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IN THE LAND COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
Case number: LanC 2025 – 154050
Before: The Honourable Acting Judge Montzinger
Hearing: 19 September 2025
Delivered: 15 December 2025
In the matter between:
GYSBERTUS JOHANNES JOUBERT First Applicant
JOHANNA ALETTA JACOBS HATTINGH Second Applicant
and
VICTORIA MKHONZA First Respondent
UNKNOWN OCCUPIERS OF PORTION 1 OF THE
FARM WELGEVONDEN NR, 93, REGISTRATION
DIVISION, H.T., UTRECTH, KWAZULUL NATAL
Second Respondent
______________________________________________________________
(1) REPORTABLE: Yes☒/ No ☐
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: Yes☒ / No ☐
Date: 15 December 2025
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Summary: Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) – urgent
application under rule 34 of the Land Court Rules – two brick structures erected
at occupier’s homestead on farm – Civil procedure – standing and authority –
authority to institute proceedings can be challenged substantively on affidavit and
is not only impeachable via rule 7(1) of the Uniform Rules - grant of rule nisi with
interim relief does not finally determine urgency - principles governing interdicts
against persons unknown – Remedies – interdict and demolition – in ESTA
context demolition not automatic; court must adopt cautious,
justice-and-equity-based approach – appropriate remedy.
ORDER
1. Insofar as the application relates to the first brick structure commenced in
or about 2023 at the first respondent’s homestead (“the 2023 structure”),
the application is struck off the roll for lack of urgency. This is without
prejudice to the applicants’ right to set the matter down to determine that
relief in the ordinary course in respect of that structure.
2. In respect of the second August 2025 brick structure at the first
respondent’s homestead (“the 2025 structure”), the following interim relief
is granted:
2.1 The first respondent, and any person acting under or through her,
including her son, Mr Philani Khoza, are interdicted and
restrained from:
2.1.1 Continuing with any construction of, or further building
works on, the second 2025 structure; and
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2.1.2 Allowing any person to occupy the second 2025
structure, or occupying it themselves,
pending the outcome of any further proceedings contemplated in
paragraphs 3 and 4 below, or the lapsing of this order in terms of
paragraph 5.
3. The demolition of the second 2025 structure is stayed on the terms set
out in paragraphs 4, 5 and 6 below.
4. The applicants and the first respondent, acting through their respective
legal representatives, are directed to engage in good faith with one
another for a period of 30 (thirty) calendar days, from 19 January 2026,
with a view to reaching agreement on the future of the second 2025
structure and any conditions that should govern its completion, alteration
or demolition.
5. If no written agreement is concluded within the 30-days period referred to
in paragraph 4:
5.1 Either the first respondent may, within 15 (fifteen) calendar days
thereafter, institute proceedings in a competent court seeking an
order authorising the continuation and completion (or
regularisation) of the second structure; and/or
5.2 The applicants may, within the same 15-day period, supplement
these papers and set the matter down seeking demolition of the
second structure and/or any other appropriate relief.
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6. The interim interdict in paragraph 2 (with sub-paragraphs) shall:
6.1 Remain in force pending the final determination of any
proceedings instituted in terms of paragraphs 5.1 and 5.2; and
6.2 Lapse if no proceedings are instituted by either party within the
time periods stipulated in paragraphs 5.1 and 5.2.
7. The relief granted in paragraphs 2 to 6 shall bind the first respondent and
any person acting under or through her, including Mr Philani Khoza. No
further relief is granted against the “Unknown Occupiers of Portion 1 of
the Farm Welgevonden” beyond the extent, if any, to which they act under
or through the first respondent.
8. Each party shall pay its own costs in these proceedings.
JUDGMENT
Montzinger AJ:
Introduction
[1] This is an urgent application concerning the erection of two brick structures at
the homestead of the first respondent on Portion 1 of the Farm Welgevonden No.
93, Registration Division H.T., Utrecht, KwaZulu-Natal (“the farm”). The
applicants seek to prevent further construction and occupation of those structures
and to secure their demolition. On 5 September 2025 I issued a rule nisi with
interim relief and directions for the filing of papers. The matter also came before
me on the return day.
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[2] The first applicant, is a farmer who concluded a sale agreement in 2017 to
purchase the farm from the second applicant. The first applicant took occupation
the same year the sale agreement was concluded. While, transfer is still pending
the second applicant remains the registered owner of the farm.
[3] The first respondent, Ms Nomusa Victoria Mkhonza, is a 67-year-old
pensioner who has resided on the farm since the 1990s and heads the
homestead on the Welgevonden farm at which the impugned structures are
situated. She claims to be a labour tenant, but for purposes of this application
relies primarily on her and her family’s status as occupiers under ESTA
1. The
second respondents are cited as the “unknown occupiers of Portion 1 of the farm
Welgevonden”, described as other family members or persons occupying the
homestead. They are not individually identified in the papers.
