Case Law[2023] ZALCC 15South Africa
Hilton Community v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC72/2020) [2023] ZALCC 15 (18 May 2023)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
18 May 2023
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Hilton Community v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC72/2020) [2023] ZALCC 15 (18 May 2023)
Hilton Community v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC72/2020) [2023] ZALCC 15 (18 May 2023)
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sino date 18 May 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE NO: LCC72/2020
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
REVISED:
YES
/NO
Date
: 18/05/2023
Before:
The Honourable Acting
Judge President Meer
and Assessors Professor S.S Luthuli
and Ms A. Andrews
Heard
on:
15 to 18 May 2023 in Verulam,
KwaZulu-Natal
Delivered
on:
18 May 2023
In the matter between:
HILTON
COMMUNITY
Plaintiff
And
MINISTER
OF AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM &
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
First
Defendant
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER,
KWAZULU-NATAL
Participating
Party
TREASURE
COVE TRUST
Second
Defendant
ELLA
HUE ESTATE (PTY) LTD
Third
Defendant
IBHUBESI
COMMUNITY TRUST
Fourth
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MEER AJP.
[1]
This
is a community claim for restitution of rights in land in which
financial compensation
is sought. The land claimed is Lots 3[…]5,
3[…]7, 3[…]0 and 3[…]9 Hilton in KwaZulu-Natal.
The
land is owned by the Second and Third Defendants. They oppose the
claim on the basis firstly, that no community resided on and was
dispossessed of the claimed land, and secondly, that an annexure to
the claim form indicates that Ms Thokozile Ngcobo who filled
in the
form, was removed from land elsewhere.
[2]
The
First Defendant and Participating Party abide the decision of the
Court. The Fourth Defendant
aligns itself with the Plaintiff’s
community claim. It does so on behalf of persons it purportedly
represents who claim to
be dispossessed community members.
[3]
Whilst
the Plaintiff is cited as the Hilton Community, the claim has its
genesis in a land claim
form filed by the late Ms Thokozile Ngcobo,
in December 1998 at the offices of the Regional Land Claims
Commissioner, KwaZulu-Natal
(“RLCC”). There is nothing on
the claim form to indicate that Ms Ngcobo was claiming on behalf of
the Hilton Community.
The name of the Applicant in paragraph 1 of the
claim form is recorded as Thokozile Ngcobo. She is also named in
paragraph 3 as
the person who lost the right in land. Paragraph 4 of
the claim form curiously records under full particulars of applicant
“Mambuzane
Howick”.
[4] A
letter attached to the claim form states as follows in relevant part:
“
We lived at eMxhakeni with
grandfather….. We lived together at Hilton at Gweje’s
F[…] opposite to the school
called S[…] Primary and
Girls High School……….. We moved in 1939 from ka
Gweje.”
[5]
The
RLCC did not in my view properly investigate the claim. Had its staff
done so, and had they
at an early stage asked the late Ms Ngcobo or
her family to point out the land she was allegedly dispossessed from,
as did the
Court during an inspection
in loco
on the claimed
land conducted on 16 May 2023, they would have established that she
was not moved from the claimed land.
[6]
The
parties gathered at 11h30 at a spot approximately 600 metres down the
common boundary of
Erf 3[…]9 and Erf 3[…]0 for the
inspection. The pointing out during the inspection
in loco
by Ms Nomzamo Mutwa, a cousin who lived with Ms Ngcobo on the land
from which they were moved, indicated they were moved to an
area 2.5
km away from the claimed land and as stated in the annexure to the
claim form, was opposite S[…] School. This is
undisputed. Had
the RLCC conducted this exercise, that would have put paid to the
claim.
[7]
Regrettably,
however, the RLCC did not adopt this course. Instead, for reasons
which are not
apparent, it embarked on a course of entertaining Ms
Ngcobo’s claim as a community claim and referred it as such in
an initial
referral report to this Court. Consequently, by the
time the claim was referred, the Plaintiff was cited as the Hilton
Community
and the Fourth Defendant had entered the fray ostensibly
representing dispossessed community members. The Fourth Defendant
filed
a notice to participate, but no response to the referral
report. Ms Manicum for the Fourth Defendant stated that it aligned
itself
to the Plaintiff’s response to the referral report.
Curiously, however there is no mention of the Fourth Defendant in the
Plaintiff’s response. Nor is there any explanation therein of a
link between the Fourth Defendant Trust and the Plaintiff
community
or any other entity that was allegedly dispossessed of the claimed
land. From the pleadings it is not at all apparent
how the Fourth
Defendant Trust brings itself within the ambit of this claim.
[8]
Not
surprisingly, after the claim was referred to Court, the RLCC came to
the view that it had
mistakenly referred the claim as a community
claim. It consequently filed an amended referral report
reflecting a change
of mind about the nature of the claim. The
amended report now categorized the claim as a family claim by Ms
Ngcobo. This, after
the RLCC had engaged with various persons who
claimed to be members of the Hilton Community and the Fourth
Defendant, and had even
gone so far as to engage in a verification
exercise with various persons. In so doing the RLCC would regrettably
and understandably
have raised the expectations of these persons
about what they could gain from the claim lodged by Ms Ngcobo.
