Case Law[2024] ZALCC 20South Africa
Xulu v Master of High Court Pietermaritzburg (LCC41/2022) [2024] ZALCC 20 (29 July 2024)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Xulu v Master of High Court Pietermaritzburg (LCC41/2022) [2024] ZALCC 20 (29 July 2024)
Xulu v Master of High Court Pietermaritzburg (LCC41/2022) [2024] ZALCC 20 (29 July 2024)
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sino date 29 July 2024
IN THE LAND COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(HELD AT RANDBURG)
CASE NO: LCC41/2022
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
29
July 2024
In the matter between:
THEMBA
TIMOTHY XULU
First Applicant
SIPHO
WONDERBOY MASUKU
Second Applicant
JABULISILE
ZODWA HLATSWAYO
Third Applicant
DIANAH
PRINCESS VAN ZUYDAM
Fourth Applicant
EXCELLENT
SONNYBOY XABA
Fifth Applicant
MBONGENI
CAIPHASE KHANYE
Sixth Applicant
KHULULIWE
PRINCESS MAGWAZA
Seventh Applicant
and
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
PIETERMARITZBURG
First Respondent
HOWARD
MARTIN FELIX, N.O.
Second Respondent
COMMISSION
ON RESTITUTION OF LAND RIGHTS
Third Respondent
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Fourth Respondent
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Fifth Respondent
MINISTER OF RURAL
DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
Sixth Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND REFORM
Seventh Respondent
THE PREMIER OF THE
PROVINCE OF
KWAZULU-NATAL
Eighth Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN J
1.
The applicants instituted proceedings in
early 2022 in which they sought relief in two stages, Part A and Part
B. In Part A, they
sought urgent interdictory relief precluding the
second respondent, Mr Howard Martin Felix NO, from performing the
functions of
trustee of the Nkunzana Communal Property Trust (the
Trust). Mr Felix was appointed to serve in that position by the
Master of
the High Court in Pietermaritzburg (the Master), the first
respondent.
2.
The
applicants are Mr Themba Timothy Xulu, Mr Sipho Wonderboy Masuku, Mr
Jabulisile Zodwa Hlatswayo, Ms Dianah Princess van Zuydam,
Mr
Excellent Sonnyboy Xaba, Mr Mbongeni Caiphase Khanye and Ms Khululiwe
Princess Magwaza. The applicants say that they are the
duly elected
trustees of the Trust, which was established to hold land purchased
by the State in settlement of a land claim under
the Restitution of
Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act). Their entitlement
to act as trustees is, amongst other things,
the subject of Part B of
the proceedings, in which the applicants seek to review and set aside
the decision of the Master to appoint
the second respondent as a so
called ‘independent’ trustee.
3.
On
30 March 2022, this Court issued directions in terms of Rule 34(3)(b)
of the Rules of the Land Claims Court, in effect, calling
for a
conference to determine time-frames for the filing of the affidavits
and a possible settlement of the application for interim
relief. At
an early stage, the second respondent gave an undertaking acceptable
to the applicants which removed any acute urgency,
but the issue of
interim relief still required determination.
[1]
The Court proceeded to case manage the proceedings as required by the
parties. Part A was finalized during a conference held on
22 July
2022 and, by agreement, interim relief was granted pending the
determination of the application for final relief.
[2]
4.
Nonetheless, the hearing of Part B was
delayed for some time as various interlocutory disputes emerged
between the parties. To enable
the matter to proceed to final
enrolment, the Court continued to case manage the matter. At a point
submissions were made on whether
the issue of jurisdiction –
which was disputed - should be dealt with separately. In
circumstances of ongoing delays, Part
B was ultimately set down for
full hearing on 22 April 2024 but then stood down again until 30
April 2024 to enable parties to
deliver further written submissions
on the implications of the coming into force of the Land Court Act 6
of 2023 in respect of
the issue of jurisdiction. The Land Court Act
came into force on 5 April 2024 which preceded the hearing of the
matter and none
of the parties had considered its import
notwithstanding its implications for pending proceedings and
differences in its provisions
governing jurisdiction.
5.
The parties that participated in Part B
were the applicants, the first and second respondents and the third
to fifth respondents,
who together comprise the Commission on the
Restitution of Land Rights in its national and provincial offices and
the Commissioner
(collectively, the Commission). The sixth and
seventh respondents, the Minister of Rural Development and Land
Reform (the Minister)
and the Department of Rural Development and
Land Reform (the Department), delivered a notice to abide.
6.
Initially, the substantive relief sought in
Part B of the notice of motion was in the following terms (the
initial relief):
6.1.
The first respondent’s decision to
issue letters of authority certifying that the second respondent is
authorized to act as
trustee of the Trust is set aside;
6.2.
The first and second respondents are
interdicted and restrained from taking any steps to implement the
first respondent’s
decision mentioned in paragraph 1 above;
6.3.
