Case Law[2022] ZALCC 12South Africa
Sokhela and Another v Mhlungu and Others (LCC 41/2019B) [2022] ZALCC 12 (20 May 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
20 May 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG Case Number: LCC 41/2019B Reportable: No Of Interest to other Judges: No Revised: No Before: The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer Heard on: 29 April 2022 Delivered on: 20 May 2022
Judgment
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## Sokhela and Another v Mhlungu and Others (LCC 41/2019B) [2022] ZALCC 12 (20 May 2022)
Sokhela and Another v Mhlungu and Others (LCC 41/2019B) [2022] ZALCC 12 (20 May 2022)
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sino date 20 May 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case
Number:
LCC 41/2019B
Reportable:
No
Of
Interest to other Judges: No
Revised:
No
Before:
The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer
Heard
on:
29 April 2022
Delivered
on:
20 May 2022
In the matter between:
THULANI
SOKHELA
First Applicant
NOZIPHO
MAVIS SOKHELA
Second Applicant
AND
SENZELE
JOHNSON MHLUNGU
First Respondent
ELIZABETH
MARIA MHLUNGU
Second Respondent
IN RE
SENZELE
JOHNSON MHLANU
First Applicant
ELIZABETH
MARIA MHLUNGU
Second Applicant
AND
THULANI
SOKHELA
First Respondent
MAVIS
NGCOBO SOKHELA
Second
Respondent
ISITHOMBE
SOKHELA
Third
Respondent
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF
THE DEPARTMENT
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND REFORM
Fourth
Respondent
IMPENDLE
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER
AJP
Introduction
[1]
On 30 March 2022 the Applicants sought, by
way of an urgent application, the suspension of an order granted by
this Court on 29
November 2021 for their eviction from the First and
Second Respondents’ farm, described as Portion 9 of lot 91,
farm number
1819 (Kwethu farm) Boston, KwaZulu-Natal (“the
farm”), pending the finalisation of a labour tenant
application.
[2]
The
eviction order was granted in the absence of the Applicants, who
concede that they did not respond to the eviction papers served
on
them, other than to approach the Department of Agriculture, Land
Reform and Rural Development and the land rights advocacy
organization, Association for Rural Advancement (“AFRA”).
It was only when the Sheriff sought to evict them, pursuant
to the
eviction order, that they launched this urgent application. The
labour tenant application on which the Applicants rely for
the
suspension of the eviction order, is alleged to be that of the First
Applicant’s late mother. They contend that by virtue
of her
application, they are protected from eviction in terms of section 14
of the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 3 of 1996 (“the
Act”).
[1]
[3]
The Applicants, a husband and wife, have
been resident on the farm since the 1990s. The First and Second
Respondents have been joint
owners of the farm since 2001. They, as
aforementioned, obtained the eviction order against the Applicants in
November 2021, and
oppose this application for its suspension. I
shall refer to them as the Opposing Respondents. The Third
Respondent, the official
with whom applications for awards of land
are lodged in terms of the Act, and the Fourth Respondent have not
participated in these
proceedings.
[4]
On 5 April 2022 the parties agreed, at a
telephonic conference which I convened, that the eviction order would
be suspended pending
the determination of this application. The
matter proceeded by way of a virtual hearing before me on 29 April
2022.
[5]
Contrary to the relief sought in the notice
of motion, namely the suspension of the eviction order, the heads of
argument on behalf
of the Applicants, disquietingly, sought the
rescission of that order. As no application for rescission is before
me, and indeed
the requirements therefor have not been met, such an
application cannot be entertained. This judgment considers only
whether there
are grounds for suspending the eviction order pending
the determination of an alleged labour tenant application. As such,
the relief
is in the form of an interim interdict.
Background Facts and
Evidence
[6]
The background facts are in the main
provided in the First Respondent’s answering affidavit, as set
out below, together with
the First Applicant’s replies, where
given.
6.1
The First Applicant and his mother were
granted permission to reside on the farm in the 1990s by a previous
owner, Mr Padmore. The
farm was later sold to a Mr Walsh, with a
condition of sale that the First Applicant’s mother and family
would have to be
relocated, alternatively evicted from the farm prior
to Mr Walsh taking ownership. This did not occur and throughout Mr
Walsh’s
ownership of the farm he endeavoured to have the family
evicted.
6.2
At no material time were either the First
Applicant or his mother employees or labourers on the farm. This
allegation is met with
a bald denial by the First Applicant in reply.
