Case Law[2022] ZALCC 35South Africa
Zimbane Land Claim Committee v Eastern Cape Development Corporation and Others (LCC42/2022C) [2022] ZALCC 35 (28 April 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
28 April 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG LCC42/2022C Reportable: No Of Interest to other Judges: Yes Revised 28/4/2022 In the matter between:
Judgment
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## Zimbane Land Claim Committee v Eastern Cape Development Corporation and Others (LCC42/2022C) [2022] ZALCC 35 (28 April 2022)
Zimbane Land Claim Committee v Eastern Cape Development Corporation and Others (LCC42/2022C) [2022] ZALCC 35 (28 April 2022)
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sino date 28 April 2022
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
LCC42/2022C
Reportable:
No
Of
Interest to other Judges: Yes
Revised
28/4/2022
In
the matter between:
ZIMBANE
LAND CLAIM COMMITTEE
Applicant
and
EASTERN
CAPE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
First Respondent
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Second Respondent
KING
SABATA DALINDYEBO MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
Introduction
1.
The Applicant is the Zimbane Land Claim Committee.
It represents the Zimbane Community, which lodged a land claim under
the Restitution
of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act).
Amongst the relief sought is restoration of various subdivided
portions of
property in Mthatha originally described as Erf [....].
Notice of the land claim was published in terms of section 11 of the
Restitution
Act in the government gazette. In the proceedings before
me, instituted on an urgent basis, the Applicant seeks to interdict
the
First Respondent from selling eleven erven under land claim
(being subdivided portions of Erf [....]).
2.
The
First Respondent, the Eastern Cape Development Corporation, is the
current owner of these eleven erven in the Eastern Cape.
The
properties are described in Annexure I to the founding affidavit.
[1]
The Second Respondent is the Regional Land Claims Commissioner (the
Regional Commissioner) and the Third Respondent is the King
Sabata
Dalindyebo Municipality (the Municipality). Only the First Respondent
is opposing and participating in these proceedings.
3.
The Applicant instituted these proceedings on 28
March 2022. On that date, the Acting Judge President granted a rule
nisi
calling
upon the Respondents to show cause on 20 April 2022 why an order
should not be granted interdicting and restraining the
First
Respondent, its agent or anyone acting on its behalf from proceeding
with the sale by auction of the properties referred
to Annexure I.
The sale of the properties was restrained pending the return date.
The Acting Judge President also issued directions
regulating the
further conduct of the proceedings. The matter came before me on 20
April 2022. Mr Krige appeared for the Applicant
and Mr Molotsi SC
(with him Mr Xozwa) appeared for the First Respondent. After hearing
the parties, I reserved judgment and extended
the interim interdict
pending the delivery of this judgment.
4.
The hearing of the land claim is due to commence
before Judge Spilg on 9 May 2022 and is set down for three weeks.
During the course
of the proceedings before me, it became apparent
that the First Respondent is not yet a party. Mr Krige undertook to
raise the
issue promptly with the Presiding Judge.
Background
5.
The matter has a long history, one chapter of
which features here. In 2008, the Municipality (the Third Respondent)
instituted proceedings
in this Court in terms of section 34 of the
Restitution Act in respect of property in Mthatha including
subdivided portions of
Erf [....]. Section 34 of the Restitution Act
provides that
“
Any
national, provincial or local government body may, in respect of land
which is owned by it or falls within its area of jurisdiction,
make
application to the Court for an order that the land in question or
any rights in it shall not be restored to any claimant
or prospective
claimant.”
6.
The
section 34 proceedings culminated in the Constitutional Court,
[2]
which
ultimately
overturned a non-restoration order that had been granted in this
Court.
In
a unanimous decision (per Moseneke J), the Constitutional Court held
that:
“
The
primary object of section 34 is to pre-empt land restoration that
threatens or prejudices public interest. The object accords
with the
statute’s objective to achieve equitable redress whilst
avoiding major social disruption which might substantially
prejudice
the public interest.”
[3]
7.
When a
Court considers a section 34 application, it must be cognisant of the
primacy of restoration of land in the scheme for restitution
set out
in the Restitution Act. In this regard, the Constitutional Court
held:
“
Whilst
a claimant for restitution of land rights is not always entitled to
restoration of rights in the land claimed,
restoration
of the land claimed must enjoy primacy when feasible. That much is
clear from the scheme of the Act and relevant jurisprudence.
A
non-restoration order is invasive of restitution rights, and for that
reason, the statute requires that it may be made only when
the
threshold requirements have been met. (Footnotes omitted.)”
[4]
8.
