Case Law[2022] ZALCC 28South Africa
Dangazele and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Mpetsheni and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Nkolisa v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC16/2022;LCC17/2022;LCC18/2022) [2022] ZALCC 28 (20 October 2022)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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## Dangazele and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Mpetsheni and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Nkolisa v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC16/2022;LCC17/2022;LCC18/2022) [2022] ZALCC 28 (20 October 2022)
Dangazele and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Mpetsheni and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others; Nkolisa v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (LCC16/2022;LCC17/2022;LCC18/2022) [2022] ZALCC 28 (20 October 2022)
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sino date 20 October 2022
IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE NUMBER:
LCC16/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
NO
20
October 2022
In the matter between:
NELSON
SIPHO DANGAZELE
FIRST APPLICANT
NOSIPHO
MILDRED NONKONYANA
SECOND APPLICANT
VUYISILE
NYEZI
THIRD APPLICANT
BAFO
MAYARHA MHLAMBISO
FOURTH APPLICANT
VULAMASANGO
SINGENE CAMPAIGN
FIFTH APPLICANT
And
MINISTER OF
AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSION
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE REGIONAL LAND
CLAIMS COMMISSION
EASTERN
CAPE
THIRD RESPONDENT
AND
CASE NUMBER:
LCC17/2022
In the matter between:
GILBERT
MPETSHENI
FIRST APPLICANT
MABEL
NTOMBENTSHA BUWA
SECOND APPLICANT
NOLOYISO
VIRGINIA NKOLISA
THIRD APPLICANT
VULAMASANGO
SINGENE CAMPAIGN
FOURTH APPLICANT
And
MINISTER OF
AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSION
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE REGIONAL LAND
CLAIMS COMMISSION
EASTERN
CAPE
THIRD RESPONDENT
AND
CASE NUMBER:
LCC18/2022
In the matter between:
NOLOYISO
VIRGINIA NKOLISA
FIRST APPLICANT
VULAMASANGO
SINGENE CAMPAIGN
SECOND APPLICANT
And
MINISTER OF
AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSION
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE REGIONAL LAND
CLAIMS COMMISSION
EASTERN
CAPE
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
COWEN J
Introduction
1.
There
are three consolidated applications before us.
[1]
In each case, the applicants ask this Court to authorise the
Commission on the Restitution of Land Rights (the Commission):
1.1.
to commence processing restitution claims
lodged between 1 July 2014 and 28 July 2016 by claimants who say they
were dispossessed
of rights in land as a result of ‘betterment’
schemes implemented in the former Transkei and Ciskei, and
1.2.
to allow potential claimants who have not
yet lodged any such claims to do so.
2.
The applications have their genesis in the
fact that during the initial period of lodgement of restitution
claims, the Eastern Cape
Regional Land Claims Commissioner actively
dissuaded claimants from lodging ‘betterment’ restitution
claims, as appears
more fully below. In these proceedings, it is
common cause that ‘betterment’ schemes, which were
implemented in the
former homelands, resulted in the dispossession of
rights in land after 19 June 2013 as a result of past racially
discriminatory
laws or practices as contemplated by section 2 of the
Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act). I
return
to these issues below.
3.
The founding affidavits in the three
applications are in similar terms. In each case, one of the
applicants is an association known
as the Vulamasango Singene
Campaign (Vulamasango). The isiXhosa words ‘vulamasango
singene’ mean ‘open the door
so we can go in’.
Vulamasango was formed in 2003 by various communities in the Eastern
Cape whose principal mandate is to
campaign for the fair treatment of
victims that were affected by ‘betterment’ dispossession
and for the communities
that were excluded from participation in
restitution programmes. Vulamasango is organised across various
municipal areas in the
Eastern Cape, each of which were affected by
‘betterment’ schemes. Vulamasango acts in the interests
of its members,
being various communities within the former Transkei
and Ciskei areas in the Eastern Cape.
4.
In each case there are also individual
applicants, who live, respectively, in Bhencuth Village, Majuba
Village and in Tyeni Location
in the Eastern Cape. These are villages
that, it is alleged, were subject to ‘betterment’
schemes. These applicants
bring the application in their own
interests and on behalf of the community that reside in their
villages. In LCC 16/2022, there
are four individual applicants living
in Bhencuth Village: Nelson Sipho Dangazele, Nozipho Mildred
Nonkonyana, Vuyisile Nyezi and
Bafo Mayarha Mhlambiso. In LCC 17/2022
there are three individual applicants living in Majuba Village: Mr
Gilbert Mpetsheni, Ms
Mabel Ntombentsha Buwa and Ms Noloyiso Virginia
Nkolisa. In LCC 18/2022 there is only one individual applicant, Ms
Noloyiso Virginia
Nkolisa. She lives in Tyeni Location in the
Kwa-Bhaca district of the Eastern Cape.
5.
The Chief Land Claims Commissioner is the
second respondent. The Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural
Development (the
Minister) is cited with her as the first respondent
and the Regional Land Claims Commissioner of the Eastern Cape (the
Regional
Commissioner) is cited as the third respondent. These
respondents, to whom I collectively refer as the State respondents,
oppose
the application.
6.
The
Commission is, at present, unable to process restitution claims
lodged between 1 July 2014 and 28 July 2016 as a result of an
interdict the Constitutional Court granted in a judgment that is
colloquially referred to as
LAMOSA
1.