[9]
At
the aforementioned inspection
in loco
at which Ms Mutwa
pointed out that the land occupied by the Ngcobo family was not the
claimed land, two witnesses for the Fourth
Defendant also pointed to
areas from which they were allegedly dispossessed. Mr Nzama, the
first witness for the Fourth Defendant
originally pointed out an area
beyond the claimed land near the railway line as the area from which
his family was moved in 1982.
Later on however Mr Nzama pointed to a
different spot on Erf 3[…]9 about 100 metres from where the
parties had gathered.
Similarly, Mr Mazibuko pointed to an area
beyond the claimed land from which his family was moved, and then in
a change of heart
he pointed to a vacant area on Erf 3[…]0
where he stated his family had been removed from, also in 1982. Aside
from the
unreliable nature of these conflicting pointings, the
alleged removals in 1982 have no relation whatsoever to the claim on
which
they rely, being that of Ms Ngcobo for a removal in 1939 and
not 1982.
[10]
From the inspection
in loco
there was no evidence whatsoever
that a community as defined in the
Restitution of Land Rights Act No
22 of 1994
had resided on or was removed from the claimed land. The
definition of community in
Section 1
of the Act is as follows:
“
community”
means any group of persons whose
rights in land are derived from shared rules determining access to
land held in common by such
group, and includes part of any such
group.
[11]
In terms of
Rule 57
(1) I thereafter ordered a separate hearing on
the following issue of law for prior adjudication:
“
Was the Plaintiff and the
Fourth Defendant a community as defined in the
Restitution of Land
Rights Act No 22 of 1994
dispossessed of the claimed land”
Counsel for the Plaintiff and Counsel for the Fourth Defendant
conceded there was no evidence
that the Plaintiff and the Fourth
Defendant were a community as so defined. This concession was
properly made. Neither the Plaintiff’s
response to the referral
report on which both the Plaintiff and the Fourth Defendant relied,
nor the parties’ witness statements
contained such evidence.
Nor, as aforementioned, did such emanate from the inspection
in
loco
. The Plaintiff’s
expert report did not state that a community as defined had resided
on the claimed land and the aerial
photographs of the land dating
back to the 1930’s did not depict such occupation. This being
so, the claim stands to be dismissed.
Costs
[12]
In
Trustees for the Time being of the Biowatch Trust v the
Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
2009 (6) SA 232CC
at
paragraph 24 it was said:
“…
particularly powerful
reasons must exist for a court not to award costs against the state
in favour of a private litigant who achieves
substantial success in
proceedings brought against it”
[13]
This was echoed by this Court in a number of cases. In
Elambini
Community v Minister of Rural Development and Others
LCC88/2012,
30 May 2018 this court said at paragraph 157:
“
This Court has, in a number of
cases, granted costs against the State and in favour of private
litigants who have achieved substantial
success in proceedings
against the State. It has done so on the basis that land claims
litigation, deriving as it does from
Section 25 (3) of the
Constitution, is in the genre of constitutional litigation. See
Makhukhuza Community
Claimants
(LCC 04/2009)
[2010] ZALCC 26
(18 November 2010) at paragraph 30;
Quinella
Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Rural Development and
Others
2010 (4) SA 308
(LCC) at paragraph 35 and 36;
Greater
Tenbosch Land Claims Committee and Others v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others
(74/06)
[2010] ZALCC 25
(15 September 2010). Ms Naidoo, for the First
Defendant, in opposing the costs order sought, argued that the
present matter
is distinguishable from that in
inter
alia
Quinella supra, in
that in those judgments the Commission’s conduct was subject to
justifiable criticism. The First
Defendant, she submitted, had
not conducted herself in any manner warranting an order of costs
against her. In support of
her argument she referred me to the
judgment in
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Pioneer Hi–Bred International Inc
and Others
2014 (2) SA 480
(CC). In that case the Court set aside a costs order against
the Competition Commission and in so doing emphasised that the
Competition Commission was not acting as a mere opposing party in
civil litigation.”
[14]
In keeping with the above decisions, the Second and Third Defendants
who have
achieved success in litigating against the state are
entitled to their costs. I accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The
Plaintiff’s claim for restitution of rights in land in respect
of Lots 3[…]5, 3[…]7, 3[…]9 and 3[…]0
Hilton KwaZulu-Natal is dismissed.
2.
The
First Defendant and the Participating Party (RLCC KwaZulu-Natal),
jointly and severally, the one to pay the other to be absolved,
shall
pay such costs of the Second and Third Defendants as are allowed by
the Taxing Master on a party and party scale, such costs
to include
the following:
2.1
The
cost of employment of counsel, the cost of their attorney as well as
the attorney’s correspondent if any.
2.2
The
qualifying fees and expenses of the Second and Third Defendants’
expert witnesses.
Y S MEER
Acting Judge President
Land Claims Court
I agree.
S S Luthuli
Assessor
Land Claims Court
I agree.
A Andrews
Assessor
Land Claims Court
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv.
T. Kadungure
Adv.
T. Ngcobo
Instructed
by:
Nzimande
L.V Attorneys
For the First
Defendant
and
Participating Party:
Adv.
S Jikela SC
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney – KwaZulu-Natal
For
the Second and Third Defendant:
Adv.
A. de Wet SC
Instructed
by
:
Clarke
Smith Attorneys
For
the Fourth Defendant:
Adv.
T. Manicum
Instructed
by
:
Chetty,
Asmall & Maharaj Attorneys
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