Case Law[2025] ZALCC 22South Africa
Khumalo and Others v Duran Law and Another (LCC93/2023) [2025] ZALCC 22 (20 May 2025)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG LCC93/2023 Before: The Honourable FLATELA J
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Khumalo and Others v Duran Law and Another (LCC93/2023) [2025] ZALCC 22 (20 May 2025)
Khumalo and Others v Duran Law and Another (LCC93/2023) [2025] ZALCC 22 (20 May 2025)
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sino date 20 May 2025
IN
THE LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
L
CC93/2023
Before:
The Honourable FLATELA J
Heard: 29
September 2024
Delivered: 20 May 2025
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
NKOSINATHI
KHUMALO
First Applicant
GAMANE
ZONDO
Second Applicant
FUNAPHI
MAZIBUKO
Third Applicant
and
DURAN
LAW
First Respondent
GAVIN
LAW
Second Respondent
and
THE SOCIO-ECONOMIC
RIGHTS INSTITUTE
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Amicus Curiae
ORDER
1.
The Respondents are ordered to restore
the access gate, which they unlawfully removed without obtaining a
court order, thereby reducing
the applicant’s grazing area and
preventing the applicant’s livestock from accessing grazing and
water on Portion 5,
Smalhoek Farm Number 1282, Registration Division
GS, KwaZulu-Natal Province.
2.
The Respondents are ordered to restore
the Applicants’ access to the 125 hectares of grazing camp on
Portion 5, Smalhoek Farm
Number 1282, Registration Division GS,
KwaZulu-Natal Province.
3.
There is no order as to costs
JUDGMENT
FLATELA
J
Introduction
[1] The applicants
are occupiers in terms of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62
of 1997 (ESTA). They reside on the
Second Respondent’s farm
described as Portion 5, Smalhoek Farm Number 1282, Registration
Division GS, Kwa-Zulu-Natal Province,
held under Deed of Transfer
number T24189/2009 in extent 459.6549 hectares. The farm is also
known as Kilham Glen Farm and is situated
in Bergville. The
applicants reside and keep their cattle on a 26-hectare staff camp
designated for farm labourers and their families.
[2]
On 26 July 2023, the applicants
approached this Court ex parte on an urgent basis, seeking an order
against the First Respondent
to restore their unhindered use of the
grazing land and their grazing rights on 125 hectares of land on the
Farm. The applicants
also sought compensation for the loss of
livestock that died due to starvation and dehydration, which resulted
from the First and
Second Respondents’ removal of a gate that
previously granted access to the 125-hectare grazing land.
[3]
The applicants contend that, in
February 2023, the respondents permanently closed an access gate on
the boundary fence between the
staff camp and the 125-ha grazing
camp. This gate had previously allowed the applicants' cattle to
reach the 125-hectare grazing
camp, which features a water stream. As
a result of this closure, several cattle belonging to the applicants
have died, and others
are reportedly suffering from starvation and
dehydration due to insufficient grass and water within the staff
camp.
The Parties
[4]
The First Applicant is Nkosinathi
Khumalo, an adult male residing on the farm. The Second Applicant is
Gamane Zondo, an adult male
pensioner who lives on the farm. The
Third Applicant is Mrs. Funaphi Mazibuko, an adult female residing on
the farm. While their
founding affidavit asserts that the Second and
Third Applicants are Labour Tenants and/or associates as defined in
the Land Reform
(Labour Tenants Act 3 of 1996) (LTA), the applicants
seek relief in these proceedings in terms of ESTA. In 2026, the
Second and
Third Applicants instituted an action to be declared as
labour tenants in terms of Section 33(2A) LTA. The matter was
assigned
to case number LCC 40/2016 and is still pending before this
court.
[5]
The First Respondent is Duran Law,
who defines himself as an adult businessman and a farmer residing on
the farm. The Second Respondent
is Gavin Law, the owner of the
property. According to the First Respondent, the Second Respondent is
not actively involved in farming;
he works in Bergville Town, and he
comes to the farm to assist when needed.
The Relief Sought
[6]
The relief requested by the
applicants is wide and is articulated in their notice of motion as
follows:
1.
That the applicant’s
noncompliance with the forms and notice periods prescribed by the
rules of this court be and are hereby
condoned, and this application
be heard as one of urgency.
2.
That a rule nisi is hereby issued,
calling upon the respondent to show cause, if any, before this
Honorable Court, on -----day 2023
at ……. Why the final
order in the following terms should not be made:-
2.1
That the Respondent be and is hereby
ordered to restore to the Applicant’s their unhindered use of
that grazing land of the
farm known as Kilham Glen situated at
Bergville, Kwa-Zulu Natal, on which the applicants grazed their
livestock until February
2023 by restoring the gate that allowed the
applicant’s livestock to pass to the other side of the grazing
camp in order
to access food.
2.2
That the Respondent be and is hereby
ordered to restore the Applicants unhindered use of what of that
flowing stream known as Kilham
Glen situated at Bergville, Kwa Zulu
Natal, on which the applicant’s grazed their livestock used for
drinking water until
February 2023 by restoring the gate that allowed
both the applicant’s livestock to pass to the other side of the
grazing
camp in order to access water
2.3
That the respondent be is
hereby ordered to restore the gate and remove the fence that he
erected during February 2023, consequently
reducing the applicant’s
grazing; preventing the applicant’s livestock from grazing and
drinking water on the other
side of the fence
2.4
That the respondent
compensates the applicants for the loss they suffered due to the
death of their livestock as a result of the
reduced grazing camp
2.5
That the applicant been
granted further alternative relief.
2.6
That the respondent be ordered
to pay the costs of this application.
2.7
That paragraph 2.2 and 2.3
above operate as an interim order with immediate effect pending the
final determination of this application.
[7]
After considering the matter, I was
satisfied that the application was urgent. Consequently, I granted
orders in paragraphs 2.1,
2.2, and 2.3 of the applicants’
notice of motion, pending the final resolution of the application. I
also issued directives
for filing papers and the hearing date. The
matter was set for a hearing on 17 August 2023.
[8]
The respondents failed to comply
with the Court’s directives regarding the filing of their
papers, and the applicants subsequently
launched a contempt of court
application. A few days before the hearing date, the respondents
addressed a letter to my registrar
seeking a postponement to prepare
their answering affidavit, but the request was refused.
