Case Law[2023] ZALCC 29South Africa
Els v Director General: The Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC225/2016) [2023] ZALCC 29 (11 September 2023)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
11 September 2023
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Land Claims Court
South Africa: Land Claims Court
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Land Claims Court
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZALCC 29
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Els v Director General: The Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC225/2016) [2023] ZALCC 29 (11 September 2023)
Els v Director General: The Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC225/2016) [2023] ZALCC 29 (11 September 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALCC/Data/2023_29.html
sino date 11 September 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case no:
LCC225/2016
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
11/09/2023
SIGNATURE
Before
the Honourable Flatela J
In
the matter between:
RAYMOND
ELS
APPLICANT
And
THE DIRECTOR
GENERAL:
1
st
RESPONDENT
THE DEPARTMENT OF
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT AND LAND
REFORM
THOSI
SIPHO SHABANGU
2
nd
RESPONDENT
MBONGENI
ELVIS
MNISI
3
RD
RESPONDENT
ZODWA
SINA MNISI
4
TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
-Interest-
claim for mora interest on purchase price where there was
unreasonable delay in the transfer of the property.
FLATELA
J:
Introduction
[1]
Central to this interlocutory application is whether the first
respondent,
a purchaser of the applicant’s immovable property
is liable to pay mora interest on the purchase price of the immovable
property
where there were unreasonable delays in finalising the
transfer of the property. The delays were caused by the internal
administrative
issues of the first respondent.
[2]
The Applicant, a retired farmer sold to the first respondent, The
Minister
of Rural in Development and Land Reform his property fully
described as
Portion 7 of the Farm Wonderboom 500
Registration Division, HUD, Measuring 266, 4469 Hectares.
The
property was subject to a claim lodged
by the
second to the fourth respondents
in terms of
the
Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act No. 3 of 1996 (LTA). The second to
fourth respondent instituted an action before this court
against the
Applicant as the first defendant and the first respondent as the
second defendant for an order declaring them to be
Labour tenants in
the subject land and for an award of Land in LCC 225/2016 (the main
action).
[3]
After the parties exchanged the pleadings in the main application,
the
Applicant and the first respondent engaged in negotiations to
resolve the matter. The Applicant availed the property to the first
respondent for purchase for full and final settlement of the matter,
the first respondent agreed to acquire the land from the Applicant.
The Applicant, the first and second to the fourth respondent
concluded a settlement agreement, the terms of which were negotiated
and agreed upon by the parties. On 3 November 2020, the settlement
agreement was made an order of Court.
[4]
The first respondent failed to comply with the terms of the
settlement
agreement which was made an order of Court.
[5]
On 01 November 2022 the applicant
approached this court in terms of Rule 37(1)(b) seeking inter-alia an
order in the following terms:
3. An order directing the
first respondent to pay the compensation to which the applicant is
entitled as per the agreement reached,
in the amount of R2 800
000.00 (TWO MILLION EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND RAND
)
plus
interest on the set amount calculated in terms of the provisions of
the Prescribed Interest Act Act 55 of 1975 from 27 June
2022 to the
date of registration of transfer
of Portion 7 of the Farm
Wonderboom 500 Registration Division, HUD, .measuring. 266, 4469
hectares, in favour of the Communal Property
Association to the trust
account of Cox &Partners Conveyancers of Vryheid, to be held by
the said conveyancers in trust until
date of registration of transfer
of the aforesaid property in favour of the aforesaid CPA, upon which
date of registration they
said amount plus interest calculated as
aforesaid until the date of registration, will be due and payable to
the applicant. The
aforesaid Conveyancers shall, upon receipt of the
set amount plus interest, deposit the funds into a special
interest-bearing account
investment on their trust account, the
interest earned on such a deposit to be for the credit of the state;
(my emphasis)
5. That the first
respondent be directed to pay the cost of the Applicant for this
interlocutory application on a scale between
attorney and own
client.’
[6]
On 27 February 2023, the matter was enrolled on
the unopposed roll before Cowen J, the first respondent’s legal
representatives
appeared and tendered to pay costs of the Applicant
on a party and party scale. The court granted an order compelling the
first
respondent to pay the Applicant the compensation he is entitled
to and the first respondent was further ordered to do whatever is
necessary to give effect to the order.
[7]
The issue of interest payable on the purchase
price and the disputed scale of the tendered costs was postponed.
[8]
The costs issue has been resolved by the parties.
The parties have since agreed on party and party scale.
