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Constitutional Court of South Africa

The Constitutional Court of South Africa is a supreme constitutional court established by the Constitution of South Africa, and is the apex court in the South African judicial system, with general jurisdiction. The Court was first established by the Interim Constitution of 1993, and its first session began in February 1995. It has continued in existence under the Constitution of 1996. The Court sits in the city of Johannesburg. The Constitutional Court has jurisdiction to hear any matter if it is in the interests of justice for it to do so. (Banner image credit: By André-Pierre from Stellenbosch, South Africa.)
Physical address
Constitutional Court, 1 Hospital Street, Constitution Hill, Braamfontein, South Africa, 2017
988 judgments
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988 judgments
Citation
Judgment date
July 2024
Reported
Premier must refer contested customary leadership nominations to provincial and local houses under section 12(2).
Traditional leadership — Interpretation of section 12(1)–(2) Limpopo Traditional Leadership and Institutions Act — only one statutory royal family per recognised traditional community may identify headman/headwoman — where competing identifications or allegations of non‑compliance exist Premier must consider section 12(2) options, notably referral to provincial and relevant local houses of traditional leaders — Premier’s decision reviewable if based on erroneous material or failure to exercise discretion — further decision‑making to take into account TKLA s2(1) obligations (non‑discrimination, equality, gender representation).
17 July 2024
Reported
Whether a grant provider’s lawful, innocent interest in property falls within POCA’s definition of "interest" for forfeiture exclusion.
POCA – definition of "interest" – wide, non‑exhaustive meaning – exclusion from forfeiture; preservation of pre‑existing innocent interests; ranking competing claims by common‑law principles (real rights over personal rights; prior tempore potior est iure).
12 July 2024
June 2024
Reported
A registered union is bound by its constitution and cannot represent employees it cannot validly admit as members.
Labour Relations Act ss 161 & 200 — legal standing of trade unions; trade union constitution — scope of membership binding; admission outside registered scope ultra vires and void; representation by legal practitioner under s161(1)(a) distinct from union authority under s200; application of Lufil precedent.
21 June 2024
Reported
Whether delegated fund-management operations can satisfy the section 9D foreign business establishment exemption.
Income Tax Act s9D – foreign business establishment (FBE) – meaning of “business” and “primary operations”; delegation/outsourcing of functions; distinction between fund management (oversight/regulatory responsibility) and investment trading; purposive interpretation balancing anti-deferral and international competitiveness; economic substance requirement for FBE.
21 June 2024
Reported
Direct access refused; High Court’s dismissal of premature acting‑leader recognition and sought substitute relief was incompetent.
Constitutional jurisdiction — traditional leadership recognition; direct access to Constitutional Court — interests of justice; prematurity of acting-leader appointment; judicial review for failure to make a decision; functus officio and limits on remedial substitution; parties bound by pleadings; urgency in urgent-motion procedure.
21 June 2024
May 2024
Reported
Consent order requiring municipal purchase of properties set aside for statutory non‑compliance and attorney’s lack of authority.
Consent orders and settlements — Eke requirements — relation to lis, consistency with Constitution and statute, practical advantage; municipal agents’ authority — municipality may not be bound to acquire immovable property absent prior statutory compliance (section 79(24) LGO, Structures Act); rescission of consent orders — common law grounds, delay and discretion; condonation for late filings; costs.
31 May 2024
Reported
Majority: prenuptial maintenance clause may co-exist with antenuptial contract; ousting section 7 not properly before court.
Matrimonial property — Prenuptial agreement providing for maintenance — Relationship with antenuptial contract — Enforceability as donation vs. contract — Section 7 Divorce Act — Whether prenuptial maintenance ousts court discretion — Pleadings and scope of appeal.
22 May 2024
Reported
s189A(13)(d) can be standalone compensation; s189A(18) does not oust Labour Court’s s189A(13) jurisdiction.
Labour law – mass retrenchments – section 189A(13): remedial hierarchy and availability of (d) compensation as standalone relief; section 189A(18): scope — precludes adjudication under s191(5)(b)(ii) only, does not oust s189A(13) jurisdiction; procedural fairness and consultation obligations; selection criteria (knowledge, skills and behaviour); reinstatement primary remedy for substantive unfairness; costs awarded.
21 May 2024
Reported
Majority refused direct access/leave: OCNS held functional; applicants’ non‑compliance due to tardiness; dissent favoured PAJA review and proactive investigation by the Commission.
