Case Law[2023] ZALCC 27South Africa
N'wandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 27 (10 August 2023)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC 89/2019
Judgment
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## N'wandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 27 (10 August 2023)
N'wandlamhari Communal Property Association and Another v Mathebula and Others (LCC 89/2019) [2023] ZALCC 27 (10 August 2023)
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sino date 10 August 2023
IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO: LCC 89/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
THE
N’WANDLAMHARI COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
CONCERNED BENEFICIARIES
Intervening Party
and
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
JUDGMENT
COWEN J (Assessor B
Padayachi in agreement)
1.
This judgment deals with three preliminary
issues which have arisen between the plaintiffs and the fourteenth
defendant in the above
action (the main action). While
preliminary in nature, they have arisen belatedly in circumstances
where this Court granted
the fourteenth defendant leave to intervene
in the main action after the trial commenced. The reasons for
doing so, and the
related circumstances, appear from the judgment
granting intervention (21 February 2023).
2.
The main action was instituted under case
no LCC 89/2019. It concerns the entitlement to benefit from
land colloquially known
as the Mala Mala land, which comprises some 9
(nine) land parcels, which were the subject of land claims lodged in
terms of the
Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the
Restitution Act). The first and second plaintiffs, the
N’Wandlamhari
Communal Property Association (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.
3.
The main 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 main action commenced during the second
sitting, being 3 to 6 October 2022, during which the evidence
of only
the plaintiffs’ first witness was completed. The action
was then postponed until March 2023 for its third session.
However, although recalled in March 2023,
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 its expeditious, economic and effective disposal. 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.
4.
One feature of the events, however, was an
effort to use some of the time allocated to ventilate the dispute in
respect of the preliminary
points. This was in circumstances
where the plaintiffs and fourteenth defendant anticipated that the
matter could be adjudicated
on only points of law, limited oral
evidence or a stated case. But that did not eventuate.
The Court was then requested
to enrol the preliminary points for
hearing between 12 to 15 June 2023 for limited oral evidence and
argument. During a case
management conference convened on 26
May 2023, the Court was assured that the parties were ready to
proceed. The Court was
informed that only two witnesses would
be led: Mr Dion Mnisi on behalf of the fourteenth defendant and
Mr Freddy Mthombeni
on behalf of the plaintiffs. The parties
had exchanged witness statements and confirmed that the main trial
bundles would
be used in the proceedings. The Court was
informed that the matter could proceed on both evidence and argument
and would,
during the same session, be able to hear brief argument in
an interlocutory application, anticipated to take approximately one
hour. The interlocutory proceedings were then scheduled for 10
am on Tuesday 13 June 2023. The Court was further informed
that
these proceedings would not take the full four days. In
circumstances where the parties requested that the main action
recommence on 17 July 2023, and a two-week period was provisionally
allocated for that purpose, the Court was requested to deliver
its
judgment, if possible, by the end of June 2023. The
matter was thereafter enrolled. Shortly thereafter, and
in
light of the parties’ advising that the matter would not take
the full four days, the Court informed the parties that
it would not
sit on Thursday 15 June 2023: that date was required for
another matter.
5.
In
the ultimate result, matters did not ensue as planned.
The time allocated on 12 June 2023 was lost in circumstances
were the
fourteenth defendant requested a postponement following late
discovery by the plaintiffs the previous week. The
postponement
was granted but only until 13 June 2023.
[1]
Evidence on the preliminary points ensued at 10 am on Tuesday 13 June
2023, with the evidence of Mr Mnisi, and evidence was
completed on
Wednesday 14 June 2023, with the evidence of Mr Mthombeni.
[2]
Oral argument was then postponed until Monday 19 June 2023. It
was heard during a special hearing convened between
4pm and 7pm on a
virtual platform. In order to allow further time to ventilate
the preliminary points in view of the postponement,
the Court
postponed argument in the interlocutory application until the
afternoon of 15 June 2023. The Court, further,
made
arrangements to sit late and start early where possible during the
week.
6.
The preliminary issues to be decided are
three-fold. During case management, the parties agreed that
they may be stated as
set out below.
6.1.
The first issue is whether the current
executive committee of the NCPA is a
bona
fide
executive committee that has the
necessary
locus standi
to
sue on behalf of the NCPA. [During argument it was clarified
that the reference to
bona fide
should
be understood to mean having legal competence.]
6.2.
The second issue is whether there is a
resolution by the members of the NCPA authorising the institution of
the action on behalf
of the NCPA.
6.3.
The third issue is whether the NCPA is
non-suited to bring the current action by reason of a conflict of
interest.
7.
It must be stated upfront that while the
issues were framed in this way, their import and scope must
ultimately be gleaned from
the pleadings. Some of the
submissions advanced went beyond the pleadings, reasonably
interpreted, and I do not deal with
these. Each of the
preliminary disputes raise questions that are ultimately informed by
the provisions of the NCPA Constitution.
It is helpful to
detail some of its core features, before turning to summarise key
features of the evidence.
Features of the NCPA
Constitution
8.
The
NCPA Constitution was signed on 19 October 2013, nearly a decade
ago. Its preamble records that various communities and
individuals lodged land claims in terms of the Restitution Act in and
around the Sabie-Sand Region, historically known to indigenous
owners
by the name N’wandlamhari. It records further that
the claimants
[3]
‘have
decided to create a joint legal entity to receive all the land
claimed in the area historically known as N’wandlamhari
and to
own and manage the land of their ancestors for the benefit of this
generation and all future generations.’ It
continues,
‘[t]herefore the claimant communities of Mhlanganisweni and
Mavhuraka have joined to adopt this Constitution of
the [NCPA].’
9.
The property of the association is referred
to in Clause 3.2. It initially includes only the Mala Mala land
but the Constitution
contemplates it would thereafter include ‘any
other land restored to or granted to or acquired by the Association
in future.’
10.
The provisions dealing with membership are
complex. Importantly, Clause 8.1 provides: ‘Qualification for
membership of the
association shall be limited to members of the
households and their descendants who form part of the groups of
people that were
dispossessed of rights in land within the lands
traditionally known as N’wandlamhari, being the land in and
around the area
known today as the Sabie Sand Game Reserve.’
