Case Law[2024] ZALCC 16South Africa
Allie and Others v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC 145/2019) [2024] ZALCC 16 (8 May 2024)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
8 May 2024
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Land Claims Court
South Africa: Land Claims Court
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Land Claims Court
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZALCC 16
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Allie and Others v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC 145/2019) [2024] ZALCC 16 (8 May 2024)
Allie and Others v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC 145/2019) [2024] ZALCC 16 (8 May 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALCC/Data/2024_16.html
sino date 8 May 2024
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO: LCC 145/2019
In the matter between:
MOHAMMED
HASSAN ALLIE
First
Applicant
FARIEDA
TAPE
Second
Applicant
YUSUF
ALLIE
Third
Applicant
MOHAMMED
SEDICK ALLIE
Fourth Applicant
MAGHIA
OSMAN
Fifth
Applicant
LAYLA
BARRON
Sixth
Applicant
And
THE DEPARTMENT OF
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND
REFORM
First Respondent
GOZYN
ALLIE (THE YOUNGER)
Second
Respondent
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Third
Respondent
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
FLATELA, J
Introduction
1.
These are civil contempt proceedings
against the First, Third and Fourth Respondents due to their failure
to comply with the order
granted by this court on 14 June 2023. The
First, Third and Fourth Respondents shall be referred to as State
Respondents.
2.
On 14 June 2023, this court granted an
order by agreement between the Applicant and the State Respondents in
terms whereof, the
State Respondents were ordered to make the record
available for inspection by the applicant’s attorneys within 20
court days
of the date of the order.
3.
The State Respondents failed to comply with
the court order within the time frames as stipulated in the order.
The Applicant launched
this application on 06 September 2023. The
applicant seeks the following orders against the State Respondents:
1.
Declaring that the Respondents are guilty
of criminal contempt of court order for their material failure to
comply with the court
order issued by this court on 14 June 2023.
2.
Sentencing the Respondents to undergo 12
(twelve) months imprisonment; alternatively, such period as the court
may deem fit.
3.
Ordering the Respondents to submit
themselves to the South African Police Service, at a police station
at a date to be determined
by this court for the officer in charge to
ensure that they are immediately delivered to a correctional centre
to commence serving
the sentence imposed and;
4.
Directing the Respondents to bear the costs
of the application on attorney and client scale.
5.
Alternatively, the orders be suspended for
a period of two years on condition that they comply fully with the
order.
6.
That a money fine be imposed on the
Respondents in their personal capacity, such as this court deems
appropriate.
7.
Alternatively, declaring that the State
Respondents are in material breach of the order.
8.
Declaring that the State Respondents are
guilty of civil contempt for their material failure to comply with
the order.
9.
Directing the State Respondents to bear the
costs of this application, jointly and severally liable the one
paying the other to
be absolved.
4.
At issue in this matter is whether the
requirements of contempt have been established.
Brief Background
5.
On 30 October 2019, under this case number,
the applicants approached this Court on an urgent basis seeking
interdictory relief
against the State Respondents wherein an
interdict was sought against the State Respondents from paying the
Second Respondent compensation
for the Land Claims lodged by Second
Respondent’s mother in respect of Erf 1457 and ERF 1458, Hout
Bay Western Cape.
6.
On 7 September 2021, the matter served
before Barnes AJ who granted an interdictory relief in favour of the
applicants (the "engagement
order") in terms of which the
parties were ordered to engage with one another and to try and
resolve the dispute. The engagement
would include the use of the
services of a mediator.
7.
The parties attempted to mediate,
however the mediation process failed.
8.
The applicants launched an application
seeking an order to the effect that the State Respondents be ordered
to undertake not to
make payment of any compensation nor restore any
right to the Second Respondent until the review proceedings are
finalised or unless
agreed to by the applicants and the Second
Respondent. The review application was to be brought before 1 March
2023. On 28
January 2023, the order was granted by consent
between the Applicant and the Respondents.
9.
On 28 February 2023, the applicants
launched the review application against the State Respondents. On 18
April 2023, the State Respondents
filed a Notice in Rule 32 of the
Rules of this Court. On 2 May 2023, the applicants filed an
application to compel against the
State Respondents.
10.
