Thulamela Municipality v Madonsi Traditional Council and Others (47769/08) [2010] ZAGPPHC 77 (30 July 2010)

78 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Land — Allocation of land — Interdict against traditional council — Applicant sought to interdict First and Second Respondents from allocating land within the township of Malamulele, claiming unlawful actions regarding land ownership and development rights — Respondents contended ownership based on historical donation and prescription — Court found no merit in Respondents' claims, affirming the Applicant's authority to govern land use within its jurisdiction and granting the interdict sought.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings took the form of a motion application for interdictory and declaratory relief brought in the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria. The applicant was Thulamela Municipality, a local municipality seeking to prevent alleged unlawful allocation and occupation of land earmarked for township development. The principal opposing parties were the Madonsi Traditional Council (first respondent) and Hlongwans, Wisani Evans (second respondent). A further individual, Chauke, Abel (third respondent), was joined as a party said to have received an allocation of land from the traditional authorities, and the Member of the Executive Council, Local Government & Housing, Limpopo was cited as fourth respondent.


The matter followed an earlier urgent application involving the municipality, which was subsequently abandoned. In the present application the municipality relied, among other things, on the identification and surveying of a land parcel described as Portion 19 of the farm Malamulele 234 LT for a further phase of township development in Malamulele.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned control and authority over the allocation, occupation, and development of land in the Malamulele area, including whether the traditional council and the second respondent were entitled to allocate land to community members (including the third respondent) within the relevant area, and whether the municipality could restrain such conduct to proceed with planned development.


2. Material Facts


A central factual foundation accepted by the court concerned the historical establishment of the township of Malamulele. During 1972 the Gazankulu Government issued a proclamation setting aside an area for the township. That proclamation was amended on 23 July 1993 (Government Notice No. 29 of 1993), defining the township area and including four farms, one of which was the farm Boltman 211 LT (by then subdivided into Portion 1 and the Remaining Extent). The court treated this background as largely not in real dispute for present purposes.


The court accepted that the relevant farms were at the time registered in the name of the National Government of the Republic of South Africa, and that consolidation occurred in terms of a Surveyor-General diagram. On the same date as the consolidated title was registered, portions of the farm Malamulele 234 LT—identified as Portions 5, 6, 7, and 10—were subdivided and registered in the name of the Provincial Government of Limpopo. The municipality’s development narrative proceeded on the basis that Portions 5, 6 and 7 had been fully developed, and that there was a demand for additional residential erven in the Malamulele area.


For the proposed further development, the court accepted that the municipality had obtained funding from the provincial government and had identified, surveyed, and obtained approval for development on Portion 19, which was adjacent to Portion 6. A material fact relied on by the court was that Portion 19 was not located on the farm Boltman, a conclusion supported by the diagrams and sketches referred to in the papers. The court treated this geographic/legal distinction as significant to the respondents’ opposition.


The respondents’ opposition, as characterised by the court, rested fundamentally on the contention that land in issue had been donated by one Joao Albasini to an ancestor of the second respondent, and that the second respondent and his community had acquired ownership, either through donation or prescription. The court noted that the respondents’ description of the land allegedly donated was vague, and that it was not possible on the papers to determine precisely what land they claimed, beyond the suggestion that it was the farm Boltman. The court treated the inability to link the respondents’ claim coherently to Portion 19 as undermining their opposition.


In relation to registration, the court accepted the municipality’s point that any asserted prescriptive claim was confronted by the fact that the land had, over time, been registered in the names of other parties, including the National Government, the Provincial Government, and later the municipality, with identified portions of the farm Malamulele 234 LT registered in the name of the municipality.


Certain factual assertions raised by the respondents in limine—most notably the alleged presence of over 300 families occupying and residing on the farm said to be in issue—were not entertained as established facts by the court because the point was not raised in the papers and thus there was no evidence before the court on that aspect.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether the municipality had established a basis for interdictory relief restraining the first and second respondents from allocating or permitting occupation of land within the proclaimed township area (or within Portion 19), whether the allocation to the third respondent was unlawful and void, and whether construction and occupation by the third respondent should be interdicted.


Before reaching the merits, the court was required to determine multiple preliminary (in limine) challenges, namely: whether the municipality’s institution of proceedings was properly authorised; whether there was a fatal non-joinder of occupiers; whether the application was in truth a spoliation matter; whether the municipality lacked locus standi (including an allegation that it purported to act for national government without authority); whether there were irresoluble disputes of fact making motion proceedings inappropriate; and whether the respondents had acquired rights through prescription.