The Constitution delineates two categories of persons entitled
to
membership in Clause 8.5 and Clause 8.6 respectively. The
first category (Clause 8.5) concerns persons who must associate
with
the community and continue to maintain adequate links with the
community and the second category (clause 9) concerns persons
who
have left the area where the community now live and who wish to
retain cultural or symbolic links with the community.
The
rights and privileges of the latter may be limited appropriately.
11.
Clause 3.9 defines the term ‘members’
as follows:
‘
3.9
Members
Depending on the context,
may mean
-
A child member; or
-
An adult member or
-
The individual members of households who
are entitled to vote at general meetings, or
-
A person who is registered on the
membership register as such, or
-
All those persons who have been verified as
originally dispossessed persons who held rights in land in the area
known as N’wandlamhari
and descendants of such originally
dispossessed persons;
-
Any person who is not registered as a
member of the association, but who is entitled to be a member.’
12.
The
Committee responsible for the day to day governance of the NCPA is
its Executive Committee. One of the functions
of the
Executive Committee of the NCPA is to establish and maintain a
membership register,
[4]
which
must be updated annually.
[5]
The
membership register must indicate which members belong to which
household,
[6]
and households are
considered established in terms of the rules of customary law.
[7]
Applications for membership must be submitted to the Executive
Committee or membership subcommittee.
[8]
However, decisions of the Executive Committee on any matter relating
to membership shall be subject to ratification by a general
meeting.
[9]
Clause 9.10 is
material. It provides: ‘The presence of the name of any
member in the register shall be
prima
facie
proof of membership of the Association, and conversely, the absence
of any member’s name in the register shall be
prima
facie
proof that such person does not have any right to membership in the
Association. The onus of proving otherwise shall vest
with the
person seeking rectification of the register.’
13.
In
terms of Clause 8.9, the ‘membership register shall …
serve as the voters roll of the Association, and may indicate
categories of voters and subgroupings for purposes of elections.’
The NCPA Constitution deals with eligibility to vote at
elections in
two stages: the initial voting process and the process that should
ensue thereafter. The initial voting process
is regulated by
Clause 8.10 which provides: ‘At the first elections to be
held after adoption of this Constitution,
which adoption is scheduled
for 19 October 2013, the eligible voters shall be determined by
informal processes agreed to by the
de
facto
committees of the constituent claimant groupings and rulings made at
the first general meeting.’ The Constitution
then
contemplates, in clause 8.12, that the Executive Committee consult
with the community and present an electoral system to a
general
meeting for adoption, which would then become part of the
Constitution.
[10]
Save
for the initial elections, the Executive Committee is elected by
voting members of the NCPA at a general meeting.
[11]
14.
The
right to vote is a right that attaches to membership, as provided in
Clause 9.4 in the following terms (underlining in Constitution):
‘Every member of the association who is the head of the
household and over the age of 18 years shall have the right to vote
at meetings of members in person. In addition to the head of
the household, each household must nominate an adult member
of the
opposite gender to attend general meetings and who may vote
thereat.’ Clause 9.5 deals with the position of
child
headed households.
[12]
15.
Clause
3.3 of the NCPA Constitution defines the executive committee to mean
‘the committee of members who constitute the committee
elected
from time to time by the members of the Association in terms of
paragraph 11 hereof to manage the affairs of the Association,
subject
to the provisions set out in this Constitution.’ In terms
of Clause 11.4 of the Constitution, the Executive
Committee ‘shall
be comprised of a Chairperson, Deputy Chairperson, Secretary, Deputy
Secretary, Treasurer and Public Relations
officer and nine other
additional members, or so many as may be determined in general
meeting.’ Under the NCPA Constitution,
the term of office
of a member of the Executive Committee is three years.
[13]
The evidence
16.
The
evidence traversed events between October 2013, when the NCPA was
initially constituted and March 2019, when the plaintiffs
say the
NCPA authorised the action. During the course of the
proceedings, Mr Ogunronbi (counsel for the Minister and Department)
requested the Court to make a ruling regarding the status of the
evidence given in these proceedings in the main action.
He made
the request in circumstances where his clients are not participating
actively in this part of the proceedings, save to
make
submissions.
[14]
After
hearing the parties, the following ruling was made:
16.1.
The evidence in these proceedings (ie the
trial relating to the preliminary points) is not to be regarded as
evidence in the main
action.
16.2.
The State defendants are entitled, should
they be so advised, to adduce the evidence in the main action of a Ms
Zanele Sihlangu
(an official of the Department) and the Chief Land
Claims Commissioner, Ms Gobodo on issues traversed in these
proceedings.
16.3.
This ruling does not preclude any party
from referring to evidence produced in these proceedings, whether
documentary or
viva voce
,
in the course of adducing evidence in the main action.
17.
It is common cause that the first executive
committee of the NCPA was elected on 19 October 2013, when the NCPA
Constitution was
signed and that the Executive Committee that was
then elected was made up of members of both the Mavhuraka Community
and the Mhlanganisweni
Community. That it was so constituted
notably accords with Clause 8.10 of the NCPA Constitution.
Moreover, in circumstances
where the term of office of the Executive
Committee is three years, there is no dispute that the Constitution
contemplated that
a new Executive Committee be elected in 2016.
It is common cause that the Department then sought to
facilitate an elective
AGM in October 2016. The
difficulty that arose, however, is that only members of the
Mhlanganisweni Community were
present at the AGM that was called.
The events that ensued thereafter are disputed, either factually or
in their legal consequences.
18.
According
to Mr Mnisi, the AGM that was called in October 2016 ought to have
been constituted not only of members of the Mhlanganisweni
Community
but also of members of the Mavhuraka Community. Their absence
arose because their constituent members had not been
verified as
members of the NCPA. The meeting proceeded, he explained, but
only for purposes of selecting an interim Committee
of seven persons
from the Mhlanganisweni Community, which would operate for a
six-month period with the sole task of ensuring that
the verification
procedure was finalised and a new AGM held. This limited
purpose, he testified, was communicated to the
meeting by officials
present. Mr Mnisi testified further that the problem that
arose is that the committee of seven
‘turned itself into’
an Executive Committee and is still acting as such until the present
time.
