Case Law[2025] ZALCC 23South Africa
Chief Land Claims Commissioner Commission on Restitution of Land Rights and Others v Hlomela Land Claims Malamulele Steering Committee and Other (LCC195/2021) [2025] ZALCC 23 (30 May 2025)
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AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC195/2021 Before: Bishop AJ Heard on: 26 May 2025 Delivered on: 30 May 2025
Judgment
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## Chief Land Claims Commissioner Commission on Restitution of Land Rights and Others v Hlomela Land Claims Malamulele Steering Committee and Other (LCC195/2021) [2025] ZALCC 23 (30 May 2025)
Chief Land Claims Commissioner Commission on Restitution of Land Rights and Others v Hlomela Land Claims Malamulele Steering Committee and Other (LCC195/2021) [2025] ZALCC 23 (30 May 2025)
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sino date 30 May 2025
IN
THE LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO
:
LCC195/2021
Before:
Bishop AJ
Heard
on:
26 May 2025
Delivered
on:
30 May 2025
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED: YES/NO
In the matter between:
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER: COMMISSION
ON
RESTITUTION OF LAND
RIGHTS
First Applicant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER, LIMPOPO
PROVINCE
Second Applicant
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND REFORM
Third Applicant
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
Fourth Applicant
and
HLOMELA
LAND CLAIMS – MALAMULELE
STEERING
COMMITTEE
First Respondent
MABASA
SAMUEL MUKWACHANI
Second Respondent
CHAUKE
HASANI
MOURICE
Third Respondent
XANISEKA
NELLY
MANGANYI
Fourth Respondent
MZAMANI
RICHARD
MABASA
Fifth Respondent
MAGEZI
AMOS
CHAUKE
Sixth Respondent
ORDER
1. The late filing
of the rescission application is condoned.
2. The order made
by this Court on 29 August 2022 is rescinded.
3. The First and
Second Applicants (
the Commission
) shall, by 6 June 2025, file
a notice stating whether or not the Commission has taken a decision
to financially compensate the
beneficiaries under the Hlomela Land
Claim, and, if so, any records of such a decision.
4. The Applicants
in the review application may, by 23 June 2025, supplement their
founding affidavit if they wish to do so.
5. The Commission,
or any of the Respondents in the review application shall, by 7 July
2025, file their answering affidavits,
if any.
6. The Applicants
in the review application shall, by 14 July 2025, file their replying
affidavits, if any.
7. The Applicants
in the review application shall deliver heads of argument by 21 July
2025.
8. The Respondents
in the review application shall file their heads of argument by 28
July 2025.
9. The review
application will be heard before Bishop AJ on 4 August 2025.
10.
Each party shall pay its own costs.
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
This is the
surprising case of the rescission of the review of a decision the
decision-maker says does not exist.
[2]
It arises against the
backdrop of unfulfilled state promises to the Hlomela Community. The
Community lodged a land claim over various
farms in Limpopo. The
Community – which included both Tshivenda and Xitsonga speakers
– had occupied the land as beneficial
occupants since 1888. The
Xitsonga-speaking people were removed in 1969 in terms of the Bantu
Authorities Act 68 of 1951. The removal
was part of the apartheid
government’s racist policy of “separate development”.
The Xitsonga speakers were forced
to relocate to the Gazankulu
“homeland”.
[3]
They
applied timeously for restitution in terms of the Restitution of Land
Rights Act 22 of 1994 (
Restitution
Act
).
In 2004, the Community’s restitution claim was approved and
settled in terms of s 42D of the Restitution Act. Because it
was not
feasible to restore the land to the community, the settlement
agreement provided for the state instead to improve the Community’s
conditions where they now live in various villages in Limpopo. That
included five elements: electricity for the Hlomela and Gawula
villages, a community office at Hlomela village, a clinic at Khakala
village including staff, and roughly 240
[1]
“RDP type of houses” on the land where the claimants
live. Various state entities were responsible for fulfilling
different parts of the agreement. The settlement agreement did not
include separate monetary compensation.
[4]
By 2021, the state
had provided electricity, built a community office, and constructed a
clinic. But it had not built the houses.
Or at least, had not built
adequate houses. The details are unclear, but the Applicants say
houses had not been completed “due
to delays associated with
poor workmanship of the previous appointed service provider”.
