Case Law[2022] ZALCC 17South Africa
Greyling and Another v Nkosi and Others (LCC 71/2022 B) [2022] ZALCC 17 (9 June 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
9 June 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG Case Number: LCC 71/2022 B Reportable: No Of Interest to other Judges: No Revised: Yes Before: The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer Heard on: 9 June 2022 Delivered on: 9 June 2022 In the matter between:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Greyling and Another v Nkosi and Others (LCC 71/2022 B) [2022] ZALCC 17 (9 June 2022)
Greyling and Another v Nkosi and Others (LCC 71/2022 B) [2022] ZALCC 17 (9 June 2022)
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sino date 9 June 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case
Number:
LCC 71/2022 B
Reportable:
No
Of
Interest to other Judges: No
Revised:
Yes
Before:
The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer
Heard
on:
9 June 2022
Delivered
on:
9 June 2022
In
the matter between:
BAREND
PETRUS GREYLING
First Applicant
BAREND
PETRUS GREYLING N.O
Second Applicant
and
BUSISIWE
GLORIA NKOSI
First Respondent
NKOSINGIPHILE
GRACE NKOSI
Second Respondent
DR.
PIXLEY KA ISAKA SEME LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
GERT
SIBANDE DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
THE
PROVINCIAL COMMISSIONER
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
Fifth Respondent
MEC,
MPUMALANGA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER
AJP
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application for the
exhumation of the body of Richard Bonginkosi Mabaso (“the
deceased”) from the
Remaining Extent of the farm Buitenzorg 114
HT, Registration Division HT, province of Mpumalanga (“the
farm”), for
reburial at the Esizameleni Graveyard,
Wakkerstroom. The deceased was buried on the farm on 15 May 2022.
[2]
The First and Second Respondents, the family
members of the deceased, oppose the application. The Third to Sixth
Respondents have
not participated in these proceedings.
Background
Facts and Evidence
[3]
On 11 May 2022 the Respondents, as applicants in
that matter, applied on an urgent basis for an order permitting the
burial of the
deceased, their family member, at the burial site on
the farm. The Respondents were funded by Legal Aid in that
application as
they are in this one. Permission for the burial had
been refused by the Applicant. After hearing argument on 14 May 2022.
I dismissed
the application on the grounds that the deceased had not
resided on the farm at the time of his death, such residence being a
threshold
requirement specified in section 6(2)(dA) of the Extension
of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (“ESTA”) for the
right
to bury a deceased family member on the farm. A reasoned
judgment was delivered shortly thereafter.
[4]
Notwithstanding my order of 14 May 2022 being
communicated to the Respondents by their attorney and it being
explained to them that
the burial could not proceed, a fact which
they do not deny, they buried the deceased at the burial site on the
farm on 15 May
2022. Their flagrant disregard for the court order is
extremely disquieting.
[5]
Equally disquieting is the failure on the part of
the South African Police Service (“SAPS”) to ensure
compliance with
the court order, as appears from the following
undisputed account in the affidavit of the Applicant’s attorney
concerning
attempts to obtain the assistance of SAPS –
5.1 On 14 May 2022, the
Applicant, apprehensive that the burial would still go ahead,
contacted Captain Nxumalo of Public Order
Policing, Sibande District
for assistance as the local Wakkerstroom police would not have
manpower to restrain the 100 people anticipated
to attend the
funeral. Pursuant to this, a copy of the application and the court
order were sent to Captain Nxumalo, who advised
that Station
Commander Captain Dlamini had been informed of the situation.
5.2 When it became
apparent that the burial would take place and the Applicant, after
numerous failed attempts, finally reached
Captain Dlamini, the latter
said the burial should be allowed to proceed and that an exhumation
order could thereafter be obtained.
He referred the Applicant to
Brigadier Makatane, SAPS’ legal counsel.
