Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 73South Africa
Bezuidenhout and Others v Minister for Agriculture Land Reform Rural Development and Others (2925/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 73 (4 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
4 March 2024
Headnotes
actions which followed must be seen as having spoliated the peaceful and undisturbed possession of the applicants. The applicants submit that they possessed exclusive use of the keys to the locks on the gates to the two properties in question (Dassiesfontein and Dassies 2) and which had been locked by them at the time of the acts of spoliation, that the respondents broke the locks and put their own locks on the gates excluding therewith the applicants use and possession of the property and they had been grazing and farming the said farm. The taking of the property by the department and the 5th and 6th respondents were without any legal process and court order.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Bezuidenhout and Others v Minister for Agriculture Land Reform Rural Development and Others (2925/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 73 (4 March 2024)
Bezuidenhout and Others v Minister for Agriculture Land Reform Rural Development and Others (2925/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 73 (4 March 2024)
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sino date 4 March 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No.:
2925/2024
In the matter between:
JOHANNES
JOSHUA BEZUIDENHOUT
First
Applicant
HEROLD
BEZUIDENHOUT
Second Applicant
JAN
BERGH
Third Applicant
NUVELD
FARMING EMPOWERMENT ENTERPRISE
Fourth Applicant
(PTY) LTD
v
MINISTER
FOR AGRICULTURE LAND REFORM AND
First
Respondent
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
CHIEF
DIRECTOR: WESTERN CAPE PROVINCIAL SHARED
Second Respondent
SERVICES CENTRE
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR GENERAL FOR AGRICULTURE
Third Respondent
LAND REFORM AND RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
LUBABALO
MBEKENI
Fourth Respondent
HENDRIK
BOOYSEN
Fifth Respondent
LUCY
NDUKU
Sixth Respondent
Coram
:
Salie, J
Date of
Hearing
:
4 March 2024 (10H00-13H30)
Written Judgment
delivered
:
4 March 2024 (16H30) - Court 28
Counsel for
Applicants
:
Adv. Geoff Budlender SC
Counsel for First to
Fourth Respondents
:
Adv. Khanyisa Ngqata
Counsel for Fifth and
Sixth Respondents
:
Adv. Madoda Titus
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
MONDAY, 4 MARCH 2024
SALIE, J:
1] This
is an application that came before me on the urgent duty roll, argued
earlier today.
The matter stood down until 16h00 (after
arguments were submitted by counsel for the applicants, 1
st
– 4
th
respondents and the 5
th
& 6
th
respondents respectively) for the handing down of this judgment and
order. This judgment is ex tempore and of necessity brief.
The farm which forms the subject matter of the application is Plateau
Farms, a state-owned farm near Beaufort West. It comprises
three farms, but same has been operating as one unit.
2] The
relief sought from this court is two-fold, that being, firstly an
order to restore possession
of two pieces of land to the applicants
and secondly to interdict the 1
st
to 4
th
respondents (from allocating any part of the farm to anyone, pending
the finalisation of the review application presently pending
between
the applicants and the 1
st
to 3
rd
respondents.) Nuveld Farming Empowerment Enterprise (Nuveld)
has been in possession of Plateau farms and farming it since
2017.
In 2020 an allocation process was conducted by the delegated
committee for the department and in terms of which it
was recommended
that a 30-year lease be granted to Nuveld.
3] In
2023 the aforesaid recommendation was rejected by the then Chief
Director, the 4
th
respondent, Mr. Mbekeni. This gave
rise to the review application presently pending between the
applicant and the 1
st
to 3
rd
respondents which
was launched in April 2023. It suffices to state that the
review will be heard by this Court on a future
date.
4] The
genesis of this application lies in the 4
th
respondent
having granted permission to the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents (Mr. Booysen and Ms. Nduku) to occupy part of Plateau.
The applicants’ gripe is that 4
th
respondent did so
without following the processes required by the department’s
own policies and consequently, the summary
actions which followed
must be seen as having spoliated the peaceful and undisturbed
possession of the applicants. The applicants
submit that they
possessed exclusive use of the keys to the locks on the gates to the
two properties in question (Dassiesfontein
and Dassies 2) and which
had been locked by them at the time of the acts of spoliation, that
the respondents broke the locks and
put their own locks on the gates
excluding therewith the applicants use and possession of the property
and they had been grazing
and farming the said farm. The taking
of the property by the department and the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents were without any legal process and court order.
5] Consequently,
the applicants seek a mandament van spolie and an interdict
preventing any official
of the department from allocating (and
thereby implementing) parts of Plateau pending the outcome of the
pending review application.