The Respondents provide a more damning
appraisal. They say that “the
developmental compensation failed miserably in that the houses built
in most cases were incomplete
and in other cases they were of such
poor quality that some fell or are in a bad condition.”
[5]
The failure to build
the houses seems to have been apparent from at least 2012 when the
Steering Committee wrote to the Commission
on Restitution of Land
Rights to complain about the failure and the Department responded to
“apologise for this unfortunate
state of affairs and commit
ourselves to finding a lasting solution”. The Department
rightly recognized that it should not
“add more suffering to
our land claimants who have been subjected to the brutality of forced
removals during the apartheid
regime.”
[6]
But here we are, 13
years later, and the houses have still not been built, and the
suffering of the Hlomela Community continues.
The reasons for this
ongoing state failure are not before me. It is difficult to think of
reasons that could justify failing to
fulfil the promise for more
than two decades.
[7]
What is before me is
the status of the Applicants’ most recent attempts to remedy
the situation, which began in 2021. On 5
to 7 October 2021, the
Commission visited the villages to assess the status of the
incomplete houses in order to “come up
with a way to complete
the project”. According to the Commission, all that occurred
was an assessment of the current state
of affairs, and an attempt to
update the beneficiary list to cater for the lapse in time.
[8]
The Respondents take
a different view. They say that at a meeting at Giyani Xilumani
Hotel, Mr Masingi – a Project Coordinator
at the Commission –
conveyed that the Commission had “decided to financially
compensate those who are affected by the
poor conducting of the
developmental compensation programme.” They allege it was also
announced that only the residents of
Hlomela village would benefit,
and not the residents of Malamulele village. It is unclear exactly
when this meeting took place,
but presumably it was around October
2021. Mr Masingi admits the meeting occurred, but denies he announced
any decision to compensate
beneficiaries.
[9]
This fear of
exclusion prompted the residents of Malamulele village – the
Respondents in this application – to bring
an urgent
application to interdict the Commission and the other state actors
from pursuing further development of the 240 houses
pending a review
of the supposed decision. The respondents in the urgent application
were the Applicants in this application, and
the Hlomela Traditional
Authority, which abided.
[10]
The Applicants did
not oppose the interdict because they wished “to avoid [the]
incorrect perception … [that] the Commission
wanted to block
them from having their rights adjudicated”. The Commission’s
position was that it had not taken any
decision to financially
compensate, or to exclude the Malamulele claimants, and so chose to
abide and await the review application.
[11]
I pause to note that
this was a strange attitude to adopt. If an interdict was premised on
the review of a non-existent decision,
the appropriate response would
have been to oppose the interdict on the basis that the respondents
had the wrong end of the stick.
A clear statement at the outset that
no such decision had been taken might have avoided the
misunderstanding, delay and legal fees
that would follow.
[12]
In the absence of
opposition, this Court granted the interdict on 5 November 2021. The
interim order interdicts the Commission from
“making any
financial compensation” to the Hlomela Traditional Authority,
and “taking any steps to further the
process of the restitution
to the members of the” Hlomela Traditional Authority, or
transferring any property to them. The
order “operates as an
interim interdict pending the final outcome of the Review
Application”. Although the Respondents
had promised to launch
the review application within 30 days, the interim order includes no
deadline by which the review must be
brought.
[13]
This brings me to the
cause of the current rescission application: a dispute about service.
The Applicants state there was an agreement
that the review
application would be served on Ms Moloto, the state attorney in
Polokwane who was handling the matter on their
behalf. The
Respondents do not deny that they agreed to serve the review on Ms
Moloto.
[14]
Rightly so because
the agreement is reflected in correspondence. On 11 November 2021, Ms
Moloto wrote to the Respondents’
attorneys indicating that she
was acting for the Applicants, and that her clients would abide the
urgent application if no costs
were sought against them. Mr Maluleke
– the Respondents’ attorney – responded the same
day stating: “As
you have confirmed telephonically that you are
not opposing this application but you wi[s]h to be notified of the
progress of the
application and be served with any documents in the
proceedings.” On 16 November 2021, Ms Moloto filed a notice to
abide
which stated that the Applicants “will accept service of
all notices in this matter” at the address of the state
attorney.