[2]
The Commission is in receipt of 163 383 restitution claims lodged
country-wide between those dates, of which 12 654 were lodged
in
the Eastern Cape.
[3]
I refer to
these 163 383 claims as ‘preserved claims’, a term
best understood with reference to
LAMOSA
1
and
the case that followed it, colloquially referred to as
LAMOSA
2.
[4]
7.
In brief, when the Restitution Act was
enacted in 1994, it required claimants to lodge restitution claims by
31 December 1998 (the
initial phase). As at October 2021, there
remained some 7 148 claims lodged during the initial phase that
the Commission had
to finalise. Of those, 684 concern land in the
Eastern cape. I refer to these as old claims. The date 1 July 2014
marks the commencement
of what can be regarded as a second phase of
lodgement of restitution claims. The second phase was enabled by the
enactment of
the Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act 15 of 2014
(the Amendment Act), which extended the cut-off date to lodge claims
to
30 June 2019. However, the second phase was cut short when, on 28
July 2016, the Constitutional Court delivered its decision in
LAMOSA
I,
declaring the Amendment Act to be
invalid because Parliament had failed to satisfy its obligation to
facilitate public involvement
in accordance with section 72(1)(a) of
the Constitution. The declaration of invalidity operated
prospectively, with the result
that restitution claims lodged from 1
June 2014 to 28 July 2016 remained intact. But the Constitutional
Court interdicted the Commission
from processing them at that stage.
Thus the term ‘preserved claims’.
8.
The
processing of the preserved claims is interdicted in paragraphs 4 to
7 of the Constitutional Court’s order in
LAMOSA
I
in the following terms:
‘
4.
Pending the re-enactment by Parliament of an Act reopening the period
of lodgement of land claims envisaged in s25(7) of the
Constitution,
the Commission on Restitution of Land Rights, represented in these
proceedings by the Chief Land Claims Commissioner
(Commission) is
interdicted from processing in any manner whatsoever land claims
lodged from 1 July 2014.
‘
5.
The interdict in para 4 does not apply to the receipt and
acknowledgement of receipt of land claims in terms of s6(1)(a) of the
Restitution Act.
‘
6.
Should the processing, including referral to the Land Claims Court,
of all land claims lodged by 31 December 1998 be finalised
before the
re-enactment of the Act referred to in para 4 above, the Commission
may process land claims lodged from 1 July 2014.
‘
7.
In the event that Parliament does not re-enact the Act envisaged in
para 4 within 24 months from the date of this order, the
Chief Land
Claims Commissioner must, and any other party to this application or
person with a direct and substantial interest in
this order may,
apply to this court within two months after that period has elapsed
for an appropriate order on the processing
of land claims lodged from
1 July 2014.’
9.
As
matters transpired, Parliament did not enact any legislation within
the 24 months, and has still not done so.
[5]
After the 24 months had lapsed, the Speaker of the National Assembly
and the National Council of Provinces applied to the Constitutional
Court to extend the 24-month period. The application to extend the
time period failed in
LAMOSA
2
.
However, the applicants in
LAMOSA
1
instituted a counter-claim aimed at dealing with the position of
preserved claims and their processing thereby triggering paragraph
7
of the order, referred to above. Other parties also made proposals
regarding those claims. The Commission abided the Court’s
decision reporting on their progress dealing with old claims. The
Constitutional Court held that as there is no clarity as to when
Parliament will enact any new legislation which may provide a
procedure for dealing with preserved claims and prioritisation of
claims, it would be unfair to perpetuate the interdict against
processing them until all old claims have been finalised.
[6]
In the result, in
LAMOSA
2,
the Constitutional Court granted a new order regulating how they
would be dealt with, while expressly preserving Parliament’s
right to legislate.
[7]
10.
The
LAMOSA
2
order lifted the supervisory role of the Constitutional Court but
made provision for judicial oversight by the Land Claims Court.
[8]
Prayer 2 of the
LAMOSA
2
order, which was subject to Parliament legislating otherwise (and to
date it has not), provides in relevant part:
‘
(a)
he [Commission] is prohibited from processing in any way any claims
lodged in terms of section 10 of the [Restitution Act] between
1 July
2014 and 28 July 2016 (interdicted claims) until the earlier of the
dates when –
(i) It has settled or
referred to the Land Claims Court all claims lodged on or before 31
December 1998 (old claims) by way of a
referral of the claim in terms
of s 14; or
(ii) The Land Claims
Court, upon application by any interested party, grants permission to
the Commission to begin processing interdicted
claims, whether in
respect of the whole or part of the Republic of South Africa and
whether in respect or part or all of the process
for administering an
interdicted claim.
(b) Until the date
referred to in para (a), no interdicted claim may be adjudicated upon
or considered in any manner whatsoever
by the Land Claims Court in
any proceedings for the restitution of rights in land in respect of
old claims, provided that interdicted
claimants may be admitted as
interested parties before the Land Claims Court solely to the extent
that their participation may
contribute to the establishment or
rejection of the old claims or in respect of any other issue that the
presiding judge may allow
to be addressed in the interests of
justice.
