Case Law[2024] ZALCC 10South Africa
Exxaro Coal (Pty) Limited and Another v Sindane and Others (LCC66/2022) [2024] ZALCC 10 (25 March 2024)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Exxaro Coal (Pty) Limited and Another v Sindane and Others (LCC66/2022) [2024] ZALCC 10 (25 March 2024)
Exxaro Coal (Pty) Limited and Another v Sindane and Others (LCC66/2022) [2024] ZALCC 10 (25 March 2024)
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sino date 25 March 2024
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC66/2022
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED
25
March 2023
In
the matter between
EXXARO
COAL (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant/ First Respondent
EXXARO
COAL MPUMALANGA (PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant/First Respondent
and
VUSIMUZI CHARLES
SINDANE
First Respondent/First Appellant
ZANDILE GERTRUDE
ZWANE Second
Respondent
CALVIN PHUMLANE
SINDANE Third
Respondent
NOTHANDO
SINDANE
Fourth Respondent
BADANILE ROSE
SINDANE
Fifth Respondent
JOHANNA
SINDANE
Sixth Respondent
JULIA
SINDANE Seventh
Respondent
KLEINBOOI
SINDANE
Eighth Respondent
ELISA NOMADLOZI
SINDANE
Ninth Respondent
FELICIA TRYPHINA
MASANGO
Tenth Respondent
THE SINDANE
FAMILY
Eleventh Respondent
MTHOBISI WESLEY
KHUMALO
Twelfth
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
Thirteenth
Respondent
EMAKHAZENI
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Fourteenth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1.
The first to twelfth respondents apply for
leave to appeal against the judgment and orders of this Court
delivered on 30 November
2023. The orders required that
they relocate from their current residence to a nearby development
called Phumulani
Agri Village by 31 January 2024, failing which they
would be evicted.
2.
An
application for leave to appeal must be delivered within fifteen days
after the order was made where reasons are given at that
time as in
this case.
[1]
In computing
periods of time expressed in days under the Rules of this Court,
Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays are
excluded as are days which
fall within the period 24 December to 2 January 2024. The
application for leave to appeal was
delivered on 1 February 2024, the
day after the applicants were to relocate. It was meant to be
delivered on or before 22
December 2023. The application was
not accompanied by any condonation application. A condonation
application was only
forthcoming on 9 February 2024 after the Court
raised the difficulty. The respondents (the applicants in the main
application,
Exxaro) oppose the condonation application.
3.
In
2008, in
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae
)
[2]
the Constitutional Court cautioned litigants to stop what was then
perceived as a trend of conduct with litigants routinely failing
to
observe the rules of Court. The Constitutional Court referred
to a growing trend for litigants in that Court to disregard
time
limits without seeking condonation, noting too that even where
litigants did apply for condonation, they at times put up flimsy
explanations. The Court firmly cautioned that the undesirable
practice ‘must be stopped in its tracks’.
[3]
The Constitutional Court issued a similar reminder in 2014, some six
years later, in
Ethekwini
Municipality v Ingonyama Trust,
[4]
noting that the unacceptable conduct of litigants failing to observe
the Rules of Court had continued in spite of its warning in
Unitas
Hospital.
4.
These words of caution have equal
application to the Land Claims Court which far too often is
confronted by litigants conducting
litigation without regard to the
time-frames imposed by the Rules of Court. Given that this
Court is concerned with social
legislation aimed at securing land
justice, the related historical marginalization of many of its
litigants and the rural context
in which this Court generally
operates, non-compliance is, at times, justified by good reasons
including struggles to access to
legal representation. Where
warranted, litigants will be duly accommodated.
5.
Nevertheless,
the consequences of non-compliance with the Rules of Court for the
efficient functioning of the Courts, the administration
of justice
and access to Court are serious and compromising. The
Constitution promises ‘everyone’ ‘the
right to have
any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law decided in
a fair public hearing before a court or, where
appropriate, another
independent and impartial tribunal or forum.’
[5]
That access is practically impeded when litigants fail without good
cause to observe the time limits for the conduct of litigation
that
are set out in the Rules of Court. When the leave to appeal process
is in issue, as it is here, non-compliance not only delays
the appeal
process but will often preclude a party who has obtained an order in
its favour from enforcing that order until and
unless it is confirmed
on appeal. In such cases, non-compliance is thus integrally
connected not only with the principle
of finality, but with the
enforceability of court orders and thus ultimately the dignity of the
Courts and the rule of law. It
is thus important for litigants
to exercise their rights to appeal in a manner that respects the
legal process.
6.
