De Jager v Sisana 1930 AD 71 is a South African appellate court case from 1930. It is an important case in the South African law of lease.
Decision
editA squatter called Sisana lived on a farm by arrangement with the owner, providing labour in return for occupation. The owner sold the land to de Jager, who was willing to keep the agreement going, but Sisana refused to work for the new owner and also refused to leave the land. The South African appellate court held that de Jager was entitled to evict Sisana since Sisana had lost tenancy rights by refusing to work for the new owner.[1][2]
Significance
editDe Jager v Sisana is an important case in the South African law of lease. The case established that rent is only payable in money or fruits of the property.[3]
References
edit- ^ De Jager v Sisana (AD 1930).
- ^ Kritzinger, Konrad M. (1994). "May a Lessee Discontinue the Lease on the Sale of the Leased Property - Is Genna-Wae Here to Stay". The South African Law Journal. 111.
- ^ Ramroop, Nazeera; Rhoodie, Lucinda (30 December 2012). "Rent is not payable in something other than money or fruits". www.polity.org.za. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
Further reading
edit- Banda, Sibo (2009). "Constitutional Mimicry and Common Law Reform in a Rights-Based Post-Colonial Setting: The Case of South Africa and Malawi". Journal of African Law. 53 (1): 142–170. ISSN 0021-8553.
- van der Walt, Andries Johannes (2009). Property in the Margins.