Case Law[2023] ZALCC 25South Africa
Mpofana Community Land Claimants and Another v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Kwazulu-Natal Province and Others (LCC 164/2021B) [2023] ZALCC 25 (21 July 2023)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
21 July 2023
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Mpofana Community Land Claimants and Another v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Kwazulu-Natal Province and Others (LCC 164/2021B) [2023] ZALCC 25 (21 July 2023)
Mpofana Community Land Claimants and Another v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Kwazulu-Natal Province and Others (LCC 164/2021B) [2023] ZALCC 25 (21 July 2023)
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sino date 21 July 2023
IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE NO: LCC 164/2021B
In
the matter between:
MPOFANA
COMMUNITY LAND CLAIMANTS
(aka
AMANGWE 2)
FIRST
APPLICANT
JONNY
SITHOLE
SECOND
APPLICANT
And
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS COMMISIONER
KWAZULU-NATAL
PROVINCE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
CHIEF LAND CLAIMS COMMMISIONER
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE, RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND REFORM
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1. The applicants seek to
compel compliance with an order made by this Court, per Justice
Ncube, on 29 November 2021 (the 2021 order).
They apply in
terms of Rule 32(5)(b)(iv) of the Rules of this Court.
2.
The primary
import of the 2021 order was to require the first respondent, the
Regional Land Claims Commissioner (KwaZulu-Natal)
to publish the
first applicant’s land claim in the Government Gazette in terms
of section 11(1) of the Restitution of Land
Rights Act 22 of 1994
(the Restitution Act).
[1]
3.
The
application came before me on 15 June 2023. On 21 June 2023, I
made an order in the matter, foreshadowed during the hearing.
I also
indicated during the hearing that I would subsequently provide my
reasons.
[2]
My order was
in the following terms:
‘
1. The first
respondent is directed to comply with the order of this Court dated
29 November 2021 within ten (10) days of the date
of this order by:
1.1 Causing notice of the
claim lodged by the first applicant to be published in the Government
Gazette;
1.2 Within 5 (five) days
of its publication, advising the owners of the land claimed by the
first applicant or any other party which
the first respondent is of
the opinion might be interested in the claim, that the land claimed
by the first applicant has been
published in the Gazette.
1.3 By making available
the following information to the applicants;
1.3.1 The Gazette
Notices;
1.3.2 The Research
Reports;
1.3.3 The
Validation Report;
1.3.4 The
Verification Report.
1.4 This order must be
complied with irrespective of any decision of the first respondent
taken or communicated in terms of
section 11(3)
of the
Restitution of
Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
.
1.5 The first respondent
shall pay the applicants’ costs on a party and party scale.
1.6 The applicants
are granted leave to apply to the Court on the same papers duly
supplemented for further relief in the
event that the order of this
Court is not complied with.’
4. The effect of my order
is to require compliance with paragraphs 5 to 8 of the 2021 order.
It should be noted that a
n unusual feature of the
2021 order is that the prayers found in paragraphs 5 to 8 were
granted ‘in the alternative’
to paragraphs 1 to 4.
During the hearing, I heard the parties regarding the resultant
import of the order. There is
no dispute that paragraphs 5 to 8
were immediately enforceable, and were so understood by the parties.
5. It is also common
cause that the first respondent has not complied with paragraphs 5 to
8 of the 2021 order. The reason
given is that after the 2021
order was made, the first respondent caused the first applicant’s
land claim to be researched
and investigated and after receipt of the
research report, the first respondent decided that the claim should
be dismissed in terms
of section 11(3) of the Restitution Act.
Section 11(3) provides: ‘A frivolous or vexatious claim may be
dismissed by
the regional land claims commissioner concerned.’
In the result, it was contended that there is no claim to publish.
6. I concluded that the
applicants were entitled to the relief they sought for three related
reasons.
7.
First, on
the affidavit before me, at the time the matter was heard, the first
respondent had not communicated any decision to dismiss
the claim to
the claimants. Indeed, on the papers before me, it is not clear
whether the decision has been formally taken.
[3]
It is established that a decision is not final until communicated to
the affected party.
[4]
In
Manok
Family Trust
,
the SCA dealt with this issue and held, ‘[o]f course finality
“is a point arrived at when the decision is published,
announced or otherwise conveyed to those affected by it,” and a
decision is revocable before it becomes final.’