[9]
The only remaining issue for determination is
whether the first respondent is liable for the payment of interest
from the date of
demand to the date of payment of the purchase price
of the property.
Settlement
Agreement
[10]
The material terms of the settlement agreement
were as follows:
“
4.
The Second Defendant will, within hundred and
twenty (120) days from the date hereof formulate and present a
written offer to the
first defendant c/o the first Defendant’s
Attorneys Messrs Cox and Partners, Vryheid, which written offer will
reflect what
amount the Second Defendant is prepared to pay the first
defendant as just and equitable compensation for the property against
registration of transfer.
5. The first defendant
shall within fourteen (14) calendar days from the date upon which the
second defendant will present the written
offer to the first
defendant, respond to the offer in writing and will deliver its
response to the second defendant, c/o the head
of the provincial
offices of the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform
dealing with the matter at 1[...] H[...] H[...]
Street
Pietermaritzburg.
11. As soon as the first
defendant and the second defendant have agreed on the amount of
compensation payable to the first defendant,
or in absence of
agreement, as soon as the amount of compensation has been determined
by the court, the first defendant will be
entitled to appoint its
conveyancers Cox & Partners, Vryheid to attend to the transfer of
the property to the CPA to be created
for the benefit of the
plaintiffs.
12. In order to ensure
that registration of transfer of the property from the first
defendant to the CPA shall be finalized as soon
as reasonably
possible, all the parties undertake to do whatever is necessary and
to sign whatever documentation may be required
of them to be signed,
without any undue or unreasonable delay. As soon as such
documentation will be submitted to them for signature.
13. Should the
registration of transfer of the property and therefore the payment of
the compensation payable to the first defendant
be delayed
unreasonably as a result of any act or omission on the part of the
second defendant and not by any act or omissions
of the first
defendant, the first defendant will through the conveyancers, be
entitled to demand in writing due and proper compliance
from the
second defendant within (fourteen) 14 days failing which, the second
defendant will be liable to pay the first defendant
interest
calculated in terms of prescribed rates Act 55 of 1975 on the full
outstanding amount of the compensation payable to the
first defendant
in terms here of, calculated from .the date of written demand to the
date of payment of the full amount of compensation
to the said first
defendant. The written demand, aforesaid shall be forwarded to the
Chief Director: by e-mail. T[...], alternatively
by hand Delivery
personally to him at 1[...] J[...] M[...] Street, Pretoria”
[11]
On 14 June 2021, the applicant was provided
with a Provisional Valuation Certificate (POV) received from the
offices of Valuer General
for consideration of the amount of
R28 00 000.00 (Two million Eight Hundred Thousand Rand) as
recommendation for the
purchase price for the property.
[12]
On 26 July 2021, an offer to purchase
reflecting the amount of R2 800 000.00 was sent to the
applicant’s legal representatives
for his consideration. On 10
August 2021, the applicant accepted the offer against registration of
transfer of the property in
question and as agreed between the
parties, the applicant appointed his attorneys Cox and Partners as
Conveyancers to attend to
the transfer of the property to a Communal
Property Association (CPA).
[13]
On 22 October 2021, the Applicant’s
Conveyancer began the process of registration of property by engaging
with one Ms. Pillay,
the Deputy Director of Legal of the Department
of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, Pietermaritzburg
through correspondence
by email wherein Miss Pillay was provided with
copies of the offer to purchase dated 26 July 2021 and the acceptance
by the applicant
dated 10 August 2021.
[14]
On 11 November 2021, Ms. Pillay responded
to the Conveyancers advising them that the transaction was not yet
approved by the National
Land Acquisition and Allocation Control
Committee (NLAAA) and would only be approved in the New Year.
[15]
On 16 May 2022, the Conveyancers dispatched
a follow-up e-mail to Miss Pillay requesting an update regarding this
matter, Miss Pillay
responded on the same day, stating that she still
awaited approval for the project. On 16 May 2022, the Conveyancers
sent another
email requesting her to indicate when approval could be
expected. No response was received.
[16]
On 27 June 2022, a letter of demand was sent
to the first respondent by the Applicant’s Conveyancers,
calling upon the
first respondent to pay the purchase price due to
the applicant to his Conveyancers, Cox and Partners in the amount of
R2 800 000.00
(Two Million Eight Hundred Thousand Rand only) and
further to provide them with the details of the Communal Property
Association
(CPA) to which the property should be
transferred to within 14 days from the date of receipt failing
which the first
respondent would be held liable to pay interest
Calculated in terms of Act 55 of 1975 on the full outstanding amount
of the compensation,
calculated from that date of demand to the date
of payment of the full amount of compensation due.