(c) Notwithstanding the
provisions of s 11(5) and 11 (5A) of the Restitution Act, no
interdicted claimant shall be entitled to any
relief having the
effect of –
(i)
altering or varying –
(a)
the relief granted to any claimant in terms
of section 35 of the Restitution Act in respect of a finalised old
claim;
(b)
the terms of an agreement concluded in
terms of s 42 of the Restitution Act; or
(c)
an award in terms of s 42E(1)(a) or (b) of
the Restitution Act, unless the Land Claims Court in exceptional
circumstances orders
otherwise; and / or
(ii)
awarding to such interdicted claimant land
or a right in land that is subject to a pending claim for restoration
by an old claimant.
(d)
The Chief Land Claims Commissioner must
file a report with the Land Claims Court, to be dealt with as the
Judge President of that
Court may deem fit, at six-monthly intervals
from the date of this order, setting out –
(i)
The number of outstanding old claims in
each of the regions on the basis of which the Commission’s
administration is structured;
(ii) The
anticipated date of completion in each region of the processing of
the old claims, including short-term targets
for the number of old
claims to be processed;
(iii)
The nature of any constraints, whether
budgetary or otherwise, faced by the Commission in meeting its
anticipated completion date.
(iv)
The solutions that have been implemented or
are under consideration for addressing the constraints; and
(v)
Such further matters as the Land Claims
Court may direct, until all old claims have been processed.
(e) The Land Claims Court
may make such order or orders as it deems fit to ensure the
expeditious and prioritised processing of
old claims.’
11.
This Court’s competence to entertain
the applications before us arises centrally from paragraph 2(a)(ii)
of the
LAMOSA 2
order
and the Restitution Act.
The relief sought and
issues arising
12.
In
the notices of motion, the applicants ask for wide ranging relief.
However, at the hearing, Mr Xozwa, who appeared for the applicants,
informed the Court that the applicants are abandoning several
prayers.
[9]
In the
circumstances, it is not necessary to allude to these. The only
substantive relief the applicants persist with are prayers
2 and 7,
being orders:
12.1.
That the Court permit the Commission to
begin processing interdicted claims lodged in terms of the
Restitution Act between 1 July
2014 and 28 July 2016 and those claims
that were never lodged in respect of people dispossessed of land
rights through the implementation
of ‘betterment’ in the
former Transkei and Ciskei areas;
12.2.
Alternatively declaring that the
applicants’ members have the right to lodge claims and must
have their claims dealt with
in a comparable manner to that set out
in the Restitution Act.
13.
The State respondents delivered an
answering affidavit deposed to by Angela Thokozila Didiza, the
Minister. The Minister, who speaks
for all of the State respondents,
explains that she is sympathetic to the applicants, but she adopts
the view that the relief sought
is not competent, and in any event,
if granted, would cause an ‘administrative nightmare’
with dire budgetary consequences.
14.
The issues that arise for decision in the
cases before us are the following:
14.1.
First, whether the applicants have
standing. We conclude that as potential beneficiaries of ‘betterment’
claims, some
of which are preserved claims, they do.
14.2.
Second, whether it is competent for this
Court to grant any relief in respect of claims that have never been
lodged, whether during
the initial phase or after the Amendment Act
was implemented. We conclude that it is not.
14.3.
Third, whether the Court should permit the
Commission to start to process interdicted betterment claims lodged
between 1 July 2014
and 28 July 2016 in respect of the former
Transkei and Ciskei areas. We conclude that the Court is not able to
make this decision
on the information supplied and we direct that the
Court must be supplied with further information about the likely
extent of such
claims before any decision can be duly taken. To the
extent necessary, we authorise the Commission to process interdicted
claims
in the Eastern Cape to enable that information to be supplied.
15.
Before dealing with these issues, we deal
briefly with ‘betterment’ schemes in the context of the
Restitution Act and
why it is that the applicants seek relief
specifically in respect of ‘betterment’ claims in the
former Transkei and
Ciskei.
‘
Betterment’
and the Restitution Act
16.
In
terms of section 2 of the Restitution Act, the persons or communities
who are entitled to restitution of rights in land must
have been
dispossessed of a right in land after 19 June 1913 as a result of
past racially discriminatory laws or practices.
[10]
As mentioned, it is common cause in these proceedings that
‘betterment’ schemes, which were applied in the former
homelands, dispossessed persons of rights in land as a result of past
racially discriminatory laws or practices in the sense contemplated
by section 2. Moreover, this Court has previously awarded restitution
of land arising from a ‘betterment’ claim,
[11]
and the Commission has settled ‘betterment’ claims on the
basis that ‘betterment’ gave rise to dispossessions
of
land as contemplated by section 2.
[12]
It is not necessary for us to deal in these proceedings with the
circumstances in which a ‘betterment’ claim gives
rise to
a restitution claim. However, some appreciation of what is at stake
is warranted, given the nature of the relief sought
and its potential
impact on the process of land restitution promised by the
Constitution.
17.
‘
Betterment’
schemes were implemented in the former homeland areas and as such, it
can be emphasised that the schemes only
applied to black persons.
According to the applicants, the legislative basis for betterment is
found in the notorious Native Land
Act 27 of 1913, the Black
Administration Act 38 of 1927 and the Native Trust and Land Act 38 of
1936 and in subordinate legislation
made thereunder.
[13]
Further homeland specific legislation is also relevant such as the
Transkei Agricultural Development Act 10 of 1965. Stated at
a high
level, the schemes entailed the proclamation or deeming of an area as
a ‘betterment’ area and the division of
land into three
types: residential, arable and grazing land. Affected residents were
then relocated from their previous homesteads
to these residential
areas (where necessary), and arable and grazing areas in ‘betterment’
areas were then allocated
and strictly regulated.
