Case Law[2025] ZALCC 4South Africa
Welverdiend Community v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC75/2009) [2025] ZALCC 4 (14 January 2025)
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AT PAULPIETERSBURG AND RANDBURG Case Number: LCC 75/2009 (1) REPORTABLE: NO (2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO (3) REVISED: YES
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Welverdiend Community v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC75/2009) [2025] ZALCC 4 (14 January 2025)
Welverdiend Community v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC75/2009) [2025] ZALCC 4 (14 January 2025)
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sino date 14 January 2025
Amended on the 3
rd
of April 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT PAULPIETERSBURG AND RANDBURG
Case
Number:
LCC 75/2009
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
26 March 2025
In
the matter between:
WELVERDIEND
COMMUNITY
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
First Defendant
TANNENBERG
TRUST
Second Defendant
ESTATE
LATE MANDLA ALMOS MBATHA
Third Defendant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER,
KWAZULU-NATAL
Fourth Defendant
concerning:
Land described by the
Welverdiend Community (“Claimant Community”). At the time
of dispossession, as comprising areas:
Mahulumbe (Welverdiend No.
2193) situated in the eDumbe Municipality, KwaZulu-Natal.
JUDGMENT
YACOOB J:
Introduction
[1]
This matter has a long history before this
court, and the nature of the claim has, over time, changed its shape.
The plaintiff community
(‘the community’) initially
sought the restoration of land in terms of the Restitution of Land
Rights Act, 22 of 1994
(‘the Restitution Act’), of which
it claimed that it had been dispossessed. The restoration was opposed
by the current
owners of the land (the second and third defendants).
[2]
After the first hearing of the matter, in
March 2020, and an inspection
in loco
,
the matter was set down again for hearing in March 2022. At that
point, the community elected to relinquish its claim for restoration,
and to seek only monetary compensation. This meant that the second
and third defendants were no longer part of the proceedings.
It also
meant that, although the trial was originally to be heard with an
assessor, an assessor was no longer necessary.
[3]
The matter was postponed for the remaining
parties, that is, the community on the one hand, and the first and
fourth defendants
on the other (I shall, for simplicity’s sake,
simply refer to the defendants, as both the first and fourth
defendants are
part of the state, have the responsibility of dealing
with restitution claims and shared legal representatives in this
matter),
to submit a stated case on which the matter may be decided,
and for the defendants to undertake a verification process, to
determine
which who exactly was part of the community and who was
entitled to compensation. There was some back and forth between the
defendants
and the community on this process, and a final agreed
verification was completed and submitted late in 2023. Further legal
submissions
were filed between September 2023 and April 2024.
[4]
There is now no dispute between the
defendantsand the community on whether the community is entitled to
compensation, or on the
identity of those entitled to compensation.
The only dispute now between the community and the commission on the
merits is whether
the members of the community are entitled, in
addition to compensation in accordance with the defendant’s
Financial Compensation
Policy, to further compensation, or
solatium
,
for the trauma and humiliation suffered by the members of the
community. The community seeks an award in
solatium
of R5 million per household.
[5]
In its initial written submissions to this
Court, in March 2022, the defendantsraised the point that the claim
for
solatium
was not pleaded by the community. It was never part of the issues
dealt with by the parties and was never properly canvassed. The
defendantscontends that the claim for
solatium
,
which suddenly made its appearance in the stated case submitted in
2022, is no more than an afterthought. The first time an amount
for
solatium
is quantified is in the community’s heads of argument, and
there is no real attempt to substantiate the amount claimed.
[6]
Despite the various delays and developments
since that date, and the opportunities given to the community to make
further submissions,
particularly with regard to the question of
solatium
,
the community made no effort to deal with the point that the claim
was never pleaded. Nor was any attempt made to formally amend
the
pleadings.
[7]
Nevertheless, it is clear to me that the
claim for
solatium
appeared
as a result of the community’s relinquishment of the claim for
restoration of the land, and as a balancing measure.
The defendants
have had the opportunity to deal with the claim and I am therefore
entitled and obliged consider it properly.
