Case Law[2022] ZASCA 53South Africa
Loskop Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and Others (390/2021) [2022] ZASCA 53 (12 April 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Land – Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 – occupiers – overgrazing of land – remedies of owner – removal of livestock does not constitute ‘eviction’ of occupier – both owner and occupier have duty to prevent overgrazing in terms of Conservation of Agricultural Resources Act 34 of 1983 – court orders not sought by applicants and not supported by pleadings – respondents not afforded opportunity to state case – livestock removed without sanction of court – self-help remedy – mandament van spolie.
Judgment
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## Loskop Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and Others (390/2021) [2022] ZASCA 53 (12 April 2022)
Loskop Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and Others (390/2021) [2022] ZASCA 53 (12 April 2022)
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sino date 12 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 390/2021
In the matter
between:
LOSKOP LANDGOED
BOERDERY (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPELLANT
WILLEM ADRIAAN
PIETERS
SECOND APPELLANT
RIAAN PIETERS
THIRD APPELLANT
and
PETRUS MOELESO
FIRST RESPONDENT
DAVID M MOFOKENG
SECOND RESPONDENT
MAKIE MOELESO
(TSHABALALA)
THIRD RESPONDENT
NINI MABE
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Loskop
Landgoed Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others v Petrus Moeleso and Others
(390/2021)
[2022]
ZASCA 53
(12 April 2022)
Coram:
VAN
DER MERWE, MOCUMIE, NICHOLLS, MBATHA, and CARELSE JJA
Heard:
8 March 2022
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives via email. It has been published
on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be at 10h00 on 12 April
2022.
Summary:
Land –
Extension of Security of
Tenure Act 62 of 1997
– occupiers – overgrazing of land –
remedies of owner – removal of livestock does not constitute
‘eviction’ of
occupier – both owner and
occupier have duty to prevent overgrazing in terms of
Conservation of Agricultural Resources Act 34 of 1983
– court
orders not sought by applicants and not supported by pleadings –
respondents not afforded opportunity to state
case –
livestock removed without sanction of court – self-help
remedy –
mandament
van spolie
.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land
Claims Court, Randburg (Yacoob J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal succeeds in part.
2
The appeal in respect of para 1 of the Land Claims Court’s order is
dismissed.
3
The appeal succeeds in respect of para 2 of the Land Claims Court’s
order
which is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
respondents are
ordered to forthwith
restore possession of the two grazing camps on the farm Barnea 231
within the district of Bethlehem, Free State
Province allocated to
the applicants prior to dispossession.’
4
The appeal succeeds in respect of para 4 of the Land Claims Court’s
order,
which is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
Each party to pay
its own costs.’
5
No order as to costs of the appeal is made.
JUDGMENT
Carelse JA (Van
der Merwe, Mocumie, Nicholls and Mbatha JJA concurring):
[1]
The primary issue in this appeal involves the reduction of the
respondents’ grazing
area from two camps to one camp, on the farm
Barnea 231 within the district of Bethlehem, Free State Province (the
farm) This appeal
arises from proceedings instituted in the Land
Claims Court, Randburg (LCC) by the respondents (who were the
applicants in the court
a quo) for certain declaratory orders.
[2]
The owner of the farm is the second appellant, Mr W A Pieters. On 1
March 2018, however,
the first appellant, Loskop Boerdery (Pty) Ltd,
took over the farming operations on the farm. The third appellant, Mr
Riaan Pieters,
is the son of Mr W A Pieters and the sole director of
the first appellant. It may safely be assumed that he at all relevant
times
acted on behalf of the first and second appellants. The first
respondent, Mr Petrus Moeleso, was born in 1974 and has, since birth,
resided on the farm with his parents and continues to do so. In 1999,
Mr Petrus Moeleso started working on the farm for Mr W A Pieters.
In
2008, his contract of employment was terminated and he has since not
worked on the farm. The second respondent, Mr David Mofokeng;
the
third respondent, Ms Maki Moeleso; and the fourth respondent, Ms Nini
Mabe, reside on the farm.