[9]
On the date of the hearing, the
respondents made an application for the postponement of the matter so
they could file their answering
affidavit. The respondents raised
issues such as the incorrect citation of the First Respondent (the
name of the First Respondent
was wrongly spelled, the non-joinder of
the Second Respondent, and Mr. Green, who had leased the grazing
land.
[10]
The parties also engaged in
negotiations regarding the postponement and agreed to the following
order:
i.The
respondents are directed to provide the applicant’s livestock
with access to water by providing a 2000-litre Jojo tank
to be
installed within the applicant’s grazing area by 21 August and
to fill the tank three times a week.
ii.The
respondents are directed to provide the applicant's livestock with
five large bales of hay weekly, to be delivered to the
applicant's
grazing camp every Monday.
iii.The
applicants are interdicted from preventing the respondents from
complying with paragraphs 5.1 and 5.2 above.
iv.The
applicants are interdicted from grazing their livestock outside the
grazing camp of the respondent, Mr. Green.
[11]
The application for postponement was
granted by consent, and costs occasioned by the postponement were
reserved. Further directives
were given on the filing of
pleadings.
[12]
An inspection
in
loco
was conducted on the farm. I took
notes during the on-site inspection. I was shown the boundary fence
that separated the staff camp
from the 125-hectare grazing camp, the
carcasses of the cattle, the dry ponds on 26 hectares, the stream in
the 125-hectare grazing
area, the other gate leading to the opposite
side of the 125-hectare grazing land, the carcass of the cow
belonging to the Second
Respondent, the other gate on the property
where there is an Eskom site with another stream of water, the cow
that was unable to
stand, digging of an artificial dam near the Third
Applicant’s homestead, and the other gate providing access to
the 125
hectares.
[13]
The application is opposed by the
respondents on the basis that the applicants were not granted consent
to graze their cattle on
the 125-hectare grazing camp. The
respondents contend that the applicants unlawfully constructed a
makeshift gate on the boundary
fence dividing the respondents’
125 ha grazing camp from the applicants’ staff camp.
Additionally, the respondents
assert that the applicants have
maintained livestock more than the number agreed upon by the parties.
Lastly, the Respondent contended
that it was agreed between the
parties that at least one member of each of the applicant’s
family must work on the farm for
them to keep their cattle. The
applicants’ entitlement to keep cattle on the farm has been
cancelled, as none of the applicants
are employed on the farm.
[14]
The Socio-Economic Rights Institute
of South Africa (SERI) applied to be admitted as amicus curiae in
terms of Rule 14 of the Rules
of this Court.
[15]
A conference in terms of Rule 30 of the Rules of the
Court was called on 12 March 2024. SERI was admitted as
amicus
curiae.
[16]
The following issues were referred for oral evidence:
a.
Was the gate already in existence when the
applicants arrived on the farm?
b.
Whether the applicants were allowed to use
the 125-ha grazing land.
c.
Whether the applicants were permitted to
keep an unlimited number of cattle.
d.
Whether the respondents had unlawfully
hindered the applicants’ access to the 125-ha grazing land by
unlawfully installing
a fence and removing the access gate between
the 125-ha grazing land and the 26 hectares of grazing land.
[17]
The matter was adjourned until 17
April 2024. Several interlocutory applications were filed, causing a
delay in the hearing of the
matter. The matter was heard on 29
September 2024.
Evidence
[18]
All the applicants testified in support of the relief sought.
The applicants also filed supporting affidavits from Fikile Mazibuko
and Phumzile Khumalo, who were not called to give oral evidence. The
First Respondent, Duran Law, the farm manager, submitted an
answering
affidavit on behalf of the respondents. He was not called to give
oral evidence; only the Second Respondent, Mr. Garvin
Law, provided
oral evidence. The respondents also filed supporting affidavits from
Mr. Alan Green and Mr. Ian King in support of
their case.
Evidence
of the First Applicant – Luke Nkosinathi Khumalo
[19]
Mr. Nkosinathi Khumalo testified that he resides on the farm
with three adult siblings and is keeping 28 head of cattle at the
staff
camp. He testified that his family arrived on the farm in 1985
with 17 head of cattle from Ntabamnyama, Kwa-Mesa. Mr. Khumalo stated
that his parents approached the Second Respondent’s mother,
Mrs. Law, who was the owner and person in charge of the farm,
seeking
a place to reside, a place to keep their cattle, and employment. He
also testified that Mrs. Law granted permission to
his parents to
live on and keep their cattle on the farm if someone would work on
the farm.
[20]
Mr. Khumalo never worked on the farm, but his parents both
did. His father worked as a herdsman and gardener, while his mother
served
as a domestic worker. His mother died in 2012, and his father
died in 2014.
[21]
Mr. Khumalo stated that his parents were
not paid a salary; instead, they received 50 kg of maize meal each
month until they stopped
working due to old age. He also testified
that his parents informed him they were allowed to keep an unlimited
number of cattle
to cover their basic living expenses, including
food, clothing, and other necessities. He mentioned that his parents
often sold
cows to meet these costs, noting that in 2003, they owned
20 heads of cattle.
[22]
Mr. Khumalo testified that his parents and
other labourers were assigned to a staff camp adjacent to a
125-hectare grazing camp,
separated by a fence. He stated that there
was an access gate to the grazing camp, which allowed their cattle to
graze more extensively
and access a drinking stream. This gate
existed prior to their arrival and was used by his parents for
grazing cattle and collecting
grass for their huts' thatched roofs.
Mr. Khumalo mentioned that Mrs. Law imposed no restrictions on the
use of the grazing area,
and he confirmed that the gate was a
makeshift one and never locked.
[23]
Mr. Khumalo testified that within the
26-hectare staff camp, there were five homesteads belonging to the
Mazibuko family and other
families from the Khumalo clan; however,
one family from the Khumalo clan left the farm. He stated that after
Mrs. Law's death,
the Second Respondent took over the farm and its
management without altering the agreements made between Mrs. Law and
Mr. Khumalo’s
parents regarding access to the larger camp.
[24]
Mr. Khumalo further testified that in 2014,
Mr. Law impounded his cattle on the 125-hectare grazing camp and
moved them to another
grazing camp that Mr. Law also owns. Mr. Law
instructed him to pay R40 per head to keep his cattle on the farm, as
no one from
his family was working there. Mr. Khumalo testified that
after the respondents impounded his cattle, he reported the matter to
the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform (the Department)
and sought their advice and intervention. An official from
the
Department advised him to pay, as there was no one from his family
working for the respondents. Mr. Khumalo indicated that
he paid R40
per head for almost two years until he discovered that other
applicants were not charged for their cattle, despite
being in a
similar situation. He testified that in 2017, the law requiring
occupiers to pay rent to farm owners for their cattle
on the farm was
abolished, and he, therefore, stopped paying rent for his cattle.