Electoral law — Election timetables and section 27 compliance — OCNS (online nomination portal) functionality — objective impossibility to comply — Commission’s power under s20(2)(a) to amend timetable — PAJA review for failure to consider complaints — Plascon‑Evans approach to disputes of fact in urgent electoral motion proceedings — direct access and issue estoppel under s96(1) Electoral Act — admissibility of further evidence and co‑respondent affidavits.
20 May 2024
Reported
A finally convicted and sentenced respondent is disqualified under section 47(1)(e), and remission does not negate that sentence.
Constitutional law – section 47(1)(e) – interpretation and operation of proviso; Presidential remission – administrative effect on execution of sentence not retrospective alteration of judicial sentence; civil contempt – criminal conviction for disqualification purposes; Electoral Act – Commission empowered to determine candidate eligibility; recusal – double requirement of reasonableness; no reasonable apprehension of bias from general, non‑specific public statement by Commissioner.
20 May 2024
Reported
Delictual debts based on alleged presidential unconstitutionality became due on the facts and prescribed before constitutional confirmation.
Prescription — delictual claims against State organs — cause of action completed when wrongful conduct and damage occur and creditor has identity/facts; Constitutional Court confirmation not precondition to debt becoming due; Institution Act condonation requires court to decide prescription; interruption under Prescription Act requires process whereby creditor claims payment; third‑party review/intervention did not interrupt prescription here.
6 May 2024
April 2024
Reported
A court may not unilaterally alter a parties’ settlement agreement without giving them the opportunity to be heard.
Settlement agreements – Courts’ power to make compromises orders of court; limits on judicial intervention; Eke requirements (must relate to dispute; not offensive to law/public policy; practical advantage); audi alteram partem; inadmissible evidence; separation of powers and public-funds oversight.
25 April 2024
Reported
Whether rule 39(2)(b) permits de novo review and the correct causation test for merger‑specific retrenchments.
Competition law — mergers — Commission rule 39(1)–(2): special statutory review requiring Tribunal to decide afresh whether a firm has substantially complied with merger conditions; causation — test for merger‑specific retrenchments requires factual (but‑for) and legal/proximate causation; mere ‘some nexus’ to controller incentives insufficient; appellate deference to Tribunal’s specialised factual findings.
17 April 2024
Reported
Rule 46A covers residential property held by trusts; occupiers may be affected, but ESTA/PIE protections can obviate notice.
Execution – Rule 46A – Execution against residential immovable property of a judgment debtor – Applicability to property registered in name of juristic persons (trusts) if property is residential by character and use – Distinction between provisions directed at a judgment debtor’s primary residence and those applying to residential property generally – Rule 46A(3)(b) notice to “any other party who may be affected” – Interaction with ESTA, PIE and huur gaat voor koop – Standing and constitutional jurisdiction.
12 April 2024
Reported
A free loan-cover insurance supply can be taxable; s16(3)(c) deductions require apportionment when supplies are partly exempt.
VAT — free-of-charge supplies — a supply for no consideration may still be a taxable supply if made in the course or furtherance of an enterprise; section 10(23) valuation rule does not determine taxability; section 16(3)(c) deduction for payments under insurance contracts; mixed supplies — part taxable/part exempt — apportionment required; section 17 input-tax apportionment does not directly govern s16(3)(c) but apportionment is implied by statutory scheme; capitalisation of fees does not change their character.
12 April 2024
December 2023
Reported
Section 12(3) may treat a lawyer‑related legal conclusion as a ‘fact’ where it is necessary to complete a negligence cause of action.
Prescription — Prescription Act s 12(3) — "facts from which the debt arises" — distinction between primary facts and legal conclusions — narrow exception in professional negligence claims against legal practitioners where a legal conclusion is essential to complete minimum facts — knowledge (actual and deemed) and discoverability — access to courts.
18 December 2023
Reported
Unauthorised attorney withdrawal of a labour claim is ineffective; case revived where no ratification, estoppel, or applicant blame for delay.
Labour law — withdrawal of proceedings by attorney without client’s authority; implied/ostensible authority and estoppel; ratification; revival of withdrawn claims; attribution of delay and prejudice in revival applications; constitutional right to access courts (s 34) and fair labour practices (s 23).
12 December 2023
Reported
Whether a lease clause ousts Magistrate’s Court jurisdiction; Court refuses leave to appeal and remits matter.
