Case Law[2024] ZASCA 37South Africa
Moladora Trust v Mereki and Others (189/2023) [2024] ZASCA 37; 2024 (5) SA 51 (SCA) (3 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
3 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Land occupied in terms of s 3(4) of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act No 62 of 1997 – no express agreement or consent for occupier to graze livestock on such land – Land Claims Court finding tacit consent/agreement of owner – defence of tacit consent/agreement not advanced by respondent occupiers.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Moladora Trust v Mereki and Others (189/2023) [2024] ZASCA 37; 2024 (5) SA 51 (SCA) (3 April 2024)
Moladora Trust v Mereki and Others (189/2023) [2024] ZASCA 37; 2024 (5) SA 51 (SCA) (3 April 2024)
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sino date 3 April 2024
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 189/2023
In the matter between:
MOLADORA
TRUST
APPELLANT
and
MAGALONE
MEREKI
FIRST RESPONDENT
TOPIES
MEREKI
SECOND RESPONDENT
DIKHOTSO
MEREKI
THIRD RESPONDENT
MAGALONE
MEREKI
FOURTH RESPONDENT
DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE,
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND
REFORM
FIFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Moladora Trust v
Mereki and Others
(189/2023)
[2024]
ZASCA 37
(3 April 2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, MATOJANE and WEINER JJA
Heard:
15 March 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email
publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 3
April
2024
.
Summary:
Land occupied in terms of
s 3(4)
of the
Extension of Security of Tenure Act No 62 of 1997
– no
express agreement or consent for occupier to graze livestock on such
land – Land Claims Court finding tacit consent/agreement
of
owner – defence of tacit consent/agreement not advanced by
respondent occupiers.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land Claims Court (Cowen
J, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
There is no order for costs.
3
The order of the Land Claims Court is set
aside and replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
The first, second and third respondents are ordered to forthwith
remove all their grazing animals, including
but not limited to
cattle, goats, horses and sheep (livestock) from the applicant’s
farm, the Remainder of the property Wildebeeslaagte
number 282,
district Dr Kenneth Kaunda, North West Province (the farm).
(b)
Should the first, second and third respondents fail to comply with
paragraph 3(a) above within 30 (thirty)
days from the date of the
order, the Sheriff of the High Court or his deputy is ordered, with
the assistance of the South African
Police Services and the Pound
Master for the district within which the farm is situated or his/her
lawful substitute, to remove
and impound the livestock.
(c)
The first, second and third respondents, subject to compliance with
paragraph 3(a), are interdicted
and restrained from returning and
keeping any livestock on the farm, without the prior consent of the
applicant.’
JUDGMENT
Weiner JA (Ponnan and
Matojane JJA concurring):
[1]
The
appellant, the Moladora Trust (the trust), is the owner of the
property described as the Remainder of the farm Wildebeeslaagte
number 282, district Dr Kenneth Kaunda, North West Province (the
farm).
The
first, second and third respondents
[1]
(the Mereki children) are occupiers as defined in the Extension of
Security of Tenure Act No 62 of 1997 (ESTA), by virtue of the
right
of their mother, the late Mrs Meraki, to occupy a portion of the farm
in terms of s 3(4) of ESTA.
[2]
The Mereki children are the major children of Mrs Mereki, who was
employed on the farm and who died in or before 2017. They resided
on
the farm with Mrs Mereki and, since her death, have continued to do
so.
[2]
The
Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform is the
fifth respondent (the Department) but has not taken part
in the
proceedings to date. The South African Human Rights Commission and
the Association of Rural Advancement applied to be admitted
as
amici
curiae
in the matter.
[3]
[3]
The trust launched an application in the
Land Claims Court (the LCC), on 11 May 2022, seeking the following
relief:
‘
1.
That the First to Fourth Respondents be ordered to forthwith remove
all their grazing
animals, including but not limited to cattle,
goats, horses and sheep from the Applicant’s farm, the
Remainder of the farm
Wildebeeslaagte number 282, district Dr Kenneth
Kaunda, North West Province (“the farm”).
2.
That should the First to Fourth Respondents fail to adhere to the
order prayed
for in (a) within 30 (thirty) days from date of the
order, the Sheriff of the High Court or his deputy be ordered to,
with the
assistance of the South African Police Services and the
Pound Master for the district within which the farm is situated or
his/her
lawful substitute, remove and impound such animals to which
the order in the above is applicable.
3.
That the First and Fourth Respondents, subject to compliance with (a)
above,
be interdicted and restrained from returning and keeping any
number of livestock on the farm, without prior arrangement with the
Applicant.