[8]
The facts in this matter are not in
dispute. Members of the community were made to unceremoniously leave
their homes and the land
on which they lived and subsisted. They were
threatened with imprisonment if they did not comply, and their
livestock and ploughing
equipment were impounded to enforce
compliance. It is common cause, and is in fact indisputable, that
they suffered emotional and
physical trauma, and were not treated in
a manner that would be acceptable in a society based on the values of
dignity, equality
and freedom.
[9]
The
claimants rely on the judgment of the Land Claims Court in
Baphiring
Community v Uys
,
[1]
in which the court reaffirmed that fair compensation would, in
certain circumstances, include “solace for emotional
distress”.
[2]
The
principle of including an amount for
solatium
in the consideration of fair compensation was considered in detail in
Hermanus
v Department of Land Affairs
.
[3]
This was again confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Haakdoornbult
Boerdery CC v Mphela
(‘
Mphela’
).
[4]
The basis for the inclusion is the factors listed in s 33 of the
Restitution Act, which, as pointed out by the Court in the
Hermanus
judgment,
include factors not listed in s 25(3) of the Constitution.
[5]
[10]
The
SCA in
Mphela
also sets out the importance of ensuring that, although a generous
approach must be taken and there is not a strict mathematical
calculation of compensation, the result of the award is not
over-compensation.
[6]
[11]
I requested the parties to make submissions
on whether the Financial Compensation Policy, on which the defendants
rely to determine
the amount it is now common cause each family
should be awarded as a minimum, includes in its calculation of the
amount a consideration
of the fact that, in most instances of
dispossession for which restitution may be claimed in this Court,
there is almost inevitably
trauma and humiliation which would justify
some kind of claim for
solatium
.
[12]
The response from the defendants was simply
to refer to and proffer interpretation of the existing policy.
Examination of the policy
reveals that it deals primarily with
compensation with reference to historical valuation and the factors
listed in section 25(3)
of the Constitution, although it makes
passing reference to section 33(eB) of the Restitution Act, which
requires “the hardship
caused” by the dispossession to be
taken into account. The historical valuation method espoused by the
policy requires a
determination of market value, followed by an
adjustment by taking into account section 25(3) of the Constitution.
It does not
require adjustment taking into account factors listed in
s 33 of the Restitution Act.
[13]
The upshot is that the Financial
Compensation Policy deals with financial compensation for loss of a
right in land of one kind or
another, calculated with specific
reference to the financial value of the loss. It does not
comprehensively consider “equitable
redress” as
contemplated in section 25(7) of the Constitution, or the Restitution
Act, in particular in the factors to be
considered by the Court in s
33.
[14]
The unavoidable conclusion is that the
Policy did not, and does not, include in its considerations the
“hardship caused”
by a dispossession. It would therefore
be open to a claimant accepting an award in terms of the Policy to
claim, and if the claim
is found to be established, to be awarded, an
amount for
solatium
.
[15]
At
the same time, the very existence of the whole scheme of restitution
is based on an acceptance and acknowledgment that dispossession
as a
result of racially based laws and practices necessarily caused
hardship, humiliation and trauma, especially to those people
who did
not have registered rights in land and whose rights were simply not
acknowledged as worthy of legal or moral consideration.
This is
evident in the fact that the Restitution Act was enacted to
facilitate equitable redress to people who suffered dispossession
as
a result of racially based laws and practices, and in the factors a
court must consider in terms of s 33 of the Act, which include
“the
desirability of remedying past violations of human rights”,
[7]
“the requirements of equity and justice”,
[8]
and any other factor the Court considers relevant.
[9]
[16]
In my view, the obligation of the Court to
look at these factors demonstrates that in some cases, the levels of
trauma and humiliation
suffered by the affected people would be
beyond what might have been contemplated as “ordinary”
levels of suffering
which could be catered for by simple
mathematically calculated awards. It must be acknowledged too, that
the idea that certain
levels of trauma and humiliation must be
considered to be “normal” is a demonstration of the
unacceptable nature of
what it was commonplace to expect people to
tolerate before the advent of the constitutional democracy.
