Case Law[2024] ZASCA 160South Africa
Kgoshi Ngoako Isaac Lebogo and Another v Headman Matome Kobe and Others (1204/2021) [2024] ZASCA 160 (18 November 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 November 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Customary law – traditional leadership – Limpopo Traditional Leadership and Institutions Act 6 of 2005 – relieving headmen/women from their royal duties – review application – Traditional Leadership and Governance Act 41 of 2003 – undue delay – whether condonation was necessary for the late filing of the review application – s 7(1)(a) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 applicable.
Judgment
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## Kgoshi Ngoako Isaac Lebogo and Another v Headman Matome Kobe and Others (1204/2021) [2024] ZASCA 160 (18 November 2024)
Kgoshi Ngoako Isaac Lebogo and Another v Headman Matome Kobe and Others (1204/2021) [2024] ZASCA 160 (18 November 2024)
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sino date 18 November 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 1204/2021
In
the matter between:
KGOSHI
NGOAKO ISAAC LEBOGO
FIRST APPELLANT
BAHANANWA
TRADITIONAL COUNCIL SECOND
APPELLANT
and
HEADMAN
ENOS MATOME KOBE
FIRST RESPONDENT
MORUKHU
MATOME ALFRED
SECOND RESPONDENT
PHALA
NTOME
SIMON
THIRD RESPONDENT
KGATLA
MASHILO PHILLIP
FOURTH RESPONDENT
KUBU
NGOAKO
ABRAM
FIFTH RESPONDENT
LEBOGO
MOLOKO COURTLY
SIXTH RESPONDENT
LEKWARA
MATLOU ALBERT
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
MAILULA
KOLOBE PATRICK
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
MANAKA
NHLODI
SAMUEL
NINTH RESPONDENT
MABOYA
MKGODI
WILSON
TENTH RESPONDENT
MALEKA
NTOME DALTON
ELEVENTH RESPONDENT
MONEYA
MODJADJI
TWELFTH RESPONDENT
THELEDI
MANTASE JACOB
THIRTEENTH RESPONDENT
PREMIER
OF LIMPOPO
FOURTEENTH RESPONDENT
MEC
OF CO-OPERATIVE
GOVERNANACE,
HUMAN
SETTLEMENTS
AND
TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS, LIMPOPO
FIFTEENTH RESPONDENT
CHAIRPERSON
OF LIMPOPO
HOUSE
OF TRADITIONAL LEADERS
SIXTEENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Kgoshi Ngoako Isaac Lebogo and Another v
Headman Matome Kobe and Others
(1204/2021)
[2024] ZASCA 160
(18
November 2024)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, SCHIPPERS, MOTHLE, WEINER and MOLEFE JJA
Heard:
16 August 2024
Delivered:
18 November 2024
Summary:
Customary law – traditional leadership – Limpopo
Traditional Leadership and Institutions Act 6 of 2005 –
relieving headmen/women from their royal duties – review
application – Traditional Leadership and Governance Act 41
of
2003 – undue delay – whether condonation was necessary
for the late filing of the review application –
s 7(1)
(a)
of
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
applicable.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane
(Makgoba JP, Kganyago and Muller JJ sitting as a court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Molefe
JA (Mocumie, Schippers, Mothle and Weiner JJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the Limpopo
Division of the High Court, Polokwane (the full court), upholding an
appeal which emanated from the court of first instance, in
the same
division, per Phatudi J (the high court). The high court refused an
application for condonation of the late filing of
the review and
dismissed the application to review and set aside the Premier of
Limpopo’s decision to remove the respondents
as headmen and
headwomen. The appeal is with the leave of this Court.
[2]
The first appellant is Kgoshi Ngoako Issac Lebogo (Kgoshi Ngoako),
a
recognised senior traditional leader of the Bahananwa Traditional
Community (the Bahananwa community). The second appellant is
the
Bahananwa Traditional Council (the Traditional Council), established
in terms of s 4 of the Limpopo Traditional Leadership
and
Institutional Act 6 of 2005 (the Limpopo Act).
