Case Law[2023] ZASCA 73South Africa
Maxwele Royal Family and Another v Premier of the Eastern Cape Province and Others (1176/2021) [2023] ZASCA 73 (24 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – review of appointment of a headman/headwoman – validity of the appointment in dispute – decision to appoint the third respondent set aside.
Judgment
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## Maxwele Royal Family and Another v Premier of the Eastern Cape Province and Others (1176/2021) [2023] ZASCA 73 (24 May 2023)
Maxwele Royal Family and Another v Premier of the Eastern Cape Province and Others (1176/2021) [2023] ZASCA 73 (24 May 2023)
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sino date 24 May 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 1176/2021
In the matter between:
MAXWELE ROYAL FAMILY
FIRST APPELLANT
ASIPHE SOLANGA
MAXWELE SECOND
APPELLANT
And
THE PREMIER OF THE
EASTERN
CAPE
PROVINCE FIRST
RESPONDENT
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF
CO-OPERATIVE AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
SECOND
RESPONDENT
BAXOLELE MAXWELE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
SANGONI ROYAL FAMILY
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Maxwele Royal Family
& Another v The Premier of the Eastern Cape Province and Others
(Case no 1176/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 73
(24
May 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA AP, NICHOLLS and GOOSEN JJA and
NHLANGULELA and MALI AJJA
Heard
:
9 March 2023
Delivered
:
24 May 2023
Summary:
Administrative law –
review of appointment of a headman/headwoman – validity of the
appointment in dispute – decision
to appoint the third
respondent set aside.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Mthatha (Notyesi AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the
costs
of two counsel where so
employed; such costs to be paid by the respondents jointly and
severally, the
one paying the
others
to be
absolved.
2 The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following
order:
‘
(a)
The second respondent’s decision to appoint the third
respondent as acting headman of Zimbane Administrative Area, Mthatha
is hereby declared unlawful and accordingly reviewed and set aside.
(b) The respondents are
ordered to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally,
the one paying, the others
to be
absolved.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Nhlangulela AJA
(Dambuza AP, Nicholls and Goosen JJA and Mali AJA concurring):
The
parties
[1]
The first appellant is the Maxwele Royal Family (the MRF), which is
described as ‘a core customary
institution or structure
comprising immediate relatives of the ruling family and other family
members who are close relatives of
the ruling family’. It
exercises authority within Khwenxurha Location, Zimbane in Mthatha
(Zimbane). The second appellant
is Asiphe Solanga Maxwele (Asiphe),
an adult male and a member of the first appellant.
[1]
He resides at Zimbane. The first respondent is the Premier of the
Eastern Cape Province (the Premier) who is responsible for
recognising
chiefs and headmen/headwomen who have been identified to
serve in traditional communities of the province of the Eastern Cape.
The second respondent is the Member of the Executive Council for the
Department of Co-operative and Traditional Affairs (the MEC).
The
third respondent is Baxolele Maxwele (Baxolele), an adult male of
Khwenxurha. The fourth respondent is the Sangoni Royal Family
(the
SRF). It is composed of members of Sangoni Royal House. It exercises
authority in the Qokolweni Administrative Area, Mthatha.
Its senior
member (Chief Sangoni) presides over the Qokolweni-Zimbane
Traditional Council, a structure that was established in
terms of s 6
of the Traditional Leadership and Governance Act 4 of 2005 (the EC
Act of 2005).
Introduction
[2]
This appeal arises from the judgment of the Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Mthatha (the high
court) which dismissed with costs
an application to review the decisions made by the MEC. In terms of
the impugned decisions, Baxolele
was appointed as the acting headman
of Zimbane. The matter comes to this Court on appeal with the leave
of the high court. The
appeal turns on the crisp question of whether
the identification, recognition and appointment of Baxolele as acting
headman of
Zimbane was lawful.
Background
[3]
Until 2008, the late Mr Mzimtsha Maxwele (Mzimtsha) was the headman
of Zimbane. At the time of his death,
Mzimtsha had one wife, Mrs
Nomthandazo Maxwele (Mrs Maxwele). The two of them had one minor
child, namely, the second appellant,
Asiphe. Subsequent to the death
of Mzimtsha, the MRF identified Asiphe as the successor to the
headmanship, in terms of s 18 of
the EC Act of 2005
[2]
.