[15]
The timing of this
correspondence is somewhat strange. It occurred six days after the
interim order had already been granted. It
seems that Ms Moloto was
unaware the interim order had been granted. It is unclear when the
order was served. The service affidavit
recording service is dated 16
November 2021, but it does not specify when it was served on the
Applicants. Nonetheless, two things
are plain. One, the Applicants
were abiding the interim application, not the review application
which had not been launched. Two,
there was an agreement to serve all
future process – including the promised review application –
on Ms Moloto.
[16]
But the Respondents
did
not
adhere to
that agreement. When it was eventually launched in March 2022 the
Respondents did not serve or even email it to Ms Moloto.
Instead,
they delivered a copy to the Commission. Exactly how this was done,
nobody knows. There is no evidence whether it was
done by the
sheriff, by an attorney, or by somebody else. There is no return of
service, and no service affidavit.
[17]
However, the
Commission accepts that it received the review. But, it explains, it
did not appreciate that it was a new application.
The Respondents
issued the review under the same case number as the urgent interdict.
The Commission’s officials mistakenly
believed that the papers
were just another copy of the urgent interdict, which it had abided.
They expected that the promised review
application would be served on
Ms Moloto as agreed. The Respondents accept the truth of this
explanation, but deny it is adequate.
[18]
There is scant
evidence on whether the review application was delivered at all to
the other Applicants – the Minister and
the Department. The
only evidence is a stamp on the notice of motion from the
“Directorate: Litigation” of the Department,
dated 15
March 2022, with a variety of signatures.
[19]
The further documents
securing a hearing of the review – the application for a date
and the notice of set down – were
not served on the Applicants.
They are addressed only to the Registrar.
[20]
In the absence of
service on their attorney, and an awareness there was a fresh review
application, the Applicants did not oppose
the review. They filed no
papers at all. They believed that, if action was required, their
attorney of record would receive the
papers and would contact them to
respond.
[21]
The review
application was heard unopposed on 29 August 2022. This Court granted
the following order:
1.
That the decisions/actions of the Chief Land Claims
Commissioner and Regional Land Claim Commissioner, Limpopo Provincial
(first and second Respondents) to financially compensate the verified
beneficiaries of Hlomela Village to the exclusion of the
members of
the first Applicant are hereby reviewed and set aside.
2.
That the first and second Respondents are hereby directed and
Ordered to also compensate members of the Applicant in the
inclusion
of the verified beneficiaries.
[22]
This order was served
on the Commission on 8 September 2022. It prompted the current
application for rescission, which was launched
on 3 November 2022.
[23]
The Applicants apply,
first, for condonation because the application for rescission was
launched outside the time periods permitted
by rule 64(2). It should
have been brought within 10 days of the date the Applicants became
aware of the Order; 22 September 2022.
It was, instead, launched on 3
November 2022. At the hearing, Mr Malatji informed me that the
Respondents do not oppose condonation.
I condoned the delay. The
explanation – the difficulty in the State Attorney procuring
counsel – is reasonable. The
delay is not long and could cause
no prejudice to the Respondents. And, as will appear, the prospects
of success are strong.
[24]
The
application is brought on two alternative grounds.
[2]
In the main, it is brought in terms of s 27 of the Land Court Act 6
of 2023. Specifically, the Applicants rely on ss 27(a)
and (c)
which permit this Court to rescind an order that was “erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of
the person against
whom that judgment or order was granted”, and an order which
was “void from its inception or was
obtained by fraud or
mistake common to the parties”. In the alternative, the
Applicants rely on the common law which affords
courts a discretion
to rescind their orders when there is justifiable reason for the
party’s absence and a bona fide defence.
[25]
I deal first with the
argument under s 27(a), then the common law, and finally with s
27(c).
Erroneously Sought
or Granted
[26]
Section
27(a) reflects the language of rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform Rules of
the High Court.
[3]
It sets two requirements for rescission: “A party must be
absent, and an error must have been committed by the court.”
[4]
The two are related – the absence may lead to the error, or the
error may be the reason for the absence. But they remain
separate
requirements.
[5]
[27]
There
is no debate that the Applicants were not present on 29 August 2022
when this Court granted the Order. That requirement is
met. The
question is whether an error was committed in granting the Order in
their absence. The error may arise either in the process
of seeking
the judgment on the part of the applicant, or in the process of
granting default judgment on the part of the court.
