Case Law[2022] ZALCC 44South Africa
Bakgatla Ba Kgafela Communal Property Association v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC93/2021) [2022] ZALCC 44 (1 November 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
1 November 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Bakgatla Ba Kgafela Communal Property Association v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC93/2021) [2022] ZALCC 44 (1 November 2022)
Bakgatla Ba Kgafela Communal Property Association v Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (LCC93/2021) [2022] ZALCC 44 (1 November 2022)
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sino date 1 November 2022
IN THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE NO:
LCC93/2021
Before:
The Honourable Acting
Judge President Meer
Heard
on: 1 November 2022
Delivered
on: 1 November 2022
In the matter between:
BAKGATLA BA KGAFELA COMMUNAL
PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
DEPARTMENT OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND
REFORM
1
st
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
2
nd
Respondent
MINISTER OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
3
rd
Respondent
THE
ADMINISTRATOR: MR PHINEAS TJIE
4
th
Respondent
MOKOPTEDI
SOPHY BATLANG
5
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER AJP
[1]
This application seeks
inter alia
compliance with
paragraphs (2) and (3) of the following order granted by me on 5
November 2018:
“
(1) The application
is dismissed. Mr L Moya shall pay the costs of the application, such
to include the costs for 10
October 2018.
(2)
The first respondent is authorised for the purpose of electing an
executive committee, to
convene a meeting of the general council of
the Bakgatla Ba Kgafela Community Property Association and to take
all steps necessary
to give effect to this.
(3) The
fourth to seventh respondents are directed to fully co-operate with
the first respondent
for the purposes of facilitating the election of
the executive committee.
(4) The
attorneys for the first to third respondents and the attorneys for
the seventh respondent
shall not charge a fee for 5 November 2018.”
[2]
The order was granted in LCC136/2018. The
first respondent in that matter is the same as the first respondent
in this matter. The
applicant is the same as the applicant in this
matter. However, the seventh respondent in that matter Mr
Sojane, is the deponent
to the founding affidavit in the matter I am
now seized with and purports to be duly authorized by the executive
committee of the
cited applicant.
The Parties
[3]
The cited applicant is a communal property
association established pursuant to a land claim. The first to fourth
respondents are
cited in their official capacities. I note that the
fourth respondent is described differently in the founding affidavit
as the
administrator, Moses Kotane Municipality. The first to fourth
respondents have not participated in these proceedings. The fifth
respondent is described as the ex-chairperson of the applicant. In
her answering affidavit however, she describes herself as the
chairperson of the applicant. The fifth respondent opposes the
application. She challenges the locus standi of Mr Sojane, and avers
that the applicant community property association should not have
been cited as applicant but should have been joined as a respondent.
She avers moreover that the order of 5 November 2018 has been
complied with.
Locus Standi
[4]
As proof of his standing Mr Sojane attached
Annexure A to his founding affidavit. This is a letter to the fifth
respondent dated
19 March 2018 which asserts that at a meeting of 16
March 2018 of the Bakgatla Ba Kgafela Communal Property Association
(“the
CPA”) General Council, resolutions were adopted
inter alia
“that the General Secretary, Mr Sojane, be appointed to act as
Acting Chairperson pending the expected AGM”. The letter
itself
is unsigned but was commissioned on 28 May 2021 and the signature of
the person commissioning it appears. Attached to the
letter as
Annexure “C” is a list of executive members of the CPA as
of 16 March 2018 and Mr Sojane is reflected as
the Chairperson.
[5]
The fifth respondent’s answering
affidavit states that the unsigned resolution dated 19 March 2018 has
no effect as Mr Sojane
was dismissed from his position as general
secretary of the CPA on 6 April 2018 after he was found guilty of
misconduct, unethical
conduct, bringing the association into
disrepute, violating the association’s constitution, financial
misconduct and theft.
In this regard she attaches a letter of
termination from the applicant dated 11 April 2018. These allegations
are met with a bald
denial in reply and not at all significantly
dealt with. Similarly, the averment in the answering affidavit that
the unsigned resolution
of 19 March 2018 does not evidence standing,
is met with a bald denial in reply.
