Case Law[2024] ZALCC 22South Africa
Macassar Land Claims Committee v Maccsand CC and Others (LCC37/2003) [2024] ZALCC 22 (16 August 2024)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
16 August 2024
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC37/2003 1. REPORTABLE: NO 2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO 3. REVISED.
Judgment
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## Macassar Land Claims Committee v Maccsand CC and Others (LCC37/2003) [2024] ZALCC 22 (16 August 2024)
Macassar Land Claims Committee v Maccsand CC and Others (LCC37/2003) [2024] ZALCC 22 (16 August 2024)
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sino date 16 August 2024
IN
THE LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC37/2003
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
16
August 2024
In
the matter between:
MACASSAR
LAND CLAIMS COMMITTEE
and
Plaintiff
MACCSAND
CC
THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF
First
Defendant
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second
Defendant
MINISTER
OF LAND AFFAIRS
Third
Defendant
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN
Fourth
Defendant
MINISTER
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND HOUSING
Fifth
Defendant
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Sixth
Defendant
THE
MUSLIM JUDICIAL COUNCIL
Seventh
Defendant
CLIVE
AUBRYT FIGAJI
Eighth
Defendant
GEOFFREY
LANE FIGAJI
MARIANNA
LORETA FIGAJI
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS
Ninth
Defendant
THE
SURVEYOR-GENERAL
Tenth
Defendant
THE
CAMMES DARRIES HERITAGE LANE TRUST
Eleventh
Defendant
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff, the
Macassar Land Claims Committee, has requested this Court to separate
two issues in the above action for preliminary
hearing in terms of
Rule 57 of the Rules of this Court. The action is a claim for
restitution in terms of the Restitution
of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
(the Restitution Act).
[2]
The plaintiff claims
restitution of various parcels of land situated in Macassar, Cape
Town, in the Western Cape, more specifically
Erf 1991, Erf 1195, Erf
1196, Erf 1197 and Erf 1198 (the commonage). In its statement
of claim, the plaintiff describes this
land as a commonage, in
respect of which members of the community of Sandvlei, Macassar,
exercised a right in land held in common.
The plaintiff
pleads that the commonage used to be known as Zandvliet. The
plaintiff also claims the remainder of Cape Farm
544.
[3]
Rule 57 is titled
‘Prior Adjudication Upon Issues of Law or Fact’ and
provides:
(1)
Should the
Court, upon application by any party or of its own accord, be of the
opinion that there is an issue of law or fact in
a case which may
conveniently be decided –
(a)
before further documents are delivered in the case;
(b)
before evidence is led in an action; or
(c)
separately from some other issue, the Court may order a separate
hearing of that issue, and grant any extensions of time periods
prescribed in the rules which may be desirable because of the
separate hearing.’
[4]
There are two issues
the plaintiff seeks to have determined separately in the action, one
of which is a question of fact and law
and the other a question of
law. The only parties to the litigation who oppose the proposed
separation are the seventh and
the eleventh defendants, the Muslim
Judicial Council (MJC) and the Trustees of the Cammies Darries
Heritage Land Trust (the CDH
Trust). It is common cause that
the MJC is also a land claimant, but the extent of its claim is in
dispute. There is
a dispute whether the CDH Trust is a land
claimant, but even if it is, there is a further dispute of the extent
of its claim.
The fourth defendant, the City of Cape Town is of
the view that the separation proposed would expedite the finalisation
of the
action and for that reason supports it. However, the
fourth defendant abides by the Court’s decision and it did not
participate in the hearing. The Minister of Land Affairs and
Rural Development and the Commission on the Restitution of Land
Rights (the Commission), being the third and sixth defendants
respectively, support the proposed separation and participated in
the
hearing to assist the Court. In this regard, the
Commission suggested that the land claimed by CDH Trust does not
overlap with the plaintiff’s claim.
[5]
The two issues
proposed to be separated may be formulated, broadly speaking, as
follows:
5.1
What
land was claimed by the MJC, and what overlapping land, if any, was
claimed by the CDH Trust prior to 31 December 1998 (the
1998 cut-off
date);
5.2
Whether the MJC and the CDH Trust duly
lodged claims when they delivered counter-claims with this Court on
or about 16 January 2015
in terms of section 38B of the Restitution
Act, as amended in 2014.