The dispute therefore involved a combination of legal questions (authority, locus standi, joinder, procedural appropriateness, and the legal implications of registration and prescription) and the application of law to fact, particularly concerning the identification of the relevant land (Portion 19 versus the farm Boltman) and whether the respondents’ alleged rights could legally justify allocation and occupation in the face of the registered position and the proposed township development.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the first point in limine (authorisation), the court approached the issue as one regulated by Rule 7 and the established method of proving authority for juristic persons. The court accepted that the municipal manager’s authority was adequately supported on the papers and referred to the statement in Herbstein & Van Winsen (Civil Practice) that authority is commonly established by an affidavit from an office-bearer together with a copy of the relevant resolution. On this basis, the court rejected the contention that the application was “unsanctioned” due to lack of a proper resolution.


On non-joinder, the court’s reasoning turned on the procedural and evidential posture of the point: because the alleged joinder issue (including the assertion about more than 300 families) was not raised in the papers, there was no evidentiary foundation upon which the court could adjudicate it. The court therefore did not uphold the objection.


The spoliation point was rejected on the factual premise that the respondents’ land claim, as advanced, related to the farm Boltman, whereas the proposed development and the interdict sought related materially to Portion 19 of the farm Malamulele. In the court’s assessment, the mismatch between the land claimed by the respondents and the land targeted for development meant the spoliation characterisation did not succeed.


On locus standi, the court reasoned from the constitutional and statutory framework governing local government. It placed weight on the fact that the land fell within the municipality’s area of jurisdiction (specifically within Ward 11). Relying on section 151(3) of the Constitution (municipal right to govern local affairs), together with the objects of local government in section 152 and municipal powers and functions in section 156, the court accepted that the municipality had authority in relation to local government matters. The court further noted that building regulations, municipal planning, stormwater management systems, and water and sanitation services appear in Part B of Schedule 4 to the Constitution, and municipal roads, municipal parks and local amenities in Part B of Schedule 5. In addition, the court referred to the role of local authorities in the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977 and its regulations. From this matrix, the court concluded that the municipality had the requisite standing and jurisdiction to seek the interdict.


On the alleged disputes of fact, the court was not persuaded that there was any real dispute of fact that precluded determination on motion. The court’s reasoning on this aspect was concise, reflecting a conclusion that the opposition did not raise genuine factual conflicts requiring oral evidence, particularly given the clarity it attributed to the diagrams and the geographic location of Portion 19.


On prescription, the court dealt with the respondents’ position in two related ways. First, it stated that the respondents could not have acquired derivative ownership from Albasini without having the land registered in their names. Second, in relation to any attempted prescriptive claim, the court noted the successive registrations in other names and the fact that substantial portions of the township had already been developed. The court held that any such prescriptive attempt would be met by estoppel, reasoning that the respondents had stood by for years while title was registered in others’ names and development proceeded. On the court’s approach, these considerations defeated reliance on prescription in opposition to the municipality’s development on Portion 19.


Turning briefly to the merits after disposing of the preliminary points, the court stated that it found no case made out on the merits by the respondents. This conclusion was tied to the vagueness of the respondents’ land claim, the court’s acceptance that Portion 19 was not part of Boltman, and the registration-related obstacles to the respondents’ asserted ownership.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted the application substantially. It ordered that prayers 1 to 9 of the notice of motion were granted except prayer 5.


In effect, the court granted interdictory relief restraining the first and second respondents from allocating or purporting to allocate land within the proclaimed township area (alternatively Portion 19), restraining them from permitting occupation, restraining them from representing that they had authority to allocate land in the relevant area, and restraining building or development work on Portion 19. The court also issued declaratory relief that the allocation of a portion of land within Portion 19 by the first and/or second respondents to the third respondent was unlawful and of no legal force, and interdicted the third respondent from building on the allocated portion.


Because prayer 9 was included among the prayers granted, the court’s order included a costs order directing the first, second and third respondents to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally. The court did not grant prayer 5, which sought to interdict and restrain the third respondent from occupying land on Portion 19.


Cases Cited


None mentioned in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996).


National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977.


Government Notice No. 29 of 1993 published in the Official Gazette of the Gazankulu Government, Republic of South Africa, on 23 July 1993.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 7.


Held


The court held that the municipality’s authority to institute proceedings was adequately established, that the asserted non-joinder point could not succeed in the absence of supporting material in the papers, and that the matter was not properly characterised as spoliation in circumstances where the respondents’ claimed land was said to be the farm Boltman whereas the development concerned Portion 19 of the farm Malamulele.


