Case Law[2024] ZASCA 164South Africa
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Thamsanqa Davis Bisset (982/2023) [2024] ZASCA 164 (2 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
2 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Land – compensation – s 42D of the Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 – settlement agreement – absence of concurrence – review – absence of administrative action – powers of review.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Thamsanqa Davis Bisset (982/2023) [2024] ZASCA 164 (2 December 2024)
Minister of Department of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others v Thamsanqa Davis Bisset (982/2023) [2024] ZASCA 164 (2 December 2024)
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sino date 2 December 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 982/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF DEPARTMENT OF RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND REFORM
FIRST APPELLANT
DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF DEPARTMENT OF
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT AND LAND REFORM
SECOND APPELLANT
CHIEF
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
THIRD APPELLANT
REGIONAL
LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER
EASTERN
CAPE PROVINCE
FOURTH APPELLANT
OFFICE
OF THE VALUER GENERAL
FIFTH APPELLANT
and
THAMSANQA
DAVIS BISSET
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
The Minister of Department of Rural
Development and Land Reform and Others v Thamsanqa Davis Bisset
(982/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 164
(2
December 2024)
Coram:
MEYER, KATHREE-SETILOANE and UNTERHALTER JJA and MOLOPA-SETHOSA and
MOLITSOANE
AJJA
Heard:
21 November 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed
to be 11h00 on 2 December 2024.
Summary:
Land – compensation –
s 42D
of the
Restitution of Land
Rights Act 22 of 1994
– settlement agreement – absence of
concurrence – review – absence of administrative action –
powers
of review.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land Claims Court of South Africa, Randburg
(Muvangua AJ sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal succeeds.
2
The order of the high court is set aside, and replaced with the
following
order: ‘The application is dismissed’.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter JA (Meyer
and Kathree-Setiloane JJA and Molopa-Sethosa and Molitsoane AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The respondent, Mr Bisset, represents the Bisset family. The Bisset
family
owned land in Gqeberha. The Bisset family, in 1972, was
dispossessed of their ownership of this land as a result of past
racially
discriminatory laws. In terms of the Restitution of Land
Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act), the Bisset family lodged
a claim for the restitution of their rights in the land that they had
owned. In 2008, Mr Bisset was visited by, Vanessa Daniels,
an
official of the Regional Land Claims Commissioner, Eastern Cape
Province, the fourth appellant (the Commissioner). Mr Bisset,
on 18
April 2008, signed a document headed, ‘Settlement Agreement in
terms of
s 42D
of the
Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994
’.
The document reflected the terms of an agreement in terms of which
the Bisset family would accept a restitution award as
compensation
for the dispossession of their land rights. Mr Bisset did not accept
that the Bisset family’s claim had been
lawfully settled and,
many years later, in September 2021, he brought proceedings to
declare the settlement agreement invalid,
and have it reviewed and
set aside. Mr Bisset also sought an extension of the 180-day period,
in so far as this was necessary,
in terms of s 9(1) of the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[2]
The review was brought on the basis that the settlement agreement
reflected
an amount in respect of the value of the land, but it
failed to place any value on the emotional suffering of the family;
and hence,
relevant factors were not considered. In addition, Mr
Bisset claimed that compensation was determined at the instance of an
unauthorised
person; and that the settlement offer of the
Commissioner was arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable. The review
was opposed by
the appellants who defended the legality of the
settlement agreement.
[3]
The high court (
per
Muvangua AJ), notwithstanding the passage
of time, considered it to be in the interests of justice to condone
the delay of Mr Bisset
in bringing the review. As to the merits of
the review, the high court held that the Commissioner, when
determining compensation,
must, in terms of the Restitution Act,
consider both the financial and non-financial factors listed in s 33
of the Restitution
Act. The Commissioner did not do so, and thus, the
high court reasoned, the settlement agreement should be reviewed and
set aside,
which it then ordered. With the leave of the high court,
the appellants appeal to this Court.