[6]
The question for decision is whether one or
both of the above issues, as broadly formulated, may conveniently be
decided separately
from other issues in the case.
The
first issue
[7]
As
indicated, it is common cause that the MJC lodged a land claim prior
to the 1998 cut-off date but the extent of the land claimed
is the
subject of dispute.
According
to the plaintiff, the MJC claimed only Erf 1195 prior to the 1998
cut-off date. The MJC’s initial claim form
describes the
claimed property as Erf 1195 (Portion 88-Farm 664 Zandvliet).
In
a counter-claim the MJC delivered on or about 16 January 2015,
however, the MJC claimed multiple properties including all of
the
properties that the plaintiff claims. Moreover, when the MJC
amended its counter-claim in July 2022, it then pleaded
that in fact,
its initial claim lodged before the 1998 cut off date includes the
land the plaintiff claimed and not only Erf 1195.
The relevant
paragraph is paragraph 10.1 of the amended counter-claim,
[1]
and, pertinently, paragraph 10.1.2 which reads:
‘
The
claim contemplated by the MJC claim form, properly interpreted taking
into account all relevant considerations pertaining to
the use of the
property by the community on behalf of which Mr Braaf acted, extends
to Farms 544 and 664 Macassar, thereby incorporating
the property set
out in paragraph 4 above.’
[8]
The property set out
in paragraph 4 includes all of the property the plaintiff claims and
not only Erf 1195. Accordingly,
pursuant to the counter-claim,
as amended in 2018, the MJC claims the property in paragraph 4 on two
alternative bases, being the
initial claim form, alternatively the
counter-claim itself.
[9]
There
is no dispute between the parties that, inasmuch as the counterclaims
comprise claims to land additional to the land claimed
prior to 31
December 1998, the claims would be interdicted claims as contemplated
by the Constitutional Court’s decisions
in
Lamosa
1
[2]
and
Lamosa
2.
[3]
That
status would not necessarily preclude the MJC and the CDH Trust from
participating in the proceedings but the participation
would be
limited. The limits are set out in the order in
Lamosa
2
in
the following terms:
‘
Until
the date referred to in para
(a)
,
no interdicted claim may be adjudicated upon or considered in any
manner whatsoever by the [Land Court] in any proceedings for
the
restitution of rights in land in respect of old claims, provided that
interdicted claimants may be admitted as interested parties
before
the Land Claims Court solely to the extent that their participation
may contribute to the establishment or rejection of
the old claims or
in respect of any other issue that the presiding judge may allow to
be addressed in the interests of justice.’
[10]
Similar
considerations apply to the CDH Trus
t.
In paragraph 3 of
its
counter-claim, as amended in 2018, the CDH Trust claims the same land
that the MJC claims, and, additional land.
Thus,
the CDH Trust also claims the land the plaintiff claims in its
amended counter-claim. Like the MJC, the CDH Trust pleads
in
its amended counter-claim that it claims the land on two alternative
bases, the first being a claim it pleads it lodged before
the 1998
cut-off date and the second being the counter-claim itself which was
lodged on or about 16 January 2015. Again,
as with the
MJC, any claim in respect of land claimed only by virtue of the
counter-claim itself would, at best, constitute an
interdicted claim
and the participation of the CDH Trust in the proceedings would be
restricted by the Constitutional Court’s
order in
Lamosa
2.
[4]
[11]
The
CDH Trust pleads the two alternative bases for the claim in paragraph
11 of its amended counter-claim. Paragraph 11.1
deals with the
contention that all of the property claimed in paragraph 3 was in
fact claimed prior to the 1998 cut-off date.
[5]
I emphasise paragraphs 11.1.1 to 11.1.3 which embrace a
contention that where the claim form referred to a portion of Farm
664, additional documentation submitted confirmed that the claim was
in respect of Farms 544 and 664, Macassar and that the claim
form
should be so understood, properly interpreted.
[12]
In its plea to the
amended counter-claim, the plaintiff denies that the CDH Trust
claimed any land before the 1998 cut off date.
In the event
that it is found that a claim form was timeously lodged, the
plaintiff pleads to the effect that for the most part,
the properties
referred to in paragraph 3 of the counter-claim were not claimed.
The plaintiff contends that the only property
in respect of which a
claim form may have been lodged before the cut off date is Portion
110 (a portion of Portion 3) of the farm
Zandvliet.