They continued to graze their cattle on the larger
farm.
[25]
Mr. Khumalo testified that in 2016, the Second Respondent
leased the grazing land to Mr. Green, and Mr. Green did not allow his
cattle to mix with the Second Respondent's cattle. As a result, Mr.
Green closed the access gate and dug ponds in the staff camp
to
provide water for the occupants' cattle. He testified that the access
gate was completely shut in February 2023, preventing
the cattle from
accessing grazing land and water.
[26]
Mr. Khumalo testified that before February 2023, he had 35
cattle, and now he has 28 because 7 (seven) have died since April
2023
due to thirst and starvation.
[27]
During cross-examination, counsel
for the respondents suggested to the First Applicant that there had
never been any agreement concluded
between the Second Respondent’s
parents and his parents to raise an unlimited number of cattle. The
First Applicant stated
that his parents had informed him they were
not paid salaries; instead, they were allowed to keep an unlimited
number of cattle.
They utilized the livestock for food and to support
their children, selling the livestock for maintenance, school fees,
and general
upkeep.
[28]
During cross-examination, the
counsel for the Second Respondent referred the First Applicant to a
letter from Blose Phindela Attorneys,
dated 9 June 2016, in which the
applicants’ previous attorneys requested that the respondents
provide water for the applicants’
cattle. It was suggested that
if there had been an agreement to graze the cattle on 125 hectares,
the applicants’ former
attorneys would have mentioned it and
pursued litigation to enforce the agreement. The First Applicant
stated that they had sought
legal assistance from the Department
because their cattle were wounded from the 125-hectare camp to a
26-hectare staff camp, leaving
them without water to drink. The
attorneys were assigned to them by the Department, but he was not
aware of the contents of the
letter.
[29]
It was also pointed out to the First
Applicant that after his cattle were impounded, he contacted the
Department of Land Affairs,
and officials were assigned to represent
him to ensure his rights were protected. Moreover, if an agreement
had been in place,
the officials from the Department should have
advocated for their rights under that agreement instead of advising
him to pay for
their cattle monthly. Additionally, the First
Applicant was informed that there was no agreement to keep an
unlimited number of
cattle and that the applicant’s parents
were permitted to raise only five cattle. Mr. Khumalo disagreed with
this statement.
Second Applicant Mr.
Gamane Zondo
[30]
Mr. Zondo testified that he lives on
the farm with his wife, four children, and six grandchildren. He
began working on the farm
as a herdsman in 1994 after being recruited
by the Second Respondent. Mr. Zondo had previously worked for Mr.
Green. He stated
that when the Second Respondent picked him up from
Mr. Green's farm, he had 18 heads of cattle and brought them all with
him to
the farm. Mr. Zondo testified that the Second Respondent did
not mention any limit on the number of cattle he could keep. He noted
that he earned very little money and had been told he could keep an
unlimited number of cattle.
[31]
Furthermore, Mr. Zondo testified
that their cattle had access to a 125-hectare grazing camp through an
access gate. Mr. Zondo testified
that when he arrived on the farm in
1994, he found a gate that he and the other occupiers used to access
the grazing land and stream.
In February 2023, the respondents
removed the gate and installed a fence prohibiting their cattle from
accessing 125 ha of grazing
land. Before February 2023, he had 17
cattle and four goats; however, he now has 14 cattle.
[32]
He states that he is no longer
working for Mr. Law; they reached an agreement in June 2022 to retire
due to old age.
[33]
During cross-examination, it was
suggested to him that the Second Applicant would testify that he had
agreed with Mr. Zondo to limit
the cattle to 15 heads. Mr. Zondo
denied this allegation, insisting that there was no such agreement
and that he arrived with 18
heads of cattle.
[34]
The respondents’ counsel
suggested to Mr. Zondo that in 2016, when he went on pension, he had
an obligation to provide labor
for his cattle. Since there was no one
available to work on the farm, the agreement to keep the cattle was
canceled. Mr. Zondo
testified that he was unaware of the cancellation
of the agreement and that the Second Respondent had not communicated
to him that
he was no longer allowed to keep cattle on the farm.
The evidence of the
Third Applicant, Mrs. Funani Mazibuko
[35]
Mrs. Mazibuko testified that she
moved to the farm with her husband and in-laws in 1987. She stated
that her father-in-law approached
the Second Respondent’s
mother with a request to accommodate their family on the farm. The
Second Respondent’s mother
agreed to provide accommodation, and
his sons would work on the farm for six months. In exchange for their
labour, they received
R30 per month and were allowed to keep an
unlimited number of cows and goats.
[36]
Following the death of her
father-in-law, her late husband and brother-in-law worked for the
father of the Second Respondent. She
also worked as a domestic worker
for the respondents, but she does not recall the year she stopped
working for the respondents.
Mrs. Mazibuko mentioned that their
cattle grazed in the larger camp. They used the access gate to access
the bigger camp.
[37]
Mrs. Mazibuko testified that Mrs.
Law was in charge of the farm when her family moved there. She stated
that they faced difficulties
regarding their grazing rights in 2015
when the Second Respondent leased the larger camp. She testified that
she heard the gate
had been removed. Mrs. Mazibuko stated that a gate
existed on the property when they arrived, but it was permanently
removed in
2023.
[38]
Mrs. Mazibuko also testified that
prior to 2015, after the access gate was closed, they would take the
cows to a distant spot on
the farm where there was little water
available for them to drink and then bring them back. Mrs. Mazibuko
testified that during
2015, Mr. Zondo’s children would also
take the cattle to a small stream near the Eskom site, but the owners
would lock the
gate, thereby denying them access to water. However,
after the inspection and loco, they discovered that the gate had been
opened
again.
[39]
During cross-examination, it was
suggested to Mrs. Mazibuko that her family was permitted to keep five
heads of cattle. Mrs. Mazibuko
denied that her family was permitted
to keep only five cattle. She stated that they arrived with several
cattle and goats, and
her father-in-law, brother-in-law, and husband
worked on the farm for six months.