Mrs Maxwele was identified and duly assumed the position of regent in
accordance with the provisions of s 21 of the EC Act of
2005
[3]
as Asiphe was 19 years old at the time. This state of affairs endured
until 20 August 2020 when the MEC appointed the third respondent
as
acting headman of Zimbane under Qokolweni Traditional Council,
effectively the same position in which Mrs Maxwele was a regent
at
the time.
On
26 January 2017, whilst the regent was still in office, the MEC
instructed the SRF to identify an acting headman to replace the
regent. Accordingly, Baxolele was recognised and appointed by the
Premier.
[4]
At the same time,
the SRF advised Mrs Maxwele that she was removed from headwomanship
with immediate effect for the reason that
her term as acting
headwoman had expired.
[4]
The appellants brought an application to review and set aside the
decisions of the MEC. The application
was opposed. Ms Ntombekhaya D.
Maxwele (Ms Maxwele), the chairperson of the MRF, deposed to the
founding affidavit. She traced
the history of
Maxwele Royal House
. It was common cause that until his
death, Mzimtsha was the hereditary headman of Zimbane and that Mrs
Mawele was appointed
as Regent because of Asiphe’s minority
status.
[5]
On 26 January 2017, whilst the regent was still in office, the
MEC
addressed
a letter to the SRF instructing it to identify an acting headman to
replace the Regent. On the same day the MEC advised
Mrs Maxwele that
the term of her regency had expired and gave her 30 days to vacate
the office. The MEC explained that the reason
for the termination of
her
regency was the expiry of the three-year term of Regency as
prescribed under ss 22(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of the EC Act of 2005
[5]
. There
were also allegations made that she had caused instability within the
Zimbane community. That conduct, it was
contended, disqualified her from continuing to act as a headwoman. On
8 January
2019
,
the MEC addressed a letter to Mrs Maxwele confirming that she was
removed from office. Baxolele was identified as Acting Headman
and
his appointment as such with effect from 12 June 2020 was confirmed
by the MEC on 20 August 2020.
Mrs
Maxwele retorted that the termination of her appointment and the
recognition of Baxolele as a new acting headman violated the
provisions of ss 26(1)(
a
)
and (
b
)
of
the
EC Act of 2017.
[6]
Aggrieved by the decisions of the respondents,
the
appellants launched the review proceedings
seeking an order
that the decision of the Premier and MEC to appoint Baxolele be
reviewed and set aside (Case no 2990/2020). It
also appears from the
record that further application proceedings had been launched by the
appellants under case no 1234/2020.
In that application the
appellants sought an order to compel the Premier and MEC to recognise
Asiphe as the headman so that he
would commence his official duties
as he had since attained the age of majority. Apart from the order
that was granted in case
no 1234/2020, there are no further details
of that application in the record.
[7]
In the review application to which this appeal relates, the
respondents challenged Ms Maxwele’s
authority to depose to the
founding affidavit on the basis that the MRF was not a valid legal
entity. Baxolele and the SRF contended
that the Qokolweni-Zimbane
Traditional Council should have been joined in the review
application. They also asserted that the review
application was
premature to the extent that the appellants had failed to refer the
dispute(s) to mediation as envisaged in the
provisions of Rule 41A of
the uniform rules of the high court. In addition, they took issue
with the appellants’ failure
to file the record of the impugned
decisions. They also maintained that there was an irresolvable
dispute of facts that must have
been foreseen by the appellants.
[8]
In justifying his appointment as acting headman, Baxolele asserted
that in Zimbane, the electoral system,
as opposed to the hereditary
system, had always been applied in appointing headmen. He refuted the
allegation made by Ms Maxwele
that Asiphe’s position as an
eldest male issue in Maxwele Royal House was the qualifying factor
for his appointment as the
headman.
In the high court
[9]
The high court dismissed the review application on four principal
bases, namely that:
(a) Ms Maxwele had
neither the
locus standi
to bring the application, nor the
authority to depose to an affidavit on behalf of the MRF;
(b) the establishment of
the MRF was invalid to the extent that its members constituting were
not of royal blood;
(c) there was no
resolution in terms of which Asiphe was identified as the headman;
and
(d) in Zimbane, the
procedure for appointment of a headman is the public ballot system,
rather than the hereditary system.
