Mamahule Communal Property Association and Others v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform (CCT179/16) [2017] ZACC 12; 2017 (7) BCLR 830 (CC) (5 May 2017)

80 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Land Claims — Jurisdiction of Land Claims Court — The Mamahule Communal Property Association and others challenged the Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform's application declaring them unlawful occupiers under the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act (PIE). The community argued that the Land Claims Court lacked jurisdiction under PIE, as it is defined to exclude the Land Claims Court. The Minister contended that the Land Claims Court had jurisdiction under the Restitution of Land Rights Act to make the declaration. The Constitutional Court held that the Land Claims Court does not have the authority under PIE to declare a person an unlawful occupier, and thus the appeal was dismissed, affirming the lower court's ruling that the community was unlawful occupiers based on the Restitution Act.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an application for leave to appeal and an appeal in the Constitutional Court of South Africa arising from an order of the Land Claims Court. The case concerned the jurisdictional competence of the Land Claims Court in relation to matters framed under the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE), and the extent to which the Land Claims Court may nonetheless grant declaratory and eviction-related relief under the Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994 (the Restitution Act).


The applicants were the Mamahule Communal Property Association, the Mamahule Community, the Mamahule Traditional Authority (cited under that name although the applicants contended no such authority currently existed), and the Occupiers of the farm Kalkfontein 1001 LS (collectively referred to in the judgment as the community). The respondent was the Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform.


The procedural history included an earlier application brought by the Minister in the High Court seeking interdictory relief and eviction-related orders. That matter was settled, with the community undertaking to desist from demarcation and allocation activities on the land. After the community allegedly continued those activities, the Minister instituted a further application in the Land Claims Court for substantially similar relief. The Land Claims Court granted orders, including a declaration that the community were unlawful occupiers “as defined in PIE” and an eviction order. Applications for leave to appeal in the Land Claims Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal were unsuccessful, and the community then sought leave to appeal to the Constitutional Court.


The dispute’s general subject matter lay at the intersection of land restitution proceedings (with a land claim pending in the Land Claims Court) and attempts to prevent and remedy occupation and land allocation activities on the claimed land pending finalisation of the restitution process.


2. Material Facts


During May 1996, the Mamahule Community, together with other communities (Mothiba, Tholongwe, Mothapo and Mojapelo), lodged restitution claims under the Restitution Act in respect of five farms in Limpopo Province, including Kalkfontein 1001 LS (the farm). A settlement agreement was drafted under section 42D of the Restitution Act, but it was not signed because the Mamahule Community approached the Land Claims Court to contest the beneficiaries reflected on the verification list. That dispute about beneficiaries remained unresolved before the Land Claims Court.


While resolution of the verification/beneficiary dispute was pending, the community began demarcating and allocating plots on the farm. This triggered litigation: the Minister brought an application in the High Court seeking, among other things, interdictory relief against the demarcation and allocation of plots, a declaration that the community were unlawful occupiers as defined in PIE, and their eviction. That High Court matter was settled, and the community undertook to desist from the challenged conduct.


Notwithstanding the undertaking, the demarcation and allocation activities continued. The Minister then brought a further application—this time in the Land Claims Court—for substantially similar relief. The application was supported by the owner of the farm.


In opposing the Land Claims Court application, the community’s case was that the Land Claims Court had jurisdiction to adjudicate evictions only under the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) and the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 3 of 1996, and that the Land Claims Court lacked jurisdiction under PIE, particularly because PIE defines “court” as the High Court or Magistrates’ Court. The Minister contended that the Land Claims Court had jurisdiction under provisions of the Restitution Act, including sections relied upon in argument (and ultimately the Court’s analysis focused on the jurisdictional architecture of section 22 and related provisions).


The Land Claims Court held that it was ousted from entertaining applications under PIE, but nonetheless granted relief (including declaratory relief and eviction-related relief) on the footing that it had jurisdiction under the Restitution Act, and it issued an order declaring the community unlawful occupiers “as defined in PIE”, together with eviction and interdictory orders pending final determination of the claim.


