134 Marek Kania
the assessment in these matters is up to the police authorities, who may pursue a more
or less stringent policy in this regard. In turn, the Supreme Administrative Court, in its
judgment of 6 June 2014, ref. II OSK 32/13,14 indicated that the iden-tication of only
combat rearms as a means of protection is not justied, since there are such instru-
ments of nancial trading that allow, if not to eliminate completely, then at least to
minimize the possible threat associated with cash trading or products of signicant val-
ue. There is also nothing to prevent the applicant from using the services of a security
company for the company’s headquarters, or for providing protection at the place of
residence, if they feel the need to do so. If, for some reason, a party does not choose
these solutions, it does so at its own risk. In other judgments it is pointed out that the
issuance of a permit to possess rearms must be justied in each individual case by
special factual circumstances, and these must not be subjective circumstances, but ob-
jectively existing ones (e.g., the judgment of the Provincial Administrative Court in
Warsaw of 6 November 2014, ref. Akt. II SA/Wa1188/14).15 The Provincial Administra-
tive Court in Warsaw in the judgments of 13 June 2012, Akt. no. II SA/Wa621/12;16 of
30 March 2012, Akt. no. II SA/Wa2603/11;17 of 26 February 2014, Akt. no. II SA/
Wa2068/1318 and of 25 July 2014, Akt. ref. II SA/Wa893/1419 also indicated that a threat
to life, health or property constituting a valid reason for possessing weapons, in order to
be considered permanent, must manifest permanence and timeliness, while its reality
must be real and objective, and not characterized by subjectivity. A real threat is a fore-
seeable or highly probable hreat. It must arise from a sequence of events that have oc-
curred in the applicant’s life and have aected them. Above-average, on the other hand,
cannot be reduced to a hypothetical situation, but must be extraordinary and unprece-
dented. Similarly, the Supreme Administrative Court ruled in the judgment of 25 June
2015, ref. II OSK2836/13,20 indicating, among other things, that the condition for grant-
ing a gun permit for personal protection purposes is a strictly, dened by law, relation-
ship of circumstances that, occurring together, can constitute a valid reason justifying
the granting of the permit. One of these prerequisites is a permanent, threat to the life,
health or property of the applicant. Therefore, it cannot be a circumstance that existed in
the past and no longer exists today, because then the element of permanent occurrence
of danger is missing. Since all three of these prerequisites characterizing the threat (per-
manence, reality and above-average) must be present together, then the determination
that one of them is not present results in the other prerequisites losing their raison d’être
in the sense that they cannot justify successfully applying for a gun permit. Thus, even
a real and above-average threat, which, however, is not permanent, but has occurred in
the past and no longer exists today, cannot be considered a valid reason for granting
a rearm permit for personal protection. In the opinion of the courts, the applicant’s
subjective assessment of a threatening danger cannot be the basis for issuing a combat
14 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 06.06.2014, ref. no. II OSK 32/13.
15 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 06.11.2014, ref. no. II SA/Wa1188/14.
16 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 13.06.2012, ref. no. II SA/Wa621/12.
17 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 30.03.2012, ref. no. II SA/Wa2603/11.
18 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 26.02.2014, ref. no. II SA/Wa2068/13.
19 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 25.07.2014, ref. no. II SA/Wa893/14.
20 Judgment of the WSA in Warsaw of 25.06.2015, ref. no. II OSK2836/13.