[6]
I note that the purported resolution on
which Mr Sojane relies dated 19 March 2018 precedes his expulsion on
6 April 2018. The document
relied upon does not prove much, let alone
Mr Sojane’s standing. His bald denial does not assist him in
the light of the
fifth respondent’s averments and accordingly
his standing has not been established.
[7]
In the applicant’s supplementary
heads of argument reliance for Mr Sojane’s authority is placed
elsewhere. Reference
is made to Mr Sojane’s authoristion
appearing at pages 010-4- 010-15 of the pleadings. The fifth
respondent’s supplementary
heads in reply assumes that this is
a reference to an affidavit filed by the applicant’s erstwhile
attorney and that referencing
it with page numbers is difficult due
to the problematic index. I was initially unable to find this
affidavit in the court file.
During the hearing it emerged that the
affidavit had been included in the notice bundle, for reasons
unknown. The fifth respondent
contends that the document does
not mention Mr Sojane by name, and does not authorize him or anyone
to bring these proceedings,
and that it is dated 3 March 2021,
referring to a resolution taken in 2017 which appoints Mr Mudau as
the applicant’s legal
representation. This does not, so the
contention goes clothe Mr Sojane with standing. I agree.
[8]
Today, during the hearing reliance was
placed yet again elsewhere for Mr Sojane’s authority, on a
third document. This is
Annexure “SB2” to the replying
affidavit, an annexure which was not filed timeously, but was
e-mailed on 21 October
2022, long after the date by when applicant’s
attorney was directed to prepare the court file in accordance with
this Court’s
Practice Directions. That annexure does not assist
the applicant. It is a resolution dated 21 May 2021 which authorizes
an application
in a different case, LCC 138/A/B/C- and not the case
before me being LCC 93/2021. Moreover, the resolution appoints Braam
De Jager
and Ruth Mudau as attorney and counsel respectively. The
instructing attorney in this matter is Masilela Attorneys and Ms
Mudau
whilst counsel in this matter, is not appointed according to
that resolution.
[9]
It is trite that a party that institutes
proceedings on behalf of an entity, be it a company or a community
property association,
must be duly authorized to do so. See Ganes and
another v Telecon Namibia Ltd
[2003] JOL 12133
(SCA) at paragraph 19.
[10]
None of the documents relied upon, duly
authorizes Mr Sojane to bring these proceedings. I am accordingly
unable to find that he
has the requisite standing and the applicstion
stands to be dismissed for this reason alone.
Joinder
[11]
As the deponent to the founding
affidavit was not duly authorized by the CPA, that entity could not
have been the applicant. As
the CPA clearly has an interest in these
proceedings, pertaining as they do to its affairs and meetings, it
ought under the circumstances,
to have been joined as a respondent.
Merits
[12]
The answering affidavit averred that
a general council meeting was held to elect a new executive committee
on 12 September 2019,
and the court order of 5 November 2019 was
accordingly complied with. The results of the election were
annexed. The averment
was met with a bald denial in reply and
reference was made to paragraph (3) of the replying affidavit.
12.1
Paragraph (3.1) to (3.16) does not address
the issue as to whether or not the meeting occurred in compliance
with the court order.
Instead it is devoted to allegations concerning
the fifth respondent’s legitimacy as chairperson of the CPA.
These paragraphs
in fact raise new facts which ought to have been
averred in the founding affidavit and not in reply. It is trite that
a party is
expected to make out his case in the founding affidavit as
opposed to the replying affidavit.
[13]
I note also that the founding affidavit
alleges that an interim order was granted in the Mafikeng High Court
on 7 May 2019 to the
effect that the fifth respondent was not
“legible” to represent the applicant which order was
later confirmed on 7
June 2019. These two orders are attached to the
founding affidavit. The order of 7 June 2019 does not confirm the
interim order
but, contrary to what is averred by the applicant
orders inter alia the removal of the matter from the roll and its
case management.
[14]
In view of all of the above a case has not
been made for the relief sought in the notice of motion.