[4] In the notice of motion the applicants seek, first, condonation for
non-compliance with the rules and enrolment of the matter as an urgent
application. Substantively, they seek (either as final relief or, alternatively, as
interim relief) to interdict the first and second respondents from erecting or
continuing to build any structure on the farm. Furthermore, to interdict the
respondents from taking occupation of the partially constructed structure or
allowing anyone else to do so. Also, for the court to direct them to demolish the
structures within five days and remove all building materials; and, failing that, to
authorise the sheriff to demolish the structures at the respondents’ cost. The
applicants also seek costs in the event of opposition.
1 Extention of Security of Tenure Act, 62 of 1997
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[5] The factual background is broadly common cause, although there are material
disputes. The first respondent has long resided at a homestead comprising a
brick house and a number of older mud-and-pole structures. She claims that she
and her late husband historically had nearly thirteen rooms to accommodate their
extended family. Many of these structures were allegedly destroyed by heavy
rain. The first applicant allege that when he arrived in 2017 there were at most
six structures and that the first respondent occupied a three-bedroom brick
house, and that only she and one grandchild lived there.
[6] During the winter of 2023, the first respondent says she sent her son, Mr
Philani Khoza, to seek permission from the first applicant to build a three-room
brick house (“the 2023 structure”) to replace the dilapidated mud houses. She
avers that permission was granted, that the first applicant attended to the
homestaed in 2024 and expressly consented to the construction of the 2023
structure and gave permissions that she could replace the mud houses with brick
and cement structures.
[7] The applicants’ version differs. The first applicant confirms that it was rather
the first respondent that personally approached him in 2023, but that she sought
permission only to replace a small, dilapidated one-roomed kitchen building,
referred to as an “inkhukhu”, and that he consented to a similar small kitchen and
nothing more. He denies that permission was sought or given for a three-room
house. When he attended the homestead in 2024 he says he discovered a larger
brick house under construction. He instructed that work stop and, according to
him, construction ceased when the walls were only a few layers of brick high.
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[8] In August 2025 the situation allegedly escalated. According to the first
applicant the first respondent commenced building a second three-room house
(“the 2025 structure”) on the foundation of a house that had collapsed after heavy
rain. The first respondent candidly admits that she did not obtain permission for
this structure, saying she assumed the 2023 consent covered it, and avers that
when the first applicant told her on 25 August 2025 to stop, she instructed the
workers to cease construction and has since then not proceeded further with
construction.
[9] The first applicant alleges that from 21 August 2025 his wife observed
truckloads of bricks being delivered near the homestead and that, despite her
insistence that they not be off-loaded, an unknown male associated with the
respondents instructed the driver to off-load them. On 23 August 2025 the first
applicant visited the site at the homestead and found what he describes as a
large five-room house (the 2023 structure) nearing completion and foundations
for a second house (the 2025 structure). He says he informed the first respondent
and the men present that they had no permission to build and had to stop, but
they responded aggressively, asserted that the land belonged to them and
indicated that construction would continue regardless. A letter of demand was
thereafter served by the sheriff in the last week of August 2025, warning the
respondents to desist and inviting engagement.
[10] On 3 September 2025 the applicants’ attorney, Ms Sanette Viljoen,
accompanied by private security officers visited the homestead to deliver and
explain the notice of motion to the respondents. In a supplementary affidavit on
behalf of the applicants, it is alleged that Ms Viljoen encountered two unknown
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men2 who were actively mixing concrete and laying bricks, notwithstanding the
attorneys’ letter and this Court’s directions. She states that, after the directions 3
and notice of motion were translated into isiZulu, the first respondent and the men
indicated that they would ignore the Court’s directives and continue building.
Photographs taken on that day allegedly show how the roof trusses and
corrugated sheeting had been installed on the 2023 structure and the walls,
window frames and door jambs of the 2025 structure had progressed to several
layers of bricks, with additional roofing sheets stockpiled nearby
[11] On the strength of these developments the applicants assert that both
structures were being erected unlawfully, without consent or meaningful
engagement, and in a manner that undermines the rule of law and their
constitutionally-protected property rights. They rely on the second applicant’s
ownership and the first applicant’s status as “person in charge” as furnishing the
clear (or at least prima facie) right required for interdictory relief, and emphasise
that if the structures are completed and occupied the applicants will have to
undertake protracted and costly eviction proceedings. In argument they relied in
particular on Daniels
4 and Basfour5, contending that those decisions confirm that
even ESTA occupiers may not demolish and rebuild or erect new dwellings
without meaningful engagement and that self-help of the kind alleged here is
impermissible
6.
2 Who is regarded to be covered by the citation of the second respondent.
3 By this time no directions were issued by the court, as the rule nisi was only granted on 5
September 2025.
4 Daniels v Scribante and Another (CCT50/16) [2017] ZACC 13; 2017 (4) SA 341 (CC); 2017 (8)
BCLR 949 (CC) (11 May 2017)
5 Basfour 3327 (Pty) Ltd v Thwala and Others (1008/2023) [2025] ZASCA 105 (18 July 2025)
6 Daniels: paras 61 - 65
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[12] The relief is opposed on several grounds. The first respondent maintains that
construction of the 2023 structure commenced at that time with the first
applicant’s knowledge and consent and that it replaced the unsafe mud structures
and that her household is simply seeking adequate shelter at the homestead
where they have long lived. She asserts that any failure to obtain fresh consent
for the 2025 structure was an honest mistake, that construction of that structure
has ceased, and that demolition would cause severe financial prejudice given that
she has used her pension money to fund the works.