Jurisdiction clauses — interpretation: consent to jurisdiction v exclusive ouster; whether private parties can oust domestic court jurisdiction; access to courts (s34) and principle of legality in jurisdiction challenges; leave to appeal — interests of justice and prospects of success.
12 December 2023
Reported
Deeming asylum claims abandoned for late visa renewal violates non-refoulement, dignity, children’s rights and is irrational.
Refugee law — Asylum procedure — Visa renewal — Whether automatic deeming of abandonment for failure to renew violates non-refoulement and international refugee obligations. Constitutional law — Rights infringed — dignity, just administrative action, children’s rights, freedom and security of the person, life. Administrative law — Procedural fairness — Standing Committee endorsement and absence of merits adjudication. Rationality review — Whether legislative measure bears rational connection to legitimate governmental aims (backlog reduction, deterrence).
12 December 2023
Reported
Direct access granted; 200/200 seat split to admit independent candidates is constitutional and non-discriminatory.
Electoral law — Electoral Amendment Act — 200 regional / 200 compensatory seat split allowing independent candidates — whether split is rational and consistent with constitutional requirement of proportional representation — risk of overhang — right to vote and to stand for public office — burden of proof on challenger — direct access.
4 December 2023
Reported
Court finds 15% nomination threshold unjustifiably limits political rights; invalidity suspended and interim 1 000‑signature remedy ordered.
Electoral law — independent candidates — nomination/signature threshold (15% of regional quota) — unjustifiable limitation of section 18 (freedom of association) and section 19 (political rights) — declaration of invalidity suspended with interim reading‑in (1 000 signatures); recalculation provisions (items 7, 12, 23) challenged and recalculation relief refused.
4 December 2023
Reported
Immigration provisions forcing foreign parents of South African children to leave or stop work were unconstitutional and read in to protect parental and child rights.
Immigration law — constitutionality of ss 10(6), 11(6), 18(2) of Immigration Act and reg 9(9)(a) — limits on human dignity, family life and children's rights; Section 36 analysis — unjustified limitation; Remedy — suspended declaration of invalidity and reading-in to protect foreign parents of citizen/permanent-resident children; Administrative law — exhaustion of remedies and 'dirty hands' precluding relief.
4 December 2023
November 2023
Reported
Whether provincial executive may impose gambling levies amounting to taxes without complying with section 228 and the Process Act.
Constitutional law – Provincial taxation – Section 228(1) – Provincial Legislature’s power to impose taxes – Dominant-purpose test to distinguish taxes from regulatory charges (Shuttleworth) – Requirement of sufficient nexus between levy and regulatory scheme (Westbank/Greenhouse Gas) – Empowering provisions in provincial gambling statute invalid to the extent they authorise Executive to impose levies as taxes – Repayment (condictio indebiti and s172) – PAJA delay objection dismissed.
29 November 2023
Reported
A court may order in camera review of allegedly privileged documents to balance open justice and legal professional privilege under s32.
Superior Courts Act s32 – open justice principle – legal professional (litigation) privilege – in camera review/judicial peek – balancing privilege and openness – procedure for review of allegedly privileged material – confidentiality undertakings – records to be made public if documents found not privileged.
28 November 2023
Reported
Interpretation and application of Article 13(b): high, forward‑looking 'grave risk' threshold; balancing risk against available protective measures.
Hague Convention (Article 13(b)) – interpretation of 'grave risk' of physical or psychological harm and 'intolerable situation' – standard of proof (balance of probabilities) – forward‑looking enquiry – obligation to consider ameliorative measures in state of habitual residence – summary and expeditious nature of Convention proceedings – courts to avoid converting return applications into merit custody hearings.
27 November 2023
Reported
An officer executing a s43 warrant has no general discretion to refuse arrest; limited manner/timing judgments permitted.
Criminal procedure – Arrests under warrant (s43 CPA) – Executing officer’s powers – No general discretion to refuse arrest under s43(2); s44 'may' denotes who may execute – Contrast with warrantless arrests under s40(1) where discretion to arrest arises – Limited operational/humanitarian value judgments permitted – Costs: punitive order set aside for material misdirection.
14 November 2023
Reported
Once-and-for-all rule applies to a single cause of action; distinct causes of action cannot be barred by that rule.