[6]
[28]
Granting
an order in the absence of service on an affected party will
ordinarily mean the order was erroneously sought (as the applicant
ought not to have approached the court without service) and
erroneously granted (because the court should not have granted the
order without proof it was served). As Streicher J put it in
Fraind
v Nothmann
:
“The applicant had a right to be served with the summons and to
defend the action. If that is so, the applicant must also
have the
right to apply for the rescission of a judgment erroneously granted
against him without the summons having been served
on him. If that
were not so, the applicant's right to be served with the summons and
to defend the matter would be meaningless.”
[7]
[29]
The question is
whether the delivery of the review application to the Commission –
and seemingly the Department and the Minister
– constituted
“service”.
[30]
The Applicants argue
that the delivery did not suffice for three reasons: it was not
proper service in terms of this Court’s
rules and practice
directives, it was non-compliant with
s 2
of the
State Liability Act
20 of 1957
, and it did not adhere to the agreement to serve on Ms
Moloto.
[31]
Let us begin with the
rules.
Rule 24
deals with the service of process.
Rule 24(1)
incorporates rule 4(1) of the Uniform Rules, unless this Court’s
rules provide otherwise. Uniform Rule 4(1) generally
requires
service by sheriff for documents that initiate application
proceedings. But rule 4(1)(aA) provides: “Where the person
to
be served with any document initiating application proceedings is
already represented by an attorney of record, such document
may be
served upon such attorney by the party initiating such proceedings.”
This is an alternative to service by sheriff.
It is not mandatory.
But if service is not effected on the attorney in terms of this
subrule, it must be effected in terms of the
other provisions of Rule
4.
[32]
Rule 24(4) deals with
proof of service. It provides for only two methods to prove that
service occurred. If service was effected
by the Sheriff, service is
proved by a return of service. Otherwise, service is proved by “an
affidavit of the person who
effected the service” accompanied
by the relevant document establishing service. In the case of hand
delivery, it must be
proved by a receipt as described in rule 24(2).
[33]
The Rules must be
read together with this Court’s Practice Directions. In 2015
the Judge President of this Court issued Practice
Direction 17, which
is headed: “Service on the Land Claims Commission”. It
reads:
In
all matters in which the Land Claims Commission is a party, service
shall be effected on the relevant regional office of the
Commission
as well as on the national office.
Service shall also be effected
upon the legal representative of the Land Claims Commission.
[34]
As I discuss below,
this requirement reflects the requirement in
s 2
of the
State
Liability Act. Its
obvious purpose is to ensure that legal process in
fact comes to the attention of both the Commission, and its
attorneys. It was
presumably prompted by experience that service on
the Commission alone was often inadequate to ensure that the
Commission was legally
represented in matters that affect it.
[35]
The service in this
case was manifestly non-compliant with the Rules and with Practice
Direction 17. It is unclear how the review
application was delivered
– whether by sheriff or otherwise. There is no return of
service, and no service affidavit. It
was not served on the state
attorney, despite the clear requirement of Practice Direction 17.
[36]
That
brings me to the second basis on which the Applicants claim the order
was “erroneously sought” and “erroneously
granted”
–
s 2
of the
State Liability Act. Section
2(1) requires that,
when suing a “department”, a litigant must cite the
“executive authority”
[8]
of the department as the nominal defendant/respondent.
Section 2(2)
then requires that, in those circumstances, the plaintiff or
applicant must serve the proceedings on the executive authority, and
within five days “serve a copy of that process on the office of
the State Attorney operating within the area of jurisdiction
of the
court from which the process was issued.”
[9]
[37]
In
Molokwane
,
the SCA held that the purpose of
s 2(2)
is “to ensure that the
relevant ‘executive authority’ … is afforded
effective legal representation in
the matter by the State
Attorney.”
[10]
That purpose will have been served as long as the State Attorney
provides representation, even if it was not served with the
application.
As Makgoka JA put it, “it is not so much about how
the State Attorney obtained the knowledge of the process commencing
proceedings,
as the representation of the party in the legal
proceedings itself.”
[11]
[38]
Applying that
rationale, the
Molokwane
Court held
that
s 2(2)
had been complied with even though the plaintiff had not
served on the State Attorney, because the State Attorney had
nonetheless
represented the affected Minister. The message is obvious
–
s 2(2)
is a mechanism to ensure notice and representation; it
is not a technical point for the state to take when it is in fact
notified
and represented.
[39]
Miya
[12]
concerned
the reverse situation – the summons was served on the State
Attorney, but not on the Minister. The Minister raised
a special plea
that service on the State Attorney alone was insufficient and,
without service on the Minister, the action was a
nullity. The
Minister asked the SCA to reconsider its finding in
Molokwane
.