[13] She also challenges the first applicant’s standing and authority to litigate on
behalf of the second applicant, pointing to the absence in the founding papers of
a signed resolution by the second applicant and to the fact that the second
applicant’s confirmatory affidavit was unsigned and uncommissioned. The first
respondent also took issue with the first applicant’s wife’s confirmatory affidavit
that appeared for the first time in reply. In respect of urgency she argues that the
2023 structure has been under construction since 2023 with the applicants’
knowledge, that any harm could have been addressed by ordinary motion
proceedings, and that in relation to the 2025 structure work stopped once she
was told to do so. She asks that the application be dismissed or, at least, that any
demolition be stayed and that the parties should pursue an amicable resolution
of the dispute between them.
[14] In reply the first applicant persists that he granted permission in 2023 only
for the replacement of a one-room kitchen and denies any consent for a
three-room house. He also denies any consent for the 2025 structure. He
disputes the relevance of labour-tenancy and asserts that he is duly authorised
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as a person in charge, contending that any challenge to his authority ought to
have been brought under rule 7 of the Land Court Rules 7. He maintains that the
rapid progress of the structures during 2025 justified resort to the Court on an
urgent basis.
[15] Against that background, the principal issues are: (i) whether the applicants
have standing and, in particular, whether the first applicant has authority to
institute these proceedings on behalf of the second applicant; (ii) whether the
application is sufficiently urgent, distinguishing between the 2023 and 2025
structures; (iii) whether the requirements for interdictory relief have been met in
relation to each structure; (iv) whether relief can competently be granted against
the “unknown occupiers”; and (v) what form of relief is just and equitable.
The applicants’ standing and authority
[16] It is common cause that the second applicant is the registered owner of the
farm, while the first applicant resides on and manages the farm pursuant to the
2017 sale agreement, although transfer has not yet been effected. The founding
papers are sparse on the precise terms of the interim arrangements as no
agreements or supporting documents were provided , but on the uncontested
allegations the first applicant lives on the property, exercises day-to-day control
over the farming operations and regulates occupiers’ use of the land. The first
respondent herself says she sent her son to request his consent in 2023. There
is also no reason to gainsay the second applicant’s ownership as reflected in the
records of the deeds office. I am therefore satisfied that both applicants have
7 The rule is substantially the same as Uniform Rule 7
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standing to seek interdictory relief: the second applicant as owner, and the first
applicant as person in charge and lawful possessor.
[17] As to authority, the law is clear that a deponent need not be authorised to
depose to an affidavit. What must be authorised is the institution and prosecution
of the proceedings8. The question is whether the party on whose behalf the matter
is brought has in fact authorised the litigation.
[18] In this matter the respondents did, on the papers, put in issue the first
applicant’s authority to act on behalf of the second applicant. That challenge was
largely neutralised by the filing of a duly signed and commissioned confirmatory
affidavit by the second applicant, which satisfies me that she authorised the first
applicant and the attorneys of record to act in her name. The applicants are
accordingly properly before the Court.
[19] I do not, however, accept the allegation and counsel’s submission that the
respondents’ challenge to authority was ineffective because it was not mounted
by way of a rule 7(1) notice and that, absent adherence to that rule, there is no
challenge at all. As the Western Cape Division held in Clackson Power
9, rule 7(1)
is a procedural mechanism to dispute an attorney’s mandate, but it is not the only
means by which authority to institute proceedings may be questioned. A court is
entitled, and indeed obliged, to have regard to a substantive challenge raised on
affidavit and to insist that authority be properly pleaded and substantiated, even
where rule 7(1) has not been invoked, all the more so in urgent proceedings
8 Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA) para 19; See also Masako
v Masako and Another (724/2020) [2021] ZASCA 168 (3 December 2021)
9 Minister of Water and Sanitation v Clackson Power (Pty) Ltd and Another 2024 (5) SA 280
(WCC)
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where an automatic stay may be impractical. Litigants should not assume that
failure to follow the rule 7(1) procedure insulates them from an authority
challenge. Therefore, if authority is pertinently attacked on the papers and not
adequately addressed, an application may yet fail for want of proof that the
proceedings were duly authorised.
Urgency
[20] Rule 34 fulfils, in this Court, the same function that rule 6(12) fulfils in the
High Court, adapted to the Land Court’s processes. Under rule 34(1) the Court
may, in urgent applications, dispense with any provision of the Rules and dispose
of a matter at such time, place and in such manner as it considers just. That wide
discretion is constrained by rule 34(2), which, in terms materially identical to rule
6(12)(b), requires an applicant in the founding affidavit to set out explicitly both
the circumstances which render the matter urgent and the reasons why
substantial redress cannot be obtained at a hearing in due course. The fact that
rule 34(3)–(6) provides additional mechanisms , such as approaching the Judge
President for the appointment of a presiding judge and seeking directions on
truncated time-limits, does not relax these substantive requirements. The general
principles that has developed under rule 6(12) apply with equal force in this Court.