[17]
It
ought by now to be trite that an award for
solatium
is intended not to be something from which a claimant can profit. It
is intended as an acknowledgment of a wrong, and a nominal
token of
apology. The Commission referred the court to a judgment of the
Constitutional Court,
Department
of Land Affairs and Others v Goedgelegen Tropical Fruits (Pty)
Ltd
.
[10]
In that judgment, Moseneke DCJ emphasised the character of a claim
for equitable redress, although in the context of determining
how
causation should be determined:
“
The claim is
against the state. It has a reparative and restitutionary character.
It is neither punitive in the criminal law sense
nor compensatory in
the civil law sense. Rather, it advances a major public purpose and
uses public resources in a manifestly equitable
way to deal with
egregious and identifiable forms of historic hurt.”
[11]
[18]
The
defendants relied also on the
Hermanus
case
(above), to submit that the award must balance the interests both of
the claimant and the community from which the award will
be financed
(i.e. the fiscus), and that the reparation has symbolic significance
but is not intended to be complete compensation
for emotional
suffering.
[12]
[19]
On balance, in the circumstances of this case, my view is that the
emotional suffering that it is common cause was and
continues to be
experienced by the claimants is sufficient to justify some additional
award as
solatium
, as an acknowledgment of that suffering. But
that award must be only a nominal amount, to show that the suffering
was and is not
invisible, and not an amount intended as compensation
for suffering.
[20]
Certainly, the amount claimed, and not substantiated, by the
claimants in their written argument, of R5 million per household,
is
excessive. That is an amount intended to make a substantial
difference in the lives of the people who receive it, and would
have
been an excessive amount even if it was an award in a delictual
claim. It is also more than ten times the amount of the award
each
household is entitled to in terms of the Policy, for the main
compensation award. There is no basis on which this is appropriate.
[21]
The cases referred to by the claimants in support of the claim are
all delictual claims, by individuals. They are not
community claims,
and are not made in the context where there is already a valid and
undisputed claim for an amount of financial
compensation. They do not
find application in the context of this matter.
[22]
The claimants also make a claim for “special damages in respect
of loss of livestock and ploughing equipment associated
with
solatium
”, of R4 364 148, but that claim is also not
pleaded. The fact that there is evidence about those damages in the
expert reports
goes towards the financial valuation of the main
compensatory claim, and not the
solatium
claim. In my view
there is no basis to include that head of damages in the
consideration of
solatium
.
[23]
The amount awarded for solatium in the
Hermanus
case was R6
000, and this was in 2000. The value of that award today is
approximately R20 000. Taking into account that an award
is not just
intended to be a mechanical calculation, and that there was only a
single claimant in
Hermanus
, I find that an appropriate amount
per household for an award of
solatium
, as a nominal amount
acknowledging the hurts and indignities suffered, would be R15 000
per household. As there are 53 households,
the total amount of that
award would be R795 000.
[24]
It remains to consider costs. A great deal of the delays in this case
were caused by disputes and confusion about the
costs of the
claimants. At first the litigation was funded by the defendant. Then
the defendants concluded an agreement with Legal
Aid South Africa
that it would handle the representation of claimants on behalf of the
defendant. I was informed that as a consequence
of this agreement the
defendant’s budget for legal representatives for claimants was
apparently also handed over to Legal
Aid South Africa. In order to
benefit from representation funded by Legal Aid South Africa, the
claimants would have had to change
legal representatives
mid-litigation, because the claimants’ attorneys were not
accredited service providers with Legal Aid
South Africa. The
claimants then elected to enter into a contingency fee agreement with
their representatives.
[25]
The defendants objected to the contingency fee agreement on the basis
that, according to them, it amounted to double-dipping.
According to
the defendant, Legal Aid South Africa would provide the requisite
legal representation and there was no basis on which
the contingency
fee agreement could be countenanced.
[26]
After much to-ing and fro-ing, after it became clear that the
claimants’ chosen representative was not accredited
with Legal
Aid South Africa, and that the claimants, not unreasonably, wished to
continue with their chosen representatives, I
ruled that the
claimants had the right to choose to conclude a contingency fee
agreement and continue with their existing legal
team. The defendants
conceded that there was no evidence of double dipping, but that the
impression had arisen out of a misunderstanding
of the situation.
