Case Law[2024] ZASCA 149South Africa
Mluleki Martin Chithi and Others v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1203/2021; 1334/2021; 261/2022) [2024] ZASCA 149; [2025] 1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 183 (SCA) (4 November 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 November 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Land claims – restitution of land – Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 – claim for restitution of land on grounds of being a ‘community’ as defined in the Restitution Act – question decided separately from other issues in terms of rule 57(1) of the Land Claims Court Rules – allegation of lack of judicial independence in the conduct of the trial proceedings. Application for recusal of presiding judge unfounded.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Mluleki Martin Chithi and Others v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1203/2021; 1334/2021; 261/2022) [2024] ZASCA 149; [2025] 1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 183 (SCA) (4 November 2024)
Mluleki Martin Chithi and Others v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1203/2021; 1334/2021; 261/2022) [2024] ZASCA 149; [2025] 1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 183 (SCA) (4 November 2024)
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sino date 4 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
LAND
TENURE –
Restitution
of rights
–
Whether “community” – Whether members derived
possession and use of land from common rules –
Rights
individual occupiers may have enjoyed as labour tenants and later
as farm workers – Were no longer derived from
shared rules
determining access to land held in common by a group in 1913 –
Community claimants failed to prove that
they constituted
“community” as envisaged in the Restitution Act –
Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1203/2021, 1334/2021 & 261/2022
In
the matter between:
MLULEKI
MARTIN CHITHI
FIRST
APPELLANT
DLUDLU
ATTORNEYS
SECOND
APPELLANT
MC
NTSHALINTSHALI
ATTORNEYS
THIRD APPELANT
IN
RE:
MAVUNDULU
COMMUNITY
CLAIMANT
and
MINISTER
OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND
REFORM
FIRST RESPONDENT
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
SECOND RESPONDENT
DJ
SCHEUER FARMING CC
THIRD
RESPONDENT
LOUIS
MEYER MANFRED FAMILY TRUST
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MANFRED
MARTIN HILLERMAN
FIFTH RESPONDENT
HERMAN
THEODOR MEYER
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN
CHURCH-
NEW
HANOVER
SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
HOPEWELL
TRUST
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
ROLF
MATTHEW SCHRODER
NINTH RESPONDENT
UHLMANN
FAMILY TRUST
TENTH
RESPONDENT
PEGMA TWENTY-SIX
INVESTMENTS
(PTY)
LIMITED
ELEVENTH
RESPONDENT
MANFRED
VICTOR SCHRODER
TWELFTH
RESPONDENT
WOERNER
TRUST
THIRTEENTH RESPONDENT
WHITE
THORN TRUST
FOURTEENTH RESPONDENT
RM
MARK FAMILY TRUST
FIFTHTEENTH RESPONDENT
WITTENMOUTAIN
TRUST
SIXTHTEENTH RESPONDENT
MANFRED
MEYER FAMILY TRUST
SEVENTEENTH RESPONDENT
WERNER
MEYER FAMILY TRUST
EIGHTEENTH
RESPONDENT
WERNER
MARK REDINGER
NINENTEETH
RESPONDENT
AMBLESIDE
MEATS CC
TWENTIETH
RESPONDENT
BRIAN
BASIL MITROPOULUS
TWENTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
TMJ
INVESTMENTS 15 CC
TWENTY-SECOND
RESPONDENT
DROGEMOLLER LIFE &
SHORT-TERM
BROKERS CC
TWENTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
ROLAND
GERHARD FRENZEL
TWENTY-FOURTH
RESPONDENT
COCOHAVEN
1057 CC
TWENTY-FIFTH
RESPONDENT
ROYHEATH RAMDEWU
AND
REETHA RAMDEWU
TWENTY-SIXTH
RESPONDENT
UCL
CO-OPERATIVE LTD
TWENTY-SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
MOOIZICHT
TRUST
TWENTY-EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Mluleki Martin Chithi and Others v Minister of Rural
Development and Land Reform and Others
(1203/2021, 1334/2021 &
261/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 149
(4 November 2024)
Coram:
ZONDI, HUGHES and MATOJANE JJA and SEEGOBIN and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
19 February 2024
Delivered:
4 November 2024
Summary:
Land claims – restitution of land –
Restitution of Land
Rights Act 22 of 1994
– claim for restitution of land on
grounds of being a ‘community’ as defined in the
Restitution Act – question
decided separately from other issues
in terms of
rule 57(1)
of the
Land Claims Court Rules –
allegation
of lack of judicial independence in the conduct of the
trial proceedings. Application for recusal of presiding judge
unfounded.
Civil
procedure – costs – adverse costs order –
disallowed fees of legal practitioners – whether conduct
of
legal practitioners in the trial was vexatious, frivolous and an
abuse of court process for persisting with claim in light of
precedent contrary to success thereof.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land Claims Court, Randburg (Canca AJ, sitting as
court of first instance):
1
The appeal under case number 1203/2021 against the order of the Land
Claims Court dismissing the Mavundulu
Community’s land claim is
dismissed with no order as to costs.
2
The appeal under case number 1334/2021 against the order of the Land
Claims Court disallowing the fees
of the first to third appellants in
the matter and directing them to repay the fees they had already
received from the state is
upheld with no order as to costs.
3
The appeal against the costs order in respect of the recusal
application under case number 261/2022 is
dismissed with costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Zondi
JA (Hughes and Matojane JJA and Seegobin and Keightley AJJA
concurring):
[1]
These three consolidated appeals are against the following orders of
the Land Claims Court, Randburg
(LCC) issued by Canca AJ:
(a)
The appeal under case number 1203/2021 is against the judgment
delivered on 25 May 2020, dismissing the Mavundulu Community
appellants’ claim for the restitution of rights in land on the
grounds that they were not a ‘community’ as defined
in
the Restitution of Land Rights Act, No 22 of 1994 (Restitution
Act).
[1]
In dismissing the
claim, the learned Acting Judge disallowed, in full, the first to
third appellants’ fees in the entire
matter and ordered them to
repay the fees that had already been paid to them by the relevant
entity that funded the litigation
on behalf of the State. This forms
the subject of the second appeal under case number 1334/202.