[21] As Fagan J held in IL & B Marcow Caterers
10, the indulgence of an urgent
hearing is justified only where “sufficient and satisfactory” grounds are shown,
including an explanation why ordinary time-periods will not provide substantial
redress, and with due regard to the prejudice to the respondent and to other
10 IL & B Marcow Caterers (Pty) Ltd v Greatermans SA Ltd and Another; Aroma Inn (Pty) Ltd v
Hypermarket (Pty) Ltd and Another 1981 (4) SA 108 (C) p 112 - G
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litigants whose cases are displaced on the roll. Urgency is assessed objectively
and mere importance to the applicant does not suffice, and self-created urgency
will generally not warrant departure from the ordinary procedures11.
[22] Against that framework it is necessary to explain why the grant of a rule nisi
does not dispose of the issue of urgency on the return day. A court hearing the
matter on the return day is empowered to revisit, and if necessary overturn, an
earlier, largely ex parte assessment that the matter warranted urgent enrolment.
[23] A rule nisi is, by its nature, a conditional order that operates on an interim
basis and is generally granted without the respondent being heard. Our courts
have long recognised
12 that this procedure is well suited to situations where
immediate protection is claimed but the respondent must still be afforded a proper
opportunity to answer and to contest every aspect of the case, including urgency.
The rule nisi mechanism enables an application to be brought before court more
speedily than ordinary processes permit and, in a proper case, allows for interim
relief while the respondent remains entitled on the return day to challenge both
the merits and the procedural basis of the order.
[24] Rule 34 of this Court’s Rules reinforces that position. A respondent is
expressly entitled, under rule 34(4)(b), to “dispute the urgency of the case” , and
the Court is obliged then to reconsider urgency on the return date, but this time
in the light of a complete record. Therefore, the existence of the interim order
11 New Nation Movement NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
(CCT110/19) [2019] ZACC 27; 2019 (9) BCLR 1104 (CC) (3 July 2019) paras 6 - 9
12 Republikeinse Publikasies (Edms) Bpk v Afrikaanse Pers Publikasies (Edms) Bpk 1972 (1) SA
773 (A); and Safcor Forwarding (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission 1982
773 (A); and Safcor Forwarding (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission 1982
(3) SA 654 (A); and Victoria Park Ratepayers' Association v Greyvenouw CC and others (511/03)
[2003] ZAECHC 19; [2004] 3 All SA 623 (SE) (11 April 2003) par 8
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does not insulate the applicants from a revisit of the issue of urgency. Every
element of their case, including whether the 2023 and 2025 structures
respectively justify urgent intervention, remains open for determination.
Urgency: the first (2023) structure
[25] On the respondents’ version, the first of the contested brick structures was
commenced with in 2023. The first applicant accepts that he became aware of
construction of a brick structure during 2024, visited the homestead, and
instructed that construction cease. He did not, however, approach a court at that
time. On his own version the incomplete structure remained on the land
throughout 2024 and into 2025.
[26] The applicants’ explanation for urgency in relation to th e 2023 structure is
essentially that, if relief is not granted urgently, the structure will be completed
and occupied and their property and constitutional rights will thereby be infringed,
necessitating costly eviction proceedings in the future. They also invoke the
“inherent urgency” of spoliation. The difficulty is that the facts of this complaint
has existed since at least 2023 or at best for the applicants, 2024, when the first
applicant first intervened on site. At that stage the applicants elected not to
approach the court. No attempt is made in the founding papers to explain why
proceedings were not instituted then.
[27] Whatever prejudice the applicants now face in relation to the first structure is
in significant measure a function of their own delay. They could, in the ordinary
course, still seek substantive relief on proper papers and after proper notice. The
possibility of occupation of the structure does not mean that substantial redress
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in due course is unavailable . The court seized with such proceedings could, if
appropriate, grant orders preventing occupation or ordering demolition.
[28] I accordingly find that, in relation to the 2023 structure, the applicants have
failed to establish that they cannot obtain substantial redress in due course. The
urgency is self-created. The urgent relief sought in respect of the 2023 structure
must for that reason be refused without prejudice to the applicants’ right to
approach a court in the ordinary course for appropriate relief.
Urgency: the second (August 2025) structure
[29] The position is materially different in respect of the second structure
commenced with during August 2025. On the first respondent’s own version, she
commenced construction of this structure during August 2025, on the foundation
of a previous dwelling that had collapsed. She candidly acknowledges that she
did so without seeking specific consent from the first applicant, relying instead on
her understanding that earlier permission had been granted in 2023.
[30] The founding and supplementary affidavits indicate that the second structure
progressed rapidly. The applicants acted within days of first learning of the new
construction activity. On any version, the second structure was a fresh
construction undertaken without prior engagement with the first applicant.