The Court did not do so. Instead, it re-affirmed
Molokwane
and
held that it applied to non compliance with both
s 2(2)(a)
and
2
(2)(b). It concluded that, on the facts, “the Minister was
fully aware of the proceedings against him. There was not even an
iota of prejudice decried by the Minister as a result of this
failure.”
[13]
For that reason, the non-compliance with
s 2(2)
was not fatal, and
the action could proceed.
[40]
Molokwane
and
Miya
establish the purpose of the special service requirements in
s 2(2)
–
to ensure that litigation in fact comes to the attention of the
executive, and that they are properly represented. The
corollary is
that
s 2(2)
should only be used to excuse the executive when the
failure to meet
s 2(2)
’s dual service requirement in fact meant
that the executive was unrepresented.
[41]
That is what happened
here. The Applicants were not represented in the review. If the
review application had been served on the
State Attorney – as
s
2(2)
required – they likely would have opposed the review.
[42]
However, it is not
clear to me that
s 2(2)
applies to the Commission. It applies when
suing a “department”. Is the Commission a “department”?
I did
not hear full argument on the issue, and therefore prefer not
to decide it. Ultimately, it does not matter for two reasons. First,
because the Commission was not the only respondent in the Review –
the Minister was also a Respondent.
Section 2(2)
undoubtedly applies
to the Minister and compelled service on the State Attorney. Second,
even if
s 2(2)
does not require service on the State Attorney when
suing the Commission, Practice Direction 17 does.
[43]
What is concerning
about this matter is that the Respondents were plainly aware of the
requirement to serve on the State Attorney
because they agreed to do
so. No explanation was proffered for why the review application was
not served on the State Attorney.
It is difficult to conceive of an
acceptable explanation. Where parties have agreed on a form of
service permitted by the Rules,
that form of service is not followed,
and the result is that a party does not have notice, that too may be
enough to mean an order
was erroneously sought.
[44]
In short, there was
non-compliance with Rule 4 of the Uniform Rules, no proof of service
in the form required by rule 24(4), non-compliance
with Practice
Direction 17, a failure to comply with s 2(2), and a breach of the
agreement to serve on Ms Moloto. These failures
were the reason the
Applicants were not represented in the Review.
[45]
The
Respondents’ counsel properly conceded as much. His argument
was that as the review application had still been delivered
to the
Commission, even if it had not been properly served, that the Court
should overlook the defects in service. He relied on
the case of
Prism
Payment Technologies
.
[14]
There, a summons had been served on one of the defendants at the
correct business park, but the wrong employment address. The
defendant was nonetheless aware of the summons and filed a notice of
intention to defend. But he also filed an irregular step notice
seeking to set aside the summons on the basis that it was defective.
It was in that context that Lamont J discussed the purpose
of
service, and the circumstances in which a defendant can raise
defective service.
[46]
He
explained that the rules for service “provide for a mechanism
by which relative certainty can be obtained that service
has been
effected upon a defendant.”
[15]
If those rules are complied with “then the assumption is made
that the service was sufficient to reach the defendant's attention
and his failure to take steps is not due to the fact that he does not
have knowledge of the summons.”
[16]
But it does not follow that “if service is not effected as
required by the rule, the service is not effective”.
[17]
If, despite non-compliance with rule 4, the defendant came to know of
the summons, then there has been proper service. In
Prism
Payment Technologies
the
purpose of service had plainly been met. The defendant knew of the
summons and had given notice of his intention to defend.
[47]
The reasoning does
not aid the Respondents.
Prism
Payment Technologies
concerns service that was defective, but nonetheless effective. The
delivery in this case was both defective
and
ineffective
.
We know it was ineffective because the Applicants, despite wishing to
oppose the review application, did not do so. Had there
been proper
service – including service on the State Attorney – the
Applicants likely would have been aware of the
review application.
The non-compliance with the Rules led to their absence from the
proceedings. In those circumstances, there
is no room to “condone”
the failure to serve in terms of the rules.
[48]
It follows that the
Order was “erroneously sought” and “erroneously
granted” in the Applicants’ absence.
The Respondents did
not serve the review application in compliance with this Court’s
rules or the
State Liability Act. There
was no compliant proof that
the Applicants had been served. And there was a breach of the
agreement to serve on the State Attorney.