The Constitutional Court set out the test
for condonation in
Unitas Hospital
in the following terms:
‘
This
court has held that the standard for considering an application for
condonation is the interests of justice. Whether it is
in the
interests of justice to grant condonation depends on the facts and
circumstances of each case. Factors that are relevant
to this
enquiry include but are not limited to the nature of the relief
sought, the extent and cause of the delay, the effect of
the delay on
the administration of justice and other litigants, the reasonableness
of the explanation for the delay, the importance
of the issue to be
raised in the intended appeal and the prospects of success.
’
7.
On the issue of delay, the Constitutional
Court held:
‘
An
applicant for condonation must give a full explanation for the
delay. In addition, the explanation must cover the entire
period of delay. And, what is more, the explanation given must
be reasonable.’
8.
What is in issue in this case is whether
the occupiers should be compelled to relocate from the property or
face eviction, in circumstances
where they are not employed.
That is a clearly important issue for the occupiers, which implicates
their constitutional rights.
The occupiers’ current home
has been their home for many years and is of sentimental and cultural
significance, and the eviction
process can be traumatic and will
invariably be difficult.
9.
I now turn to the delay, its impact and
reasonableness. The delay was some 21 court days after taking into
account the
dies non,
weekends
and public holidays. While not particularly extensive, this is
not a minimal delay not least in context of this case.
What
happened is that the occupiers effectively delayed until the very
date when the eviction order could be executed before applying
for
leave to appeal. The eviction order was technically not
automatically suspended as it would have been had the occupiers
delivered their application for leave to appeal timeously. It
was thus open to Exxaro to enforce it, but Exxaro understandably
sought rather to act cautiously and await the Court’s
decision. Instead, they requested that the application be
promptly
set down for hearing, which it then was. The impact of
the delay on Exxaro must, in my view, be accorded due recognition,
not least in circumstances where Exxaro has conducted the litigation
patiently and in a manner that repeatedly accommodated the
occupiers
in what turned out to be protracted process. They have done so
in circumstances where they have constructed new
accommodation at
great cost for the occupiers nearby and the occupiers are currently
living amidst active mining operations, which
is not safe.
10.
In explaining the delay, Ms Sindane, who
deposed to the founding affidavit, refers to two periods, the period
between 1 December
and 15 December 2024 (the December period) and the
period from 16 January 2024 to 31 January 2024 (the January period).
The
December period is sought to be explained by stating that it is
‘characterised by many holidays and office closures’,
their attorneys’ offices were closed from 14 December 2023 to
15 January 2024 and accordingly ‘there was nothing we
could
have done to pursue the appeal’. The January period is
explained on the basis that on 16 January 2024, their
attorneys
informed them that they would not be able to assist them ‘due
to lack of capacity’. The occupiers then
sought new
attorneys initially through the
pro bono
office at the Labour Court. On 17 January 2024, they booked an
appointment for 23 January 2024 but were informed on that
date that
the
pro bono
office does not deal with land matters. On 24 January 2024,
they approached Mr Marweshe of Marweshe Attorneys, who informed
them
that he could only consult with them on 29 January 2024. Mr
Marweshe then consulted with the occupiers on that date
and prepared
the notice of appeal. He filed it on 1 February 2024 without
any condonation application.
11.
In my view, the explanation for the delay
during the December period is unreasonable. The occupiers were
legally represented:
indeed the hearing of the main application
had been postponed on more than one occasion so that legal
representation could be secured.
But nothing was done during
the December period in which the application for leave to appeal
ought to have been prepared
and delivered. The order was
supplied to the parties’ representatives on 30 November 2023,
two weeks before the attorneys
planned to take their leave.
There were no public holidays until Friday 15 December 2024 and the
application was due on or
before 22 December 2024. Even if the
attorneys intended to close their offices mid-December it would have
been incumbent
upon them to inform the occupiers of the applicable
time frames and duly to attend to this matter timeously. The
explanation
for the December period is effectively non-existent and
manifests an attitude that the court order and court process could be
ignored
and need not be respected.
12.
In my view, the explanation for the further
delay in the January period is in part understandable as it is
characterized with efforts
to obtain new legal representation which,
on the information supplied, was frustrated less by the occupiers and
more by their lawyers.
In this regard, at least on the face of
it, it is not reasonable for a firm of attorneys merely to refuse to
assist their clients
in the circumstances of this case ‘due to
capacity constraints’. Moreover, the erstwhile attorneys
are still
on record and at no stage withdrew. And even if there
was a legitimate basis to withdraw, they ought still to have
communicated
with Exxaro, explained their position and requested an
extension on behalf of their clients and once attending thereto, to
formally
withdraw. But they did nothing, and indeed
remain on record. Furthermore, it is noteworthy that the
new
attorneys who ultimately assisted the occupiers are not new to
the matter, had previously been approached and attended the site
inspection before the matter was initially heard. At the very
least, correspondence should have been sent immediately upon
receipt
of the instruction.
