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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Maria Johanna Kruger v Tate Matthew Sibanyoni and Others

Citation(1191/2023) [2025] ZASCA 127 (9 September 2025)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Land Law
Extension of Security of Tenure

Facts of the Case

Mr Tate Matthew Sibanyoni (first respondent) and his family resided on the farm Vaalbank since 2011 as occupiers as defined in the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA). The farm was previously owned by the late Mr MJC van der Merwe, father of Ms Maria Johanna Kruger (the appellant). Mr Sibanyoni alleged that Mr Vincent Schalk (van der Merwe's son-in-law), who was in charge of Vaalbank, gave him permission to install electricity at his dwelling and signed a consent form submitted to the municipality. Ms Kruger, described as the heiress of van der Merwe's estate and person in charge of Vaalbank, denied that consent was given and prevented Eskom from delivering electricity poles to the property. Ms Kruger claimed she had never consented to the installation and that landowner consent was required for Eskom to establish electricity supply on private land. Mr Sibanyoni approached the Land Claims Court seeking an order directing Ms Kruger to consent to the electricity connection and interdicting her from preventing the installation.

Legal Issues

  • Whether electricity constitutes a reasonably necessary improvement to make a dwelling habitable under ESTA
  • Whether the consent of the landowner is required before an occupier may install or connect electricity to their dwelling under ESTA
  • Whether the right to human dignity in section 5 of ESTA entitles occupiers to install and connect electricity to their homes
  • Whether meaningful engagement occurred between the parties
  • Whether the occupier had standing and whether there was proper joinder of parties

Judicial Outcome

The appeal was dismissed with costs, including costs of two counsel where so employed. The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the Land Claims Court's interdict preventing Ms Kruger from preventing the installation of electricity to the Sibanyoni family's residential home, but implicitly set aside the directive that Ms Kruger must consent to the connection (as consent was found not to be required).

Ratio Decidendi

The binding legal principles established are: (1) Electricity installation is an improvement that is reasonably necessary to make a dwelling habitable under ESTA; (2) The right to human dignity in section 5 of ESTA entitles occupiers to install and connect electricity to their homes without requiring the landowner's consent; (3) While consent is not required, meaningful engagement between occupiers and landowners/persons in charge is necessary to balance conflicting rights and interests; (4) Occupiers under ESTA have the right to make improvements to their dwellings in order to make them habitable and thereby live with dignity; (5) In the modern context, electricity is a practical necessity for residential properties and is indispensable to dignified living; (6) The fundamental rights in section 5 of ESTA, including human dignity, apply equally to occupiers, landowners and persons in charge, requiring a balancing of competing rights; (7) Security of tenure under ESTA necessarily means that a dwelling must be habitable, which connotes making whatever improvements are reasonably necessary to achieve this.

Obiter Dicta

The Court made several non-binding observations: (1) The Court noted that people living on farmlands are entitled to human dignity and should not be left to struggle without electricity; (2) The Court expressed concern about submissions suggesting that people on farmland should explain how they are impacted by lack of electricity, comparing this to requiring someone in a mud house to prove how they are impacted; (3) The Court took judicial notice of the impact on anyone's life of living without electricity, particularly given the plight of people living in poverty on farms and rural land; (4) The Court noted that the amended section 4(1)(e) of ESTA (effective 1 April 2024) now obliges the Minister to provide tenure grants to compensate owners or persons in charge for provision of accommodation and services to occupiers; (5) The Court observed that Ms Kruger could have applied for subsidies under the previous section 4(1)(c) of ESTA if concerned about incurring liabilities; (6) The Court noted that meaningful engagement does not need to be elevated to the status of an agreement - its purpose is to find common ground with the aim of achieving agreement, but there will be circumstances where agreement is difficult to achieve.

Legal Significance

This case is significant in South African jurisprudence as it establishes important principles regarding occupiers' rights under ESTA. It confirms that the right to human dignity in section 5 of ESTA includes the right to make improvements to one's dwelling, specifically including the installation of electricity, without requiring landowner consent. The judgment recognizes electricity as a modern necessity integral to dignified living conditions, even on farmland. It clarifies the balance between occupiers' constitutional rights and landowners' property rights under section 25 of the Constitution. The case also clarifies the relationship between Eskom, municipalities and residents in electricity supply, and confirms that meaningful engagement (rather than consent or agreement) is required between occupiers and landowners. It demonstrates the protective purpose of ESTA for vulnerable farm dwellers and interprets the legislation in a manner that gives effect to constitutional rights to dignity and security of tenure. The judgment is important for understanding how courts will balance competing rights in the land reform context.

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Applies

  • Daniels v Scribante and Another(CCT 50/16) [2017] ZACC 13
  • Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others

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(CCT 43/09) [2009] ZACC 30
  • Molusi and Others v Voges N.O. and Others[2016] ZACC 6
  • Cites

    • Molusi and Others v Voges N.O. and Others[2016] ZACC 6
    • Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others(CCT 43/09) [2009] ZACC 30

    Follows

    • Daniels v Scribante and Another(CCT 50/16) [2017] ZACC 13
    • Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others(CCT 43/09) [2009] ZACC 30