[15]
Mr Mnisi testified
that in fact the necessary verification processes ensued and on 12
December 2020, and at a special general meeting,
the NCPA duly
adopted the verification report of a Singwane and Partners dated
March 2019. The resolution is signed by Mr
Mnisi representing
the ‘Former Mhlanganisweni Group’ and by Mr Richard
Ngomane representing the ‘Former Mavhuraka
Group’.
Under cross examination, and in argument, plaintiffs’ counsel
Ms Barnes made it clear that the plaintiffs
dispute that this was a
proper meeting.
19.
Mr Mnisi testified that to his knowledge,
the NCPA had not given anyone the authority to institute the action.
He contended
that such a decision, if made, would have to be made by
the NCPA after consultation with its members. He
testified
that he only learnt of the action when informed about it by
the first to ninth defendants at a meeting in 2019 after they had
been
served. Under cross-examination, Ms Barnes alerted Mr
Mnisi to a document purporting to be the minutes of a meeting of the
NCPA held on 9 March 2019 which is the document the plaintiffs rely
on to assert that the NCPA authorised the action. She
also drew
Mr Mnisi’s attention to the fact that the attached attendance
register records his presence at the meeting.
In response, Mr
Mnisi contended, amongst other things, that these documents are
fraudulent. In re-examination, he testified
– with
reference to the terms of the resolution purportedly taken –
that he does not understand it to authorise the
action.
20.
Finally, Mr Mnisi testified about his
understanding of why the NCPA cannot lawfully take a decision,
through its Mhlanganisweni
membership, to exclude the Mavhuraka
Community from its ranks due to a conflict of interests. He
explained the conflict by
referring to the Mhlanganisweni and
Mavhuraka Communities as being the two children of the NCPA and the
decision of the entity
constituted as it was, to exclude one child,
in his understanding, presents a conflict of interests. Ms
Barnes did not cross
examine Mr Mnisi on the alleged conflict of
interests.
21.
Mr Mnisi’s cross examination was
focused on matters germane to credibility, seeking to demonstrate
that Mr Mnisi does not
appear on the 2019 verification list and
putting the plaintiffs’ version to him. On the latter,
this concerned both
the events of the October 2016 and 9 March 2019
meetings, and a series of unsuccessful attempts to hold meetings of
the NCPA and
Mr Mnisi’s attempts (with others, including the
Mavhuraka) to disrupt them with the effect that the NCPA, it is said,
has
not been able to convene an AGM or finalise the verification
process to bring the Mavhuraka into their ranks.
22.
Mr Mthombeni is a member of the
Mhlanganisweni Community and since 2016 has acted as the Secretary of
the NCPA. He testified
that he was elected as Secretary of the
NCPA at the October 2016 meeting. Prior to that, and from 2013,
he served as an additional
member of the Executive Committee of the
NCPA. Mr Mthombeni testified about the events that ensued
during the October 2016
meeting. He explained that only members
of the Mhlanganisweni Community were present at that meeting, which
was also attended
by officials from the Department. The
Department’s Ms Zanele Sihlangu addressed the meeting and
informed attendees
that she had received a call from the Chief Land
Commissioner who had asked if members of the Mavhuraka Community were
present
and upon learning that they were not, had said that the
meeting should be halted. Those present were not happy
with
the message and it was thereafter suggested that the elections
proceed with seven members elected to the Executive Committee:
Once the Mavhuraka membership had been verified, a further eight
members would be elected to the Executive Committee from their
ranks. The elections then proceeded on that basis. Mr
Mthombeni disputed that the Department had placed any limitations
on
how the Executive Committee would work or that it would be in
existence for only six months. Under cross-examination,
Mr
Mthombeni conceded that there were, at this stage, no minutes of this
meeting nor any attendance register. He explained
that minutes
‘can be produced after a while.’ He emphasised that
the Executive Committee that emerged from the
meeting was elected and
was not serving on any interim basis. Moreover, he emphasised
that the exclusion of the Mavhuraka
Community was justified on the
basis that the Mavhuraka had not been verified, and accordingly, its
constituent members could not
be members of the NCPA or part of an
AGM.
23.
Mr
Mthombeni then testified about several attempts to convene an AGM of
the NCPA which were disrupted, including meetings of 17
February
2018, 12 October 2019 and 18 January 2020. The disruptions are
attributed to Mr Mnisi, a Mr Zamani Mathebula, a
Mr Reinas Mkansi and
members of the Mavhuraka Community. During cross examination,
Mr Siyo highlighted formal difficulties
with some of the relate
notices or minutes (for example, if not signed or dated) and posed
questions to the effect that the plaintiffs
were seeking both unduly
to single out Mr Mnisi as a wrong-doer and to exclude the Mavhuraka
Community from the affairs of the
NCPA. Mr Mthombeni
confirmed that only verified members of the NCPA are permitted to
attend general meetings and that
in the result, members of the
Mavhuraka Community were excluded from such meetings. Mr
Mthombeni was ultimately unable to
explain why the Court had not been
approached over these years to interdict the alleged unlawful
disruptions, so that the NCPA
could become constituted as envisaged
by its Constitution.
[16]
24.
Mr Mthombeni testified about the meeting of
9 March 2019 – which notably did proceed without apparent
interruption –
and confirmed the resolution recorded in the
minute was in fact taken. The resolution records the following:
‘
4.2
Application to land claims court. After deliberation on each
issue N’wandlamhari (Mhlanganisweni) community
took the
following resolutions that.
1.
N’wandlamhari CPA committee must make
application to the land claims court
2.
Application must be made through lawyers
(Legal Team)
3.
Court must separate Mhlanganisweni and
Mavhuraka Community
4.
N’Wandlamhari community
(Mhlanganisweni Community) took resolution to submit application to
land claims court to request the
court to separate Mhlanganiswni and
Mavhuraka Community.’
25.
Notably, when testifying about the
resolution taken and under cross-examination, Mr Mthombeni
unequivocally referred to the Mhlanganisweni
Community as those who
took the resolution. The Mavhuraka constituents were not
present at the meeting.
26.