The court held further that the municipality had locus standi grounded in its constitutional powers and functions over local government affairs within its jurisdiction, and that no genuine disputes of fact were shown that would prevent determination on motion. The court rejected reliance on prescription and indicated that such a claim would in any event face an estoppel in light of longstanding registrations and development.


On the merits, the court concluded that the respondents had not made out a defensible case to justify allocating or permitting occupation of the land intended for development, and it accordingly granted interdictory and declaratory relief, substantially in the terms sought, with the exception of the prayer restraining the third respondent from occupation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party challenging the authority of a deponent or representative acting for a juristic person must do so within the procedural framework governing such challenges, and authority is commonly established by an affidavit from an office-bearer together with an appropriate resolution conferring authority, as reflected in the civil practice text relied upon by the court.


A municipality’s locus standi to protect and regulate matters within its area of jurisdiction may be derived from the constitutional scheme of local government powers and functions, including sections 151(3), 152 and 156 of the Constitution and the functional assignments in Schedules 4 and 5, together with the statutory role of local authorities under the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977.


A point in limine such as non-joinder requires an evidential foundation in the papers; absent such material, the court may decline to uphold the point.


Where opposition rests on an asserted land entitlement (including claims of historic donation or prescription), a court may treat the identification of the land as decisive. If the claim is directed at one property (for example, a particular farm) but the impugned development relates to a different, clearly identified parcel (such as a surveyed portion reflected on official diagrams), the opposition may fail on the merits.


Claims framed as prescription may be undermined where the relevant property has been registered in the names of others over time and development has proceeded, and the court may consider principles such as estoppel in evaluating whether a party can assert ownership-related rights after standing by while successive registrations and development occurred.

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[2010] ZAGPPHC 77
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Thulamela Municipality v Madonsi Traditional Council and Others (47769/08) [2010] ZAGPPHC 77 (30 July 2010)

IN
THE NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
(REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA)
CASE
NO. 47769/08
DATE:
30/07/2010
In
the matter between:
THULAMELA
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
MADONSI
TRADITIONAL COUNCIL
First
Respondent
HLONGWANS,
WISANI EVANS
Second
Respondent
CHAUKE,
ABEL
Third
Respondent
MEMBER
OF EXECUTIVE, LOCAL GOVERNMENT & HOUSING, PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT
OF LIMPOPO
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
GOODEY
AJ:
[1]
INTRODUCTION:
This
is an application by the Applicant for an Order in the following
terms:
1.1
Interdicting and restraining the First and Second Respondents from
allocating, granting, donating, demarcating or purporting
to
allocate, grant, donate or demarcate any land or portions of land
within the area defined and set apart as the township of Malamulele

in terms of Government Notice No. 29 of 1993 published in the
Official Gazette of the Gazankulu Government, Republic of South
Africa, on 23 July 1993 ("the proclaimed area"),
alternatively, within the portion of land defined as Portion 19 of
the
farm Malamulele 234-LT in terms of the consolidation diagram
approved by the Surveyor-Genera! on 5 April 2006, under reference SG

No 1367/2006, a copy of which, certified as correct by the
Surveyor-General, is attached to the founding affidavit ("portion

19"), to any subjects of the First and Second Respondents, or do
to any other persons.
1.2
Interdicting and restraining the First and Second Respondents from
permitting or purporting to permit any of their subjects,
or any
other persons, to occupy any iand, or a portion of land, within the
proclaimed area, alternatively, within Portion 19.
1.3
Declaring the allocation by the First and/or Second Respondents to
the Third Respondent of a portion of land within Portion
19 to have
been unlawful and of no legal force.
1.4
Interdicting and restraining the Third Respondent from carrying out
any building work, erecting any structure and proceeding
with any
building operations on the portion of land allocated to him located
on Portion 19.
1.5
Interdicting and restraining the Third Respondent from occupying any
land or portion of land on Portion 19.
1.6
Interdicting and restraining the First and Second Respondents from
informing, advising or communicating to their subjects or
any other
persons that they are authorised or empowered to
allocate land or any portion of land within the proclaimed area,
alternatively, within Portion 19.
1.7
Interdicting and restraining the First and Second Respondents from
purporting to authorise or permit any building work, construction