[2]
(b)
Dissatisfied with the costs order against them, the first to third
appellants (the legal practitioner appellants) applied for
leave to
appeal against it. Before the application for leave was argued, the
legal practitioner appellants brought an application
for the recusal
of Canca AJ. He dismissed the application for his recusal and ordered
the legal practitioner appellants to pay
the third to twenty seventh
respondents’ (landowner respondents) costs. This forms the
subject of the third appeal under
case number 261/2022.
[3]
Background
[2]
The appeals concern a claim that was lodged by the Mavundulu
Community (Community appellants/claimants)
for the restitution of
rights in land of which they were allegedly dispossessed in terms of
the Restitution Act (land claim). The
land claim was lodged on behalf
of the Community claimants on 30 December 1998 by Mr Sipho Cebekhulu.
He was authorized to do so
by the Community claimants in terms of a
resolution dated 9 August 1998. The claimed land comprises certain
portions/sub-divisions
of the farm Spitzkop No. 1129 (Spitzkop) and
Mooiplaats No. 1315 (Mooiplaats), situated in the Magisterial
District of New Hanover,
KwaZulu-Natal. The Regional Land Claims
Commissioner: KwaZulu-Natal accepted and investigated the claim as a
community claim. The
claim was accepted in terms of s 11 of the
Restitution Act by publication in the Government Gazettes of 29
November 1996 and 1
August 2001.
[3]
During October 2017, the Community claimants, whilst the
determination of the community claim
was underway, added individual
claims as an alternative to the community claim. On 31 March 2020,
the LCC dismissed the individual
claims on the basis that they were
not lodged by 31 December 1998 and were not supported by evidence.
The dismissal of the alternative
claims was correct as an individual
claim cannot be introduced by way of amendment.
[4]
So, what remained was the Community claim which had been duly
accepted, published and investigated.
[4]
As already mentioned, the claimed land relates to some portions of
the two farms, namely farm
Mooiplaats No 1315, which was granted to a
Mr Cornelius J Laas in March 1853, and the farm Spitzkop No 1129,
which was granted
to a Mr Cornelius J G Vermaak in May 1851. The
farms were granted to them by the British government following its
annexation of
the then Natal in 1842. The farms underwent certain
sub-divisions and changed ownership over the years, in particular,
prior to
1913 and thereafter.
[5]
The third to twenty-eighth respondents are the landowner respondents.
The first and second respondents
(the State respondents) are the
Minister of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform (the
Minister) and the Regional Land
Claims Commissioner, KwaZulu-Natal
(RLCC), respectively. The State respondents did not appeal against
the finding of the LCC that
the existence of a community had not been
proved and the associated costs order.
[6]
Mr Mluleki Martin Chithi (the first appellant) (Mr Chithi), Dludlu
Attorneys (the second appellant)
and MC Ntshalintshali Attorneys (the
third appellant) were the legal representatives of the Community
claimants. The second and
third legal practitioner appellants were
appointed to represent the Community claimants in terms of s 29(4) of
the Restitution
Act
[5]
and they
instructed the first appellant as counsel.
[7]
During the hearing in the LCC in March 2020, at the close of the
Community claimants’ case
(and that of the State respondents),
Canca AJ ordered the separation of issues in terms of
rule 57(1)(c)
of the
Land Claims Court Rules.
[6
]
He directed that the issue whether Mavundulu is a community, as
envisaged in the Restitution Act, be determined separately before
any
other issues. To that end Canca AJ directed the parties to file heads
of argument to address the separated issue. In addition,
he directed
Mr Chithi to address him on why legal costs or the costs of the legal
team for the claimants should not be disallowed.
The parties filed
heads of argument as directed.
[8]
On 25 May 2020, Canca AJ delivered the judgment in respect of the
main case, in which he found
that the Community claimants had failed
to prove the existence of a community as defined in s 1(iv) of the
Restitution Act. The
judgment, in the main case, included an order
that the legal fees of the legal practitioner appellants were to be
disallowed and
that any fees already paid to them had to be repaid,
as well as ordering the State respondents to pay the costs of the
landowner
respondents.
[9]
An application for leave to appeal was instituted by the legal
practitioner appellants against
the disallowance of their fees. Prior
to the hearing of the application for leave to appeal by the legal
practitioner appellants
and after heads of argument had been filed by
the parties, the legal practitioner appellants brought an application
for the recusal
of Canca AJ from hearing the application for leave to
appeal. The landowner respondents did not oppose the application for
leave
to appeal and the order pertaining to the disallowance of the
legal practitioner appellants’ fees. The landowner respondents
opposed the application for the recusal of Canca AJ.
[10]
On 16 August 2021, Canca AJ dismissed the recusal application with
costs. No appeal was lodged against the
dismissal of the recusal
application. However, the legal practitioner appellants sought leave
to appeal against the costs order
in the recusal application (in
favour of the landowner respondents), which leave to appeal was
dismissed by the LCC on 22 November
2021. On 2 March 2022, this Court
granted leave to the legal practitioner appellants to appeal the
recusal costs order.
[11]
On 16 August 2021, in a separate judgment, the LCC granted an
application for leave to appeal against the
disallowance of the legal
practitioner appellants’ fees. It dismissed the Community
claimants’ application for leave
to appeal against the
dismissal of their claim for restitution of land on the ground that
they had failed to prove that they were
a community as defined in the
Restitution Act. On 11 November 2021, this Court granted leave to the
Community claimants to appeal
against the LCC’s order
dismissing their community claim. Having set out the background facts
I turn to consider each appeal.
Whether
the LCC was correct to decide the ‘community issue’
separately in terms of rule 57(1)(c)
[12]
As already stated, the LCC dismissed the land claim because the
Community claimants had failed to establish
that they are a community
as defined in s 1 of the Restitution Act. That issue was decided on a
separated basis in terms of rule
57(1) (c) of the LCC’s Rules.
The two issues therefore are whether the LCC’s finding that the
Community claimants was
not a community, was correct and whether in
the circumstance of the case using rule 57(1)(c) to determine the
community issue was
appropriate.
[13]
Counsel for the Community claimants submitted that the LCC’s
application of rule 57(1) constituted
a misdirection in that it
failed to give the parties an opportunity to address it before it
made the separation order, and this
failure offended the principles
of natural justice and violated the Community claimants’ right
to access to court under s
34 of the Constitution. The issue of
whether the Community claimants constituted a community, proceeded
the argument, is not a
discrete legal issue capable of being
determined separately from other issues in proceedings under the
Restitution Act. Rather,
it forms the bedrock of the claim for
restitution of land and can only be determined once all the evidence
in the trial has been
heard and assessed. Therefore, factual evidence
had to be led and, by abruptly stopping the proceedings midway and
not allowing
the full trial to unfold, the LCC violated the Community
claimant’s right to have a fair hearing and to have their case
fully
ventilated before a court of law.