Mr Mthombeni was cross-examined about the
alleged conflict of interest through a set of questions concerning
the position of the
NCPA as the first plaintiff and co-plaintiff with
the Mhlanganisweni Community, in the main action, with the Mavhuraka
Community
as a respondent. He deferred each of these questions
for answer by the plaintiffs’ attorneys.
- It
is neither necessary nor desirable to deal with each of the issues
that arise in connection with what was a credibility focused
attack
on Mr Mnisi. However, it is necessary to indicate my general
findings on his credibility and to make limited factual
findings on
disputed issues. There were indeed features of Mr Mnisi’s
evidence that were unsatisfactory, and which
were laid bare during
his cross-examination. At times, the witness was inconsistent
and advanced explanations (specifically
concerning fraud and
conspiracy) about the plaintiffs’ holding of meetings that did
not persuade. However,
while the cross-examination was
impactful and rendered features of Mr Mnisi’s evidence
unacceptable, important truths emerge
from his evidence, which are
furthermore corroborated, and his evidence cannot be wholly
rejected. A far more nuanced approach
is necessitated.
Importantly, I am left with the overall impression that Mr Mnisi
has, as suggested, being unduly singled
out as a cause of the
difficulties of the NCPA with the result that the real cause of the
difficulties is thereby masked.[17]In consequence, his resultant marginalisation, rather than
dishonesty, may well explain at least important unsatisfactory
features of his evidence. That said, I ultimately accept
that Mr Mnisi has been one of a group of persons who have
disrupted
meetings sought to be called by the plaintiffs and that the meetings
were disrupted.
It
is neither necessary nor desirable to deal with each of the issues
that arise in connection with what was a credibility focused
attack
on Mr Mnisi. However, it is necessary to indicate my general
findings on his credibility and to make limited factual
findings on
disputed issues. There were indeed features of Mr Mnisi’s
evidence that were unsatisfactory, and which
were laid bare during
his cross-examination. At times, the witness was inconsistent
and advanced explanations (specifically
concerning fraud and
conspiracy) about the plaintiffs’ holding of meetings that did
not persuade. However,
while the cross-examination was
impactful and rendered features of Mr Mnisi’s evidence
unacceptable, important truths emerge
from his evidence, which are
furthermore corroborated, and his evidence cannot be wholly
rejected. A far more nuanced approach
is necessitated.
Importantly, I am left with the overall impression that Mr Mnisi
has, as suggested, being unduly singled
out as a cause of the
difficulties of the NCPA with the result that the real cause of the
difficulties is thereby masked.
[17]
In consequence, his resultant marginalisation, rather than
dishonesty, may well explain at least important unsatisfactory
features of his evidence. That said, I ultimately accept
that Mr Mnisi has been one of a group of persons who have
disrupted
meetings sought to be called by the plaintiffs and that the meetings
were disrupted.
28.
Mr
Mnisi’s disputed membership of the NCPA illustrates the
complexity. Although his name does not appear on the 2019
verification list, Mr Mnisi’s persistence regarding his own
membership of the NCPA was wholly credible and his exclusion
is
difficult to understand. Indeed, in moments of testimony
noted by obvious and palpable candour, and notwithstanding
the case
the plaintiffs have asserted on paper, Mr Mthombeni effectively
accepted that Mr Mnisi’s membership of the Mhlanganisweni
Community and NCPA is legitimate. While this is not the
occasion finally to resolve that dispute, it is of course vital that
it be duly resolved in accordance with due process. What
happened in the October 2016 meeting are similarly complex.
[18]
29.
Mr Mthombeni was, overall, a credible
witness, not least due to his candid position regarding Mr Mnisi’s
membership. That
does not mean that all features of his
testimony were satisfactory. Specifically, the record of
calling of meetings and minutes
– for which the witness is
responsible – is inconsistent – calling into question how
much store can be placed
on them. Moreover, his overall
credibility does not mean that the plaintiffs’ stance on
material issues or the
manner in which the NCPA has been run is
regular or correct. I find below that it has not
been, and while I should
not be viewed as condoning unlawfully
disruptive conduct, I am left with the distinct impression that
legitimate grievances regarding
the running of the NCPA may at least
partly explain its disruptive history. Mr Mthombeni’s
overall credibility
as a witness also does not mean that Mr Mnisi has
not been unduly singled out as a troublemaker.
30.
Before turning to the issues for
determination, I pause to emphasise that the above ‘credibility’
complexities ultimately
unmask the real challenges facing the NCPA.
Amongst these are the issues that arise in the main action.
Furthermore,
while there are unsatisfactory features of the evidence
of both witnesses, at least part of the explanation probably lies in
the
fact that the deep divisions in the community will invariably
have given rise to profoundly different points of view about what
constitutes legitimate and lawful NCPA action and procedures.
It is clearly of vital importance that the underlying problems
within
the NCPA be peacefully and lawfully resolved.
The first issue:
whether the current executive committee can sue on behalf of the NCPA
31.
The first issue is whether the current
executive committee of the NCPA is legally competent to sue on behalf
of the NCPA.
In my view, and as Ms Barnes submitted, this
issue can be disposed of on the basis that the party before the Court
is the NCPA
itself and the decision the plaintiffs rely upon to
institute the proceedings was not made by the committee asserting
power as
the Executive Committee, and whose competence to so act is
impugned by the fourteenth defendant. It was taken at a meeting
convened on 9 March 2019 as a special general meeting of the NCPA.
32.
In
deciding the issue on this basis, I should not be understood to
minimise the significance of the underlying dispute about the
competence of the committee and what transpired on 16 October 2016.
On the contrary, it is clear that the dispute about the
status
of the committee that came into office in 2016 is a matter of real
importance and needs to be resolved. However, in
my view, this
is not the appropriate occasion to resolve it as it does not squarely
arise. At best the committee would
have probably been
instrumental in calling the meeting and giving effect to the
resolution taken. But the issue was
not pleaded or dealt
with on that basis. To the extent that the broader role of the
committee was canvassed in evidence,
the interests of justice would
not – in my view – be served by venturing to deal with
that issue now. This Court
does not currently exercise primary
jurisdiction over the
Communal Property Associations Act 28 of
1996
,
[19]
or disputes about
the exercise of powers within a communal property association.
