Loadshedding continues to plague us and our businesses, and when tenants are connected during power cuts to their landlord’s alternative power source – such as a generator – it is essential for both parties to understand their respective rights.
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“Spoliation” - no one can take the law into their own hands
No one can go the self-help route and take the law into their own hands by removing property from someone else without a court order. Anyone deprived of possession like that can urgently obtain a “spoliation” order forcing an immediate return to it of the property.
At this stage, the court won’t be interested in who has the legal right to the property – all it will look at is whether -
That’s straightforward with possession of a “corporeal” thing like a car, or a house, or a parrot. But when it comes to an “incorporeal” like access to an alternative energy source, things become more complicated. Now you must prove that you had “quasi-possession” of the power supply.
As complicated as that may sound, what’s important on a practical level for both landlords and tenants is that this judgment has confirmed in principle that access to an alternative power supply such as a generator falls under the law’s protection as much as possession of a corporeal “thing”.
The bottom line
Whether or not a tenant has an enforceable right to its landlord’s alternative power supply – and if so whether it must pay extra for it - will depend on the wording of the lease.
But the landlord cannot just cut off an existing power supply without following legal process.