[3]
The first to thirteenth respondents (the headmen/women respondents)
were recognised as headmen and headwomen of the Bahananwa community
until they were removed from their positions by the Premier
of
Limpopo (the Premier) on 29 July 2013. The fourteenth respondent is
the Premier, who is empowered by the Limpopo Act to issue
and
withdraw certificates of recognition and appointments of headmen and
headwomen. The fifteenth respondent is the Member of the
Executive
for Co-operative Governance, Human Settlements and Traditional
Affairs, Limpopo (the MEC).
Background
facts
[4]
This appeal concerns the ongoing dispute about the traditional
leadership
of the Bahananwa community. Mr Tlabo Joseph Lebogo
(Mr Tlabo Lebogo) was initially recognised as the senior traditional
leader
of the Bahananwa community in terms of the Limpopo Act. The
Premier terminated the recognition of Mr Tlabo Lebogo and issued a
certificate of the recognition of Kgoshi Ngoako as the senior
traditional leader, with effect from April 2011.
[5]
The Bahananwa community had been divided into two factions, with
one
faction supporting Kgoshi Ngoako and the other faction supporting Mr
Tlabo Lebogo. The headmen/women respondents were labelled
as being
loyal to Mr Tlabo Lebogo. On 17 March 2013, a meeting of the
Bahananwa royal family and the Traditional Council was held,
at which
it was resolved that the headmen/women respondents should be removed
from their positions. This decision was communicated
to the Premier
by the Traditional Council on 29 March 2013, and the Premier removed
them and withdrew their certificates of recognition
on 29 July 2013.
New headmen and headwomen were appointed to take over their
responsibilities.
Legal
framework
[6]
Section 1 of the Limpopo Act defines a ‘royal family’
as
–
‘
[T]he
core customary institution or structure consisting of immediate
relatives of the ruling family within a traditional community,
who
have been identified in terms of custom, and includes, where
applicable, other family members who are close relatives of the
ruling family.’
A
‘senior traditional leader’ is defined as –
‘
[A]
traditional leader of a specific traditional community who exercises’
authority over a number of headmen or headwomen
in accordance with
customary law, or within those area of jurisdiction a number of
headmen or headwomen exercise authority.’
A
‘headman’ or ‘headwoman’ is defined as –
‘
[A]
traditional leader who –
(a)
is under the authority of, or exercises authority within the area
of jurisdiction of, a senior traditional leader in accordance with
customary law; and
(b)
is recognised as such in terms of the Act.’
The
‘traditional community’ is defined as a traditional
community recognised as such in terms of s 3 of the Limpopo
Act.
[7]
Sections 12(1) and (2) of the Limpopo Act provide:
‘
(1)
Whenever a position of a senior traditional leader, headman or
headwoman is to be filled -
(a)
the royal family concerned must, within a reasonable time after
the need arises for any of those positions to be filled, and with
due
regard to the customary law of the traditional community concerned –
(i)
identify a person who qualifies in terms of customary law of the
traditional community concerned to assume
the position in question;
and
(ii)
through the relevant customary structure of the traditional community
concerned and after notifying the traditional council,
inform the
Premier of the particulars of the person so identified to fill the
position and of the reasons for the identification
of the specific
person.
(b)
the Premier must, subject to subsection (2) –
(i)
by notice in the Gazette recognise the person so identified by the
royal family in accordance
with paragraph (a) as senior traditional
leader, headman or headwoman, as the case may be;
(ii)
issue a certificate of recognition to the person so recognised;
and
(iii)
inform the provincial house of traditional leaders and the relevant
local house of traditional leaders
of the recognition of a senior
traditional leader, headman or headwoman.
(2)
Where there is evidence that the identification of a person referred
to in subsection (i) was not done in accordance with the
customary
law, customs or processes, the Premier–
(a)
may refer the matter to the provincial house of traditional leaders
and the relevant house of traditional leaders for their
recommendations;
or
(b)
may refuse to issue a certificate of recognition; and
(c)
must refer the matter back to the royal family for reconsideration
and resolution where the certificate of recognition has been
refused.’