Civil procedure – "once and for all" rule – applicability limited to a single cause of action; distinct causes of action (unlawful arrest and detention vs malicious prosecution) may be pursued separately. Development of common law – extension/restriction requires compliance with s 39(2) of the Constitution. Constitutional right – denial of adjudication implicates s 34 right of access to courts. Misapplication vs development – where change impacts constitutional rights, higher courts’ jurisdiction engaged.
14 November 2023
October 2023
Reported
Court supplements prior invalidation of detention provisions, imposing interim safeguards and personal cost sanctions.
Immigration law — detention for deportation — constitutionality of s34(1)(b) and (d) — automatic judicial oversight and in-person appearance; Constitutional remedies — limits on revival of lapsed suspension — Court may grant supplementary relief under s172(1)(b); Interim safeguards — interests of justice test, 48‑hour bring‑to‑court rule, limited detention extensions; Costs — personal cost orders against public officials and disallowance of legal representatives’ fees for egregious litigation conduct.
30 October 2023
Section 7(3) of the Divorce Act unlawfully excludes redistribution on death and discriminates by excluding post‑1984 marriages.
Divorce Act s7(3) — redistribution remedy — exclusion where marriage dissolved by death — exclusion where marriage entered into on/after 1 Nov 1984 — equality (s9) — differentiation, indirect discrimination (gender), justification (s36) — reading‑in and suspended declaration — interim read‑in to Matrimonial Property Act (s36A).
10 October 2023
Reported
Whether investigatory disciplinary evidence rendered a criminal trial unfair where convictions rested on formal section 220 admissions.
• Criminal procedure – formal admissions – section 220 C.P.A. – admissions as sufficient proof and generally conclusive. • Evidence – admissibility of employer investigatory/disciplinary evidence in criminal trials – voluntariness and exclusion under s 35(5) Constitution. • Fair trial – whether evidence obtained in disciplinary processes rendered trial unfair – requires demonstrable reliance on such evidence. • Judicial bias – remarks by trial judge do not automatically establish reasonable apprehension of bias absent supporting record. • Constitutional Court jurisdiction – no jurisdiction where alleged irregularity did not raise a serious constitutional issue or failure of justice.
10 October 2023
Reported
A temporally‑limited ministerial power to amend tax Schedules (with parliamentary oversight) is constitutionally permissible; quota regime rational and lawful.
Constitutional law — separation of powers — delegation to Minister to amend Schedules to tax statutes — temporally limited regulatory delegation with parliamentary oversight permissible; Administrative law — rationality and procedural fairness of quota measures — rational connection to legitimate fiscal/anti‑abuse objective; International law — Vienna Conventions allow receiving State laws/regulations (including quantitative limits) to prevent abuse; Money Bills — section 77 not infringed where dominant purpose is regulatory implementation, subject to parliamentary confirmation.
3 October 2023
Reported
PAJA’s 180‑day review period begins when the applicant receives sufficient reasons for the administrative action.
Administrative law — PAJA s 7(1) — 180‑day time period for judicial review — period runs from date reasons for administrative action became known or ought to have become known to the applicant. Adequacy of reasons — a reasoned decision communicated to the applicant starts the PAJA clock; later elaborations that do not supply materially new reasons do not reset the period. Preventing procedural gamesmanship — requests for additional reasons cannot be used to indefinitely delay the PAJA time limit. Export/VAT Regulations — substantive entitlement to VAT refund not decided because procedural bar was dispositive.
3 October 2023
August 2023
Reported
Whether presidential DPP appointments become final on authorised personal notification or require public promulgation, and whether NDPP had authority to notify.
National Prosecuting Authority Act s 13(1)(a) – appointment of provincial DPPs – finality and functus officio; personal versus public notification of executive appointments; authority of NDPP to communicate Presidential decisions; executive action v administrative action (PAJA) – standards of review; legality and rationality of revocation of inchoate appointments.
24 August 2023
Reported
Labour Court’s overlooking of opposing affidavit breached section 34; s145(2)(b) requires improper obtaining proved on balance of probabilities.
Labour law; review of arbitration award under s145(2)(b) LRA — award set aside only if improperly obtained proven on balance of probabilities; constitutional right of access to courts and fair hearing (s34) — overlooking filed opposing papers breaches right to be heard; hearsay and use of affidavits from separate litigation — all related affidavits must be considered; remedy — remit to Labour Court to determine review and rule 11 applications with all admissible evidence.