In 2001 Mr Walsh sold the farm to the Opposing Respondents, such sale
being contingent
upon the Opposing Respondents inheriting the matter
of the Applicants’ residency on the farm, which they accepted.
6.3
In an attempt to cordially and amicably
deal with the residency of the Applicants on the farm, the following
rules were communicated
to them:
6.3.1
They would not establish any new dwellings on the farm;
6.3.2
They would not allow unauthorised persons to reside on the farm;
6.3.3
They would not introduce and graze livestock on the farm without the
owner’s consent;
6.3.4
They would not demarcate any portion of the farm for their own use;
6.3.5
They would not threaten anyone with
physical violence or death.
6.4
The answering affidavit contends that the
Applicants have breached every one of these rules, and attempted to
illegally connect
electricity. Discussions with the Applicants, in an
attempt to resolve the situation, were met with threats of violence.
The Applicants
refused officials from the Department access onto the
farm and accosted them with threats of violence. This too is denied.
These
allegations are baldly denied in reply.
6.5
The Opposing Respondents offered to
relocate the Applicants to an area known as eNcwadi, and to construct
a three-bedroom house
for them. The offer was not accepted.
Thereafter on 8 January 2019 the Respondents instituted proceedings
for the eviction of the
Applicants, in terms of the
Extension of
Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
.
[7]
The Probation Officer’s report, for
the purposes of the eviction application, records the First Applicant
stating that he
worked partially for the Opposing Respondents’
predecessors, that he never worked for the current landowner, was
paid ‘little
money’ and nothing else, and that he has
never worked fulltime on the farm. The report records further that he
is currently
working on the neighbouring farm and has always worked
there.
[8]
An account by Mr Ncanana of the Department
of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, in an e-mail dated
15 March 2022,
annexed to the Applicants’ founding affidavit
and highlighted in the First Respondent’s answering affidavit,
is not
denied in reply. Mr Ncanana states that the First Applicant
chased him away with a screwdriver and “[he] had to drive the
car in reverse for almost 500 meters from his house as the situation
did not allow [him] to turn around”.
[9]
As aforementioned, the eviction order was
granted in the absence of the Applicants. The First Applicant admits
that the papers were
served on him, but states that “due to
lack of sophistication and being an indigent person” he took
the papers to AFRA
and assumed the matter was handled by them. The
eviction order of 29 November 2021 was served on the Applicants. They
neither vacated
the property nor applied for the rescission of that
order.
[10]
An attempt by the Sheriff and members of
the South African Police Services on 28 March 2022 to evict the
Applicants pursuant to
the eviction order, was met with violence,
according to the Sheriff’s return of service. On 29 March 2022,
faced with actual
eviction, the Applicants instructed an attorney to
bring this urgent application for the suspension of the eviction
order, on the
basis that a labour tenancy application had been
lodged.
[11]
As proof that a labour tenancy application
had been lodged by his late mother, the First Applicant relied on
“Annexure TS2”
to his founding affidavit, which he avers
is a copy of her application. The annexure is a pamphlet in isiZulu,
with dates and a
reference number. I consider below the probative
value of this document.
[12]
Apropos the labour tenancy application, the
First Respondent states that on the First Applicant’s own
version he is not a
labourer or employee, and that save for an
application lodged in 1999, there is no allegation that the First
Applicant’s
late mother was a labourer or employee of the
Opposing Respondents’ predecessors. The mere existence of a
lodgment of an
application some 23 years ago, it is contended, cannot
be the basis upon which the Applicants seek to claim the status of
labour
tenants. This is denied in reply, the Applicants contending
that according to section 14 of the Act, as long as a labour tenancy
application has been lodged, they cannot be evicted, unless special
circumstances exist, and the Opposing Respondents have not
averred
any special circumstances.
[13]
The First Respondent further points out
that during consultations in 2017 to 2019, the Applicants did not
raise the labour tenancy
status. Opportunistically, it was only once
threatened with eviction in March 2022 that they raised the labour
tenancy application.
The First Respondent refers to this as an abuse
of the court processes, an allegation which is met with a bald denial
by the Applicants
in reply.
[14]
Such were the background facts and
evidence. For the purposes of the interim relief sought in this
application, it is not necessary
for me to consider the disputed
facts, other than those pertaining to the establishment of a
prima
facie
right or clear right in respect
of the relief sought before me, namely the suspension of the eviction
order pending the finalisation
of the alleged labour tenancy
application. The disputed facts pertaining to the eviction
application fall to be considered in a
condoned rescission
application, should there be one.
