notably, the FCA references a firearm’s dealer specifically as
‘a dealer’ or
a ‘holder of a dealer’s
licence’. As do the regulations. This is a further textual
indicator that the phrase
‘may only be provided to a person who
may lawfully possess the firearm or ammunition’ in regulation
67 of the regulations,
is a reference to an individual holder of a
licence, authorisation or permit to possess a firearm or ammunition,
and not another
dealer.
[24]
By the same token, the words ‘on behalf of the holder of a
licence, authorisation or permit’
in regulation 37 of the
regulations must also be construed as a reference to an individual
holder of a licence, authorisation or
permit to possess a firearm or
ammunition. Regulation 37 obliges a dealer to keep a Firearms Safe
Custody Register of the firearms
that the dealer receives on behalf
of a holder of a licence, authorisation or permit for the purposes of
the safe custody or transfer
of the firearms. In terms of regulation
67, a dealer may provide storage to this category of licence holder
as prescribed in the
regulations.
[25]
The regulations are subordinate legislation.
They are the
consequence of a statutory power conferred, by virtue of s 145 of the
FCA, on the Minister of Safety and Security to
make regulations on
matters relating to,
inter alia
, anything that may or must be
prescribed in terms of the FCA. Although the regulations are binding
with the force of law, they
cannot impose requirements that are
additional to, or inconsistent with, the FCA. They also cannot
circumscribe the ambit of the
FCA or override its provisions. They
remain subordinate to the FCA.
[26]
Consequently,
to interpret regulation 67 as
permitting a dealer (as agent) to store firearms for another dealer,
at its place of business specified
in that dealer’s licence,
will be inconsistent with the injunction in s 39(1) of the FCA that a
dealer may trade in firearms
and ammunition only on premises
specified in the dealer’s licence. Significantly, counsel for
the appellant accepted at the
hearing of the appeal that storage of
firearms form part of the trade in firearms as contemplated in s
39(1) of the FCA.
[27]
In sum, neither the FCA nor the regulations permits a dealer to
provide storage for firearms
to another dealer. This interpretation
of the FCA and the regulations is consistent with the overall purpose
of the FCA, which
is to establish a comprehensive and effective
system of firearm control and management.
[13]
Accordingly, it is impermissible for Inyathi to provide storage for
firearms on behalf of Safari Outdoor as its agent.
[28]
In the result, the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs including those of two counsel.
__________________________
F
KATHREE-SETILOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellants:
N
G D Maritz SC and A P J Els
Instructed
by:
J
W Botes Incorporated, Pretoria
Salley’s
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first and second respondents:
M
V Magagane
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
State
Attorney, Bloemfontei
[1]
Firearms Control Act
60
of 2000
.
[2]
As published in GG 26156 GNR 345 of 26 March 2004.
[3]
Safari
Outdoor and Inyathi are referred to collectively as ‘the
appellants’ in the judgment.
[4]
Although
Safari
Outdoor owns the total issued share capital of Inyathi, they operate
their respective businesses separately and independently
of each
other.
[5]
Before
a person can apply for a licence to possess a firearm, that person
must be in possession of a competency certificate as
contemplated in
s 10
of the FCA.
[6]
The
National Commissioner is the Registrar of Firearms in terms of
s 123
of the FCA.
[7]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 12.
[8]
Section
33
(a)
of the FCA.
[9]
Section
33
(b)
of the FCA.
[10]
Sections
34
(a)
,
(b)
and
(c)
of the FCA.
[11]
Regulations 86(4)
(a)-(f)
provide:
(a)
A person who holds a licence to possess a firearm or is a holder of
a competency certificate in respect of a muzzle loading firearm,
may
store a firearm or muzzle loading firearm in respect of which he or
she does not hold a licence or competency certificate,
if -
(i)
he or she is in possession of a written authorisation given by the
person who holds a licence, permit or authorisation to
possess that
firearm or competency certificate in respect of a muzzle loading
firearm and which authorisation is endorsed by
a relevant Designated
Firearms Officer; and
(ii)
the firearm or muzzle loading firearm is stored in a prescribed safe
at the place mentioned in the authorisation contemplated
in
sub-paragraph (i).
(b)
Only the person who holds a licence, permit, or authorisation to
possess the firearm or a competency certificate in respect of
a
muzzle loading firearm or permission contemplated in subparagraph
(a)(i) may transport that firearm or muzzle loading firearm
to and
from the place where that firearm or muzzle loading firearm is to be
stored in terms of paragraph (a) as authorised by
the Registrar or
Designated Firearms Officer.
[12]
Regulation
86(11)
(b)
of the Regulations provides:
(b)
Any person who may lawfully possess a firearm, muzzle loading
firearm or ammunition shall store these in a prescribed safe or
strong room, to which he or she shall have at all time exclusive
access or his or her presence and cooperation shall be a necessary
prerequisite for access to the relevant firearm, muzzle loading
firearm and ammunition unless-
(i)
the storage is undertaken by the holder of a dealer’s of
gunsmith’s licence in which case the dealer or the dealer’s
personnel with valid competency certificates, or the gunsmith may
have access to the safe or strong-room; or
(ii)
the firearm or muzzle loading firearm is temporarily stored in a
safe or strong room that conforms to the prescripts of SABS
Standard
953-1 and 953-2 or a lock-away safe, device, apparatus or instrument
for the safe custody of a firearm that conforms
to the prescripts of
sub-regulation (12), that is under the control of a holder of a
licence, authorisation, permit or competency
certificate for a
muzzle loading firearm issued in terms of this Act, the person
storing the firearm or muzzle loading firearm
must in writing notify
the Designated Firearms Officer in whose area the firearm or muzzle
loading firearm is temporarily stored.’
[13]
Section
4 of the FCA provides:
‘
The
purpose of this Act is to –
(a) enhance the
constitutional rights to life and bodily integrity;
(b) prevent the
proliferation of illegally possessed firearms and, by providing for
the removal of those firearms from society
and by improving control
over legally possessed firearms, to prevent crime involving the use
of firearms;
(c) enable the State to
remove illegally possessed firearms from society, to control the
supply, possession, safe storage, transfer,
and use of firearms and
to detect and punish the negligent or criminal use of firearms;
(d) establish a
comprehensive and effective system of firearm control and
management; and
(e) ensure the
efficiency, monitoring and enforcement of legislation pertaining to
the control of firearms.’
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