6] In
its opposition, the 1
st
to 4
th
respondents
submitted that the application is not urgent and that there is no
basis for this court to find that its conduct in
changing the locks
and giving the 2 farms to the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents is unlawful and consequently that no act of spoliation
had occasioned. Furthermore, it also submitted that the
history
of events in relation to the rights of the farms and other background
facts are salient to the determination whether the
department had
acted unlawfully. The argument follows that, given the past
injustice to the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents, the
allocation to them were both necessary to address the past injustice
committed to them respectively when sometime
during 2017, both Nduku
and Booysen were unfairly and harshly removed from the farm and so to
honour the department’s land
reform objectives.
Similarly, the decision to allocate the Plateau farms to other
beneficiaries is not only an imperative
goal incumbent upon the state
departments but so too to effect same within a speedy process.
Further to this, counsel for
the state argued that it is not so that
Nuveld had been in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the Plateau
farms as a whole
unit and that it would not prejudice them that 2 of
the sub-farms had been allocated to the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents. Counsel pointed out that the caretaker agreement
in terms of which Nuveld had been farming on the Plateau farms
had
expired some years ago and this left the department to allocate and
physically give possession to other beneficiaries.
7] Counsel
for the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents submitted that
the applicants are non-suited from having it being found by the court
to being urgent as it had unduly
truncated the time-table, giving the
respondents less than 2 days to respond to a founding affidavit well
in excess of 200 pages.
The argument follows that on the
applicable principles of urgency, the applicant’s conduct falls
short of alleging urgency
and on that basis the application ought to
be struck. It was also pointed out that as the applicant’s
replying affidavit
had not been properly commissioned, the
applicant’s case before the court thus rests on an uncontested
version of the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents and
consequently, on that basis alone, ought to be dismissed with costs.
Lastly, counsel argued that as the applicants
had changed the locks
after the initial act of spoliation, it had thus lost its right to
approach this court on the basis of spoliation.
8] In
determination of this application, moreover, the relief sought for
spoliation, the court
need to be satisfied that the applicant was in
peaceful and undisturbed possession of the farms and that it was
unlawfully deprived
of possession by the respondent. The act of
unlawfulness is underpinned by the lack of consent of the applicant
to be so
dispossessed and without any due legal process. The
right to relief under the
mandament van spolie
arises from
deprivation of possession otherwise than through legal process.
9] It
is trite law that one is not allowed to take the law into one’s
own hands.
Any self-help action in dispossessing another
forcibly or wrongfully against the possession of property, will upon
application
to court be restored as a preliminary to any inquiry as
to the merits of the dispute. The main purpose of the mandament
van
spolie is to preserve public order by restraining persons from
taking the law into their own hands and inducing them to resort to
the arms of the law for the pursuit of due process.
10] As
a possessory remedy, it is exclusively directed at restoring the
factual position as it
was before the dispossession, which is
determined separate and distinct from an investigation into the
rights of the parties.
It is by its very nature urgent and on
the chronology of events herein, I am satisfied that the matter is
properly on the urgent
roll and in fact urgent.
11] Counsel
for the state argued that the issue of possession is not common
cause. I have
difficulty with this submission. At various
junctures the state does not dispute that the Plateau farms operate
as a unit
and that the 3 farms need to function as such to be
viable. This is contained in its own reports. As such, I
cannot
accept that Nuveld had no real possession of the 2 farms in
question. Mr. Bezuidenhout, the first applicant, had possession
of the keys to both the gates of Dassiesfontein and Dassies 2 when
the spoliations took place on 17 January 2024 and 7 February
2024
respectively. It is not disputed that the respondents proceeded
to cut the locks on the gates to the two portions in
order to enter
and take possession of the properties and thereafter replaced it with
their own locks. It is also not disputed
that grazing of cattle
by Nuveld over the past 7 years took the form of moving it to
different portions of the farms to allow grazing
areas to “rest”
and recultivate. The permission by the state to Nuveld to farm
on the Plateau farms was not limited
to a certain portion only and it
also received a quarterly report from 2017 until December 2023 over
the full Plateau farms as
Nuveld was required to do in terms of the
caretaker agreement. Furthermore, Mr. Mbekeni called on the
applicants in February
2023 for their consent to allocate the farms
in question to other persons. I find it problematic to accept
in these circumstances
that Nuveld had not held possession of these
farms
nec vi, nec clam et nec precario
(without force, secrecy
or permission) and that its possession was in fact peaceful and
undisturbed.
12] I
further find state Counsel’s submission that the state was not
required to follow
due process, or alternatively that their internal
commissions and reports amounted to following due process to warrant
critique.