18.
What is immediately apparent from the
information before us is that the impact of ‘betterment’
schemes was felt by rural
black South Africans in large numbers. In
the founding papers, Ms Noloyiso Ntloko, the Chairperson of
Vulamasango explains that
in late 2003, the then Minister of
Agriculture and Land Affairs estimated that 375 villages in the
Ciskei and 900 villages in the
Transkei representing between 190 000
and 320 000 households were dispossessed of land rights through
the implementation
of ‘betterment’ schemes in those
areas. Nationally, she says, it is estimated that betterment policies
‘dispossessed’
about 2.5 million South Africans. The
applicants explain that although ‘betterment’ was
effected in the name of conservation
and agricultural development,
the implementation of the schemes was at least in some cases coerced
and might better be described
as forced removals. The description the
applicants supply regarding what ensued depicts systematic control
over the rural population
in a process that, at least in some cases,
resulted in loss of land, productive capacity and grazing, increased
poverty and reliance
on migrant labour earnings and even
environmental degradation.
19.
For present purposes, and without making
findings on the legal nature of ‘betterment’ or any
rights affected thereby,
it is clear that the issues at stake are
very serious ones concerning the promises of the Constitution
relating to land justice,
and may affect numerous vulnerable rural
people.
The position of
claimants in the Eastern Cape
20.
A
notable feature of these proceedings is that relief is sought only in
respect of claimants or potential claimants in the former
Transkei
and Ciskei areas, which form part of the Eastern Cape. In this
regard, it is common cause that during the initial phase
of lodgement
of restitution claims, the Commission actively dissuaded potential
‘betterment’ scheme claimants in the
Eastern Cape from
lodging claims with the Commission, with the result that many did
not.
[14]
The stance was
apparently informed both by a view that laws and practices to which
people were subjected while in the former homelands
were not racially
discriminatory and the view that since the removal of persons
occurred ostensibly ‘for the public good’,
this could not
be remedied under the Restitution Act. The approach resulted in the
rejection, in practice, of claims sought to
be submitted and
officials routinely advising people from the former Transkei and
Ciskei that they were not entitled to lodge claims
and turning them
away. The applicants refer to a specific occasion in 1998 during an
interview on Umhlobo Wenene Radio Station,
which broadcast in the
Eastern Cape mainly in the isiXhosa language in which an official of
the Commission from the Eastern Cape,
a Mr Zonyane allegedly stated
that claims emanating from the former homelands did not qualify for
restitution. The view appears
to have been that while the Restitution
Act addresses laws and practices that resulted in people moving to
the former homelands,
it does not address laws and practices to which
people were subjected while in the homelands. A different view was
apparently taken
in Gauteng. It can be noted that the suggestion that
‘betterment’ schemes may not give rise to restitution
claims was
at least indirectly endorsed by excerpts of the 1997
Department of Land Affairs’ White Paper on South African Land
Policy.
[15]
21.
The State respondents thereafter changed
their view on the matter and explain that the position adopted in the
Eastern Cape was
based on a ‘
bona
fide
misunderstanding’ of the
Restitution Act. However, it was too late for many claimants who had
missed the 31 December 1998
deadline. Their exclusion was one concern
that informed the extension of the period to lodge claims in terms of
the Amendment Act,
which enabled claimants again to lodge claims. But
that reprieve was cut short due to the Constitutional Court decision
in
LAMOSA 1
.
22.
The applicants’ evidence on these
matters is not disputed by the State respondents. On the information
before us, we can accept
that those who resided in the Eastern Cape,
and thus in the former Transkei and Ciskei, were disproportionately
affected by the
Commission’s active dissuasion against the
lodgement of ‘betterment’ claims during the initial
phase. Indeed,
according to the Commission’s own estimations,
in the former Transkei, approximately 900 villages were dispossessed
through
‘betterment’ of which at least 800 did not lodge
claims in the initial period and in the former Ciskei, ‘betterment’
was implemented in approximately 250 locations, comprising
approximately 375 villages, of which at least 320 did not lodge
claims
in the initial period.
23.
It is against this background of active
dissuasion that the applicants call upon this Court to prioritise
preserved ‘betterment’
claims and say that at this
juncture, the Commission must be permitted at least to commence
processing these claims. Although the
State respondents accept the
plight of ‘betterment’ claimants in the Eastern Cape,
they contend that their position
is not
sui
generis
because many of the claimants
who lodged preserved claims failed to lodge claims in the initial
period ‘as a result of government’s
failure to reach all
people who wanted to lodge claims’ and their ‘inadequate
outreach programmes prior to 31 December
1998.’
The first issue:
Standing
24.
The
first issue for consideration is whether the applicants have standing
to institute these proceedings. Mr Majozi, who appeared
for the State
respondents, submitted that they do not. In its order in
LAMOSA
2
,
the Constitutional Court ruled that any interested party may apply to
this Court to permit the Commission to process interdicted
claims.
[16]
In
SARDA
,
the Constitutional Court held that a Court ought to grant leave to
intervene to a party with a direct and substantial interest
in the
subject matter of the case:
[17]
“
What
constitutes a direct and substantial interest is the legal interest
in the subject-matter of the case which could be prejudicially
affected by the order of the court. This means that the applicant
must show that it has a right adversely affected or likely to
be
affected by the order sought.’
25.