Before the Constitutional Court, the community persisted in challenging the Land Claims Court’s power to make a declaration framed with reference to PIE, raised arguments including abuse of process, res judicata arising from the earlier High Court settlement, and challenged the Minister’s locus standi. The Minister conceded that PIE does not empower the Land Claims Court to issue a PIE-based declaration, but argued that the declaration was authorised under the Restitution Act and the Land Claims Court’s ancillary powers.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were concerned with jurisdiction and statutory interpretation, namely whether the Land Claims Court has authority to adjudicate matters under PIE and, if not, whether it may nonetheless declare occupation unlawful and order eviction (and on what statutory basis) in circumstances connected to a pending restitution claim.


The dispute was primarily one of law, involving the interpretation of PIE’s definition of “court” and the scope of the Land Claims Court’s powers under the Restitution Act, including its ancillary and incidental powers. It also concerned the application of those legal rules to the procedural posture and relief sought, specifically whether the declaratory relief and eviction/interdict relief could properly be sustained without reliance on PIE.


Subsidiary issues included whether the Minister had standing to seek such relief in the Land Claims Court, and whether res judicata could operate given the earlier High Court settlement and the subsequent alleged continuation of the prohibited conduct.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Constitutional Court treated the matter as raising a constitutional issue because it concerned the interpretation of PIE and the Restitution Act in a context implicating constitutional provisions referenced in PIE’s preamble (including protections against arbitrary deprivation of property and against eviction without a court order after considering relevant circumstances) and the constitutional foundation for restitution legislation under section 25(7) of the Constitution.


On the jurisdictional question under PIE, the Court held that the Land Claims Court has no authority under PIE. This conclusion followed directly from section 1 of PIE, which defines “court” as the High Court or the Magistrate’s Court. On that basis, the Court considered it plain that references throughout PIE to “court” do not include the Land Claims Court, which is a statutory court whose jurisdiction is sourced in its establishing legislation and any legislatively conferred extensions.


The Court then considered whether the Land Claims Court nonetheless had power under other law to make an order determining that the community’s occupation was unlawful. The Court located that power in the Restitution Act, focusing particularly on section 22(2)(b), which confers on the Land Claims Court “all the ancillary powers necessary or reasonably incidental to the performance of its functions, including the power to grant interlocutory orders and interdicts”. The Court reasoned that the litigation pending before the Land Claims Court regarding the restitution claim fell squarely within its jurisdiction, and that the presence and conduct of the occupying community on the farm could materially affect the implementation and practical efficacy of any final restitution outcome.


A key aspect of the Court’s reasoning was functional and case-management oriented: if the Land Claims Court were ultimately to order restitution in favour of claimant groups other than the community, ongoing occupation and allocation activities could render implementation of the restitution order burdensome and could generate further eviction litigation. The Court therefore considered that relief addressing the problem of occupation and restraining unauthorised activity on the claimed land pending final determination could fall within the Land Claims Court’s ancillary powers, because it served to ensure that the restitution process and eventual resolution were not “hamstrung”.


Although the Minister’s case and the Land Claims Court’s order referred to PIE, the Constitutional Court held that it was entitled to uphold the substantive conclusion—namely that the community’s occupation was unlawful—without reliance on PIE, because the Restitution Act supplied an adequate jurisdictional foundation for ancillary relief in the circumstances. The Court characterised this as confirming the unlawfulness of occupation not under PIE, but under the Land Claims Court’s Restitution Act powers.


In relation to the community’s concern that the Minister had approached the High Court for eviction under PIE using the Land Claims Court’s declaration, the Constitutional Court declined to pronounce on what the High Court might do with that declaration in separate proceedings.


On locus standi, the Court rejected the community’s challenge, holding that the Minister’s central and multi-faceted role under the Restitution Act gave him a direct and substantial interest in the relief sought.