[8]
Sections 13(1); (2) and (3) of the Limpopo Act provides –
‘
13
Relief of royal duties
(1)
Relief of royal duties shall be on the grounds of
(a)
a conviction of an offence with a sentence of imprisonment for
more than 12 months without an option of fine;
(b)
physical incapacity or mental infirmity which, based on
acceptable medical evidence, makes it impossible for that senior
traditional
leader, headman or headwoman to function as such;
(c)
wrongful appointment or recognition;
(d)
a transgression of a customary rule or principle that warrants
removal; or
(e)
persistent negligence or indolence in the performance of the
functions of his or her office.
(2)
Whenever any of the grounds referred to in subsection 1
(a)
,
(b)
and
(c)
come to the attention of the royal family
and the royal family decides to remove a senior traditional leader,
headman or headwoman,
the royal family concerned must, within a
reasonable time and through the relevant customary structure –
(a)
inform the Premier of the province concerned of the particulars of
the senior traditional leader headman or headwoman to be removed
from
office; and
(b)
furnish reasons for such removal.
(3)
Where it has been decided to remove a senior traditional leader,
headman or headwoman in terms of subsection (2), the Premier
must –
(a)
withdraw the certificate of recognition with effect from the date of
removal;
(b)
publish a notice with particulars of the removed senior traditional
leader, headman or headwoman in the Gazette; and
(c)
inform the royal family concerned, the removed senior traditional
leader, headman or headwoman, and the provincial house of traditional
leaders as well as the relevant local house of traditional leaders of
such removal.’
Litigation
history
The
high court (review application)
[9]
The headmen/women respondents instituted a rule 53 application to
review and set aside the Premier’s
decision taken on 29 July
2013, to remove them as headmen/women of the Bahananwa community (the
impugned decision), and to be reinstated
to their positions with full
pay, without any loss of benefits, with effect from the date of their
removal.
[10]
The appellants alleged that the headmen/women respondents had
committed acts of serious misconduct. On 17
March 2012, they were
invited to attend a disciplinary enquiry and to make a presentation
before the Royal Council, but they
failed to attend. In their
absence, they were relieved of their duties in terms of s 13(1)
(c)
,
(d)
and
(e)
of the Limpopo Act. After hearing evidence,
the appellants resolved to request the Premier to remove them as
headmen/women. The
Premier removed them and withdrew their
certificates of recognition on 29 July 2013. The review application
was launched on 11
February 2019 – nearly six years later.
[11]
In the high court, the Premier and the MEC raised three points
in
limine
: undue delay,
res judicata
and lack of
locus
standi
. Despite the points
in limine
raised, the parties
agreed to argue the merits of the application. The high court refused
to grant condonation to the headmen/women
respondents for the late
filing of the review application. It reasoned that the decision
sought to be reviewed was taken as far
back as 2013, and,
furthermore, that the headmen/women respondents failed to bring a
substantive application for condonation to
properly explain the
inordinate delay. The high court also dismissed the application to
review and set aside the Premier’s
decision to remove the
headmen/women respondents from their positions, solely on the basis
of the undue delay in instituting the
review application.
[12]
Dissatisfied with the order of the high court, the headmen/women
respondents applied to the high court for
leave to appeal, which was
refused. Leave to appeal to the full court was granted by this Court.
The
full court
[13]
The appellants contended that, from the outset, the headmen/women
respondents accepted that the review application was out
of time, and
sought condonation, which was opposed. It was argued that this was
the only issue which had to be adjudicated by the
full court. The
full court held that, in terms of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA), an application
for condonation was not
necessary because the headmen/women respondents had not delayed in
launching the review application: they
had followed the internal
remedy for dispute resolution under s 21(1) of the Traditional
Leadership and Governance Framework
Act 41 of 2003 (the Framework
Act),
[1]
in September 2018.
[14]
The full court upheld the appeal with costs, and set aside the order
of the high court, replacing it with
an order to the effect that:
(a)
there was no need for the headmen/women respondents to have brought a
condonation application in the high court as –
(i)
there was no evidence as to when the impugned decision was brought to
their attention;
(ii)
there were other headmen/women respondents who instituted review
proceedings, but there was an agreement in place to the effect
that
those proceedings would be kept in abeyance in order to give the
parties an opportunity to exhaust their internal remedies;
and
(iii)
the high court did not deal with the explanation for the delay,
prospects of success, and the prejudice which the respondents
might
suffer due to the refusal to grant condonation.