[10]
The court found that the MRF is not a
royal
family
because Zimbane is an administrative area and
not
a traditional community recognised
in terms of s 2 of
the
Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act 41 of 2003 (the
Framework Act)
[6]
. For that
reason, it was
not
qualified to identify a headman. It held that the SRF, as the royal
family with authority over the entire Qokolweni-Zimbane
traditional
community, held the authority to identify headmen for all the
communities within its jurisdiction, including Zimbane.
The court
upheld the respondents’ contention that the first appellant was
not a legal entity.
In this Court
[11] For the
reasons that follow, the judgment of the high court cannot stand.
First, it was not in dispute that the
demise of Mzimtsha in 2008 led
to the identification of Asiphe as the successor in terms of s18 of
the EC Act of 2005 and the processes
provided for therein. Mrs
Maxwele’s regency was founded on this identification. Further,
the MEC was involved in the 2008
process, which, in essence, meant
that he accepted the underlying reason for the regency. Had it not
been for the fact of the minority
status of Asiphe, the Premier would
have been compelled in terms of the provisions of s 18(2) of the EC
Act of 2005 to inform the
Provincial House of Traditional Leaders of
such identification and then publish, in the Gazette, a notice
recognising such identification.
Thereafter, in terms of s 18(3) of
the EC Act of 2005, the Premier would have been compelled to issue a
certificate of recognition
in favour of Asiphe.
[12] In the
record, Asiphe’s date of birth appears as 13 July 1989. He had,
therefore, long attained majority
when the MEC instructed the SRF to
identify an acting headman and when Baxolele was recognised as such.
If the term for Mrs Maxwele’s
regency had expired, the Premier
and MEC could not simply ignore the identification of Asiphe which
remained extant. Both the identification
of an acting headman and the
recognition of Baxolele as such had no lawful basis.
[13] Counsel
for the Premier and MEC conceded that the appointment of Mrs Maxwele
as regent proceeded on the basis of
an acceptance of the recognition
of Asiphe as the successor to headmanship. The consequence of such
acceptance is that there existed
an administrative decision or act
which preceded the appointment of the regent. Counsel conceded that
in the absence of such administrative
conduct being set aside both
the MEC and Premier could not lawfully recognise another identified
headman nor purport to appoint
such person to the position of headman
or acting headman. Counsel accordingly conceded, correctly so, that
the decision to appoint
Baxolele must be set aside.
[14] At the
hearing of this appeal, our attention was drawn to the fact that the
review in this case served before same
judge who, on the same day,
granted the order in case no 1234/2020 in terms of which the Premier
and MEC were compelled to consider
and decide Asiphe’s
recognition as the headman of Zimbane. It was not in dispute before
us that the order in case no 1234/2020
compelled the Premier and MEC
to consider and decide Asiphe’s recognition as the headman of
Zimbane. The context in which
the order in case no 1234/2020 was
granted is not apparent from the record. However, the fact that a
full-scale hearing of the
review application proceeded before the
same judge who had just granted the order compelling a decision on
Asiphe’s nomination
is surprising. The reasons for rejecting
Asiphe’s nomination by the same court in the review application
are perplexing,
given that the order in case no 1234/2020 entailed a
positive finding on issues regarding the status of the MRF and Ms
Maxwele’s
locus standi
and authority to participate in
the review proceedings.
[15]
A further issue that requires comment by this Court is the reference
in the record, especially in the correspondence
by the MEC to the
‘appointment’ of the third respondent. It is important to
highlight that there is no provision in
the EC Acts 2005 and 2017,
for
appointment
of
a headman by government functionaries. The relevant legislation
provides for
recognition
of the headman by the
Premier
,
rather than the MEC.
[7]
Conclusion
[16] To
conclude, the MEC’s (and the Premier’s) decisions to
recognise the identification, and appoint Baxolele
in the face of the
identification of the second appellant in 2008, which resulted in Mrs
Maxwele’s regency, is unlawful.