[13]
The first issue thus
arises as a dispute between both the plaintiff and the MJC and the
plaintiff and the CDH Trust. Simply
understood, the plaintiff
is contending that both the MJC and the CDH Trust are impermissibly
seeking to expand their claims beyond
what was claimed in 1998.
[14]
My
attention was drawn to case law of relevance to the enquiry to
determine the first issue. The two cases the plaintiff referred
to are
Minaar
[6]
and
Makhuva-Mathebula
Community,
[7]
the latter decided ultimately by the Supreme Court of Appeal. The
seventh and eleventh defendants, on the other hand, relied
on the
more recent decision of this Court in
Nyavana
Traditional Authority,
[8]
in which Spilg J considered the import of
Minaar
and
Makhuva-Mathebula.
Ultimately,
and with reference to these authorities, the parties have starkly
divergent views on the scope of the enquiry a Court
can embark upon
when a claimant has described the claimed property in a claim form
with reference to its cadastral boundaries and
then seeks to assert
that in fact they intended to claim more land.
[15]
While mindful of the
parties’ divergent submissions in respect of these authorities,
I am of the view that it is neither necessary
nor desirable to
consider their full implications in order to determine whether it is
convenient to separate the issues as the
plaintiffs seek.
Suffice to emphasise that on either party’s approach, the
nature of the enquiry is one of both
fact and law. And
that on the plaintiffs’ understanding of the authorities
referred to, the evidence that would
be relevant to the enquiry would
be considerably more limited than on the approach of the MJC and the
CDH Trust. In my view,
what must be asked at this stage to
assess the convenience of the proposed separation is whether there is
any material overlap
between the evidence that could be relevant on
either approach, with the evidence that would be relevant to the
remainder of the
trial should the Court determine the first issue in
favour of the MJC and the CDH Trust.
[16]
The only basis for
contending that there would be a material overlap is the
reliance, pertinently of the MJC, in paragraph
10.1.2 of its
counter-claim as amended on “all relevant considerations
pertaining to the use of the property …”
in interpreting
the claim form. The pleadings do not say what those relevant
considerations are, but Mr Duminy SC,
on behalf of the MJC and
CDH Trust, submitted that the issues are inextricably intertwined
with those that would arise in the trial
itself. What is clear,
however, is that even on the authority of
Nyavana
Traditional Authority
,
the fact that a claimant used property in the past, cannot, without
more, determine that that property is the subject of a claim
form,
properly interpreted. Notably, there is no similar allegation
in the counter-claim of the CDH Trust. In these
circumstances,
and having regard to the pleadings in both counter-claims, as
amended, and
Nyavana
Traditional Authority,
upon
which Mr Duminy relies, I am unpersuaded that there is any cognisable
risk of a material overlap of evidence.
[17]
Mr Duminy also
submitted that the separation will likely trigger piece-meal appeals
in circumstances where the matter has long been
delayed and has
already reached the Constitutional Court on a prior issue. Mr
Joseph SC (with him Ms Williams) accepts that
the separation might
give rise to a further appeal, but contends that if this transpires,
that would not be contrary to interests
of justice and is a risk his
clients are willing to assume. Indeed, he submitted that the
interests of justice might be served
thereby should the issues dealt
with provide certainty in respect of other restitution cases.
[18]
In my view, the
broader considerations about the impact of the separation on the
trial favour a separation of issues, more pertinently,
those that
flow from obtaining certainty, in advance of the trial, about the
extent of the land in respect of which the MJC and
the CDH can assert
their interests. This will self-evidently affect matters such
as how one prepares for trial, what evidence
can be led, the
prospects of pre-trial settlement and the ability to adduce or test
evidence without impediment or controversy.
It will also reduce
confusion in the trial process. This may mean that the
finalisation of the matter will take
time, but that appears to be
inevitable in this case and a failure to obtain certainty on these
matters in advance has the real
potential to generate an
unnecessarily complex and prolonged trial.