On 14 June 2023, both applications served
before me and by agreement between the parties the following order
was granted:
1)
The First, Third and Fourth Respondents’
Application and notice in terms of
Rule 32
of the
Land Claims Court
Rules, dated
18 April 2023 is withdrawn.
2)
The applicant’s application to order
compliance dated 2 May 2023, is withdrawn.
3)
The First, Third and Fourth Respondent are
to make the record available for inspection to the applicants/the
applicants’ attorneys
within 20 court days of the date of this
order.
4)
The cost pertaining to paragraphs 1 and 2
above are reserved.
11.
It is common cause that the State
Respondents have since complied with the order on 12 January 2024
after the launch of this application.
Legal Principles
12.
Section 165 (5) of the Constitution
provides that “An order or decision by a court binds all
persons to whom and the organ
of state to which it applies”.
13.
The
requirements of contempt of Court were neatly summarised in
Fakie
v
CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[1]
and approved by the Constitutional Court in
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (Pheko 2)
[2]
,
Pheko
II
,
an applicant who alleges contempt of Court must establish that (a) an
order was granted against the alleged contemnor; (b) the
alleged
contemnor was served with the order or had knowledge of it; and (c)
the alleged contemnor failed to comply with the order.
Once these
elements are established, wilfulness and mala fides are presumed, and
the Respondent bears an evidentiary burden to
establish a reasonable
doubt. Should the Respondent fail to discharge this burden contempt
would have been established.
Cameron
JA went on to outline the defences to a charge of contempt of Court.
He said
:
‘
The
test for when disobedience of a civil order constitutes contempt
[3]
has come to be stated as whether the breach was
committed
‘deliberately
[4]
and mala
fide’. A deliberate disregard is not enough, since the
non-complier may genuinely, albeit mistakenly, believe him-
or
herself entitled to act in the way claimed to constitute the
contempt. In such a case good faith avoids the infraction. Even
a
refusal to comply that is objectively unreasonable may be bona fide
(though unreasonableness could evidence lack of good faith).
[5]
(internal footnotes omitted).
These
requirements – that the refusal to obey should be both willful
and mala fide, and that unreasonable non-compliance,
provided it is
bona fide, does not constitute contempt – accord with the
broader definition of the crime, of which non-compliance
with civil
orders is a manifestation. They show that the offence is committed
not by mere disregard of a court order, but by the
deliberate and
intentional violation of the Court's dignity, repute or authority
that this evinces. Honest belief that non-compliance
is justified or
proper is incompatible with that intent.’
[6]
14.
Having dealt with the legal principles
applicable to this matter, I now turn to deal with facts as they
manifest in the pleadings
in which these principles must apply.
The Applicant’s
submissions
Service and Knowledge
of the Order and the Respondent’s Wilful and Mala Fide
15.
The applicants contend that the State
Respondents were aware of the order which was made by agreement
between the parties on the
following basis:
1.
On 19 June 2023, the Judges Registrar
emailed the copy of the court order to the State Attorneys, the State
Respondents’ attorneys
of record.
2.
The State Respondents were represented in
court when the order was granted, and;
3.
The applicant’s attorneys wrote a
letter to the state attorney on 31 July 2023 by way of an email to
which an order of the
court was annexed. In this letter, the State
Respondents were put on terms to provide the record before Wednesday,
2 August 2023
failing which the applicants advised them that they
will hold the State Respondents in contempt and seek appropriate
criminal sanction
against them.
16.
No response was received from the State
Respondents. The Applicant submitted that the State Respondents were
wilful and mala fide
by refusing to comply with the court order.
17.
The Applicants also relies on the
Respondents answering affidavit which stated that “…,
the state respondents were in fact
co-operative from the moment they were informed of the court order
they had to follow”.
18.
The State Respondents raised a
procedural issue regarding the service of the order upon the Third
and Fourth Respondents personally
regard being had to the possibility
of a committal order against Dr Wayne Alexender, the Regional Land
Claims Commissioner, Western
Cape and Ms Nomfundo Ntloko, the Chief
Land Claims Commissioner.
19.