[40]
It was suggested to Mrs. Mazibuko
that Mr. Green remove the illegally constructed gate to the larger
camp in 2012, as the applicants
had unlawfully created a makeshift
gate to access the leased grazing land. Counsel for the respondents
indicated that the ponds
had been present in the staff camp since
1987. In the winter of 2012, there was no water in the ponds, and
others were dug. Mrs.
Mazibuko denied these allegations and
reiterated that their cattle drank water from the stream in the
bigger camp. She stated that
the gate was removed completely in
February 2023.
[41]
Mrs. Mazibuko resides on the farm with her seven
children and five grandchildren. She has eight cattle and one goat.
She has not
lost any livestock, but her livestock has nowhere to
graze.
Ms
Phumzile Khumalo
[42]
Ms. Phumzile Khumalo filed a supporting affidavit,
stating that she arrived on the farm in 1975 after marrying her late
husband,
Meyi Khumalo. She confirmed that her husband was granted
permission by the Second Respondent’s father to stay and graze
on
the farm, utilizing 125 hectares and a nearby stream for water.
She noted that a gate allowed access to the grazing area camp.
Ms
Fikile Mazibuko
[43]
Ms. Fikile Mazibuko states that she was born on the
farm in 1963 and that her late parents, Mkiyo and Julia Khumalo,
worked for
the Second Respondent’s parents. She notes that
their house was built on the 125-hectare grazing camp. She testified
that
there was a fence dividing the camps, but a gate allowed access
to the 26-hectare staff camping area. She states that her late father
was permitted to graze on the 125-hectare grazing camp.
[44]
That concluded the evidence of the applicants.
The
Respondents evidence
Mr
Duran Law – The First Respondent
[45]
Mr. Duran Law filed an answering affidavit on behalf of
the respondents, identifying himself as a businessman and a farmer
residing
on the property in question. Mr. Duran asserts that the
Second Respondent, Mr. Gavin Law, is his father and the registered
owner
of the property. He states that he is actively involved in
farming operations, while indicating that Mr. Law primarily works in
town and returns only as necessary to help on the farm. However, Mr.
Duran does not specify the timeframe during which he assumed
the
responsibilities of farm manager.
[46]
The First Respondent contends that the applicants
previously engaged in litigation against the Second Respondent,
asserting their
rights to the farm by seeking a declaration as labour
tenants under the Labour Tenants Act, but were unsuccessful in their
pursuit.
He indicates that an agreement was reached between the
parties after the respondents could not secure the estimated
relocation
costs of R100,000 per family, allowing the applicants to
utilise a 26-hectare portion of the farm for residence and grazing.
[47]
The First Respondent stated that it was Mr. Khumalo’s
father who originally moved onto the farm after approaching his
grandmother,
Mrs. Law, for a place to stay and a job. The First
Respondent also mentioned that Mr. Khumalo’s father was not
employed by
his family at that time but rather worked for their
neighbour, Mr. Raymond Green. However, Mr. Khumalo’s mother
worked on
the farm. He notes that “an agreement was made that
they could stay on the land and keep the cattle, but they would be
entitled
to only five head of cattle with them, and someone would
have to work for them at all times for the cattle to remain on the
property.”
[48]
The First Respondent asserts that the farm is 156
hectares in extent. A fence separates the 125-hectare grazing area
from the staff
camp. The First Respondent admitted that a gate was
unlawfully installed by the applicants around 1 April 2020, and he
restored
the fence in February 2023 after a confrontation with Mr.
Khumalo, who moved his cattle into the 125-hectare grazing area,
leading
to Mr. Green cancelling his lease with the respondents, which
resulted in financial loss for them. During this argument, Khumalo
insulted him and told him that the farm is his. The First Respondent
stated that permanently closing the gate was a necessity,
not an act
of malice.
[49]
The First Respondent asserts that in 2017, he
approached the First Applicant to complain about him deliberately
moving his cattle
outside the 26-hectare camp. An altercation ensued
during which the First Applicant assaulted the Second Respondent, and
both parties
filed criminal charges against each other.
[50]
The First Respondent asserts that none of the
applicants or their family members have worked on the farm since
2002. Regarding the
First Applicant, the First Respondent states that
in 2004, Mr. Gavin Law reached an agreement with the First Applicant
to pay a
fee of R40 per head of cattle. The payments were honoured
until early 2015, when the First Applicant ceased making payments
after
discovering that the other applicants were not paying for their
livestock. He asserts that all three applicants have no right to
use
the land for grazing since no one is working for them, which was the
condition for keeping their livestock on the farm.
[51]
The First Respondent states that the Second Respondent
has cattle on the farm, including a bull, which would cost around
R40,000
to R50,000. He notes that the applicants do not vaccinate
their herds, and if they were to become ill, the illness could spread
to his herd, resulting in significant financial loss for him.
[52]
The First Respondent asserted that the complaint
regarding the lack of water in the staff camp dates back ten years;
therefore,
the matter is not urgent. The First Respondent referred
the Court to a letter written by Blose Phindela Attorneys, the
applicants’
erstwhile attorneys, dated 9 June 2016, in which
the applicants’ erstwhile attorneys claimed that the Second
Respondent had
moved the applicants’ cattle to a camp where
they had no access to water. A request was made to the Second
Respondent to
allow the herd to move to an alternative camp; failing
which, an application would be brought to court. In response, the
Second
Respondent refuted the allegations that he had moved the
applicants’ cattle to a camp where there was no water. He
stated
that he was willing to assist insofar as necessary, as he did
not intend for the applicants’ cattle to go thirsty.
Additionally,
it was noted that the applicants’ cattle exceeded
the permitted number and that they were required to reduce the number
to
the permitted limit within 30 days.
[53]
The First Respondent asserts that prior to the
commencement of these proceedings; the Second Applicant had requested
water for the
cattle from his father. On 16 July 2023, they
successfully organised a 2,000-litre tank and delivered water to a
staff camp. The
First Respondent claims that when they brought the
water, the Second Applicant, who was intoxicated, yelled at them and
questioned
why the gate had been removed.
[54]
Furthermore, the First Respondent avers that
approximately two years ago, the First Applicant had only seven head
of cattle, but
now claims to have 35. He doubts that the herd could
have naturally increased to that size in just two years and suspects
that
the First Applicant is leasing the land and charging others to
keep their cattle on the farm. There are various brands of cattle,
and some remain unbranded.
The
testimony of Gavin Law, the Second Respondent.
