Revocation because the Commissioner is satisfied that Mr Walker negligently caused a firearm to be stolen
- Section 24 (2) (c1) states:
A licence may be revoked … If the Commissioner is satisfied that the licensee, through any negligence or fraud on the part of the licensee, has caused a firearm to be lost or stolen …
- The Commissioner relied on the Conviction and submitted that Mr Walker's shotgun was stolen because of his negligence. The Commissioner said:
68. In Muller v Lalic [2000] NSWCA 50, a case dealing with the failure to safely store a firearm, the Court of Appeal held that a failure to comply with statutory requirements is evidence of negligence.
69. While the Respondent has a discretion whether to revoke the Licence or not on the basis that the Applicant has, through negligence on his part, caused a firearm to be stolen, having regard to the circumstances of the stealing, that discretion should be exercised to revoke the Licence.
- Mr Walker's evidence of the event which led to the Conviction was that on the morning of Saturday, 6 June 2015 he had intended to use the shotgun to eradicate feral cats near his house. He stated that the shotgun was unloaded and within his sight all morning. The shells were placed on top of a refrigerator a few feet from the shotgun. He was running behind schedule to attend a clearing sale away from his property and before locking and leaving his home he placed the shotgun on top of a piano inside his lounge room. He was away from home for 4 ½ hours and on his return discovered that the shotgun was missing. He subsequently informed police of the theft of the shotgun and of some machinery from his property.
- In his application for an internal review Mr Walker stated that in the 30 odd years he had resided at the property he had never lost a thing. In response, the Commissioner produced evidence that Mr Walker's home had been broken into and property stolen in 1990, some 25 years earlier. Mr Walker's oral evidence to the Tribunal was that at the time he stated that he had never previously lost anything from his property he had forgotten the 1990 event.
- The evidence shows that on 6 June 2015 Mr Walker had an approved gunsafe on his property and that notwithstanding the theft of other items from the property on or about that date, all firearms within the gunsafe remained secure.
- The Commissioner submitted that the theft of the shotgun would not have occurred if it had been securely locked in Mr Walker's gunsafe and that he was aware of his statutory obligations in this regard. The Commissioner also submitted that the theft of the shotgun created a possible threat to public safety because it had moved into the hands of an unknown person.
- Mr Walker submitted that he thought that by locking the shotgun inside his house, a structure of hard wood and steel or house bricks, he had complied with his obligation of ensuring safe keeping of the shotgun.
- I observe that there is evidence that during the seizure of his firearms and licence in June 2015 Mr Walker said to police officers words to the effect that he should have followed a mate's advice and cut all the locks on his safe. It may well be that Mr Walker's honesty in informing police of the whereabouts of the shotgun at the time that it was stolen had a direct negative effect in that it led to the seizure of his firearms and the revocation of his licence. However, I find that Mr Walker's honesty in informing police of what actually happened is to be commended irrespective of the revocation.
- Having regard to the facts detailed above I find that the ground in s 24 (2) (c1) creating the discretionary power of revocation has been made out.