On the affidavits before me, the Applicant
emphasises that it seeks restoration of the eleven portions of land
that the First Respondent
now intends to sell by auction. They say
that this is undeveloped and vacant land and point out that it was
because some of the
land that forms part of Erf [....] is undeveloped
and vacant land that the Constitutional Court overturned the
non-restoration
order that had been granted in respect of the entire
erf. They contend that this Court must determine whether the eleven
portions
of land should be restored to the Applicant during the
proceedings due to commence shortly before Judge Spilg. If they are,
the
Applicant wishes to develop the properties themselves. The right
to claim restoration will be irreparably harmed, they say, by the
imminent sale of the properties to private parties who will
presumably wish to develop the properties and will purchase at market
value.
9.
In this regard, reference is made in the founding
affidavit to various related findings of the Constitutional Court. Mr
Molotso
submitted during the hearing before me that the properties in
question are in fact developed and for that reason non-restorable,
a
status that has been confirmed to the First Respondent by the
Regional Commissioner. I return to this below.
Events leading to
these proceedings
10.
The salient facts leading to the institution of
these proceedings are common cause. That a sale of the First
Respondent’s
eleven properties by auction was imminent –
due to take place on 5 March 2022 – came to the attention of
the Applicant
through its attorney. On 17 and 18 February 2022, the
Applicant’s attorney then wrote to the auctioneers (Riley
Auctioneers)
and the First Respondent, respectively. In the letters,
the Applicant’s attorney informed the First Respondent that the
properties
were under land claim and drew attention to the fact that
under the Restitution Act, no property under claim may be sold
without
giving notice to the Regional Commissioner and interdict
proceedings were threatened should no proof of notice be furnished.
11.
This is a reference to section 11(7)(aA) of
the Restitution and it is convenient to refer now to its provisions,
which state that
once a notice has been published in respect of land,
“
(aA)
no
person may sell, exchange, donate, lease, subdivide, rezone or
develop the land in question without having given the regional
land
claims commissioner one month's written notice of his or her
intention to do so, and, where such notice was not given in respect
of-
(i)
any sale, exchange, donation, lease, subdivision or rezoning of land
and the Court is satisfied that such sale, exchange, donation,
lease,
subdivision or rezoning was not done in good faith, the Court may set
aside such sale, exchange, donation, lease, subdivision
or rezoning
or grant any other order it deems fit;
(ii)
any development of land and the Court is satisfied that such
development was not done in good faith, the court may grant any
order
it deems fit; …”
12.
The Second Respondent, which had been alerted to
the correspondence of 17 February 2022, replied to the Applicant’s
attorney
that same day indicating that according to “the set
plan which is before the Land Claims Court” in the land claims,
they have determined that the properties to be auctioned are “deemed
as non-restorable”. The Applicant was advised
further that the
Regional Commissioner had requested the First Respondent to comply
with section 11(7) of the Restitution Act “before
they proceed
with the sale of the properties.” Moreover, in e-mail
correspondence of 17 February 2022, the Regional Commissioner
advised
the Applicant that correspondence would be addressed to the First
Respondent to demand that the sale be stopped and notice
be given
under section 11(7) of the Restitution Act.
13.
On 23 February 2022, the First Respondent wrote to
the Regional Commissioner and in doing so gave notice in terms of
section 11(7)
of the Restitution Act of its intention to sell the
eleven properties. The letter concluded:
“
We
will as such withdraw the above 11 listed properties from the auction
to be held on the 5
th
March
2022 and will include them in a new process after the lapse of the 30
day period in compliance with s11(7) of the [Restitution
Act].”
14.
On 24 February 2022, the Applicant wrote again to
Riley Auctioneers and the First Respondent advising that the
Applicant is opposed
to the intended sale because, amongst other
reasons, the properties are vacant and undeveloped and they seek
restoration of them
in the land claim. The letter concludes as
follows:
“
We
call upon the Corporation to stop the intended sale of the properties
it given notice to sell. If by noon on the 25
th
March
2022 you have not indicated that you will not sell those properties
our instructions are to proceed and launch an application
to the Land
Claims Court for an appropriate interdict plus costs.”
15.
No such intention was indicated and these
proceedings were then instituted on the 28
th
March 2022.
The relief sought and
the requirements for interim relief
16.
The relief that is sought in the notice of motion
is cast as final relief interdicting the sale of the properties.
However, during
the course of argument Mr Krige conceded that the
relief sought would need to be interim in nature pending the
finalisation of
whether the properties are restorable to the
Applicant, and, if so, transferred to it. I adjudicate this
application on this basis,
and thus as an application for interim not
final relief.