[14]
Rule 57(1)(c) of the LCC Rules provides that the Court may of its own
accord order a hearing of an issue,
separately from other issues if
‘an issue of law or fact in a case may conveniently be decided
separately’. Nugent
JA, in
Denel (Pty) Ltd v Vorster
had
this to say regarding the purpose of rule 33(4) (the equivalent of
rule 57(1)(c)) and how it is to be applied:
‘
Rule
33(4) of the Uniform Rules – which entitles a court to try
issues separately in appropriate circumstances – is
aimed at
facilitating the convenient and expeditious disposal of litigation.
It should not be assumed that that result is always
achieved by
separating the issues. In many cases, once properly considered, the
issues will be found to be inextricably linked
even though at first
sight they might appear to be discrete. And even where the issues are
discrete the expeditious disposal of
the litigation is often best
served by ventilating all the issues at one hearing, particularly
where there is more than one issue
that might be readily dispositive
of the matter. It is only after careful thought has been given to the
anticipated course of the
litigation as a whole that it will be
possible properly to determine whether it is convenient to try an
issue separately. But where
the trial court is satisfied that it is
proper to make such an order – and in all cases it must be so
satisfied before it
does so – it is the duty of that court to
ensure that the issues to be tried are clearly circumscribed in its
order so as
to avoid confusion’.
[7]
[15]
In
Luhlwini
Mchunu Community v Hancock and Others
(Luhlwini)
,
[8]
the LCC dismissed a similar argument which was raised by counsel for
the claimants in those proceedings, namely that the invocation
of
rule 57(1)(c) could deprive the claimant of a full hearing. It held
that:
‘
The
order granted in terms of Rule 57(1)(c) is clearly permitted and Mr
Chithi conceded as much. His contention that the Plaintiff
would be
deprived of a full hearing by the determination of the separated
issue, is without merit. The Plaintiff has adduced all
its evidence
and was thus not constitutionally deprived of a full hearing. It is
ludicrous to suggest, as the Plaintiff does, that
it would be unjust
to consider if the Plaintiff has discharged its onus after it has
delivered all its evidence.’
[9]
The
LCC explained that this was so because ‘the Plaintiff [bears]
the onus of establishing at the close of its case,
prima
facie
at
the very least, that it [is] a community as defined in the Act’.
[10]
[16]
In my view, Canca AJ was entitled to invoke the provisions of rule
57(1)(c) in determining whether the Community
claimants had made out
a case on the evidence at that stage of the hearing (after the close
of the claimant’s case, including
the submissions of the State
respondents). The question whether or not the Community claimants
were a ‘community’ as
defined in the Restitution Act is a
discrete legal point that is capable of being disposed of separately
from other issues. It
is a statutory requirement that must be met by
a claimant seeking a restitution of a right in land which it lost as
a result of
past discriminatory practices. Undoubtedly, the claimant
will have to present evidence – both oral and documentary - to
substantiate
its claim. Oral evidence will be from the lay witnesses
and expert witnesses. But once all the evidence has been presented
there
appears to be no reason for not deciding some of the issues on
a separated basis. In this matter the claimants had had ample time
to
present their case, some 30 court days, excluding inspections, which
lasted two days. After the claimants closed their case,
witnesses
were called on behalf of the State respondents, and the parties were
given ample time to prepare heads of argument and
to argue the issue.
[17]
Moreover, s 32 of the Restitution Act clothes judges with the power
to, inter alia, manage the procedure
and manner of conducting a trial
and, thus, permits a judge to curtail the proceedings to ensure that
resources, both public and
private, are not wasted. The LCC is vested
with inquisitorial powers in terms of s 32(3)
(b)
of the Restitution
Act,
[11]
to conduct any part of
any of its proceedings on an informal or inquisitorial basis and to
identify issues to be determined separately,
which power may be
invoked at any stage of the proceedings by the presiding judge. I
therefore find that the contention that the
Community claimants were
in any way prejudiced through the invocation of rule 57(1), has no
merit.
Whether
Mavundulu was a ‘community’
[18]
The next question is whether the finding of the LCC that the
Community claimants did not constitute a community,
was correct.
Section 2(1)
(d)
of the Restitution Act provides that a ‘person
shall be entitled to restitution of a right in land if 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’.
The claim for such restitution must have been
lodged with one of the offices of the Land Claims Commission, by not
later than 31
December 1998.
[19]
A ‘community’ is defined in s 1 of the Restitution Act
as:
‘
.
. . any group of persons whose rights in land are derived from shared
rules determining access to land held in common by such
group and
includes part of any such group.’
[20]
Section 1 defines ‘right in land’ as:
‘
.
. . any right in land whether registered or unregistered, and may
include the interests of a labour tenant and sharecropper, a
customary law interest, the interest of a beneficiary under a trust
arrangement and beneficial occupation for a continuous period
of not
less than 10 years prior to the dispossession in question; . . .’
[21]
In
In re
Kranspoort Community
,
[12]
Dodson J explained what the statutory definition entails:
‘…
it is
clear that there must be a community in existence at the time of the
claim. Moreover, it must be the same community
or part of the
same community which was deprived of rights in the relevant land …
This seems to me to require that there
must be, at the time of the
claim,
(1) a sufficiently cohesive group of
persons
to show that there is still a community or a part of a
community, taking into account the impact which the original
removal
of the community would have had;
(2) some element of commonality with
the community
as it was at the time of the dispossession to show that
it is the same community or part of the same
community
that is claiming.’ (Footnotes omitted.)
[22]
The Constitutional Court, in
Department
of Land Affairs and
Others v Goedelegen Tropical Fruits (Pty) Ltd
, was also concerned
with the question as to what constitutes a community. It had this to
say in this regard:
‘
At
the heart of this enquiry is whether the occupational rights in the
land were derived from shared rules determining access to
land held
in common. At its core, the question is whether the labour tenants,
through shared rules, held the land rights jointly.
