Case Law[2024] ZALCC 17South Africa
Muslim Judicial Council and Another v Chief Land Claims Commissioner and Another (LCC117/2022) [2024] ZALCC 17 (18 May 2024)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
18 May 2024
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Muslim Judicial Council and Another v Chief Land Claims Commissioner and Another (LCC117/2022) [2024] ZALCC 17 (18 May 2024)
Muslim Judicial Council and Another v Chief Land Claims Commissioner and Another (LCC117/2022) [2024] ZALCC 17 (18 May 2024)
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sino date 18 May 2024
IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
Case No: LCC 117/2022
Before the Honourable
Cowen J
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED. NO
18
May 2024
In the matter between:
MUSLIM JUDICIAL
COUNCIL
First Applicant
THE TRUSTEE OF THE
CAMEES
DARRIES HERITAGE LAND
TRUST
Second Applicant
and
THE CHIEF LAND CLAIMS
COMMISSIONER
First Respondent
THE REGIONAL LAND
CLAIMS COMMISIONER
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
[1]
The applicants, the
Muslim Judicial Council (MJC) and the Trustees of the Cammies Darries
Heritage Land Trust (the CDH Trust) applied
to this Court to review
decisions of the respondents to refuse them
funding
for legal
representation in terms of section 29(4) of the Restitution of Land
Rigths Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act).
The first and
second respondents are the Chief Land Claims Commissioner and the
Regional Commissioner, Western Cape, respectively.
[2]
The two decisions
that were subject to the review are decisions of 25 February 2022 and
31 March 2022 to refuse, respectively, the
MJC’s and the CDH
Trust’s requests to fund their litigation in an action under
case number LCC 37/2003. The applicants
are parties to those
proceedings in which the Macassar Land Claims Committee, as
plaintiff, claims restitution under the Restitution
Act in respect of
land situated in Macassar, Cape Town. The applicants dispute
the plaintiff’s entitlement to relief
and when the impugned
decisions were taken had themselves counter-claimed for restitution
in respect of what they say is overlapping
land.
[3]
The application came
before me on 27 November 2023. However, in circumstances where
Legal Aid South Africa has now taken over
the function of providing
legal assistance to restitution litigants, the parties agreed to an
order on the merits pursuant to which
the funding decisions were set
aside and the applicants would submit a fresh application to the
Legal Aid Board to request funding.
[4]
The respondents did
not concede that the decisions were unlawful, and the question of
costs still required determination.
I heard preliminary
argument on that issue on 27 November 2023, and then stood the matter
down to enable the parties to deliver
further affidavits germane to
costs and deliver further written submissions. Judgment on
costs was reserved only on 19 February
2024. This judgment
deals with those costs.
[5]
Section 29(4)
provides:
‘
Where
a party cannot afford to pay for legal representation itself, the
Chief Land Claims Commissioner may take steps to arrange
legal
representation for such party, either through the State legal aid
system or, if necessary, at the expense of the Commission.’
[6]
Historically, the
steps taken by the Chief Land Claims Commissioner to arrange
representation have entailed its provision through
a facility know
n
as the Land Rights Management Facility which was housed in the
Department of Rural Development, Agriculture and Land Affairs (the
Department). Under that system the Commissioner retained for
herself a discretion to approve or reject applications. However,
in late 2019, a decision was taken for Legal Aid South Africa to
provide legal support to all land claimants, occupiers, labour
tenants and persons involved in such litigation. That decision
was taken in circumstances where the executive was initiating
the
Land Court Bill, now the Land Court Act 6 of 2023 (the LC Act). The
LC Act only came into force on 5 April 2024 after this
matter was
argued.
[7]
Nonetheless, with effect from 1 April 2022,
it has been Legal Aid South Africa that made the relevant decisions
in respect of legal
representation for restitution matters. At
least pending the commencement of the LC Act, this ensued pursuant to
a memorandum
of understanding signed by the Department of Justice,
Legal Aid South Africa and the Department (the MOU). The
competent
author
ities
for implementing the MOU
are
the Directors General
of Justice, the Department and the Executive Officer of Legal Aid
South Africa. In terms of Clause 4.5
of the MOU, Legal Aid was
to ensure that it worked in collaboration with the Department to
ensure that the constitutional rights
of farm occupiers, labour
tenants and restitution claimants are realised.
[8]
Subject
to the principles in
Affordable
Medicines Trust
[1]
and
Biowatch
[2]
this Court only orders costs in special circumstances dealing as it
does with social legislation. In this case, the
applicants were asserting a right of access to State funding for
legal representation against the State, in context of a restitution
matter, and in my view, had they succeeded in the review, they would
have been entitled to their costs against the State.
[3]
The issue of costs must be dealt with against that background.
[9]
The applicants,
however, face two difficulties.
[10]
First, the case that
the applicants advanced was materially misdirected in that it was in
material measure advanced on information
that was not before the
Commissioner when she made her decisions and indeed on events that
had not yet occurred. The applications
for funding were
submitted on 14 January 2022 and the Commissioner made her decisions
on 25 February 2022 and 31 March 2022.
It was only thereafter
in June 2022 that the applicants delivered notices of intention to
amend their counter-claims. In
important respects, the case on
review is advanced – both on affidavit and in the written
submissions – in respect
of the issues that arise by virtue of
those amendments. But it is the circumstances that prevailed at
the time the applications
were considered, and the information that
was then before the Commissioner that must inform the lawfulness of
her decisions. Once
the chronology is appreciated, salient
points raised in the review application, at least as pleaded, are
shorn of substance.