[31] In these circumstances, the risk that the 2025 structure would be completed
and occupied before the applicants could obtain relief in the ordinary course, is
not fanciful. While the respondent has since stopped construction, this only
occurred after the application was launched. On these facts I am satisfied that,
as regards the 2025 structure, the applicants have demonstrated that they may
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well be denied substantial redress at a hearing in due course if urgent relief is not
granted.
Interdictory relief: Legal Framework
[32] Interdicts generally take on the nature of two formats. Interim or final. For an
interim interdict a litigant must establish a prima facie right (even if open to some
doubt), a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not
granted, that the balance of convenience favours the grant of interim relief, and
that there is no adequate alternative remedy 13. A litigant seeking a final interdict
must show a clear right; an injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended,
and the absence of any other satisfactory remedy
14.
[33] In the present matter the notice of motion is framed in the alternative. The
applicants seek final interdictory and mandatory relief, failing which interim relief
pending future proceedings. However, in light of my finding on urgency in respect
of the 2023 structure it would be inappropriate to express any view on the viability
of an interdict. I therefore consider the interdict sought only in respect of the 2025
structure.
Interdict in relation to the second (2025) structure
The right asserted
[34] As indicated, the second applicant is the registered owner and the first
applicant is the person in charge and possessor of the Welgevonden farm.
Ownership and lawful possession are rights protected both at common law and
13 Webster v Mitchell 1948 (1) SA 1186 (W) at 1189-1190.
14 Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221
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under section 25 of the Constitution. The applicants are entitled to regulate the
use of the farm and to insist that additional residential structures are not erected
without adherence to the law that balances owners’ rights with the security of
tenure and dignity rights of occupiers under ESTA.
[35] The first respondent is an ESTA occupier and, on her version, may also be
a labour tenant. For present purposes it is unnecessary to decide the latter, since
it is common cause that she enjoys at least the protection conferred by ESTA.
She has resided on the farm since the early 1990s and her right to occupy her
existing homestead is not in issue.
[36] As foreshadowed, the applicants rely, inter alia, on the recent decision of the
SCA in Basfour, in which an ESTA occupier demolished two mud structures used
as a storeroom and for traditional ceremonies and commenced building a new
brick-and-mortar structure on the same foundation, without engaging with or
obtaining consent from the farm owner. The SCA in Basfour held that even where
improvements are contemplated, the Constitutional Court’s judgment in Daniels
does not entitle occupiers to erect a new structure without engagement with the
owner or the person in charge, and that the absence of such engagement
rendered the structure unlawful. The court declared the new structure unlawful
and ordered its demolition.
[37] The respondents in turn also rely on the Daniels judgment, for a different
reason, arguing that the Constitutional Court held that ESTA confers on occupiers
the right to make improvements to their dwellings, at their own cost, in order to
bring them up to a standard consistent with human dignity, and that an owner’s
consent is not a precondition to that right.
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[38] In my view the applicants’ reliance on Daniels and Basfour is, in broad
outline, correct. Those authorities do not entitle ESTA occupiers to unilaterally
erect new or additional dwellings wherever they choose on a farm without prior
engagement with the owner or person in charge; nor do they authorise self-help
in the face of a dispute. The mentioned authorities rather recognise a right to
make improvements that are reasonably necessary to render an existing dwelling
habitable in line with human dignity, subject to meaningful engagement
15. Basfour
confirms that where an occupier erects a new structure on a different footprint, or
converts a non-residential structure into a substantial new dwelling, without
engagement with the owner, such conduct is unlawful and may warrant
demolition
16. Further, a court has a discretion to order demolition after taking into
account all the facts17.
[39] At the same time, the applicants’ submission that any unilateral
commencement of construction by an ESTA occupier is per se an abuse of rights
is overstated. Daniels makes clear that in appropriate circumstances an occupier
may proceed with reasonably necessary improvements, subject to the duty to
engage and, where disagreement persists, to seek the court’s assistance.
[40] On the papers it is common cause that there was no meaningful engagement
prior to the commencement of the construction with the second structure. The
first respondent commenced building a substantial new three-roomed brick
dwelling in August 2025 . The applicants were not consulted and construction
proceeded at pace. This conduct constitutes an unlawful interference with the
15 Daniels: paras 61 - 65
16 Basfour: paras 24 - 26
17 Basfour: par 27
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applicants’ rights as owner and person in charge. Consistently with Daniels and
Basfour, it cannot be justified as a mere improvement of an existing dwelling.
[41] I accordingly find that the applicants have at least a prima facie right, open
to little if any doubt, to restrain further construction of the 2025 structure and to
prevent occupation.
Injury and apprehension of harm
[42] The injury is both actual and reasonably apprehended. The second structure
has already altered the physical use of the land. If completed and occupied, it will
entrench a new dwelling and potentially introduce additional occupiers, with
attendant implications for land use and future eviction or tenure proceedings. The
longer construction and possible occupation are allowed to continue unchecked,
the more entrenched the infringement becomes and the more complex and
intrusive any subsequent remedy will be. The threat of harm to the applicants’
rights is real and ongoing.