On res judicata, the Court held the contention misconceived because, after the High Court settlement, the community allegedly continued the demarcation and allocation conduct. The Court treated this subsequent conduct as not covered by the earlier settlement such that the later dispute could not be precluded on the basis that it had already been finally determined.


Finally, on leave to appeal and costs, the Court considered that the community had achieved limited success (in relation to the PIE-based framing of the declarator), which justified granting leave to appeal, but that the appeal failed substantially. The Court stated that it saw no reason why the Biowatch principle should not apply.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Constitutional Court granted leave to appeal.


The appeal was dismissed, subject to a modification of the Land Claims Court’s order. The Constitutional Court set aside only that portion of the Land Claims Court order which declared the community to be unlawful occupiers “as defined in [PIE]”, and substituted it with a declaration that the community were unlawful occupiers of the farm, without purporting to do so under PIE.


No explicit costs order was included in the final order. The Court indicated that the Biowatch principle applied.


Cases Cited


City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd [2011] ZACC 33; 2012 (2) SA 104 (CC); 2012 (2) BCLR 150 (CC).


Florence v Government of the Republic of South Africa [2014] ZACC 22; 2014 (6) SA 456 (CC); 2014 (10) BCLR 1137 (CC).


Occupiers of Portion R25 of the Farm Mooiplaats 355 JR v Golden Thread Ltd [2011] ZACC 35; 2012 (2) SA 337 (CC); 2012 (4) BCLR 372 (CC).


South African Police Service v Solidarity obo Barnard [2014] ZACC 23; 2014 (6) SA 123 (CC); 2014 (10) BCLR 1195 (CC).


My Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly [2015] ZACC 3; 2016 (1) SA 132 (CC).


Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC); 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998.


Restitution of Land Rights Act 22 of 1994, including sections 6(3), 22(1)(c), 22(1)(cA), 22(2)(a), 22(2)(b), 22(2)(c), 35, 38E, and 42D.


Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997.


Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 3 of 1996.


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, including sections 25(1), 25(7), 26(3), and 166(c), (d) and (e) (as referenced in the Restitution Act extract).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Constitutional Court held that the Land Claims Court does not have jurisdiction under PIE, because PIE defines “court” as the High Court or Magistrates’ Court and therefore does not empower the Land Claims Court to grant PIE-based declarations.


The Court held further that, notwithstanding the absence of PIE jurisdiction, the Land Claims Court could grant relief addressing unlawful occupation and related interdictory relief under the Restitution Act, relying on the Land Claims Court’s ancillary powers in section 22(2)(b) in order to protect the integrity and effective functioning of pending restitution proceedings.


As a result, the Court upheld the substantive result reached by the Land Claims Court, but set aside and substituted the wording that purported to declare unlawfulness “as defined in PIE”, replacing it with a declaration of unlawful occupation of the farm without reference to PIE.


The Court rejected challenges based on locus standi and res judicata on the facts and procedural history described.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


PIE does not confer jurisdiction on the Land Claims Court, because its definition of “court” is confined to the High Court and Magistrates’ Courts, and the Land Claims Court may not purport to make orders “as defined” in PIE where PIE does not empower it to do so.


The Land Claims Court’s jurisdiction under the Restitution Act includes ancillary powers (Restitution Act section 22(2)(b)) that permit it to grant interlocutory and interdictory relief reasonably incidental to the performance of its restitution functions, including relief aimed at preventing unauthorised occupation or activities that could undermine or complicate the eventual determination and implementation of restitution claims.


Where an order can be sustained on a proper statutory basis within the Land Claims Court’s competence, the mere presence of incorrect reliance on an inapplicable statute (such as PIE) does not necessarily defeat the order’s substance; however, the order must be framed so as not to attribute its authority to legislation that does not confer jurisdiction.


A res judicata defence cannot succeed where the later proceedings concern allegedly subsequent conduct occurring after an earlier settlement, such that the later dispute is not the same matter already finally determined.


The Minister has standing to seek relief connected to restitution proceedings where the statutory role under the Restitution Act gives a direct and substantial interest in preventing conduct that may undermine the restitution process.

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Mamahule Communal Property Association and Others v Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform (CCT179/16) [2017] ZACC 12; 2017 (7) BCLR 830 (CC) (5 May 2017)

Links to summary

Heads of arguments

CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 179/16
In the matter between:
MAMAHULE COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
First Applicant
MAMAHULE
COMMUNITY
Second Applicant
MAMAHULE TRADITIONAL
AUTHORITY
Third Applicant
OCCUPIERS OF THE FARM
KALKFONTEIN
Fourth Applicant
and
MINISTER OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND LAND
REFORM
Respondent
Neutral citation:
Mamahule Communal Property Association and Others v Minister of
Rural Development and Land Reform
[2017] ZACC 12
Coram:
Mogoeng CJ, Nkabinde
ADCJ, Cameron J, Froneman J, Jafta J, Khampepe
J, Madlanga J, Mbha AJ, Mhlantla J, Musi AJ and Zondo
J
Judgments:
The Court
Decided on:
5 May 2017
ORDER
On appeal from the Land Claims Court:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed subject to paragraph 3.
3.
The order by the Land Claims Court declaring that the Mamahule
Communal Property Association, the
Mamahule Community, the
Mamahule Traditional Authority and Occupiers of the farm Kalkfontein
1001 LS are unlawful occupiers
as defined in the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
is set aside and, in its stead,
the following is substituted:

It
is declared that the Mamahule Communal Property Association, the
Mamahule Community, the Mamahule Traditional Authority and Occupiers

of the farm Kalkfontein 1001 LS are unlawful occupiers of the farm.”
JUDGMENT
THE COURT (Mogoeng CJ; Nkabinde ACJ,
Cameron J, Froneman J, Jafta J, Khampepe J, Madlanga J, Mbha AJ,
Mhlantla J, Musi AJ and Zondo
J)
[1]
This matter concerns the power of the Land Claims Court, if
any, to adjudicate matters under the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
[1]
(PIE).  The pertinent question is whether, if it does not have
that power, it may nonetheless declare persons unlawful occupiers
and
order their eviction; and, if it may, the legal basis on which it may
do so.
[2]
During May 1996 the second applicant, the Mamahule
Community,
[2]
together with the Mothiba, Tholongwe, Mothapo and Mojapelo
communities, lodged claims in terms of the Restitution of Land Rights

Act
[3]
(Restitution Act) for the restitution of five farms in Limpopo
Province.  The farms included Kalkfontein 1001 LS (farm).  A

settlement agreement was drafted in accordance with the provisions of
section 42D of the Restitution Act.  The agreement was
never
signed as the second applicant approached the Land Claims Court to
contest the beneficiaries in the claimants’ verification
list.
That dispute remains unresolved before the Land Claims Court.
Whilst resolution was pending, the community started
demarcating and
allocating plots on the farm.
[3]
This precipitated an application in the High Court of South
Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria by the Minister of Rural
Development
and Land Reform
[4]
(Minister) against the community.  The Minister sought orders
interdicting the demarcation and allocation of plots; declaring
that
the members of the community were unlawful occupiers as defined in
PIE; and evicting the community from the farm.  That
application
was settled, with the community making an undertaking to desist from
their conduct.  Notwithstanding this, the
demarcation and
allocation of plots continued.
[4]
The Minister brought another application against the community
– this time before the Land Claims Court – for
substantially
similar relief.  That application had the support
of the owner of the farm.
[5]
The community opposed the application on the grounds that the
Land Claims Court had jurisdiction to adjudicate evictions only under

the Extension of Security of Tenure Act
[5]
(ESTA) and Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act
[6]
(Land Reform Act).  It thus had no jurisdiction under PIE on
which the application was based.  In support, they argued
that
the definition of “court” in PIE excludes the Land Claims
Court.  That definition is that “court”
means the
High Court or the Magistrate’s Court.  Therefore –
so the argument went – the Land Claims Court,
as a creature of
statute, lacks jurisdiction to adjudicate matters under PIE.
The Minister submitted that the Land Claims
Court derives
jurisdiction to order an eviction from section 22(1)(c)
[7]
and (2)(c)
[8]
and section 6(3)
[9]
of the Restitution Act.
[6]
The Court held that “[c]ounsel for the applicants argued
that this Court may evict in accordance with the provisions of PIE.

I disagree, this Court is ousted in respect of . . . applications
under the PIE Act”.  The Court then
held that it had
jurisdiction in terms of section 22(1)(cA) of the Restitution Act to
declare that, pending the final determination
of the claim in respect
of the farm, the community has no legal right or title to take
occupation of the farm or portions of it;
declare that the community
is an “unlawful occupier . . . of [the farm]
as defined in
the PIE Act
” (Emphasis added.);
[10]
and to order the eviction of the community from the farm.  It
then made an order in those terms.  The Court also interdicted

the community from engaging in any activity involving the demarcation
and allocation of sites on the farm and any other related
activity
pending the final determination of the claim in respect of the farm.
[7]
Applications for leave to appeal brought before the Land
Claims Court and Supreme Court of Appeal were unsuccessful.  The
community
now seeks leave from us.  We are deciding the matter
based on the parties’ affidavits and written submissions filed
pursuant to directions issued by this Court.
[8]
The community persists in its contention that the Land Claims
Court had no jurisdiction to make the declarator that it was an
unlawful
occupier in terms of PIE.  The Land Claims Court,
drawing its jurisdiction from the Restitution Act, as extended by
ESTA and
the Land Reform Act, has no authority under PIE, argues the
community.  The community further submits that, based on the
definition
of “court” in section 1 of PIE, declarations
of rights under PIE are within the exclusive realm of the
Magistrates’
Courts and the High Court.
[9]
The community also argues that the application brought before
the Land Claims Court is an abuse of court process.  This is
because the Minister had since approached the High Court for an
eviction order on the basis of the declaration issued by the Land

Claims Court that the community was an unlawful occupier.  A
related argument is that, if the Land Claims Court does
have
jurisdiction to declare that a person is an unlawful occupier, that
declaration may not form the basis of an eviction order
by a High
Court or Magistrate’s Court under PIE.  The community also
raises the defence of
res judicata
(literally, a matter
already judged)
[11]
on the basis that the issues between the parties had been determined
when the parties reached settlement before the High Court.
Another
contention is that the Minister is not the registered owner of the
farm and, therefore, lacks
locus standi
(standing).
[10]
The Minister concedes that PIE does not empower the Land
Claims Court to make a declaration of unlawful occupation under PIE.

However, he submits that here the Land Claims Court’s
declaration was made in terms of the Restitution Act.  He argues

that sections 6(3), 11(7), 22(1)(cA) and 22(2) of the Restitution Act
do empower the Land Claims Court to make the declaratory
order on the
lawfulness of the community’s occupation.  He also
contends that the declarator by the Land Claims Court
was made in
terms of section 22.  Further, as the land in question was
subject to a pending land claim under the Restitution
Act and the
case before the Land Claims Court concerned the community’s
conduct on that land, the Land Claims Court had authority
to “make
sure that there [were] no unauthorized activities that [would]
undermine the whole process of [the] land claim”.
The
Minister submits that – in accordance with its ancillary
jurisdiction under section 22 – the Land Claims Court
does
possess the power to make the contested declaratory order.
[11]
This application concerns the interface between PIE and the
Restitution Act insofar as the jurisdiction of the Land Claims Court

is concerned.  At issue is the interpretation of certain
provisions of the two Acts.  As this Court observed in
Blue Moonlight
,
[12]
in its preamble PIE quotes sections 25(1) and 26(3) of the
Constitution.
[13]
PIE “acknowledges people’s quest for homes, while
recognising that no one may be deprived arbitrarily of
property”.
[14]
On the other hand, the Restitution Act was passed pursuant to
the provisions of section 25(7) of the Constitution.
[15]
The interpretation of the Restitution Act and PIE is a constitutional
issue.
[16]
So, we do have jurisdiction.  Must leave to appeal be granted?
[12]
The Land Claims Court was established by section 22 of the
Restitution Act to adjudicate matters relating to land claims.
It derives much of its jurisdiction from this Act.
[17]
Section 22(1) of the Restitution Act grants the Land Claims Court,
among other things, the power:
“(c)
to determine the person entitled to title to land contemplated in
section 3;
(cA)
at the instance of any interested person and in its discretion, to
grant a declaratory order on a question
of law relating to section
25(7) of the Constitution or to this Act or to any other law or
matter in respect of which the Court
has jurisdiction,
notwithstanding that such person might not be able to claim any
relief consequential upon the granting of such
order . . . .”
[13]
Under section 22(2)(a) and (b), the Land Claims Court also has
“all such powers in relation to matters falling within its
jurisdiction as are possessed by a High Court” and “all
the ancillary powers necessary or reasonably incidental
to the
performance of its functions, including the power to grant
interlocutory orders and interdicts”.  Section 22(2)(c)

grants the Court “the power to decide any issue either in terms
of this Act or in terms of any other law, which is not ordinarily

within its jurisdiction but is incidental to an issue within its
jurisdiction, if the Court considers it to be in the interests
of
justice to do so”.
[14]
Section 35 of the Restitution Act deals with the types of
orders the Land Claims Court may grant.  It states that the
Court may order the restoration of land as well as grant the claimant
any alternative relief.
[18]
Section 38E(e) empowers the Land Claims Court to “make
such other order as in the circumstances appears to be just”.

Section 38E decrees that during proceedings under Chapter IIIA
of the Restitution Act, the Land Claims Court may make an
order:
“(i)
prohibiting or setting aside the sale, exchange, donation, lease,
subdivision, rezoning
or development of land to which an application
relates, if it is satisfied that such sale, exchange, donation,
lease, subdivision,
rezoning or development—
(aa)
defeats or will defeat the achievement of the objects of this Act;
(bb)
was not or will not be done in good faith;
. . .
(iv)
prohibiting the entering upon and occupation of the land in question
without the permission
of the owner or lawful occupier.”
[15]
The Land Claims Court has no authority under PIE to declare
that a person is an unlawful occupier.  PIE does not grant
jurisdiction
to the Land Claims Court.  Section 1 of PIE makes
this plain.  It defines “court” as the High Court
and Magistrate’s
Court.  Therefore, references to “court”
in PIE, with which this Act is replete, are references to these
courts.
Does the Land Claims Court have power under any other
law to determine that a person is an unlawful occupier of land?
If
it does, is it open to us to place reliance on that other law to
support the declaration that the community was an unlawful occupier?
[16]
Section 22(2)(b) of the Restitution Act provides that “the
Court shall . . . have . . . all the ancillary powers

necessary or reasonably incidental to the performance of its
functions, including the power to grant interlocutory orders and
interdicts”.  Without doubt, the litigation that is
pending before the Land Claims Court falls within the jurisdiction
of
that Court.
[19]
That litigation is central to how the pending land claim will finally
be determined.  If the Land Claims Court eventually
orders
restitution of the farm in favour of a claimant group other than the
community, the presence of the community on the farm
will make the
implementation of the order unduly burdensome.  It may even
necessitate litigation to evict the community.
Surely then,
granting relief aimed at addressing the problem of the occupying
community, including their eviction, before the determination
of the
claim falls within the section 22(2)(b) power.  It ensures
that the ultimate resolution of the claim by the Land
Claims Court is
not hamstrung.
[17]
The case was about evicting the community from the farm and
interdicting their return and any activity on it by them pending the

final determination of the land claim.  The Minister’s
case sets out enough to entitle him to relief in terms of
section 22(2)(b).
Thus despite the reference in that case
to, and the Land Claims Court’s reliance on, PIE, we are
entitled to uphold the Land
Claims Court’s conclusion; that, of
course, shorn of the reliance on PIE.
[20]
Effectively, this is confirming the holding that the community’s
occupation was unlawful, but not under PIE.
[18]
Regarding the community’s concern that the Minister is
using this holding as a basis for its eviction in fresh proceedings

instituted under PIE before the High Court, we are disinclined to
pronounce on what the High Court may or may not do with the holding.
[19]
There is no substance in the contention that the Minister
lacked
locus standi
to bring the application.  By reason
of the fact that under the Restitution Act the Minister plays a
central, multi-faceted
role, he did have a direct and substantial
interest in the relief he was asking for.
[20]
The
res judicata
argument is misconceived.  After
the earlier High Court proceedings had been settled, the community
continued to engage in
the conduct of demarcating and allocating
sites.  Surely, that later conduct could not have been covered
by an already concluded
settlement.
Conclusion
[21]
Because the community has achieved some success, albeit
limited, that warrants the grant of leave to appeal.  But
substantially
the appeal fails.  On costs, we see no reason why
the
Biowatch
[21]
principle should not apply.
Order
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed subject to paragraph 3.
3.
The order by the Land Claims Court declaring that the Mamahule
Communal Property Association, the
Mamahule Community, the
Mamahule Traditional Authority and Occupiers of the farm Kalkfontein
1001 LS are unlawful occupiers
as defined in the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
is set aside and, in its stead,
the following is substituted:

It
is declared that the Mamahule Communal Property Association, the
Mamahule Community, the Mamahule Traditional Authority and Occupiers

of the farm Kalkfontein 1001 LS are unlawful occupiers of the farm.”
For the Applicants:

C R Jansen SC and S M Van Vuuren instructed by Gilfillan du Plessis.
For the First Respondent:

W Mokhari SC and P Managa instructed by the State Attorney.
[1]
19 of 1998.
[2]
The first applicant, the Mamahule Communal Property Association, was
established by the community to own land restored to it.
The
“Mamahule Traditional Authority” is cited as the third
applicant.  According to the applicants’ founding

affidavit no such authority currently exists, but this was the name
used by the community when it initially lodged the claim
for
restitution.  The fourth applicants are the occupiers of the
farm subject to the disputed land claim, and are members
of the
community.  For convenience we shall refer to the applicants
jointly as the “community”.
[3]
22 of 1994.  Section 42D provides:
“If the Minister is satisfied
that a claimant is entitled to restitution of a right in land in
terms of section 2, and that
the claim for such restitution was
lodged not later than 30 June 2019, he or she may enter into an
agreement with the parties
who are interested in the claim providing
for one or more of the following:
(a)
The award to the claimant of land, a portion of land or any other

right in land: Provided that the claimant shall not be awarded land,
a portion of land or a right in land dispossessed from another

claimant or the latter’s ascendant, unless—
(i)
such other claimant is or has been granted restitution of
a right in
land or has waived his or her right to restoration of the right in
land in question; or
(ii)
the Minister is satisfied that satisfactory arrangements have been

or will be made to grant such other claimant restitution of a right
in land;
(b)
the payment of compensation to such claimant;
(c)
both an award and payment of compensation to such claimant;
. . .
(e)
the manner in which the rights awarded are to be held or the
compensation
is to be paid or held; or
(f)
such other terms and conditions as the Minister considers
appropriate.”
[4]
The respondent in these proceedings.
[5]
62 of 1997.
[6]
3 of 1996.
[7]
This section provides:
“There shall be a court of law to
be known as the Land Claims Court which shall have the power, to the
exclusion of any
court contemplated in
section
166
(c), (d) or (e) of the Constitution—
. . .
(c)
to determine the person entitled to title to land contemplated
in
section
3
;
(cA)        at the
instance of any interested person and in its discretion, to grant a
declaratory
order on a question of law relating to section 25(7) of
the Constitution or to this Act or to any other law or matter in
respect
of which the Court has jurisdiction, notwithstanding that
such person might not be able to claim any relief consequential upon

the granting of such order . . . .”
[8]
Section 22(2)(c) reads:
“Subject to Chapter 8 of the
Constitution, the Court shall have jurisdiction throughout the
Republic and shall have—
(c)
the power to decide any issue either in terms of this Act or in

terms of any other law, which is not ordinarily within its
jurisdiction but is incidental to an issue within its jurisdiction,

if the Court considers it to be in the interests of justice to do
so.”
[9]
This section provides:
“Where the regional land claims
commissioner having jurisdiction or and interested party has reason
to believe that the
sale, exchange, donation, lease, subdivision,
rezoning or development of land which may be the subject of any
order of the Court,
or in respect of which a person or community is
entitled to claim restitution of a right in land, will defeat the
achievement
of the objects of this Act, he or she may—
(a)
after a claim has been lodged in respect of such land; and
(b)
after the owner of the land has been notified of such claim and

referred to the provisions of this subsection;
on reasonable notice to interested parties, apply to
the Court for an interdict prohibiting the sale, exchange, donation,
lease,
subdivision, rezoning or development of the land, and the
Court may, subject to such terms and conditions and for such period
as it may determine, grant such an interdict or make any other order
it deems fit.”
[10]
The Court made this holding despite an earlier one to the effect
that it had no jurisdiction under PIE.
[11]
The principle is that generally parties may not again litigate on
the same matter once it has been determined on the merits.
[12]
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd
[2011] ZACC 33
;
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC);
2012 (2) BCLR 150
(CC) (
Blue Moonlight
) at para 36.
[13]
Here is what the preamble says in this regard:

WHEREAS no one may be deprived of property
except in terms of law of general application, and no law may permit
arbitrary deprivation
of property;
AND WHEREAS no one may be evicted from their home, or
have their home demolished without an order of court made after
considering
all the relevant circumstances . . . .”
[14]
Blue Moonlight
, above n 12, at para 36.
[15]
This section provides:
“A person or community
dispossessed of property after 19 June 1913 as a result of past
racially discriminatory laws or practices
is entitled, to the extent
provided by an Act of Parliament, either to restitution of that
property or to equitable redress.”
[16]
Florence v Government of the Republic of South Africa
[2014]
ZACC 22
;
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC);
2014 (10) BCLR 1137
(CC) at para 24
and
Occupiers of Portion R25 of the Farm Mooiplaats 355 JR v
Golden Thread Ltd
[2011] ZACC 35
;
2012 (2) SA 337
(CC);
2012 (4)
BCLR 372
(CC) at para 3.
[17]
The Land Claims Court is granted additional jurisdiction by ESTA and
the Land Reform Act.
[18]
Section 35(1)(a) and (e).
[19]
In terms of section 22 the Land Claims Court has the power to
determine a right to restitution of any right in land in accordance

with the Restitution Act.  The case pending before the Land
Claims Court concerns the right to restitution asserted by the

various claimant groups.
[20]
See
SAPS v Solidarity obo Barnard
[2014]
ZACC 23
;
2014
(6) SA 123
(CC)
;
2014
(10) BCLR 1195
(CC) and other cases collected in footnote
253 of
My Vote Counts v Speaker of the National Assembly
[2015]
ZACC 3
;
2016 (1) SA 132
(CC).
[21]
Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources
[2009] ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC);
2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC) (
Biowatch
) at
para 43