[19]
During the course of
argument, Mr Joseph and Mr Majozi submitted that in any event, unless
a review of the relevant decisions to
gazette the properties is
brought, the MJC and the CDH Trust are confined to the property as
gazetted. In respect of the
MJC, the gazetted property is
pleaded as the remaining extent of Erf 1195. In respect of the
CDH Trust, the gazetted property
is pleaded as Erf 7461. This
too, the plaintiff submitted, favours a separation. The Court
was not addressed on whether
a review is necessary in view of section
11A of the Restitution Act which provides a procedure to withdraw or
amend notices of
claim. Nonetheless, in my view the status of
the gazettes is a relevant consideration and, on the information to
hand, favours
separation.
[20]
In the result, I have come to the
conclusion that the first issue should be separated in terms of Rule
57 for prior determination
in the trial.
[21]
I requested further submissions from the
parties regarding how to frame the separation with reference to
specific paragraphs in
the pleadings. Only the plaintiffs
responded to the request and in doing so, identified multiple
paragraphs. Unfortunately,
the MJC and CDH Trust declined to
respond saying that they could not afford legal representation to
prepare the submissions.
In these circumstances, the precise
formulation of the separation must be finalised prior to the
commencement of the hearing of
these issues.
The
second issue
[22]
The
second issue is a question only of law and arises should the Court
find that the MJC and the CDH Trust lodged only limited (or
no)
overlapping claims before the 1998 cut-off date. In that event,
to participate in the proceedings, the MJC and the CDH
Trust would
need to rely on the status of an interested person whose claim is an
interdicted claim under
Lamosa
2.
However, neither the MJC nor the CDH Trust lodged their claims
in 2015 directly with the Commission. They lodged their
claims
by instituting direct access proceedings under section 38B of the
Restitution Act. Relying on
Witz,
[9]
Mr Duminy submitted that it is plain that this constitutes lodgement
and that
Witz,
a
two judge decision of this Court, binds this Court. Mr Joseph
submitted that the plaintiffs contend that
Witz
is
wrongly decided and contended that the issue warrants the further
attention of the Court, in light
inter
alia
of the wording of the Restitution Act. Reference was also made
to
Mahlangu
NO.
[10]
He requested that the bench in the matter be accordingly
composed of more than one Judge so that the correctness of
Witz
can
be duly determined. Mr Duminy submitted that that is an issue
that can be dealt with by a higher Court should the matter
progress
on appeal.
[23]
In my view, the plaintiff is correct that
the second issue can conveniently be separated and dealt with
together with the first
issue, and even more so if the matter is
heard by a Court comprised of more than one Judge. The two
issues will, together,
materially inform both the extent to which and
the basis upon which the MJC and / or the CDH Trust can participate
in the proceedings.
Mr Joseph is correct that the issues raised
can have an impact on other matters that come before this Court, not
least in light
of the wave of interdicted claims that were lodged
between 2014 and 2015 before the
Lamosa
1
decision. As regards
Witz,
if the plaintiff is correct and
Witz
was wrongly decided, then it would be
highly prejudicial for the plaintiff to have to run a trial on the
basis that the MJC and
the CDH Trust are interested parties as
contemplated by
Lamosa 2.
And
if
Witz
was
correctly decided, the MJC and the CDH Trust should be permitted duly
to assert their rights. However, the power to constitute
a
Court comprising of more than one Judge resides with the Judge
President of the Court.
Legal representation
of the MJC and the CDH Trust
[24]
As indicated above,
the MJC and the CDH Trust declined to make substantive submissions in
respect of the paragraphs of the pleadings
that would sensibly be
separated should the Court order a separation. The Court was
informed that this is because they could
not afford to pay counsel.
Their attorney made brief submissions mainly on the impact of the new
Land Court Act 6 of 2023,
and particularly section 16(4), which deals
with legal representation and which provides:
(a)
Where a party involved in a matter before the Court is not
represented by a legal representative because such party cannot
afford to pay for legal representation, and the Court is of the
opinion that it would be in the best interests of the party to
have
legal representation, the Court must refer the matter to Legal Aid
South Africa as contemplated in section 2 of the Legal
Aid South
Africa Act 2014 (Act No 39 of 2014).
(b)
Legal Aid South Africa must deal with a matter referred to in
paragraph (a) in accordance with section 43(1)(f) of the
Legal Aid
South Africa Act, 2014, to provide legal representation at State
Expense, where substantial injustice would otherwise
result.