The community and
individual applicants contend that they did. They support this
contention by pointing to the history of their
use and occupation of
the land and to the attendant social arrangements. Their forebears
lived on the farm since the mid-1800s,
before the first registered
owner Mr Hattingh in 1889, and the claimants continue to do so
despite successive registered ownership
of the land.’
[13]
[23]
At paragraphs 37 and 38 of the judgment the Constitutional Court went
on to state:
‘
However,
what is clear on all the evidence is that the indigenous ownership of
land in the original Boomplaats farm was lost before
1913. Once they
had lost ownership, they were compelled to work for the owner. Their
relationship with the owner was coercive.
The Land Claims Court
found, correctly in my view, that “the white owners took
possession of the land, and compelled the
inhabitants to become
labour tenants” -
Although
they had lost indigenous ownership, they continued to exercise the
right to occupy the land, to raise crops and to graze
their
livestock. Successive registered owners did not terminate these
rights. By 1969, the collective indigenous title to land
of the
Popela Community had succumbed to settler dispossession and
subsequent land laws on ownership and occupation of land by
black
people. Members of the community had been successfully coerced into
being farm labourers whose occupational interest in the
land had
become subject to the overriding sway of the registered owner. They
had to work the lands of the owner without wages in
order to live
there. Mr Altenroxel makes the point that, whilst there was a
supervisor who was also regarded by the workers as
Kgoshi, as well as
a community, they derived their right to live there, plant crops and
keep livestock from him, the white registered
owner, at whose whim
and fancy they lived.’
[24]
The Land Claims Court held in
Elambini Community and Others v
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others
that:
‘
Thus
it is settled law that for a community litigant to succeed in a
restitution claim it must prove that it existed as a community
after
19 June 1913, that it derived its possession and use of the land from
common rules, and that it existed as the same community
at the time
that the claim was lodged. If at the time of dispossession, the
possession and use of the land did not derive
from common rules, but
were supplanted by labour tenancy rules, the rights in land were not
held by a community at the time of
dispossession.’
[14]
[25]
It was submitted on behalf of the Community claimants that the LCC
misdirected itself by finding that they
did not constitute a
community. It was argued that the evidence presented on their behalf
established that that they existed as
a community at the time of
dispossession. In support of this submission, the Community claimants
relied on the evidence of lay
witnesses; expert testimony of Mr
Hennie Schoeman, the aerial photography expert, Dr Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu,
an anthropologist and the
witnesses who testified for the State
respondents, Mr Lionel Joubert and Mr Adolph Gerber and documentary
evidence.
[26]
The question is whether the members of the Mavundulu community
derived their possession and use of the land
from common rules. This
requires the analysis of the pleadings including the Notice of
Referral in terms of s 14 of the Restitution
Act, the Community
claimants’ response thereto and the evidence presented in
support of the pleaded case.
[27]
The following allegations are made by the Regional Land Claims
Commission KZN in the Referral Report in support
of the Notice of
Referral in terms of s 14 of the Restitution Act:
‘
The
claimant community had beneficial occupation of the claimed land.
They resided on the claimed land by virtue of historical right
of
occupation; alternatively, they had historically beneficial
occupation for a continuous period in excess of ten (10) years prior
to their dispossession. They practised subsistence farming on the
claimed land until the arrival of English and German speaking
settlers, when the process of systematic colonial occupation and
dispossession of the indigenous people from the land commenced
in
earnest.
In this regard, the
State's design to forcibly dispossess indigenous population from the
land, was facilitated by a barrage of legislation
such as the Masters
& Servant Amendment Act, 1926, giving effect to the Native Land
Act, 1913, Native Service Control Act of
1932 and the Group Areas Act
of 1966, and which legislation contributed directly to the claimant
community’s dispossession
from the claimed land.’
[28] As
regards the status of the claimants, the Report records that:
‘
1.2
The
Mavundulu Community comprises of individuals and all descendants of
individuals of a community who were dispossessed of their
rights in
the land after 19 June 1913 as a result of a deliberate and enforced
system of segregation and racial discrimination.
Their rights in the
claimed land are derived from shared rules determining access to
land, held in common by the community, and
they used the land for
their own benefit and subsistence.
…
1.4 The claimed land in
Natal at the time of dispossession was occupied under the enforced
land tenure system, incorporating indigenous
traditional practices,
as imposed by the colonial authority. This system provided that
traditional leaders would administer and
allocate land
(chieftainship) as agents of the State, to members of the community.
In essence, the traditional leaders held the
land in trust for its
community members.
1.5 By virtue of the
above system, the claimant community enjoyed beneficial occupational
rights under an implied trust arrangement,
which was derived from
being members of a “traditional community” and
subscribing to the cultural values and norms
of that community. Such
traditional communities were defined by its members’
subscription to a common cultural value and
norm system. In this
regard, the claimant community, a traditional community, as defined
above, acquired its rights, to the claimed
land, by reason of its
beneficial use and occupation of the land, bestowed as trust
beneficiaries, prior to 1913.
…
4.4 The claimant
community and/or their predecessors lived on the land and used the
claimed land for cultivation of crops, as shared
access to communal
grazing and as shared access to available water and firewood and
other resources from the land, for example
medicinal plants.’
Community
claimants’ response to the referral in terms of rule 38(7)(b)
[29]
In their response to the referral in terms of rule 38(7)
(b)
of
the LCC Rules, the Community appellants alleged that the Mavundulu
Community members were in occupation of the claimed land since
time
immemorial prior to the arrival of the white people who later came to
the land. They surveyed and subdivided the land and
thereafter
registered title deeds. The Community claimants alleged further that
the problem started with the arrival of the white
people of English
and German descent, on their land, between 1850 and 1860. Upon their
arrival, they approached Chief Mavundulu
for a piece of land to be
allocated to them. They, however, started to build their own
dwellings before Chief Mavundulu granted
them authority to do so.
When questioned about their behaviour, the white people said that
they had been granted authority and
permission to use the land by the
government of the day and later displayed and presented the title
deeds which had been issued
to them. The white people started tilling
the land and rearing livestock. Mavundulu Community members were then
compelled to live
side by side with the white people.
[30]
The Community appellants explained how the dispossession occurred:
‘
7.16
The Mavundulu community were dispossessed of their land between 1914
and 1920. The dispossession did not comprise in one singular
and
isolated act akin to an event which happens once and for all but it
occurred over a period of time which extended over a number
of years.
