Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 53South Africa
Makhubela v Stellenbosch District Municipality (20830/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 53 (15 March 2023)
Judgment
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## Makhubela v Stellenbosch District Municipality (20830/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 53 (15 March 2023)
Makhubela v Stellenbosch District Municipality (20830/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 53 (15 March 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
INITIATION SCHOOL AND SPOLIATION
CIVIL
LAW – Spoliation – Initiation site – Schools
commencing with initiation – Police cordoning off
area and
restricting access – Family members and care-givers deprived
of control and power over the site and initiates
–
Dispossessed of site and initiates – Municipality directed
to restore unrestricted access to the site.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 20830/22
In
the matter between
RASH
MAKHUBELA
APPLICANT
AND
STELLENBOSCH
DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
Date
of Hearing: 07
December 2022
Date
of Judgment: 15 March 2023 (to be
delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE
J
[1]
The applicant sought an urgent order against the respondent to
restore to the applicant and other stakeholders
unrestricted access
to an initiation school at Idas Valley. The initiation school
commenced on 25 November 2022 and was to run
until the first week in
January 2023. The application was opposed on two grounds. Firstly,
the respondent denied that the applicant,
other parents and medical
personnel were in possession of the property from 25 November 2022
and that they were wrongfully dispossessed
of the property. Secondly,
the respondent alleged that as the owner of the property, it had a
statutory obligation in terms of
the Veld Fires Forest Act, 1998
(VFFA), and that the restriction of access other than the identified
persons was a step taken by
the respondent to ameliorate the risk of
veld fires on the property.
[2]
The issue is whether the applicant and other caregivers, parents and
medical personnel are to have unrestricted
access to the property
restored.
[3]
The applicant was a member of the
Basotho
tribe. He was a principal
at the school which he conducted under the guidance and supervision
of the Nyanga Initiation Forum, Stellenbosch
Initiation Forum and the
Basotho-Mahlubi
Metro NPO with number 274-516. He oversaw initiates and was obliged
to ensure amongst others that they were fed, hydrated and given
the
necessary care. Indigenous communities around the metro have
historically conducted initiation schools at the site, which
occupation over the years had been peaceful and undisturbed.
[4]
The initiation forums received communication from the respondent on 8
November 2022 that the people, African
tribes to be precise, would
not be granted access to the site to hold initiation schools. The
African tribes commenced with the
initiation schools, as a culture of
right of passage to manhood on 25 November 2022 at the site. The men
and the aspirant initiates
established a camp on the site. The Fora
earlier referred to in this judgment, including the Congress of
Traditional Leaders of
South Africa (Contralesa) took the
respondent’s refusal of access to court on an urgent basis
under case number 20135/22.
It was whilst the matter was pending in
court that the applicant’s tribe also moved in and set camp
while the matter was
before the court.
[5]
The respondent’s Municipal Police (MunPol) sought to evict the
applicant, the initiates and other
stakeholders of his school from
the camp. The applicant and others resisted and informed the
respondent that the matter was pending
before the courts, and that
the respondent needed a court order authorizing their evacuation from
the site before they can be forcefully
removed. The MunPol on site
called for back-up to increase the necessary manpower, and indicated
that they acted on the instructions
of management. The applicant and
other stakeholders sought the intervention of the South African
Police Service (SAPS) and it was
through that intervention that
MunPol did not proceed to forcefully evacuate the school.
[6]
The school operated under very challenging and severe circumstances
because of the restricted access
controlled by MunPol on the
respondent’s instructions. The MunPol stood at two entrance
points to the site, had locked the
gates with padlocks and did not
allow cars to enter the nature reserve into the camps of the
initiates. This hindered provision
of necessities such as food,
water, medical equipment etc, which placed the lives of the initiates
at high risk. This made it difficult
for the disabled and elderly who
wanted to visit their blood relatives amongst the initiates. The
distance between the gates and
the camps was about 8 to 10 kilometres
and took longer on foot and dangerous at night. Most parents could
only visit their children
in the evening after work.