(c)
Expenditure in connection with the implementation and application of
paragraph (a) must be defrayed from money appropriated
by Parliament
for this purpose and monies appropriated by Parliament for hits
purpose constitute earmarked funds on the vote of
Legal Aid South
Africa, and may not be used for any other purpose.’
[25]
In short, the Court
was requested
mero
moto
to
‘regularise’ the position regarding the funding of the
MJC and the CDH Trust by Legal Aid. In my view,
it would
not be appropriate for this Court to entertain this request in these
proceedings. The issue was raised only after
the hearing of the
matter, the Court has not heard argument on how issues of this sort
should duly be raised, there is no adequate
information before the
Court and the Court is not apprised of the status of recent
engagements between Legal Aid South Africa and
these parties.
There are also unsatisfactory features of how the MJC and the CDH
Trust is approaching its representation,
which it is able to afford
from time to time and for purposes it selects. Specifically it
is difficult to understand how
a party can justify instructing senior
counsel to oppose the request for separation but then fail to comply
with the Court’s
request to assist in identifying how to frame
a separation having regard to the pleadings. That stance, indeed, can
give rise to
wasted costs for others.
Order
[26]
I make the following
order:
26.1
The following two issues, broadly
formulated, are to be decided separately.
26.1.1
What
land was claimed by the MJC, and what overlapping land, if any, was
claimed by the CDH Trust prior to 31 December 1998;
26.1.2
Whether the MJC and the CDH Trust duly
lodged claims when they delivered counter-claims with this Court on
or about 16 January 2015
in terms of section 38B of the Restitution
Act, as amended in 2014.
26.2
The decision whether to constitute the
Court of more than one Judge is referred to the Judge President for
determination.
26.3
Subject to 26.4 costs are costs in the
cause.
26.4
Any costs wasted by the failure of the of
MJC and CDH Trust to facilitate the final formulation of the
separated issues are reserved.
26.5
Any party may at any time request a
conference to determine the further conduct of the matter.
SJ
Cowen
Judge,
Land Court
Date
reserved: 16 May 2024
Date
of decision: 16 August 2024.
Appearances:
Plaintiff:
Adv B Joseph SC and J Williams instructed by
Ighsaan
Sadien Attorneys
Seventh
and eleventh defendants: Adv W Duminy SC instructed by Raymond
McCreath Inc.
Third and sixth
defendants: Adv M Majozi instructed by the State Attorney,
Johannesburg.
[1]
Paragraph 10 read with 10.1 reads:
10.
This counterclaim serves as an application for restitution of the
Seventh Defendant’s land rights in respect of
the property set
out in paragraph 4 above. It is advanced on the following two
alternative bases:
10.1
First, on the basis that the eleventh defendant submitted claims in
respect of the property
set out in paragraph 4 above on or before 31
December 1998 in accordance with the provisions of the Act. In
this regard:
10.1.1 Mr MN
Braaf (
Mr Braaf
) submitted a claim form to the Sixth
Defendant in the prescribed manner on or about 31 December 1998 (
the
MJC claim form
) which stipulated that the land described as ‘Erf
1195 (Ptn 88 – Farm 664 Zandvliet) was claimed by the ‘Cape
Malay Community – Muslim Judicial Council / Faure / Kramat /
Sandvlei Muslim Community’, a copy of which is attached
marked
‘M-CC4
10.1.2 the
claim contemplated by the MJC claim form, properly interpreted
taking into account all relevant considerations
pertaining to the
use of the property by the community on behalf of which Mr Braaf
acted, extends to Farms 544 and 664 Macassar,
thereby incorporated
the property set out in paragraph 4 above;
10.1.3 The
sixth defendant subsequently designated reference number N479 to the
claim contemplated by the Darries
claim form;
10.1.4 By
way of Notice 643 of 2018 in Government Gazette No 41982 of 19
October 2018, the Sixth Defendant gave notice
in terms of section
11A(4) of the Act that claim B479 had been submitted and would be
investigated;
10.1.5 The
aforesaid notice described the property claimed in respect of B479
as the ‘remaining extent of erf 1195,
Macassar’ and the
claimant as Mohamed Nazeeem Braaf;
10.1.6 The
seventh defendant objected to the aforesaid notice on or about 13
December 2018 on the basis that the property
is was (sic) not
properly described (inasmuch as it did not extend to Farm 664
Macassar) and the claimant is the Muslim Judicial
Council, on behalf
of the Muslim community of South Africa (and not only Mojamed Nazeem
Braaf);
10.1.7 The seventh
defendant represents the Muslim community of South Africa, the
community on whose behalf the MJC
claim form was lodged and who
claims restitution of land rights in respect of the property set out
in paragraph 4 above in terms
of the Act.’