Costs
[15]
The fifth respondent seeks costs de bonis
propriis against both the applicant’s attorneys and counsel,
one paying the other
to be absolved. Mr Mbeki pointed to the
fact that both the attorneys and counsel for the applicant were put
on terms in a
letter by the fifth respondent’s attorneys on 26
August 2022, that if they did not withdraw what he referred to as
“this
spurious application”, such costs would be sought
against them.
[16]
In considering the question of costs the
following must be borne in mind:
16.1
As is aptly pointed out by Mr Mbeki for the
fifth respondent, the matter was previously removed from this court’s
roll precisely
because of lack of authority and for sloppiness by the
applicant’s then attorneys who neither prepared the court file
on
time nor filed an index. Ms Mudau also appeared for the applicants
at the previous hearing. Costs de bonis propriis were awarded
against
the applicant’s erstwhile attorney. Her current instructing
attorneys were appointed on 19 July 2022. They had three
months to be
brought up to speed by Ms Mudau, about the deficiencies in the
previous application, and indeed to establish these
on their own and
prevent their repetition, as expected from a diligent practitioner.
Yet Ms Mudau and her instructing
attorneys have once
again approached this court with precisely the same deficiencies.
This is indeed an abuse of the Court process.
16.2
In addition to the repeat of the Locus
standi deficiency, pages were missing from the court file, which was
prepared out of time,
and a woefully inadequate index was filed in
which none of the annexures were paginated. The Registrar wrote to
the applicant’s
attorney on 20 October 2022 cautioning that the
matter would be struck if these were not attended to. The missing
pages still do
not appear to have been sorted out and the applicant
can consider itself fortunate that the matter was not struck.
16.3
Supplementary heads of argument were filed
by the applicant’s counsel without the courtesy of an
explanation as to the reason
therefor, heads which I might add did
not shed any further light on any aspect. As a matter of good
practice if a party wishes
to file supplementary heads, the reason
therefor, if not leave of the court should be present.
16.4
The applicant’s attorney filed an
amended notice of motion without notice. Rule 22 makes abundantly
clear that an amendment
occurs on notice to all other parties. There
is no notice of amendment in the court file. An amendment contrary to
Rule 22 is an
irregular step.
[17]
In Ebenhaesar
(LCC05/2015)
[2019] ZALCC 2
;
[2019] 3 All SA 530
(LCC)
this court had occasion
to consider the award of costs de bonis propriis. At paragraph 48 it
was stated
“
As
was stated in
Multi-Links Telecommunications Ltd v Africa Prepaid
Services Nigeria Ltd; Telkom SA Soc Limited and Another v Blue Label
Telecoms
Limited and Others
[2013] 4 All SA 346
(GNP), at
paragraph 35:
“
Such an order is reserved for
conduct which substantially and materially deviates from the standard
expected of the legal practitioners,
such that their clients, the
actual parties to the litigation, cannot be expected to bear the
costs, or because the court feels
compelled to mark its profound
displeasure at the conduct of an attorney in any particular context.
Examples are, dishonestly,
obstruction of the interests of justice,
irresponsible and grossly negligent conduct, litigating in a reckless
manner, misleading
the court, and gross incompetence and a lack of
care.”
[18]
The conduct of the applicant’s
legal team deviated materially from the conduct expected of legal
practitioners. The
respondents and this Court were once again
visited with an application that repeated the same flaw in respect of
standing, clearly
an abuse. In preparing the court files no heed was
paid to the court’s practice directions and furthermore to rule
22 in
respect of the purported amendment to the notice of motion.
Their conduct demonstrates either wanton disregard for the rules
and
practice directions of this court or ignorance thereof. This was a
serious dereliction of duty which prejudiced the respondents
and
inconvenienced and disrespected the Court. In the circumstances
I am satisfied that the award of costs de bonis propriis,
as sought,
is warranted.
[19]
I order as follows:
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
The Applicant’s attorney,
Masilela Attorneys and the Applicant’s counsel, Advocate R
Mudau shall bear the costs of the
application de bonis propriis, the
one paying the other to be absolved.
Y S MEER
Acting Judge President
Land Claims Court
For
the Applicant:
Adv.
R. Mudau
Instructed
by:
Masilela
Attorneys
For
the Fifth Respondent:
Adv.
S.D Mbeki
Instructed
by:
Avela
Nontso Attorneys
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