This Court’s jurisdiction to decide
the issue currently arise
from this Court’s incidental jurisdiction. Specifically,
under section 22(2)(c) of the Restitution
Act, the Court’s
power to decide issues not ordinarily within its jurisdiction, which
arise incidentally, can only be exercised
when it is in the interests
of justice to do so. There are several reasons why the
interests of justice militate against
this Court venturing beyond
what is necessary to decide the preliminary disputes where the issues
raised fall outside of its primary
jurisdiction. First, the
dispute affects thousands of people and may affect the validity of
numerous decisions that may have
been taken by the Executive
Committee, some with far-reaching implications including regarding
financial benefits of the NCPA.
The dispute currently being
ventilated is being ventilated centrally between the plaintiffs and
the fourteenth defendant.
The ninth defendant and the State
defendants are not actively participating in the dispute and the
presence of the fourteenth defendant
indicates that there is a level
of division – the extent of which is unclear – even
within the Mhlanganisweni Community.
Secondly, the evidence
that has been led raises questions about the events that transpired
during the 16 October 2016 meeting and
how they were understood.
This Court has only heard the evidence of two witnesses from within a
clearly divided NCPA, and
it is has not heard from any departmental
officials or Ms Gobodo, whose representations appear to have been
instrumental to what
ensued. Thirdly, there is an existing
Court order in place made by the Gauteng High Court, by my sister
Judge Khumalo, which
concerns the functioning of the NCPA, which is
yet to be complied with. In these circumstances, this Court
must, in my view,
be deferent to the existing jurisdiction of the
High Court, preserve the integrity of existing court orders –
notably that
of Judge Khumalo – and be cautious not to make
unnecessary findings that can have dramatic implications for
thousands of
people in a deeply divided communal property association
who have not been duly heard. Fourthly, the credibility
issues
that arise in respect of this particular dispute do not permit
of ready resolution. Rather, on the limited evidence to hand, there
appears to be truth and plausibility in features of both versions
advanced, with the explanation for the divergence probably lying
not
in dishonesty but in what was understood on the occasion.
33.
In the result, I decide the first issue in
the plaintiffs’ favour on the basis that the decision the
plaintiffs rely upon
to authorise the first plaintiff to institute
the proceedings is a decision of a special general meeting and not
the impugned committee
which is asserting the powers of the Executive
Committee.
The second issue:
whether there is a resolution by the members of the NCPA authorising
the institution of the action on behalf
of the NCPA
34.
The second issue is whether there is a
resolution by the members of the NCPA authorising the institution of
the action on behalf
of the NCPA. As indicated above, the
plaintiffs rely for this purpose on the decision taken at the special
general meeting
called and held on 9 March 2019 at which the
resolution quoted in paragraph 24 above was taken. This
issue ultimately
raises whether it was competent for the NCPA to
convene a special meeting comprised only of the Mhlanganisweni
Community households,
being the only verified members at that time in
order to take the impugned decision.
35.
This Court’s jurisdiction to deal
with this issue also arises from its incidental jurisdiction
conferred by section 22 of
the Restitution Act. I am satisfied
that in this instance, it is necessary and in the interests of
justice to decide it.
36.
In essence, the Court is required to
determine how a special meeting of the NCPA must be constituted for a
valid decision of this
sort to be taken. The plaintiffs submit
that as only the members of the Mhlanganisweni Community had been
verified at that
time, only they could be present and vote.
Further, they say, it had proven impossible to convene an AGM
necessary to further
the verification processes – due to
ongoing disruptions. The fourteenth defendant submits that on a
proper interpretation
of the Constitution, the meeting could not be
composed of only the Mhlanganisweni Community.
37.
In my view, the fourteenth defendant is
correct. On an interpretation of the NCPA Constitution, a decision of
this sort would have
to be taken by the NCPA constituted of both its
constituent parts. Although the Constitution does not deal
expressly with
the scenario, I arrive at this conclusion having
regard to the language, context and purpose of the NCPA Constitution.
38.
The
law relating to the interpretation of documents was expressed in
Endumeni
Municipality
[20]
as follows:
‘
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules
of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision
appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known
to those responsible for its production. Where
more than one
meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of
all these factors. The process is objective,
not subjective.
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the
temptation to substitute what they
regard as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to
a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation; in a contractual context it is to
make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact
made. The ‘inevitable point of departure is the language
of the provision
itself’, read in context and having regard to
the purpose of the provision and the background to the preparation
and production
of the document.”
[21]
(Footnotes omitted.)
39.
In
University
of Johannesburg
,
[22]
the Constitutional Court elaborated on the principles articulated in
Endumeni
Municipality
,
emphasising the unitary nature of the interpretative process which
means that ‘interpretation is to be approached holistically:
simultaneously considering the text, context and purpose.’
[23]
The need to have regard to context and purpose arise irrespective of
any ambiguity in the words used in a contract.
[24]
While extrinsic evidence is not always admissible, and it is to be
used conservatively, ‘the unitary approach to contractual
interpretation enjoins a court to err on the side of admitting
[extrinsic evidence of context]’, even if limited weight is
ultimately to be given to it.
[25]
Under the current approach, parties ‘invariably have to adduce
evidence to establish the context and purpose of the
relevant
contractual provisions.’
[26]
40.
In
Capitec
Bank Holdings
,
[27]
the Constitutional Court further elaborated on the principles
articulated in
Endumeni
Holdings
by stating:
‘
the
triad of text, context and purpose should not be used in a mechanical
fashion. It is the relationship between the words
used, the
concepts expressed by those words and the place of the contested
provision within the scheme of the agreement (or instrument)
as a
whole that constitute the enterprise by recourse to which a coherent
and salient interpretation is determined.’
[28]
41.
The Court further emphasised that
Endumeni
Municipality
:
‘
is
not a charter for judicial constructs premised upon what a contract
should be taken to mean from a vantage point that is not
located in
the text of what the parties in fact agreed. Nor does [Endumeni
Municipality] license judicial interpretation
that imports meanings
into a contract so as to make it a better contract, or one that is
ethically preferable.’
[29]
42.
The
preamble of the NCPA Constitution makes it clear that the
Mhlanganisweni and Mavhuraka Communities have joined, and created
the
NCPA as an entity to receive all land claimed in the area known as
N’wandlamhari and to own and manage it for the benefit
of this
and future generations.
