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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
South Africa: Land Claims Court
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[2022] ZALCC 22
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## SAPPI Southern Africa Ltd and Another v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Mpumalanga and Others: In re: Ngodwana Community and/or group of individuals v SAPPI Southern Africa Limited and Another (LCC105/2020)
[2022] ZALCC 22 (26 October 2022)
SAPPI Southern Africa Ltd and Another v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Mpumalanga and Others: In re: Ngodwana Community and/or group of individuals v SAPPI Southern Africa Limited and Another (LCC105/2020)
[2022] ZALCC 22 (26 October 2022)
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sino date 26 October 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT DURBAN
CASE NO: LCC1
05/2020
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED.
YES/NO
26
October 2022
In
the matter between:
SAPPI
SOUTHERN AFRICA LTD
First Applicant
SAPPI
FORESTS (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
and
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
First Respondent
MPUMALANGA
COMMISSION
ON RESTITUTION OF LAND RIGHTS
Second Respondent
THE
MABUZA FAMILY
Third Respondent
NGODWANA
COMMUNITY AND/OR
Fourth Respondent
GROUP
OF INDIVIDUALS
In
Re
NGODWANA
COMMUNITY AND/OR
Claimants
GROUP
OF INDIVIDUALS
SAPPI
SOUTHERN AFRICA LIMITED
First Respondent
SAPPI
FORESTS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
NCUBE
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application, in which the Applicants seek relief,
declaring the First and/or
Fourth Respondents’ consolidation of
individual claims, as a community claim on behalf of the Ngodwana
Community to be invalid.
The application is unopposed. The First and
Second Respondents, as a result, did not file answering affidavits.
The Third Respondent
supports the application. The Fourth Respondent
does not oppose the application as such, but the issue of costs.
Facts
[2]
On 14 August 2020 the Regional Land Claims Commissioner- Mpumalanga
(“First
Respondent”) referred a land claim to this court
in terms of section 14 of the Restitution of Land Rights Act, Act 22
of
1994 (“the Act”). The said referral was in respect of
several properties owned by the First Applicant in the Mpumalanga
Province. Included in those properties, is the First Applicant’s
Ngodwana Mill, Ngodwana village which includes a school,
police
station, a post office and shops.
[3]
The Executive Summary to the referral notes that the First Respondent
received a Land
Claim which was lodged by one Mr Magotweni Zephania
Shongwe on behalf of the Ngodwana Community. Apart from that claim,
there was
also a claim lodged by Mr (
Sic
) Norah N Mabuza.
Apart from those two claims, the referral notes that there were other
twenty-four (24) claimants who also lodged
claims before the closing
date of 31 December 1998. Those 24 claimants lodged claims on behalf
of their families. The Executive
summary notes that at a meeting held
on 07 October 2012, the individual claimants decided to consolidate
their claims into one
Ngodwana Community Claim. The list attached to
the Referral Notice and marked C1 reflects the names of 26 individual
claimants.
The First Respondent then referred the claim as one
Ngodwana Community Claim.
Entitlement to
Restitution of a Right in Land
[4]
Section 2(1) of the Act makes provision for certain categories of
persons to be entitled
to restitution of a right in land and it
provides:
“
(1)
A person shall be entitled to restitution of a right in land if-
(a)
he or she is a person dispossessed of a
right in land after 19 June 1913 as a result of past racially
discriminatory laws or practices;
or
(b)
it is a deceased estate dispossessed of a
right in land after 19 June 1913 as a result of past racially
discriminatory laws or practices;
or
(c)
he or she is the direct descendant of a
person referred to in paragraph (a) who has died without lodging a
claim and has no ascendant
who-
i.is
a direct descendant of a person referred to in paragraph (a); and
ii.has
lodged a claim for the restitution of a right in land; or
(d)
it is a community or part of a community
dispossessed of a right in land after 19 June 1913 as a result of
past racially discriminatory
laws or practices;
Section 10 (1) of the Act
makes provision for the lodgment of claims by either individual
claimants or the representatives of a
community.