I have referred to Vulamasango’s
position in paragraph 3 above. In my view, Vulamasango is an
interested party as contemplated
by section 38(c) and (e) of the
Constitution, which confers the right on various persons to approach
a competent court alleging
that a right in the Bill of Rights has
been infringed or threatened. Section 38(c) confers the right on
anyone acting in the interests
of a group or class of persons.
Section 38(e) confers the right on an association acting in the
interests of its members, and I
accept that members of Vulamasango
and the persons whose interests they advance have a direct and
substantial interest in the subject
matter of this case. That is so
both in instances where a person has lodged a ‘betterment’
restitution claim that is
a preserved claim and where a person has
not lodged any ‘betterment’ restitution claim.
26.
In my view, the individual applicants also
have standing to seek relief sought in the application in their own
interests or in the
interests of those of their village community who
were also affected by ‘betterment’. The individual
applicants have
asserted that they and those whose interests they
assert are victims of ‘betterment’ dispossession in the
named areas
of the Eastern Cape and who did not lodge claims in the
initial lodgement period (pre December 1998) because it was announced
on
‘Radio Xhosa’ that they were not entitled to lodge a
claim. They assert that they have a direct and substantial interest
in the relief sought ‘as described in
LAMOSA
1
’. The difficulty with their
founding affidavits is that it is not stated expressly whether their
position is that they lodged
claims which now constitute preserved
claims or whether their position is that they are yet to lodge claims
if so allowed. However,
in the answering affidavit, the Minister
accepts, from the context of the application that at least some of
the applicants lodged
preserved claims and others have not lodged
claims at all. While it would have been better if the applicants had
indicated their
precise interests, we can accept in these
circumstances that the applicants have standing, albeit that they may
not all have a
legal interest in the same relief. Some will have a
legal interest in the relief aimed at processing interdicted
preserved ‘betterment’
claims and others will have a
legal interest in the relief aimed at authorising lodgement of new
‘betterment’ claims.
The second issue:
claims not yet lodged
27.
The second issue is whether it is competent
for this Court to grant any relief in respect of claims that have
never been lodged,
whether during the initial phase or after the
Amendment Act was implemented. As indicated, we conclude that it is
not.
28.
This Court is a creature of statute. Its
jurisdiction in respect of restitution matters is framed by the
Restitution Act. In terms
of section 2(1)(e) of the Restitution Act a
person is entitled to restitution of a right in land if the claim for
such restitution
was lodged by 31 December 1998. Its jurisdiction in
respect of preserved claims is, at present, constrained by the terms
of the
Constitutional Court order in
LAMOSA
2
. This Court does not itself have the
power to re-open restitution claims, for ‘betterment’
claims or any other claims:
at least absent a challenge to
constitutional validity of the cut-off dates, that is a matter for
the legislature. Indeed, Mr Xoswa
conceded as much.
The third issue:
should the Court permit the Commission to process preserved
‘betterment’ claims in the former Transkei
and Ciskei
areas
29.
The third issue is whether the Court
should, in terms of paragraph 2(a)(ii) of the Constitutional Court’s
order in
LAMOSA 2
,
grant permission to the Commission to begin processing interdicted
claims, whether in respect of the whole or part of the Republic
of
South Africa and whether in respect of part or all of the process for
administering an interdicted claim. The relief is sought
specifically
in respect of preserved ‘betterment’ claims in respect of
the former Transkei and Ciskei areas. The case
advanced in respect of
these claims is that they should be prioritised given the
Commission’s active dissuasion in respect
of lodgement of
‘betterment’ claims in the Eastern Cape, which had dire
implications for the realisation of important
constitutional rights
and in view of the extensive ongoing delays encountered in finalising
old claims.
30.
In response, the Minister contends that
commencing to process preserved claims would result in administrative
chaos with dire financial
implications and would result in further
delaying the processing of old claims, which must be prioritised
according to the Constitutional
Court’s orders in
LAMOSA
1
and
LAMOSA
2
. To substantiate this, the Minister
explains that as at the end of October 2021, the total projected
settlement cost for the outstanding
7 148 restitution claims
nationally is some R65.5 billion. As indicated, 684 (<10%) of
these concern land in the Eastern
Cape. The projected settlement cost
of these claims is said to be some R8 139 billion (a figure that
appears also to include
the cost of some additional 181 recently
finalised and settled claims in that province). The Eastern Cape is
said to be understaffed
and faces budgetary constraints particularly
in the ‘human resource intensive research phase’. The
Minister explains
further that the Commission, nationally, requires a
staff complement of 1544 people but currently only has 784 staff. In
the Eastern
Cape, there are only some 70 staff of a required staff
complement of 196 people. There is at present a moratorium on
post-filling.
In the current three-year budget cycle, there is an
allocation of only some R9 billion for land claims. As at the end of
October
2021, no province had completed processing old claims. This
lamentable state of affairs calls for urgent rectification.
Unattended,
the noble intentions of the restitution project elude
those whom the Restitution Act was intended to benefit.
31.
The respective positions of the provinces
are indicated in the table below, which, according to the
Commission’s statistics,
indicate that 76% of total outstanding
claims are in the three provinces of KwaZulu Natal, Limpopo and
Mpumalanga. However, the
outstanding claims in the Eastern Cape
represent close to 10% and as the Minister indicates, numerical
indicators do not reveal
the complexity of claims nor do they provide
insight into the resource challenges faced in a particular province
such as the Eastern
Cape.