[7]
The first two weeks was a very sensitive period for the initiation,
which made it necessary for the
elders to be present in order to
oversee the processes. This was aimed to avoid preventable deaths and
botched circumcisions. Having
visits from as many men as possible
assisted the initiates in many ways, which included optimal care,
training and teaching and
also contributed to the initiate’s
mental fortitude required to complete the course. On 3 December 2022
the applicant was
denied access to the site by MunPol and was forced
to return home with the essentials that he was carrying. Upon receipt
of a report
that one of the initiates was coughing blood and needed
medical care, he brought this to the attention of the MunPol and
pleaded
with them to allow a vehicle on to the site to collect the
initiate for medical attention and this was declined. He informed his
lawyers, who wrote to the respondent’s lawyers and that
communication was not responded to. The request for intervention
of
the Provincial Standing Committee on Arts and Culture also did not
receive a response. The leaders approached the Public Protector,
the
Human Rights Commission and the Commission for Cultural and
Linguistic Communities for intervention.
[8]
Once an initiate had been in a
Kgotla,
he could not be returned
home without competing the entire process. It was believed that this
would amount to indignation of untold
proportions not only for the
initiate but for their parents and families. The conduct of the
respondent, if it continued, would
affect the dignity of the school,
the initiates and their blood relations. The applicant relied on his
and the stakeholders’
constitutional rights to enjoy their
culture and practice their religion as envisaged in section 31 of the
Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996)
(the Constitution). The deprival of unhindered access to the
initiation school
had dire and direct consequences on the health and
lives of the initiates in particular, and the smooth running of the
school in
general.
[9]
The respondent’s denial that the applicant was a principal of
an initiation school and was in possession
of the property as of 25
November 2022 or anytime thereafter was because the applicant was not
on a list provided to the respondent.
The respondent’s case was
that when the school commenced, the respondent was given 24 initiates
and seven names of persons
who were identified as the principals and
caregivers as envisaged in section 21 of the Customary Initiation
Act, 2021 (CIA). These
seven persons identified as principals and
caregivers were in occupation of the property and took care of the
initiates at that
time. The respondent acceded to the request by the
seven for access to water and entry of vehicles on site. There were
also three
others identified as elders. These elders were identified
as experts and emergency persons who had the knowledge and expertise
to deal with any health issues that may arise at the school. The
applicant was not on those two lists of ten persons. These ten
were
given unrestricted access to visit the school at any time when they
had to do so and were allowed by the respondent to come
as and when
they deemed it necessary. Consequently, according to the respondent,
the only persons that were in possession of the
property had rights
of access were the 24 initiates and the ten others comprising of
principals, caregivers and elders.
[10]
According to the respondent, it was the owner of the property and had
statutory obligations in terms of the VFFA, to
comply with the rules
set by the Winelands Fire Protection Association and had to abide
therewith. The restriction of persons other
than the ten was a step
taken by the respondent to comply with its statutory obligations in
terms of the VFFA to take steps to
ameliorate the risk of veld fires
in the property. The property was the bearer of fynbos and other
natural vegetation which was
prone to catching fires if not properly
managed. It was a management exercise of the risk which informed the
formulation of the
list of identified persons. The respondent also
managed the property in terms of its constitutional and statutory
obligations as
envisaged in section 24 of the Constitution and other
applicable legislation.
[11]
There were other private properties adjacent to the property and the
respondent owed the owners a statutory obligation
to take all
necessary steps t prevent the risk of fires emanating from the fynbos
which could catch fire if not managed. In terms
of the VFFA there was
strict liability on the part of the respondent should a fire break
out in its property. The respondent was
advised that should it fail
to manage and control the property as envisaged in the VFFA, it could
be viewed as gross negligence
which will exonerate the insurers of
properties from taking liability for the insured and look upon the
respondent to take such
insured liability. According to the
respondent, it would be dereliction of duty if it acceded to the
applicant’s demands,
despite the fact that the applicant had
not made out a case for the remedy sought.
[12]
The respondent’s position was that there were already ten
persons who were trusted and competent experts to attend
to any
health and nutrition requirements of the initiates, and that the
applicant’s inability to access the initiation school
by virtue
of not being on the list furnished to the respondent would not place
the health and nutrition needs of the initiates
at risk. The
respondent, according to its papers, wanted the names and identities
of all the caregivers and parents, according
to it, to enable it to
fulfil its statutory obligations to manage access to a protected and
fire sensitive area. The respondent’s
case was further that the
applicant had no
locus
standi
to act on behalf of
medical personnel as he was not a medical doctor or a nurse, or
traditional surgeon as envisaged in the CIA.
[13]
In
Bisschoff & Others v
Welbeplan Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
2021
(5) SA 54
(SCA) at para 5 it was said:
“
[5] … The requirements
for the mandament van spolie are trite: (a) peaceful and undisturbed
possession of a thing; and (b)
unlawful deprivation of such
possession. The mandament van spolie is rooted in the rule of law and
its main purpose is to preserve
public order by preventing persons
from taking the law into their own hands.”