The failure to properly
serve was the reason they did not participate. I am satisfied that
this is a sufficient basis to rescind
the Order.
The Common Law
[49]
The
Applicants also sought rescission under the common law. This Court
retains the power to rescind under the common law on grounds
not
enumerated in s 27 of the Land Court Act.
[18]
An order granted in the absence of a party can be rescinded under the
common law if there is “good cause”, which is
generally
understood to set two requirements: “First, the applicant must
furnish a reasonable and satisfactory explanation
for its default.
Second, it must show that on the merits it has a bona fide defence
which prima facie carries some prospect
of success.”
[19]
The Court retains a discretion whether to rescind or not.
[50]
Here, both
requirements are met.
[51]
The reason the
Applicants failed to participate was the failure to serve on the
State Attorney. That is a reasonable explanation
for the failure to
participate. The Commission’s officials who received the review
application should have done better. They
should have read the
documents, and referred them to the relevant officials who would have
realised this was a new application
requiring a new response. But
Practice Direction 17 and
s 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act exist
precisely because there is a risk in large bureaucracies that
litigation will not find its way to the relevant decision maker.
That
is why service on the state attorney is a safeguard. And that is why
the Applicants agreed with the Respondents that the review
application would be served on Ms Moloto. In my view, the explanation
is satisfactory.
[52]
Second, there
Applicants undoubtedly have a bona fide defence – there was no
decision to review. There is no documentary evidence
of the decision.
The only evidence is the averment in the answering affidavit of Mr
Mabasa that Mr Masingi announced the decision
at the Xilumani Hotel.
Mr Masingi denies that he made such a statement. It is inherently
unlikely that a decision of this kind
would be announced orally
without any written evidence.
[53]
I do not wish, at
this stage, to decide whether or not there was a decision. The
Respondents continue to assert there was a decision.
Resolving that
dispute would likely pre-empt the outcome of the review which must be
decided on its own papers. But if the Applicants
had been able to
participate in the review, they would have had a genuine defence: the
Commission had not taken a decision to depart
from the terms of the
s
42D
agreement.
[54]
Even if the order
ought not to be rescinded under
s 27(a)
, considering this matter
under the common law, I would exercise my discretion to rescind the
Order.
Section 27(c)
[55]
The Applicants
advanced various other grounds of rescission under s 27(c) of the
Land Court Act. Given the outcome I have reached
on s 27(a) and the
common law, I prefer not to decide those grounds of rescission.
[56]
In
general, the basis for this attack was that there was no decision and
therefore the Order was “void from its inception”,
and
obtained by the Respondents misleading the Court. The Applicants
relied on
Njemla
[20]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the rescission of an order
which was based on false information about the scope of a restitution
claim.
[57]
I have no doubt that
if the Respondents knowingly misrepresented that there was a decision
when they knew there was not, that would
be a basis for rescission.
It would likely also be a basis for rescission even if the
representation was made in good faith, but
the Respondents now
accepted that there was no decision.
[58]
But that is not the
case. The Respondents continue to assert that there was a decision.
Whether there was or not will be a central
issue in the review. While
I think the Applicants have reasonable prospects of success in
showing there was no decision, I do not
think it would be appropriate
to rescind on that basis as that would effectively decide the review
application as well. As there
are other bases to rescind the Order, I
prefer not to decide the application under s 27(c).
Further Conduct
[59]
The result of
rescission is that the review application must still be decided. That
also has the consequence of resuscitating the
interim order which was
made until the determination of the review. The consequence is that
progress on actually implementing the
s 42D settlement agreement will
again come to a halt.
[60]
That is particularly
unfortunate where there is no substantive disagreement between the
parties. All the parties agree that the
Malamulele claimants have not
been, or should not be, excluded from benefitting under the
settlement agreement. The only difference
is why. The Applicants say
it is because they have never taken a decision to exclude them. The
Respondents say it is because there
was a decision to exclude them,
but the decision was unlawful. It is a distinction with no apparent
practical consequence for the
implementation of the s 42D agreement.
Since the review was granted, the parties have continued to engage
about how to finally
ensure implementation on the basis that there is
no decision excluding the Respondents.
[61]
The resolution of the
review will not alter the substantive position of the parties. But it
may cause further delay for successful
claimants who have already
waited two decades to see the promise of restitution fulfilled.
