Case Law[2023] ZALCC 1South Africa
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Poit and Others (LCC205/2021) [2023] ZALCC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (6 January 2023)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
6 January 2023
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC205/2021 Before: The Honourable Acting Judge Muvangua Heard on: 16 November 2022 Delivered on: 6 February 2023 In the matter between
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Poit and Others (LCC205/2021) [2023] ZALCC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (6 January 2023)
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Poit and Others (LCC205/2021) [2023] ZALCC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (6 January 2023)
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sino date 6 January 2023
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC205/2021
Before:
T
he Honourable Acting
Judge Muvangua
Heard
on:
16 November 2022
Delivered
on:
6 February 2023
In
the matter between
MINISTER
OF DEPARTMENT OF RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND REFORM
First
Applicant
DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF DEPARTMENT OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
Second
Applicant
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Third
Applicant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER: EASTERN CAPE PROVINCE
Fourth
Applicant
and
KHOLEKA
GLADYS POIT
First
Respondent
NOMBULELO
MAVIS GENGE
Second
Respondent
MARGARET
NOUZOLA QUMA
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MUVANGUA AJ.
Introduction
[1]
The applicants seek an order from this
court condoning the late filing of their answering affidavit in
review proceedings before
this court and under the same case number.
I will refer to those proceedings as the main proceedings in this
judgment.
[2]
The application for condonation
arises out of the following background. On 6 December 2021, the
respondents, who are the applicants
in the main proceedings, filed an
application for the review and setting aside of: a decision to pay
them (respectively) compensation
of R36 000.00 in respect of
claims lodged by the applicants (in the main proceedings); as well as
for the review and setting
aside of the respective settlement
agreements that were signed by the first and second respondents.
[3]
The
applicants (who are respondents in the main proceedings) filed their
notice of intention to oppose the review application on
10 January
2022. In terms of rule 35 of the Land Claims Court,
[1]
the applicants ought to have dispatched the record of decision within
15 days. The record was dispatched two months later, and
it was
indexed on 31 March 2022. The respondents then prepared and filed
their supplementary affidavit on 6 April 2022. This set
in motion the
dies
for
the filing of an answering affidavit by the applicants. It was common
cause between the parties before me that the answering
affidavit was
due to be filed by 29 April 2022.
[4]
The respondents served the applicants with
a notice of bar on 12 May 2022, which required them to file an
answering affidavit by
19 May 2022. The applicants filed their
answering affidavit 15 days out of time, on 26 May 2022.
Legal Principles
Applicable to the Granting of Condonation
[5]
The
principles applicable to the granting of condonation are settled in
law. The Constitutional Court in
Mphephu-Ramabulana
[2]
summarised
the legal position as follows:
“
.
. . compliance with this Court's Rules and timelines is not optional,
and
. . . condonation for any non-compliance is not at hand
merely for the asking. The question in each case is "whether the
interests
of justice permit" that condonation be granted.
Factors such as the extent and cause of the delay, the reasonableness
of the
explanation for the delay, the effect of the delay on the
administration of justice and other litigants, and the prospects of
success
on the merits if condonation is granted, are relevant to
determining what the interests of justice dictate in any given
case.”
[3]
[6]
The
court may take the following factors into account when determining
whether the interests of justice permit the granting
of
condonation: the nature of the relief sought;
[4]
the
extent and cause of the delay;
[5]
the
reasonableness of the explanation for the delay;
[6]
the
importance of the issue to be raised;
[7]
the
effect of the delay on the administration of justice and other
litigants;
[8]
and
the prospects of success on the merits if condonation is granted.
[9]
[7]
The
Constitutional Court in
Mphephu-Ramabulana
also
noted that “
the
extremity of the delay, coupled with the paucity of the explanation
provided, justify the immediate refusal of condonation
”
,
but
“
lateness
and inadequacy of the explanation provided are not necessarily
dispositive of the question of condonation. This is because
the other
factors relevant to condonation may favour its granting and tilt the
interests of justice to the other side of the scale
.”
[10]
Reasons for the
delay
[8]
The reasons provided for the late filing of
the applicants’ answering affidavit all concern their legal
representatives. The
first reason is that although they received the
supplementary affidavit on 6 April 2022, their counsel was not
available to consult
for
three weeks
.
Counsel was only able to consult with clients for purposes of
preparing answering affidavit on the day that it was due –
on
29 April 2022. There is no explanation in the founding affidavit for
why the attorney could not, in the interim, consult with
the clients,
or why another counsel who had availability could not be briefed to
prepare answering papers. On the appointment of
another counsel, the
applicants state boldly in the replying affidavit that the State
Attorney relies on a tender
process in the
appointment of counsel, and that the administrative process of
appointing counsel “is long and tedious”.
However, the
applicants provided no detail that explains what the
appointment process entails, how long it takes, and whether
there are
ways of appointing counsel expeditiously. During oral argument, I
sought to enquire from counsel for the applicants whether/how
the
State Attorney appoints counsel in urgent matters. She was not able
to provide an answer.