[17]
The only response that the Applicant’s
attorneys received regarding the demand was that the first respondent
awaited approval
for the transfer from the National Land Acquisition
and Allocation Control Committee.
[18]
On 1 November 2022, the Applicant launched this
application seeking inter -alia the payment of interest from the date
of demand
to the date of payment.
[19]
On 8 November 2022, after the launch of these
proceedings, Ms. Pillay provided the Applicant's attorneys with the
details of the
CPA and draft sale agreement for consideration. She
informed the attorneys that the department has now received approval
from the
National Land Allocation Committee to proceed with the
transfer.
[20]
Upon perusal and consideration of the draft sale
agreement the Applicant’s attorneys discovered that the CPA
mentioned in
the draft sale agreement was incorrect. On 6th December
2022, the Applicant’s conveyancers were provided with an
amended
sale agreement and a further amended sale agreement was
received from the first respondent on Friday 27th January 2023.
[21]
The Applicant’s Conveyancers have since
received the guarantee on 18 April 2023.
[22]
The Applicant contends that he is suffering and continues to suffer
severe financial damages
and prejudice due to the unreasonable delays
caused by the first respondent in the finalization of the
transaction.
[23]
He has two bonds registered against the property which he is liable
to pay until the bonds
are cancelled upon registration of transfer.
The Conveyancers have informed the bondholders that they will be paid
from the transaction
but due to the delays in finalisation of the
transaction, the bondholders are threatening to sue him.
[24]
One of the bondholders First National Bank, offered to cancel about
R600 000 of interest
on the amount owed if the bond owing was
settled before January 2022, failing which the whole amount owing
plus interest would
become due and payable. The Applicant failed to
settle the bond before the end of January 2022 and the Applicant
avers that the
Department’s delay is causing him serious
financial hardships.
[25]
The Applicant contends that there has been an
unreasonable delay in the registration of the property and no
acceptable reasons have
been provided for undue delays therefore
payment of compensation to him as a result of the act and omission of
the second defendant
therefore, the plaintiff is entitled to payment
of interest from the date of the letter of demand until the date of
final payment
of the compensation.
[26]
Mr B E Ntuli, the Director in Tenure Reform Implementation Department
filed an answering
affidavit opposing the relief sought by the
application for the payment of interest from the date of demand to
the date of payment.
It is contended on behalf of the First
Respondent that the Respondent’s officials including the
deponent have always communicated
with the Applicant’s
Conveyancers regarding the compliance with the court order and have
always been informed of the progress
thereof.
[27]
It is contended further on behalf of the first respondent that an
offer could only be made
after the property concerned have been
valued and
a CPA could not be established without
the property having been valued. It is also stated on behalf of the
first respondent that
the CPA could not be established without an
offer being made and accepted.
[28]
The first respondent avers that the Provisional Communal Property
Association had been
established in compliance with Paragraph 9 and
10 of the Settlement Agreement and it was impossible for the first
respondent to
establish and register a Communal Property Association
before a valuation has been done and an offer made and accepted. The
period
of sixty days mentioned in the settlement agreement was not
reasonable because the offer had to be made within a period of 120
days from the date of settlement.
[29]
The first respondent alleges that it was awaiting approval from the
National Land Acquisition
and Allocation Control Committee and the
amendments had to be made for the approval to accord with their
standard and the applicants
were informed of these procedures.
[30]
In his reply, the applicant avers that the CPA was only registered on
1 December 2022 a
year and four months after the valuation was
completed, the offer to purchase was accepted on 10 August 2021 but
the request for
funding was only made on 18 October 2022, a year and
approximately two months after the offer was accepted and the
applicant was
not provided with reasons for the delay and the demand
was ignored.
[31]
The
Applicant submits that it had placed the first respondent on mora on
27 June 2022, the first respondent was in mora and its
failure to
comply with demand within the time frames entitles the applicant
payment of the interest on the purchase price from
the day. For this
proposition, the applicant refers to C
rookes
Brothers Ltd v Regional Land Claims Commission for the Province of
Mpumalanga and Others
[1]
where the court held:
[17] The term
mora
simply means delay or default. When the contract fixes the time
for performance,
mora
(
mora ex re
) arises from the
contract itself and no demand (
interpellatio
) is necessary to
place the debtor in
mora
. In contrast, where the contract does
not contain an express or tacit stipulation in regard to the date
when performance is due,
a demand (
interpellatio
) becomes
necessary to put the debtor in
mora
. This is referred to as
mora ex persona
[12]
In contrast where the contract does not contain an express or tacit
stipulation in regard to
the date when performance is due, a demand
(interpellatio
)
becomes necessary to put the debtor in
mora.