In
Ngqukumba v Minister of Safety and Security & Others
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) at para 10 to 13 it was said:
“
[10] The essence of the
mandament van spolie
is the restoration before all else of unlawfully deprived possession
to the possessor. It finds expression in the maxim
spoliatus
ante omnia restituendus est
(the
despoiled person must be restored to possession before all else).[17]
The spoliation order is meant to prevent the taking of
possession
otherwise than in accordance with the law. Its underlying philosophy
is that no one should resort to self-help to obtain
or regain
possession. 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 by inducing them to follow due
process.[20]
[11] This applies equally whether the
despoiler is an individual or a government entity or functionary. In
Vena
the then Appellate Division, now the Supreme Court of
Appeal, endorsed
Sithole
:
“
The Court came to the
conclusion that the section was not worded so clearly as to detract
from the general principle of law ‘.
. . that there shall be no
spoliation by any person, be it an individual, or a government
department or a municipality or any similar
body’. . . . What
the learned Judge said at 117D-F bears repetition:
‘
[T]he clear principle of our
law is that, ordinarily speaking, persons are not entitled to take
the law into their own hands to
enforce their rights. There is a
legal process by which the enforcement of rights is carried out.
Normally speaking, it is carried
out as a result of an order of court
being put into effect through the proper officers of the law such as
the sheriff, deputy sheriff,
messenger of the magistrate’s
court or his deputies, reinforced if necessary, by the aid of the
police or some such authority;
in most civilised countries there
exists the same principle that no person enforces his legal rights
himself. For very obvious
reasons that is so; if it were not so,
breaches of the peace, for instance, would be very common. It is
clear, therefore, that
if you want to enforce a right you must get
the officers of the law to assist you in the attainment of your
rights.’ That
this is a fundamental principle of our law admits
of no doubt.” (Emphasis added.)
[12] A spoliation order is available
even against government entities for the simple reason that
unfortunately excesses by those
entities do occur. Those excesses,
like acts of self-help by individuals, may lead to breaches of the
peace: that is what the spoliation
order, which is deeply rooted in
the rule of law, seeks to avert.[23] The likely consequences aside,
the rule of law must be vindicated.
The spoliation order serves
exactly that purpose.
[13] It matters not that a government
entity may be purporting to act under colour of a law, statutory or
otherwise. The real issue
is whether it is properly acting within the
law. After all, the principle of legality requires of state organs
always to act in
terms of the law. Surely then, it should make no
difference that, in dispossessing an individual of an object
unlawfully, the police
purported to act under colour of the search
and seizure powers contained in the Criminal Procedure Act. Non
compliance with the
provisions of the Criminal Procedure Act in
seizing a person’s goods is unlawful. This unlawfulness, plus
the other requirement
for a spoliation order (namely, having been in
possession immediately prior to being despoiled) satisfy the
requisites for the
order. All that the despoiled person need prove is
that—
(a) she was in possession of the
object; and
(b) she was deprived of possession
unlawfully.”
[14]
Courts ordinarily bend over backwards to assist parties, especially
in urgent matters, in ensuring that justice
is done. However, it
remains the responsibility of the parties to ensure that what they
place before the courts, can and should
assist the courts to
pronounce justice. The application against the respondent was served
and filed, and heard on the 7th of December
2022. In order to afford
the respondent an opportunity to file an answer, at its request, the
matter was rolled to the following
day, the 8
th
. It is an
understatement to say that the respondent presented a ‘cut and
paste’ which purported to be an answering
affidavit.
[15]
Page 17, which is the last page of the purported answering affidavit,
the alleged commissioner of oaths certified
that the declaration made
by Anna Maria Cornelia De Beer was signed in their presence on 24
February 2022. In other words, the
deponent to the respondent’s
answering affidavit deposed to that affidavit more than 9 months
before the application was
lodged. Moreover, although Melissa van Wyk
suggests that she was a commissioner of oaths and had obtained an LLB
from the University
of the Western Cape, she did not do the due
diligence expected of someone in her position, acting as a
commissioner of oaths as
envisaged in the relevant legislative
provision, and did not comply with the basic tenets of those
requirements. Her industry failed
to answer simple and basic
questions like: “Where is Melissa van Wyk to be found and who
is she?”
