Case Law[2023] ZALCC 36South Africa
Nwandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 36 (22 June 2023)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
18 May 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC 89/2019 In the matter between:
Judgment
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## Nwandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 36 (22 June 2023)
Nwandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 36 (22 June 2023)
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sino date 22 June 2023
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE NO: LCC
89/2019
In
the matter between:
THE
N’WANDLAMHARI COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
First
Plaintiff
MHLANGANISWENI
COMMUNITY
Second
Plaintiff
And
MILLINGTON
ZAMANI MATHEBULA
First
Defendant
RICHARD
MANGALISO NGOMANE
Second
Defendant
SURPRISE
WELCOME NTIMANE
Third
Defendant
KAIZER
MESHACK KHUMALO
Fourth
Defendant
SIPHO
ORANCE MKHWANAZI
Fifth
Defendant
FRANK
SOLLY BHUNGELA
Sixth
Defendant
RULANI
HARRIET MAWELA
Seventh
Defendant
THUYANI
SOUL DLAMINI
Eighth
Defendant
MAVHURAKA
COMMUNITY
Ninth
Defendant
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
Tenth
Defendant
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
Eleventh
Defendant
THE
CHIEF LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER:
COMMISSION
ON RESTITUTION OF
LAND
RIGHTS
Twelfth
Defendant
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER:
MPUMULANGA
PROVINCE
Thirteenth
Defendant
THE
N’WANDLAMHARI COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
CONCERNED BENEFICIARIES
Fourteenth
Defendant
JUDGMENT
PLAINTIFFS’
APPLICATION IN TERMS OF RULE 45(1)
COWEN J
1. The application
before me is an application in terms of Rule 45(1) of the Rules of
this Court which regulates the rights
of parties in action
proceedings to obtain further particulars from another party.
The plaintiffs are seeking further particulars
from the 10
th
and 11
th
defendants, being the Minister of Agriculture,
Rural Development and Land Reform (the Minister) and her Department’s
Director-General
(the Department).
2. The plaintiffs
are the N’wandlamhari Communal Property Association (NCPA) and
the Mhlanganisweni Community. The
main action concerns who is
entitled to benefit from land referred to in the proceedings as the
Mala Mala land, comprising 9 (nine)
parcels of land that are the
subject of claims under the Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
(the Restitution Act).
The NCPA and the
Mhlanganisweni Community seek declaratory relief to the effect that
only members of the Mhlanganisweni Community
are entitled to share in
the benefits of the Mala Mala land. The plaintiffs seek to exclude
from its benefits, members of another
community known as the
Mavhuraka Community, whose members, it is said, laid claim to
different land.
The central tenet upon which their
claim is based is found in the allegation, in paragraph 37A of the
amended statement of
claim, which reads:
‘
37A When the CPA
was formed, the Mhlanganisweni Community was informed by the relevant
officials representing the Department that
the Mavhuraka Community
would be part of the CPA. The inclusion of this Mavhuraka
Community in the CPA was imposed on the
Mhlanganisweni Community
without the Mhlanganisweni Community’s informed consent thereto
being sought or obtained in that
the Mhlanganisweni Community did not
hold a community meeting and resolve to sign the resolution that was
signed on 5 October 2013
at the Gavazana Primary School.’
3.
The action
is of real importance to the parties. It has generated vigorous
opposition from the defendants. The first to ninth
and fourteenth
defendants include both the Mavurakha Community and individuals
affected by the action. State defendants also
oppose the
action, specifically the Minister and her Department, and the Chief
Land Claims Commissioner and the Regional Land Claims
Commission,
Mpumalanga.
[1]
4. The action was
instituted in 2019.
The first sitting of the
trial was in February 2022 when the parties argued certain special
pleas, with judgment delivered on 18
May 2022. Evidence in the
trial commenced during the second sitting, being 3 to 6 October 2022,
during which the evidence
of the plaintiffs’ first witness was
completed. The matter was then postponed until March 2023 for
its third session.
However, although the matter was recalled,
and various efforts made to enable its further prosecution, it
did not proceed, save to conduct various case management meetings
in
terms of Rule 30 to promote the expeditious, economic and effective
disposal of the case. The reasons for this are the
subject of
reserved costs of some magnitude, yet to be argued and decided, and
may become the subject of further dispute, and I
accordingly decline
to deal with them in any detail.
5.
For present
purposes, it suffices briefly to mention certain related features
without elaboration. First, in the period following
the second
session of the trial, a dispute, centrally between the plaintiffs and
the fourteenth defendant has been ventilated in
what the parties
refer to as ‘a trial within a trial’,
[2]
which concerns the standing and authority of the first plaintiff, the
NCPA, to prosecute these proceedings. This application
was argued during the same session as the ‘trial within a
trial’ was ventilated, being 12 to 15 June 2023.