4.
That the First to Fourth Respondents and/or any person associated
with them be
interdicted and restrained from interfering with the
execution of this order in any way whatsoever.
5.
That the First to Fourth Respondents be ordered to pay the costs of
the application,
jointly and severally the one to pay the other to be
resolved, alternatively that the First to Fifth Respondents be
ordered to
pay the costs of the Application, jointly and severally,
in the event of the Fifth Respondent opposing the relief sought.
6.
That leave be granted to the Applicant to approach this Court for
further relief
against any other person/s and to join such person/s
should it become known that other person/s, other than the First to
Fourth
Respondents are keeping livestock, as set in paragraph (a)
above without the Applicant’s consent and to supplement the
papers
where necessary.’
No relief was sought for
the eviction of the Mereki children and their occupation of the farm
has not been threatened or terminated.
[4]
The LCC held that a tacit agreement had
been concluded and tacit consent had been granted by the trust to the
Mereki children to
keep livestock and exercise grazing rights on the
farm. As the trust had not invoked the provisions of s 8 of ESTA, the
termination
of the grazing rights by the trust could not be upheld.
This appeal is with the leave of the LCC.
[5]
The
application was served on 6 June 2022, on the Mereki children,
[4]
but they did not appear at the hearing, nor did they file any
affidavits in response to the application.
[5]
Accordingly, the facts alleged by the trust remained uncontested.
Heads of argument were filed on behalf of the Mereki children
and
they were represented in this Court at the hearing. It is not
disputed that the Mereki children had never sought nor obtained
express consent to keep livestock on the farm and that no express
agreement was concluded with the trust in this regard.
[6]
After Mrs Mereki died, efforts were made by
Mr Marius Nel (Mr Nel), on behalf of the trust, to inform the Mereki
children that they
did not have consent to keep livestock on the
farm. Mr Nel contends that during these incidents, the Mereki
children were abusive
and aggressive towards him and informed him
that they would not remove their livestock. The attempts to engage
with the Mereki
children proved fruitless. Thus, on 31 October 2017,
a letter was addressed to each of the Mereki children, informing them
that
they had never obtained permission to keep livestock on the farm
and they were given 30 days’ notice to remove their livestock.
The letter was served personally on the first respondent on behalf of
all three respondents on 9 January 2018.
[7]
Mr Nel emphasises that the keeping of
livestock has an immediate impact on available grazing on the farm
and may cause damage to
the natural vegetation on the farm. The
ownership of the livestock is also unclear and there is nothing to
suggest that they are
healthy or have been treated for disease.
[8]
During August 2020, Mr Nel was contacted by
officials of the Department on behalf of the Mereki children.
Allegations had been made
by the children that the trust had reduced
the grazing area of the Mereki children and that Mr Nel had caused a
fire which had
burnt their grazing area. Mr Nel denied the
allegations, but was threatened with a court application by the
Department. This elicited
a written response from the trust in a
letter dated 21 August 2020, wherein it again recorded that the
Mereki children had never
sought permission to keep livestock on the
farm. The accusations levelled at the trust were again denied. No
response was received
from the Department and no application was
launched.
[9]
A further letter, dated 23 September 2020,
was addressed to the Mereki children informing them of the previous
letters and recording
that a fire had occurred on the farm, which had
an adverse effect on the available grazing land. It was repeated that
no consent
had been given for the Mereki children to keep livestock
and allow them to graze on the farm. The Sheriff, who had attempted
to
serve the letters on the Mereki children on 5 October 2020,
deposed to an affidavit stating the following:
‘
With
our arrival people were aggressive and extremely violent. The
interpreter tried to translate the meaning of the letter and
explain
the contents thereof but they said they do not know who the Court is
and refused to take the document. We tried to get
hold of the
recipient of the letter but as the people got more violent we served
the letter on A Shuping.’
There was no response to
this letter.
[10]
It
is not disputed by the Mereki children, and it was accepted by the
LCC, that express consent to graze livestock was not given
and the
rights under the agreement with Mrs Mereki did not automatically
devolve upon the Mereki children, upon her death.
[6]
[11]
That ought to have been the end of the
matter. However, the LCC took it upon itself to consider whether
there could have been a
tacit agreement or tacit consent pursuant to
which the Mereki children had been grazing their livestock on the
farm. This, the
LCC did in circumstances where no such case had been
advanced by the Mereki children. This was found, despite reference to
the
efforts to communicate with the Mereki children, the
correspondence informing the Mereki children that they had no
permission to
graze livestock on the farm, and the trust’s
unequivocal denial that any agreement was concluded, or that any
consent had
been given, none of which was disputed.