[16]
To stand in direct contra-distinction to the evidence of Makhubela
that he had over 50 initiates in Ida Valley
on 7 December 2022 as a
principal who oversaw an initiation school, irrelevant speculative
opinions were not sufficient. De Beer
did not say that she had been
to Ida Valley on or about 7 or 8 December 2022 and that there were at
that time only 24 initiates.
It is not even clear from the purported
affidavit as to what the source of her information was, as she did
not say that at any
stage she was at Ida Valley contemporaneous with
the initiation school period. Nowhere does De Beer even suggest that
she was at
any stage prepared, which was the least she could do, to
give Makhubela an audience. It seems that from the ivory towers of
her
offices, she simply issued decrees without the alacrity of spirit
to at least understand the true facts. A gut feeling from De Beer,
that Makhubela is not a principal of an initiation school or that
there were no more than 50 initiates in his school in Ida Valley
on
or about 7 December 2022, is irrelevant. From her own purported
affidavit, she had access to other principals who were already
at the
site, who could have supplemented her version, if true. Moreover, she
had Municipal Police members on site and their commanding
officer
could have helped the Municipality on the true facts.
[17]
The less said about De Beer’s ignorance and what is my view is
in fact refusal to understand African culture in
general, and an
initiation school in particular, the better. Just to cite a classic
example, the Legislature took the definition
of a ‘family
member’ from African culture when it defined the term in the
Children’s Act, 2005 (Act No. 38 of
2005). The concept is
defined as follows in section 1:
'family
member', in relation to a child, means-
(a) a parent
of the child;
(b) any other
person who has parental responsibilities and rights in respect of the
child;
(c) a
grandparent, brother, sister, uncle, aunt or cousin of the child; or
(d) any other
person with whom the child has developed a significant relationship,
based on psychological or emotional
attachment, which resembles a
family relationship; “
Furthermore,
the section defines “care-giver” as follows:
“
'care-giver'
means any person other than a parent or guardian, who factually cares
for a child and includes-
(a) a foster
parent;
(b) a person
who cares for a child with the implied or express consent of a parent
or guardian of the child;
(c) a person
who cares for a child whilst the child is in temporary safe care;
(d) the person
at the head of a child and youth care centre where a child has been
placed;
(e) the person
at the head of a shelter;
(f) a
child and youth care worker who cares for a child who is without
appropriate family care in the community;
and
(g) the child
at the head of a child-headed household;”
[18]
Truth sometimes seems strange to those who do not know. An adult in
common and statutory law remains a child, as
an initiate. The
involvement of paternal and/or maternal uncles and where unknown or
unavailable any distant blood relation or
if needs be any adult in
the child’s initiation process, just like in other processes
like marriage, is very central in Africa.
Clearly De Beer has no
knowledge of
isiduko
or
ukuzithutha.
She has no
functional literacy of the importance of the teachings inherent in
isiduko
and the pride of knowing
ukuzithutha.
She has
no clue on the true nature, scope and content of an initiation
school, its desired outcomes and its contribution to a family,
relatives, community and society
.
I was unable to allow De
Beer to cause the initiation school in Ida Valley to produce
imbiza
engakabadle or ukupheka unobenani
with African young men.
[19
]
"At local level the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality
and the Stellenbosch District Municipality struggle
with violent
crime and Gender-based violence committed in the main by young men.
At Provincial and national level the struggle
is with Gender-based
violence and corruption. The country needs all hands on deck against
these social ills. The Stellenbosch Municipality
does not know the
analysis of
ixabiso
le ntembeko
and
isimilo
nemigaqo yokuziphatha
.
It has no appreciation for the Basotho -
Mahlubi
teachings
that
motho
ke motho ka batho.
African families, clans and tribes can contribute through and by
enjoying their culture. Sadly, Stellenbosch Municipality has
positioned itself in the same league as Mr Mafe, the man accused of
putting Parliament on fire, to wit, as a suspect in the destruction
of the people's Institutions using the fire. Whilst Mafe opened 2022,
the Stellenbosch Municipality closed that year in the same
note and
style.
[20]
De Beer does not even attempt to make a link between the protection
against veld fires and the initiation school. What
is clear, is that
she built a speculative case of the initiation school causing veld
fires. There were no facts set out which sustained
a reasonable
apprehension that there would be veld fires in Ida Valley, caused by
the initiation school, if unrestricted access
was allowed. The
respondent did not even have a chamber in its heart to consider any
mitigating measures that those responsible
for the initiation school
would have factored into the discussions to allay its fears, if there
was proper engagement with the
custodians of culture in our
democratic and constitutional milieu. The inherent assumption that
the concerns of the Municipality
were beyond the comprehension of
those in the initiation school community is condescending and
disrespectful.