[4]
The premise from which the high court’s judgment proceeds is
that
there was a settlement agreement concluded between Mr Bisset and
the Commissioner. This premise requires scrutiny. It is common
ground
that Mr Bisset on 18 April 2008 signed the document to which I have
referred. Mr Bisset complained that Ms Daniels had made
him sign the
document, but that the nature and content of the settlement was not
explained to him. Later in 2008, Mr Bisset stated
that he advised Ms
Daniels that, ‘the settlement agreement is no longer accepted’.
The deponent to the answering affidavit,
Mr Maphuta, the Regional
Land Claims Commissioner, denied that Mr Bisset had expressed any
uncertainty to Ms Daniels as to what
he was signing. He further
denied that the settlement agreement was not explained to him. No
confirmatory affidavit from Ms Daniels
formed part of the papers.
[5]
The following matters were not disputed. First, that Mr Bisset, after
signing the document, had called Ms Daniels to inform her that the
settlement was no longer accepted. Second, that the document
containing the settlement agreement was not signed by the
Commissioner on behalf of the Department of Rural Development and
Land
Reform (the Department). Third, a framework settlement agreement
was signed by a Mr Daniels on behalf of the Veeplaas community
claimants in April 2007 (of which Mr Bisset’s claim formed
part) in terms of s 42D of the Restitution Act. But this agreement
nevertheless required individual claimants, such as Mr Bisset, to
conclude separate settlement agreements with the Minister of
Rural
Development and Land Reform (the Minister), if they so wished.
Fourth, the Department never paid any compensation to Mr Bisset
as
specified in the settlement agreement, or otherwise. Fifth, in early
2019, Mr Bisset’s attorney engaged further with representatives
of the Commissioner concerning appropriate compensation in respect of
Mr Bisset’s claim, among others. Meetings were held;
Mr Bisset
was invited to present a proposal for compensation that included the
loss suffered by the Bisset family by way of distress
directly caused
by its dispossession. This, the firm of attorneys, Maci Incorporated,
acting for Mr Bisset, indicated that it could
not do. No agreement
was reached, and the review was eventually brought.
[6]
These undisputed facts give rise to only one conclusion. Although Mr
Bisset
signed the proposed settlement agreement, there is no evidence
that the Minister’s representatives did so, or otherwise
evidenced
their concurrence. There was no indication, following Mr
Bisset’s disavowal of the settlement agreement, that the
Commissioner
considered there to be a binding agreement. Nor was
there any compensation paid to the Bisset family pursuant to any
settlement
agreement or any attempt to do so. In 2019, the
Commissioner and Mr Bisset’s attorney recommenced negotiations
for compensation,
without any indication from the Commissioner that
this was futile because a binding settlement agreement had already
been concluded.
It follows that there was no settlement agreement
concluded between Mr Bisset and the Minister in terms of s 42D of the
Restitution
Act.
[7]
If there was no settlement agreement, there was nothing to declare
invalid,
nor to review and set aside. Mr Bisset is not bound by any
settlement agreement. He and the Commissioner are, therefore, at
liberty
to continue their negotiations to reach an agreement. And if
they cannot, then Mr Bisset may seek other recourse to pursue his
claim. The review proceedings sought to undo an agreement that had
not been concluded. The high court declared invalid, reviewed
and set
aside what it described in its order as ‘the settlement
agreement that was signed by the applicant [ Mr Bisset] on
18 April
2008’. But all that existed was a document that contained terms
upon which a settlement was proposed, and which
Mr Bisset had signed.
The high court had no power to exercise its review powers to review
and set aside a document that was not
a binding settlement agreement,
or, to put the matter in the framework of public law, to review and
set aside something that was
not yet a decision on the part of the
Commissioner amounting to administrative action.
[8]
Once that is so, the order made by the high court cannot stand. It
was
made on the basis of an incorrect premise. The appeal succeeds.
The appellants, given the nature of this case, did not seek costs
from Mr Bisset, either in respect of the appeal or the proceedings
before the high court.
[9]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal succeeds.
2
The order of the high court is set aside, and replaced with the
following
order: ‘The application is dismissed’.
D
N UNTERHALTER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
T Seneke SC (with him L Hesselman)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Gqeberha
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
A
M Maseti
Instructed
by:
Maci Attorneys, Port Elizabeth
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
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