The State Respondents contended that the
Applicants ought to have been joined in these proceedings as
the orders sought against
them in their personal capacity would
result to committal to prison,
thus taking away the liberty of an individual thereby violating the
rights of the freedom and
security of the person
which
includes the right not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or
without just cause and not to be detained without trial in
terms of
section 12(1) and the fair trial rights in terms of section 35(3) of
the Constitution.
20.
The State Respondents also argued that the
Applicants failed to prove that there was personal service upon the
State Representatives
or that they have knowledge of it.
21.
In Reply, the Applicant argued that the
personal service of the order is not a pre-requisite for contempt of
court proceedings.
Discussion
22.
The
relief sought against the State Respondents is committal, the
standard of proof is beyond reasonable,
whereas
proof on a balance of probabilities suffices where the remedies
sought ‘do not have the consequence of depriving an
individual
of their right to freedom and security of the person.’
[7]
23.
As stated earlier in this judgement, the
test for contempt requires a deliberate intentional disobedience of
the court order;
an applicant who
alleges contempt of Court must establish that (a) an order was
granted against the alleged contemnor; (b) the alleged
contemnor was
served with the order or had knowledge of it; and (c) the alleged
contemnor failed to comply with the order.
24.
Once these elements are established,
wilfulness and mala fides are presumed, and the Respondent bears an
evidentiary burden to establish
a reasonable doubt. Should the
Respondent fail to discharge this burden, contempt would have been
established.
25.
Practice Directive No. 17 of this court
deals with the Service where the Land Claims Commission is the party
to the proceedings.
It states:
“
In
all matters in which the Land Claims Commission is a party, service
shall be affected on the relevant regional office of the
Commission
as well as on the national office. Service shall also be affected
upon legal representative of the Land Claims Commission
.”
26.
This
practice
directive
was issued by the Acting
Judge President on 04 April 2015.
27.
On 1 December 2023, the office of the
Registrar of the Court issued a directive wherein the Applicant was
directed to serve these
proceedings to the offices of the Minister,
the Commission and the Regional Land Claims Commissioner as well as
the state attorney.
28.
It seems to me that Service Directives as
well as the directives of 1 December 2023 were completely ignored by
the applicants. Instead
of complying with the directives from the
office of the Registrar, the applicants’ legal representatives
questioned the status
of the directives as it was penned by an intern
in the office of the Registrar. If the applicants’ legal
representatives
had familiarised themselves with Practice Directive
No. 17, they would have noticed that the email from the Registrar’s
office
was simply re-iterating this service directive.
29.
The applicants’
counsel argued forcefully that there was no need to serve the State
Respondents with the contempt proceedings
personally and the service
upon the legal representative suffices. I do not agree.
30.
Dealing
with the contempt proceedings against the government representatives,
In
Mjeni
v Minister of Health and Welfare, Eastern Cape
[8]
,
Jafta J held that :
‘
[C]ontempt
of court proceedings can only succeed against a particular public
official or person if the order has been personally
served on him or
its existence brought to his attention and it is his responsibility
to take steps necessary to comply with the
order but he willfully and
contemptuously refuses to comply with the court order.’
[9]
31.
It is trite that personal service must
be affected on the contemnor for the contemnor to be held in contempt
of court, if there
is none, at least it must be shown that the
contemnor has knowledge of the court order. In this matter, the
applicant has failed
to prove that the contemnor had knowledge of the
court order.
32.
I am not satisfied that the applicants have
proven requisite two and three for the State Respondents to be held
in contempt. There
is no evidence that the Chief Land Commissioner,
Ms Nomfundo Ntloko -Gobodo, the Chief Director: Land Restitution
Support, Dr Wayne
Alexander and the Regional Land Claims Commissioner
were made aware of the court order of the 14 June 2023. Consequently,
I find
no basis for the applicant’s contention that State
Respondents are in wilful disregard of the court order.
33.
The
requirement of personal service or the joinder application was
further clarified In
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings
[10]
’.
The Constitutional Court clarified the procedural and substantive
issues concerning the requirements of contempt of court
, when
allegations of the contempt
ex
facie curiae
are made where the resultant committal to prison violates the rights
of the freedom and security of the person
,
which includes the right not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or
without just cause and not to be detained without trial
in terms of
section 12(1) and the fair trial rights in terms of section 35(3) of
the Constitution.
34.