I hold this view, given that the possession by Nuveld
cannot be reasonably disputed and that a change of heart so to speak
on the
part of the department apropos the allocation process cannot
amount to affording the respondents the right to entrench upon the
possession of the applicants as the possessor and to evict them from
the farms in question. The historical background of
the Plateau
farms, injustices suffered by other beneficiaries including the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents, land reform objectives and the
failure to have done so in the past by the department, are relevant
elsewhere but certainly
not in this determination.
13] The
argument by counsel for 5
th
and 6
th
respondents
that the replying affidavit is fatally defective is considered as
follows. The affidavit, albeit titled and purported
as that,
had not been commissioned in terms of regulation 4(2) of the Oaths
Act. Accordingly, it is not before the Court
under oath.
Mr. Budlender in reply conceded this to be the case, as that same
resulted as a mishap during the efforts to
have same commissioned at
the police station. However, as I see it, the averments
supporting the facts upon which the relief
is sought, are set out in
the founding affidavit and the material aspects had been deal with in
the reply thereto in the replying
affidavits to the answer of the
state respondents. The impugned actions overlap in both set of
papers and are duly dealt
with under oath.
14] The
5
th
and 6
th
respondents also submitted points
in limine
that the non-joinder of the trusts which the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents respectively represent is fatal as
well as the failure to join the other 79 beneficiaries given that
they have an interest
in the allocation process and would have the
right to intervene. I am not persuaded that these submissions
bear merit.
My position is fortified by the fact that
throughout the papers, Ms. Nduku and Mr. Booysen are referred to as
the beneficiaries
and referred to by their names specifically by both
the applicants and all the respondents. So too are the acts of
spoliation
committed by Mr. Mbekeni, Ms. Nduku and Ms. Booysen.
I fail to understand the argument that no legal recourse can be
gained
as against them without the trusts whom they represent, that
being in particular, Ms. Nduku and Mr. Booysen. Furthermore,
it
is so that there are 79 other beneficiaries. However, the
latter has nothing to do with the spoliation application.
As it
relates to them not having been joined to seeking an interdict as per
prayer 6.2 of the notice of motion (restraining allocations
of any
portion of Plateau Farms to any person pending the review), it is
significant a fact that the review application is pending
between the
applicants and the 1
st
to 3
rd
respondents.
This interdict is sought to preserve the status quo whilst that
matter is being heard and determined.
The relief sought is
interlocutory to that relief being sought as between the applicant
and the state parties herein. I cannot
see it nor can it be
considered a fatal non-joinder as it seeks the preservation of the
process of that review.
15] On
the facts and circumstances of this case, I can find no basis upon
which to deviate from
the principle that the despoiled applicant be
restored possession before all else,
(spoliatus ante omnia
restituendes est)
and in the circumstances the applicant is
justified in its application for an order restoring possession of the
farms, described
as:
15.1] Farm
Dassiesfontein No.73 Portion 6 (South Dassiesfontein); and
15.2] Farm
Dassiesfontein No. 73 Portion 5 (Portion 1 North Dassiesfontein).
16] Secondly,
I am satisfied that on the facts before me that it is evident that
onward allocation
by the state respondents would mean that the
decision would be implemented in the same manner as had been done in
the manner herein.
This would undermine the pending review
proceedings. Accordingly, this would be an exceptional
circumstance where the threatened
and intended actions (namely,
future spoliations) by the state respondents must be curtailed so as
to ensure that the subject matter
forming the basis of the pending
review does not become moot, undermined or interfered with which
would otherwise most probably
hamper the review Court from making a
determination in the review proceedings. It follows that the
review proceedings need
be finalized and heard as soon as possible.
17] As
regarding costs, I am satisfied that nothing on the papers before me
warrants me to deviate
from the normal costs order and accordingly,
costs must follow the result.
18] In
the circumstances and for the reasons aforementioned, I make the
following order:
“
(i) The
applicants’ possession of the properties referred to in 12.1
and 12.2 are herewith
declared to be restored ante omnia with
immediate effect;
(ii) The
first to the fourth respondents and the officials of the Department
of Agriculture,
Land Reform and Rural Development is interdicted and
restrained from allocating (and implementing such allocation) in
respect of
any allocation of any portion of Plateau Farms (being the
various portions of the farms listed in annexure A hereto) to any
person,
pending the finalisation of the review proceedings under case
number 6553/2023.
(iii) The
applicants’ costs of suit shall be paid by the First to Third
Respondents, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.”
SALIE, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
WESTERN CAPE
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