This is referred to as
mora
ex persona
.
The debtor does not necessarily fall into
mora
if he or she does not perform immediately or within a reasonable
time. In this situation
mora
arises
only upon failure by the debtor to comply with a valid demand by the
creditor.
Mora
ex persona
is so referred as it requires an act of a person (the creditor) to
bring it into existence.
[2]
……
The
purpose of
mora
interest is therefore to place the creditor in
the position that he or she would have been in had the debtor
performed in terms
of the undertaking. Here a demand (
interpellatio
)
was necessary to place the respondents in
mora
.
[32]
The
applicants further referred to
Mokala
Beleggings & Another v Minister of Rural Development and Land
Reform & others
[3]
,
where the court stated that:
‘
. . . In Linton
v Corser supra the court held the purchaser liable for mora interest
(it was a case of mora ex persona) for delaying
the signing of the
transfer documents and the delivery of the necessary guarantees. Mora
in the present matter concerned a delay
in the payment of the
purchase price as a result of the department's delay in having the
registration of transfer effected by its
conveyancers. As stated, the
fact of and the reason for the delay were common cause. The delay was
deliberate, due to the department's
financial constraints and
resultant inability to pay the purchase price. Of course, our law
does not require fault on the part
of a debtor for contractual
damages claim. All that is required is proof that the debtor is in
mora.'
[33]
The liability to pay interest is because of the failure to pay on
demand. It is common
cause that the first respondent was placed on
mora on 27 June 2022. When it comes to the State obligations in terms
of performance
for rights which are derived directly from the
constitution, in
Mokala Beleggings
(supra) Majiedt JA said,
albeit in the context of land restitution, but however applicable
here to, that
‘
It
may well be that the department is under severe strain to meet the
financial (and, it seems, the administrative) demands imposed
by the
land reform process. The restitution of land under the
Restitution
of Land Rights
Act 22 of 1994
,
is not only a constitutional imperative but a highly emotive issue as
well. Considerable circumspection, diligence and sensitivity
are
required on the part of all concerned, including departmental
officials. Agreements to purchase land for restoration to
dispossessed
communities should be honoured in accordance with the
terms agreed upon, lest the already demanding challenges of the
process are
further exacerbated.’
[34]
It cannot be gainsaid that there has been delay in performance. The
respondent’s
submissions stand to be rejected.
[35]
In the results the following order is granted:
1. The
First Respondent is liable to pay interest on the sum of
R2 800 000.00
(TWO MILLION EIGHT HUNDRED
THOUSAND RAND)
tempora morae
at the Prescribed Rate of
Interest Act from 27 June 2022 to the date of payment.
2. The
First Respondent shall pay the applicant’s costs inclusive of
the costs of 27 February 2023 on party
and party scale.
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or their representatives by email. The date and time
for the hand
down is deemed to be 10H00 on this 11 September 2023
.
L
FLATELA
JUDGE
LAND
CLAIMS COURT
Appearances
For
the Applicant
Ms
Fritze
Instructed
by
Cox and Partners
For
the Respondent
Adv
Nqala CM
Instructed
by
State
Attorneys, Kwa-Zulu Natal
Date
of Hearing:
08
June 2023
Date
of Judgement:
11
September 2023
[1]
2013
(2) SA 259
(SCA) at paragraph 17.
[2]
5(1)
LAWSA
para 222 at 301.
[3]
2012
(4) SA 22
(SCA) para 8.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Nzimande and Others v Director General of the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC41/2011) [2022] ZALCC 47 (8 July 2022)
[2022] ZALCC 47Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Selahle and Others (LCC137/2022) [2022] ZALCC 43 (25 November 2022)
[2022] ZALCC 43Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Bisset v Minister of the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC171/2021) [2023] ZALCC 11 (31 March 2023)
[2023] ZALCC 11Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Department Of Rural Development And Land Reform and Others v Jacobs and Another (LCC19/2022) [2023] ZALCC 5 (1 March 2023)
[2023] ZALCC 5Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Poti and Others v Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (205/2021; 19/2022) [2025] ZALCC 6 (21 January 2025)
[2025] ZALCC 6Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar