Case Law[2025] ZALCC 19South Africa
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Another v Shah and Others (LCC93/2014 ; LCC180/2014) [2025] ZALCC 19 (9 May 2025)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
9 May 2025
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Another v Shah and Others (LCC93/2014 ; LCC180/2014) [2025] ZALCC 19 (9 May 2025)
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Another v Shah and Others (LCC93/2014 ; LCC180/2014) [2025] ZALCC 19 (9 May 2025)
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sino date 9 May 2025
IN
THE LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE NO: LCC93/2014
Before:
Honourable Ncube J
Heard:
25 March 2025
Delivered:
09 May 2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE
09/05/2025
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
First
Applicant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER,
KWAZULU-NATAL
Second
Applicant
and
FEROZ
SHAH AND 42 OTHERS
1
st
to 43
rd
Respondents
and
CASE
NO:
LCC180/2014
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
First
Applicant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER,
KWAZULU-NATAL
Second
Applicant
and
NADAR
SHAH
Respondent
ORDER
1.
The
Applicants are granted leave to appeal to the Full Court of the Land
Court in Randburg on the issue of
Solatium
and Financial Loss.
2.
There is no order as to costs
JUDGMENT: APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
NCUBE
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application for
leave to appeal. The Applicants seek leave to appeal to either
the Full Court of the Land
Court or the Supreme Court of Appeal
against the whole judgment and order of this Court handed down on 06
December 2024.
Test for leave to
appeal
[2]
The
Applicant for leave to appeal must satisfy three cumulative
requirements for leave to appeal. The starting point of
exercise
is section 17 of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
which
provides:
“
17
Leave to appeal
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the
Judge or Judges concerned are of the opinion that-
(a)
(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16(2)(a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case, the appeal will lead to a just
and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties”
[3]
Commenting
on the aspect of reasonable prospects of success in
MEC
Health Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[2]
,
Scheepers
AJA as he then was, expressed himself in the following terms:
‘
An
applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case or
one that is not hopeless is not enough. There must
be a sound
rational basis to conclude that there is reasonable prospect of
success on appeal’
[4]
In
Smith
v S
[3]
Plasket
J said:
‘
What
the test of reasonable prospect of success postulates is a
Dispassionate decision based on the facts and the law that a court
of
appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of
the trial court. In order to succeed, therefore the
appellant
must convince this court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote but have a
realistic chance of succeeding.’
Grounds
of Appeal
[5]
The Applicants has tabulated the following
grounds of appeal:
1.
The Learned Judge erred in awarding
solatium
in the amount of
R1 391 569.48 calculated
in accordance with the formula prescribed by the Expropriation Act 63
of 1975.
2.
The Learned Judge ought to have found that the
Expropriation Act 63 of 1975 is not applicable to this case, since
the property in
question was not expropriated in terms of the
Expropriation Act 63 of 1975.
3.
In dealing with the issue of
solatium
the Learned Judge ought to have followed the
principle expressed in
Florence v
Broadcount Investments
(Pty)
Ltd
where the Court held that the
purpose of the award of
solatium
is symbolic and does not attempt to provide full
redress for the claimants’ emotional suffering.
4.
The Learned Judge erred in awarding the amount of
R11 739672.00 as just and equitable compensation for the land
concerned. In awarding
the said amount, the learned Judge considered
market value only and failed to consider the
other factors mentioned in Section 25(3) of
the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa.
5.
The Learned Judge ought to have considered the
principle laid down in the
Florence and
Jacobs and Others v Department of Land Affairs and Others
(LCC3/98)
[2016] ZALCC 14(13 June 2016)
namely,
payments in terms of the Restitution of Land Rights Act are not meant
to replicate the market value but should reflect
the public interest.
6.
The Learned Judge erred in accepting that the
value of the land concerned is R5 500.00 per hectare. In this
regard the learned
Judge ought to have accepted the evidence of the
Applicants’ expert witness to the effect that the value of the
land concerned
is R3 500.00 per hectare.
7.
The learned Judge erred in awarding financial loss
in the amount of R534 794.36. In this regard the learned Judge
ought to
have taken into account the principle laid down by the
Constitutional Court in
Florence v
Government of the Republic of South Africa
where
the Court held that
financial loss should
be calculated at the time of dispossession and for the
purpose of placing the claimants in the
same position as they would
have been in immediately after dispossession.”
[6]
As it is always the case in these
applications, the drafter of the grounds of appeal will always cast
the net wide and in the process,
repeat some of the grounds of
appeal. In the present case, grounds 1,2 and 3 deal with one
issue and that is the issue of
solatium.
Grounds 4, 5 and 6 deal with one issue which is
the value of the land.
[7]
Therefore, in essence, there are only
three grounds of appeal which are
Solatium
,
Value of the Land and Financial loss. I now turn to deal with
each of those grounds as I have summarized them above.
i.
Solatium:
Solatium
is payment made as compensation for injured feelings or emotional
pain and suffering. It may be difficult to measure
solatium in
monetary terms. In the present case, the Court calculated solatium
with reference to the Expropriation Act 63 of 1975.
In its
earlier judgment
[4]
,
this same Court found that the Expropriation Act 63 of 1975 was not
applicable in these cases. In that case, the Court awarded
solatium at R45 000 and in that case, there was evidence of hardship
suffered by the victims. In the present case, no evidence
of
hardship suffered was presented to the Court and that should be
corrected by the Appeal Court. I find therefore that the Applicants
have a reasonable prospect of success on appeal on this ground.
Similarly, there was no
evidence of financial loss suffered. The Appeal Court will be
required also to give guidance on how to calculate
compensation for
financial loss in circumstances where no such evidence has been
tendered by the victims. The remaining ground
therefore, is the
determination of the value of the land.
ii.
Value
of the land
The
graveman of the Applicants is that in its determination of the value
of the land, this Court only considered the market value
of the land
and did not consider the other factors mentioned in Section 25(3) of
the Constitution. There is no indication in this
courts’
judgment that factors mentioned in Section 25(3) of the Constitution
were not
considered.
They were in fact considered, without being mentioned. In
R
v Dhlumayo and Another
[5]
Davis
AJA, as he then was said:
‘……
even
in a written judgment it is often impossible, without going into the
facts at undue length, to refer to all the considerations
that
arise. Moreover, even the most careful Judge may forget, not to
consider but to mention some of them. In other
words, it does
not necessarily follow that, because no mention is made of certain
points in the Judgment ……….they
have not been
taken into account by the trial Judge in arriving at his decision.
No judgment can ever be perfect and all-embracing.
It would be
most unsafe invariably to conclude that everything that is not
mentioned has been overlooked
.’
[8]
In
Casu,
Mr
Serfontein was a hopeless witness. He did not believe in the
integrity of his own investigations and he was not worthy of
credence.
I rejected his calculations and accepted Mr Stephenson’s
calculations. In any event, at first, all experts, in a joint minute,
agreed on the value of R5 500 per hectar. Mr Serfontein, after he had
wrongly consulted the Regulations from the office of the
Valuer
General unilaterally changed his calculations from R5 500 per hectar
to R3 500 per hectar. I therefore conclude that
there was no
misdirection in the determination of the value of the land.
Costs
[9]
There is no application for leave to appeal
the costs order.
Conclusion
[10]
I therefore conclude that the Applicants
have a reasonable prospect of success on appeal only on the point of
solatium
and
financial loss. Those are the only two issues to be determined by the
Appeal Court.
Order
[11]
In the result, I make the following order:
1. The
Applicants are granted leave to appeal to the Full Court of the Land
Court in Randburg on the issue of
Solatium
and Financial Loss.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
NCUBE
T
Judge
of the Land Court
Appearances:
For
the Applicants:
Adv
Choudree SC
Adv
Nqala SC
Instructed
by
:
State
Attorney
Durban
For
the Respondents:
Mr
Grobbelaar
[1]
Act
10 of 2013
[2]
(1221/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 176
( 25 November 2016) Para17
[3]
2012(1)
SACR567 (SCA) Para 7
[4]
Habiba
Soofie Saheb Baosha Trust and Others v Minister of Agriculture Rural
Development and Land reform and Others(LCC106/2014)
[2021] ZALCC 12
(6 July 2021
)
[5]
1948
(2) SA 677
(AD) at 702
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