(b)
The impugned decision was reviewed and set aside as the procedure
followed by the appellants had several serious irregularities;
and
(c)
The headmen/women respondents were reinstated in their respective
villages with immediate effect, and the Premier was to pay
their
arrear monthly salaries from the date of their removal.
In
this Court
[15]
The first issue to be determined is whether s 21 of the Framework Act
is applicable. The second issue is
whether the late filing of the
review application required condonation and if so, whether it should
have been condoned.
[16]
Section 21 of the Framework Act provides:
‘
(1)
(a)
Whenever a dispute or claim concerning customary law or customs
arises between or within traditional communities or other customary
institutions on a matter arising from the implementation of this Act,
members of such a community and traditional leaders within
the
traditional community or customary institution concerned must seek to
resolve the dispute or claim internally and in accordance
with
customs before such dispute or claim may be referred to the
Commission.
(b)
If a dispute or claim cannot be resolved in terms of paragraph
(a)
,
subsection (2)
applies.
(2)
(a)
A dispute or claim referred to in subsection (1) that cannot be
resolved as provided for in that subsection must be referred to the
relevant provincial house of traditional leaders, which house must
seek to resolve the dispute or claim in accordance with its
internal
rules and procedures.
(b)
If a provincial house of traditional leaders is unable to resolve a
dispute or claim as provided for in paragraph
(a)
, the dispute
or claim must be referred to the Premier of the province concerned,
who must resolve the dispute or claim after having
consulted -
(i)
the partes to the dispute or claim; and
(ii)
the provincial house of traditional leaders concerned.
(c)
A dispute or claim that cannot be resolved as provided for in
paragraphs
(a)
and
(b)
must be referred to the
Commission.
(3)
Where a dispute or claim contemplated in subsection (1) has not been
resolved as provided for in this section, the dispute or
claim must
be referred to the Commission.’
[17]
In terms of s 21(1)
(a)
of the
Framework Act, members of the traditional community and
traditional leaders of the community must attempt to resolve
the
dispute internally and if it is not resolved, it must be referred to
the provincial house of traditional leaders,
[2]
and if the house cannot resolve the dispute, it must be referred to
the Premier who must resolve the dispute after consulting the
parties
to the dispute and the traditional house.
[3]
[18]
In
Tshivhulana Royal Family v Netshivhulana
(
Tshivhulana
Royal Family
), the Constitutional Court held that:
‘
It
is unlikely that the Legislature would have contemplated a dispute
between the Premier and a traditional community or a customary
institution to fall within the preview of section 21(1)(a) of the
Framework Act. This is so because the Premier is part of the
internal
dispute resolution institution or persons in section 21. It would be
absurd to have the Premier simultaneously as a party
to and resolver
of the dispute. In recognition disputes, the Premier’s decision
would invariably be impugned because he or
she is the recognising
authority. Having decided the issue, he or she would be disqualified
to resolve the dispute about his or
her alleged unlawful conduct.’
[4]
[19]
The review application in this matter was against the decision of the
Premier and the primary relief sought
by the headmen/women
respondents was to set aside the Premier’s administrative
action to remove them from their positions.
The Legislature
recognises that the Premier may not revoke or review an earlier
decision because he or she would be
functus
officio
,
having discharged his or her office.
[5]
The dispute before the full court was not a dispute as envisaged by s
21 of the Framework Act and there was no internal remedy
that the
headmen/women respondents had to exhaust in terms of that provision.
The full court therefore erred in finding, contrary
to
Tshivhulana
Royal Family
,
that a condonation application was not necessary as internal remedies
under s 21 of the Framework Act were not exhausted.
[20]
I now deal with the issue of the application for condonation for the
late filing of the review. A party applying
for condonation must give
a full and honest explanation for the whole period of the delay. In
S
v Mercer,
the
Constitutional Court held that the standard for considering an
application for condonation is the interests of justice.