Secondly,
the main action is now provisionally scheduled to
recommence on 17 July 2023, albeit that the matter cannot at this
stage be formally
re-enrolled.
[3]
Thirdly, shortly before the third session was due to recommence in
March 2023, the plaintiffs amended their statement of
claim.
Fourthly, shortly after the amendment, the 10
th
and 11
th
defendants, and the 12 and 13
th
defendants, respectively, delivered counterclaims. Fifthly, the
Court has continued to seek to case manage the action under
Rule 30
to facilitate its economic, economic and effective disposal.
6. The plaintiffs
now apply, in terms of Rule 45(1) of the Rules of this Court, for
further particulars from the Minister
and her Department in respect
of their counter-claim dated 10 March 2023. The plaintiffs are yet to
plead to the counter-claim,
and as indicated above, the parties are
still hoping to be ready to recommence the main action on 17 July
2023. Whether that
will be possible remains to be seen, but
this judgment is delivered in that context, and, due to the obvious
urgency in its delivery,
I do not deal with or fully detail all
issues.
7. The particulars
sought must be understood in light,
inter alia,
of the
provisions of an agreement of sale concluded in respect of the
purchase of the Mala Mala properties between the owners and
the
National Department of Rural Development and Land Reform on 3
September 2013 (the sale agreement). More specifically, Clause
8 is
relevant which is titled ‘Nomination of Transferee’ and
provides, in relevant part:
‘
8.1 The
Purchaser shall be entitled to by no later than 1 November 2013 to
nominate any legal entity representing the Claimants
as the
Transferee and, subject to clause 8.6 below, direct that the transfer
of the property be registered in the name of the Transferee
to hold
it on behalf of the Claimants, subject to the restrictive conditions
indicated in Annexure C to be included in the title
deed of the
Property.
…
8.4 The Parties agree
that this clause constitutes a
stipulation alteri
for the
benefit of the Transferee and shall be open for acceptance by the
Transferee. Upon acceptance of such benefit in terms
of clause
8.5 the Transferee shall become a party to this Agreement solely for
the purposes of taking transfer of the Property
and discharging the
corresponding obligation of the Purchaser to accept transfer of the
Property, and subsequently to accept the
risks and benefits of
ownership of the Property, in terms of this Agreement. The
Purchaser shall, however, remain liable
to pay the Purchase Price and
ensure compliance of all obligations of the Transferee hereunder.
8.5 The Transferee
shall accept the benefit of the
stipulation alteri
set out in
8.4 above by delivering a notice to that effect to the Seller
and the Purchaser by completion and delivery of a
form of an
acceptance substantially in accordance with the form of acceptance
which is
Annexure B
to this Agreement.’
8. Annexure B, in
turn refers to an acceptance of the benefit by the Mhlanganisweni
Communal Property Association. The
reference in the sale
agreement to the Claimants is a reference to the Mhlanganisweni
Community, which is in turn defined.
9. In their
conditional counter-claim, the Minister and her Department refer to
these parts of the sale agreement and then
plead, amongst other
facts, that
9.1. The Department did
not nominate the Mhlanganisweni Community or a legal entity
representing it as the transferee in respect
of the acquisition of
the Mala Mala land. (Clause 6.2)
9.2. The NCPA was
nominated as the transferee in respect of the acquisition of the Mala
Land land (Clause 6.4).
9.3. The members of the
Mhlanganisweni Community were informed in full about the facts of the
intention to and the consequences
of the decision to form the NCPA
especially as the vehicle to accept the benefit of the Mhlanganisweni
claim and to substitute
the NCPA for the entity to be established by
the Mhlanganiswni Communtiy as the transferee in respect of the
acquisition of the
Mala Mala land.
10.
The
counter-claim of the Minister and her Department is detailed and
extensive but its thrust is simple. In short, the Minister
and
her Department, relying on these and other facts, proceed to plead,
amongst other things, that the Mhlanganisweni is estopped
from
denying various agreements and outcomes
[4]
and assert the legality of the arrangements. Moreover, they
plead, in the event that if the Court makes certain findings
in
favour of the plaintiffs, then the decision to transfer the Mala Mala
properties to the NCPA should be reviewed and set aside
and the Mala
Mala properties transferred to the State. The review is
premised also on a series of further allegations
which concern the
understanding and basis upon which the Minister and Department
effected the transfer.
11. The particulars
sought are in respect of three paragraphs of the counter-claim but,
in effect concern two decisions, described
in the request as:
11.1. The decision
not to nominate the Mhlanganisweni Community or a legal entity
representing it as the transferee in respect
of the acquisition of
the Mala Mala land (referred to in paragraph 1 of the request); and
11.2. The decision
to nominate the NCPA as the transferee in respect of the acquisition
of the Mala Mala land (referred to
in paragraph 2 of the request).
12. I refer to these as
the first and second decisions. Later in the request, at
paragraph 7, there is reference to a decision
to substitute the
Mhlanganisweni Community with the NCPA as the transferee. In
substance this is a reference to the above
two decisions, but I refer
to it as the decision to substitute.
13. In brief, the request
seeks the following particulars in respect of these decisions, in
paragraphs 1,2 and 7 respectively.
First, which individuals on
behalf of the State took the decisions, secondly, when were they
taken, thirdly, was the decision recorded
in writing and fourthly, if
so, a copy is sought. As to the latter request, it was
foreshadowed during the case management
process I refer to above that
discovery would be requested when asking for further particulars.
14.
I have
considered these requests in light of the grounds of refusal advanced
in the response to the request to provide the particulars,
[5]
the detailed content of the counter-claim and the submissions
advanced by Mr Ogunrumbi (with him Ms Phasha) for the 10
th
and 11
th
Defendants.
15. Rule 45, titled
‘
Further particulars
’, provides:
(1)
Any party in an action may—
(a)
with
leave of the Court at any time; and
(b)
without
leave of the Court, only once and after a reply has been delivered or
the time for doing so has expired,
deliver
a request to any other party for further particulars which are
necessary to enable him or her to prepare for the hearing.
(2)
The request under subrule (1) may, among other matters, require—
(a)
details
of the date of purchase, purchase price, size and title description
(where available) of every property transaction to be
used as a
comparable transaction in the case; and
(b)
in
the form of an abridged resume, the basis upon which any compensation
claimed or offered in the case is calculated.
(3)
Any party to whom a request under subrule (1) was delivered must
respond to it within fifteen days.`
16.
The
plaintiffs have set out their case at a level of generality, which is
unfortunate.
[6]
I am
nevertheless satisfied, in context of the pleadings and facts of this
case, that there is sufficient information before
me upon which I
should conclude that the particulars are necessary for the plaintiffs
to prepare for the hearing both for purposes
of pleading and for
purposes of preparing for the hearing itself. In context of the
case management process that ensued during
the third session and the
provisional allocation of dates for the next session in July 2023,
these processes must ensue in tandem
and swiftly to enable the matter
to proceed to finality economically, expeditiously and effectively.
The parties are in agreement
that the matter must proceed to finality
as soon as possible.
17. On a consideration of
the pleadings, I do not agree, as submitted on behalf of the Minister
and Department, that the allegations
in respect of which the
particulars sought amount merely to denials, or a joining of issue on
matters the plaintiffs have pleaded
in paragraph 37A of their
statement of claim and in respect of which they bear the onus of
proof. Rather, the allegations
concerning the two decisions
underpin the case advanced in the counter-claim. For present
purposes, I need arrive at this
conclusion only in respect of the
pleaded estoppel, but it appears to apply with equal force to the
pleaded review which rests
on allegations of fact additional to those
pleaded by the plaintiffs. I am, further, unpersuaded by the
objection that the
particulars of fact sought constitute evidence.
18.
The
furnishment of the particulars sought will serve the purposes of
calling for particulars, being to prevent surprise, to inform
the
plaintiffs with greater precision what the Minister and Department
will prove so that they can prepare their case and will
not, in doing
so, tie the Minister or Department down unfairly.
[7]
19. Mr Ogunrumbi
submitted that the particulars sought in respect of the first
decision are unnecessarily sought as it is clear
from the broader
context of the pleadings and the documents attached to the pleadings
that it is the Minister who is the empowered
functionary. In my
view, this does not answer the request for at least two self-standing
reasons. First, this is an
issue which, in context, ought to
have been explained in an answering affidavit and none was filed.
Rather the Minister and
Department elected to deal with the
application on points of law. Secondly, the answer presupposes
authorised decision-making,
and an absence of delegation. It
can also be noted that the submission itself reveals the absence of
any unfairness to the
Minister and her Department in being asked to
supply it.
20. The Minister and
Department also contended that the particulars sought in respect of
the second decision and the decision to
substitute need not be
provided as it was not alleged that the decisions were taken by the
State. In my view, this submission cannot
be accepted as it is clear,
in context, both that they were decisions that must have been taken
and that they were taken by State
functionaries. There is more force
in the further submission that the import of the allegations to which
the request in paragraph
7 relates are not focused on the decision to
substitute. But in context of the request in this case, this is
ultimately immaterial
as the decision to substitute is a reference to
the first two decisions.