[5]
In that case, the regional commissioner had declined to accept
a claim in terms of section 11(1) of the Restitution Act and
that
decision was communicated to the affected claimants thereby becoming
final and irrevocable. In this case there had been no
such
communication of any decision. In the result, there is no
reason why the first respondent should not comply with the
court
order.
8.
Secondly,
it was not open to the first respondent merely to decline to comply
with the 2021 order for over a year while an investigation
into the
claim ensued. As the Constitutional Court has recently
re-emphasised, court orders must be complied with unless
properly set
aside:
[6]
‘
It cannot be
gainsaid that orders of court bind all to whom they apply. In
fact, all orders of court, whether correctly or
incorrectly granted,
have to be obeyed unless they are properly set aside. This, in
addition to typifying common sense, the
Constitution itself enjoins.’
9.
This is
fundamental to the protection of the authority of the judiciary to
perform its constitutional functions in terms of section
165 of the
Constitution and to the rule of law. The Constitutional Court
explained this in
Pheko
[7]
when it held:
“‘
(t)he rule
of law, a foundational value of the Constitution, requires that the
dignity and authority of the courts be upheld.
This is crucial,
as the capacity of the courts to carry out their functions depends
upon it. As the Constitution commands,
orders and decisions
issued by a court bind all persons to whom and organs of state to
which they apply, and no person or organ
of state may interfere, in
any manner, with the functioning of the courts. It follows from
this that disobedience towards
court orders or decisions risks
rendering our courts impotent and judicial authority a mere mockery.
The effectiveness of
court orders or decisions is substantially
determined by the assurance that they will be enforced.
Courts have the power to
ensure that their decisions or orders are complied with by all and
sundry, including organs of state.
In doing so, courts are not
only giving effect to the rights of the successful litigant but also
and more importantly, by acting
as guardians of the Constitution,
asserting their authority in the public interest.’’
10.
In
Meadow
Glen Homeowners
[8]
the SCA emphasised that where a party encounters difficulties
complying with a court order, that party should come to court for
appropriate relief. It is not appropriate for the non-complying
party to sit back and wait for the aggrieved party to come
to court
to complain of non-compliance.
[9]
The SCA held:
‘
Having said that,
the municipality consented to the court making an order in those
general terms. That obliged it to make
serious good faith
endeavours to comply with it. That is what we are entitled to
expect from our public bodies. If
it experienced difficulty in
doing so, then it should have returned to court seeking a relaxation
of its terms.
If there were a dispute
between them and the appellants regarding the scope of the order and
what needed to be done to comply with
it, it was not appropriate for
the municipality to wait until the appellants came to court
complaining of non-compliance in contempt
proceedings. It
should have taken the initiative and sought clarification from the
court. Its failure over a protracted
period to take these steps
is to be deprecated.’
11. The first respondent
has neither sought to rescind, vary or clarify the 2021 order.
The rule of law requires that the
order be complied with.
12.
Thirdly,
the applicable legislation itself provides the first respondent with
a remedy should the research and investigation process
subsequent to
publication reveal that a claim should be dismissed.
[10]
Indeed, the scheme of the Restitution Act entails that thorough
investigation generally ensues after publication.
[11]
This is not a matter of mere form, as publication of a claim in the
Government Gazette has a material impact on the rights of parties,
both protective and restrictive, as envisaged by section 11(7) and
(8) of the Restitution Act.
[12]
13. The first
respondent’s explanation for failing to comply with the 2021
order thus does not stand scrutiny. The first respondent
ought to
have complied with the court order.
14. The first
respondent delivered a counter-application centrally aimed at
securing a dismissal alternatively an adjournment
of the application
to enable it to finalise the process of dismissing the claim,
specifically to furnish the applicants with the
section 11(3)
decision. The applicants, they say, should then review that
decision. That application cannot, in my
view, succeed in light
of my conclusions above. Indeed, to grant such application in
the circumstances of this case would
subvert the authority of the
judiciary and the rule of law.
15.
The
remaining issue is costs. Subject to
Biowatch
Trust
,
[13]
this Court only orders costs in special circumstances dealing as it
does with social legislation. In my view, the applicants
are
entitled to their costs both on the
Biowatch
principle
and because this is a matter that concerns protracted non-compliance
with a court order. The applicants submitted
that costs
should be awarded on an attorney and client scale. I am not
persuaded that such an order is warranted on the affidavits
before
me.
[14]
Notably, this is
not a contempt application and in the result, matters relating to
wilfulness of non-compliance and whether
it was tainted by bad faith
have not been duly canvassed. Different considerations may
apply should the non-compliance persist.
