Case Law[2022] ZALCC 1South Africa
Sehole v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC288/ 2017) [2022] ZALCC 1 (8 February 2022)
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
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZALCC 1
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Sehole v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC288/ 2017) [2022] ZALCC 1 (8 February 2022)
Sehole v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC288/ 2017) [2022] ZALCC 1 (8 February 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALCC/Data/2022_1.html
sino date 8 February 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case
No: LCC288/ 2017
Date
of hearing: 13 September 2021
Date
of judgment: 8 February 2022
In
the matter between:
SEKHOANE
BENJAMIN
SEHOLE
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
First Respondent
AND
LAND REFORM
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS
COMMISSIONER
Second Respondent
SAMUEL
TSOLO AND
OTHER
Third Respondent
TSOLO
FAMILIES
S
SLIAS SEBITLOANE &
OTHERS
Fourth Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, NORTH WEST
Fifth
Respondent
NALEDI
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Sixth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF AGRICULTURE
Seventh Respondent
NORTH
WEST DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Eighth Respondent
CONSERVATION
AND ENVIRONMENT
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Ninth
Respondent
BOIKHUCO
COMMUNAL
PROPERTY
Tenth Respondent
ASSOCIATION
BEN
SEHOLE COMMUNAL PROPERTY
Eleventh
Respondent
ASSOCIATION
JUDGMENT
BARNES AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
This application
concerns the farm Villa Franca 680 IN, situated in the district of
Vryburg in the North West Province.
2.
Three families lodged
land claims in respect of the farm Villa Franca, namely: the Sehole
family, the Tsolo-Maine family and the
Sebitloane family.
3.
All three claims were
accepted as valid in terms of Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of
1994 (“the Restitution Act”)
and were duly published in
the Government Gazette.
4.
During or about 2007,
the claims were settled on the basis that the farm Villa Franca would
be subdivided and a portion thereof
transferred to each of the three
families. Each of the three families would also receive certain
additional adjoining land.
5.
Overall,
in terms of the settlement, each family was to receive the following
land:
5.1
the
Tsolo-Maine
family would receive Portion 2 of Villa Franca 680 IN and Portion 1
Weltevreden 681 IN;
5.2
the Sebitloane family would receive
Portions 3 and 4 of Villa Franca 680 IN and Portion 3 of Oreillys Pan
682 IN; and
5.3
the Sehole family would receive the
remaining extent of Villa Franca 680 IN and Portion 1 of
Hartebeespoort 723 IN.
6.
The Sebitloane family
formed the Boikhuco Communal Property Association (“CPA”)
in order to take transfer of the land
awarded to it in settlement of
its land claim, that is, the land described in paragraph 5.2 above.
The Boikhuco CPA is cited as
the tenth respondent in this
application.
7.
In
the result however, and for reasons which are not made clear in this
application, the farm Villa Franca was not subdivided as
intended and
the entire farm Villa Franca was transferred to the Boikhuco CPA.
This was done in error. Importantly, all the
parties to this
application accept that this was done in error and accept further
that the error needs to be rectified.
8.
It is against this
background that the present application is brought.
THE
RELIEF SOUGHT BY THE APPLICANT
9.
The applicant is Mr
Sekhoane Benjamin Sehole. He is the grandson of the late Mr Benjamin
Polo Sehole who lodged the Sehole land
claim in respect of the farm
Villa Franca.
10.
The applicant seeks an
order in the following terms:
10.1
“
That
the claim lodged and filed under Villa Franca 680 IN by the Applicant
be declared valid and binding in effect.
10.2
An
order declaring the First, Second, Seventh and Ninth respondents to
comply with the subdivision of the Farm Villa France 680
IN,
following the Research Report no. 14/2002 of the farm Villa Franca
680, situated in the district of Vryburg, North West Province
with
reference number; BB012 and BB043 and agreement reached thereto.
10.3
Declaring
that the entire farm registration made with the Fifth Respondent on
behalf of the Fourth Respondent, Sebitloane’s
family, the,
Boikhuco CPE Trust, be cancelled, reversed and be declared null and
void abinitio,
10.4
Declaring
that the First, Second, Seventh and Ninth Respondents are
within a period of Thirty (30) days to commence with the
Transfer and
registration of the farm Villa Franca by subdivided (sic) amongst the
three claimants as per agreement reached.
10.5
An
Order directing the First, Second, Seventh and Ninth Respondents to
comply with agreement and/or decision of subdividing, transfer
and
registration of the farm to be in accordance with the subdivisions
that existed at the time of dispossession and in accordance
to
the portions and extent of each respective family as follows:
10.5.1
Tsolo
Maine with
portion 2 of Villa
Franca 680 IN and Portion 1 Weltevreden 681 IN;
10.5.2
Sebitloane
family, Portion 3 and 4 of Villa Franca 680 IN and portion 3 of
Oreillys Pan 682 IN; and
10.5.3
Sehole
family, being R/E of of Villa Franca 680 IN and Portion 1 of
Hartebeespoort 723 IN, with extent of, 1435 8792 hectares, be
transferred and registered into the Applicant’s family trust,
Sehole Family Trust.
10.6
Directing
the First, Second, Seventh and Ninth Respondents to pay the costs of
this application on attorney and client scale, and
such costs to be
paid by the said Respondents jointly and severally with the one
paying the other to be absolved.”