Alternative remedy
[43] The respondents submit that an ordinary application, or action, would suffice,
and that the first respondent is willing to engage and to seek formal permission
for the second structure. That is precisely what Daniels envisages. In my view,
however, without an interim prohibition on further construction or occupation,
such engagement and future proceedings would take place against a moving
target, with the 2025 structure becoming de facto permanent. An interim interdict
is therefore appropriate to stabilise the situation and to create space for
engagement and, if necessary, further proceedings.
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[44] The requirements for interim relief in relation to the second structure are
accordingly met.
The “unknown occupiers” (second respondent)
[45] The applicants also seek relief against “Unknown Occupiers of Portion 1 of
the Farm Welgevonden” as the second respondent, and the notice of motion
seeks orders against “the First and Second Respondents” without differentiation,
while the only clearly identified actors are the first respondent and her son, Philani
Khoza. There is no identification of other specific occupiers, nor any attempt to
link them individually to the impugned conduct. The “unknown occupiers” are
nowhere particularised beyond a general statement that they are family members
of the first respondent and that some unidentified males were seen off-loading
bricks and mixing concrete.
[46] In Johannes Rooyen
18 a Full Court of the Western Cape Division, sitting on
appeal, dealt with the propriety of an anti-land-intrusion interdict granted against
Mr Rooyen and a second respondent cited as “persons unknown”. The court a
quo had discharged the rule nisi on the basis, inter alia, that the interdict was
impermissibly wide, directed at an “unknown class” of people and amounted in
substance to an eviction. On appeal the Full Court accepted that our law
recognises the competence of interdicts against persons unknown who threaten
to occupy land unlawfully, provided that the class is described with sufficient
precision to render its membership objectively determinable and to permit service
and enforcement of the order. Lukhuleni J, writing on behalf of the Full Court,
18 City of Cape Town v Johannes Rooyen and Another (A23/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 507 (31
October 2025)
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refers to various authorities19 to conclude that orders against “persons unknown”
are exceptional and will only be countenanced where20 the class is described by
reference to objective criteria so that it is in principle ascertainable who is bound
and there is cogent evidence linking that class to an actual or imminent
infringement.
[47] Applying the guidance in Johannes Rooyen and the authorities cited in that
judgment, to the present matter, the second respondents as cited do not meet
the threshold. They are described only as “unknown occupiers of Portion 1 of the
Farm Welgevonden”, without any limiting reference to conduct. On that
formulation, the class of respondents potentially includes every ESTA occupier
and family member who happens to reside on the Welgevonden farm,
irrespective of whether they have participated in or even kn ow about the
construction of the impugned structures. The evidence goes no further than to
say that some unnamed men ( who “likely resort under the second respondent” )
instructed a driver to off-load bricks and were later seen mixing concrete.
[48] In addition, an order in the blanket terms sought , interdicting all “unknown
occupiers” from erecting any structure anywhere on the Welgevonden farm and
from taking or permitting occupation of “partial, alternately recently completed
structures” would be both over-broad and opaque. As Lekhuleni J pointed out in
Johannes Rooyen, and as the SCA stressed in Ramahlele
21, courts must guard
against interdicts that, under the guise of restraining unlawful future conduct,
effectively operate as general injunctions against an undefined segment of the
19 Fischer and Another v Persons Unknown 2014 (3) SA 291 (WCC); Ramahlele and Others v
Fischer and Another 2014 (4) SA 614 (SCA)
20 Johannes Rooyen: par 56
21 Ramahlele: par 16
22 | Page
public, or as de facto eviction orders, without the procedural safeguards
demanded by PIE and ESTA.
[49] On application of the foreshadowed principles, the applicants have not
demonstrated that the vague class of “unknown occupiers of Portion 1” is an
identifiable, ascertainable group of the kind contemplated in Johannes Rooyen,
nor that a general order against them is necessary or justifiable on the evidence.
The applicants are therefore not entitled to interdictory relief against the second
respondents as an independent party described only as “unknown occupiers of
Portion 1”. The appropriate course is to tailor the relief to those individuals who
have been shown, on the papers, to be involved in or directing the contested
construction. That is, the first respondent and those acting under or through her,
including her son, Mr Philani Khoza.
Remedy: Demolition and just and equitable relief
[50] The applicants seek, in addition to prohibitory relief, a mandatory order that
the first respondent demolish both structures in issue in this matter, failing which
the sheriff may do so. As the interdict in respect of the 2023 structure may be
determined sometime in the future, the following paragraphs will consider
whether the demolition of the 2025 structure is justified in the circumstances. It is
necessary to situate the demolition request in the broader law relating to
demolition orders, and then to consider how that law must be applied in matters
governed by ESTA
22.