SJ Cowen
Judge
LAND CLAIMS COURT
Date
of hearing: 15 June 2023
Date
of order: 21 June 2023
Date
of judgment: 21 July 2023
Appearances
For
the Applicant
:
Mr
M Mzila Mzila HM Inc
For
the First Respondent:
Adv
S Giba instructed by State Attorney, Durban
[1]
Section
11 (1) provides:
(1)
If
the regional land claims commissioner having jurisdiction is
satisfied that-
(a)
the
claim has been lodged in the prescribed manner;
(b)
the
claim is not precluded by the provisions of section 2; and
(c)
the
claim is not frivolous or vexatious,
he or she shall cause
notice of the claim to be published in the
Gazette
and
in the media circulating nationally and in the relevant province,
and shall take steps to make it known in the district
in which the
land in question is situated.
[2]
The
delivery of the judgment has regrettably been delayed by two weeks
due to a burglary.
[3]
Although
it is stated in the answering affidavit that a notice of dismissal
of the claim has been issued, purportedly attached,
there is no
attachment.
[4]
President
of the Republic of South Africa v South African Rugby Football Union
2000(1)
SA 1 (CC) para 49;
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye and
Laser Institute
2014(3) SA 219 (SCA) at para 15
.
Manok Family Trust v Blue Horison Investments
2014(5) SA 503 (SCA) (
Manok
Family Trust
)
at para 14.
[5]
Manok
Family Trust
at
para 14.
[6]
Secretary,
Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture v
Zuma and Others
2021(5)
SA 327 (CC) at para 59. See too paras 1, 24 to 27.
[7]
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni City
2015(5)
SA 600 (CC); 2015(6) BCLR 711;
[2015] ZACC 10
(
Pheko
)
at paras 1 to 2.
[8]
Meadow
Glen Home Owners Association and Others v City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 209
(
Meadow
Glen Home Owners)
.
[9]
Id
at
para 22.
[10]
See
Manok
Family Trust
,
supra, at para 12.
[11]
Gamevest
(Pty) Ltd v Regional Land Claims Commissioner for the Northern
Province and Mpumalanga and Others
[2002]
ZASCA 117
at para 7.
[12]
Section
11(7) and (8) provide:
‘
(7)
Once a notice has been published in respect of any land –
(a)
No person may in an improper manner
obstruct the passage of the claim;
(aA) No person may sell,
exchange, donate, lease, subdivide, rezone or develop the land in
question without having given the regional
land claims commissioner
one month’s written notice of his or her intention to do so,
and, where such notice was not given
respect of –
(i)
Any sale, exchange, donation, lease,
subdivision or rezoning of land and the Court is satisfied that such
sale, exchange, donation,
lese, subdivision or rezoning was not done
in good faith, the Court may set aside such sale, exchange,
donation, lease subdivision
or rezoning or grant any other order it
deems fit,
(ii)
Any development of land and the Court is
satisfied that such development was not done in good faith, the
court may grant any order
it deems fit.
(b)
No claimant who occupied the land in
question at the date of commencement of this Act may be evicted from
the said land without
the written authority of the Chief Land Claims
Commissioner;
(c)
No person shall in any manner whatsoever
remove or cause to be removed, destroy or cause to be destroyed or
damage or cause to
be damaged, any improvements upon the land
without the written authority of the child Land Claims Commissioner;
(d)
No claimant or other person may enter upon
and occupy the land without the permission of the owner or lawful
occupier.
(8)
The regional land claims commissioner may, at any time after the
publication of a notice contemplated in subsection
(1), if he or she
has reason to believe that any improvement on the land is likely to
be removed, damaged or destroyed or that
any person resident on such
land may be adversely affected as a result of the publication of
such notice, authorize any person
contemplated in section 8 or 9 to
enter upon such land for the purpose of drawing up an inventory of
any assets on the land,,
a list of persons employed or resident on
the land, or a report on the agricultural condition of the land and
of any excavations,
mining or prospecting thereon.
[13]
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, in context of constitutional litigation, 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.’
[14]
Plastic
Converters Association of South Africa obo Members and Others v
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others
[2020] ZALAC 39
; (2016) 37 ILJ 2815 (LAC) at para 46;
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[2019]
ZACC 29
(
SARB
)
at para 8 and 225;
Tjiroze
v Appeal Board of the Financial Services Board
[2020] ZACC 18
at para 23.
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