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Postscript
on Anglican Church court cases - Court Watch 23/2012
Veritas
January 07, 2013
Stop Press: There have
been newspaper reports that at a press conference on Wednesday 19th
December Dr Kunonga’s spokesperson Reverend Admire Chisango
[with Dr Kunonga being present] announced that Dr Kunonga and his
breakaway church would abide by the Supreme Court ruling and that
they had already surrendered the to Anglican Church of the Province
of Central Africa [CPCA] all CPCA property that had been in their
possession. Veritas, however, has ascertained from Dr Kunonga’s
lawyer Jonathan Samukange that this does not mean that Dr Kunonga’s
new court cases claiming the properties in the name of his breakaway
church [the Church of the Province of Zimbabwe] are being dropped.
[See below for details of the new court cases.]
The Story so
Far: Court Watch 21/2012
of 22nd November summarised the Supreme Court’s judgment of
19th November confirming the right of the official Anglican Church
of the Province of Central Africa [CPCA] to possess and control
its property in the Diocese of Harare. The background to this decision
was that CPCA property in the Harare Diocese is administered by
a Board of Trustees chaired by the Archbishop of CPCA and including
the Bishop of the Diocese – at one stage this was Dr Kunonga,
but he broke away to form his own “Anglican” Church
of the Province of Zimbabwe, and refused to relinquish the CPCA
properties and, often violently, prevented access or use by loyalist
Anglicans. There were court cases between the CPCA and Kunonga camp
that dragged on for five years before a judgment was obtained in
the Supreme Court which ruled that Dr Kunonga, had in September
2007, voluntarily withdrawn from membership of the CPCA and, in
so doing, had lost the right to possess and control CPCA properties.
This confirmation of the CCPA’s position meant that the Harare
Diocese led by the legitimate CPCA Bishop of Harare [first Bishop
Bakare and now Bishop Gandiya] could now use the properties again.
The Supreme Court decision
- In the Supreme Court’s judgment, Deputy Chief Justice Malaba
said that the case centred on “the question whether those
people who had been members of the Board of Trustees for the Diocese
of Harare” before 21st September 2007 [i.e., the then Bishop
of Harare Dr Kunonga and certain other persons] withdrew their membership
from the CPCA and resigned their offices as bishop and trustees,
thereby relinquishing the right to control CPCA property in the
diocese.
This bulletin outlines
developments that have taken place since then in the Harare Diocese
followed by an update on related litigation concerning the Manicaland
Diocese.
Aftermath
of the Supreme Court Decision
Following the Supreme
Court decision some Kunonga followers and/or tenants voluntarily
vacated the CPCA premises they were occupying, and the the CPCA,
the official Anglican church, was able to resume possession. Others,
including Kunonga himself, did not do so. The CPCA therefore had
to take further legal action to give effect to the Supreme Court’s
decision.
Church
obtains eviction orders against Kunonga camp
The CPCA, on the basis
of the Supreme Court judgement, obtained “warrants of ejectment
and notices of removal” from the High Court. These authorised
the Deputy Sheriff to carry out evictions, which he proceeded to
do with police assistance. The Church properties concerned included
the Cathedral in Harare. At the Cathedral Dr Kunonga himself was
involved in a confrontation with the Deputy Sheriff, but eventually
left.
Kunonga’s
Second Bite at the Legal Cherry
Having switched legal
firms, the Kunonga camp soon returned to the High Court in an attempt
to avoid the consequences of the Supreme Court decision, but in
a new guise. On 27th November Dr Kunonga’s new lawyer, Jonathan
Samukange, lodged papers in the High Court commencing two fresh
but interlinked legal cases in the name of Dr Kunonga’s breakaway
Church of the Province of Zimbabwe:
1. An urgent application
for a court order stopping the evictions
The basis of this was
that a new case was being initiated by Dr Kunonga’s new Church
of the Province of Zimbabwe [see 2 below] and until the High Court
decided this new case the evictions should stop. This was supplemented
on 29th November by a additional urgent application when the CPCA
persisted with the evictions despite knowing that the urgent application
had been lodged and would be heard on 4th December.
2. A summons seeking
a court order that Anglican Church property is owned by the new
church
This bold attempt to
change the legal goalposts tries to get round the Supreme Court
decision by relying on the fact that the decision was given in proceedings
to which the new, breakaway Church of the Province of Zimbabwe was
not a party – in other words, the fact that it was a decision
against the “Diocesan Trustees for the Diocese of Harare”
[Kunonga and his fellow former trustees], not against the new church,
even though the new church was established by Dr Kunonga and his
followers, with Dr Kunonga as its Archbishop.
Note: The claim is that
the new church owns all the previous CPCA properties – which
is surprising, given that up to now there has been no dispute between
the CPCA and the Kunonga camp over ownership [as opposed to possession
and use, which are different legal concepts]. As Justice Malaba
said in his judgment: “There has been no dispute as to the
ownership of the movable and immovable property.....It is common
cause that the property belongs to the Church [the CPCA]. It has
a right to an order for vindication of its property from possessors
who have no right to have it.”
Indigenisation-type
argument
The basis of the new
church’s claim to ownership is apparently an assertion that
the churches, schools, colleges and properties concerned are part
of “the natural resources of the Zimbabwean community just
like land and minerals” and therefore cannot be owned by a
“foreign entity” such as the CPCA.
Note: the CPCA is not
governed or controlled from England or by any other church. It is
an independent, autonomous African church, with its own constitution
and system of governance. It is also one of 38 autonomous churches
that make up the worldwide Anglican Communion. The Archbishop of
Canterbury is the senior bishop and head of the Church of England.
He is also the symbolic head of the worldwide Anglican Communion,
but that does not mean that the Archbishop or the Church of England
can speak or act for the CPCA.
The
Anglican Church of the CPCA Response
The CPCA’s response
to these moves has been that the formation of the breakaway church
by Dr Kunonga and his followers cannot be used to reverse the position
that the Supreme Court has already finally decided; in other words,
the Church relies on what lawyers call the rule of res judicata
[a Latin tag which encapsulates the legal principle that a “matter
decided” finally by the courts cannot be reopened].
Urgent
Application to Stop Evictions Dismissed
The urgent application
to stop the eviction [1. above] was heard in chambers by Judge-President
George Chiweshe on 4th and 5th December He reserved judgment until
10th December.
Justice Chiweshe’s
judgement [available from veritas@mango.zw].
On 10th December
Justice Chiweshe handed down his written judgment, in which, after
outlining the background and the submissions advanced by both sides,
he identified the cardinal point as whether the breakaway church
was bound by the Supreme Court’s decision and if not, whether
it has a right to be heard, and if so, whether in fact it should
be heard. His conclusion was that that “the answer to these
questions requires an interpretation of the scope and extent of
the Supreme Court judgment....The High Court is not the appropriate
forum for that kind of exercise.” The breakaway church should,
he continued, have approached the Supreme Court for directions.
He agreed with the CPCA’s argument that the matter is res
judicata: “The Supreme Court has spoken ... I have no jurisdiction
to entertain this application.” He therefore dismissed the
application to stop the evictions. This conclusion leaves the CPCA
in possession and control of Church property in terms of the Supreme
Court’s decision.
Justice
Chiweshe’s observations on CPCA continuing with evictions
pending his decision
Justice Chiweshe referred
in his judgment to the fact that the CPCA had persisted with evictions
after the urgent application had been set down for hearing. He observed
that “it is the practice, custom and tradition of this court
that when an urgent matter has been set down, it suspends execution
until the matter is heard.”
Note: Justice Chiweshe
did not say the continued evictions were illegal, which they were
not. From the CPCA point of view they considered the urgent application
just one more delaying tactic after 5 years of waiting and, having
a Supreme Court judgment in their favour, were anxious to celebrate
Christmas in the restored churches.
Kunonga
camp’s appeal against dismissal of its urgent application
On 13th December Mr Samukange
lodged a notice of appeal in the Supreme Court against Justice Chiweshe’s
dismissal of the new church’s urgent application. Once the
CPCA has filed its papers in response to the notice of appeal, the
case will proceed in accordance with the rules of court. It is unlikely
that there will be any form of hearing before the beginning of the
new Supreme Court term on 14th January.
Justice
Chiweshe’s Decision Refers Only to the Urgent Application
NOT
to the New Ownership Claim
Justice Chiweshe’s
decision refers only to the new church’s urgent application
to stop the evictions – not to the case initiated by the breakaway
church’s summons seeking a court order declaring it to be
the owner of all the church properties.
This case remains
on the High Court’s books. It will follow the course laid
down by the rules of court for the handling of cases involving disputed
issues of fact and law. The rules include provision for early rejection
by the High Court of claims that do not have a sound legal basis.
Justice Chiweshe’s decision on the urgent application is an
indication of the difficulties that may face the Kunonga camp if
they choose to press on.
Manicaland:
Former Bishop Jakazi Re-Applies to Supreme Court
Court Watch 21/2012 referred
to the situation in the diocese of Manicaland where incumbent Bishop
Josiah Jakazi followed the Kunonga lead but, unlike Kunonga, lost
a High Court case against the Church of the Province of Central
Africa. That was in May 2010. He appealed to the Supreme Court against
this High Court decision. His appeal was due to be heard during
the same week as the Church’s appeal against Justice Hlatshwayo’s
decision in favour of the Kunonga camp. But Rev Jakazi’s appeal
was not actually heard; instead, it was “struck off the roll”
by the Supreme Court on 22nd October because it did not comply with
the rules of court about appeal procedures. As this did not amount
to a final dismissal of the appeal on the merits, Rev Jakazi had
the right to apply to the Supreme Court for condonation of the late
noting of a fresh appeal, and he promptly did so.
Judge hears application
for condonation of late appeal - Justice Vernanda Ziyambi heard
the condonation application in chambers at the Supreme Court on
Monday 10th December. After listening to lawyers for both sides,
the judge reserved judgment, meaning that her decision will be given
on a later date. In reaching this decision Justice Ziyambi will
be weighing up not only the acceptability or otherwise of Rev Jakazi’s
reasons for not complying with the rules of court, but also whether
she is satisfied that his proposed appeal has a reasonable prospect
of success. Meanwhile, the May 2010 High Court decision concerned,
which decided that he has no rights to CPCA property or to take
part in the CPCA’s affairs, is fully operational.
Veritas makes
every effort to ensure reliable information, but cannot take legal
responsibility for information supplied
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