[30]
Clause 7, materially, firmly embraces the principle of equity and in
doing so contains interpretive principles.
It provides:
‘
7.1
The powers of the Association and the Executive Committee shall
be interpreted and implemented
at all times in accordance with the
overriding principle of fairness and equity.
7.2
The administration of all assets, rights and interests of the
Association shall
be conducted only for the benefit of the members of
the Association.
7.3
Members of the Association shall be dealt with in such a manner as to
ensure
that all members receive the same or similar benefits and that
any arbitrary distinction or unfair discrimination shall be avoided.
7.4
The terms and conditions of this Constitution shall be interpreted
and implemented
in a manner consistent with the spirit and objects of
the principles contained in section 9 of the Constitution.
7.5
Distribution of funds for community projects, bursaries or any other
valid cause
shall be made strictly in terms of written policies
approved by the general meeting, and shall contain provisions that
promote
substantive equality.’
43.
In terms of Clause 25, the Constitution can
only be amended with the support of two-thirds of members present,
preceded by a process
of broad consultation and on one months’
notice.
44.
It
is common cause that its first general meeting was constituted of
members of both communities. It may sensibly be assumed
(but I
do not thereby determine) that eligible voters would have been
determined by informal processes agreed to by the
de
facto
committees
of the constituent claimant groupings and rulings made, as
contemplated by Clause 8.2 of the NCPA Constitution.
[31]
There is no suggestion that any electoral system has since been
devised and adopted, as contemplated by Clause 8.12.
However,
the system would need to be compliant with the NCPA Constitution
which, amongst other requirements, treats the membership
register as
the voters roll (Clause 8.9) and, in Clause 9.4, confers the right to
vote on every member of the association who is
the head of a
household and over the age of 18 years, together with a person
nominated by that household of the opposite gender.
[32]
45.
While it stands to reason that the
membership register should ultimately substantially accord with a
list of verified members, the
register and verification list cannot
be conceptually conflated. Indeed, the definition of member in
Clause 3.9 makes it
clear that verification is not a prerequisite for
the exercise of all rights: whether that is so depends on the
context the
term ‘member’ is used in the Constitution and
may include a child member, an adult member, individual members of
households
entitled to vote at general meeting, persons registered on
the membership register as such
or
those verified as originally dispossessed persons who held right in
land in the N’wandlamhari area. And notably, Clause 9.4
itself
does not restrict the right to vote to verified members.
46.
The
NCPA was not established in circumstances where the verification
process had been finalised, in respect of either community.
In
my view, in those circumstances, if it was intended that only
verified members of the respective communities could vote at any
general meeting, the NCPA Constitution would have said so expressly
and provision would not have been made for an initial electoral
process in the terms it did and which included representatives from
both communities. Indeed, if a construction is given
that
restricts the voter’s roll to verified members in circumstances
where verification is substantially incomplete, it would
defeat the
purposes of the NCPA, compromise the electoral system that is put in
place, and undermine the principle of equity.
It would
also undermine the notion that the member’s register is only
prima
facie
proof
of membership.
[33]
47.
I accept that it may be practically
challenging to work out how the members’ register should be
comprised without resorting
to the list of verified members. And
it is possible that these practical considerations have partly
informed what has happened
in recent years. But that
approach gives undue priority to the status of being verified, and in
doing so, subverts
the Constitution’s requirements that all
those who are entitled to membership, from both communities, must be
on the members’
register, and thus able to exercise their right
to vote. It also subverts the principle of equity, because it
was bound to
mean, practically, that only persons from one community,
the Mhlanganisweni Community, can vote, to the exclusion of the
Mavhuraka
Community members.
48.
In my view, in circumstances where the
verification process has been delayed, the members’ register –
and thus the voter’s
roll – would have to be compiled in
a different way, at least pending finalisation of the verification
process and its adoption.
It would have to be compiled in a way
that includes members from both constitutive communities. The
Constitution itself
provided a solution, being that used for the
initial electoral process.
49.
While the decision to institute these
proceedings was allegedly taken in March 2019, it was very shortly
thereafter, on 9 May 2019
that the Pretoria High Court (per Judge
Khumalo) granted an order which contemplated that the verification
process be finalised
and an AGM be convened shortly thereafter.
The verification process has now long been finalised. Even on
the plaintiffs’
approach – which disputes the validity of
the 12 December 2020 AGM – there is no good reason why an AGM
could not have
been convened to regularise the position. Even
accepting, as I do, that attempts to convene an AGM have been
disrupted, the
plaintiffs had and still have recourse to remedies,
through the Department, the IEC, SAPS and ultimately the Courts.
And
there has been no effort to convene an AGM that includes
the Mavhuraka membership. On the respondents’ approach,
that
AGM has already taken place (on 12 December 2020).
Precisely how the resultant impasse arising from these divergent
positions
may now sensibly be resolved is a matter for another day
and a mediated solution may be warranted.
50.
For present purposes, the result of my
interpretation of the NCPA’s requirements is that the special
general meeting of 9
March 2019 was not properly constituted, at
least for purposes of taking a decision of the sort impugned.
This means
that there was no decision to authorise the action
on the part of the NCPA itself. It is not necessary for me to
decide whether
there may be decisions of a nature that can be taken
by a general meeting constituted by only members of one group.
That
may well be so, but even if there are, this is not such a
decision, concerning as it does the constitutive basis of the NCPA.
The third issue:
conflict of interests
51.
The third issue is whether the NCPA is
non-suited to bring the current action by reason of a conflict of
interest. This issue
is pleaded more fully in the fourteenth
defendant’s plea as follows: ’27.7.1 The [NCPA] is
constituted by the
Mhlanganisweni Community and the Mavhuraka
Community; 27.7.2 The [NCPA] has issued these action
proceedings against Mavhuraka
as the Ninth Defendant; 27.7.3 On
the other hand, in the current action proceedings, Mhlanganisweni
Community has been cited
as a co-plaintiff with the [NCPA]; 27.7.4
The [NCPA] is faced with a conflict of interest and is placed in an
invidious position
where it must choose a side between two of its
constituent members. As such, this constitutes a clear and
obvious conflict
of interest which was foreseeable before the current
action proceedings were launched. 27.7.5 Effectively, the
[NCPA] has
issued action proceedings against itself. I am
advised, which advice I accept as both true and correct, that this is
legally
impermissible, unsustainable and untenable.