21. Mr Ogunrumbi
submitted that there was no obligation on the part of the State to
nominate the Mhlanganisweni Community (or associated
entity) as the
transferee of the Mala Mala land and it thus cannot be compelled to
prove any compliance therewith. But the
case pleaded may not
turn on the existence of any duty and in any event, whether there was
such a duty (if ultimately requiring
determination) is a matter best
left for determination in the main action, not at this stage.
In the meantime, the plaintiffs
are entitled to know who, on behalf
of the State, took the decisions, when and how, and receive copies if
written, so that they
can both plead and prepare for trial.
22.
Subject to
Biowatch Trust,
[8]
this Court
only orders costs in special circumstances dealing as it does with
social legislation. In my view there are none.
However,
as this is litigation in part against the State, this is a matter
where costs should be in the cause. Mr Musandiwa
submitted that
the Court should make a suitable costs order to indicate its
displeasure with the fact that the Minister and Department
delivered
their heads of argument late. In this regard, the initial dates
for exchange of heads of argument were regulated
by agreement of the
parties, not by direction of the Court. Initially this matter
was to be argued on 13 June 2023, but it
was not, primarily because
of the need to use the time to ventilate the dispute between the
plaintiffs and the fourteenth defendant
in circumstances where the
application was postponed from 12 to 13 June 2023 when the plaintiffs
made late discovery. Mr
Ogunrumbi then undertook to deliver the
heads of argument on 14 June 2023 but only did so during the morning
of the hearing, on
15 June 2023. This was in circumstances when he
was sitting in Court for the ventilation of the dispute between the
fourteenth
defendant and the plaintiffs, in respect of which he was
due to make oral submissions and for which purpose the Court started
early
and sat late due to the postponement. Ultimately, I have
insufficient information before me, and no evidence, upon which I
can
conclude that the circumstances of the delay should attract my
censure. Furthermore, the plaintiffs accepted that they
were
not prejudiced by the delay and the hearing ensued without impediment
or any need for postponement. Finally, the Court was
not prejudiced.
23. I make the following
order:
23.1. The 10
th
and 11
th
defendants are directed to produce further
particulars in response to paragraphs 1, 2 and 7 of the plaintiffs’
request for
further particulars dated 17 March 2023 in relation to
the above action.
23.2. The
particulars shall be furnished by no later than 4pm on Tuesday 27
June 2023.
23.3. Costs are
costs in the cause.
JUDGE SJ COWEN
LAND CLAIMS COURT
Date of hearing: 15
June 2023
Date of judgment:
22 June 2023
Appearances (1
st
to 9
th
, 12 to 14
th
Defendants
observing):
Plaintiffs:
Mr M Musandiwa
Instructed by Malatji &
Co Attorneys
10
th
and 11
th
Defendants: Adv S Ogunrumbi and Adv L Phasha
Instructed by
The State Attorney
1
st
to 9
th
Defendants:
G W Mashele Attorneys
12
th
and 13
th
Defendants:
Adv C Marule
I
nstructed
by
The
State Attorney
14
th
Defendant:
Adv L Siyo
Instructed by
Legal Aid SA
[1]
The
twelfth and thirteenth defendants.
[2]
I
adopt this terminology for convenience and without characterising
their nature.
[3]
Under the case management process, t
he
matter may not be formally re-enrolled until the parties have
satisfied the Court that they are ready to recommence the matter,
the subject of a case management conference scheduled for 1pm on 4
July 2023. However, in view of the number of counsel
and
parties in the matter and the importance of finalising the matter as
soon as reasonably parties, provisional dates have been
arranged
with the parties to recommence the trial on 17 July 2023 over a
period of two weeks.
[4]
Paragraph
8.
[5]
As
set out in paragraphs 1 to 8 and 43 of the response.
[6]
Mindful
of the dictum of Leach J in
Szedlacsek
v Szedlacsek; Van der Walt v Van der Walt; Warner v Warner
2000(4) SA 147 (E) 150A-B referred to by counsel for the Minister
and Department which held that an applicant for further particulars
‘must set out sufficient information to enable the Court to
consider whether or not to exercise its discretion in his favour.’
[7]
Thompson
v Barclays Bank DCO 1965(1) SA 365 (W) at 369C-E.
[8]
Trustees
for the Time being of the
Biowatch
Trust v the Registrar Genetic Resources and others
2009(6) SA 232 (CC). Importantly, in para 24, the
Constitutional Court held that ‘… 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.’
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