[55]
Mr. Gavin Law testified that his parents had owned the
farm since 1954, and prior to that, his two uncles had owned it as
early
as 1890. Mr. Law stated that initially, the farm was a single
unit; however, it was subsequently subdivided into two separate units
by a fence. The boundary fence was installed in 1954. The 26-hectare
area where the applicant resided belonged to his father's
side, while
the 125-hectare area belonged to his uncle’s side. There was no
access gate between the two properties.
[56]
Mr. Law testified that he was born in 1961 and worked
for the Railways until his retirement. He states that the Khumalo
family arrived
at the farm in 1987 after Mr. Khumalo approached his
mother for a job and a place to stay while working. Mr. Law asserts
that upon
returning from work, he informed Mr. Khumalo’s father
that he could keep only five head of cattle, but only if someone
worked
in exchange. He stated that Mr. Khumalo’s father did not
work for them initially; instead, he worked for their neighbour,
Mr.
Green. However, Mr. Khumalo’s mother did work for them. After
Mr. Khumalo’s parents passed away, no one worked
on the farm.
Mr. Law states that he contacted Mr. Khumalo to request R40 per head
for the cattle, to which Khumalo agreed. Mr.
Law moved the cattle and
returned them to the staff camp after receiving a demand letter from
his attorneys.
[57]
Regarding Mr. Zondo, Mr. Law confirmed that he
recruited Mr. Zondo as a herdsman in 1996 and fetched him from Mr.
Malcolm Green's
farm, where he had previously worked. Mr. Zondo
requested to keep his cattle and was allowed to maintain 15 head. At
that time,
he owned 15 cattle and three calves, totalling 18. They
agreed that Mr. Zondo would sell the calves after six to eight
months.
Mr. Law recognised Mr. Zondo as his best herdsman and
indicated that he paid him a salary, although he could not recall the
exact
amount, in addition to providing an 80 kg bag of maize meal.
Upon the implementation of minimum wage laws, Mr. Law ensured Mr.
Zondo was paid the required minimum, though he was unable to specify
the amount.
[58]
In 2012, Mr. Law leased his grazing land to Mr. Hilton
Green, followed by Mr. Ian King, and lastly to Mr. Allen Green in
2020. Mr.
Green reported that the applicants were unlawfully driving
their cattle onto the leased land by creating a makeshift gate and
cutting
fences. Mr. Law stated that there was no access gate to the
125-hectare area and denied granting the applicants any permissions.
[59]
He explained that the farm comprised 300 hectares for
grazing, 100 hectares for planting, and 125 hectares for commercial
grazing,
while the applicants were restricted to 26 hectares in the
staff camp. Mr. Law also noted that the applicants had access to
water
through two ponds, and the stream near the Eskom site had been
opened for their cattle.
Mr
I Green's testimony – Former tenant
[60]
Mr. Green filed a supporting affidavit indicating that
he leased the respondents’ 125-hectare grazing camp from 2015
to 2017
and again in 2020. He claimed that the applicants encroached
upon the camp by breaking the fence to access water for their
livestock.
When he asked them why they were driving their cattle to
the large camp he had leased, they told him that they had no water.
He
then constructed a pond over a 26-hectare area. When the dam dried
up, the applicants accessed water from a nearby stream by the
ESCOM
power station.
[61]
In 2020, Mr. Green signed a three-year lease agreement
for the grazing camp. Upon taking possession of the camp, he
discovered that
the applicants had created a makeshift gate by
tampering with the fence. Despite his efforts to restore the fence,
the makeshift
gate continued to reappear. After consulting his
attorneys, they sent a letter demanding that the applicants cease
grazing on the
grazing camp, which was ignored. Ultimately, Mr. Green
decided to terminate the lease due to concerns about the health of
his cattle
linked to the applicants' actions.
Mr
J Buys - Former beef production manager employed by Mr Green
[62]
Mr. Johannes Matthys Buys testified as the former beef
production manager for Mr. Green, a role he held since 2003,
overseeing leased
farms and grazing camps. In 2021, he specifically
managed a 125-hectare camp leased from Mr. Law. Mr. Buys explained
that a fence
enclosed the camp, but there was no gate. He reported
instances of the applicants attempting to drive their cattle onto the
camp
by tampering with the fence. When he asked the applicants why
they were tampering with the fence, they expressed concerns about
water shortages and improvised a gate to access a stream within the
125-hectare area, which allowed their cattle to enter the grazing
camp leased by Mr. Green.
Mr
Ian Malcolm King
[63]
Mr. King filed an affidavit stating that he has resided
at Roseleigh Farm in Ladysmith, adjacent to the First Respondent’s
farm, for 21 years. In 2017, he sought additional grazing land and
verbally negotiated a lease for a 125-hectare camp at a rate
of R6000
per month for one year. He testified that there was no access gate
from the staff camp to the leased area; however, the
applicants
managed to move their cattle onto the land. Mr. King instructed his
attorneys to send letters demanding that the applicants
keep their
cattle off the leased land, which were served by D. Van Rensburg, the
security officer for the farm owners' association.
The applicants
ignored the letter as they continued to drive their cattle to his
leased grazing camp. He expressed concern that
the applicants' poorly
maintained cattle could harm his herd's health. health. Upon
the applicants' non-compliance, Mr. King
terminated the lease.
[64]
That concluded the evidence of the Respondents.
SERI’s
submissions
[65]
SERI focused on two main submissions, namely:
i.The proper
interpretation of section 6 of the ESTA.
ii.The
practical meaning of installing the fence and or fencing off the
camp.
[66]
Counsel for SERI made submissions regarding the proper
interpretation of section 6 of the ESTA. Referring to the current
jurisprudence
on cattle and grazing rights, he argued that viewing
grazing rights as personal rights, rather than as integral to the
right to
use land as provided in section 6 of the ESTA, has
consistently represented a narrow and overly restrictive
interpretation of ESTA.
SERI primarily relied on the judgment of this
Court in
Maladora Trust v Mereki and Others
for their
submissions. It is common cause that the judgment was overturned on
appeal by the Supreme Court of Appeal, which reaffirmed
that grazing
rights are personal rights. Mereki subsequently appealed to the
Constitutional Court, where the issue of whether grazing
rights
should be considered personal or real rights has been referred for
determination. The matter was heard on 27 March 2025,
and the
judgment is pending. Therefore, I will not entertain the arguments
regarding the interpretation of section 6 of the ESTA.