17.
The
requirements for interim relief in this Court are
well-established,
[5]
being
“
a)
that the right which is the subject matter of the main action and
which the applicant seeks to protect is clear or, if not clear,
is
prima
facie
established
though open to some doubt;
b) that, if the right is
only
prima facie
established, there is a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm to the applicant if the interim
interdict is not granted
and he ultimately succeeds in establishing
his right (it is implicit in this requirement that the harm
apprehended must be the
consequences of an actual or threatened
interference with the right referred to in (a);
c) that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of interim relief; and
d) that the Applicant has
no other remedy.”
18.
In applying these
principles this Court follows the approach expounded in
American
Cyanamid Co v Ethican Ltd
.
[6]
That approach departs from a rigid approach of a ‘strong prima
facie right’ and emphasises flexibility and the importance
of
the balance of convenience criterion. The Court must be satisfied
that the claim is not frivolous or vexatious, in other words,
that
there is a serious question to be tried. In this regard, the House or
Lords held in
American
Cyanamid
:
“
It is no part of
the Court’s function at this stage of the litigation to try to
resolve conflicts of evidence on affidavit
as to facts on which the
claims of either party may ultimately depend nor to decide difficult
questions of law which call for detailed
argument and mature
considerations. These are matters to be dealt with at the trial.”
[7]
19.
As this Court held in
Macassar
Land Claims Committee v Maccsand CC
[8]
:
“
According to this
approach, where the grant of the interim interdict results in
significant inconvenience for the respondent, a
higher standard of
proof is required of the applicant under the ‘serious question
to be tried’ criterion. Conversely,
where the inconvenience to
the respondent is insignificant, a lesser standard of proof may be
accepted.”
20.
The
Applicant seeks relief relying on the common law right to seek relief
by way of interim interdict. The Applicant does not expressly
refer
in its founding affidavit, nor in the correspondence leading to the
institution of these proceedings, to the provisions of
section 6(3)
of the Restitution Act.
[9]
During the course of proceedings, I requested the parties to address
me on whether an interested party seeking to interdict a sale
of land
under claim is obliged to rely on section 6(3). However, in the view
that I take of the matter, it is not necessary for
me to resolve that
question. It does not admit of obvious answer, and I am satisfied on
the facts before me that the Applicant
would be entitled to the
relief I grant even if the answer is in the affirmative, albeit on a
finding of substantial compliance.
[10]
Urgency
21.
Mr Molotsi submitted that the application is not
urgent and that any urgency is self-created. I disagree and am
satisfied that the
application is indeed urgent. In this regard, the
application was instituted on 28 March 2022 in circumstances where
the First
Respondent declined to confirm that the sale would not
proceed. Any legal protection against a sale afforded by section
11(7)(aA)
itself would and did lapse by 8 April 2022. In the
answering affidavit, the First Respondent pertinently did not disavow
any intention
to sell stating rather that at this stage and following
the withdrawal of the eleven properties from the 5 March 2022
auction,
the First Respondent “has not yet issued [a] new
instruction to the Auctioneers to advertise auction of the properties
as
listed in the Government Gazette.” That may be so, but read
with the letter of 23 February 2022, the intention to sell following
the lapse of the 30 day notice period required by section 11(7)(aA)
cannot has not been refuted. It would have been an easy matter
for
the First Respondent to say in its answering affidavit (or at least
prior to or when the hearing commenced) that there was
no immediate
intention to sell the properties and that should a new instruction be
issued, the Applicant would be given reasonable
advance notice.
Indeed, during the course of argument, Mr Molotsi himself accepted
that absent an interdict, the instruction could
be given immediately
and he confirmed that his clients intended to auction the properties
although he did not know the intended
timing.
Non-joinder of Riley
auctioneers
22.
In its
answering affidavit, the First Respondent raised the non-joinder of
the auctioneers, Riley Auctioneers (Riley), contending
that they are
a necessary party.
[11]
The
Applicant has not conceded that Riley, as First Respondent’s
agent, is a necessary party, but nevertheless instituted
a joinder
application and requests its joinder. In response, Mr Molotsi sought
to persuade me that joinder application was defective.
He submitted
that while there is no current instruction to sell the properties on
any particular date, they remain the intended
auctioneers. On the day
of the hearing, Mr Krige read a letter from Riley to the Applicant’s
attorneys which indicated, at
least, that Riley has no objection to
their joinder. In these circumstances, I exercise the Court’s
power to join Riley,
and do not consider it necessary to decide
whether they are a necessary party or if the application is
defective. I agree, however,
with Mr Molotsi that if joined, Riley
must be afforded a fair opportunity to participate in the matter and
I make provision for
this in my order. At this juncture, and in
circumstances where no new instruction to sell has yet been issued,
there can be no
prejudice to them in extending the interim interdict.
