Case Law[2025] ZALCC 25South Africa
Mnisi and Another v Registrar of Deeds Pretoria and Others (LCC49/2011B) [2025] ZALCC 25 (17 June 2025)
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AT RANDBURG Case Number: LCC49/2011B Heard: 13 June 2025 Delivered: 17 June 2025 (1) REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒ (2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒ (3) REVISED: Yes ☒ / No ☐ Date: 17 June 2025 In the matter between: MNISI ELVIS
Judgment
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## Mnisi and Another v Registrar of Deeds Pretoria and Others (LCC49/2011B) [2025] ZALCC 25 (17 June 2025)
Mnisi and Another v Registrar of Deeds Pretoria and Others (LCC49/2011B) [2025] ZALCC 25 (17 June 2025)
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sino date 17 June 2025
THE
LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case
Number: LCC49/2011B
Heard:
13 June 2025
Delivered:
17 June 2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒
(3)
REVISED: Yes ☒ / No ☐
Date:
17 June 2025
In
the matter between:
MNISI
ELVIS
First Applicant
MNISI
PHILEMON
Second Applicant
and
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS: PRETORIA
First Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS: MPUMALANGA
Second Respondent
MINISTER
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
Third Respondent
LAND
REFORM AND RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
MEMBER
OF EXECUTIVE
Fourth Respondent
COMMITTEE
OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF
AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
Fifth Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
Sixth Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT:
MPUMALANGA
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS
Seventh Respondent
COMMISSIONER
ERMELO
MPUMALANGA
NEAL
FRASER SYMON N.O.
Eight Respondent
ANDREW
MGCINN PROPERTIES
Ninth Respondent
(PTY)
LTD
KOMATI
GORGE LODGE (PTY) LTD
Tenth Respondent
KOMATI
GORGE LODGE FLY
Eleventh Respondent
FISHING
NKAMBULE
KUYITI JOSEPH
Twelfth Respondent
ORDER
1.
The
Department of Land Reform and Rural Development, including the
Director-General of the Department, is directed to
finalise
the applicants' labour tenant claim
,
including conducting any required
Land
Rights Enquiry
,
within
30
court days
from the date of this order.
2. The First and/or
Second Respondent is directed to register a caveat over Portion 5 of
Komatidraai 417 JT, restricting transfer,
alienation or encumbrance
thereof, pending the finalisation of the applicants' labour tenant
claim.
3. The Twelfth
Respondent is directed to permit the applicants to access Portion 5
of Komatidraai 417 JT for the purpose of
grazing, limited to
twenty-seven (27) head of cattle, on the portion referred to in the
unsigned 2023 grazing arrangement, pending
the finalisation of their
claim as set out in paragraph 1.
4. There is no
order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The
applicants launched this urgent application for interim relief in
terms of Part A of an amended notice of motion. In terms of
the
amended notice of motion, the applicants, Elvis and Philemon Mnisi
("applicants") seek an order directing the Registrar
of
Deeds to register a caveat to restrict his rights over Portion 5 of
the farm Komatidraai 417 JT ("portion 5"), Mpumalanga,
which has been awarded to the Twelfth Respondent, Mr Kuyiti Joseph
Nkambule ("Mr Nkambule"), under the Land Reform (Labour
Tenants) Act
[1]
("LTA"). They request this as a temporary measure, pending
the main application (Part B), a review application. In addition,
they seek temporary grazing rights on Portion 5.
[2]
The initial notice of motion sought wide-ranging relief, seeking to
interdict the Registrar of Deeds from transferring
the property to Mr
Nkambule. It also sought orders compelling the Department of Land
Reform and Rural Development ("Department"),
as well as
various officials, to disclose land under their control and to
urgently allocate grazing land to the applicants. They
further sought
to amend or vary a 2022 settlement agreement that awarded land to Mr
Nkambule and to compel the Seventh Respondent
to disclose all records
and documents related to the processing of the applicants' late
father's labour tenant claim.
[3]
At a case management meeting held on 21 May 2025, it became apparent
that the broad scope of the original relief rendered
it unsuitable
for urgent determination. The Court invited the parties to consider
narrowing the relief, a "holding position",
to what was
strictly necessary to prevent prejudice pending the finalisation of
Part B. The parties were encouraged to explore
the possibility of
interim protective mechanisms, including the placement of a caveat on
the title deed of Portion 5. It should
also be noted that the
Department has indicated that it is treating this matter with the
urgency it deserves and hopes that the
issues raised in Part B can be
resolved without the need to go to court.