[67]
On
the second issue, SERI submitted that any interference with grazing
rights constitutes an eviction or, at the very least, constructive
eviction. In
Loskop
Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and
Others
[1]
T
he SCA
held that:
‘……
ESTA
defines ‘evict’ to mean: ‘to deprive a person
against his or her will of residence on land or the use of
land or
access to water which is linked to a right of residence in terms of
this Act, and “eviction” has a corresponding
meaning’.
[2]
[68]
In
Adendorffs Boerderye v Shabalala and Others
[2017] ZASCA 37
,
it was held that:
‘
It thus follows
that his rights of grazing do not derive from ESTA. He has a personal
right to use the land for the purpose of grazing.
I agree with the
remarks by Pickering J in
Margre Property Holdings CC v Jewula
[2005] 2 All SA 119
(E) at 7 when he said the following:
“
The right of an
occupier of a farm to use the land by grazing livestock thereon is a
right of a very different nature to those rights
specified in s 6(2)
[in ESTA]. In my view, such use was clearly not the kind of use
contemplated by the Legislature when granting
to occupiers the right
to use the land on which they reside. Such a right would obviously
intrude upon the common law rights of
the farm owner and would, in my
view, thereby amount to an arbitrary deprivation of the owner’s
property. There is no clear
indication in the Tenure Act that such an
intrusion was intended. It is relevant in this regard that the
respondent is neither
an employee nor a labour tenant as defined by
section 1 of the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 3 of 1996. His
right, if any, to
graze stock on the farm does not derive from that
Act. In my view, the use of land for purposes of grazing stock is
pre-eminently
a use which would be impossible to regulate in the
absence of agreement between the parties. I am satisfied in all the
circumstances
that an occupier is not entitled as of right to keep
livestock on the farm occupied by him as an adjunct of his right of
residence.
His entitlement to do so is dependent on the prior consent
of the owner of the property having been obtained.”’
[3]
[69]
The second issue has been addressed
in Loskop, and the SCA held that the removal of cattle does not
amount to an eviction.
Evaluation
of the evidence
[70]
The
summary of the evidence presented to the Court regarding the issues
that were referred to oral evidence is irreconcilable. Nienaber
JA
neatly summarised the method for resolving such factual disputes in
the case of
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell et Cie and
Others
2003 (1) SA 11
(SCA)
at paragraph 5.
[4]
[71]
The first issue that must be determined is whether the
respondents unlawfully despoiled the applicants of their access to
the 125
ha by illegally installing a fence and removing the access
gate between the 125 ha and the 26 hectares of grazing land.
[72]
In my view, once I find that against the respondents in this
issue, there is no need to determine other issues. It will dispose of
the matter.
[73]
Stripped of all the verbiage, the relief sought by the
applicants is in the form of
mandament van spolie.
The
applicants alleged that in February 2023, the respondents removed a
gate that allowed the applicants’ livestock access
to the
125-ha grazing and constructed a fence prohibiting the applicants’
cattle from accessing the 125-ha grazing
[74]
Stripped of all the verbiage, the relief sought by the
applicants is in the form of
mandament van spolie.
The
applicants alleged that the respondents removed a gate that allowed
the applicants’ livestock access to the 125-ha grazing
and
constructed a fence prohibiting the applicants’ cattle from
accessing the 125-ha grazing.
The
Respondents’ Pleaded Case and evidence
[75]
The First Respondent conceded that there was a gate that the
applicants unlawfully installed on 1 April 2020. He conceded that he
closed the gate in February 2023 following a confrontation with the
First Applicant.
[76]
The First Respondent's version of the events that led to him
closing the gate is well articulated in paragraphs 50, 51, 52,68,
71,72,73
and 74 of their answering affidavits, which he states thus:
“
50.
I
concede there was a gate placed on the property. This gate was
unlawfully placed by the applicants when they cut the fence in
order
to install their own gate. This happened on or about 01 April 2020.
51.
I
admit that I restored the fence in February of this year. This was
not done out of malice but rather necessity.
52.
My
father liked to have cattle on the land. Included in this head of
approximately 60 is a rather impressive bull who I estimate
is worth
approximately R40,000 to R50,000.
53. I am aware that
applicants do not vaccinate their head. Consequently, if any of their
head were to get some kind of illness,
and considering their
intention to continue to allow our head to mix, these illnesses could
be spread to our own head at a vast
loss than she lost to me.
……
..
68. This leads me to
the incident in February 2023.
71.
What led to the restoration of the fence was an argument
between myself and the First Applicant when he had once again moved
his
cattle off the 26-hectare portion of the property which they are
allowed to use and in the greater part of the farm where our cattle
were as well as the adjacent camp which is currently still leased by
Mr A Green.
I went to confront the First Applicant and told
him that again his cattle are not allowed in that camp, particularly
because it
was putting pressure on our relationship with Mr Green.
72.
The First Applicant’s response was to claim that the
farm belongs to him and instead shouted at me to get off his
property.
73.
It was shortly after that that the First Applicant again
forced his cattle onto the property that was being leased by Mr
Green.
74.
Mr Green at that stage expressed his regret of the situation
but said that there was no reason for him to continue leasing the
land
if we could not secure it. As a result of this he said that the
lease agreement which would be expiring shortly thereafter would
not
be removed. (I think the correct word is that the lease would not be
renewed.
75.
We have accordingly already lost money because of the
Applicant’s behaviour.”
Legal
principles applicable to
mandament van spolie
[77]
Mhlantla
JA in
Ivanov
v Northwest Gambling and others
[5]
held that:
‘
Spoliation is the
wrongful deprivation of another's right of possession. The aim of
spoliation is to prevent self-help. It seeks
to prevent people from
taking the law into their own hands. An applicant, upon proof of two
requirements, is entitled to a mandament
van spolie restoring the
status quo ante. The first is proof that the applicant was in
possession of the spoliated thing. The cause
for possession is
irrelevant - that is why a thief is protected. The second is the
wrongful deprivation of possession. The fact
that possession is
wrongful or illegal is irrelevant, as that would go to the merits of
the dispute.
[6]
[78]
In this matter, the First Respondent conceded to removing the
makeshift gate and constructing the fence in February 2023, thereby
preventing the applicants from grazing on 125 ha of grazing land.
However, the respondents spent a great deal of time justifying
the
cause of possession, i.e., that the gate was unlawfully constructed.