5.3 A copy of the court
order was sent to Brigadier Makatane, who stated that the Respondents
would be in contempt of court if they
proceeded with the burial, and
their only option was to appeal the decision of the Court. It is
undisputed that thereafter ,Captain
Dlamini, also equipped with the
application and court order, handed the court order to the
Respondents and explained that if they
proceeded with the burial,
they would be in contempt of court, and may face criminal charges and
an exhumation application. This
notwithstanding, the burial
proceeded. The replying affidavit states that SAPS was present on the
scene, that the Respondents were
informed that they were not allowed
to proceed with the burial, and this sparked aggressive behaviour
towards SAPS, as can be confirmed
by video material taken on the
scene.
[6]
On 27 May 2022 pursuant to these unfortunate
events, the Applicant instituted this urgent application for the
exhumation of the
deceased.
Urgency
[7]
The Respondents raise lack of urgency as a point
in limine
,
stating that the Applicants have not explained why they will not get
substantive relief at a hearing in due course. The Applicant
counters, correctly in my view, that the body is decomposing daily
and if one waited for a hearing in due course, the extent of
decomposition may well impact on the exhumation process. Furthermore,
says the Applicant, the application is brought on an urgent
basis so
as to prevent a sense of permanency being established in the deceased
being buried in the farm.
[8]
I am inclined to agree. If an exhumation were to
be ordered, it is in the interests of all concerned that this occur
as soon as
possible before a sense of permanency is created. The
application is, to my mind, clearly one of urgency. I note that it is
not
disputed that it was instituted as soon as possible after the
burial. The period of 12 days in launching this application was not
in my view unreasonable.
Jurisdiction of this
Court to grant an exhumation order
[9]
Section 22(2)(c) of the Restitution of Land Rights
Act 22 of 1994 (“Restitution Act”) clothes this Court
with jurisdiction
to decide any issue which is not ordinarily within
its jurisdiction but is incidental to an issue within its
jurisdiction, if the
Court considers it in the interests of justice
to do so. The Respondents submitted that this application did not
fall into the
category of matters over which this Court has
incidental jurisdiction. I disagree. This application is clearly
incidental to a
burial in terms of section 6 of ESTA, a matter over
which this Court clearly has jurisdiction. It is also in my view
clearly in
the interests of justice that it be adjudicated.
[10]
I
mero
motu
raised
the question of this Court’s jurisdiction to grant an
exhumation application in the light of Regulation 26(1) of the
Regulations Relating to the Management of Human Remains,
[1]
promulgated in terms of the
National Health Act 61 of 2003
.
Regulation 26
(1) states:
“
26.
Authorisation for exhumation of human remains.
(1) No exhumations and
reburials of human remains shall be done unless –
(a) authorized by the
relevant sphere of government and permitted by the relevant local
government in whose jurisdiction the exhumation
and reburial will
take place; or
(b) a
court order issued by a magistrate and shall be permitted by the
relevant local government in whose jurisdiction the exhumation
and
reburial will take place.”
This appears to restrict
such applications to the Magistrate’s Court.
[11]
The Applicants contended that this Court could
grant an order permitting the exhumation, which order would be the
basis for a magistrate
to issue an exhumation order. The Respondents
contended that the jurisdiction of this Court was ousted.
[12]
Section 22(2)(a) of the Restitution Act provides
that this Court shall have all such powers in relation to matters
falling within
its jurisdiction as are possessed by a High Court
having jurisdiction in civil proceedings.
[13]
The High Court’s concurrent jurisdiction
with the Magistrates Court is well recognized. In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others v Mpongo and Others
2021
(6) SA 403
(SCA) at para 26, the Court held:
“
the
concurrency of jurisdiction in circumstances in which a claim
justiciable in a Magistrates’ Court has been brought in
a High
Court has been recognised in case law for over a century.”
[14]
In
Nedbank
Ltd v Mateman and Another; Nedbank Ltd v Stringer and Another
[2007] ZAGPHC 295
;
2008
(4) SA 276
(T) at 280,
the court held:
“
It
is settled law that the High Court has concurrent jurisdiction with
any magistrate's court in its
area
of jurisdiction . . .
It
is common cause between counsel before us (and correctly so), that
there is a strong presumption against the ouster or curtailment
of
the High Court's jurisdiction”.