[4]
At a follow-up case management meeting on 27 May 2025, the applicants
agreed to narrow the scope of Part A. They no longer
sought to halt
the transfer of the land or restructure the existing settlement
agreement. Instead, they confined their urgent relief
to what is set
out above. Mr Nkambule could not agree to this.
[5]
A further case management meeting, where still no agreement could be
reached, culminated in the Court issuing a
directive and draft
order, confirming that the only issue to be determined in Part A
would be whether a caveat should be placed
on the title deed at the
point of transfer of the land to the Mr Nkambule, and if so, what its
content should be. Pursuant to that
directive, the applicants filed
an amended notice of motion limiting the relief sought to the caveat
and interim grazing rights.
# Background
Background
[6]
The applicants are the sons of Simon Fanyana Mnisi, a deceased labour
tenant who, they allege, lodged a section 16 application
for land
acquisition under the LTA in respect of the farm Waterval 424 JT
("Waterval") in Mpumalanga. They contend that
this was
submitted at the same time as Mr Nkambule's. According to the
applicants, this claim was never properly processed by the
Department, as their rights were not considered alongside those of Mr
Nkambule. While they acknowledge that both claims are technically
individual, they point out that all the rights are interlinked, as
they were connected to the same owner and the same land, and
cannot
be considered in isolation.
[7]
Between 2011 and 2014, the Mnisi and Nkambule households were
relocated from Waterval when the landowners changed the
land use to
accommodate game, which conflicted with cattle grazing. Although the
applicants questioned the validity of the 2011/2012
relocation in
their founding affidavit, they did not follow the matter further, and
it is not before this Court.
[8]
The Nkambule family resisted relocation and was assisted by the
Department, ultimately settling on Portion 5, where grazing
is
permitted. This arrangement was then finalised in a settlement
agreement pursuant to a section 18 of the LTA. The Mnisi family
remained on the other side of the road, adjacent to the Waterval
property, where they were restricted in the number of cattle they
could keep. The limited carrying capacity of the land led to
overgrazing, resulting in the death of some cattle.
[9]
The then-owners attempted to facilitate an agreement in 2023 whereby
the applicants would be temporarily allowed to graze
their cattle on
a small portion adjacent to the entrance of portion 5. The applicants
aver there was an oral agreement to this
effect, but when it came to
signing a document, Mr Nkambule refused. Instead, he instructed the
applicants (they aver with the
help of the Department) to remove
their cattle from his land. It was only when launching an application
in the magistrate’s
court to interdict the eviction of the
cattle from the land that they learnt about the settlement agreement.
They then started
to engage with the Department.
[10]
During this engagement, the Department wrote a letter to the
applicants (in April 2025). The Department notes that the
Mnisi
family did not express an interest in pursuing the matter of the
livestock or the labour tenancy in court in 2011 when Mr
Nkambule
did. There is no further clarity on why that was, and I do not wish
to draw any inferences or conclusions from this process
based on the
papers before me. The Department further indicated that it wishes
first to finalise the claim of Mr Nkambule before
it processes the
claim of the Mnisis, as "the owners might want to combine the
applications, and this could be prejudicial
to the Nkambule family,
who have been pursuing this matter since 2011". Not only does
this point to the fact that the claims
are interlinked, but it also
effectively defers the Mnisi claim until Mr Nkambule's is finalised.
[11]
Mr Nkambule also denies that they are entitled to the relief sought
and maintains their claim relates to the Waterval
property. They have
no historical or legal rights to Portion 5, as Portion 5 and Waterval
are distinct parcels of land. He argues
that the two properties are
distinct and unrelated for purposes of the present relief. He further
points out that he was awarded
Portion 5 pursuant to a court-approved
settlement agreement under the LTA, to which the applicants were not
parties and which they
did not challenge at the time. He suggests
that he has become collateral damage in a dispute between the
applicants and the State,
and he cannot be penalised for alleged
administrative failures. He asserts his entitlement to have his land
rights respected.
[12]
The
applicants, however, argue that the different parcels of land cannot
be viewed in isolation. They emphasise that all the land
parcels
originally belonged to the same landowner and that both the Mnisi and
Nkambule families were relocated as a result of the
owner's business
decision to convert the farm to game farming. This relocation had
substantive consequences. Mr Nkambule was settled
on Portion 5 of
Komatidraai, where grazing is permitted, and they were moved to a
portion of land on the opposite side of the road,
where
grazing
is restricted
.