[27]
As a result of the confusion, the experts employed by the claimants
after Legal Aid South Africa became the defendant’s
agent in
arranging legal representation, have been paid for by the claimants’
attorneys, and those costs must be included
in the costs order.
[28]
The
contingency fee agreement was submitted to court and is consistent
with the Contingency Fees Act,
[13]
save that the amount that may be paid to counsel in terms of the
agreement is not subject to the limit of a maximum of 25% of the
value of the claim. This is clearly an oversight, as the amount paid
to counsel cannot be unlimited. In addition, it seems to me
that to
allow separate limits for each legal practitioner would unnecessarily
erode the value of the award received by the claimants.
For example,
if there had been three representatives, and each was limited to a
maximum of 25% of the value of the claim, this
could easily result in
75% of the claim award being allocated to legal costs, with 53
households then sharing only 25% of the claim.
This is neither just
nor equitable, and in my view is in fact inconsistent with a proper
interpretation of the Contingency Fees
Act.
[29]
Counsel’s fees must be calculated as part of the total maximum
of 25% of the award which may be allocated to legal
fees not covered
by the costs award.
[30]
It is appropriate in the circumstances that the claimants not be out
of pocket for more than necessary, and therefore
that the costs be
taxed on an attorney and client scale.
[31]
For the reasons set out above, I make the following order:
1.
The
following compensation is to be paid by the Minister of Rural
Development and Land Reform to the plaintiff for:
1.1.
monetary compensation in respect of
restitution of land
rights
R17 020 738.00
1.2.
recompense for trauma, pain and suffering
for all 53
households
R795 000.00
TOTAL
R17 815 738.00
2.
The total amount payable to the plaintiff
in terms of paragraph 1 of this Order, be paid into the trust account
of the plaintiff’s
attorneys of record, the details of which
are as follows:
Account holder:
P […] N[…] A[…]
Bank:
S[…] B[…]
Account number:
0[…]
Branch:
K[…]
Ref:
WELVERDIEND COMMUNITY // MINISTER FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT & LAND
REFORM, CASE NO. LCC 75/09
3.
The First Defendant is to pay the taxed
costs of the plaintiff including for the employment of the attorneys,
Senior Counsel and
the experts as from 7 February 2020 up to and
including 25 March 2024, on an attorney and client scale.
4.
The fees payable to the plaintiff’s
attorneys and counsel by the plaintiff in respect of the period of 7
February 2020 to
25 March 2024, shall be in accordance with the
Contingency Fee Agreement signed on 25 March 2022 and 4 July 2022, a
copy of which
is annexed to this Order, marked “
WC1”
,
with the proviso that the total amount that is paid towards legal
fees as a whole shall not exceed 25% of the total amount
awarded.
S YACOOB
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
LAND CLAIMS COURT
For
the Plaintiffs:
G Shakoane SC
Instructed
by:
Maseko Mbatha Attorneys
For
the First and Fourth Defendants RBG Choudree SC and
TSI Mthembu SC
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Durban
The
original version of this judgment was handed down on 14 January 2025.
An
error having been pointed out by the parties, there being 53
households and not 54, this corrected version is handed down on
26
March 2025.
[1]
2007
(5) SA 585 (LCC)
[2]
At
para [15].
[3]
2001
(1) SA 1047
(LCC) at paras 15-27.
[4]
[2008]
7 BCLR 704
(SCA) at [48].
[5]
Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[6]
At
para [60]
[7]
Section
33(b).
[8]
Section
33(c).
[9]
Section
33(f).
[10]
[2007] ZACC 12
;
2007
(6) SA 199
(CC);
2007(10)
BCLR 2027 (CC) (wrongly referred to in the written submissions as
Baphiring
Community v Uys and Others
).
[11]
At
para [68].
[12]
Hermanus
v Department of Land Affairs
,
above, at para [33].
[13]
Act
66, 1997
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