Entitlement to an
interim interdict
23.
Against this background I turn to consider whether
the Applicant is entitled to an interim interdict. I conclude it is.
24.
There is no dispute between the parties that the
Applicant has claimed a right to restitution in the form of
restoration of (amongst
others) the eleven properties and that this
is a serious issue to be tried. Rather, Mr Molotsi submitted that the
right is not
a clear or cognisable right because on the papers, the
eleven properties are developed and thus non-restorable to the
Applicant.
This stance, he submits, accords with the communication
from the Second Respondent, referred to above.
25.
I am unable to accept this contention for two
related reasons. First, on the evidence before me I am unable safely
to conclude that
the properties are developed. The Applicant
pertinently alleges that they are not, and this is not clearly
disputed in the answering
affidavit: indeed, it is admitted that the
properties are vacant. However, there is only scant information in
this regard. Secondly,
and in any event, the question whether the
properties should be restored to the Applicant is one of the issues
that a trial Court
is empowered to determine. Moreover, on the
authorities cited above, this Court should avoid making factual
findings of this sort
at this stage including as regards the
development status of the land, which may be material to a finding on
restorability. Thus,
the Applicant both makes the necessary averments
in its founding affidavit, which for present purposes have not been
seriously
disputed, and these are serious issues that must be
determined at trial by admissible evidence.
26.
Moreover,
even proceeding on the basis that there is a serious issue to be
tried, I am satisfied that, on the facts of this case,
there is a
well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if an interim
interdict is not granted and the Applicant succeeds in
establishing
the right. The trial is to commence very shortly: the proceedings are
susceptible to protracted disruption should
a sale ensue at this
particular point in time. That will most likely result in a need for
joinder of any new owner with attendant
trial delay, costs and
disruption prejudicing not only the Applicant but all involved.
Moreover, both the Regional Commissioner
and the First Respondent
have themselves adopted the view that the properties are
non-restorable to the Applicant. The First Respondent
intends to
proceed with the sale on that understanding, and the Regional
Commissioner has evinced no intention to intervene. Whether
there are
circumstances or conditions of any sale that would preclude or limit
prejudice, or whether necessary disclosures are
made, concerns facts
that reside within the knowledge of the First Respondent.
[12]
But no such information has been forthcoming: rather, the stance is
adopted that the properties are non-restorable.
27.
In my
view there is genuine scope for such prejudice in the circumstances
of this case. I have mentioned the impact on the imminent
trial.
Furthermore, while a land claim attaches to the property and would
survive any sale, this does not mean that a sale does
not affect the
adjudication of a land claim. Existing rights of ownership do not
take precedence over claims for restitution
[13]
but the balance of equities that a court must engage with in a case
of this sort can be affected thereby.
[14]
One such consideration relates to compensation payable to a new
purchaser, in this case likely to be a private party purchasing
from
a public body. In this case, the situation is complicated further by
the fact that the First and Second Respondent assert
that the
property is non-restorable to a claimant, an issue which is for the
Court to determine in imminent proceedings.
28.
I am satisfied further that there is no other
satisfactory alternative remedy. Mr Molotsi submitted that the
Applicant can approach
the Court in due course for an interdict when
it is known precisely when a sale is imminent. But I have already
accepted that the
application is urgent and there is no suggestion
that a different remedy would suffice.
29.
As regards the balance of convenience and in
circumstances where the trial is imminent, I am of the view that the
restriction I
place on the auction of the property does not cause any
serious inconvenience to the First Respondent. Furthermore, the First
Respondent
has failed to set out any claimed prejudice in any
particularity and none that would result from mere delay. On the
other hand,
the inconvenience to the Applicant is both real and
potentially serious as the threatened harm can be immediately
realised. The
balance of convenience may, however, shift as the trial
proceeds. It is partly for this reason that in my order I grant leave
to
parties, on good cause shown, to approach the Court to uplift the
interdict on duly supplemented papers.
30.
My reasons for doing so extend to enabling Riley
to be independently heard on the merits of the interdict should it
elect to participate,
as it has not at this stage been so heard, and
because there may be information upon which a party can satisfy the
Court that the
interim interdict should be lifted at an appropriate
time. For example, they may be able to demonstrate that a sale can
proceed
in circumstances and under conditions that will not prejudice
the Applicant’s right to claim restoration of the eleven erven.