This includes the period extending from 1920 to 1994 wherein a number
of people were removed and evicted from their ancestral
land.’
[31]
In paragraphs 8 and 9 of the response the Community claimants pointed
out that as a precursor to the dispossession,
the white people:
‘
8.1
in 1903 dismantled the chieftaincy of Chief Cebekhulu Mavundulu by
kidnapping him and throwing him in a deep ditch (
odibini
).
. . and left him to die there.
8.2
in 1912 they started a big fire which destroyed the Claimant
Community’s homesteads and other valuable belongings and
annihilated various natural landmarks after which they substantially
and significantly increased the land which they occupied.
9.1
The Customary rights held by the claimant community to the land were
reduced to those of labour tenants overtime and…,
the rights
were gradually reduced to those of farm labourers over a period of
time. The claimant community members were forced
to work for various
white landowners on their land and those who were not willing to be
subjected to the labour tenancy and farm
labourer system were forced
to seek residence in the black townships and black rural areas in the
greater KwaZulu-Natal Province
including Greytown, Pietermaritzburg,
Hammersdale and in Zululand.
.
. .
9.3
Those that elected to remain on the farms they were allowed to [live]
on the farms and in exchange for their rights to live
on the farms
they provided labour to the farm owners as labour tenants and/or
alternatively they were obliged to work for minimum
wages. At the end
of six months, those were under labour tenant contracts were forced
to seek work elsewhere.’
Lay
witnesses’ testimony
[32]
The Community claimants led the evidence of following lay witnesses.
Mr Umbross Absalom Ndlovu testified
that after the arrival of the
white people, black people encountered quite a lot of problems. They
started losing their rights
of utilising the land as it was utilised
customarily. They lost their traditional way of utilisation of the
land.
[33]
Mr Ndlovu further testified that his father and mother worked for
‘Jubela’ (Mr Joubert). Critically,
he conceded during
cross-examination that the people lost the use of land during Nkosi
Mavundulu’s time. From when the white
people arrived in the
1800s, they restricted the grazing grounds, the number of cattle, the
number of houses the community could
have, their movement and rights
to bury their dead. He conceded that the Mavundulu as a community
disappeared in 1903.
[34]
Mr Sipho Wilson Cebekhulu, who was 72 years old when he gave
evidence, testified that his great grandfather
was Chief Mavundulu of
Cebekhulu clan from KwaMavundulu area. His family lived at Kwa-Jubela
until it was forcibly removed by the
police. This must have been
between 1961 and 1966. Their neighbours were the Zondi’s,
Ndlovu’s, Sithole’s, Kunene’s
and Dlamini’s.
After the eviction his family trekked to Pietermaritzburg and settled
at Kwa-Dambuza and thereafter relocated
to Kwa-Mpumuza.
[35]
Mr Cebekhulu testified that before the arrival of the white people at
their land the community occupied the
land in terms of the rules
established by the chief. All that changed after the arrival of the
white people. They undermined the
traditional leadership. They
replaced Chief Cebekhulu with Malinga who ruled the community
according to the rules set by the white
people.
[36]
Mr Cebekhulu conceded, under cross-examination, that blacks had no
control over the land, and they lived
there with the permission of
the landowner. The landowner made the rules where they could live,
how many houses they could build,
how many cattle they could keep. He
further conceded that ‘he worked for 6 months looking after the
cattle and ploughing
the fields.’ Mr Cebekhulu represented and
acted on behalf of the community.
[37]
Mr Makhonda Albert Ntanzi testified that his father and mother worked
for the landowner. He testified that
his father worked full time. He
testified that when his father got ill, his mother had to work for
the landowner in order for them
to be resident on the farm. They were
evicted because his mother got ill and could no longer work. He also
conceded under cross-examination
that when he lived on the farm, they
were under the authority of the landowner. They needed permission to
bury the dead and the
landowner allocated places where they could
graze their cattle.
[38]
Mr Dludla conceded under cross-examination that after the arrival of
whites the community that existed was
disestablished and by 1960 it
no longer existed. Mr Ngubane testified that ‘he was removed
from the farm Welverdient, which
was degazetted. He testified that
his grandfather, uncles and aunties worked on the farm Mooiplaas.
[39]
It is clear from the statements of the lay witnesses that from the
time of the arrival of white farmers in
the 1800s, their forebears
lived on the claimed land under the rules of the farmers, and they
set the terms on which they could
occupy and use the designated
portions of a particular farm.
[40]
Additionally, the common cause facts undermine the Community
claimants’ claim that they existed as
a community. No reference
is made in any historical records of the existence of Nkosi Mavundulu
or any other Cebekhulu Inkosi or
a community of African people living
on the farms Mooiplaats or Spitzkop. No reference is made in any
historical maps to Inkosi
Mavundulu or any chiefs of the Mavundulu or
a community of African people living in the area or on the farms
Mooiplaats or Spitzkop.
[41]
Mr Schoeman testified that numerous farmsteads were present already
in 1937 on the various sub-divisions
of the farms Mooiplaats and
Spitzkop and, already in 1937, these farms commercially farmed with
agricultural products linked to
a commercial farming enterprise
instead of it being farmed by subsistence farming. By 1937, fences
had been erected on the various
sub-divisions of the farms Mooiplaats
and Spitzkop.
[42]
According to Mr Gerber, in 1937, there were already established
timber plantations in various stages of growth
on the farms
Mooiplaats and Spitzkop and that no cattle kraals, manufactured in a
rudimentary fashion with branches were situated
near any of the
homestead areas on both the farms Mooiplaats and Spitzkop. He further
testified that there were clearly demarcated
paths between the
homesteads and the farmsteads indicating a link between the
homesteads and the farmsteads, such as would indicate
employees
visiting the farmsteads.
[43]
The only two references to the Cebekhulu clan are in the HSRC report
which covers an area that is situated
a substantial distance away
from Mooiplaats and Spitzkop and by Dr Bleek in 1849 and 1853.
According to Dr Bleek, Cebekhulu was
found between the Umtyezi and
Umsuluzi rivers being a reference to the Bushmansriver and the
Bloukransriver in the area of Estcourt.
[44]
Further, a report of a survey done by Dr NJ Van Warmelo, in 1934, in
the New Hanover area, records the tribe
in the area as Gwamanda and
no reference is made to Cebekhulu. Instead, the survey refers to
other chiefs in the New Hanover district.
