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LPL4802 Assignment 1 (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED

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LPL4802 Assignment 1 (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED Answers, guidelines, workings and references , Read the scenario below and then answer the essay question set on it. In the rural hills of eNquthu, located in the uMzinyathi District of KwaZulu-Natal, a community of small- to medium-scale black farmers has established a reputation for sustainable commercial agriculture over the last two decades. Among them is Mr. Andile Mahlangu, a second-generation eucalyptus and wattle farmer who inherited over 150 hectares of land from his late father. His operation provides timber to a pulp processing plant and employs more than 20 local residents. Adjacent to Mahlangu’s land is a government-owned farm leased to Ms. Nokuthula Ngubane, a dedicated agriculturalist known in the area for her mentorship of young farmers, as well as her skills in livestock and grassland management. The government, through its Rural Development Support Programme, placed Ngubane on this farm as part of its post-settlement land reform initiative. Her responsibilities include maintaining natural grasslands, managing firebreaks, and running a small but growing cattle operation. On the afternoon of 13 August 2023, dry, gusty winds swept across eNquthu. A fire, believed to have started from a lightning strike or possibly stray embers from a roadside rubbish burn, ignited on the northwestern corner of Ms. Ngubane’s farm. Her workers responded quickly, activating their fire protocols, deploying water units, and calling in local firefighting volunteers. Despite their efforts, the wind direction shifted rapidly. The fire jumped one of the boundary firebreaks, crossed a small stream, and entered Mr. Mahlangu’s eucalyptus grove. Within hours, the flames engulfed more than 40 hectares of plantation, destroying mature timber ready for harvest as well as younger saplings. The economic loss surpassed R5.2 million and included damages to infrastructure, machinery, and future harvests. The fire was ultimately contained after sunset, aided by neighbouring farmers and community firefighters. In the aftermath, Mr. Mahlangu lodged a delictual claim against Ms. Ngubane, alleging that her negligent failure to contain the fire and protect adjacent land amounted to a wrongful omission for which she bore legal liability. He contended that she had not properly maintained her firebreaks in certain areas, that she failed to notify This study source was downloaded by from CourseH on :16:02 GMT -05:00 Page 3 of 5 1Page 3 of 5 neighbouring farmers in time to mount a joint response, and that she should have foreseen the risk of such fires and taken additional steps to prevent their spread, particularly given the dry conditions and proximity to commercial plantations. Ms Ngubane, in her defence, presented detailed records of her fire management activities. She submitted satellite imagery and dated photographs showing regularly cleared firebreaks; a signed fire risk assessment report compiled in June 2023 by the local Fire Protection Association; testimony from fire specialists confirming that, under the prevailing wind conditions, the fire would have breached any standard firebreak regardless of preparation, as well as evidence that she responded swiftly and in line with best practice norms for smallholder farms in the region. She denied any negligence and further argued that, while she deeply regretted the damage suffered by her neighbour, she had no legal duty to guarantee absolute protection of adjacent farms, especially since she acted reasonably and the fire’s behaviour was unpredictable due to extreme weather conditions. The matter was referred to the High Court in Pietermaritzburg, where legal representatives for both parties presented expert testimony on fire behaviour, land management responsibilities, and the relevant standards for appropriate conduct in rural fire control. Central to the court’s analysis was whether Ms. Ngubane’s conduct, although perhaps not negligent in the conventional sense, constituted wrongfulness. In submissions, Mr. Mahlangu’s attorneys argued that Ngubane’s omission, in failing to take extraordinary precautions (such as controlled burns earlier in the season or installing additional artificial barriers), amounted to a breach of a legal duty to prevent foreseeable harm. They urged the court to consider the special vulnerability of timber plantations and the reliance that neighbouring farmers place on each other’s fire management. Ms. Ngubane’s team argued that imposing such a legal duty would be excessively burdensome, particularly for small-scale, government-supported farmers. They contended that liability should only arise when conduct significantly falls below the standard of reasonableness, not when the risk could not have been avoided even with the best precautions. This study source was downloaded by from CourseH on :16:02 GMT -05:00 Page 4 of 5 1Page 4 of 5 Before attempting this question, you should study Chapter 2 of the prescribed textbook, Concept of Damage, and the corresponding lessons. BACKGROUND The concepts of wrongfulness and negligence are often confused, yet they play distinctly different roles in South African delict law. In the case of Mahlangu v Ngubane (scenario above), a devastating fire ignited on Ms Nokuthula Ngubane’s farm during the routine burning of old crop residue. Despite her efforts to contain it, strong winds led to the rapid spread of the fire into the neighbouring commercial timber plantation of Mr Andile Mahlangu, destroying several hectares of pine ready for harvest. Mr Mahlangu is suing Ms Ngubane for patrimonial damages in delict, alleging wrongful and negligent conduct. Ms Ngubane defends the action, asserting that she took all reasonable steps and cannot be held responsible for the sudden change in the wind's direction. QUESTION 1: ESSAY Provide a clear description of how a South African court would analyse the claims and defences in Mahlangu v Ngubane through the legal concepts of wrongfulness and negligence. In doing so, clearly distinguish between the two concepts and discuss how they are assessed independently. Furthermore, with reference to relevant legal authority, determine whether liability is likely to be imposed, and on what basis.

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LPL4802
Assignment 1 Semester 2 2025
Unique # 689451

Due Date: 28 August 2025

Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.

+27 81 278 3372

, 2 ANSWERS PROVIDED

MAHLANGU v NGUBANE: ANALYSIS OF WRONGFULNESS AND NEGLIGENCE
IN SOUTH AFRICAN DELICTUAL LAW

In South African delictual law, the concepts of wrongfulness and negligence are
central to determining liability, particularly in claims for patrimonial loss. Although
often discussed together, these two elements serve distinct legal functions and must
be assessed independently. In the case of Mahlangu v Ngubane, the court must
decide whether the defendant’s conduct constituted a wrongful omission and
whether that omission was negligent in law. The complexity of this issue lies in the
interplay between duties of care in fire management, the foreseeability of harm, and
the reasonableness of precautionary measures.

Understanding Wrongfulness

Wrongfulness, or unlawfulness, refers to the infringement of a legally recognized
interest in a way that is contrary to the legal convictions of society. It asks the
normative question of whether the conduct in question is legally unacceptable. In the
case of Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden, the Supreme Court of
Appeal emphasized that wrongfulness involves an evaluation of whether there is a
legal duty not to cause harm, and whether failing to act amounted to a breach of this
duty. The court held that the determination of wrongfulness must consider policy
factors and the legal convictions of the community, especially where an omission is
involved.1

In the Mahlangu v Ngubane case, the plaintiff claims that the defendant, Ms
Ngubane, failed to prevent the spread of fire from her farm, thereby causing damage
to his commercial timber plantation. To establish wrongfulness, the court must
decide whether Ms Ngubane had a legal duty to act positively in order to protect her
neighbour’s property. The general rule is that omissions are not wrongful unless a
legal duty to act exists. This duty may arise from statutory provisions, prior conduct,
a special relationship, or public policy considerations.2




1
Minister of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden 2002 (6) SA 431 (SCA) para 20.
2
JM Potgieter, L Steynberg & TB Floyd, Visser and Potgieter's Law of Damages, 3rd ed (2012) at 28.


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