EC
FS
GP
KZN
LP
MP
NC
NW
WC
Total
684
(10%)
6
(<0.5%)
386
(5%)
2386
(33%)
1438
(20%)
1610
(23%)
42
(1%)
208
(3%)
388
(5%)
7148
32.
Importantly, the State respondents are
currently unable to inform this Court how many preserved ‘betterment’
claims
there are, nor indeed, how many preserved claims there are in
respect of the former Transkei and former Ciskei or the parts thereof
where ‘betterment’ schemes were implemented.
33.
In
this regard, the Commission has adopted the view that, save for
acknowledging receipt of preserved claims in terms of s6(1)(a)
of the
Restitution Act, the Constitutional Court’s interdict prohibits
it from administratively sorting the preserved claims
in any way
until such time as the date referred to in paragraph 2(a) of the
order in LAMOSA 2 arrives. The Minister has said in
her answering
affidavit that it would take roughly a year just to determine which
of the 163 383 preserved claims lodged nationally
are
‘betterment’ claims and which are not. The Minister
estimates that that process on its own will incur a cost of
R8
billion for ‘human resources, resource mobilisation and
outreach.’ Notably, however, the estimated cost is in respect
of all preserved claims lodged nationally, not those lodged in the
Eastern Cape generally, the former Transkei and Ciskei specifically
or those parts of these former homelands where ‘betterment’
schemes were implemented. When queried about the cost,
Mr Majozi
indicated his instructions to be that the cost relates to what would
be incurred in the process of accepting and investigating
claims in
the sense contemplated by Rules 3 and 5 of the Rules regarding the
Procedure of the Commission made under section 16(1)
of the
Restitution Act.
[18]
Rule 3
governs acceptance of claims for investigation
[19]
and Rule 5 governs investigations by the Regional Commissioner.
[20]
Acceptance and investigation are two steps in the formal processing
of claims.
34.
I
accept that the Commission would only be in a position to provide
reasonably accurate information to this Court about the number
of
‘betterment’ claims in the Ciskei and Transkei if claims
were formally processed in this way. And while the figure
of R8
billion is unsubstantiated, I accept that embarking on the formal
process of accepting and investigating claims under Rules
3 and 5
would both require a very significant budget, even if limited to the
Eastern Cape, and that this would impede the finalisation
of old
claims in those areas. This is because according to the Commission’s
process, it is the investigation of the claims
in terms of Rule 5
through which the Commission establishes the date and circumstances
of the dispossession of the right in such
land, the nature of the
right in land claimed, whether there are competing claims on the same
land, and which racially discriminatory
law or practice gave rise to
the dispossession.
[21]
35.
But it does not follow that pursuing the
formal process of acceptance and investigation of the claims under
Rules 3 and 5 are the
only ways in which relevant information can be
gleaned about the likely number of preserved ‘betterment’
claims lodged
by those actively dissuaded from lodging claims in the
Eastern Cape. While the exercise may be imperfect, it may rationally
be
assumed that the vast majority of persons affected by the
dissuasion are amongst the 12 654 preserved claims that were
lodged
in the Eastern Cape. As indicated above, the legislative
scheme that governed ‘betterment’ entailed,
inter
alia,
the proclamation or deeming of
areas as ‘betterment’ areas. Even on the information
supplied by the Minister, it is
known how many villages are affected,
and in any event, it can readily be ascertained what villages were
affected by ‘betterment’
schemes in the former Transkei
and Ciskei. If that is so, as it appears to be, then it would be a
relatively simple exercise to
ascertain how many of the 12 654
preserved claims lodged in the Eastern Cape affect land in areas of
the former Transkei and
Ciskei where ‘betterment’ was
implemented. While the figure could not be treated as an accurate
determination of the
number of ‘betterment’ claims in the
Eastern Cape, absent any contrary indication, it could serve as a
reasonable estimate.
36.
Moreover,
it cannot be assumed that useful information relevant to estimating
the number of preserved ‘betterment’ claims
in the former
Transkei and Ciskei could not be gleaned from a preliminary
administrative sorting of the preserved claims forms
lodged under
section 10 of the Restitution Act.
[22]
While claim forms will, in the nature of things, vary in their
specificity, level of detail and accuracy, the forms themselves
ought
to reveal at the very least whether the claim is in respect of
property that fell within a ‘betterment’ area
and some
forms will reveal pointed information about the rights in land
allegedly dispossessed. In addition, the applicants and
specifically
Vulamasango, have tendered their support to assist the Commission to
ascertain the approximate number of preserved
‘betterment’
claims in the Eastern Cape. This co-operation would alleviate the
administrative burden involved in making
this assessment.
37.
Mr
Majozi contended that this Court could not expect the Commission, in
these proceedings, to have embarked on any exercise of administrative
sorting of claims to estimate the number of ‘betterment’
claims in the affected areas, for two reasons. First, he contended
that the case pleaded did not warrant such a response. I disagree.
Indeed, the Minister sought to provide one albeit at a very
high
level.
[23]
An applicant
seeking relief under paragraph 2(a)(ii) will in the ordinary course
not be in a position to provide information relevant
to the
administration of preserved claims and its cost. That information
resides with the State respondents. And from the Court’s
perspective, absent provision of such information, this Court is
unable sensibly to determine if there is a proper basis for
permitting
such claims to be processed and if so, where and in what
manner. Rather, this Court would be substantially constrained to wait
until a province has completed, or nearly completed processing all
old claims before allowing the commencement of the processing
of
preserved claims in that province.
