By John Graham, HouseCheck CEO
In February 2026, the Western Cape High Court delivered a judgment that should make every home buyer, seller, and estate agent pause for thought. In Fitzpatrick and Another v Latsky NO and Others, a wooden deck collapsed just seven months after the buyers took occupation of a waterfront property in Marina da Gama, Cape Town. What followed was more than a decade of litigation. The buyers sued the estate agent, his agency, and the seller for alleged non-disclosure of latent defects. The court ultimately granted absolution from the instance to all defendants, ruling that the buyers had failed to establish even a prima facie case.
The judgment is a masterclass in South African property law. It confirms that enthusiastic marketing phrases such as “stunning” or “beautiful” amount to nothing more than sales puffery: Opinion, not fact, and certainly not a guarantee of structural integrity.
The judgement reaffirms that estate agents are not structural engineers; their duty is limited to disclosing material facts within their personal knowledge. It upholds the strength of the voetstoots (“as is”) clause, which can only be defeated by proof of the seller’s actual knowledge and deliberate concealment of a defect. This is a high bar where the burden of proof was not met.
The judgement also clarifies the limited application of the Consumer Protection Act to private, once-off residential sales.
For home buyers, the message is clear: Latent defects, those not reasonably discoverable by a layperson, remain the buyer’s risk unless proactive steps are taken. The financial, emotional, and professional costs of a failed claim lasting 12 years are huge. The only reliable protection is an independent home inspection by a qualified building inspector before the offer to purchase becomes unconditional.
For estate agents, the ruling is equally instructive. While it reduces the agent’s exposure to liability for hidden defects the agent could not reasonably have known about, it also highlights the professional and reputational value of recommending independent inspections. An inspection by a certified inspector demonstrates integrity, protects your client, and shields you from future disputes.
Home sellers benefit too. An inspection report provides peace of mind and can be attached to the sale agreement, showing good faith and reducing the risk of later claims. Honest sellers have nothing to fear from transparency.
The Fitzpatrick judgment does not weaken consumer rights; it redirects them where they belong: toward prevention rather than cure.
In a market where building standards, renovations, and hidden defects are facts of life, the wise move for any buyer is to commission a professional, independent inspection by a certified home inspector. It is the single most effective way to ensure that “your dream home does not become a nightmare”.