Effectively, the [NCPA] is both the Plaintiff and the Defendant.’
Reasonably construed, the pleading amounts to a contention that the
institution of the proceedings was unlawful due to the conflict
of
interests. During the case management process, I engaged the
parties on whether this is not an issue that can be decided
as a
question of law or with reference merely to the terms of the NCPA
Constitution. The parties indicated that it could
not be as
their contentions rest in part on the circumstances present within
the NCPA.
52.
In
my view, the fourteenth defendant’s contention would have had
traction if the decision to litigate was a decision taken
by the
Executive Committee. The Executive Committee was then
constituted only of members of the Mhlanganisweni Community.
The Executive Committee is obliged to act in a fiduciary manner, yet
its decision served to promote the interests of only the
Mhlanganisweni Community members to the exclusion of the Mavhuraka
Community members contrary to the principle of equity.
[34]
53.
However,
in this case, the decision was taken by the NCPA membership, who are
not precluded from advancing their own interests when
voting on
matters properly placed before them in accordance with the
Constitution and in a properly constituted meeting. The
difficulty here is that, as I have already found, the relevant
meeting was not properly constituted. In practice, this meant
that only the interests of the Mhlanganisweni Community members could
be and were advanced. But while this serves to frustrate
and
compromise the interests of the Mavhuraka Community members, the
vitiating reason is their exclusion from the meeting in the
first
place.
[35]
Conclusion, order and
costs
54.
In the result, I have concluded that the
first plaintiff was not authorised to institute these proceedings
because the meeting of
members at which the decision to litigate was
taken was not properly constituted in that it excluded members of the
Mavhuraka Community.
In short, the NCPA has not authorised the
action.
55.
Subject
to
Biowatch
Trust
,
[36]
this Court only orders costs in special circumstances dealing as it
does with social legislation. The fourteenth defendant,
who has
succeeded, did not seek any costs against the plaintiffs. The
State defendants do not seek costs. The first
to ninth
defendants sought their costs against the plaintiffs. This
request might have been justified had the issue been
raised and
ventilated by these parties, but it was not and the fourteenth
defendant does not seek any costs.
56.
Finally,
the plaintiffs contended that this Court must make a costs order in
their favour adverse to the Minister and the Department
in
circumstances where their counsel, Mr Ogunronbi, has – they
submitted – repeatedly failed to comply with directives
of this
Court. The submission is advanced in supplementary heads
constituting some 22 pages delivered after the hearing.
The submissions were delivered ostensibly in response to the Court’s
directive that the plaintiffs may respond in written
heads of
argument to various questions raised by Mr Ogunronbi during his oral
submissions in the hearing
[37]
and to an issue raised by Mr Springveldt.
[38]
The Court made the directive after Mr Musandiwa, for the
plaintiffs, objected to Mr Ogunronbi’s submissions,
and after
hearing the parties in respect of the objection. Notably, the
plaintiffs dealt in their submissions only scantily
with the
questions raised by Mr Ogunronbi (about five pages). The bulk of the
submissions are addressed to the complaint about
Mr Ogunronbi’s
conduct.
57.
In a
letter addressed to this Court, Mr Ogunronbi objected to the
submission, and indicated that if the Court was to entertain them,
he
and his clients would require an opportunity to deal with them fully
including by way of affidavit. The objection
was again
raised during a case management conference held on 4 July 2023.
During that conference it was confirmed that the
main action would
not be recommencing on 17 July 2023 as pleadings (which reopened)
have not yet closed and the parties are not
ready. I then
indicated to Mr Ogunronbi that I would afford a further hearing if
the submissions were to be entertained.
[39]
58.
In my view, the submissions cannot be entertained.
During the course of the hearing itself, Mr Musandiwa fervently
objected
to Mr Ogunrunbi’s submissions. I dealt
with the objection by affording the plaintiffs an opportunity to
respond
to what Mr Ogunronbi had said in written submissions. It must
be noted that the Court is appreciative of the questions raised by
Mr
Ogunronbi during his oral submissions and the note then produced.
The plaintiffs had a fair opportunity to deal with them.
The
plaintiffs also rely on conduct of Mr Ogunronbi unrelated to this
hearing. I am of the view that this it is not
appropriate
to raise these complaints now. First, the plaintiffs take issue
with conduct relating to a recent application
to compel further
particulars. But this Court has already adjudicated the issue
in dealing with costs in that judgment.
Second, the plaintiffs
take issue with conduct in a hearing of an urgent application of 10
February 2022. These costs
are to be dealt with as costs
in the main action. In conclusion, I emphasise that this
approach does not mean that
this Court will not censure the conduct
of parties through costs awards in an appropriate case or at an
appropriate time.
59.
The following order is made:
59.1.
The first objection relating to the legal
competence of the Executive Committee to sue on behalf of the NCPA is
dismissed.
59.2.
The second objection is upheld and it is
declared that the first plaintiff has not duly resolved to authorise
the action on behalf
of the NCPA pursuant to the decision of 9 March
2020.
59.3.
The third objection relating to whether the
NCPA is non-suited to bring the action by reason of a conflict of
interests is dismissed.
59.4.
Each party shall carry its own costs.
______________________
S Cowen
JUDGE
Land Claims Court
I
agree
_________________
B
Padayachi
ASSESSOR
Appearances:
14th Defendant:
L Siyo and
T Pooe instructed by Legal Aid, South Africa.
Plaintiffs:
Ms H Barnes SC and Mr M Musandiwa
instructed by Malatji &
Co Attorneys
1
st
to 9
th
Defendants: Adv
P Springveldt
instructed by G W Mashele
Attorneys
10
th
and 11
th
Defendants: Adv S Ogunronbi and Adv L Phasha
instructed
by the State Attorney
12
th
and 13
th
Defendants: Adv C Marule
instructed
by the State Attorney
[1]
The
issue of costs is dealt with in a brief judgment delivered on 13
June 2023.