[79]
Recently,
in
Loskop
Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and
Others
[7]
,
Carelse
JA outlined the principles underlying the
mandament
van spolie
as
follows :
‘
On the appellants’
own version, the respondents were deprived of possession of the two
grazing camps that they had been given
consent to use. In
Nino
Bonino v De Lange
1906 TS 120
, the court stated that:
‘
It is a
fundamental principle that no man is allowed to take the law into his
own hands; no one is permitted to dispossess another
forcibly or
wrongfully and against his consent of the possession of property,
whether movable or immovable. If he does so, the
Court will summarily
restore the
status quo ante
, and will do that as a preliminary
to an inquiry or investigation into the merits of the dispute. It is
not necessary to refer
to any authority upon a principle so clear.’
In
a decision of this Court, in
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
it was specifically held that the
mandament
van spolie
is
available for the restoration of the lost possession (in the sense of
quasi-possession, which consists of the actual use of the
servitude)
of a right of servitude. In this case, a right of servitude of
grazing could therefore be spoliated. The dispossession
of the actual
possession of the two camps or the quasi-possession in respect
thereof by the respondents without consent or a court
order, was
unlawful and amounted to a spoliation.
[8]
[80]
The removal of the gate without a court order was unlawful and
amounted to self-help.
[81]
Van
Blerk JA in
Yeko
v Qana
[9]
neatly summarised the principle for spoilation and held as follows
at page 739D-G:
'The very essence of the
remedy against spoliation is that the possession enjoyed by the party
who asks for the spoliation order
must be established. As has so
often been said by our Courts the possession which must be proved is
not possession in the juridical
sense; it may be enough if the
holding by the applicant was with the intention of securing some
benefit for himself. In order to
obtain a spoliation order the
onus
is on the applicant to prove the required possession, and that he was
unlawfully deprived of such possession. As the appellant
admits that
he locked the building it was only the possession that respondent was
required to establish… For, as
Voet,
41.2.16, says, the
injustice of the possession of the person despoiled is irrelevant as
he is entitled to a spoliation order even
if he is a thief or a
robber. The fundamental principle of the remedy is that no one is
allowed to take the law into his own hands.
All that the
spoliatus
has to prove, is possession of a kind which warrants the
protection accorded by the remedy, and that he was unlawfully
ousted.'
[82]
The applicants have demonstrated that they were unlawfully
dispossessed of the gate providing access to 125 hectares of grazing
land for their cattle. The respondents had several legal remedies
available to them; however, they opted to take matters into their
own
hands. Therefore, the applicants are entitled to a restoration order
of the gate that they unlawfully removed without a court
order.
[83]
The conclusion reached above disposed of the matter as
deciding on other issues will not have a bearing on the restoration
order.
For completeness, I will deal with the remaining questions:
Were
the Applicants allowed to raise an unlimited number of cattle?
[84]
The First and Third Applicants both testified that their
parents approached Mrs. Law, the Second Respondent’s mother,
who
was the owner and person in charge of the farm for work, a place
to stay and to keep their livestock. They stated that Mrs. Law
provided their parents a place to stay and jobs and allowed them to
keep an unlimited number of cattle. They described this arrangement
between Mrs. Law and their parents as mutually beneficial for both
parties. Mrs. Law did not pay their parents' salaries for the
work,
and their parents were permitted to keep an unlimited number of
cattle.
[85]
The First Respondent confirmed in their affidavit that the
First Applicant’s father, Mr. Doda Khumalo, approached his
grandmother,
Mrs. Law, for a place to live and a job. According to
him, an agreement was made allowing them to stay on the farm, but
they would
only be entitled to keep five heads of cattle. Someone
would need to always work on the farm to ensure the cattle remained.
[86]
The Respondents urged me to reject the First and Third
Applicants’ evidence, arguing that their evidence is hearsay,
whereas
the Second Respondent’s evidence is direct. I disagree.
[87]
The Second respondent confirmed that the First Applicant’s
father approached his mother, seeking a job and a place to stay,
and
his mother granted the First and Third Applicant consent to stay on
the property and keep their cattle. The Second respondent
confirmed
that he was not present when the First Applicant’s father spoke
to his mother, as he was working at the time. However,
he says that
upon returning from work, he informed the First Applicant’s
father that he was permitted to keep five heads
of cattle and that
someone would always work to keep the cattle; the same applies to the
Third Applicant.
[88]
Responding to my inquiry regarding the role he played on the
farm while his mother was still actively farming and managing it, he
clarified that he acted in a supportive capacity since his mother was
the owner and manager. He indicated that his involvement
primarily
consisted of assisting her in managing the farm.
[89]
The First and Third Applicant contested the allegation that
the Second Respondent was actively involved on the farm; they
asserted
that the Second Respondent was not responsible for the
management of the farms; rather, this responsibility lay with his
mother,
Mrs. Law. Furthermore, it was Mrs. Law who provided them with
jobs and gave them consent to reside on the farm and keep an
unlimited
number of their livestock.
[90]
I accept the applicant's version regarding this issue. ESTA
defines a “person in charge” as follows:
"… a person
who at the time of the relevant act, omission of conduct had or has
legal
authority
to give consent to reside upon the land in
question" (my emphasis)
[91]
Pullinger
AJ in Red Oak Properties (Proprietary)
[10]
dealing with the interpretation of a person in charge of the property
in PIE eviction application held as follows
‘
The
phrase “legal authority” implies a right in law to permit
a person entry upon or to reside upon the land or building
in
question. When the ordinary grammatical meaning of the words in
the phrase is considered, purposively, and through the
lens of the
Constitution, the meaning of the phrase is uncontroversial. It
asks whether a person, who is not the owner of
the said land or
building erected on the land, has the right, in law, to allow another
person to enter land or a building situated
thereon and to reside
there.’
[11]
‘
Various people who
fall within the class who enjoy the aforesaid right. These include a
lawful tenant that is permitted to sub-let
or a registered owner’s
agent (for example a letting agent). Then, there are those who enjoy
a registered servitude of
usus
,
usufruct
or
habitatio
.
Each of these examples are holders of limited real rights which
confer upon the holder the legal authority PIE contemplates to
be the
“person in charge’.
[12]
[92]
It is a common fact that the Second Respondent was employed
full-time by the Railways until his retirement. The Second Respondent
admitted that when his mother was the owner and overseeing the farms,
he assisted her whenever needs arose. He conceded that he
did not
take any measures to enforce compliance with the farm regulations and
that the agreements he claimed were made between
himself and the
Applicants, stating that he saw no necessity for such actions.