[45]
Dr Ndlovu admitted that no reference is made in the Blue Books of
1896 and 1907 of Cebekhulu’s in the
area on the farms
Mooiplaats and Spitzkop. No reference to the Cebekhulu is made in the
New Hanover district but reference is made
to other chiefs. Finally,
there is no evidence of officially sanctioned removals after 1913 in
the New Hanover district, from the
farms Mooiplaats and Spitzkop.
Expert
witnesses' evidence
[46]
The Community claimants called Dr Ndlovu to testify on its behalf to
give expert evidence. His expertise
was placed in issue. The LCC
concluded that Dr Ndlovu did not qualify as an expert and for that
reason placed no weight on his
evidence.
[47]
Section 30(2)
(b)
of the Restitution Act provides that it is
competent for evidence to be adduced by ‘expert evidence
regarding the historical
and anthropological facts relevant to any
particular claim’. Dr Ndlovu has an MA degree in anthropology
from Rhodes University
and a PhD in rock art. He is not an historian.
He testified that he is a heritage expert and, according to him, the
land is part
of heritage.
[48]
Dr Ndlovu’s evidence was correctly disregarded. He conceded
under cross-examination that he did not
conduct independent archival
research but merely relied on the report of Dr Whelan, the landowner
respondents’ expert witness.
He stated that he neither verified
the archival documents of Dr Whelan nor looked at the aerial
photography in respect of the claimed
land. Dr Ndlovu did not profess
to have any skill or knowledge to analyse oral evidence and/or
archival documents to determine
whether there was in existence a
community and/or a person and/or persons who lost rights in land,
subsequent to 19 June 1913.
[49]
Besides these shortcomings in Dr Ndlovu’s evidence, it is clear
from the evidence of various witnesses
who testified for the
Community claimants, including those who testified for the State
respondents, that although the claimants’
forebears may have
existed as a community before the arrival of the white people, that
community disintegrated before June 1913.
Individual members of what
may historically have been a community prior to the arrival of white
farmers continued to occupy the
land as labour tenants subject to the
rules and policies of the white landowners and later as farm workers
post-1913. For instance,
each household in terms of the labour
tenancy regime was restricted to a certain number of livestock and if
they failed to obey
the rules they could be evicted from the farm.
However, what the evidence establishes in this case is that whatever
rights individual
occupiers may have enjoyed as labour tenants and
later as farm workers they were no longer derived from shared rules
determining
access to land held in common by a group in 1913. Their
occupation and use of the land did not meet the acid test referred to
by
the Constitutional Court in
Goedgelegen.
Disallowance of
fees
[50]
The next issue is whether the LCC misdirected itself in ordering that
the legal practitioner appellants were
not entitled to fees in the
matter and ordering them to repay the fees they had already received
from the state. This was because,
reasoned the LCC, they had pursued
the claim which they knew had no merit. It described such conduct as
vexatious, frivolous and
an abuse of the process of the court.
[51]
In
Multi Links Telecommunications Ltd v Africa Prepaid
Services Nigeria Ltd
, the court remarked:
‘
.
. . [A]ttorneys and counsel are expected to pursue their clients’
rights and interest fearlessly and vigorously without
undue regard
for their personal convenience. In that context they ought not to be
intimidated by their opponent or even, I may
add, by the Court. Legal
practitioners must present their case fearlessly and vigorously, but
always within the context of set
ethical rules that pertain to them.
. ..’
[15]
[52]
In
Jazz Spirit 12 (Pty) Limited and Others v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner: Western Cape and Others
, this Court made it clear
that:
‘
It
is crucial for the promotion and maintenance of the rule of law that
parties who approach the courts to resolve their land disputes
should
not be mulcted with costs, particularly where there are no
allegations of wilfulness or vexatiousness as is in this case.
Undoubtedly s 6 of the Restitution Act places an onerous duty on the
office of the Land Claims Commission to take all reasonable
steps to
ensure that claims that are lodged are well investigated and properly
prepared. Evidently, this is intended to ensure
that all facts
relevant to a particular claim are considered. In addition, it has as
its rationale the fact that many of the people
dispossessed of land
have also been systematically disadvantaged in many other ways and
may well be unlikely to be in a position
to fund any adverse costs
order. Such people might be dissuaded from pursuing the very rights
provided for in the Restitution Act
if costs orders were made in the
ordinary course. If this was their response, it would defeat the very
object of the Restitution
Act. This is, perhaps, an additional reason
for the exceptional circumstances envisaged in s 21A(3) [of the
Supreme Court Act 59
of 1959] to be required to meet an even higher
standard in matters concerning costs arising from the Restitution
Act.’
[16]
[53]
Where there is an unresolved dispute, the Commission is obliged to
refer such dispute to the LCC for adjudication.
The investigation and
reports by the Commission play a pivotal role in the ultimate
resolution of any ensuing dispute. Self-evidently,
costs orders might
be subversive of the spirit of social justice underlying the
Restitution Act.
[54]
The approach followed by Canca AJ in disallowing the fees for the
legal practitioner appellants in the entire
matter and directing them
to repay the fees they had already received for the work they had
done, fails to appreciate the
sui
generis
nature
of the Restitution Act.
[17]
Unlike
in any other litigation, litigation in terms of the Restitution Act
is instituted at the instance of the Commission on Restitution
of
Land Rights. Although the claimants are cited as plaintiffs, they are
not the ones who have a right to initiate and stop proceedings.
Once
an arguable case has been shown to exist the Commission must accept
the claim, even if the arguments are relatively weak.
Once a land
claim has been accepted as valid claim and published in the
Government Gazette by the Regional Land Claims Commission,
it can
only be withdrawn by the Commission in terms of s 11A (1) of the
Restitution Act. Having regard to the evidence of the witnesses
called by the State respondents who testified that the claimants were
a community as defined in the Restitution Act, there was
no basis for
the finding that the claim was frivolous and that its prosecution
amounted to an abuse of court process. In fact,
it is stated in the
Report filed by the Regional Land Claim Commission in terms of s 14
of the Restitution Act that ‘the
claim as submitted is neither
frivolous nor vexatious’ and that it had merit.