[3]
According to the respondents, they inherited 24 cattle and initially
had the use of three grazing
camps for their livestock. Mr
Petrus Moeleso alleged that in 2002, Mr W A Pieters informed him that
he intended reducing
the three camps to two grazing camps and offered
to feed the first respondent’s cattle during the winter months.
These allegations,
including the number of cattle the respondents
own, were disputed by the appellants but do not require determination
because they
are not material to the outcome of this appeal.
[4]
It was not disputed that the respondents were occupiers in terms of
the Extension of
Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA)
[1]
on the farm. It was also not disputed that as on 1 March 2018 the
respondents had consent to keep cattle on the farm and were allocated
two grazing camps for the purposes of grazing. It was further not
disputed that the camps allocated to the respondents became
overgrazed
and required rehabilitation for a period of two years.
[2]
[5]
In the LCC, the applicants sought the following orders:
‘
1.
THAT the Respondents be ordered
to restore the Applicants’ rights at the farm known as Barnea
231
in the District of Bethlehem, Free State Province.
2.
THAT the Respondents
unilateral conduct reducing the applicant’s grazing camp and
stopped feeding [the respondent]’s cattle in winter seasons as
previously agreed and practiced for a long period be declared
unlawful.
3.
THAT the Respondents conduct of preventing Applicants cattle access
to water be
declared unlawful.
4.
GRANTING the Applicants
further and/or alternative relief.’
As
a result of the reduction of the grazing area that was allocated to
the respondents, they were left with only one small camp on
which to
graze their cattle. The effect of this, so the respondents alleged,
was an eviction through the back door as well as self-help.
[6]
Pursuant to the provisions of the Conservation of Agricultural
Resources Act 43 of 1983
(CARA), the appellants obtained a report,
dated May 2018, from an ecological specialist, Mr Rikus Lamprecht of
Eco Focus, who opined
that the grazing camps used by the respondents
were ‘seriously overgrazed’. A copy of the report and a letter,
dated 30 May 2018,
were sent to the respondents and the Department of
Rural Development and Land Reform (the Department), demanding that
the respondents
remove their cattle from the farm. In the event that
the respondents refused to comply, the appellants warned that ‘[]f
the cattle
of the occupiers are not removed from the farm within 7
(SEVEN) days after the date of this correspondence, we put on record
that
we have received instructions from our client to urgently
approach the Court with an urgent application for an order that the
occupiers’
cattle is to be removed from our client’s farm as per
the recommendations of the specialist appointed by our client, with
reference
to the report by Eco Focus annexed hereto.’
[7]
Because the respondents refused to comply with the demand, the
appellants removed the
cattle from the two overgrazed camps to
another camp on the same farm. This was done to avoid being
criminally charged for contravening
the provisions of CARA, so the
appellants submitted. The removal was therefore effected despite the
refusal of the respondents to
consent thereto.
[8]
It was common cause that the appellants did not bring an application
to relocate the
respondents’ cattle to another camp on the same
farm. However, the appellants launched proceedings in the
magistrates’ court
to remove the respondents’ cattle from the
farm. This application is still pending. Pertinently, Mr Riaan
Pieters in his answering
affidavit in the present matter stated the
following:
‘
I
admit that I later
reduced
the grazing area of the Applicants by one camp due to the fact that
that specific grazing camp is totally overgrazed, which is a
serious
contravention of the provisions of
inter
alia
the so called
CARA Act. Despite the request made to the Applicants to
remove
their cattle from the farm, the Applicants refused to adhere to the
request whereafter I
removed
the cattle of the Applicant’s out of that specific camp which was
severely overgrazed.(My emphasis)
[9]
On 2 December 2020, the LCC per Yacoob J found in favour of the
respondents and granted
an order in the following terms:
‘
1.
The respondents’ conduct in
reducing the grazing available to the applicants in the absence
of a
court order is unlawful.
2.
The respondents are
ordered to restore to the applicants the right to graze on a camp
of
at least similar capacity to the camp from which the applicant’s
livestock has been removed, on the farm known as Barnea 231
in the
District of Bethlehem, Free State Province.
3.