[9]
The second reason is that the attorney at
the office of the State Attorney who was seized with the matter was
too ill and needed
to be off work for about two weeks – from 6
May 2022 to 19 May 2022. She was only able to return to work on 23
May 2022.
On her return to work, she found an email from counsel with
an attached draft answering affidavit.
There
is no allegation about when the draft was sent or what the date stamp
on the email attaching the affidavit was. She also realised
then that
she had received a notice of bar from the respondents. She “put
pressure on the clients to have the affidavit commissioned
so that it
could still be served and filed”. As a side observation –
I note that there are no allegations about the
clients having been
afforded an opportunity to consider and apply their minds to the
draft affidavit. They were pressurised to
sign the affidavit and have
it commissioned, without more. Clients had the affidavit commissioned
and returned it to the attorney
on the same day, 23 May 2022.
However, the affidavit was not served and filed with the same urgency
that clients were required
to sign and have it commissioned.
[10]
The attorney for the applicants explains in
the founding affidavit that she then took time to attend to urgent
issues that needed
her attention. In other words, the attorney had a
commissioned affidavit that was already late and that needed to be
served and
filed. Instead of requesting the messenger to attend to
it, she elected to let is sit there for more time. Inexplicably, and
while
in possession of an affidavit that was commissioned and ready
for dispatch, the applicants’ attorney wrote an email to the
respondents’ attorneys on 25 May 2022, requesting for more time
to file her clients’ answering affidavit, on account
of her
having been unwell and off work for two weeks, from 6 May 2022 to 20
May 2022. The affidavit was in fact due on 29 April
2022, a week
before she went on sick leave. There is no explanation in the papers
to cover that period.
[11]
The applicants’ attorney explains in
her replying affidavit that another attorney could not be appointed
to facilitate the
processing of the answering affidavit in her
absence because
she
was
seized with the matter. There are no allegations on the papers to
suggest that she
participated
in the drafting of the answering affidavit, or the reviewing of the
draft answering affidavit. This indicates to me that another
attorney
could have been assigned to do the administrative processing of the
answering affidavit.
Interest of Justice
Override
[12]
I was unpersuaded by applicants’
explanation for the delay in the filing of their answering affidavit.
In my view, the explanation
provided fell short of the required
standard of good cause. I am, however, minded to grant the
application, because it is (in the
circumstances of this case), in
the interests of justice to do so. Disallowing the applicants’
answering affidavit would
mean that the matter would proceed without
hearing from them. That cannot serve the proper administration of
justice. More so because
the Minister had nothing to do with the late
filing of the answering affidavit.
[13]
It is in the interests of justice for a
court to adjudicate a dispute on the basis of the fullness of all the
evidence before it.
It would not be in the interests of justice for
the court to determine the review application without the views and
evidence of
the applicants.
Costs
[14]
The delay in the filing of the applicants’
answering affidavit was solely the result of their legal
representatives. This
is rather unfortunate. However, the respondents
were justified in opposing the application for condonation on the
grounds that
they did. They ought to be entitled to costs, especially
given that the reasons for the delay were simply not satisfactory.
[15]
The circumstances of this case justify a
departure from this court’s practice of not ordering costs. The
applicants in this
case must bear the costs of the application for
condonation.
Order
[16]
The following order is made:
16.1
The applicants’ failure to file their
answering affidavit timeously is condoned.
16.2
The applicants are granted leave to file
their answering affidavit within five (5) days from the date of this
order.
16.3
The applicants are to pay for the costs of
this application.
______________________
N
Muvangua
Acting
Judge
Land
Claims Court
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicants:
L
Hesselman
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
Counsel
for the first respondent:
AM
Maseti
Instructed
by:
Maci
Incorporated
[1]
Land Claims Court Rules GN
300 contained in Government Gazette 17804
of February 1997, as amended.
[2]
Mphephu-Ramabulana
and Another v Mphephu and Others
(CCT 121/20)
[2021] ZACC 43
;
2022 (1) BCLR 20
(CC); 2021 JDR 2796
(CC).
[3]
Mphephu-Ramabulana
at
para 33.
[4]
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority and Another
(CCT 08/13)
[2013] ZACC 37
;
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 65
(CC);
[2014] 1 BLLR 1
(CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 121 (CC) at para 22.
[5]
Brummer
v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZACC 3
;
2000 (2) SA 837
(CC);
2000 (5) BCLR 465
(CC) at para
3
[6]
Van Wyk
v Unitas Hospital (Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC);
2008 (4) BCLR 442
(CC) at para
20.
[7]
Grootboom
at para 22.
[8]
Brummer
at para 3.
[9]
Mankayi
Mankayi
v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
[2011] ZACC 3
;
2011 (3) SA 237
(CC);
2011 (5) BCLR 453
(CC) at para
8.
[10]
Mphephu-Ramabulana
para 38.
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