[6]
Whether it is in the interests of justice to grant condonation
depends on the facts and the circumstances of each case. Factors
that
are relevant to this enquiry include, but are not limited to, the
nature of the relief sought, the extent and cause of the
delay, the
effect of the delay on the administration of justice and other
litigants, the reasonableness of the explanation for
the delay, the
importance of the issue to be raised in the intended appeal, and the
prospects of success.
[7]
An
application for condonation must give a full explanation for the
delay. In addition, the explanation must cover the entire period
of
delay. What is more, the explanation must be reasonable.
[8]
[21]
This Court, in
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town City
,
[9]
stated that, in determining whether condonation should be granted,
the relevant factors that require consideration are the nature
of the
relief sought; the extent and cause of the delay; its effect on the
administration of justice; the reasonableness of the
explanation for
the delay; the importance of the issues raised and the prospects of
the success on review.
[22]
In
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance v South African National Roads Agency
Ltd
,
[10]
this Court found that s 7 of PAJA creates a presumption that a delay
of longer than 180 days is ‘
per
se
unreasonable’:
‘
At
common law application of the undue delay rule required a two stage
enquiry. First, whether there was an unreasonable delay and,
second,
if so, whether the delay should in all circumstances be condoned…
Up to a point, I think, section 7(1) of PAJA requires
the same two
stage approach. The difference lies, as I see it, in the
legislature’s determination of a delay exceeding 180
days as
per se
unreasonable. Before the effluxion of 180 days, the
first enquiry in applying section 7(1) is still whether the delay (if
any) was
unreasonable. But after the 180 day period the issue of
unreasonableness is pre-determined by the legislature; it is
unreasonable
per se
. It follows that the court is only
empowered to entertain the review application if the interest of
justice dictates an extension
in terms of s 9. Absent such extension
the court has no authority to entertain the review application at
all. Whether or not the
decision was unlawful no longer matters. The
decision has been ‘validated’ by the delay. . .’
[23]
It is common cause that the review application was to be adjudicated
in terms of s 6(1) of PAJA. It is also
common cause that the
headmen/women respondents had to exhaust internal remedies, if any,
before approaching the court, unless
there were exceptional
circumstances,
[11]
as provided
for in s 7 of PAJA.
[12]
[24]
The impugned decision was made on 29 July 2013. The evidence shows
that on 23 August 2013, the headmen/women
respondents received,
through service by the sheriff, personal notification that the
Premier had decided to relieve them of royal
duties. On that date,
they were aware of the decision. Although the headmen/women
respondents alleged that the notice was not served
upon them, they
did not dispute receipt of the notification.
[25]
The explanation of the headmen/women respondents for the delay
amounts to this. On 23 August 2013, they received
a letter from the
traditional council requesting them to desist from performing their
duties. Soon after that, the sheriff served
them with an interim
order from the Magistrates Court, preventing them from attending and
conducting community meetings in their
respective villages, and also
interdicting them from representing themselves as traditional leaders
of their respective villages.
[26]
During March and April 2014, the Premier initiated the process of
internal remedies by delegating a committee
on customs and
traditions, to investigate whether the appellants followed proper
customs and traditions in removing the headmen/women
respondents and
appointing new headmen/women. The committee promised to release the
report within three months, that is before
the end of July 2014, but
they never received the report. Counsel for the headmen/women
respondents submitted that the internal
process as initiated by the
Premier was therefore never concluded.
[27]
On 27 June 2015, the headmen/women respondents attended a meeting
arranged by the chairperson of the traditional
council. At that
meeting they learnt that the Premier had removed them as
headmen/women. On 13 July 2015, the headmen/women respondents
made a
representation to the Premier that he should internally review and
nullify his decision to terminate their recognition as
headmen/women.
[28]
On 19 July 2016, the headmen/women respondents attended a meeting
arranged by the advisor to the Premier
where the internal review and
the memorandum of complaints were discussed. On 15 November 2016, the
headmen/women respondents held
another meeting with the MEC’s
representative to discuss the issues of, inter alia, why their
salaries were terminated. On
19 November 2016, they held another
meeting with the traditional council where it was agreed that the
Premier should continue to
resolve the issue of the headmen/women
respondents as a matter of urgency.