work or development work on Portion 19.
1.8
Interdicting and restraining the First, Second and Respondents from
carrying out any building work, construction work or development
on
the land identified as Portion 19.
1.9
Directing the First, Second and Third Respondents to pay the costs of
this application, jointly and severally."
[2]
BACKGROUND:
2.1
The
township of Malamuleie
2.1.1
During 1972 the Gazankulu Government, the government
of one of the self-governing territories of that time,
issued a
proclamation defining and setting aside an area of land for the
establishment of a township, to be known as Malamulele.
2.1.2
That proclamation was amended on 23 July 1993 and an area of land for
the establishment of the township of Malamulele was
defined and it
included four farms, one of them being the farm Boltman (which by
that time had been sub-divided into Portion 1
and the Remaining
Extent of the farm Boltman 211 LT).
2.1.3
At that time the four farms were registered in the name of the
National Government of the Republic of South Africa. The farms
were
consolidated in terms of the Surveyor-General's diagram, Annexure
"FA4".
2.1.4
On the same date that the consolidated title was registered, and
following immediately upon the registration of title in the
name of
the National
Government
of the Republic of South Africa, certain portions of the farm
Malamulele 234 LT, being Portions 5, 5, 7 and 10, were
sub-divided
from the farm and registered in the name of the Provincial Government
of Limpopo.
2.1.5
Portions 5, 6 and 7 have been fully developed and the applicant now
seeks to proceed with a further development as a result
of a demand
for residential erven by the communities residing in and around the
Malamulele area. There is no real dispute concerning
these matters.
2.2
The
proposed development
2.2.1
The proposed development is to take place on a portion of land
adjacent to Portion 6; which has been fully developed. The
Applicant
has procured the necessary funding from the provincial government and
a portion of land, Portion 19, had been identified,
surveyed and
approved for this purpose.
2.2.2
Portion 19 is clearly depicted on the sketch, Annexure "FA1317''
and in the consolidation diagram, Annexe "FA11".
2.2.3
It is pertinent that Portion 19 is not located on the farm Boltman
(neither on Portion 1 nor on the Remaining Extent). This
emerges
clearly from the diagram, Annexure "FA4". On page 35 of the
papers the farm Boltman is depicted as the figure
BCDQ, whereas the
farm Jerome is depicted as ABQHJK. Portion 19 sits adjacent to
Portion 6, to the northwest of Portion 6. Thus,
it is plain that it
is not located on the farm Boltman.
2.3
The
Respondent's case
2.3.1
The fundamental basis for the Respondents' opposition is that the
land in question was donated by one Joao Albasini ("Albasini")

to a forefather of the Second Respondent and that the Second
Respondent
and his community acquired ownership of the land, it seems, either on
the basis of a donation or by prescription.
2.3.2
Thus, the Respondents contend that the applicant is not entitled to
proceed with its development and that the First and Second