[21]
The applicant’s case was that the initiation school community
was not consulted prior to the decision being made.
At best the
Municipality’s answer is that this allegation was noted. The
applicant said that the initiation school community
received a
whatsapp message from a Municipal official that the Municipality
would not grant them access to hold initiation at Idas
Valley. The
respondent in answer simply noted the allegation. The applicant
alleged that on 8 November 2022 the Municipality informed
the
initiation school community that they will not be granted access,
which decision they immediately took to the courts. The answer
is
simply to note the allegation.
[22]
Stellenbosch District Municipality is simply cold, aloof and
unjustifiably removed from its obligation to respect,
protect,
promote and fulfil the values to which South Africa bound itself as a
nation. It is imperative to repeat what is contained
in section 1(a)
of the Constitution. It reads:
“
Republic
of South Africa
1.
The Republic of South Africa is
one, sovereign, democratic state founded on the following values:
(a)
Human dignity, the achievement
of equality and the advancement of human rights and freedoms.”
In
the preamble, the Constitution reads:
“
We, the people of South Africa,
Recognise the injustices of the past;
…
Believe that South Africa belongs to
all who live in it, united in our diversity.
We therefore, through our freely
elected representatives, adopt this Constitution as the supreme law
of the Republic so as to –
Heal the divisions of the past and
establish a society based on democratic values, social justice and
fundamental human rights;
Lay the foundations for a democratic
and open society in which government is based on the will of the
people and every citizen is
equally protected by law …
Build a united and democratic South
Africa able to take its rightful place as a sovereign state in the
family of nations …”
[23]
The deployment of the Municipal Police to simply cordon off the area
around Ida Valley where the initiation school was
underway, to
prevent a principal, family members and care-givers to initiates who
enjoyed the culture of initiation, which included
unrestricted access
to the initiates, was heavy handed and unlawful. The closing off of
the area and the prevention of movement
into Ida Valley to the
initiates, deprived the principal, family members and care-givers of
control and power over the site and
the initiates. The principal,
family members and care-givers were dispossessed of Ida Valley and
the initiates. It is not for De
Beer to question the cogency of the
need for traditional healers at an initiation school, for which she
did not provide, according
to her purported answer. Suffice it to
mention that they are generally a necessary component, for those of
that faith, to also
be allowed access to the site and the initiates.
[24]
The attitude of the respondent, as demonstrated by De Beer, is that
the Stellenbosch District Municipality is simply
out of breath to
keep up with the nation at work to construct a democratic and
constitutional dispensation, especially for an African
child in its
jurisdiction. De Beer, who is the Acting Municipal Manager for the
Stellenbosch Municipality, is simply crying out
loud for social
context training. This call is necessary to be heeded, urgently,
before she does a lot of damage to the project
of nation building.
She clearly lacks that element of equal concern and respect which is
expected of a Municipal Manager in a transitional
phase from
apartheid to an ideal constitutional state.
[25]
The national body of law, like the VFFA, was never some magic wand or
what in school was called “a duster”
to simply erase ‘the
chalk from the blackboard’ which are, the rights to enjoy one’s
culture of initiation in
Stellenbosch. The right to enjoy one’s
culture, because of our history in South Africa, is written in blood
and tears in
the hearts of African people in particular and Blacks in
general. In my view, where the intended action of the Municipality
like
Stellenbosch tended to infringe on those rights, there was a
need for adequate consultation with all interested and affected
parties
before a decision was considered. Where constitutional rights
were in issue, the balance of convenience favoured the protection
of
those rights. This premise was necessary especially where the sacred
right to be heard before the decision was taken, was simply
disregarded.
[26]
For these reasons I found that the applicant and other caregivers,
parents and medical personnel are to have unrestricted
access to the
property restored and I made the following order:
1. The respondent is directed to
restore and grant unrestricted access to:
1.1. Care-givers;
1.2. Parents and family
members of the initiates. Parents, family-members and care-givers
were to be given a broader
meaning, including a meaning similar to
the meanings in the Children’s Act, 2005.
1.3 Medical
Personnel, also to include traditional healers and herbs-persons and
1.4 Mr Makhubela the
applicant as the principal.
2. The respondent to pay the
costs.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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