The matter is remitted to the first
respondent who is hereby directed to give effect to the applicants’
request of 1 September
2019 to issue letters of authority certifying
that the first to seventh applicants are authorised to act as
trustees of the Trust.
7.
At a point, the applicants amended their
notice of motion to include further relief, specifically, an order
that:
7.1.
The beneficiary list (which was annexed as
A) be declared the only correct and valid list of beneficiaries of
the Trust; and
7.2.
A declaration that the redistribution
agreement concluded between the Trust and the ninth to twenty-fourth
respondents (to be joined)
is valid and binding on the parties.
8.
The further relief appeared to necessitate
a joinder application. A joinder application was instituted but not
persisted with and
the Court was informed that there is some debate
as to whether a joinder application is indeed necessary as on the
applicants’
account, they duly represent the beneficiaries of
the Trust.
9.
During the course of argument however, the
applicants’ counsel informed the Court that at least at this
stage the applicants
were not persisting with the further relief.
Moreover, counsel informed the Court that provided the issue of
trusteeship is resolved,
it may well transpire that it is not
necessary to persist with the further relief at all, as the
underlying issues might be resolved
in non-litigious ways.
Accordingly, the only issue before me is whether the initial relief
should be granted, which amounts to
a review of the Master’s
decision.
Background
10.
On 10 December 1998, Mr Tamsanqa Michael
Nzuza lodged a claim under the Restitution Act on behalf of the
Nkunzana Community. The
Commission accepted the claim to be valid and
the claim was published in the Government Gazette on 12 August 2005
in terms of section
11(1) of the Restitution Act. The section 11
notice was subsequently amended on more than one occasion.
11.
On 30 July 2007, the Minister approved the
settlement of the claim in terms of section 42D of the Restitution
Act. At that stage,
the verification had indicated that there were
472 (four-hundred and seventy-two) heads of households, a number
referred to in
the memorandum placed before the Minister. The
applicants aver that this was, however, only a preliminary
verification. The memorandum
authorized the Commission to conclude
further agreements to settle the claim.
12.
The
first respondent accepted a Deed of Trust on 28 May 2009. According
to the Trust Deed, the beneficiaries of the Trust are the
heads of
482 (four-hundred and eighty-two) households.
[3]
The household heads are meant to be listed in an Annexure A to the
Trust Deed but Annexure A is not supplied. The applicants aver
that
at no stage was the list of 472 submitted to the Master. The State
purchased properties which were apparently transferred
to the Trust.
he Trust Deed itself only refers to two returned properties.
However, during or about 2010, the Trust instituted
proceedings
in this Court for an order to compel the transfer of further
properties the State had purchased for it to the Trust,
which was
granted by Mpshe AJ.
13.
According to the applicants, as a result of
a subsequent verification process, apparently in 2014, which was
supported by the Commission,
the Minister and her Department, the
number of beneficiary households was reduced to 52 (fifty-two) and
the Trust beneficiary list
was amended accordingly. According to the
applicants, the reduction of the households came about in
circumstances where a pointing
out and mapping exercise was conducted
to determine the cadastral units of land that form part of the
Nkunzana Community land claim.
Through this exercise it was found
that during the initial verification process, claimants in respect of
land surrounding the land
comprising the Nkunzana land claim included
their names and were initially erroneously verified thereunder by the
Commission. This
included claimants falling under other claims such
as the Gumbi, Mathe and Ntshangase claims. These persons’
names, as mentioned,
were removed from the beneficiary list of the
Trust. Thus, according to the applicants, the only beneficiaries of
the Trust are
the fifty-two households.
14.
Thereafter and in 2016, a redistribution
agreement was apparently concluded pursuant to which land would be
allocated and transferred
to communities amongst the Trust
beneficiaries. In other words, different parcels of land would be
transferred out of the Trust
and into the names of other entities,
families or individuals. According to the applicants, that
beneficiary agreement was also
concluded with the full support and
approval of the Commission and the Minister.
15.
A settlement agreement was apparently
concluded in terms of section 14(3) of the Restitution Act but it is
not annexed to the papers
and if concluded, its date is not pleaded.
16.
On 19 November 2014, the first respondent
issued letters of authority in terms of section 6(1) of the Trust
Property Control Act
1998 to seven trustees which included the first,
second, sixth and seventh applicants and three others.
17.
According to the applicants, on 1 September
2019, the Trust held an AGM at which the applicants were elected
trustees. As mentioned,
the applicants aver that by that stage, only
the fifty-two households were trust beneficiaries. On 1 October 2019,
the applicants’
attorneys, Cebisa Attorneys delivered an
application to the Master requesting him to issue letters of
authority in their favour.
18.