In that matter,
the
dispute arose from a settlement agreement between the Matjhabeng
Local Municipality and Eskom Holdings Limited regarding overdue
electricity bills. A court order was issued to regulate the
monthly payments by the Municipality to settle the arrears. Due
to non-compliance with the first order, a second order was issued. In
terms of the second order, certain obligations were imposed
on the
Municipality and on Mr. Lepheana, the Municipal Manager. A third
order was subsequently granted, including a
rule
nisi
calling upon Mr. Lepheana, in his official capacity, to file a report
justifying non compliance with the second order.
Mr. Lepheana filed an
explanatory affidavit detailing various attempts to settle the
dispute. He
was accordingly held
in contempt of court and was
sentenced
to six months imprisonment
wholly
suspended for failure to comply with the court order. Mr Lepheana was
present in court when the court order was granted against
the
Municipality.
35.
In
Shadrack
Shivumba Homu Mkhonto and Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty)
Limited
[11]
,
Compensation
Solutions instituted proceedings in the High Court of South Africa,
Gauteng Division against the Commissioner of the
Compensation Fund,
Director-General of the Department of Labour, and Minister of Labour
for declaratory relief and mandamus to
obtain payment for outstanding
compensation accounts. Mr Mkhonto was cited in his official capacity
as the Commissioner. The parties
reached a settlement agreement. This
agreement was signed by Mr Mkhonto, on behalf of the applicants, and
was made an order of
court on 31 July 2009. The Commissioner and
other applicants failed to comply with the consent order. Contempt
proceedings were
then instituted against Mr Mkhonto, he
was held in contempt of court for failure to comply with the court
order
and
was committed to three months imprisonment, which was conditionally
suspended for five years on condition that he not be convicted
of
contempt within that period.
36.
Both parties appealed the orders .When the
appeal came before the Constitutional Court, the Chief Justice issued
the directives
seeking the submissions of the parties on the joinder
of Mr Lepheana and Mr Mkhonto in the proceedings in their personal
capacity.
37.
Relying
on previous court orders in
Insamcor
(Pty) Ltd v Dorbyl Light & General Engineering (Pty) Ltd
[12]
,
Meadow
Glen
Meadow
Glen Home Owners Association v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
[13]
,
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Hlophe
[14]
,
and
Pheko
II
[15]
,
the
respondents submitted that it was not necessary to join the
applicants in their personal capacity in the contempt of court
proceedings.
38.
Nkabinde J held as follows
at
para 92 - 94:
“
The
law on joinder is well settled. No court can make findings
adverse to any person’s interests, without that person
first
being a party to the proceedings before it.
[16]
The purpose of this requirement is to ensure that the person in
question knows of the complaint so that they can enlist counsel,
gather evidence in support of their position, and prepare themselves
adequately in the knowledge that there are personal consequences
–
including a penalty of committal – for their non-compliance.
All of these entitlements are fundamental to ensuring
that potential
contemnors’ rights to freedom and security of the person are,
in the end, not arbitrarily deprived”.
The
principles which are fundamental to judicial adjudication, in a
constitutional order, were reaffirmed by this Court in its recent
decision in
Lushaba
,
[17]
where the Court, per Jafta J, endorsed principles stated by Ackermann
J in
De
Lange
:
“
[F]air
procedure is designed to prevent arbitrariness in the outcome of the
decision. The time-honoured principles that . . . the
other side should be heard [
audi alterem partem
],
aim toward eliminating the proscribed arbitrariness in a way that
gives content to the rule of law. . . . Everyone
has the right to state his or her own case, not because his or her
version is right, and must be accepted, but because in evaluating
the
cogency of any argument, the arbiter, still a fallible human being,
must be informed about the points of view of both parties
in order to
stand any real chance of coming up with an objectively justifiable
conclusion that is anything more than chance.
Absent these
central and core notions, any procedure that touches in an enduring
and far-reaching manner on a vital human interest,
like personal
freedom, tugs at the strings of what I feel is just, and points in
the direction of a violation.”