[15]
The court went on to find that the provision in
section 127(8)(a)
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
for the
credit provider to commence proceedings in terms of the
Magistrates'
Courts Act 32 of 1944
for judgment enforcing the credit agreement,
did not deal and was not intended to deal, with the jurisdiction of
the High Court
or the ousting thereof.
[16]
There is no provision in the
National Health Act
which
ousts the jurisdiction of this Court or the High Court. The
purported ouster is contained in a regulation or subordinate
legislation
which, as has been correctly acknowledged, cannot oust a
court’s jurisdiction. See
Golube v
Oosthuizen and Another
1955 (3) SA 1
(T), where at paragraph it was said:
“
Quite
apart from this consideration it seems to me that, in the absence of
express enabling authority, this subordinate legislative
authority
would have no power to limit the Court's jurisdiction in this way.
A subordinate legislative authority has
no power
to oust the jurisdiction of the Court. . .”
[17]
In
similar vein,
Regulation 26
of the Regulations Relating to the
Management of Human Remains, issued under the
National Health Act,
does
not oust the jurisdiction of the High court, as evidenced by the
following high court cases in which exhumation orders were granted:
Mphiki
v Mphiki and Another
[2019]
ZANCHC 43
;
Bukula
and Another v Nkosi
[2014]
ZAGPJHC 298; and
Shai
v
Botlholo
and Others
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 156
.
Nor does the Regulation oust the incidental jurisdiction of this
Court. The intention of the Regulation was in any event intended
to
provide for matters pertaining to the exhumation of human remains and
the proper functioning of the
National Health Act. Its
intention was
not to oust the concurrent jurisdiction of the High Court or the
incidental jurisdiction of this Court.
[2]
This Court accordingly has the requisite jurisdiction to entertain
the application.
[18]
It is common cause that with full knowledge of the
court order and that in defiance thereof, notwithstanding being
warned of the
consequences by members of SAPS and their attorney, the
Respondents buried the deceased on the Applicant’s farm. This
being
so, there is no bar to the application being granted.
Costs
[19]
The Respondents’ defiant burial of the deceased in the light of
the court order which
did not allow it and with full knowledge of the
consequences of their conduct, are in my view exceptional
circumstances which warrant
their being mulcted with costs.
Order
I
order as follows:
1.
The exhumation of the deceased, Richard Bonginkosi
Mabasa, who was buried on the Remaining Extent of Farm Buitenzorg,
114 Registration
Division HT, Province of Mpumalanga on 15 May 2022
for reburial at Esizameleni Graveyard in Wakkerstroom is ordered.
Such exhumation
shall occur in compliance with
Regulation 26
of the
Regulations relating to the Management of Human Remains promulgated
in terms of the
National Health Act 61 of 2003
.
2.
The Third and/or the Fourth and/or Sixth Respondents are ordered to
issue a reburial
permit for the reburial of the deceased at the
Esizameleni in Wakkerstroom.
3.
The Third and/or the Fourth and/or Sixth Respondents are ordered to
oversee and/or
conduct the exhumation, in terms of paragraph 1 above.
4.
The First and Second Respondents, and anyone associated with them,
are interdicted
from interfering with or obstructing the exhumation
of the deceased and from preventing or hindering the reburial of the
deceased,
as aforesaid.
5.
The Fifth Respondent, the Provincial Commissioner of the South
African Police
Services, is directed to oversee the exhumation and
reburial process and ensure enforcement of prayer 4 above.
6.
The First and Second Respondents shall bear the costs of the
application.
Y
S MEER
Acting
Judge President
Land
Claims Court
APPEARANCES
For
the First and Second Applicants:
Adv.
I. Oschman
Instructed
by:
C
Pretorius Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents:
Adv. N. Gama
Instructed
by:
Shabangu Lulamile
Attorneys
[1]
GNR.363 in GG 36473 (22 May 2013).
[2]
See
the discussion of the purpose of the
National Credit Act in
para 79
of
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others v Mpongo and Others
2021
(6) SA 403
(SCA), quoting
Nedbank
Ltd v Mateman and Another; Nedbank Ltd v Stringer and Another
[2007] ZAGPHC 295
;
2008
(4) SA 276
(T) with approval.
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