Respondents are entitled to allocate the land to their subjects and
to develop it as they deem fit. There is a number of answers
to these
contentions.
2.3.3
Firstly, the land over which the First and Second Respondents claim
ownership is vaguely described and it is impossible to
determine from
the papers what their contention is; save that they contend that it
was the farm Boltman that was donated to the
Second Respondent's
forefather. The same contention was advanced in the urgent
application.
2.3.4
If the land claimed by the First and Second Respondents, is the farm
Boltman, then there is no defence to a proposed development
on
Portion
19
of
the farm Malamulele.
2.3.5
Secondly the First and Second Respondents were unable to acquire
derivative ownership from Albasini without having the land
registered
in their names. To the extent that they assert a claim to ownership
by prescription, they are confronted by the fact
that the land in
question has been registered, from time to time, in the names of
other parties, viz the National Government of
the Republic of South
Africa, the Provincial Government and, later, the Applicant. Portions
5, 6, 7 and 10 of the farm Malamulele
234 LT are registered in the
name of the Applicant.
In
view of the aforegoing. I find no case made out on the merits by the
Respondents.
[3]
POINTS
IN
LIMINE
:
The
Respondents have, apart from the papers, raised a number of points
in
limine
and
the argument on their behalf was almost exclusively confined thereto.
The points
in
limine
were
set out by counsel on behalf of the Respondents and as follows:
i:
3.1
First
point in limine no resolution
The
Municipality (the Applicant) is a creature of statute and its actions
and intentions are evidenced by the resolution passed
in order to
mandate its intentions into action through its employees. Furthermore
the Deponent to the Applicant's founding papers
is not an executive
municipal manager and therefore is required by law to be authorised
each time he acts on behalf of the Applicant.
Annexure "FA1"
on page 22 of the Applicant's founding papers is exactly the
authorising instrument specifically authored
by the Municipal Council
for the purpose of the urgent application which was subsequently
abandoned and on that basis the extrapolation
of this authorising
instrument in the current application is irregular and on that basis
alone this litigation before this Honourable
Court is unsanctioned
and therefore unlawful."
3.2
Second
point in limine non joinder of other tenants
It
is common cause that to date over 300 families are occupiers and
residents of the farm in question which is the subject matter
of this
application which families have not be joined to the proceeding nor
have they been served with the papers and of interest
is that these
families have a substantial and material interest in the adjudication
of this matter and this doctrine enjoins the
Applicant with a duty to
have both joined and served the tenants as interested parties in
these proceedings."
3.3.
Third
point in limine spoliation
The
effect of the Applicant's application albeit it be conjured in an
interdictory form the effect thereof is that the spoliation
at least
against the Third Respondent as well as any other occupier in his
position."
3.4
.
Fourth
point in limine no locus standi
The
Applicant if it purports to represent the national government as is
espoused in its founding papers, requires the necessary
authority to
do so and same is not attached as an authorising instrument mandating
the Applicant to act on behalf of the national
government and as a
result failure to attach same renders the papers materially
defective."
3.5.
Fifth
point in limine: dispute of facts
It
is clear from the papers that this application riddled with a litany
of disputes of facts and as such a motion application is
not a
conducive application to have followed since the above Honourable
Court will not be able adjudicate these disputes on paper.
Applicant
made an election and such dictates that the above Honourable Court
holds the Applicant to its choice."
3.6.
Sixth
point in limine: Prescription
It
is common cause that the tribal authority has been the custodian and
as well have exercised control and possession of land rights
on the
portion in question which is the entire Boltman Farm inclusive of
portions 5, 6. 7 and 10 as its communal tribal land for
a period of
not less than 150 years. It is also common cause that the very
portions of land which are a subject of dispute before
the above
Honourable Court have for more than 50 years been used as grazing
land for the tribal community's livestock."
[4]
DEALING WITH THE POINTS
IN
LIMINE:
4.1
Ad:
First Point
The
authority of the Municipal Manager is challenged. It is clear from
Rule 7 and the founding affidavit that his authority is beyond
doubt.
In this regard Herbstein & Van Winsen (Civil Practice) says the
following at 268:
"Thus,
when authority to act on behalf of a juristic person is challenged,
the usual manner in which authority is establishes
is by production
of an affidavit by an office-bearer of the juristic person and a copy
of a resolution conferring authority."
4.2
Ad:
Second Point
This
point is not raised in the papers and consequently there is no
evidence before me in this regard.
4.3
Ad:
Third Point
This
point turns on aiieged spoliation. Fact of the matter is that the
iand claimed by First and Second Respondents pertained to
the farm
Boltman and not to Portion 19 of the farm Malamuleie (where the
proposed development is to take place).
4.4
Ad:
Fourth Point
The
applicant is a local municipality. The land in question falls within
its area of jurisdiction. It is located within Ward 11,
a ward within
the Applicant's area of jurisdiction.
In
terms of section 151(3) of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa, Act 108 of 1996 ("the Constitution"),
the
Applicant, as a municipality, has the right to govern, on its own
initiative, the local affairs of its community, subject to
national
and provincial legislation. The objects of local government are set
out in section 152 of the Constitution and the powers
and functions
of municipalities in section 156. The applicant has executive
authority in respect of. and has the right to administer,
the local
government
matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4 and Part B of Schedule 5 of
the Constitution. Building regulations, municipal planning,
storm
water management systems and water and sanitation services are
matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4. Municipal roads, municipal

parks and local amenities fall within Part B of Schedule 5. Moreover,
a local authority is defined in the National Building Regulations
&
Standards Act, 103 of 1977, and the roie of a local municipality is
set out in that Act as well as in the regulations promulgated
under
it.
By
virtue of the aforegoing, it is clear that the applicant has the
requisite
locus
standi
to
launch this application and the requisite jurisdiction over the
proposed development, traversed in the founding affidavit. The

powers, functions and duties of the Applicant are not in dispute.
4.5
Ad:
Fifth Point
I
have not been persuaded that any real dispute of fact exists.
4.6
Ad:
Sixth Point
If
the First and Second Respondents were to endeavour to asset a claim
to ownership based upon prescription, they would be met by
an
estoppel, in view of them having stood by all these years and allowed
successive registrations of title, in the meantime, as
indicated
above, various portions of the township have been fully developed.
Consequently,
I find no merits in any of the points
in
limine.
I
therefore make the following order:
Prayers
1 to 9 (with the exception of prayer 5) of the notice of motion are
granted.
GOODEY
AJ