The applicants are granted
leave to institute action proceedings to determine their
entitlement
to winter fodder.
4.
The respondents are to pay
the costs of this application, jointly and severally.’
The
application for leave to appeal was granted by Yacoob J in respect of
paragraphs 1, 2 and 4 (costs order) of its order. Leave
to appeal
against para 3 of the court’s order was not granted on the basis
that it was not a final order.
[10]
The LCC understood that one of the issues it had to decide was
whether the reduction of the
grazing area that the
respondents had the use of was unlawful or wrongful. The
appellants contended that because of the non-compliance
with CARA,
its reduction of the grazing area and the removal of the respondents’
cattle was not unlawful and that any order restoring
the status
quo
ante
would have the effect of the appellants acting unlawfully.
[11]
It is trite that where a landowner needs to rehabilitate farmland,
because of overgrazing, the landowner
is entitled (within the law) to
remove the cattle for such purpose, and after the land is
rehabilitated, the cattle can be returned.
[3]
It is also not disputed that the provisions of CARA impose an
obligation on both the landowner and anyone who utilises farmland for
grazing to protect the area from overgrazing.
[12]
Before I deal with the primary issue in this case, I deal with the
finding by the LCC at paras 43-44
of the judgment that ‘the actions
of [the appellants] in reducing the grazing area available to [the
respondents] do amount to
an attempt to evict in terms of the
definition in ESTA. The order I propose to make would not amount to
an order requiring anyone
to commit an offence, since I simply order
[the appellants] to ensure that grazing of similar capacity and
quality is made available.
It does not have to be the same camp that
has been overgrazed’. I disagree with this finding for the reasons
set out herein below.
[13]
It was common cause that the respondents’ cattle were not removed
from the farm, but were relocated
to another grazing area on the same
farm. ESTA defines ‘evict’ to mean: ‘to deprive a person
against his or her will of residence
on land or the use of land or
access to water which is linked to a right of residence in terms of
this Act, and “eviction” has
a corresponding meaning’.
[14]
In
Adendorffs Boerderye
v Shabalala and Others
[2017]
ZASCA 37
(SCA), it was held that:
‘
It
thus follows that his rights of grazing [do] not derive from ESTA. He
has a personal right to use the land for the purpose of grazing.
I
agree with the remarks by Pickering J in
Margre
Property Holdings CC v Jewula
[2005]
2 All SA 119
(E) at 7 when he said the following:
“
The
right of an occupier of a farm to use the land by grazing livestock
thereon is a right of a very different nature to those rights
specified in s 6(2) [in ESTA]. In my view such use was clearly not
the kind of use contemplated by the Legislature when granting
to
occupiers the right to use the land on which they reside. Such a
right would obviously intrude upon the common law rights of the
farm
owner and would, in my view, thereby amount to an arbitrary
deprivation of the owner’s property. There is no clear indication
in the Tenure Act such an intrusion was intended. It is relevant in
this regard that [the] respondent is neither an employee [nor]
a
labour tenant as defined by section 1 of the Land Reform (Labour
Tenants) Act 3 of 1996. His right, if any, to graze stock on the
farm
does not derive from that Act. In my view the use of land for
purposes of grazing stock is pre-eminently a use which would be
impossible to regulate in the absence of agreement between the
parties. I am satisfied in all the circumstances that an occupier
is
not entitled as of right to keep livestock on the farm occupied by
him as an adjunct of his right of residence. His entitlement
to do so
is dependent on the prior consent of the owner of the property having
been obtained.”.’
[4]
[15]
Section 6 of ESTA provides:
‘
Rights
and duties of occupier –
(1)
Subject to the provisions of
this Act, an occupier shall have the right to reside on and
use the
land on which he or she resided and which he or she used on or after
4 February, 1997, and to have access to such services
as had been
agreed upon with the owner or person in charge, whether expressly or
tacitly.
(2)
Without prejudice to the generality of the provisions of section 5
and subsection (1),
and balanced with the rights of the owner or
person in charge, an occupier shall have the right–
(a)
to
security of tenure;
(b)
to
receive bona fide visitors at reasonable times and for reasonable
periods;
(c)
to
receive postal or other communication;
(d)
to
family life in accordance with the culture of that family;
(dA)
. . .
