Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 520South Africa
Bakubung Ba Ratheo Traditional Community and Others v Bakubung Community Development Corporation and Others (14349/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 520 (2 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 August 2022
Headnotes
by the first
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bakubung Ba Ratheo Traditional Community and Others v Bakubung Community Development Corporation and Others (14349/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 520 (2 August 2022)
Bakubung Ba Ratheo Traditional Community and Others v Bakubung Community Development Corporation and Others (14349/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 520 (2 August 2022)
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sino date 2 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 14349/2017
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
NOT
REVISED:
02/08/2022
In
the matter between:
BAKUBUNG
BA RATHEO TRADITIONAL COMMUNITY
1
st
Applicant
JABULANI
BEN
GUMBI
2
nd
Applicant
ITUMELENG
TIRO MONNAKGOTLA
3
rd
Applicant
and
BAKUBUNG
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
1
st
Respondent
CORPORATION
BAKUBUNG
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
2
nd
Respondent
UNIT
(PTY) LTD
TRANSAFRICA
MINING VENTURES (PTY)LTD
3
rd
Respondent
AFRICA
CONTINENTAL RESOURCE VENTURES
4
th
Respondent
(PTY)
LTD
DISELE
JOHANNES PHOLOGANE
5
th
Respondent
MARY
ANNAH MMALENYALO DIALE
6
th
Respondent
KELEBOGILE
ELIZABETH MOUTLOATSE
7
th
Respondent
PEGGY
MPHO
PILANE
8
th
Respondent
TSIETSI
DAVID TSELADIMITLWA
9
th
Respondent
CHOICE
FRANCINA TSHETLE
10
th
Respondent
SOLOMON
MPHUPHUTE MONNAKGOTLA
11
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The second and third applicants are members of the first applicant
community. Purporting also to represent the first applicant, they
seek an order against the respondents preventing the sale of
certain
shares (“the Wesizwe shares”) without specific
consultation with the Royal Family, Dikgoro (clans), and the
general
body of members of the first applicant, as well as the Department of
Minerals and Energy, the House of Traditional Leaders
of the North
West Province, that information be provided to the applicants about
any disposal of shares and that a written mandate
be obtained from
the first applicant for the sale of the shares.
2.
The applicants obtained an interim order in the urgent court,
interdicting the passing of any resolution by the first and second
respondents to dispose of shares beneficially held by the first
applicant, and requiring notice of any meeting held for passing such
a resolution by the first to fourth respondents to the applicants’
attorneys, pending the final resolution of this application.
3.
The applicants, having obtained the interim order, then did
not
prosecute the remainder of the application, and it was left to the
respondents to compel the applicants to file heads of argument,
and
to take steps to set the matter down.
4.
The third and fourth respondents, although they caused explanatory
affidavits to be filed, did not participate in these proceedings.
Where I refer to “the respondents”, this is a reference
to the remaining respondents. For reasons which will shortly become
clear, where I refer to “the applicants” this is
a
reference to the second and third applicants, unless the context
requires a different interpretation.
5.
The respondents raised a number of points
in limine
and also
brought an application in terms of Rule 7 to the authority of the
second and third applicants to represent the first applicant.
The
applicants did not file an answering affidavit in the Rule 7
application nor did they file a replying affidavit in the main
application.
6.
The points
in
limine
raised by respondents were that
the applicants did not have
locus standi
, that the relief
claimed by the applicants is not capable of enforcement, and that the
application does not disclose a cause of
action.
THE
RULE 7 APPLICATION
7.
The basis of the Rule 7 application is that the power to institute
proceedings on behalf of a traditional community such as the first
applicant is regulated by traditional law and by the North West
Traditional Leadership and Governance Act, 2 of 2005 (“the
North West Act”).
8.
The community is recognised in terms of the Traditional Leadership
and Governance Framework Act, 41 of 2003 (“the Framework Act”)
read with the North West Act.
9.
In terms of section 32 of the North West Act, the Kgosi of the
community has the power to institute proceedings on the community’s
behalf. In this matter the Kgosi is the eleventh respondent
and has
not instituted or authorised proceedings on the community’s
behalf. Also, a general meeting of the community was
held after this
application was instituted, at which the community stated that no
mandate was given to the applicants’ erstwhile
attorneys, or to
anyone for opposing the deal in which the shares are to be disposed
of.
10.
In addition, according to the respondents, the Khuduthamaga which is
only a
part of the Royal Family and does not substitute for the
Traditional Council, nor does it have the right to speak for the
community.
A resolution by the Khuduthamaga as attached to the
founding affidavit therefore would not authorise action on behalf of
the community.
11.
Finally, the respondents aver that of the signatories to the
Khuduthamaga resolution,
only one of them, the third applicant in
this matter, is actually a member of the Khuduthamaga. So the
resolution is not valid
in any event.
12.
As I have mentioned above, the applicants failed to file any
affidavit in response
to the respondents’ version, either in
the main application or the Rule 7 application. There is therefore
only the respondents’
version on this issue.
13.
In argument, it was submitted that the North West Act uses the word
“may”
to empower the Kgosi to institute legal proceedings
on the community’s behalf and that this means that in addition
to the
community anyone else may also bring legal proceedings on the
community’s behalf. In my view there is no merit in this
argument
unless a factual basis is laid why another person other than
the Kgosi may do so. Use of the word “may” rather than
“must” is clearly empowering the Kgosi to bring legal
proceedings. Use of the word “must” as suggested
by the
applicants would oblige him to bring proceedings, which would be
nonsensical.