[2]
The
Court made arrangements during these two days to sit late and
commence early on 14 June 2023.The parties declined to use the
addition time offered on 13 June 2023.
[3]
Who
are stated to be listed in an Annexure B but the Court has not been
supplied with Annexure B.
[4]
Defined
in Clause 3.10 to mean ‘the register of individuals and
households who are members of the association which shall
be
established and maintained by the Executive committee through a
subcommittee specifically tasked with ensuring the integrity
of the
membership register.’
[5]
Clause
8.2 which provides: ‘The Executive Committee shall
establish and maintain a membership register which shall
be updated
annually. This function may be delegated to a specific
subcommittee which shall advise the executive on all
membership
issues.’ The duty to review the membership regularly is
further regulated in Clause 9.8 and 9.9, which provide:
Clause 9.8 provides:
‘The membership register shall be reviewed annually within one
(1) month after the Annual General
Meeting, and such amendments
shall be made thereto as may, at the time of such review, be
necessary to maintain the register
as correctly as possible,
reflecting the members and the particulars of such members as
required in terms of this Constitution
and the decisions of the
Annual General Meeting.’
Clause 9.9 provides:
‘Any member admitted to the Association at any time after the
date of the first establishment of the
register shall be entered
into the register immediately after the approval by the next Annual
General meeting.’
[6]
Clause
8.7 which provides: ‘The membership register shall
indicate which members belong to which household.’
[7]
Clause
8.8 which provides: A household shall be considered
established in terms of the rules of customary law.
[8]
Clause
8.3
[9]
Clause
8.4 which provides: ‘A decision of the Executive
Committee on any matter relating to membership shall be subject
to
ratification by a general meeting.
[10]
Clause
8.12 provides: ‘As soon as is practical after the first
election, and after proper consultation within the community,
the
Executive Committee must present an electoral system to a general
meeting for adoption, which electoral system shall become
an
addendum to this Constitution.’
[11]
See
Clause 11.5 which provides: ‘The Executive Committee is
elected by voting members of the Association at a general
meeting.’
[12]
It
provides: ‘Child headed households shall be allowed
representation in the Association through an adult or guardian
nominated by the household. The Executive committee has a duty
to ensure that child headed households can access and enjoy
all the
rights of membership.’
[13]
Clause
11.8 provides: ‘A member of the Executive Committee
shall hold office for a period of three (3) years from
the date of
election or until he / she is obliged to vacate the office of the
Committee. Individual members of the committee
are eligible to
be elected for a second consecutive term. Thereafter such
member is not eligible for a period of three
years.’
[14]
One
material issue raised in this regard is that it was only during
evidence that the alleged involvement in the disputed events
of
persons from the Commission and Department became apparent as it was
not foreshadowed in the plaintiffs’ witness summaries.
[15]
Mr
Mnisi’s version is at least partly corroborated by the content
of a report from the Chief Land Claims Commissioner to
Parliament’s
Portfolio Committee on Rural Development and Land Reform dated 20
February 2019. In this regard,
Mr Mnisi referred to the
report during his testimony (Annexure DMS18 to the founding
affidavit of the fourteenth defendant’s
intervention
application) and confirmed that Parliament was informed that the
committee that was elected was interim in nature
and elected with
the objectives he had stated.
[16]
It
is only very recently – in response to a recent alleged
disruption in October 2022 – that the prospect of such
action
has been intimated.
[17]
Notably,
Mr Mnisi is not a member of the Mavhuraka Community. He is a
member of the Mhlanganisweni Community, but amongst
those who seek
to defend the unitary objectives of the NCPA.
[18]
See
below at para 32.
[19]
The position will be altered when the Land Court Bill, recently
passed by Parliament, is in force.
[20]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) (
Endumeni
Municipality
).
[21]
Endumeni
Municipality
at
para 18 cited with approval by the Constitutional Court in
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Limited and
Others
[2018]
ZACC 33
at para 29
.
See too
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176; [2014] 1 All SA 517 (SCA); 2014 (2) SA 494 (SCA).
[22]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and another
[2021]
ZACC 13
; 2021(8) BCLR 807 (CC); 2021(6) SA 1 (CC) (
University
of Johannesburg)
.
[23]
At
para 65.
[24]
At
para 66.
[25]
At
para 68.
[26]
At
para 67.
[27]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and others
[2021]
ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA); 2022(1) SA 100 (SCA).
[28]
At
para 25.
[29]
At
para 26. See too para 50.
[30]
See
para 8 above.
[31]
See
para 13 above.
[32]
See
para 14 above noting that special provision is made for child headed
households.
[33]
Clause
9.10. See para 12 above.
[34]
Clause
11.2 of the NCPA Constitution: ‘The Committee members
shall act jointly in a fiduciary manner in relation to
the
Association.’
Robinson
v Randfontein Estate Gold Mining Co Ltd
1925
AD 168
at 178-9. On the analogous position when a person in a
fiduciary relationship purchases immovable property in respect of
which
that relationship applies, such as under the law of trusts,
was recently restated
Kuttel
v Master of the High Court and others
2023 (3) SA 498
(SCA) at paras 30 to 36 where the relevant
authorities are set out and which affirms
Hoppen
v Shub
1987(3) SA 201 (C) at 210
.
See
too
Grobbelaar
v Grobbelaar
1959(4)
SA 719 (A) and
Trustees
for the time being of the DA Fordyce Testamentary Trust v Weber and
Le Clezio
(unreported) Case No 42094/2014) delivered 13 December 2019 at para
66.
[35]
I
do not deal with all requirements necessary to place an item of this
sort on an agenda or the requirements of a valid electoral
system,
as these were not in issue. Cf
Bafokeng
Land Buyers Association and others v Royal Bafokeng Nation and
others
[2016]
ZANWHC 45.
[36]
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.’
[37]
These
were then reduced to writing. They centrally concerned how
properly to interpret the NCPA Constitution and whether
the
Mavhuraka Community members were properly excluded from
decision-making since 2016.
[38]
Concerning
whether the decision taken in the form set out in paragraph 24 in
fact authorises the litigation in the form that it
has ensued.
[39]
At
that stage, it was intended that this judgment would be delivered
shortly thereafter. However, due to a burglary, this
was not
possible.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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