[55]
The LCC committed a material misdirection in disallowing the
legal practitioner appellants to recover their fees for the work they
had performed and also in directing them to refund the fees they had
already received from the State for representing the Community
claimants. This is a land claim and, once a claim has gone through
the internal vetting mechanisms contained in the Restitution
Act, it
would generally be reasonable for a legal practitioner appointed in
terms of s 29(4) of the Restitution Act to rely on
the decision of
the Regional Land Claims Commissioner to accept the claim as a valid
claim and to refer it to court for adjudication.
Thereafter, the
appointed legal practitioner is expected to put forward the best case
as is reasonably possible on behalf of the
claimants at the hearing
of the matter.
[56]
It is clear from the evidence that the LCC misdirected itself in
imposing a punitive costs order. Its decision
was influenced by
irrelevant considerations and that being so, this Court is entitled
to interfere in the exercise of its discretion.
There is
evidence to suggest that Canca AJ’s judgment was improperly
influenced by the
Luhlwini
case, as reflected in the striking
similarities between the two judgments, particularly regarding the
costs order. This reliance
on an external case raises concerns about
his impartiality and independence in deciding the punitive costs
issue. Judicial independence
requires that each case be considered on
its own merits, and his failure to independently assess the facts and
evidence in this
case undermines confidence in the exercise of his
discretion.
[57]
It follows, therefore, that the order made by the LCC disallowing the
legal practitioner appellants to recover
their fees in the matter and
directing them to repay the fees they already received from the state
should be set aside. There was
no legal basis for such order.
Recusal
application
[58]
The application for Canca AJ’s recusal was brought by the legal
practitioner appellants. It sprang
from the costs order made by Canca
AJ depriving the legal practitioner appellants of their fees (both
already earned and those
still to be paid). The recusal application
was in respect of the presiding judge hearing the application for
leave to appeal the
25 May 2020 judgment.
[59]
The objection to Canca AJ’s continued involvement in this
matter was based on his alleged extensive
reliance on the
Luhlwini
judgment, handed down shortly before the conclusion of the trial, by
Meer AJP. In support of this objection, attention was drawn
to the
similarity in terms and language of the costs order and the amendment
judgment. The manner in which judgment was written,
it was contended,
would leave any reasonable person, in the position of the affected
parties, with a reasonable perception of bias
and a reasonable
apprehension that Canca AJ ‘did not have a mind open to
persuasion in particular the pertinent and germane
arguments which
were raised by the first appellant’.
[60]
It is so that
Luhlwini
was the authority on
which Canca AJ heavily relied for depriving the legal practitioner
appellants of their fees. In that case,
like in the present one, the
Community claimants failed in their claim because they were unable to
prove that they were a community
when the claim was lodged. The legal
practitioners were deprived of their fees for having unsuccessfully
contended, contrary to
the established legal principle, that persons
who were at best labour tenants or farm workers on privately owned
land constituted
a community as defined in the Restitution Act. The
legal practitioner appellants were said to have abused the court
process in
pursuing a community claim that was bound to fail.
Luhlwini
has since been overturned
by this Court on appeal
[18]
which means that the whole basis on which the costs order in the
present matter was made, has ceased to exist.
[61]
A further allegation levelled at Canca AJ was that he was a
participant in a virtual meeting and/or tele-conference
held with
certain officials of the Department during which Acting Judge
President Meer allegedly, ‘complained about the incompetence
of
the first appellant [Mr. Chithi] herein’. He denied having been
a participant in that meeting.
[62]
The allegations of bias based on the adverse remarks concerning the
first appellant allegedly made at the
virtual meeting to which the
first appellant had not been invited were totally unfounded and the
grounds upon which they were based
were unfortunately
unsubstantiated. The legal practitioner appellants had ample
opportunity to support their allegations with affidavits
from any of
the participants at that meeting, in view of the gravity of the
allegation, they failed to do so. The recusal application
on this
ground was properly dismissed.
[63]
The legal practitioner appellants further submitted that Canca AJ
erred in deviating from the LCC’s
usual practice of not
awarding costs unless special circumstances exist. For the reasons
that will follow, Canca AJ was justified
in dismissing the recusal
application with costs. In
Le
Car Auto Traders v Degswa 10138 CC and Others
,
[19]
Sutherland J dealt with a similar situation where leave to appeal was
sought against a judgment and, before the application could
be heard,
an application for recusal from hearing the application for leave to
appeal was instituted. He commented as follows:
‘
These
propositions have only to be stated to be revealed as nonsense. The
effect of a recusal can only be in respect of a prospective
or
current proceeding. Asking a judge to recuse himself after judgment
is given is silly. Even if he chose to recuse himself, the
judgment
is not thereby nullified. A judgment once given stands until an
appeal sets it aside. The judge who gave the judgment
is
functus
officio
.’
[20]
[64]
Spilg J, in
Bennett and Another v S; In Re: S v Porritt and
Another,
expressed the disapproval of recusal applications as
follows:
‘
More
and more recusal application are brought as a tactical device or
simply because the litigant does not like the outcome of an
interim
order made during the course of the trial. The seeming alacrity with
which legal practitioners bring or threaten to bring
recusal
applications is a cause for concern.’
[21]
[65]
There is therefore no merit in the contention that Canca AJ erred in
awarding costs against the legal practitioner
appellants. Canca AJ
considered the application for his recusal. He determined that it had
no legal basis, and he dismissed it
with costs. In awarding costs
against the legal practitioner appellants, he was exercising his
discretion and there is no suggestion
that he had in any way
misdirected himself in the manner in which he did so. That being the
case, there is no basis for this Court
to interfere with his costs
order.
[66]
It was further contended by the legal practitioner appellants that
the landowners did not have a direct and
substantial interest in the
recusal application and therefore a costs order in their favour was
not warranted. In response, it
was argued on behalf of the landowner
respondents that the contention that the landowners had no interest
in the application for
the recusal is without merit. Since the
recusal application was grounded in the disallowance of fees, the
allegations of judicial
bias, and the improper influence of the
Luhlwini
judgment, the facts underlying the principal case
(the community claim) and the conduct of the legal practitioners and
that of
the presiding officer would, of necessity, be brought into
issue in the recusal application. The landowner respondents therefore
indeed had a direct and substantial interest in such matters.
Further, any submissions by the landowner respondents in regard to
the aforementioned issues, can only assist the court in bringing to
the court’s attention facts and legal authority to assist
it in
arriving at a considered decision with regard to the recusal
application, whether or not this is ultimately in favour or
against
the recusal
per se
.