14.
The
applicants relied in argument on the Constitutional Court’s
judgment in
Pilane
and Another v Pilane and Another
[1]
to support the submission that someone other than the Kgosi would in
ordinary circumstances be empowered to instituted proceedings
on
behalf of a recognised Traditional Community. The judgment is not
authority for that proposition, as it deals with a defined
group of
people within a recognised Traditional Community who wish to speak
for themselves, rather than purporting to speak for
the Traditional
Community itself.
15.
I was satisfied and ruled that the second and third applicants have
not established
any authority to represent the first applicant. The
Rule 7 application succeeded, and the so-called first applicant is
accordingly
not an applicant before this court.
THE
POINTS IN
LIMINE
16.
The respondents raised as points in
limine
the applicants’
lack of
locus standi
, that the relief sought was not capable
of enforcement, and that the papers disclosed no cause of action.
17.
It is clear that as members of the community the applicants have the
right to
come to court to prosecute their interests as members of the
community members. Whether they come to court correctly or not, or
can establish a right to the relief sought, is a separate question
and must be dealt with as part of the main application.
18.
In my view the remaining points in
limine
are so bound up in
the merits of the main application that they are better dealt with in
a consideration of the main application
than as points in
limine
.
THE
MAIN APPLICATION
19.
The applicants seek an order compelling the respondents to
consult with them and with the community before decisions are taken
regarding
certain shares. According to them an order granted in the
North West province also requires the respondents to consult.
20.
The respondents contend that some of the relief seeks
consultation with people who are not required to be consulted with,
and that
there is no evidence that any consultation which ought to
happen will not happen. As far as the order in the North West is
concerned,
they contend that it is no longer relevant.
21.
I deal first with the order in the North
West. This granted on 22 September 2010. It was granted in favour of
applicants who are
not the applicants before me. It contains an
interim order interdicting parties from holding out a person who is
not before this
court as the Kgosi or Acting Kgosi of the Traditional
Community, and preventing that person from performing any act in that
capacity.
It referred the question to oral evidence and deals with
the procedure to be followed in having the oral evidence heard.
According
to the respondents the oral evidence portion was never
pursued.
22.
The order also interdicts the second and
third respondents in that matter from committing or causing to be
committed violence or
damage to property. Those respondents are not
parties before this court.
23.
The first to sixth respondents in that
matter then undertake to inform the attorneys of the applicants in
that matter fifteen court
days before they seek to dispose of or
encumber the Wesizwe shares (the same shares at issue in this case).
They are also ordered
to inform the applicants’ attorneys if
they seek to alienate or encumber any asset outside the ordinary
course of business,
and to furnish the applicants in that matter
specific information by 4 October 2010. The remainder of the order
deals with costs.
24.
Of the respondents in that matter only the
fifth and sixth respondents are before this court, they are the first
and second respondents.
25.
The applicants contend that they are
obliged to inform the attorneys of the applicants in that North West
matter 15 days before
they dispose of the Wesizwe shares. Those
attorneys happen to be the attorneys of the applicants in this
matter. That is irrelevant.
The North West order requires them to be
informed in their capacity as the attorneys in that matter. That does
not entitle the
applicants before me to any information through their
attorneys. In any event there is no evidence that the respondents
have not
or will not comply with that order to the extent that it
still applies. The order was made pending the hearing and
determination
of the oral evidence in that matter, not in perpetuity.
If it is still in force, on which I venture no opinion, and if the
first
and second respondents in this matter do not inform the
applicants in that matter, then those applicants have the remedy of
applying
for a contempt order in that court.
26.
The order is irrelevant to what the
applicants in this matter may be entitled to. It certainly does not
establish the right to consultation
that the applicants claim it
does.
27.
Nevertheless I assume that the applicants
have a right to consultation as members of the community. The
respondents implicitly accept
that the community must be consulted
with. They aver that as a matter of policy they have and will consult
with the community.
28.
In order to establish that they are
entitled to an order, the applicants must establish that there is a
danger that the community
(and they as members thereof) will not be
consulted with.
29.
The uncontradicted evidence of the
respondents is that they have consulted with the community regarding
the disposal of the Wesizwe
shares and that as a matter of policy
they do consult with the community. The response by the applicants is
that they addressed
letters of demand to the respondents which were
never responded to and this shows that there will not be consultation
with the
community.
30.
However, the letters of demand require
information for the second and third respondents themselves, as
directors of the companies.
They have since resigned. In addition,
the letters refer to decisions taken not consistent with the articles
of incorporation of
the companies. That is not the case made out in
the founding affidavit nor is it relevant to the relief sought.
31.
I am not convinced that the letters of
demand and the failure of the respondents to respond are proof that
the community will not
be consulted with. Since the second and third
applicants have no right beyond that as members of the community to
be consulted
with, in general community consultations, this means
they have not established that their right to consultation is in any
way in
danger.
32.
For these reasons I make the following
order:
32.1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
For
the applicants: Mr Esterhuyse of Du Plessis Van Der Westhuizen Inc
Counsel
for the 1
st
, 2
nd
and 5
th
to
11
th
Respondents:
G Nel SC
E Eksteen
B
Maphosa
Instructed
by: Fasken Martineau
For
the 3
rd
and 4
th
Respondents: None.
Instructed
by:
Date
of
hearing:
24 August 2021
Date
of
judgment:
02 August 2022
[1]
(CCT46/12)
[2013] ZACC 3
;
2013 (4) BCLR 431
(CC)
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