[18]
‘
It
follows that the objection of non-joinder by the Municipality in
Matjhabeng
, specifically where the potential contemnor’s
section 12(1) rights are in the balance, is not a purely idle or
technical
one − taken simply to cause delays and not from a
real concern to safeguard the rights of those concerned. There
is
however a caveat: this should not be understood to suggest that
joinder is always necessary. There may well be a situation
where joinder is unnecessary, for example, when a rule
nisi
is
issued, calling upon those concerned to appear and defend a charge or
indictment against them. Undeniably, in appropriate
circumstances a rule
nisi
may be adequate even when there is a
non-joinder in contempt of court proceedings. This means that
the rule is not inflexible’
39.
The State Respondents have
established reasonable doubt for
non-compliance
with the court order, consequently the contempt has not been
established.
40.
In the circumstances, the following order
is made.
1.
The
Application is dismissed with costs.
________________________
L
Flatela
Judge
of the Land Claims Court
APPEARANCES
Date
Heard:
18
March 2024
Date
Delivered
:
0
8
May 2024
For
the Applicant:
Adv Nongogo
Instructed
by:
Dewey Mclean Levy
Inc Attorneys
For
the State Respondents:
Adv
P Magona-Dano
Instructed by:
State Attorney, Western Cape
For
the Second Respondent
: Mr H
Smith,
Instructed
by:
Henk Smith & Associates
[1]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd (653/04)
[2006] ZASCA 52
.
[2]
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (No 2)
[2015]
ZACC 10.
[3]
At
Pheko
v Ekurhuleni City
[2015]
ZACC 10
; (
Pheko
II
) at
para 30 it was said that:
"The
term civil contempt is a form of contempt outside of the Court and
is used to refer to contempt by disobeying a court
order. Civil
contempt is a crime, and if all of the elements of criminal contempt
are satisfied, civil contempt can be prosecuted
in criminal
proceedings, which characteristically lead to committal. Committal
for civil contempt can, however, also be ordered
in civil
proceedings for punitive or coercive reasons. Civil contempt
proceedings are typically brought by a disgruntled litigant
aiming
to compel another litigant to comply with the previous order granted
in its favour. However, under the discretion of the
presiding
officer, when contempt occurs a court may initiate contempt
proceedings
mero motu
.”
[4]
In
other words, wilfully.
[5]
Ibid
at p
ara
9.
[6]
Ibid,
para 10.
[7]
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Limited and Others; Mkhonto and
Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Limited
(CCT
217/15, CCT 99/16)
[2017] ZACC 35
at para 67.
[8]
Mjeni
v Minister of Health and Welfare, Eastern Cape
2000 (4) SA 446
(Tk
HC) at 451D-E
[9]
Ibid at at 454G-H.
[10]
Supra
note 7.
[11]
Ibid.
[12]
I
nsamcor
(Pty) Ltd v Dorbyl Light & General Engineering (Pty) Ltd, Dorbyl
Light & General Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Insamcor
(Pty) Ltd
[2007] ZASCA 6
.
[13]
Meadow
Glen Home Owners Association v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
[2014] ZASCA 209
.
[14]
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Hlophe
[2015] ZASCA 16
.
[15]
Supra
note 3.
[16]
This was stressed in
Mjeni
above n 70 at 454G-H where Jafta J held:
“
[C]ontempt
of court proceedings can only succeed against a particular public
official or person if the order has been personally
served on him or
its existence brought to his attention and it is his responsibility
to take steps necessary to comply with the
order but he wilfully and
contemptuously refuses to comply with the court order.”
[17]
Member
of the Executive Council for Health, Gauteng v Lushaba
[2016] ZACC 16
at para 15
.
[18]
De
Lange
above
n 100 at para 131.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Allie and Others v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform (Leave to Appeal) (LCC145/2019) [2024] ZALCC 39 (5 November 2024)
[2024] ZALCC 39Land Claims Court of South Africa99% similar
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Selahle and Others (LCC137/2022) [2022] ZALCC 43 (25 November 2022)
[2022] ZALCC 43Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Bisset v Minister of the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC171/2021) [2023] ZALCC 11 (31 March 2023)
[2023] ZALCC 11Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Poti and Others v Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (205/2021; 19/2022) [2025] ZALCC 6 (21 January 2025)
[2025] ZALCC 6Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Department Of Rural Development And Land Reform and Others v Jacobs and Another (LCC19/2022) [2023] ZALCC 5 (1 March 2023)
[2023] ZALCC 5Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar