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IN THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA Held in Vryheid on 1-3 September 2003; 3-5 May 2004 before Moloto J Decided on : 20 May 2004 CASE NUMBER: LCC23/02 In the matter between: HENDRIK CAREL GERHARDUS WALKER Plaintiff and DUMISANE SHOVE Y S NGCOBO First Defendant Second Defendant JUDGMENT MOLOTO : [1] The plaintiff instituted an action in terms of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 1 ( the Act ) for the eviction of the defendants from his farm, the Remaining Extent of Portion 1 and Portion 2 of the farm Goedhoop number 431, in the district of Vryheid, KwaZulu-Natal, also known as Goedehoop ( the farm ). The plaintiff alleged that the defendants were occupiers within the meaning of that term as defined in the Act. The defendants filed a Special Plea and a Plea on the merits. In the Special Plea they alleged that the first defendant was a labour tenant as defined in the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act 2 ( Labour Tenants Act ), and that the second defendant was an associate of the first defendant as defined in the same Act. As such, so the Special Plea continued, the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief sought. 1 Act 62 of 1997, as amended. 2 Act 3 of 1996, as amended.

Page 2 [2] The parties were legally represented in the beginning, but counsel for the defendants withdrew at the end of the cross examination of the first defendant. Thereafter the defendants elected to conduct their own defence. The issues to be determined are the following : (a) whether the first defendant is a labour tenant as pleaded in the Special Plea and whether the second defendant is his associate; if the first defendant is found not to be a labour tenant, a determination of the claim in terms of the Act. Whether the first defendant is a labour tenant [3] The statement of agreed facts and facts in dispute states, among others, that the parties are agreed that the defendants live together as husband and wife. It would, therefore, follow as a matter of law that if the first defendant is a labour tenant, then the second defendant would be his associate. 3 [4] A labour tenant is defined as: a person - (a) (c) who is residing or has the right to reside on a farm; who has or has had the right to use cropping or grazing land on the farm, referred to in paragraph (a), or another farm of the owner, and in consideration of such right provides or has provided labour to the owner or lessee; and whose parent or grandparent resided or resides on a farm and had the use of cropping or grazing land on such farm or another farm of the owner, and in consideration of such right provided or provides labour to the owner or lessee of such or such other farm, including a person who has been appointed a successor to a labour tenant in accordance with the provisions of section 3(4) and (5), but excluding a farmworker; 3 See definition of an associate and family member in section 1of the Labour Tenants Act.

Page 3 [5] It is common cause that the defendants reside on the farm. Therefore they satisfy paragraph (a) of the definition. The plaintiff led no evidence in rebuttal of the defendant s allegations with respect to their stay on the farm before the plaintiff and his immediate predecessor-in-title were on the farm. This was hardly surprising as the plaintiff and the immediate predecessor-in-title were not on the farm at the time and would not know what happened then. The result is that the first defendant s testimony, that his father resided on the farm and had cropping and grazing rights in return for which he provided labour to the owner of the farm, stands uncontested. Accordingly, paragraph (c) of the definition of a labour tenant is satisfied. [6] It remains to determine whether paragraph was also satisfied. The first defendant testified on this aspect in his evidence in chief, as follows: He was born on the farm in 1966 when the owner of the farm was one Mandathane. As already stated, his father had cropping and grazing rights and rendered services for such rights. His father had 10 cattle and 5 goats. Mandathane sold the farm to Piet. Piet demanded that his father reduce the number of cattle and his father had a problem with this suggestion. Piet evicted his father s entire family including himself. Three months later he returned to Piet to ask for work and a place to stay. Piet employed him and allowed him to stay where he currently stays (not where his parents stayed before they were evicted). He had 9 goats but some died and others were stolen, leaving him with no livestock. He also ploughed and Piet planted two rows of mealies for him. Coertze bought the farm from Piet. Coertze agreed with him that he could graze livestock and cultivate the land. He stayed where Piet had allowed him to build his homestead. He had 5 cattle and 6 goats. In return for the right to reside, graze and crop, he provided labour to Coertze and was paid R40,00 per month. His wife, the second defendant, also worked for Coertze, and was paid a wage, although he does not know how much. Coertze sold the farm to the plaintiff. When the plaintiff took over the farm he and his wife left the farm because the plaintiff used to assault people. He (the first defendant) returned to the farm some three months later to seek employment from the plaintiff. The plaintiff employed him and he stayed on the farm Bellevue, on which the plaintiff also lived. He lived in a trois (single

Page 4 quarters) on Bellevue. At some stage he got sick and had to be hospitalised in Ceza and Durban for a year. On being discharged from hospital he went to his parents home in Nondweni where he stayed for 3 months before returning to the plaintiff to ask for work. He was duly employed and allowed to build his homestead at his parents ruins on the farm. While building his homestead he lived in Nxumalo s home. Nxumalo lives on one of the plaintiff s farms and is employed by him. On completion of the building operations, the plaintiff told him that he had not agreed that he build on his parents ruins but that he should build on his own ruins (that is, where Piet had earlier allowed him to build). He relocated to where the plaintiff said he should, his present homestead on the farm. The arrangement with the plaintiff was that he could keep cattle and cultivate the land. He had 4 goats. His wife worked for the plaintiff for one month but was not paid. She was also breast-feeding and the farm Bellevue was too far for her to travel from the farm, so she stopped working. He also stopped working. The plaintiff demanded that his wife return to work but she did not for the abovementioned reasons. The plaintiff then dismissed him and ordered him to vacate the farm. He did not vacate the farm. To date he is still on the farm. He is currently employed by the Vryheid Abattoir earning R600,00 per fortnight and has no intention of returning to the plaintiff s employ. He has been working for the abattoir for the last three years while staying on the plaintiff s farm for free. Under cross-examination, he made the following statements while insisting that he had the right to crop and graze: (a) He agreed that when Coertze sold the farm to the plaintiff all the workers, including himself, left the farm. Yet he persisted in his assertion that when the plaintiff took over the farm the workers were still on the farm. He did not know whether in Coertze s time on the farm he had the right to crop and graze but he had cattle and he cropped. (c) He had no cattle, no goats and no chickens during Piet s ownership of the farm. No discussion about keeping cattle on the farm ever took place between Piet and himself.

Page 5 (d) When Coertze took over the farm he had no livestock, that is, no cattle, goats or chickens. He had no agreement with Coertze in this regard. He merely acquired livestock and brought it on the farm after Coertze had acquired the farm. He had chickens, 5 goats and no cattle. (e) He denied having said in evidence in chief that he had 5 cattle and 6 goats during Coertze s time. (f) When he worked for the plaintiff and lived in the single quarters, his family, i e wife and children, stayed in Nondweni, some 70km away from the farm. (g) Piet, Coertze and the plaintiff employed him personally.he did not have the right to appoint a nominee to work in his stead. (h) When he worked for the plaintiff and lived in the single quarters, he had no livestock. (i) The plaintiff and him never discussed the issue of him keeping any livestock or cropping. (j) When he concluded the re-employment agreement (after being hospitalised) with the plaintiff, he did not know whether it was to be on the same terms and conditions as before, but in his mind it was to be on the same terms and conditions as before. (k) When the was first employed by the plaintiff (before being hospitalised) he was paid a wage and got three meals per day. He did not remember how much he earned, but by the time he stopped working for the plaintiff he earned R200,00 per month.

Page 6 [7] The second defendant mentioned the following points in her testimony which either contradict or are inconsistent with the first defendant s testimony. The list is not exhaustive but mentions major contradictions and inconsistencies only. (1) When the first defendant s family left the farm as a result of their differences with Piet, she and the first defendant remained on the farm; they stayed in the first defendant s parental home and cultivated their fields. (2) It was Frans Coertze who instructed them to relocate from the first defendant s parental home to their current home. (3) When the first defendant came to work for the plaintiff and was accommodated in the single quarters, she was also staying on the farm, accommodated by the Dlamini family. (4) She had the plaintiff s consent to stay with the Dlaminis. (5) While the first defendant was erecting his home on his parents ruins and later on his own ruins during the plaintiff s ownership of the farm, the first and second defendants lived with the Khumalo s and not the Nxumalo s as the first defendant had testified. The second defendant corroborated the first defendant s testimony that the successive owners of the farm, including Coertze and the plaintiff allowed the defendants to stay, crop and graze on the farm. [8] The last witness for the defendants was Mr Fanana Dlamini ( Dlamini ). He testified that when the first defendant came to work for the plaintiff and was accommodated in the single quarters, he (Dlamini) was also employed by the plaintiff. The second defendant did not stay with his family, but used to visit the first defendant and during such visits she stayed with his family. At the end of the visit, the second defendant would return to Nondweni with all her possessions. She never left anything behind as she had testified. He further testified that he did not know

Page 7 whether Coertze (whom he called Malandela) gave the first defendant permission to graze. He only saw goats. The cattle which the first defendant kept during Coertze s time were removed from the farm by the first defendant s brothers. He also did not know whether the plaintiff had consented to the first defendant keeping goats, but the plaintiff saw the goats in the kraal. On this latter point, that the plaintiff saw the goats, the witness corroborated the evidence of both defendants. [9] Two witnesses testified for the plaintiff, being the plaintiff himself and Francois Johannes Coertze (Coertze). This is the Coertze referred to by the earlier witnesses and who sold the farm to the plaintiff. Both Coertze and the plaintiff were emphatic that in their respective times on the farm the defendants never had permission or the right to crop or graze. Each testified that when the first defendant came to seek employment from each of them, the agreement was that the first defendant would be a worker paid in cash and food rations. Each of the witnesses denied ever consenting to the first defendant cropping or grazing on the farm. The first defendant had to render his services personally with no right to nominate a substitute worker. Coertze further testified that when he bought the farm the defendants were not resident on the farm. Both Coertze and the plaintiff said that when the plaintiff bought the farm the defendants were also no longer on the farm. [10] The plaintiff and his witness gave their evidence in a clear and consistent manner. They did not contradict themselves or each other in any manner. They were credible witnesses. Notwithstanding his ripe age of 85 and sickly condition, the plaintiff displayed an impressive clarity of mind and recollection of facts. The defendants on the other hand, contradicted themselves and each other in many material respects. Their witness, Dlamini also contradicted the second defendant on the question whether the second defendant lived at his home during the time the first defendant was accommodated in the single quarters. The defendants were not credible witnesses at all, and their version is rejected. The Court has no hesitation in accepting the version of the plaintiff. Consequently, I find that the defendants have not satisfied the second paragraph of the definition of a labour tenant. The finding of the Court is, accordingly, that the first defendant is not a labour tenant, consequently the second defendant is also not an associate, as defined.

Page 8 Determination of the claim in terms of the Act [11] Section 1 of the Act defines an occupier as :... a person residing on land which belongs to another person, and who has or on 4 February 1997 or thereafter had consent or another right in law to do so, but excluding - (a)...; (c) a person using or intending to use the land in question mainly for industrial, mining, commercial or commercial farming purposes, but including a person who works the land himself or herself and does not employ any person who is not a member of his or her family; and a person who has an income in excess of the prescribed amount. The prescribed amount is R5000,00 per month. 4 [12] It is common cause that the first defendant was employed by the plaintiff and accommodated in the single quarters. He fell ill and went to hospital for about a year. On his discharge from hospital he returned to the plaintiff and sought employment. He was employed and allowed to build a home for himself and his family where he currently resides on the farm. At some stage the second defendant was also employed, but stopped working. [13] From the above common cause facts it is clear that the first defendant was given permission to establish a home on the farm because he was employed on it. The first defendant did not engage in any of the activities mentioned in paragraph of the definition of an occupier; neither did he earn R5 000,00 or more per month. He is, therefore, an occupier as defined in the Act. [14] The second defendant s right of occupation arose from her relationship with the first defendant. She was employed when she was already on the farm as the first defendant s spouse. Consequently she has no independent right of occupation of the farm. Her right to occupy depends on the first defendant s right. 4 The prescribed amount is R5 000,00 per month. See the regulations contained in Government Notice 1632 in Government Gazette number 19587 of 18 December 1998.

[15] Section 8(2) of the Act provides that - Page 9 (2) The right of residence of an occupier who is an employee and whose right of residence arises solely from an employment agreement, may be terminated if the occupier resigns from employment or is dismissed in accordance with the provisions of the Labour Relations Act. [16] The first defendant falls squarely within the provisions of section 8(2). [17] It is common cause that the second defendant was convicted on 7 December 2000 for theft of a cattle feeding trough belonging to the plaintiff. It is so that, both defendants protested the second defendant s innocence during the hearing of this matter. It is not for this Court to determine the guilt or otherwise of the second defendant in the criminal case. Neither is it within the competence of this Court to pronounce on the validity or regularity of those criminal proceedings. All that this Court can do is to take cognisance of the outcome of those proceedings. The second defendant neither appealed against judgment nor brought the proceedings under review. As a result of the criminal conviction (the second defendant added that the plaintiff also did not pay her for her services), the second defendant stopped working for the plaintiff. The first defendant associated himself with the conduct of the second defendant by also stopping to work for the plaintiff. He sought and found employment with the Vryheid Abattoir. The plaintiff alleged that the first defendant stopped working of his own accord, whereas the first defendant alleged that the plaintiff dismissed him. It is not necessary to determine the true position. If the first defendant alleged that he was unfairly dismissed, he should have challenged the dismissal in terms of the Labour Relations Act 5 which he did not do. Therefore, this Court must accept that the first defendant s employment terminated in terms of that Act, and that the first defendant s right of residence was terminated in terms of section 8(2). [18] Section 9(2) prescribes the formalities to be complied with for a Court to grant an order for the eviction of an occupier. It reads: (2) A court may make an order for the eviction of an occupier if- (a) the occupier's right of residence has been terminated in terms of section 8; 5 Act 66 of 1995, as amended.

Page 10 (c) (d) the occupier has not vacated the land within the period of notice given by the owner or person in charge; the conditions for an order for eviction in terms of section 10 or 11 have been complied with; and the owner or person in charge has, after the termination of the right of residence, given- (i) (ii) (iii) the occupier; the municipality in whose area of jurisdiction the land in question is situated; and the head of the relevant provincial office of the Department of Land Affairs, for information purposes, not less than two calendar months' written notice of the intention to obtain an order for eviction, which notice shall contain the prescribed particulars and set out the grounds on which the eviction is based: Provided that if a notice of application to a court has, after the termination of the right of residence, been given to the occupier, the municipality and the head of the relevant provincial office of the Department of Land Affairs not less than two months before the date of the commencement of the hearing of the application, this paragraph shall be deemed to have been complied with. [19] The parties agreed that the formalities have been complied with, that is, that the first defendant s right of residence has been terminated in terms of section 8. It was specifically in terms of section 8(2) as determined above. It is common cause that the first defendant and his family have not vacated the farm. It is not clear from the papers and the evidence when the first defendant became an occupier, therefore this Court is unable to determine, for purposes of section 9(2)(c), which of section 10 or 11 is applicable. That notwithstanding the Court is satisfied that it is just and equitable to grant the order; given the facts of this case. The notices in terms of section 9(2)(d) were given. [20] There are no amounts as contemplated in section 13 of the Act owing by the plaintiff to the defendants. [21] The following order is made : (a) The defendants, together with all those occupying the farm Remaining Extent of Portion 1and Portion 2 of the farm Goedhoop number 431, in the district of

Page 11 Vryheid, KwaZulu-Natal, through the first defendant, are ordered to vacate the said farm on or before 31 July 2004; Should the defendants and all those occupying the farm referred to in (a) above through the first defendant, fail to vacate the said farm by the aforesaid date, the Sheriff is authorised and ordered to eject the defendants and all those occupying the said farm through the first defendant on or after 7 August 2004. (c) The defendants are granted the right to demolish any structures constituting their homestead and remove any material salvaged therefrom. (d) No order as to costs is made. JUDGE J MOLOTO For the plaintiff : Mr A B T Van der Merwe from Cox & Partners, Vryheid. For the defendants : In person.