22 Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
23 | Page
[51] Our law distinguishes clearly between statutory demolition at the instance of
a municipality under the Building Act 23, and neighbour -law demolition between
private parties. In Lester24 the SCA held that where a local authority proceeds
under s 21 of the Building Act to demolish an illegal structure, the court enjoys
virtually no discretion, and that o nce the jurisdictional fact of illegality under the
Act is established, the magistrate “has no latitude not to order the demolition” and
neighbour-law notions of equitable discretion cannot be imported into the
statutory scheme. By contrast, the same judgment reaffirmed that in common-law
encroachment disputes, i.e. where one neighbour’s building encroaches upon
another’s land, courts have always exercised a remedial discretion . While
demolition is the primary vindicatory remedy, the court may, in an appropriate
case, refuse removal and instead award compensation or fashion some other
adjustment if that is the just and equitable outcome. The deciding factor, as Lester
and also Brian Lackey Trust
25 explain, is the disproportionality of prejudice
between the harm to the encroacher if demolition is ordered and the harm to (or
loss of benefit by) the affected owner if the encroachment is allowed to remain.
[52] That neighbour-law approach was recently restated in Bet-el Faith Mission
26,
where a church sought the demolition of its neighbours’ garage encroaching onto
its erf. The court accepted that encroachment is an unlawful interference with
property rights and that removal is the primary remedy
27, but held further that
23 National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977
24 Lester v Ndlambe Municipality and Another (514/12) [2013] ZASCA 95; [2014] 1 All SA 402
(SCA); 2015 (6) SA 283 (SCA) (22 August 2013)
25 Trustees of the Brian Lackey Trust v Annandale [2003] 4 All SA 528 (C) at para [45] – [55] &
[57]
26 Bet-el Faith Mission v Motthamme and Others (5306/2017) [2020] ZAFSHC 6 (16 January
[57]
26 Bet-el Faith Mission v Motthamme and Others (5306/2017) [2020] ZAFSHC 6 (16 January
2020)
27 Phillips v South African National Parks Board 2010 JDR 0480 (ECG) at par 24. See also:
Trustees, Brian Lackey v Annandale 2004 (3) SA 281(CPD) at 292; Fedgroup Participation Bond
Managers (Pty) Ltd v Trustees of the Capital Property Trust 2015 (5) SA 290 (SCA) at paras (21)
24 | Page
where encroachment is the only problem, the Court has a discretion to either
order the removal of the encroachment or to award damages and
compensation
28. The deciding factor being the disproportionality between
removal and the damage or inconvenience suffered by the landowner 29. The
judgment further emphasised that the encroaching owner’s own conduct (good
faith, knowledge of illegality, response to warnings) weighs heavily in this
balance, and that courts are especially reluctant to condone conduct that persists
in the face of clear statutory or municipal directions
30.
[53] The present matter does not involve a municipality relying s 21 of the Building
Act and is there no attempt to invoke the specific public-law powers that Lester
held to be non-discretionary. Rather, the applicants seek to restrain and undo
building works undertaken by an ESTA occupier on a farm, on the basis that
those works were carried out without consent or meaningful engagement and
encroach upon their private property rights. That places this case squarely in the
neighbour or private law category for remedial purposes, even if aspects of
illegality under the Building Act may also be present. It follows that this Court
retains the full, equitable discretion recognised in the cases referred to and that
demolition is not automatic merely because unlawfulness is established . It must
be justified as a just and equitable remedy on the facts.
[54] In addition, the dispute arises within the statutory and constitutional
framework of ESTA whose preamble records that many South Africans lack
- (33); Rand Waterraad v Bothma 1997 (3) SA 120 (0) at 130 F -138 G; Lester at paras 21 - 23
28 Lester at par [22]
29 Lester at par [22]; Rand Waterraad v Bothma, 1997 (3) SA 120 (O), at 138; Phillips v South
African National Parks Board, Brian Lackey Trust at par [23]
30 Beth-El Faith Mission par [36]
25 | Page
secure tenure and are vulnerable to unfair eviction, and that the Act seeks to
promote long-term security of tenure while recognising the rights, duties and
legitimate interests of owners. Section 5 of ESTA guarantees to both occupiers
and owners fundamental rights, including dignity and security of the person.
Section 6(1), in turn, confers on an occupier the right to reside on and use the
land on which an occupier resides after 4 February 1997, while s 6(2), “balanced
with the rights of the owner or person in charge”, confers, inter alia, the right to
security of tenure and also expressly to take reasonable measures to maintain
the dwelling occupied by him or her or members of his or her family. The
Constitutional Court in Daniels and Hattingh
31 has interpreted these provisions
as requiring a just and equitable balance between occupier and owner and as
infusing “justice and equity” into every enquiry about the exercise of rights under
ESTA. That approach was also taken in Basfour where the SCA made a finding
that it was just and equitable in the circumstances of that case that demolition be
ordered
32.
[55] Basfour is particularly instructive because it operates precisely at the
intersection of ESTA and demolition. Far from establishing a rule that demolition
automatically follows a finding of unlawfulness, Basfour is authority for the
proposition that, in an ESTA setting, demolition is the product of a fact-sensitive
discretion, guided by justice and equity.