Urgency
[15]
The Opposing Respondents contend that the
urgency the Applicants rely on is self-created, as they were only
spurred into action
when they were confronted with actual eviction in
terms of the court order. They did nothing before this, both in
respect of the
eviction and labour tenancy applications. The stance
of the Opposing Respondents is understandable.
[16]
I was however satisfied that the matter
warranted to be treated as urgent when it was launched, in
circumstances where persons who
might possibly be protected from
eviction in terms of section 14 of the Act, were faced with
homelessness. I have not been dissuaded
from my view.
Applicant’s
Entitlement to an Interim Interdict
[17]
In
Chief
Nchabeleng v Chief Phasha
1998 (3) SA
578
at paragraph 6 to 18, this Court considered the requirements for
an interim interdict. At paragraph 6, the oft-quoted requirements
according to the decided cases, are recorded, namely:
“
(a)
that the right which is the subject matter of the main action and
which (the applicant) seeks to protect by means of interim
relief 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
relief is not granted and
he ultimately succeeds in establishing his
right (it is implicit in this requirement that the harm apprehended
must be the consequence
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.”
(Internal
references omitted.)
[18]
In
applying these principles, this Court endorsed the approach in
Olympic
Passenger Service (Pty) Ltd v Ramlagan
[2]
as well as that in
American
Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd
[3]
.
In the former case, Holmes J, commenting on the
prima
facie
right requirement said:
“
It thus appears
that where the applicant’s right is clear, and the other
requisites are present, no difficulty presents itself
about granting
the interdict. At the other end of the scale, where the prospects of
ultimate success are nil, obviously the court
will refuse an
interdict.”
In
the latter case, Lord Diplock stated that 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”.
Proof of Labour
Tenancy Application
[19]
The right which the Applicants seek to
assert is that of protection from eviction, in terms of section 14 of
the Act, due to a pending
application by a labour tenant. It must
therefore be established if this right is
prima
facie
, if not clear.
[20]
The labour tenancy application on which the
Applicants rely, as aforementioned, is that of the First Applicant’s
deceased
mother.
The Applicants do not attempt to ascribe any
labour tenancy status to themselves and advance no evidence that they
are labour tenants.
According to the First
Applicant, his late mother’s application was filed on 16
November 1999 and is “Annexure TS2”
to his founding
affidavit. It is however not at all evident from the annexure that it
is a labour tenancy application by the First
Applicant’s
mother. The annexure, as aforementioned, is a pamphlet in isiZulu
with certain dates (one of which is 16 November
1999), and reference
numbers. No name appears on the document, nor is it evident therefrom
that it is an application for labour
tenancy by any person.
[21]
The supporting affidavit of Applicants’
attorney, Ms Ndlovu, refers to confirmation that “Annexure TS2”
is proof
of submitting an application to be declared a labour tenant.
She states that she enquired and sought confirmation from the
Department
and the Special Master for Labour Tenants, and refers to
“Annexure APN3” to her affidavit as confirmation of the
alleged
labour tenancy application. She further states that “Annexure
APN4” is confirmation and an explanation from the Special
Master’s Office and AFRA of the labour tenant application.
[22]
These two annexures provide no such
confirmation. They consist of a series of emails between Ms Ndlovu
and various persons, seeking
confirmation that a labour tenant
application was submitted. “Annexure APN4”, for example
is,
inter alia
,
correspondence from a Mondli Zondi from AFRA stating that proof of
the client’s claim for land acquisition under the Act
is
attached. The attachment consists of various e-mails between a Mr
Thabiso Mbhense, of Legal Aid, and Mr Zondi. In one of the
e-mails,
of 23 March 2022, Mr Zondi refers to the First Applicant as a labour
tenant associate who is being evicted from the farm,
and that his
mother had a labour tenant claim. Mr Mbhense’s e-mail records
the Department as stating that they were unaware
of the client being
a labour tenant associate who has proof of his mother’s claim.
Another e-mail, sent on 16 March 2022,
by Sbaningi Mngadi of the
Department, suggests that enquiries about whether the First Applicant
had lodged a labour tenant claim
drew a negative response to the
question. A further e-mail, of 3 March 2022, by Mondli Zondi of AFRA
to various persons in the
Department, states that the First Applicant
is the son of the late labour tenant claimant, Norah Gasa.
[23]
Ms Ndlovu, for the Applicants, very
properly did not persist during argument with the assertion that the
aforementioned annexures
proved that a labour tenancy application had
been lodged by the First Applicant’s mother.