13.
However, even if I accept that the
occupiers should not be prejudiced by the conduct of their attorneys
in January, this does not
assist them to explain reasonably any of
the delay in the December period. And to overlook what happened
in that period would
be tantamount to condoning disrespect for
judicial process.
14.
The occupiers have a further difficulty
which is the prospects of success on appeal. The application
for leave to appeal is
scantly framed. As pleaded, the
grounds of appeal relate to issue in respect of which my reasons
appear from the judgment,
and on the issues pleaded, I am unpersuaded
that the appeal would have reasonable prospects of success: in
my view, the prospects
of success are low.
15.
There is one issue in respect of which
argument was addressed that was not addressed during the hearing.
Though not expressly
pleaded in the grounds of appeal I assume in
favour of the occupiers that it may fairly be canvassed under
paragraph 3 of the application
for leave to appeal, which takes issue
with the Court’s finding that the occupier’s challenge to
the signature of Mr
Frans Sindane could not succeed. The
submission ultimately amounts to a submission that the Court ought
mero motu
to
have referred the issue of whether Mr Frans Sindane signed the
settlement agreement to oral evidence. There is no dispute
that
the occupiers did not request any such referral. Furthermore,
the Court canvassed the issue with the occupiers’
representatives during the hearing and was informed that the
occupiers are not seeking a referral to oral evidence. In this
regard, it was contended on their behalf in the application for leave
to appeal that the Court ought nevertheless to have referred
the
matter to be resolved by way of
viva
voce
testimony.
16.
I
am not persuaded that this point has prospects of success. As
appears from the judgment I concluded, in paragraph 38, that
although
the occupiers sought to dispute the signature, there was no evidence
put up seriously to dispute the substantial evidence
that Exxaro had
produced to substantiate their case – namely that the
re-settlement agreement had been signed and concluded.
That
conclusion was arrived at by applying the trite principles
articulated in
Plascon
Evans
and
Wightman
,
[6]
to which the judgment refers at paragraph 27. I am unpersuaded
that another Court would conclude differently. In any
event,
the occupiers’ representatives at no stage sought a referral to
oral evidence on this or any other issue, and rather
confirmed that
they did not seek one after enquiry from the Court. Whatever
the scope of the Court’s powers or discretion
in those
circumstances, the Court was not obliged to refer the issue to oral
evidence and it would have been highly undesirable
to insist upon
such a referral,
[7]
not least
given the evidence before the Court which was not seriously disputed.
Furthermore, Exxaro’s case ultimately
does not stand or
fall on a finding that the agreement was validly concluded and the
application for leave to appeal does not address
this aspect. For
these reasons too, prospects of success are weak. I have also
considered whether there are other compelling
reasons why leave might
be granted and am not persuaded that there are any.
17.
In all of the circumstances, I have
concluded that the interests of justice demand that the condonation
application be refused.
Finality is warranted in this
case. This Court only orders costs in special circumstances and
I am not persuaded that there
are any.
18.
I make the following order:
18.1.
The first to twelfth respondents’
application for condonation for the late filing of their application
for leave to appeal
is refused.
18.2.
There is no order as to costs.
SJ Cowen
Judge, Land Claims
Court
Date of hearing:
22 February 2024
Date of judgment: 25
March 2024
Appearances:
Applicants for leave to
appeal: Marwashe Attorneys
Respondents in leave to
appeal: HR Fourie SC & M Majozi instructed by Twala
TRR Attorneys
[1]
Rule
69 of the Rules of the Land Claims Court.
[2]
2008(2)
SA 472 (CC); 2008(4) BCLR 442;
[2007] ZACC 24
(
Unitas
Hospital
).
[3]
See
para 33.
[4]
2014(3)
SA 240 (CC) (
Ingonyama
Trust
).
[5]
Section
34.
[6]
Plascon-Evans
Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
1984(3)
SA 623 (A) at 634H-635C;
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and ano
2008(3)
SA 371 (SCA) para 13.
[7]
Joh-Air
(Pty) Ltd v Rudman
1980(2)
SA 420 (T) at 428-429;
Santino
Publishers CC v Waylite Marketing CC
2010(2) SA 53 (GSJ) at para 5 citing
Joh-Air
and
dealing with the reasons why such a course is undesirable.
These remarks have particular resonance when one is dealing
with
Land Court litigation.
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