In addition, the order of the
high court in case no 1234/2020, in effect, disposed of the
preliminary issues raised in the review
application. The order of the
high court must be set aside. There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result.
Order
[17] In the
result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the
costs
of two counsel where so
employed; such costs to be paid by the respondents jointly and
severally, the
one paying the
others
to be
absolved.
2 The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following
order:
‘
(a)
The second respondent’s decision to appoint the third
respondent as acting headman of Zimbane Administrative Area, Mthatha
is hereby declared unlawful and accordingly reviewed and set aside.
(b) The respondents are
ordered to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally,
the one paying, the others
to be
absolved.’
_______________________
ZM NHLANGULELA
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellants:
ZZ
Matebese SC with Z Badli
Instructed
by:
A
S Zono & Associates, Mthatha
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first and second respondent:
M
Gwala SC with LX Mpiti
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Mthatha
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
third respondent:
S
Sintwa
Instructed
by:
Chris
Bodlani Attorneys, Mthatha
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
fourth respondent:
M
Sishuba with N Mdunyelwa
Instructed
by:
Potelwa
& Co, Mthatha
Ponoane
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
First
names are used because s
ome
of the persons referred to in this judgment share the same surname.
No disrespect is intended.
[2]
The
provisions of s 18 of the EC Act of 2005 read as follows:
‘
(1)
Whenever the position of an iNkosi or iNkosana is to be filled -
(a) the royal family
concerned must subject to such conditions and procedure as
prescribed, within sixty days after the position
becomes vacant, and
with due regard to applicable customary law: -
(i) identify a person
who qualifies in terms of customary law to assume the position in
question, after taking into account whether
any of the grounds
referred to in section 6(3) apply to that person; and
(ii) through the
relevant customary structure, inform the Premier of the particulars
of the person so identified to fill the position
and of the reasons
for the identification of that person; and
(b) the Premier
must, subject to subsection (5), by the notice in the
Gazette
,
recognise the person so identified by the royal family as an iNkosi
or iNkosana, as the case may be.
(2) Before a notice
recognising an iNkosi or iNkosana is published in the
Gazette
,
the Premier must inform the Provincial House of Traditional Leaders
of such recognition.
(3) The Premier must,
within a period of thirty days after the date of publication of the
notice recognising an iNkosi or iNkosana
issue to the person who is
identified in terms of paragraph (a)(i), a certificate of
recognition.’
[3]
The provisions of s 21 of the EC Act of 2005 read as follows:
‘
Recognition
of regents
-
(1) Where a royal family
has identified the successor to the position of iKumkani, iNkosi or
iNkosana who is a minor in terms
of applicable customary law or
customs and advised the Premier, the Premier must: -
(a) within a
reasonable time, by notice in the
Gazette,
recognize the
person so identified by the royal family as a regent;
…
(3) The Premier
must review the recognition of a regent -
(a) at least once
every three years, and
(b) immediately
after the successor has attained the age of majority.’
[4]
The provisions of s 18 of the EC Act of 2005 were replaced by s 23
of the EC Act of 2017 in identical terms.
[5]
Subsections
22 (1)
(a)
and
(b)
of the EC Act of 2005, reading in identical terms as ss 26(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of the EC Act of 2017, which read as follows:
‘
Persons
acting as iKumkani, iNkosi or iNkosana –
(1)
A
royal
family
may
identify a suitable person to act as iKumkani, iNkosi or iNkosana
as
the case may be, where: —
(a)
a successor to the position of a
traditional
leader
has
not been identified by the
royal
family
concerned;
(b)
the identification of a successor to the position of iKumkani,
iNkosi or iNkosana
is
being considered and not
yet
resolved;…’.
[6]
Section
2(1) of the Framework Act reads:
‘
(1)
A community may be recognised as a traditional community if it –
(a) is subject to a
system of traditional leadership in terms of that community’s
customs; and
(b) observes a system of
customary law.’
[7]
Sections
9, 11, 13, and 14 of the Framework Act; see also
s 3
of the
Traditional and Khoi-San Leadership Act 3 of 2019
and relevant
provincial legislation, in this instance,
ss 18
&
21
of EC Act
of 2005 and s 23 of the EC Act of 2017.
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