38.
Second,
the Commission understands that to do the work entailed in providing
even a reasonable estimate of affected claims would
entail a breach
of the Constitutional Court’s prohibition on processing
preserved claims ‘in any way’.
[24]
On this interpretation, the affected claims and forms must, in
effect, not be sorted in any way while the prohibition on processing
is in place. I accept that the Constitutional Court’s
prohibition on processing preserved claims would preclude the
Commission
from embarking on the processes entailed in Rules 3 and 5
of its Rules. But in my view, it is doubtful that the Constitutional
Court’s prohibition precludes some level of administrative
sorting as a prior process, at least to enable accounting to this
Court under the
LAMOSA
2
order. On the other hand, even if such administrative sorting is
permitted, on the facts of this case, the line between what is
then
permissible and what is not, may become somewhat blurred and it would
be wholly undesirable for the Commission and its officials
to be
placed in a position where they may not know on which side of the
line they are treading.
39.
This
Court is entitled to conduct any part of its proceedings on an
inquisitorial basis.
[25]
Moreover, paragraph 2(a)(ii) of the Constitutional Court’s
order in LAMOSA 2 expressly contemplates that this Court can grant
permission to the Commission to begin processing preserved claims in
respect of part of the process of administering claims. In
our view,
the interests of justice demand that to the extent necessary, we make
such an order, and, that we invoke our inquisitorial
powers to permit
and require the Commission to conduct administrative sorting of the
relevant claims so as to supply this Court
with a reasonable estimate
of the number of preserved claims in the former Transkei and Ciskei
generally, and the specific areas
thereof where ‘betterment’
schemes were implemented. Upon receipt of that information, and any
further relevant information,
this Court can then assess whether to
permit the formal processing of such claims in light of all of the
information before us.
40.
We also direct the applicants to deliver a
supplementary affidavit supplying related information.
Order
41.
The following order is made:
41.1.
The Commission is directed, within four
months of the date of this order, to deliver an affidavit supplying
the Court with:
41.1.1.a
description of the areas and villages in the former Transkei and
Ciskei in respect of which betterment schemes were implemented;
41.1.2.a
reasonable estimate of the number of preserved claims lodged in the
Eastern Cape in respect of land in those areas and
villages; and
41.1.3.any
other relevant information.
41.2.
To the extent necessary, the Commission is
permitted to process preserved claims lodged in the Eastern Cape by
embarking on a process
of administrative sorting and capturing
relevant information.
41.3.
The applicants are directed:
41.3.1.to
co-operate with the Commission in the above process;
41.3.2.to
deliver an affidavit within three months of the date of this order
supplying such information as may be available or obtained
relating
to the matters in paragraph 41 above.
41.4.
Either party may set the application
down for further hearing after the Commission has delivered the
affidavit referred to in paragraph
41, or request a conference in
terms of the Rules of the Land Claims Court.
41.5.
Costs are reserved for later determination.
S J Cowen
Judge
Land Claims Court
Y S Meer
Acting Judge President
Land Claims Court
Date of hearing: 18
August 2022
Date of judgment: 20
October 2022
Appearances:
For the applicants: Mr
MMJ Xozwa instructed by Siyathemba Sokutu Attorneys Inc East London
For the respondents: Mr
MM Majozi and Ms AF Ashton instructed by the State Attorney, Port
Elizabeth
[1]
LCC16/22,
LCC17/22 and LCC18/22.
[2]
Land
Access Movement of South Africa and others v Chairperson of the
National Council of Provinces and others
2016(5)
SA 635 (CC) (LAMOSA 1).
[3]
6 180
in East London and 6 474 in Queenstown.
## [4]Speaker,
National Assembly and another v Land Access Movement of South Africa
and others[2019] ZACC 10; 2019 (5) BCLR 619 (CC); 2019 (6) SA 568 (CC)(LAMOSA
2).
[4]
Speaker,
National Assembly and another v Land Access Movement of South Africa
and others
[2019] ZACC 10; 2019 (5) BCLR 619 (CC); 2019 (6) SA 568 (CC)
(LAMOSA
2).
[5]
In
LAMOSA
1
,
The
Constitutional Court expressly contemplated the possibility that
this might occur either because of a shift in government
policy or
for some other reason. Supra n 2 at para 90.
[6]
Supra
n 4 at para 55.
[7]
Id at para 55 and 60
[8]
Id
at para 59.
[9]
Prayers
3 to 5 and 8 to 10 were abandoned.
[10]
In turn, the Restitution Act gives effect to
section
25(7) of the Constitution which provides: ‘A person or
community dispossessed of property after 19 June 1913 as
a result of
past racially discriminatory laws or practices is entitled to the
extent provided by an Act of Parliament, either
to restitution of
that property or to equitable redress.’
## [11]Mazizini
Community and Others v Minister for Rural Development and Land
Reform and Others[2018]
ZALCC 5; [2018] 3 All SA 164 (LCC) at paras 243 to 245.
[11]
Mazizini
Community and Others v Minister for Rural Development and Land
Reform and Others
[2018]
ZALCC 5; [2018] 3 All SA 164 (LCC) at paras 243 to 245.
