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The Obligation on Landowners to Accommodate ESTA Occupiers on their Land: Critically Analysing Daniels v Scribante 2017 4 SA 341 (CC)


Lerato Ngwenyama

Abstract

In Daniels v Scribante (hereafter the Daniels case) the Constitutional Court had to decide whether: (a) the Extension of Security of Tenure  Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) afforded Ms Daniels the right to make improvements to her dwelling; (b) if consent from the person in charge, Mr  Scribante, was a requirement for Ms Daniels to make such improvements; and (c) if consent was not a requirement, if Ms Daniels could  effect improvements to the total disregard of Mr Scribante. The judgment in Daniels is important not only because it paved the way for  Ms Daniels to effect improvements on her existing dwelling without the consent of Mr Scribante, but also because it showed that under  section 8(2) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (hereafter the Constitution) on the application of the Bill of Rights Mr  Scribante owed a positive obligation to Ms Daniels to ensure that she lived in conditions that afforded her human dignity. In Daniels the  Constitutional Court indicated that private landowners were enjoined by section 25(6) of the Constitution through ESTA to accommodate  ESTA occupiers on their land. According to the Constitutional Court in Daniels, the nature of the obligation imposed by section 25(6) of  the Constitution was both negative and positive, and in this particular case it rested on Mr Scribante. Against this background, this case  note provides at the outset the salient facts and judgment of the Daniels case. This is followed by an analysis aimed at critiquing the  judgment in Daniels pertaining to what is expected of private landowners in the new constitutional dispensation. It is concluded that  more may be required from the private landowner – a positive duty – to ensure that ESTA occupiers enjoy fundamental rights. 


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eISSN: 1727-3781