THE DISPUTE AT HAND
11.
As stated above, all
parties to this application agree that the farm Villa Franca was
transferred to the Boikhuco CPA in error and
that it ought to have
been subdivided and transferred to the three families as per the
settlement set out above. All parties further
agree that this error
needs to be rectified. This agreement is recorded in an Order granted
by this Court pursuant to a pre-hearing
conference held between the
parties on 2 November 2020. Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the Order read as
follows:
1.
In this order:
1.1
‘
The
property’ means all of the properties that were transferred to
the tenth respondent as a result of the settlement of the
land claims
lodged on behalf of the Sehole, Tsolo Maine and Sebitloane families
in respect of the Farm Villa Franca 680 IN.
1.2
‘
The
three families’ mean the Sehole, Tsolo-Maine and Sebitloane
families intended to benefit from the settlement of the claims.
1.3
‘
The
state respondents’ means the first, second and ninth
respondents.
2.
The parties
record their agreement as follows:
2.1
The
property was, prior to the launch of these proceedings, erroneously
transferred to the 10
th
respondent, Boikhuco CPA, in settlement of the land claims of the
three families.
2.2
The
property was intended to be transferred in separate parts to the
three families.
2.3
It
is desirable that the properties be transferred as intended.”
12.
The first, second and ninth
respondents have filed affidavits in which they state that they stand
ready to facilitate the subdivision
of the farm Villa Franca and
transfer the relevant portions to the three families, as was
intended in terms of the settlement.
The state respondents state
further that once the subdivision has taken place, the Tsolo Maine
family’s portion shall be
transferred to the Tsolo Maine Family
Trust, which has been established for this purpose, and the
Sebitloane family’s portion
shall be transferred to the
Boikhuco CPA.
13.
It is in respect of the Sehole
family that the problem arises. And this gives rise to the dispute at
hand. The dispute is a narrow
one. It pertains solely to whom the
“Sehole land” is to be awarded.
14.
The applicant contends that he is
the sole beneficiary of the Sehole land claim. On this basis, he
contends that the Sehole land
falls to be transferred to the Sehole
Family Trust, which comprises only of his nuclear family members.
15.
The first, second and ninth
respondents dispute this. They point out that the dispossessed person
in respect of the Sehole family
was the late Benjamin Polo
Sehole (“Mr Sehole”). Mr Sehole had four children: Tefo
Sehole, Mercy Thabede, Winifred
Sedumedi and Olive Mabathu Malusi.
They are Mr Sehole’s direct descendants in respect of the land
claim and accordingly the
beneficiaries thereof. Tefo Sehole has
since passed away and the applicant is his son. All of this is set
out in the answering
papers filed on behalf of the first, second and
ninth respondents. It is also clearly borne out by the record of the
Sehole land
claim which serves before this Court.
16.
The applicant contends that
notwithstanding the above, and for reasons which are not made clear,
the state respondents in this application,
viz the first, second and
ninth respondents “declared” him the sole beneficiary of
the Sehole land claim. The state
respondents categorically deny this
in their papers and there is no evidence of this on the record.
17.
The other Sehole family members also
deny the applicant’s contentions in this regard. They have
formed the Ben Sehole Communal
Property Association, the eleventh
respondent herein, through which they seek to take transfer of the
Sehole land.
18.
The state respondents are clear in
their position that once an entity has been established (whether it
be a trust or a CPA) in which
all beneficiaries of the Sehole land
claim are represented, they will facilitate the transfer of the
Sehole land to that entity.
This is in the Court’s view
precisely what ought to happen in this case.
19.
There is no evidence before this
Court that the applicant is the sole beneficiary of the Sehole land
claim and the applicant’s
contentions to this effect cannot be
accepted. The applicant is therefore not entitled to an order
directing that the Sehole land
be transferred to the Sehole Family
Trust as sought in his Notice of Motion. The applicant is also not
entitled to the more general
relief sought in his Notice of Motion as
it is entirely unnecessary. The land claims of the Sehole,
Tsolo-Maine and Sebitloane
families in respect of the farm Villa
Franca have already been found to be valid. Furthermore, the state
respondents accept that
the farm Villa Franca was transferred to the
Boikhuco CPA in error and that this needs to be rectified by
subdividing the Farm
and transferring the relevant portions to the
three families as intended in terms of the settlement. This has
already been
recorded in an Order of this Court and it would serve no
purpose for it to be repeated here.
20.
In the circumstances, I make the
following order:
THE ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
_______________________
BARNES AJ
Acting Judge of the Land Claims Court
Appearances:
For the applicant:
Adv Mothibi instructed by Maluleke Attorneys
For the 1
st
,
2
nd
and 9
th
respondents: Adv Mtheto instructed
by the State Attorney
For the 3
rd
,
10
th
and 11
th
respondents: Adv Seboko
instructed by Kgomo Attorneys
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Radebe v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC73/2020) [2022] ZALCC 46 (21 September 2022)
[2022] ZALCC 46Land Claims Court of South Africa99% 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 Africa99% similar
Moloto Community v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC 204/2010) [2022] ZALCC 4 (11 February 2022)
[2022] ZALCC 4Land Claims Court of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Poit and Others (LCC205/2021) [2023] ZALCC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (6 January 2023)
[2023] ZALCC 1Land 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