Following the passing of his mother, he took on
the management of the
farm. The Second Respondent testified that upon assuming control of
the farm, he did not modify the agreements
that had previously been
established with his mother. I find it difficult to comprehend how an
individual responsible for the farm
could be indifferent to whether
the regulations in effect since 1987 are being adhered to unless he
is not the actual person in
charge. In my opinion, the Second
Respondent did not fulfil the role of a 'person in charge' as defined
by the ESTA at the time
the Applicant's parents arrived; his late
mother held that role. He lacked the legal authority under the law to
enter into any
agreements with the occupiers regarding the number of
cattle the Applicant was permitted to keep. All agreements governing
their
residency on the farm were made with his mother.
[93]
The First Applicant testified that following the death of his
mother in 2012, the Second Respondent impounded his 17 heads of
cattle
and demanded a payment of R40 per head. The First Applicant
disputes having agreed to this payment. He indicated that he sought
guidance from the Department of Rural Development, which advised him
to proceed with the payment. At that time, he possessed 17
heads of
cattle and was making a monthly payment of R640 to the Second
Respondent. Mr. Law accepted the payments for all the cattle
without
raising any concerns regarding the number of cattle the First
Applicant was keeping. The issue arose only after he ceased
making
payments for the cattle. This begs a question: If there was indeed an
agreement between the First Applicant and the Second
Respondent
regarding the number of cattle to keep payment, why did the Second
Respondent accept the payment for 17 cattle and not
raise the issue
of the number of cattle that the Applicants kept?
[94]
The respondents further testified that the number of cattle
maintained by the applicants raises suspicions, as the cattle appear
to have multiplied in an unreasonably short period. The First
respondent suspects that the First Applicant may be harbouring other
people’s cattle in exchange for compensation. It appears that
the Second Respondent impounded the First Applicant's cattle
based on
these suspicions. Furthermore, it seems improbable that an agreement
was concluded between the First Respondent and the
Applicant
concerning any form of payment.
[95]
The testimony of the Second Respondent is considered
unreliable. An effective manager would certainly monitor compliance
with farm
rules and any agreements made with labourers over a long
period, including after their retirement. The evidence clearly shows
that
the Second Respondent was not in charge of the property while
his mother was alive, and after her passing, he did not change the
rules. Instead, it was the lessors who attempted to prevent the
applicant’s cattle from accessing, which attempts met
with
resistance. Conversely, the Applicant's account is accepted as
credible.
Whether
the access gate was present when the Applicants arrived in 1987 and
1994, respectively
[96]
The First and Second Applicants testified that an access gate
has been present between the two camps since they arrived in 1987.
The Third Applicant also confirmed that he discovered the gate when
he began working on the farm in 1994.
[97]
The Applicant submitted unequivocal evidence from two
independent witnesses, Ms. Fikile Mazibuko and Ms. Phumzile Khumalo,
both
of whom affirmed the existence of the gate. They described it as
a makeshift structure utilized for accessing the grazing camp,
thereby allowing their cattle to graze and obtain water from the
nearby stream. Furthermore, the Third Respondent indicated that
the
gate was used to access grass that they collected for constructing
thatched houses.
[98]
The Applicants also testified that the gate was in existence
when the Second Respondent commenced leasing the grazing camp to Mr.
Green. However, Mr. Green prohibited his cattle from mingling with
those of the Applicants. Consequently, he closed the access
gate,
which resulted in the Applicants' cattle being deprived of water.
Subsequently, Mr. Green excavated an artificial pond within
the camp.
[99]
The Second Respondent disputed the existence of the access
gate at the time the Applicants arrived on the farm and acknowledged
that the Applicants had constructed a makeshift gate. Furthermore,
the Second Respondent failed to take action to prevent the Applicants
from doing so.
[100]
Upon thorough consideration of the evidence presented, I
accept the Applicant’s version that a gate was already in
existence
at the time the Applicant arrived at the farm. The farm
labourers utilized this gate to access the 125-grazing camp for
extended
grazing and to access water from the stream until the Second
Respondent leased the grazing land to various farmers.
[101]
In my view, all the applicants were credible witnesses. Their
evidence, taken as a whole, was credible. The applicants are
not sophisticated individuals; their testimony was presented through
an interpreter. They had a clear recollection of the facts
and
provided straightforward and candid testimony.
[102]
In relation to the matter of compensation for the loss of
livestock sustained by the First and Second Applicants, it is
determined
that this issue cannot be resolved within the context of
these proceedings. It will be best resolved in action proceedings.
Order
[103]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The Respondents are ordered to restore
the access gate, which they unlawfully removed without obtaining a
court order, thereby reducing
the applicant’s grazing area and
preventing the applicant’s livestock from accessing grazing and
water on Portion 5,
Smalhoek Farm Number 1282, Registration Division
GS, KwaZulu-Natal Province.
2.
The Respondents are ordered to restore
the Applicants’ access to the 125 hectares of grazing camp on
Portion 5, Smalhoek Farm
Number 1282, Registration Division GS,
located in the KwaZulu-Natal Province.
3.
There is no order as to costs
FLATELA
J
JUDGE
LAND COURT
Date
of hearing: 21 September
2024
Date
of judgment:
20 May 2025
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicants
:
Mrs Nkomonde
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid South
Africa
Counsel
for the Respondents
:
Mr I Veerasamy
Instructed
by: Maree & Pace, Mpulo Inc
For
the Amicus Curiae – SERI LAW CLINIC
[1]
(390/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 53.
[2]
Ibid
para 13.
[3]
Adendorffs
Boerderye v Shabalala and Others
[2017] ZASCA 37
para 28.
[4]
‘….
The
technique generally employed by courts in resolving factual disputes
of this nature may conveniently be summarised as follows.
To come to
a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make findings on
(a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses;
(b) their
reliability; and (c) the probabilities.’
[5]
Ivanov
v North West Gambling Board and Others 2012 (6) SA 67 (SCA).
[6]
Ibid
para 19.
[7]
Loskop
Landgoed Boerdery
supra
n 2
.
[8]
Loskop
Landgoed Boerdery
supra
n2 para 20.
[9]
Yeko
v Qana 1973 (4) SA 735 (A).
[10]
Red
Oak Properties (Proprietary) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit
[...], Door 1[...], Pearlbrook Complex, 3[...] B[...] Street,
Hillbrow, Johannesburg and Another (2023/053286) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1058
(16 October 2024).
[11]
Ibid para 7.
[12]
Red Oak
Properties
supra n 12 para 8.
sino noindex
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