[12]
See for example the settlement described in
Gongqose
and Others v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Others, Gongqose
and S
[2018] ZASCA 87
;
[2018] 3 All SA 307
(SCA);
2018 (5) SA 104
(SCA);
2018 (2) SACR 367
(SCA). The applicants explain that the State
settled various betterment claims lodged in the Keiskammahoek
District of
the former Ciskei between 2000 and 2002. This
includes a claim known as the Chata claim which was referred to this
Court
by way of direct access under case number LCC 154/1998.
[13]
The subordinate legislation the applicants identify as relevant,
including to the former Transkei and Ciskei, are Proclamation
302 of
1928 made by the Governor General in terms of section 25 of the
Black Administration Act. Proclamation 117 of 1931 and
Proclamation
31 of 1939, Proclamation 116 of 1949.
[14]
This
process has provoked academic debate.
See
G
Minkley and A Westaway (2005) The Application of Rural Restitution
to Betterment Cases in the Eastern Cape, Social Dynamics,
31:1,
104-128 at 115, DOI: 10.1080/02533950508628698 accessed on
Https://doi.org/10.1080/02533950508628698
(Minkley
and Westaway)..
[15]
The White Paper stated: ‘The claims of those
dispossessed under ‘betterment’ policies, which involved
forced removal and loss of land rights for millions of inhabitants
of the former Bantustans, should be addressed through tenure
security programmes, land administration reform and land
redistribution support programmes.’ See pp 55-6. The
applicants
refer to the White Paper in the founding affidavits.
[16]
See above para 9.
## [17]South
African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others [2017] ZACC 4; 2017 (8) BCLR
1053 (CC); 2017
(5) SA 1 (CC) at para 9 to 11.
[17]
South
African Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others [2017] ZACC 4; 2017 (8) BCLR
1053 (CC); 2017
(5) SA 1 (CC) at para 9 to 11.
[18]
Published
in GoN R703, G16407 on 12 May 1995 as amended.
[19]
Rule 3 reads:
(1) A
regional land claims commissioner having jurisdiction over the land
in respect of which a claim is instituted
shall accept the claim for
investigation where he or she is satisfied –
(a) Subject
to the provisions of section 11(2) of the Act, that the claim was
lodged –
(i)
Substantially in the form of Annexure A together with such
additional documents as are relevant to substantiate the claim; and
(ii)
With any regional office or the Head Office of the Commission or
the
Department of Land Affairs not later than 31 December 1998;
(b) That the
claimant has reasonable grounds for arguing that the claim meets the
criteria set out in section 2 of
the Act; and
(c)
That the claim is not frivolous or vexatious,
Whereupon
he or she shall advise the claimant accordingly.
(2) In the
case of an informal land right, the documents contemplated in
paragraph (a)(i) of subrule (1) may include
a sworn statement by the
claimant, giving a full description of the land in question and the
nature of the right being claimed.
[20]
Rule 5 reads: On acceptance of a claim for investigation, the
Regional Land Claims Commissioner or a person designated
by him or
her, shall –
(a) Ensure
that the outstanding information required in respect of the claim is
obtained;
(b)
Establish if the land is State-owned and, if not, obtain particulars
of the owner, and the history of the acquisition
of the land by the
owner;
(c)
Establish the purpose for which the land is used at that stage and
the conditions of such use;
(d)
Establish the date and circumstances of the dispossession of the
right in such land;
(e)
Establish whether any compensation or compensatory land has been
received, the amount of such compensation, the
basis on which such
amount was calculated, and whether the compensation was properly
determined and comparable to the value of
the land dispossessed;
(f)
Establish which Government Department or institution deal with the
dispossession, and which racially discriminatory
law or practice
gave rise to the dispossession;
(g)
Investigate the nature of the right in land claimed, and obtain
proof thereof;
(h)
Establish whether or not the claimant is a person, deceased estate,
direct descendant, community or part of a
community as contemplated
in section 2(1) or (3) of the Act;
(i)
Establish whether there is more than one claim in respect of a
specific area or property;
(j)
See to it that a topographical or compilation map indicating the
location of the land is obtained from the
Government Printer or the
Surveyor-General;
(k)
Establish factors should could give rise to priority treatment as
contemplated in section 6(2)(d) of the Act;
(l) …
(m) Investigate
options and make recommendations to the Minister in terms of section
6(2)(b) of the Act for appropriate
alternative relief in respect of
claimants who do not qualify for the restitution of land rights;
(n)
Establish in terms of section 13(1)(c) of the Act whether the
current owner or holder of rights in land claimed
is opposed to the
claim;
(o) …
(p) Obtain
information regarding any other matter which is deemed to be
necessary or desirable to be investigated
in order to facilitate the
task of the Regional Land Claims Commissioner.
[21]
See specifically Rules 5(d), (f), (g) and (i).
[22]
Section 10(1) provides: ‘ Any person who or the representative
of any community which is entitled to claim restitution
of a right
in land, may lodge such claim, which shall include a description of
the land in question, the nature of the right
in land of which he,
she or such community was dispossessed and the nature of the right
or equitable redress being claimed, on
the form prescribed for this
purpose by the Chief Land Claims Commissioner under section 16.’
[23]
See above para 33.
[24]
See para 2(a) of the
LAMOSA
2
order,
above para 10.
[25]
Section 32(3)(b) of the Restitution Act. See too
Mlifi
v Kingenberg
1999 (2) SA 674
(LCC).
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