Case Law[2022] ZALCC 16South Africa
Tafelkop (PTY) Ltd and Another v Dikgalaopeng Community (Di Thomo TSA Bokone and Others (LCC 51/2022) [2022] ZALCC 16 (10 June 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
10 June 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG Case Number: LCC 51/2022 Reportable: No Of Interest to other Judges: No Revised:Yes Before: The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer Heard on: 10 June 2022 Delivered on: 10 June 2022 In the matter between: TAFELKOP (PTY) LTD
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Tafelkop (PTY) Ltd and Another v Dikgalaopeng Community (Di Thomo TSA Bokone and Others (LCC 51/2022) [2022] ZALCC 16 (10 June 2022)
Tafelkop (PTY) Ltd and Another v Dikgalaopeng Community (Di Thomo TSA Bokone and Others (LCC 51/2022) [2022] ZALCC 16 (10 June 2022)
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sino date 10 June 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
Case
Number: LCC 51/2022
Reportable:
No
Of
Interest to other Judges: No
Revised:Yes
Before:
The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer
Heard
on:
10 June 2022
Delivered
on:
10
June 2022
In
the matter between:
TAFELKOP
(PTY) LTD
First Applicant
FONTIS
DEVELOPMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
DIKGALAOPENG
COMMUNITY
(DI
THOMO TSA BOKONE)
First Respondent
ANDREW
MAMADILE MOHLALA
Second Respondent
MARIBE
MAILULA HENDRICK
Third Respondent
BAKWENA
BA MATSEPE
TRADITIONAL
COUNCIL
Fourth Respondent
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
Fifth
Respondent
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER:
PRETORIA
Sixth
Respondent
CHIEF
DIRECTOR: RESTITUTION SUPPORT:
LIMPOPO
Seventh Respondent
MINISTER
OF AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Eighth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER
AJP
[1]
The Applicants sought on an urgent basis to review and set aside,
alternatively suspend,
an interim order of the Groblersdal
Magistrates Court granted
ex parte
on 22 March 2022. The order
interdicted
inter alia
the Applicants from continuing with the
development of a shopping complex on the farm Eengevonden, in the
Limpopo province, in respect
of which the First Respondent has lodged
a restitution claim. The basis for the review is that the Magistrate
lacked jurisdiction
as the application pertained to the First to
Third Respondents’ (applicants in the court
a quo
)
rights in terms of the Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
(“Restitution Act”), a matter over which this Court
has
exclusive jurisdiction.
[2]
The First to Third Respondents opposed the application. I shall refer
to them as the “Opposing
Respondents”. The other cited
Respondents have not participated in these proceedings. The Opposing
Respondents successfully
challenged the
locus standi
of the
Applicants on the basis that there was no resolution by the directors
of the Applicant companies authorizing the institution
of
proceedings. The Applicants were however given an opportunity
to approach the Court on the same papers duly supplemented.
The
Applicants have now filed the requisite resolution authorizing the
institution of proceedings, and the application can now
be
considered.
[3]
The subject matter of the application before the Magistrate has its
genesis in the
Restitution Act, over which this Court has exclusive
jurisdiction. The right which the First Respondent (applicant in the
court
a quo
) sought to protect by applying for the interdict
was their right to restitution, which the development by the
Applicants of the
land claimed by them, could compromise. That this
Court has sole jurisdiction in respect of the subject matter of the
interdict
is evident from section 22(1)(cC) and (d) of the
Restitution Act which provide:
“
22
Land Claims Court.
(1) There shall be a court of law to be known as the Land Claims
Court which shall have the power, to the exclusion of any court
contemplated in section 166 (c), (d) or (e) of the Constitution -
…
(cC) to determine any
matter involving the interpretation or application of this Act or the
Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act, 1996
(Act No. 3 of 1996), with the
exception of matters relating to the definition of “occupier”
in section 1 (1) of the
Extension of Security of Tenure Act, 1997
(Act No. 62 of 1997);
…
(d) to
determine all other matters which require to be determined in terms
of this Act.”
The court
a quo
accordingly did not have the requisite jurisdiction. The Opposing
Respondents have not even asserted otherwise.
[4]
The Magistrate’s
jurisdiction was also in my view barred under sections 29 and 30
of
the Magistrates Court Act 32 of 1944. Whilst section 30(1) thereof
empowers a Magistrate to grant an interdict, section 29(1)(g)
read
together with the
Gazette
[1]
sets a jurisdictional limit of R200 000 for district magistrates
courts and R400 000 for regional magistrates courts on the
monetary
value of the cause of action. The Applicants’ value of the
undeveloped land of R10 000 000 is not disputed,
and
clearly places this matter beyond the jurisdiction of the magistrates
court.
[5]
Finally, I am inclined to agree with the Applicants that the
Magistrate committed
an irregularity in entertaining the application
on an
ex parte
basis, contrary to Magistrates Court Rule
55(3)(a). The Rule precludes
ex parte
applications except
where the court is satisfied that “the giving of notice to the
party against whom the order is claimed
would defeat the purpose of
the application or the degree of urgency is so great that it
justifies dispensing with notice”.
The unsubstantiated averment
by the Opposing Respondents (as applicants in the court
a quo
)
that should the Applicants (respondents in the court
a quo
) be
aware of the proceedings before an interim order is granted, the
building will continue to completion, does not pass muster.
No
factual and evidential basis in satisfaction of Rule 55(3)(a) is
provided, other than the
ipse dixit
of the deponent. For this
reason too, the order ought not to have been granted by the
Magistrate.
[6]
In view of all of the above, I am satisfied that the order of the
Magistrate stands
to be reviewed and set aside. In keeping with this
Court’s practice not to grant orders for costs other than in
exceptional
circumstances, which I do not find in the present
application, I intend granting no order as to costs.
Order:
1.
The interim order of the Magistrate for the
District of Elias Motsoaledi sitting at Groblersdal under case number
207/2022 granted
ex parte
on 22 March 2022 is reviewed and set aside.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
Y
S MEER
Acting
Judge President
Land
Claims Court
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Adv S. Ogunronbi
Instructed
by:
Strydom
Britz Mohulatsi Inc.
For
the First, Second and
Third
Respondents:
Adv. R. H Mahlase
Instructed
by:
KJ
Mogofe Attorneys
[1]
GN
216 in GG 37477 (27 March 2014).
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