As a result, they are unable to sustain their cattle, a central
feature of their livelihood and tenure.
[13]
The 2023
agreement did not materialise. This complicates matters, as the
applicants are left without proper grazing for their cattle,
arguably
also not due to their fault. The applicants acknowledge that they
were not parties to the section 18 settlement agreement.
Still, they
maintain that their
exclusion
from the process leading up to the agreement
,
despite their shared labour tenancy and historical relocation, is at
the root of the present conflict.
[14]
The Department may have expedited the finalisation of Mr Nkambule's
claim due to his chosen strategy. However, the main
issue is that the
Department did not consider or process the applicants' claim
alongside Mr Nkambule's during the section 16 process,
despite the
shared historical connection to the Waterval property and both
parties having instituted claims. This is why the applicants
seek a
review. Based on the available facts, their request appears to have
merit.
[15]
I disagree
with Mr Mathibedi SC's claim that the settlement agreement cannot be
reviewed, thus rendering the review application
moot. As outlined
below, section 18
[2]
of the LTA establishes a clear procedure that must be adhered to,
culminating in the signing of a settlement agreement wherein
the
applicants are acknowledged as labour tenants and awarded land. This
process concludes with the Director-General (or delegate)
certifying
that the agreement is reasonable and equitable. Such certification
constitutes administrative action and is, in principle,
subject to
review.
[16]
In the April 2025 letter, the Department gave the undertaking to
finalise the application, which includes conducting
an Enhanced Land
Rights Enquiry and then following the procedure set out in section
17. When asked during argument if I could impose
a time limit on this
process, Mr Mathibedi SC for the State indicated that 30 court days
would suffice.
[17]
The court finds itself in an unenviable position. What should have
been a moment of triumph and joy for Mr Nkambule,
finally receiving
redress and secure tenure at the age of 93, is now clouded by the
applicants' request to impose a temporary limitation
on his rights.
[18]
It is with this background and understanding that I proceed with the
legal analysis
# Legal Framework
Legal Framework
[19]
The relief
sought by the applicants is an
interim
interdict
and a
mandamus
compelling the First and/or Second Respondent to register a caveat
over Portion 5 of Komatidraai 417 JT, and allowing limited grazing
access to that land. The applicable legal test for interim relief is
well-established.
Chief
Nchabeleng v Chief Phasha
[3]
sets out the requirements for interim relief:
‘
(a) that the right
which is the subject matter of the main action and which (the
applicant) seeks to protect by means of interim
relief is clear or,
if not clear, is prima facie established though open to some doubt;
(b) that, if the right is
only prima facie established, there is a well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable harm to the applicant
if the interim relief is not
granted and he ultimately succeeds in establishing his right (it is
implicit in this requirement that
the harm apprehended must be the
consequence of an actual or threatened interference with the right
referred to in (a);
(c) that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of interim relief; and
(d) that the applicant
has no other remedy.’
# Prima facie right
(though open to some doubt)
Prima facie right
(though open to some doubt)
[20]
Section 25(6) of the Constitution provides that a person or community
whose tenure is legally insecure as a result of
past racially
discriminatory laws or practices is entitled, to the extent provided
by law, to tenure which is legally secure or
comparable redress. The
LTA was enacted to give effect to this constitutional obligation as
it pertains to labour tenants. The
LTA provides a mechanism for
labour tenants to secure rights in the land they occupy or use,
including ownership. It recognises
a specific form of tenure for
individuals with historical ties to both occupation and land use. The
definition of labour tenants
includes activities such as cropping and
grazing. In many cases, keeping cattle is closely associated with the
identity of a labour
tenant, and grazing concerns are both a
practical issue and an aspect of what secure tenure signifies for
labour tenants.
[21]
The
LTA
provides a statutory mechanism through which persons who qualify as
labour tenants or their successors may acquire ownership or
otherwise
secure land rights. This process begins with an application lodged
under
section
16
of the Act, after which the Department is required to investigate the
claim and, where appropriate and possible, facilitate a resolution.
[22]
According
to section
17
,
the Director-General must serve notice of the application on the
owner of the affected land. The landowner is then obliged to
disclose
the presence of all unregistered rights holders on the land, together
with supporting documents. The landowner is also
entitled, at this
stage, to dispute whether the applicant qualifies as a labour tenant.