Moreover, the status of the properties as restorable or
non-restorable may become clearer as trial preparation and the trial
itself
ensues. Ultimately, it is the Judge presiding over the trial
who is likely to be best placed to determine these issues and who
should thus be in a position to retain control over when the
interdict should appropriately be lifted
31.
I make the following order:
(1)
Non-compliance with the rules prescribed for
ordinary applications is condoned.
(2)
Riley Auctioneers is joined as the Fourth
Respondent.
(3)
Should Riley Auctioneers wish to
participate, it must file a notice of appearance in terms of Rule 25
within 10 (ten) days of service
of the application and this order on
it.
(4)
The First Respondent, its agent or anyone acting
on its behalf is interdicted and restrained from proceeding with the
auction or
sale of the eleven properties referred to in Annexure I to
the founding affidavit pending the determination by this Court of
whether
each or any of the properties are restorable to the
Applicant, and if so, their transfer to the Applicant, alternatively
at such
date as may be determined in proceedings in terms of (5)
below.
(5)
Any party may, on good cause shown, apply to the
Court for an order lifting the interim order in (4) at an earlier
date, and for
directions regulating such application. Any such
application should be made, in the first instance, to the Judge
presiding at the
trial.
Judge
Cowen
Land
Claims Court
Date
of hearing: 20 April 2022
Date
of judgment: 28 April 2022
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv L J Krige instructed by Chris Bodlani Attorneys
First
Respondent: Adv H Molotsi SC and Adv MMJ Xozwa instructed by Sokutu
Attorneys
[1]
While reference should be made to Annexure I, the properties are
broadly described as follows (replacing Umtata with Mthatha):
Erf
[....], [....] I [....] Street, Southernwood, Mthatha; Erf [....],
[....] F [....] Street, Southernwood, Mthatha; Erf [....]
Mthatha,
Extension [....]; Erf [....] Mthatha Extension [....]; Erf [....]
Mthatha Extension [....]; Erf [....], [....] U [....]
Street,
Southernwood, Mthatha; Erf [....] Mthatha Extension [....]; Erf
[....], [....] S [....] Crescent, Southernwood, Mthatha;
Erf [....],
Mthatha Extension [....] and Erf [....] Mthatha Extension [....].
[2]
Kwalindile Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and
Others; Zimbane Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality
and
Others [2013] ZACC 6; 2013 (5) BCLR 531 (CC); 2013 (6) SA 193 (CC).
[3]
At
para [41].
[4]
At
para [43].
[5]
Chief
Nchabeleng v Chief Phasha 1998(3) SA 578 at paras [6] to [18].
[6]
[1975]
1 All ER 504 (HL).
[7]
At
p 510.
[8]
(LCC37/03)
[2003] ZALCC 21
(22 September 2003) at page 14.
[9]
Section
6(3) provides as follows:
“
Where
the regional land claims commissioner having jurisdiction or an
interested party has reason to believe that the sale, exchange,
donation, lease, subdivision, rezoning or development of land which
may be the subject of any order of the Court, or in respect
of which
a person or community is entitled to claim restitution of a right in
land, will defeat the achievement of the objects
of this Act, he or
she may-
(a)
after
a claim has been lodged in respect of such land; and
(b)
after
the owner of the land has been notified of such claim and referred
to the provisions of this subsection,
on
reasonable notice to interested parties, apply to the Court for an
interdict prohibiting the sale, exchange, donation, lease,
subdivision, rezoning or development of the land, and the Court may,
subject to such terms and conditions and for such period
as it may
determine, grant such an interdict or make any other order it deems
fit.”
[10]
The
requirements for compliance with section 6(3) of the Restitution Act
are set out in Matladi v Anglorand Holdings Ltd and others
(LCC119/2010) unreported judgment delivered on 6 January 2012; Singh
and others v North Central and South Central Local Councils
and
Others
[1999] 1 All SA 350-
(LCC) at 353; Ga-Magashula Community
Trust v Marsfontein and others 2001(2) SA 945 (LCC) at para [43] and
Koshi ML Mamadinno
v ML Mosela and others LCC 110/2008.
[11]
Relying on SA Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land
Claims Commissioner 2017(5) SA 1 (CC)
.
[12]
An example of a necessary disclosure is mentioned in
Transvaal
Agricultural Union v Minister of Land Affairs and another
[1996]
ZACC 22
; 1996(12) BCLR
1573; 1997(2) SA 621
(CC) (TAU v Minister of
Land Affairs) at para [28].
[13]
TAU
v Minister of Land Affairs at para [33].
[14]
See
generally section 33 of the Restitution Act.
sino noindex
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