[24]
In view of the above, I am unable to find
that Annexure “TS2” to the First Applicant’s
founding affidavit is a
labour tenancy application by the First
Applicant’s mother. I am also unable to find that the annexures
referred to by Ms
Ndlovu suffice as proof of a labour tenancy
application by the First Applicant’s mother.
Protection from
Eviction in terms of section 14 of the Act
[25]
The
protection from eviction in section 14 of the Act upon which the
Applicants rely, is a protection afforded only to a labour
tenant
whose application is pending and not to their family members, like
the Applicants, or associates.
[4]
The section, which appears as a footnote above, is repeated here for
convenience.
“
No labour tenant
may be evicted while an application by him or her in terms of Chapter
III is pending: Provided that the Court may
order eviction if it is
satisfied that special circumstances exist which make it fair, just
and equitable to do so, taking all
the circumstances into
account.”
[5]
[26]
Section
14 does not give the Applicants a right to be protected from eviction
by virtue of the alleged pending labour tenancy application
of the
First Applicant’s mother. This is so because, firstly and
obviously, there is no pending application, given that their
mother
is deceased. Upon her death her alleged application would no longer
have been pending. Secondly, even were she to have been
a labour
tenant (and here I pause to mention that there is no evidence
whatsoever that she was a labour tenant as defined in the
Act)
[6]
,
with a pending application in terms of Chapter III of the Act, this
would not have brought the Applicants within the ambit of
the section
14 protection, which would apply only to the First Applicant’s
mother as the applicant labour tenant. At best
she would have been
protected from eviction, not her family members or associates, like
the Applicants.
[27]
The protection from eviction afforded to associates or family
members of labour tenants upon the death of a labour tenant, is
prescribed
at section 9(2) of the Act, which provides:
“
On the death of a
labour tenant who has retained the right to occupy the farm in terms
of the provisions of subsection (1), all
his or her associates may be
given 12 calendar months' notice to leave the farm.”
At
best, were the First Applicant’s mother to have been a labour
tenant, upon her death, the Applicants would have been entitled
to
protection from eviction for 12 months.
[28]
In view of all of the above, the Applicants
have established neither a
prima facie
right, nor a clear right to protection from eviction in terms of
section 14 of the Act. They have certainly not shown a serious
question to be tried. The prospects of ultimate success are therefore
nil. For this reason alone, the application stands to be
dismissed
without consideration of the other requirements for an interim
interdict. They are accordingly not entitled to a suspension
of the
order of 29 November 2021, pending the finalisation of the labour
tenant application.
Costs
[29]
In
keeping with the practice of this Court
not to award costs except in exceptional circumstances, of which I
find there to be none
in this application, I intend granting no order
as to costs.
[30]
I order as follows:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
Y
S MEER
Acting
Judge President
Land
Claims Court
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Ms P Ndlovu
AP
Ngubo Attorneys
For
the First and
Second
Respondents:
Adv. L Msomi
Instructed
by:
Cari
du Toit Incorporated Attorneys
[1]
Section
14 of the Act states: “
No
labour tenant may be evicted while an application by him or her in
terms of Chapter III is pending: Provided that the Court
may order
eviction if it is satisfied that special circumstances exist which
make it fair, just and equitable to do so, taking
all the
circumstances into account
.
”
[2]
1957
(2) SA 382
(D) at 383C-G.
[3]
[1975] UKHL 1
;
[1975]
1 All ER 504
(HL) at 510c-f.
[4]
Associate
means: “a family member of a labour tenant, and any other
person who has been nominated in terms of section 3(4)
as the
successor of such labour tenant, or who has been nominated in terms
of section 4(1) to provide labour in his or her stead”.
[5]
Chapter III, titled “Acquisition of ownership or other rights
in land by labour tenant”, provides, at section 16,
for the
right of labour tenants to acquire land and, at section 17, for this
Court to determine disputed labour tenancy status.
[6]
Labour tenant means: “a person-
(a)
who is residing or has the right to reside on a farm;
(b)
who has or has had the right to use cropping or grazing land on the
farm, referred to in paragraph (a), or another farm of
the owner,
and in consideration of such right provides or has provided labour
to the owner or lessee; and
(c)
whose parent or grandparent resided or resides on a farm and had the
use of cropping or grazing land on such farm or another
farm of the
owner, and in consideration of such right provided or provides
labour to the owner or lessee of such or such other
farm,
including
a person who has been appointed a successor to a labour tenant in
accordance with the provisions of section 3(4) and
(5), but
excluding a farmworker”.
There
is no evidence of the First Applicant’s mother providing
labour in consideration for the right to use cropping or
grazing
land on the farm.
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