[67]
I agree with the landowner respondents’ submissions. The
landowners were parties to the case and their
land was the subject of
the case. In terms of the
audi alterem partem
rule they were
entitled to oppose the application and to make their views known in
response to an ill-conceived application which
was bad in law and on
the facts. The landowners made no issue about the disallowance of the
fees of the legal practitioner appellants
but considered themselves
obliged to counter the attack on the factual and legal findings of
the LCC on which the disallowance
of fees order was dependent. The
landowners had a substantial interest in the application for recusal
in that the granting of it
would have resulted in the entire evidence
having to be re-run before another presiding officer, resulting in
enormous costs to
the landowners. Thus, the landowner respondents had
a direct and substantial interest in the recusal application and the
landowner
respondents’ legal representatives, as officers of
the court, were duty bound to put the record straight when scurrilous
and uncalled for allegations are made attacking the integrity of a
Judge.
[68]
In conclusion, the appeal against the dismissal of the land claim is
dismissed. The Community claimants failed
to prove that they
constituted a ‘community’ as envisaged in the Restitution
Act. The appeal against the order disallowing
the legal practitioner
appellants from recovering their fees on the matter is upheld. The
LCC misdirected itself in depriving the
legal practitioner appellants
of their fees and in directing them to repay the fees they had
already received from the State. The
conclusion that the legal
practitioner appellants had pursued a hopeless case in circumstances
where they should not have done
so, is wrong for the simple reason
that it is the State respondents who accept and refer the claim after
investigation. It is therefore
unfair to punish the legal
practitioner appellants by depriving them of their fees and ordering
them to repay the fees they had
received simply because the land
claim was at the end of trial found to have no merit. The appeal
against the order directing the
legal practitioner appellants to pay
the landowner respondents’ costs of opposing the recusal
application should fail.
Order
[69]
The following order is made:
1
The appeal under case number 1203/2021 against the order of the Land
Claims Court dismissing
the Mavundulu Community’s land claim is
dismissed with no order as to costs.
2
The appeal under case number 1334/2021 against the order of the Land
Claims Court disallowing
the fees of the first to third appellants in
the matter and directing them to repay the fees they had already
received from the
state is upheld with no order as to costs.
3
The appeal against the costs order in respect of the recusal
application under case
number 261/2022 is dismissed with costs.
D
H ZONDI
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
Case number:
1334/2021 & 261/2022
For the appellants:
C J Pammenter SC
and C Nqala
Instructed by:
Dludlu Attorneys,
Durban
Maduba Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the third to
twenty-seventh respondents
in case number
261/2022:
M G Roberts SC and
E Roberts
Instructed by:
Cox & Partners
Attorneys, Vryheid
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein.
Case
number: 1203/2021
For the appellants:
S Poswa-Lerotudi
and K Shazi
Instructed by:
Dludlu Attorneys,
Durban
Maduba Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the third to
twenty-seventh respondents:
M G Roberts SC and
E Roberts
Instructed by:
Cox & Partners
Attorneys, Vryheid
Symington De Kok,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Leave to appeal was granted by this Court on 11 November 2021.
[2]
Leave to appeal was granted by Canca AJ on 16 August 2021.
[3]
Leave to appeal was granted by this Court on 2 March 2022.
[4]
Minister
of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others v Ndumo
(obo Emdwebu Community)
[2023]
ZASCA 136.
[5]
Section 29(4) of the Restitution Act provided as follows:
‘
Where
a party cannot afford to pay for legal representation itself, the
Chief Land Claims Commissioner may take steps to arrange
legal
representation for such party, either through the State legal aid
system or, if necessary, at the expense of the Commission.’
[6]
Rule 57(1)
(c)
provides
as follows:
‘
57.
Prior Adjudication upon Issues of Law or Fact
(1)
Should the Court, upon application by any party or of its own
accord, be of the opinion that there is an issue of law or fact
in a
case which may conveniently be decided —
.
. .
(c)
separately from some other issue,
the
Court may order a separate hearing of that issue and grant any
extensions of time periods prescribed in the rules which may
be
desirable because of the separate hearing.’
[7]
Denel
(Pty) Ltd v Vorster
[2004]
ZASCA 4
;
[2005] 4 BLLR 313
(SCA);
2004 (4) SA 481
(SCA); (2004) 25
ILJ 659 (SCA) para 3.
[8]
Luhlwini
Mchunu Community v Hancock and Others
[2020]
ZALCC 2.
[9]
Ibid para 11.
[10]
Ibid para 12.
[11]
Section 32(3)
(b)
of the Restitution Act
provides:
‘
(3)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act or in the rules
contemplated in subsection (1) —
.
. .
(b)
the Court may conduct any part of any proceedings on an informal or
inquisitorial basis.’
[12]
In re
Kranspoort Community
2000
(2) SA 124
(LCC) para 34.
[13]
Department
of Land Affairs and Others v Goedgelegen Tropical Fruits (Pty) Ltd
[2007] ZACC 12
;
2007
(10) BCLR 1027
(CC);
2007 (6) SA 199
(CC) para 35. See also
Elambini
Community v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others
[2018]
ZALCC 11
para 141 (
Elambini
).
[14]
Elambini
para
141.
[15]
Multi-links
Telecommunications Ltd v Africa Prepaid Services Nigeria Ltd
[2013]
ZAGPPHC 261;
[2013] 4 All SA 346
(GNP);
2014 (3) SA 265
(GP) para
34.
[16]
Jazz
Spirit 12 (Pty) Limited and Others v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner: Western Cape and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 127
(SCA) para 27.
[17]
Salem
Party Club and Others v Salem Community and Others
2018(3)
SA 1 (CC) para 72.
[18]
Chithi
and Others: In re: Luhlwini Mchunu Community v Hancock and Others
(Case no.423/2020)
[ZASCA] 123 (23 September 2021).
[19]
Le Car
Auto Traders v Degswa 10138 CC and Others
[2012]
ZAGPJHC 286.
[20]
Ibid para 36.
[21]
Bennett
and Another v S; In Re: S v Porritt and Another
[2020] ZAGPJHC 275;
[2021] 1 All SA 165
(GJ);
2021 (1) SACR 195
(GJ);
2021 (2) SA 439
(GJ) para 113.
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