However, the Master did not do so in
circumstances where the Premier of KwaZulu-Natal, the eighth
respondent, addressed correspondence
to the Master in which,
inter
alia,
he asserted the interests of a
concerned group of persons, who, according to the applicants are not
beneficiaries of the Trust
nor entitled to benefit. One of the
applicants’ complaints is that the Master did not afford the
applicants a fair hearing
in respect of the Premier’s
correspondence before the second respondent was appointed and bowed
to his dictates. There are
many issues raised and grounds of review
pleaded. Viewed through the lens of land reform, the issues raised
are, indeed, important
ones.
19.
The Commission delivered an explanatory
affidavit, which essentially confirms the evidence adduced by the
applicants. Pertinently,
the Commission confirms that the Trust’s
beneficiaries were reduced to the fifty-two households and that the
redistribution
agreement was concluded. The Commission expresses its
concern with the absence of what it perceives to be fair process
regarding
the Master’s appointment of the second respondent as
trustee and what it perceives to be undue interference with the land
reform process.
Jurisdiction
20.
The second respondent, and in turn, the
Master, took issue with this Court’s jurisdiction to adjudicate
the matter. As
only the initial relief is before me, I am of
the view that the matter must be dealt with by considering whether
the Court has
jurisdiction to determine that relief. All the more so
because there is no clarity whether and if so when the further relief
will
ever be persisted with.
21.
The
lawfulness of the Master’s appointment of trustees pursuant to
the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1998 and the Trust
Deed are not
matters that ordinarily lie within the jurisdiction of this Court.
[4]
In circumstances where a matter does not ordinarily lie within the
jurisdiction of this Court, this Court can only assert jurisdiction
in statutorily delineated circumstances. The same applied to the Land
Claims Court, which ceased to exist when the Land Court Act
came into
force on 5 April 2024.
22.
Under section 22(2)(c) of the Restitution
Act, prior to its amendment by the Land Court Act, the Land Claims
Court had ‘the
power to decide any
issue either in terms of [the Restitution Act] or in terms of any
other law, which is not ordinarily within
its jurisdiction but is
incidental to an issue within its jurisdiction, if the Court
considers it to be in the interests of justice
to do so.’
23.
Under section 24(1)(c) of the Land Court
Act, the Land Court has ‘
the power
to decide any issue in terms of any other law, which is not
ordinarily within its jurisdiction but is sufficiently connected
to a
matter within its jurisdiction, if the Court considers it to be in
the interests of justice to do so.’
24.
The applicants, in their further
submissions, contended that this Court must apply section 24(1)(c) of
the Land Court Act by virtue
of
inter
alia
the provisions of section
35(1)(b)(i), which provides:
‘
(b)
Any proceedings arising out of the application of this Act or any
other law conferring jurisdiction on the Court, pending in
the Land
Claims Court, at the commencement of this Act must be continued and
concluded in terms of this Act in the Court and, for
that purpose –
(i) those
proceedings are deemed to have been instituted in terms of this Act
in the court; …’
25.
There can be no doubt that these
proceedings were pending at the commencement of the Land Court Act.
Section 35(1)(c) provides that
proceedings for purposes of section
35(1)(b) are deemed to be pending if, at the commencement of the Act,
an application has been
lodged, but judgment or an order has not been
given.
26.
However, the second respondent disagreed
with the applicants about the effect of section 35(1)(b)(i) and
submitted that this Court
must apply section 22 of the Restitution
Act as it read prior to its repeal. The parties were also in
dispute about how both
section 22(2)(c) and section 24(1)(b) must be
applied to the facts of this case. It is however not necessary for me
to decide these
issues or to interpret the provisions, because under
either approach, the question of jurisdiction can be disposed of by
asking
whether it is in the interests of justice for this Court to
assert jurisdiction over an issue that usually falls within the
jurisdiction
of the High Court. It is also not desirable for me to
decide these issues because argument, for the most part, was
addressed only
after the hearing on the issues and on limited written
submissions, which, if anything, point to the complexity of the
debates.
27.
I
am acutely mindful that what underlies the dispute in this case is a
broader dispute about who is ultimately entitled to benefit
from a
land claim under the Restitution Act, a matter that is frequently
raised in proceedings in which this Court’s jurisdiction
is
directly, and at times incidentally, invoked.
[5]
I am also mindful that this Court was established as a specialist
Court to adjudicate disputes of that sort. Nonetheless, I have
concluded that it would not be in the interests of justice for this
Court to assert any incidental jurisdiction it has.
28.
First, under the provisions of section
34(2) of the Land Court Act, this Court can order the removal of
proceedings from this Court
to a Division of the High Court and
thereby enable the matter to proceed to finality. This means, for
example, that any process
of transfer of these proceedings to the
High Court should be a simple, expeditious and cost effective matter
and in turn, a process
is in place if it transpires that this Court
must be called upon to deal with further matters arising.
29.