[56] These principles sit alongside the more general constitutional jurisprudence
under ESTA and PIE that insists on a contextual, humane approach to measures
31 Hattingh and Others v Juta (CCT 50/12) [2013] ZACC 5; 2013 (3) SA 275 (CC); 2013 (5) BCLR
509 (CC) (14 March 2013)
32 Basfour: par 30
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that may undermine a vulnerable occupier’s security of tenure. Demolition of a
dwelling, or of a structure intended to enhance an occupier’s home , is often, in
substance, a partial eviction or a serious curtailment of the protection ESTA was
enacted to secure. It will almost always entail the destruction of improvements
funded from scarce household resources in an attempt to secure a more
habitable a nd dignified home. That reality requires courts, in ESTA matters
especially, to be more circumspect before granting demolition orders than in
ordinary neighbour-law cases between relatively powerful landowners. The court
must meaningfully weigh the impact on the occupier’s dignity and security of
tenure against the landowner’s property and management interests, and it must
be alive to the structural inequality and power imbalance that typically
characterise the relationship between farm owners and ESTA occupiers.
[57] It follows that in ESTA disputes, when they come before court on an urgent
basis on truncated papers, a demolition order should not be treated as an
automatic or routine sequel to a finding that a structure was erected without
consent or meaningful engagement. The party seeking demolition bears the onus
to place clear, concrete facts before the court explaining why demolition, rather
than a less drastic remedy, is necessary and proportionate in the particular
circumstances. The applicant for example will have to present evidence regarding
the stage of completion of the structure; its precise impact on the use and value
of the land; whether it renders land unusable for its primary purpose; the
availability (or lack) of alternative sites or arrangements; the occupier’s conduct
(good faith or bad faith, knowledge of unlawfulness, response to warnings or court
orders); and whether compensation, regularisation, partial modification or some
27 | Page
other tailored remedy could adequately vindicate the owner’s rights without
needlessly destroying economically valuable improvements.
[58] In the present matter, the applicants have established, at least prima facie,
that the 2025 structure was commenced without meaningful engagement and that
this constitutes an unlawful encroachment upon their property rights. They have
not, however, on these urgent papers, demonstrated why immediate demolition
is the only, or even the most appropriate, way to vindicate those rights in the light
of the first respondent’s long-standing occupation, her advanced age and modest
means, the substantial expenditure she has already incurred to create a more
secure and habitable home, and the absence of any prior litigation or defiance of
court orders comparable to that in Basfour. Against this backdrop, a cautious,
incremental remedy is more consonant with the balancing exercise mandated by
s 6(2) of ESTA, and with the constitutional imperative to infuse justice and equity
into disputes affecting vulnerable occupiers’ homes. The order I grant will cater
for the foreshadowed approach.
Costs
[59] Neither side has been wholly successful. The applicants fail on urgency and
relief in relation to the 2023 structure and do not obtain the immediate demolition
they sought in relation to the 2025 structure. In matters of this nature, involving
the intersection of property rights and constitutionally protected tenure rights, the
default position is that each party should bear its own costs absent special
circumstances. No such special circumstances are present here.
28 | Page
Order
[60] For these reasons, the following order is made:
1. Insofar as the application relates to the first brick structure commenced in
or about 2023 at the first respondent’s homestead (“the 2023 structure”),
the application is struck off the roll for lack of urgency. This is without
prejudice to the applicants’ right to set the matter down to determine that
relief in the ordinary course in respect of that structure.
2. In respect of the second August 2025 brick structure at the first
respondent’s homestead (“the 2025 structure”), the following interim relief
is granted:
2.2 The first respondent, and any person acting under or through her,
including her son, Mr Philani Khoza, are interdicted and restrained
from:
2.2.1 Continuing with any construction of, or further building
works on, the second 2025 structure; and
2.2.2 Allowing any person to occupy the second 2025
structure, or occupying it themselves,
pending the outcome of any further proceedings contemplated in
paragraphs 3 and 4 below, or the lapsing of this order in terms of
paragraph 5.
3. The demolition of the second 2025 structure is stayed on the terms set
out in paragraphs 4, 5 and 6 below.
29 | Page
4. The applicants and the first respondent, acting through their respective
legal representatives, are directed to engage in good faith with one
another for a period of 30 (thirty) calendar days, from 19 January 2026,
with a view to reaching agreement on the future of the second structure
and any conditions that should govern its completion, alteration or
demolition.
5. If no written agreement is concluded within the 30-days period referred to
in paragraph 4:
5.1 Either the first respondent may, within 15 (fifteen) calendar days
thereafter, institute proceedings in a competent court seeking an
order authorising the continuation and completion (or
regularisation) of the second structure; and/or
5.2 The applicants may, within the same 15-day period, supplement
these papers and set the matter down seeking demolition of the
second structure and/or any other appropriate relief.
6. The interim interdict in paragraph 2 (with sub-paragraphs) shall:
6.1 Remain in force pending the final determination of any
proceedings timeously instituted in terms of paragraphs 5.1 and
5.2; and
6.2 Lapse if no proceedings are instituted by either party within the
time periods stipulated in paragraphs 5.1 and 5.2.