[29]
The following year, on 21 February 2017, another meeting was held by
the headmen/women respondents with the
traditional council where it
was resolved that the house of traditional leaders should release a
report of the investigations conducted
during 2014. During July 2017,
the headmen/women received an invitation to combine their
representation about their dispute before
the house of traditional
leaders on 20 July 2017, and they were promised to be provided with a
report before the end of 2017.
[30]
During February 2018, seeing that the report was not forthcoming, the
headmen/women respondents sent their
delegates to the house of
traditional leaders to enquire about the report. Their delegates were
advised that the report had been
sent to the Premier for
implementation. They never received the report, and, during September
2018, they took a decision to embark
on the legal route. Their
review application was only launched on 11 February 2019. This was in
summary, the headmen/women
respondent’s explanation for the
delay in instituting the review application.
[31] As
stated above, the impugned decision was made on 29 July 2013 and the
Premier appointed other headmen and
headwomen. It was therefore
legally impossible for him to apply the dispute-resolution mechanism,
in which the active participation
of the Premier, as the decision
maker was envisaged.
[13]
[32]
Taking into consideration the 180-day period prescribed by s 7(1) of
PAJA, the review application was brought
almost six years later. The
contention by counsel for the headmen/women respondents that the
180-day period only commenced when
they were provided with the full
reasons in terms of rule 53, is without merit.
[33]
The relief sought by the headmen/women respondents is that they be
re-instated as headmen/headwomen of the
Bahananwa community, with
retrospective benefits. The undisputed fact is that, shortly after
the Premier decided to remove them
from their royal duties on 24
August 2013, he appointed other individuals as headmen and headwomen
upon recommendation by Kgoshi
Ngoako and the traditional council.
When it comes to the extent and cause of the delay, the headmen/women
respondent’s version
is that they decided, in September 2018,
to challenge the Premier’s decision taken on 29 July 2013 and
only launched the
review application on 11 February 2019. In their
founding affidavit, their reasons for the delay are that ‘the
legal route
[was] expensive, and we had to collect funds from the
community and supporters in order to give instructions to our legal
representatives
to pursue the matter’. Furthermore, from July
2013 until September 2018, they were attending numerous meetings with
different
parties to inter alia, have the Premier review his
decision.
[34]
The inordinate delay in this case denies litigants the closure they
are entitled to on the issue, and the
litigation. To grant
condonation after such an inordinate and largely unexplained delay of
almost six years would undermine the
principle of finality and will
have a negative effect on the administration of justice. Even if we
accept the version that the
respondents only realised that they were
no longer headmen and headwomen at a meeting on 27 June 2015, their
explanation for the
delay in launching the review application in
February 2019 is not reasonable. Lack of finality will also cause
prejudice to the
institution of traditional leadership in the
Bahananwa community.
[35]
Undue delay should not be tolerated. Delay can prejudice the
respondent, weaken the ability of a court to
consider the merits of a
review, and undermine the public interest in bringing certainty and
finality to administrative action.
A court should therefore exhibit
vigilance, consideration and propriety before overlooking a late
review, reactive or otherwise.
[14]
[36]
Granting condonation in the interests of justice, does not create an
unfettered judicial power and must be
decided judicially upon the
facts and circumstances of the particular case.
[15]
Subjective sympathy for the litigant should not be conflated with the
objective test of the interests of justice.
[37]
The headmen/women respondents did not make out a proper case for
condonation, and that is dispositive of
the matter. There was
unreasonable delay and no good reasons were provided why the delay
should be condoned. The proverbial clock
started running from the
date that the headmen/women respondents became aware or reasonably
ought to have become aware of the impugned
decision. The enquiry does
not end there. There must be reasonable prospects of success if
condonation is granted.