[62]
I therefore raised
with counsel at the hearing the possibility of an expedited hearing
of the review. They agreed this was appropriate
and after the hearing
proposed a timetable. With some minor adjustments, I am going to make
the timetable part of my order. As
I have already read the papers, I
also intend to keep the file and to hear the review.
[63]
I appreciate the
parties’ willingness to agree to an expedited resolution. But I
would still encourage them to explore a non-litigious
solution. It is
unclear to me what either party will gain from an opposed review
application that cannot be gained from a simple
acceptance that all
the parties will move forward on the basis that there is no decision
to financially compensate beneficiaries,
or to exclude the
Respondents. If a court order is needed to formalise that position,
the Court can be approached to make such
an order. But it is
ultimately for the parties to decide what their disputes are, and how
to resolve them.
[64]
That leaves only the
issue of costs. The Applicants did not seek costs and accepted that,
if they were successful, there should
be no costs order. I agree.
[65]
Accordingly, I make
the following order:
1.
The late
filing of the rescission application is condoned.
2.
The order made
by this Court on 29 August 2022 is rescinded.
3.
The Commission
shall, by 6 June 2025, file a notice to the effect that there is no
decision taken by the Commission, and no records
of that nature, to
financially compensate the beneficiaries under the Hlomela Land
Claim.
4.
The applicants
in the review application may, by 23 June 2025, supplement their
founding affidavit if they wish to do so.
5.
The
Commission, or any of the Respondents in the review application
shall, by 7 July 2025, file their answering affidavits, if any.
6.
The applicants
in the review application shall, by 14 July 2025, file their replying
affidavits, if any.
7.
The applicants
in the review application shall deliver heads of argument by 21 July
2025.
8.
The
respondents in the review application shall file their heads of
argument by 28 July 2025.
9.
The review
application will be heard on 4 August 2025.
10.
Each party
shall pay its own costs.
M
BISHOP
Acting
Judge
Land
Court
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv
K Toma
Instructed by:
State Attorney, Polokwane
For the Defendant
:
Adv C Malatji
Instructed by:
GA Maluleke Attorneys
[1]
The settlement agreement records 240, 245 and 250 as the number of
houses to be built. Nothing turns on the discrepancy for present
purposes.
[2]
It was originally brought under the comparable provisions of the
Restitution Act that have since been repealed and replaced by
s 27.
[3]
Rule 42(1)(a) reads: “The court may, in addition to any other
powers it may have, mero motu or upon the application of
any party
affected, rescind or vary: (a) An order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any
party affected
thereby”.
[4]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
[2021] ZACC 28
;
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC) at para 57.
[5]
Ibid.
[6]
D Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
(3
ed, RS25, 2024) Vol 2 at D1-Rule 42-19.
[7]
1991 (3) SA 837
(W) at 841G.
[8]
Section 4A defines “department” as “a national or
provincial department”, and defines “executive
authority” to mean the relevant minister or MEC. I return to
these definitions below.
[9]
The provision reads in full:
(2)
The plaintiff or applicant, as the case may be, or his
or her legal representative must-
(a)
after any court process instituting
proceedings and in which the executive authority
of a department is
cited as nominal defendant or respondent has been issued, serve a
copy of that process on the head of the
department concerned at the
head office of the department; and
(b)
within five days after the service of the
process contemplated in paragraph (a), serve
a copy of that process
on the office of the State Attorney operating within the area of
jurisdiction of the court from which
the process was issued.
[10]
Minister
of Police and Others v Samuel Molokwane
[2022] ZASCA 111
at para 18.
[11]
Ibid.
[12]
Minister
of Police v Miya
[2024]
ZASCA 71; 2025 (3) SA 130 (SCA).
[13]
Ibid at para 18.
[14]
Prism
Payment Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Altech Information Technologies
(Pty) Ltd (t/a Altech Card Solutions)
and
Others
2012 (5) SA 267 (GSJ).
[15]
Ibid at para 21.
[16]
Ibid.
[17]
Ibid.
[18]
See, for example,
King
Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality v Njemla, Njemla v King Sabata
Dalindyebo Municipality and Others
[2010] ZALCC 2
; and
Sokhela
and Another v Mhlungu and Another
[2023] ZALCC 22
[19]
Zuma
(n
4) at para 71.
[20]
Njemla
v KSD Local Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 141
;
[2012] 4 All SA 532
(SCA).
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