(e)
not to be denied or deprived of
access to water; and
(f)
not to
be denied or deprived of access to educational or health services.’
[16]
In
Serole and Another v Pienaar
[1999] 1 All SA 562
(LCC);
2000 (1) SA 328
(LCC), the court, correctly in my view, held that:
‘
Section
6(2) sets out some instances of use. All of them relate to the
occupation of the land, and do not bear upon the land itself.
. .
Although the specific instances of use in section 6(2) are set out
“without prejudice to the generality” of the provisions
of
sections 5 and 6(1), they still serve as an illustration of what kind
of use the legislature had in mind when granting to occupiers
the
right to “use the land” on which they reside. . . A Court will
not interpret a statute in a manner which will permit rights
granted
to a person under that statute to intrude upon the common-law rights
of another, unless it is clear that such intrusion was
intended.’
[5]
[17]
This Court, in
Minister
of Rural Development and Land Reform v Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others, Mathibane and Others v Normandien Farms
(Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2017] ZASCA 163
;
[2018]
1 All SA 390
(SCA);
2019 (1) SA 154
(SCA), held that:
‘
In
my view Normandien was not seeking to “evict” the occupants
within the meaning of the LTA. The term “eviction” in the LTA
connotes a deprivation of the right of occupation or use of land as a
result of the purported termination or repudiation of that
right by
the person in control of the land, whether the owner or lessee. This
is apparent from the circumstances which must be present
in order to
justify an eviction, as specified in s 7(2), and from the fact that,
in terms of s 6, proceedings for eviction can only
be instituted by
the owner or by someone else (e.g. the lessee) with the owner’s
sworn support.
In
the present case Normandien did not purport to terminate or repudiate
the relationship between itself and the occupants as labour
tenants.
Normandien did not contend that the occupants no longer had the right
to reside on the farm. Normandien did not contend
that the occupants’
right, as between themselves and Normandien, to graze their livestock
on the farm as an incident of their occupation
was at an end.
Normandien asserted that the continued presence of the livestock on
the farm contravened CARA and this was damaging
Normandien’s land
and causing Normandien to be in violation of its obligations under
CARA. If the Agriculture Minister had brought
proceedings to enforce
CARA through the removal of the livestock, it could hardly have been
contended that he was applying for the
occupants’ “eviction”
for purposes of the LTA. Such a contention would imply that the
Agriculture Minister would be powerless
to act without the owner’s
sworn support, which would be untenable. The position is no different
where a private party with locus
standi seeks to enforce CARA.’
[6]
Although this
dictum was made in the context of the Land Reform (Labour Tenants)
Act 3 of 1996 it is equally applicable to this matter.
[18]
Furthermore, para 2 of the LCC’s order
[7]
was misconceived. As a general principle a court should not range
beyond that on which it has been asked to adjudicate. In other
words,
it should adjudicate the case made out in the papers and the issues
raised therein. The LCC did not forewarn the appellants
that it was
contemplating such an order. The LCC simply granted the order without
affording the appellants an opportunity to respond.
Importantly, the
papers did not disclose any legal basis for a right to alternative
grazing. Paragraph 2 of the order was also impermissibly
vague and
prejudicial, and cannot stand.
[19]
The LCC and the parties have mischaracterised the issues
[8]
for determination in this appeal. As I see it, the real dispute
between the parties was whether the respondents were in peaceful
and
undisturbed possession of the grazing camps prior to being spoliated,
and not whether the respondents’ possession was based
on any right.
The respondents in para 1 of its notice of motion sought a
restoration order. In other words, the respondents sought
relief in
the form of the
mandament
van spolie
.
[20]
On the appellants’ own version, the respondents were deprived of
possession of the two grazing camps
that they had been given consent
to use. In
Nino Bonino v De Lange
1906 TS 120
, the court
stated that:
‘
It
is a fundamental principle that no man is allowed to take the law
into his own hands; no one is permitted to dispossess another
forcibly or wrongfully and against his consent of the possession of
property, whether movable or immovable. If he does so, the Court
will
summarily restore the
status
quo ante
,
and will do that as a preliminary to an inquiry or investigation into
the merits of the dispute. It is not necessary to refer to
any
authority upon a principle so clear.’