Put differently, at the time that the
impugned decisions were taken, the applicants’ counterclaims
did not raise the issues
that the applicants now complain were not
duly or rationally considered, including in light of the applicants’
means.
[11]
This does not mean
that the applicants may not have raised points of substance or
importance, but it is difficult to see how the
case could succeed
even assuming some of these points have merit, given how the case was
advanced and the fact that the applications
for assistance were made
and the impugned decisions were taken prior to the notices of
amendment. Furthermore, given that
Legal Aid South Africa must
now consider the applicants’ predicament post-amendments, and
in light of its own processes and
requirements, it would be
undesirable for this Court to pre-empt its decisions by unnecessarily
expressing views on these points.
[12]
While much of the
review application is affected by this issue, I am mindful that there
are some points raised in the founding affidavit,
as supplemented,
that are not so affected. Most pertinently, the position of the
MJC in respect of the portions expressly
referred to in their pre
1998 claim form. However, when limited to these narrow issues,
I am of the view that the Commission
answered the case. In
doing so, the Commission considered the MJC’s means in light of
their means test and the fact
that but for the expanded issues
arising from the counter-claim, the first applicant was in fact
funding itself. I cannot
fault the Commissioner for declining
to provide assistance in response to the application and
counter-claim as framed at that time.
I am similarly
unpersuaded that the Commissioner’s response to the CDH Trust’s
claim can be faulted in view of the
information then before her.
[13]
Moreover,
even if the applicants had succeeded in persuading the Court that the
they should achieve limited success, it would not
have been possible
to grant effective relief at least because Legal Aid South Africa was
not a party to the proceedings yet had
taken over its functions under
the MOU. On consideration of the papers before me, this
is not a case where this Court
would have granted a substitution
order: at best a limited remittal might have been ordered. On
the current arrangements
the remitted decision would then have had to
serve before Legal Aid South Africa which had taken over with effect
from 1 April
2022.It was for this reason that when argument
commenced, the Commission made an open tender at the hearing of the
matter to consent
to the decisions being set aside for purposes of
progressing the proceedings, and without conceding the merits. The
tender
was made precisely due to the practical concern that even if
the applicants succeeded on review, the Court could not grant any
effective relief, because the current arrangements for legal
representation under section 29(4) of the Restitution Act entail its
provision by Legal Aid South Africa and subject to its processes and
requirements. The tender was accepted but, as appears
from the
order made, without the applicants conceding either the legality of
the new arrangements or that the application had become
‘moot’,
as was suggested.
[4]
[14]
In my view, even if
there may have been scope to grant effective relief, this could only
have ensued if Legal Aid was joined in
the proceedings and explained
their position and the transitional arrangements. The tender
the Commission made thus enabled
a practical solution that both
expedited and simplified the litigation process.
[15]
However, the
difficulty for the Commission is that although Legal Aid South Africa
took over on 1 April 2022, in other words, shortly
after the
Commissioner took the impugned decisions, the applicants were
apparently unaware of the transition until the hearing
in November
2023 or shortly before hand and indeed, remained in the dark about
its details even after the hearing and until a supplementary
affidavit was delivered on 30 January 2024 to enable the issue of
costs to be ventilated. In this regard, the respondents
only
raised the difficulty in heads of argment submitted on 20 November
2023. The respondents, in doing so, asserted that
the
transition was a matter of public record. But while many
engaged in land litigation may have been aware of the
transition, the
transition was not effected by way of legislative act nor was it
gazetted and these parties did not know about
it. In my view,
the circumstances surrounding the transition should have been raised
by the Commissioner in her answering
affidavit which is dated
November 2022. Had she done so, it would have put the
applicants in a position where they could
have sensibly evaluated
their position, made suitable enquiries, and, assuming the parties
had each conducted themselves reasonably
from that time, the dispute
might then have settled or, if not, a joinder might have been
effected and the Court then apprised
of material information to
determine the matter. In my view, the Commission’s
failure to deal squarely with the transfer
of functions in the
answering affidavit thus contributed in a limited but material part
to a wastage of costs from the date of
receipt of the answering
affidavit. Thus, while the Commission’s tender was ultimately
responsibly made, a factor of which
I take note, it was made in
circumstances where the applicants were unaware of the transition.
In all the circumstances,
I order that the Commission pay a portion
(25%) of the applicants’ costs from the date the answering
affidavits were delivered.
[16]
I make the following
order:
16.1
The Commission shall pay 25% of the costs
of the applicants in the review application on a party and party
scale from the date of
their receipt of the answering affidavit,
including the costs of two counsel.
16.2
Save as aforesaid, each party shall pay its
own costs.
SJ
Cowen
Judge,
Land Court
Date
reserved: 19 February 2024
Date
of decision: 18 May 2024.
Appearances:
Applicants:
Adv W Duminy SC and Adv G Quixley instructed by Raymond McCreath Inc.
Respondents:
Adv M Majozi and Adv P Maluleke instructed by the State Attorney,
Johannesburg.
[1]
Affordable
Medicines Trust and others v Minister of Health and others
2006(3)
SA 247 (CC) at paras 138 and 139
[2]
Biowatch
Trust v the Registrar Genetic Resources
2009(6)
SA 232 (CC)
[3]
Cf
In
re Kusile Land Claims Committee: Land Restitution Claim,
Midlands North Research Group and others
2010(5)
SA 57 (LCC), paras 17, 20, 21 and 37.
[4]
I
do not deal with whether the language of mootness is apposite.
The real underlying issue was whether effective relief
could have
been granted given the transfer of functions.
sino noindex
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