If the applicant's status is not denied,
they are presumed to be a
labour tenant unless the contrary is proved. If the status is
contested, either party may approach the
Land Claims Court to resolve
the matter. The Director-General remains responsible for further
investigation, facilitation, or mediation
throughout.
[23]
Once the
applicant's status has been confirmed,
section
18
provides two possible routes for resolving the claim: resolution by
agreement or by court adjudication. Importantly, if settled
by
agreement, section 18(5) stipulates that such agreement has no effect
unless the Director-General certifies that it is
reasonable
and equitable
or unless the agreement is made an order of the Court. The settlement
agreement that forms part of the record in this matter bears
the
signature of the Deputy Director-General, who signed it in purported
compliance with section 18(5).
[24]
The applicants allege that the sections 17 and 18 procedures were
followed for Mr Nkambule's application but not for
theirs. The record
appears to substantiate this observation. This
divergent
treatment, despite both families having filed claims regarding the
same farm (Waterval), undermines the procedural safeguards that
the
LTA is designed to maintain. The applicants' heads refer specifically
to the Department's failure to conduct a Land Rights
Enquiry and to
comply with the required procedural steps (application,
processing,
response, agreement, referral, adjudication). There is possible
prejudice in this. At the very least, there is a prima
facie right.
[25]
At its core, the
applicants assert a right not to be excluded from the statutory
process
set out in the LTA and not to have their claim
undermined by such exclusions. While no fault lies with Mr Nkambule,
who followed
the prescribed process and lawfully secured a
settlement, the administrative process that led to his award cannot
be viewed in
isolation. The applicants' and Mr Nkambule's claims
arose from the same historical context, yet only one was processed.
Claims
are individual, but it is interlinked and must be considered
as such.
# A well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
A well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
[26]
The result of the disparity in the awarding of the land and the
consequences thereof requires a temporary solution that
is in the
interest of justice. If both families lodged their claims to the same
parcel of land involving the same landowner, the
outcome of one
receiving land with adequate grazing and the other receiving tenure
without grazing is a cause for concern. Where
the fault for this lies
is not for me to decide.
[27]
The right of tenure encompasses more than mere occupation. It
includes the ability to exercise other land rights, such
as grazing.
The applicants do not assert historic grazing on Portion 5 but rather
highlight the lack of viable grazing rights on
the land to which they
were relocated. The potential loss of cattle, which consequently
affects their security of tenure, constitutes
the harm they face if
the relief is not granted.
# The balance of
conveniences favours the granting of interim relief
The balance of
conveniences favours the granting of interim relief
[28]
The caveat sought by the applicants is not intended to strip Mr
Nkambule of his land rights or occupation. The relief
sought is
modest, limited in duration, and aimed at maintaining fairness
pending the State's fulfilment of its obligations. It
does not affect
Mr Nkambule's title but seeks to preserve the integrity of the
broader process in which both claims should have
been considered.
[29]
The applicants do not seek exclusive use or control of Portion 5.
They seek grazing for twenty-seven head of cattle in
the interim
until the Department finalise their application. The relief they
request is minimal and interim. This temporary relief
does not assign
fault to Mr Nkambule. He is not responsible for the applicants'
exclusion. The court is only too aware that Mr
Nkambule's journey to
land justice has been long and hard-earned.
[30]
In a constitutional system where property rights are relational
rather than absolute, it may sometimes be necessary to
impose
temporary, proportionate limitations on the enjoyment of those rights
to protect the rights of others. This case is an example
of such a
situation.
[31]
For these reasons, the balance of convenience favours the applicants.
# No other remedy
No other remedy
[32]
The relief sought is not without legal ambiguity. It places a
responsibility on Mr Nkambule despite him not being directly
responsible for the applicants' harm. In ordinary circumstances, such
interference would be unjustifiable. However, this is not
ordinary
circumstances. The Court is compelled to craft interim relief that
protects the applicants' rights to a fair consideration
of their
claims while minimising disruption to those already realised by Mr
Nkambule.
[33]
Should the
State fail to act within the timelines it has undertaken,
particularly the 30 court days set out in this order, the
consequences may become more severe, and other remedies may become
available. The Constitutional Court, in
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
[4]
, recognised that
where
the State fails to fulfil its constitutional obligations, it may bear
the burden of providing compensation or other just and
equitable
remedies to the persons burdened by this failure
.
That prospect is not before this Court now, but it cannot be ignored
if the present failure persists.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[34]
Section
3(1) of the
Land
Court Act
[5]
provides
that this Court is both "a court of law and equity." This
dual character recognises that disputes under land
reform legislation
often arise in contexts of historical injustice and systemic failure.
Equity empowers the Court to craft relief
that is responsive to
creating space to address such shortcomings, particularly where rigid
legalism
would
compound harm and enable the failure to persist
.
[35]
The
applicants were excluded from a statutory process through no fault of
their own. They seek only temporary, proportionate relief
that
minimally limits Mr Nkumbula's rights, while preserving the fairness
and integrity of the broader process. Where both parties
are
rights-bearers, and the State has failed to act, equity permits the
Court to intervene to prevent further injustice and
ensure
that the constitutional and statutory framework is allowed to unfold
as intended within a defined timeframe
.
[36]
This
judgment provides an interim situation and should not be read as
pre-judging the merits of the applicants’ claim. In
keeping
with the practice of this Court, and mindful that the parties are
either state-funded or represented pro bono,
no
order as to costs is made
.
## Order
Order
[37]
The following order is made:
1.
The
Department of Land Reform and Rural Development, including the
Director-General of the Department, is directed to
finalise
the applicants' labour tenant claim
,
including conducting any required
Land
Rights Enquiry
,
within
30
court days
from the date of this order.
2. The First and/or
Second Respondent is directed to register a caveat over Portion 5 of
Komatidraai 417 JT, restricting transfer,
alienation or encumbrance
thereof, pending the finalisation of the applicants' labour tenant
claim.
3. The Twelfth
Respondent is directed to permit the applicants to access Portion 5
of Komatidraai 417 JT for the purpose of
grazing, limited to
twenty-seven (27) head of cattle, on the portion referred to in the
unsigned 2023 grazing arrangement, pending
the finalisation of their
claim as set out in paragraph 1.
4. There is no
order as to costs.
WJ
du Plessis
Judge,
Land Court
Date
of hearing:
13 June 2025
Date
of judgment:
17 June 2025
For
the applicant:
PG Masango (attorney, acting pro bono).
For
the 4
th
and 7
th
respondent:
TF Mathibedi SC, instructed by the State Attorney
For
the 12
th
respondent:
MC Nkosi, instructed by Legal Aid South
Africa, Ermelo legal
office
[1]
3 of 1996.
[2]
18.
Resolution of claim by agreement.
(1) An owner of affected
land, who informs the Director-General in terms of section 17 (4)
that he or she admits that the applicant
is a labour tenant may,
within one calendar month after the date of such admission, submit
to the Director-General proposals
as to an equitable means of
disposing of the application, including but not limited to the
acquisition by the labour tenant of
rights in land elsewhere on that
farm or in the vicinity, or payment to the labour tenant of
compensation in lieu of the acquisition
of such land.
(2) The Director-General
shall forthwith give notice of any proposal referred to in
subsection (1), and a copy thereof, to the
applicant.
(3) The Director-General
may appoint a mediator to assist the applicant and the owner to
discuss any such proposal and to arrive
at an agreed resolution of
the application.
(4) If an agreed
resolution is not reached within one calendar month after receipt by
the applicant of notice of the proposal,
the applicant may continue
with his or her original application: Provided that the applicant
shall not be obliged to wait for
the expiration of a calendar month
if the proposal was submitted to the Director-General later than the
period referred to in
subsection (1).
(5) No agreement for the
settlement of any application shall be of any effect unless the
Director-General has certified that he
or she is satisfied that it
is reasonable and equitable, or unless it is incorporated in an
order of the Court in terms of this
Act.
(6) The Director-General
may submit any agreement certified by him or her in terms of
subsection (5), to the Court.
7) If—
(a) the owner does not
submit proposals in terms of subsection (1); or
(b) the applicant
rejects a proposal in terms of subsection (4); or
(c) the parties reach an
agreement but the Director-General is not satisfied that it is
reasonable and equitable, the Director-General
shall, at the request
of any party, refer the application for arbitration or to the Court
for adjudication, and inform the other
parties that he or she has
done so.
(8) The parties may,
within 30 days of the referral of the application for arbitration,
make a joint recommendation to the Director-General
as to who should
be appointed as the arbitrator.
(9) Any nomination
referred to in subsection (8) shall be in writing, signed by all the
parties, and submitted to the Director-General.
[3]
1998
(3) SA 578
(LCC)
para 6.
[4]
2005
(5) SA 3
(CC).
[5]
6
of 2023
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