03/03/2026
The Environment and Land Court in Githuka v Njau (2025) has delivered a ruling that every landowner and every long-term occupant in Kenya needs to hear.A man (James Kamau Githuka) had lived on a parcel in Githunguri for over 20 years. His late father bought it, but the transfer was never completed. The registered owner (Njoroge Njau) never appeared, never challenged the occupation, and never stopped the open, peaceful, and continuous use of the land. The Court granted the applicant absolute ownership through adverse possession.This ruling is a stark reminder: Kenyan law does not protect absentee “title deed landlords” who disappear for decades and then resurface with threats. Under the Limitation of Actions Act, if someone occupies your land openly, continuously, without force, secrecy, or permission for 12 straight years, your title can be extinguished whether you like it or not. The incomplete sale didn't matter; the long, unchallenged occupation from around 2005 sealed the deal long before the case reached court.This isn't new law—it's a reinforcement of established principles from landmark cases like Wambugu v Njuguna [1983], Mtana Lewa, Chevron v Harrison Charo, and others: possession must be open, notorious, uninterrupted, and adverse (nec vi, nec clam, nec precario—no force, no secrecy, no permission).The Court also clarified a point many Kenyans misunderstand: you can own land without occupying it, but only if you actively protect your rights. Abandon it, and if someone possesses it as an owner would, time runs against you. Adverse possession isn't a loophole it's the legal consequence of sleeping on your rights.This should wake up both sides of Kenya's land struggles:For long-term occupiers who've built homes and lives on land while owners vanished: the law provides a legitimate path to secure your future—gather evidence like photos, witness statements, utility bills, and consider filing in the Environment and Land Court.
For title holders who think a deed is an unbreakable shield: wake up! A piece of paper doesn't defend itself. Visit your land, assert ownership, pay rates, fence it, lease it, or take action against trespassers. Vigilance, not entitlement, wins.
Whether you inherited, bought, or were gifted land protect it. Whether you've occupied land peacefully for years document it. Time doesn't wait, and neither does the law.Land is Kenya's biggest asset and source of conflict. Let's learn from this: act now, before someone else does.