[12]
The
finding of the LCC that tacit consent to graze livestock had been
granted and that there was a tacit agreement with the trust
to that
effect was thus not based on any proper factual foundation.
[7]
The test to be applied in dealing with whether there was tacit
consent or a tacit agreement is whether the party alleging the
existence of the tacit contract has shown on a balance of
probabilities unequivocal conduct on the part of the other party that
proves that it intended to enter into a contract with it.
[8]
This issue did not arise in this case, as the version of the trust,
which was that there was no agreement, either express or tacit
between the parties, was not contested.
[13]
Instead, the conclusion reached by the LCC
rested on a foundation that was purely conjectural, not foreshadowed
in the papers and
of which the trust had not been forewarned. It
follows that neither the approach, nor the conclusion reached by the
LCC can be
supported on appeal. Consequently, the appeal must
succeed.
[14]
The trust has not sought costs against the Mereki children. To
the extent that the relief sought by the trust before the LCC
conduces
to confusion, the order that issues, although in substance
no different to the relief sought by the trust before the LCC, has
been
modified somewhat.
[15]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is
upheld.
2
There is no order
as to costs.
3
The
order of the Land Claims Court is set aside
and replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
The first, second and third respondents are ordered to forthwith
remove all their grazing animals, including
but not limited to
cattle, goats, horses and sheep (livestock) from the applicant’s
farm, the Remainder of the property Wildebeeslaagte
number 282,
district Dr Kenneth Kaunda, North West Province (the farm).
(b)
Should the first, second and third respondents fail to comply with
paragraph 3(a) above within 30 (thirty)
days from the date of the
order, the Sheriff of the High Court or his deputy is ordered, with
the assistance of the South African
Police Services and the Pound
Master for the district within which the farm is situated or his/her
lawful substitute, to remove
and impound the livestock.
(c)
The first, second and third respondents, subject to compliance with
paragraph 3(a), are interdicted
and restrained from returning and
keeping any livestock on the farm, without the prior consent of the
applicant.’
_______________________
S E
WEINER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellants:
M G Roberts SC with E Roberts
Instructed by:
Moolman &
Pienaar Inc, Potchefstroom
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the first to second
respondents: V A Mnyameni with M S Sebotha and D
Somo
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid
South Africa, Vryburg
Legal
Aid South Africa, Bloemfontein.
[1]
The
citation of the fourth respondent is an error, being a duplication
of the first respondent. Further reference to the Mereki
children
will be a reference to the first to third respondents.
[2]
Section 3(4) of ESTA provides as follows:
‘
3.
Consent to reside on land
. . .
(4)
For the purposes of civil proceedings in terms of this Act, a person
who has continuously and openly resided on land for a
period of one
year shall be presumed to have consent unless the contrary is
proved.’
[3]
The
application was granted, but in view of the decision on the facts of
this matter, this Court does not have to deal with the
legal issues
raised by the
amici
.
[4]
By
service on Ms Kediemetse Lephadi (Tenant), in control at the
defendants’ chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
residence, who accepted service on behalf of the defendants.
The
notice of set down was served on 13 July 2022, by
affixing
it at the main gate as the Sheriff noted on the return of service
that ‘[t]he Respondents was very aggressive towards
us, refuse
to communicate by taking this Notice he called the police for us,
and they did arrive at given address. Notice on
the respondents, but
still they refuse to take this Notice, that’s why it was
served by affixing at the main gate.’
[5]
The
Mereki children also did not deny receipt of the letters, the
application and the notice of set down.
6
Adendorff’s Boerdery v Shabalala
and Others
[2017] ZASCA 37
para 28;
Loskop Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and
Others v Petrus Moeleso and Others
[2022] ZASCA 53
para 14
, where this Court held that the
right
of an occupier to keep or graze livestock on another person’s
farm or land is not a right
which derives
from ESTA, but a personal right which derives from consent between
the occupier and the land owner or person in
charge.
[7]
Moladora
Trust v Mereki and Others
[2022] ZALCC 32; 2023 (3) SA 209 (LCC).
[8]
Buffalo
City v Nurcha Development Finance
(Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2018]
ZASCA 122
;
2019 (3) SA 379
(SCA)
paras 20 and 22;
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Metgovis (Pty) Limited
[2019]
ZACC 9
paras 16-22
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