Discussion
[5]
The Act does not make provision for consolidation of claims. There is
no provision
for the consolidation of an individual claim with a
community claim. The requirements and procedure for the lodgment of
individual
and community claims are not the same and they are
irreconcilable. In
Gamevest
(Pty) Ltd v Regional Land Claims Commissioner Northern Province and
Mpumalanga
[1]
Olivier
JA expressed himself in the following terms:
“
Section
10 of the Restitution Act sets out the requirements for the lodgment
of a claim by community:
1.
It must be lodge by the
representative of a community which is entitled to claim restitution
of a right in land. The basis on which
it is contended that the
person submitting the form represents such community shall be
declared in full and any appropriate resolution
or document
supporting such contention shall accompany the form at the time of
lodgment, or may with the necessary permission be
lodged at a later
stage.
2.
The claim must be lodged on the form
prescribed for this purpose by the Chief Land Claims Commissioner.
This document forms part
of the rules regarding procedure of the Land
Claims Commission promulgated in Government Notice R703 of 12 May
1995 and as amended
by Government Notice R1961 of 29 November 1996.
3.
The claim must include a description
of the land in question, the nature of the right in land of which the
community was dispossessed
and the nature of the right or equitable
redress that is being claimed.”
[6]
This court has, on several occasions held that an individual claim in
terms of section
2(1)(a) or (c) cannot be transformed into a
community claim made in terms of section 2(1)(d). The Regional Land
Claims Commissioner
is not free to do as he/she pleases, he/she must
be guided by the intention of the claimant which is reflected in the
claim form.
Even the claimants are not at liberty to take a
resolution to convert individual claims into a community claim. The
community must
have existed at the time of dispossession. That
community must have lost rights in land. Those rights must have been
derived from
shared rules determining access to land and held in
common.
[2]
[7]
In
Luhlwini
Mchunu Community v Laurence Hancock
[3]
Meer AJP expressed herself in the following terms:
“
In
accordance with In re Macleantown Residents Association: Re Certain
Erven and Commonage in Macleantown, “the claimants
must make it
clear on what basis they are bringing their claim i.e. as a community
or as individuals and in each case submit the
requisite particulars.”
In
the same case the court held:
[4]
“
The
claim instituted by the Applicant as Plaintiff is a community claim
as envisaged in section 2(1)(d) of the Act. A community
claim is
distinct and separate from an individual claim under section 2(1)(a)
or 2(1)(c). The latter claims are simply not alternatives
to
community claims and are separate causes of action thereto.”
I therefore, conclude
that the First Respondent was not entitled to consolidate individual
claims and present them as being community
claims. This brings me to
the question of costs.
Costs
[8]
Mr Dodson, argued that according to paragraphs 2 of the Notice of
Motion, any Respondent
who opposes this application must pay the
costs. The argument goes that since the Fourth Respondent opposed the
application and
filed the answering affidavit, the Fourth Respondent
brought themselves within the scope of paragraph 2 of the Notice of
Motion.
The Fourth Respondent did not persist with the opposition.
Therefore, on the date of the hearing, the application was not
opposed.
[9]
The practice in this court is not to make cost orders unless there
are exceptional
circumstances warranting the award of costs. The
filing of Notice to Oppose alone without opposition is not an
exceptional circumstance
and it is not a sufficient reason for this
court to depart from its usual practice of not awarding costs.
Order
[10]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
It is declared that the First Respondent
and/or Fourth Respondent consolidation of individual claims as a
community claim on behalf
of the “Ngodwana Community” is
invalid.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
MT
NCUBE
Judge
of the Land Claims Court of
South
Africa, Randburg
APPEARANCES
For
First & Second Applicants:
Adv Alan
Dodson SC
Instructed
by:
Shepstone & Wylie
Johannesburg
For
First & Second Respondents:
MR S I Mathebula
STATE ATTORNEY
Pretoria
For
Third Respondent:
B T Ngwangela
K Shoe
Instructed
by:
Morakile Attorneys
P Tabane
For
Fourth Respondent:
Nkosikhona Gama
Instructed
by:
Mthimunye Attorneys
Embalenhle
Mpumalanga
Date
of hearing:
10 August 2022
Date
Judgment delivered:
26 October 2022
[1]
2003
(1) SA 373
(SCA) Para 7
[2]
See
definition of “Community” in Section 1 of the Act.
[3]
(LCC121/2017)
20/01/2020 par 16.
[4]
Par
12
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