Secondly, a careful consideration of the
papers in this case reveals that the issues on review are not
straightforward and might
entail dealing with a range of questions
relating to trust law, not all of which have been fully canvassed in
argument. In these
circumstances, the High Court as the Court
ordinarily clothed with jurisdiction, is better placed to adjudicate
them including
determining what grounds of review should be
entertained in this case and what related issues must be dealt with.
30.
Thirdly, the legislature has not conferred
on this Court primary jurisdiction over trust disputes even where
they arise directly
from the settlement or finalization of land
claims whether by way of court process or without court process. The
legislature could
have done so when expanding this Court’s
jurisdiction under the recently enacted Land Court Act, as it did in
respect of
the
Communal Property Associations Act 28 of 1996
.
Accordingly, this Court must duly respect that it is the High
Court that continues to exercise primary jurisdiction over
trust
disputes and should act cautiously before treading into that terrain.
This is a case that warrants caution.
31.
Fourthly, none of this means that a High
Court can disregard the imperatives of land justice which gave rise
to the creation of
the Trust in the first place. All Courts are bound
to give effect to the Constitution. Thus, when the High Court
adjudicates restitution
related trust disputes, it will itself give
appropriate regard to the purposes of restitution under section 25(7)
of the Constitution
and the Restitution Act, including the dignity
and agency that is profoundly restored when a community or persons
dispossessed
as a result of racially discriminatory laws and
practices of the past, reacquires control over property through the
trust instrument.
32.
Accordingly, this Court declines to
exercise jurisdiction over these proceedings.
33.
While this Court has the power to transfer
the proceedings to the High Court, such a transfer ensues on
application by a party in
terms of section 34 of the Land Court Act.
34.
This Court does not ordinarily grant costs
orders dealing as it does with social legislation. There are no
special circumstances
that would warrant such an award.
35.
The following order is made:
35.1.
Leave is granted to any party to apply for
an order in terms of section 34 of the Land Court Act transmitting
the proceedings to
the High Court of KwaZulu Natal in
Pietermaritzburg.
35.2.
There is no order as to costs.
SJ COWEN
ADJP, LAND COURT
Date reserved: 30 April
2024
Date of judgment: 29 July
2024
Appearances:
Applicants: M Naidoo SC &
N Bhagwandeen instructed by Cebisa Attorneys Inc.
First respondent: H Singh
instructed by the State Attorney, KwaZulu Natal
Second respondent: C van
Reenen instructed by Felix Attorneys
Third, fourth and fifth
respondents: PD Nyembe instructed by the State Attorney, KwaZulu
Natal
[1]
The
undertaking is recorded in paragraph 4 of a minute of a conference
held on 11 April 2022 in the following terms: ‘The
Second
Respondent provided an undertaking that pending the determination of
the application for interim relief, he would not
perform any acts or
exercise any functions as trustee of the Trust. In the event
that it becomes necessary for urgent steps
to be taken in this
period, he shall first approach the applicants’ legal
representatives to obtain the applicants’
consent thereto,
failing which he will approach the Court for leave to act.’
[2]
The
relief is captured in paragraph 3 of the Court’s directives of
22 July 2022 in the following terms:
a.
The first respondent shall take no steps
and perform no acts in respect of the appointment of the second
respondent.
b.
The second respondent undertakes that he
will perform no acts and exercise no functions as trustee of the
Trust and that in the
event that it becomes necessary for urgent
steps to be taken in this period, he shall first approach the
applicants’ legal
representatives to obtain the applicants’
consent thereto, failing which he will approach the Court for leave
to act.
c.
Without any concession of legality by the
applicants, the above undertakings do not preclude the second
respondent from applying
to the first respondent for an extension of
his appointment nor does it preclude the first respondent from
deciding such application.
[3]
The
inconsistency between the numbering (472 / 482) appears on the
documents.
## [4]The
applicants’ reliance onMakgahlelav
Maboi 6 Community Trust[2020]
ZALCC 29 to ground jurisdiction is misplaced. Jurisdiction was
not asserted in that matter.
[4]
The
applicants’ reliance on
Makgahlela
v
Maboi 6 Community Trust
[2020]
ZALCC 29 to ground jurisdiction is misplaced. Jurisdiction was
not asserted in that matter.
## [5]CfN'wandlamhari
Communal Property Association and Another v Director General :
Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural
Development and
Others : In re: N'wandlamhari Communal Property Association and
Another v Mathebula and Others; N'wandlamhari
Communal Property
Association and Another v Mathebula and Others[2022]
ZALCC 36.
[5]
Cf
N'wandlamhari
Communal Property Association and Another v Director General :
Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural
Development and
Others : In re: N'wandlamhari Communal Property Association and
Another v Mathebula and Others; N'wandlamhari
Communal Property
Association and Another v Mathebula and Others
[2022]
ZALCC 36.
sino noindex
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