[9]
In
a decision of this Court,
in
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
[10]
it was
specifically held that the
mandament
van spolie
is
available for the restoration of the lost possession (in the sense of
quasi-possession, which consists of the actual use of the
servitude)
of a right of servitude.
In this case,
a right of servitude of grazing could therefore be spoliated. The
dispossession of the actual possession of the two
camps or the
quasi-possession in respect thereof by the respondents without
consent or a court order, was unlawful and amounted to
a spoliation.
[21]
In light of the aforegoing, and on the basis that the respondents had
been spoliated, para 1 of the LCC’s
order was correctly granted.
Paragraph 2 of the LCC’s order should be reformulated to provide
that the respondents’ possession
of the camps, of which they had
been dispossessed, should be restored forthwith.
[22]
In addition, something needs to be said about the manner in which the
legal representatives of both parties
have pleaded their case. It is
expected that at the very least legal representatives should ensure
that the essential facts of the
case should be pleaded with
sufficient clarity and particularity. In this case the
pleadings of both parties alleged the bare
minimum. As a result of
the lack of the essential averments, it is not surprising that the
issues in this case have been mischaracterised.
[23]
Finally, the LCC ordered costs against the appellants. In terms of
the jurisprudence of the LCC, costs
should only be ordered in
exceptional circumstances.
[11]
In my view,
there were no circumstances warranting a departure from the ordinary
rule. A costs order against the appellants was not
warranted and each
party should pay its own costs in the proceedings in the LCC. The
second issue is the costs of the appeal. The
usual order is
that costs should follow the result. In the appeal, the appellants
have had partial success, therefore no order as
to costs of the
appeal is made.
[24]
I therefore make the following order:
1
The appeal succeeds in part.
2
The appeal in respect of para 1 of the Land Claims Court’s order is
dismissed.
3
The appeal succeeds in respect of para 2 of the Land Claims Court’s
order
which is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
respondents are
ordered to forthwith
restore possession of the two grazing camps on the farm Barnea 231
within the district of Bethlehem, Free State
Province allocated to
the applicants prior to dispossession.’
4
The appeal succeeds in respect of para 4 of the Land Claims Court’s
order,
which is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
Each party to pay
its own costs.’
5
No order as to costs of the appeal is
made.
Z CARELSE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
Appellants: J S Stone
Instructed
by:
Niemann Grobbelaar Attorneys, Bethlehem
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
Respondents: G Shakoane SC
Instructed
by:
Finger Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
1 of ESTA defines ‘
occupier
’
as follows: ‘a person residing on land which belongs to another
person, and who has or [sic] on 4 February 1997 or thereafter
had
consent or another right in law to do so . . .’.
[2]
See para 8 below.
[3]
See
Adendorffs
Boerderye v Shabalala and Others
[2017] ZASCA 37
(SCA); and
Minister
of Rural Development and Land Reform v Normandien Farms (Pty) Ltd
and Others; Mathimbane and Others v Normandien Farms
(Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2017] ZASCA 163 (SCA); 2019 (1) SA 154 (SCA); [2018] 1 All SA 390
(SCA).
[4]
Paragraph
28.
[5]
Paragraph 16.
[6]
Paragraphs
59-60.
[7]
‘
The
respondents are ordered to restore to the applicants the right to
graze on a camp of at least similar capacity to the camp from
which
the applicant’s livestock has been removed, on the farm known as
Barnea 231 in the District of Bethlehem, Free State Province.’
[8]
See
para 10 above.
[9]
At 122.
[10]
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
1989
(1) SA 508 (A); [1989] 1 All SA 416 (A).
[11]
See
Hlatshwayo
& Others v Hein
1999 (2) SA 834
(LCC);
Tsotetsi
& Others v Raubenheimer NO
and
Others
2021
(5) SA 293
(LCC).
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