[2]
Land
Access Movement of South Africa v Chairperson, National Council of
Provinces
2016(5)
SA 635 (CC).
[3]
Speaker
of the National Assembly and another v Land Access Movement of South
Africa and others
2019(6)
SA 568 (CC) .
[4]
See
above paragraph 10.
[5]
Paragraph
11 read with 11.1 reads:
11.
This counterclaim serves as an application for restitution of the
Eleventh Defendant’s land rights in respect of the
property
set out in paragraph 3 above. It is advanced on the following
two alternative bases:
11.1
First, on the basis that the Elevanth Defendant submitted claims in
respect of ‘Farms
544 and 664 Macassar’ comprising the
property set out in paragraph 3 above, on or before 31 December 1998
in accordance
with the provisions of the Act. In this regard:
11.1.1 Mr Mogamat Ganief
Darries (‘
Mr Darries’
) submitted a claim form to
the Sixth Defendant in the prescribed manner on or about 31 December
1998 (‘
the Darries claim form’
) which stipulated
that the land described as ‘Portion of 664 Macassar, Somerset
Weste, Cape Province’ was claimed
by the ‘Kamies Darries
Estate’, a copy of which is attached marked ‘D-CC6’;
11.1.2 On or about the
time of the submission of the aforesaid claim form, Mr Darries
submitted to the Sixth Defendant additional
documentation supporting
the claim, including a letter entitled ‘The Camies Darries
Land Claim’, a copy of which
is attached marked ‘D-CC7’
which explains that the claim extends to ‘farms 544 and 664
Macassar’;
11.1.3 The claim
contemplated by the Darries claim form, properly interpreted taking
into account the additional documentation
so submitted, extends to
Farms 544 and 664 Macassar, thereby incorporating the property set
ou in paragraph 3 above;
11.1.4 The sixth
defendant subsequently designated reference number D697 to the claim
contemplated by the Darries claim
form;
11.1.5 By way of
Notice 644 of 2018 in Government Gazette No 41982 of 19 October
2018, the Sixth Defendant gave notice in
terms of section 11A(4) of
the Act that claim D697 had been submitted and would be
investigated;
11.1.6 The
aforesaid notice described the property claimed in respect of claim
D697 as Erf 7461, Macassar and the
claimant as Mogamat Ganief
Darries;
11.1 7 The
Eleventh Defendant objected to the aforesaid notice on or about 12
December 2018 on the basis that the property
is was (sic) not
properly described (inasmuch as it did not extend to Farms 544 and
664 Macassar) and the claimants are the descendants
of the late
Camies Darries (and not only Mogamat Ganief Darries).
11.1.8 The
Eleventh Defendant is the representative of the direct descendants
of Camies Daries, the community on whose behalf
the Darries claim
form was lodged and who claims restitution of land rights in respect
of the property set out in paragraphs
3 above in terms of the Act;
…’
[6]
Minaar
NO v Regional Land Claims Commissioner for Mpumalanga and others
[2006] ZALCC 12
(
Minaar
)
at para 23: ‘ …There is no manifestation that the
person who signed the claim form intended, at the time when he
lodged the claim that the claimed land should also include other
land. Even if he has had such an intention, that subjective
intention alone cannot expand a claim which
ex
facie
the
claim form is limited to portion D, to also include other
subdivisions of Daisy Kopje.’ See too para 27.
[7]
Makhuva-Mathebula
Community v Regional Land Claims Commissioner, Limpopo & another
[2019]
ZASCA 157
(
Makhuva-Mathebula
)
[8]
Nyavana
Traditional Authority v MEC for Limpopo Department of Agriculture
and others
[2020]
ZALCC 12
;
[2021] 1 All SA 237
(LCC) (
Nyavana
Traditional Authority
).
[9]
Department
of Land Affairs v Witz
LCC152/98
delivered on 12 October 2000
(Witz)
at
para 7.
[10]
Mahlangu
NO v Minister of Land Affairs and others
2005(1)
SA 451 (SCA).
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