[38]
The foundation of the headmen/women respondents’ case is that
the Premier did not follow the procedure
for misconduct in Schedule 2
to the Limpopo Act, and s 13 thereof, because the ‘village
royal family’ of the respective
respondents had not been
consulted. Consequently, so it was contended, the impugned decision
was reviewable because it was beyond
the powers of the Premier (
ultra
vires
),
or a mandatory and material procedure was not followed. However, in
law there is no such institution as a ‘village royal
family’,
as was held recently by the Constitutional Court in
Chief
Avhatendi Ratshibvumo Rambuda and Others v Tshibvumo Royal Family and
Others
:
[16]
‘
As
a matter of law, the authority to identify a new headman or headwoman
rests exclusively with the Rambuda Royal Family. This conclusion
is
buttressed by several points. Section 12(1) of the Limpopo
Traditional Leadership Act provides that the identification for a
headman position shall be done by the royal family and in terms of
customary law of the traditional community concerned. It follows
clearly from the definition of a royal family in section 1 of the
Limpopo Traditional Leadership Act, namely, “the ruling
family
within a traditional community,” not “a ruling family
within a traditional community” that there can only
be one
royal family per traditional community.’
For this reason, there
are no reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
[39]
The full court should have dismissed the appeal on the basis that the
review application was out of time.
The appellants did not satisfy
the requirements for an application to extend the period of time
within which proceedings for judicial
review must be instituted under
PAJA. The interests of justice in these circumstances militate
against the granting of condonation.
[40]
In the result, the following order is made:
1 The appeal
is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel where
so employed.
2 The
order of the full court is set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.’
D
S MOLEFE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants:
M Oosthuizen with N
Gaisa
Instructed by:
Espag Magwai
Attorneys, Polokwane
Symington & De
Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the first to
thirteenth respondents:
M B Monyemaratho
Instructed by:
Mmaphiwa Phihlela
Attorneys, Polokwane
Matsepes Inc.,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Netshimbupfe
and Another v Cathcart and Others
[2018] ZASCA 98; 2018 (3) All SA 397 (SCA).
[2]
Section 21(2)
(a)
of the Framework Act.
[3]
Section 21(2)
(b)
of the
Framework Act.
[4]
Tshivhulana
Royal Family v Netshivhulana
[2016]
ZACC 47
;
2017 (6) BCLR 800
(CC) (
Tshivhulana
Royal Family
)
para 40.
[5]
Ibid para 42.
[6]
S v
Mercer
[2003] ZACC 22
;
2004 (2) SA 598
(CC);
2004 (2) SA 598
(CC);
2004 (2)
BCLR 109
CC
;
2004 (1) SACR 1
(CC)
para
4.
[7]
Brummer
v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2000] ZACC 3
;
2000 (5) BCLR 465
(CC)
;
2000 (2) SA 837
(CC)
para
3.
[8]
Van Wyk
v Unitas Hospital
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC);
2008 (4) BCLR 442
(CC) para
20.
[9]
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town City
[2015] ZASCA 209
;
[2016] ALL SA 33
(SCA);
2016 (2) SA 199
(SCA) para
17. This was reaffirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Cape
Town v Aurecon SA (Pty) Ltd
[2017] ZACC 5
;
2017 (6) BCLR 730
(CC);
2017 (4) SA 223
(CC) para 18.
[10]
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance v Suth African National Road Agency Ltd
[2013] ZASCA 148
;
[2013] 4 All SA 639
(SCA) para 26.
[11]
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs
and
Others
[2009] ZACC 23
;
2010 (4) SA 327
(CC);
2009 (12) BCLR 1192
(CC) para
34-40.
[12]
Section 7(1) of PAJA provides:
‘
(1)
Any proceedings for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) be
instituted without unreasonable delay not later than 180 days
after
the date –
(a)
subject to subsection 2
(c)
, on which any proceedings
instituted in terms of internal remedies as contemplated in
subsection 2
(a)
have been concluded.
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned was
informed of the administrative action, became aware of the action
and the reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to
have become aware of the action and the reasons.’
[13]
Tshivhulana
Royal Family
para 47.
[14]
Department
of Transport v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
ZACC 39;
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC);
2017 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) paras 163-164.
[15]
Booi v
Amathole District Municipality
[2021] ZACC 36
; [2022] 1 BLLR (CC); (2022) 43 ILJ 91 (CC);
2022 (3)
BCLR 265
(CC) para 27.
[16]
Chief
Avhatendi Ratshibvumo Rambuda and Others v Tshibvumo Royal Family
and Others
[2024]
ZACC 15
;
2024 (11) BCLR 1376
(CC) para 49.
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