21 August 2023
Reported
15 August 2023
Reported
2 August 2023
July 2023
Reported
Precautionary suspension lawful absent a real risk of conflict or a reasonable apprehension of bias.
Constitutional law – Chapter 9 institution – suspension under section 194(3)(a) – precautionary suspension lawful where rational to protect office integrity; administrative law – apprehension of bias and conflict of interest – real, reasonable risk required under section 96(2)(b); parliamentary procedure – sub judice rule and rule 129AD(3) – severance by Constitutional Court cures rule defect; confirmation of High Court orders affecting Presidential conduct – sections 167(5) and 172(2)(a); interlocutory execution – section 18 Superior Courts Act.
13 July 2023
Reported
12 July 2023
Reported
Leave to appeal refused where dispute about adequacy of SACE’s investigation was primarily factual, lacking constitutional public-importance.
Administrative law – statutory regulator’s disciplinary powers – adequacy of investigative process under SACEA section 14 – whether reliance on another body’s investigatory report amounts to insufficient investigation; Constitutional jurisdiction – exercise of public power by statutory body – when factual challenges warrant Constitutional Court intervention; Appeal procedure – leave to appeal to Constitutional Court requires arguable constitutional point or public importance and interests of justice.
12 July 2023
June 2023
Reported
Section 4 unfairly discriminates by denying never-married parents streamlined access to the Family Advocate; invalidity confirmed with interim reading-in.
• Constitutional law – equality (section 9) – discrimination on basis of marital status – indirect discrimination by legislative provision allowing streamlined access to Family Advocate only for married/divorcing parents. • Children’s rights – best interests of the child (section 28(2)) – discriminatory limitation impacting children's right to timely, fair processes. • Remedies – declaration of invalidity confirmed, suspended for 24 months; interim reading-in to enable access to Family Advocate; Parliament to cure legislative defect. • Costs – Minister ordered to pay specified High Court costs and applicant awarded costs in Constitutional Court.
29 June 2023
Reported
29 June 2023
Reported
28 June 2023
Reported
A non-member's voluntary, unobjecting participation in self-regulatory proceedings constitutes submission to that body's jurisdiction.
Advertising self-regulation; non-statutory industry body (ARB); submission to jurisdiction by non-member via participation; ad-alert mechanism; judicial avoidance of unnecessary constitutional determinations; appellate restraint on disturbing factual findings.
26 June 2023
Reported
Parliament failed to facilitate required public participation for material amendments expanding the statutory definition of “waste”, rendering those provisions invalid.
Constitutional law — Parliamentary public participation — Sections 59(1)(a) and 72(1)(a) — Material amendments to draft legislation — Definition of “waste” expanded; consequential definitions (“commercial value”, “trade in”) and transitional provision — Failure to facilitate further public involvement — Declaration of invalidity.
26 June 2023
Reported
Section 29(8) unlawfully gives the Minister veto over municipal by‑laws on building matters, infringing municipal autonomy.
Local government – Municipal legislative authority (sections 43(c), 151, 156) – Building Act s29(8) requiring ministerial approval for by‑laws relating to erection of a building – ministerial veto usurps municipal power and breaches separation of powers – interpretive narrow reading cannot save provision – retrospective invalidity applies but cannot produce retrospective criminal liability.
23 June 2023
Reported
Section 12(1) of the Constitution — principle of non-refoulement — section 49(1) and 34 of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 — illegal foreigner’s intention to apply for asylum — lawfulness of detention
12 June 2023
Reported
Whether the Act’s involuntary admission and Review Board regime limits the applicant’s constitutional rights.
Mental Health Care Act — Involuntary inpatient admission (ss 33–34) — procedural safeguards and timing (initial assessments; 72‑hour review; Review Board within 30 days; automatic High Court review) — whether automatic immediate judicial review required — Review Boards’ independence (Chapter IV) — s 12(1), s 34 and s 10 of the Constitution — international law considered (ICCPR, UN Mental Health Principles, CRPD).
9 June 2023
May 2023
Reported
An absolute statutory ban on disclosure of tax records is unconstitutional; PAIA’s public‑interest override must be applicable to taxpayer information subject to safeguards.
Constitutional law — right of access to information (s32) and freedom of expression (s16) — absolute statutory prohibition on disclosure of taxpayer records — whether exclusion of PAIA public‑interest override (s46) is justifiable — Tax Administration Act secrecy provisions — compatibility with privacy, voluntary tax compliance and international exchange obligations — remedy: reading‑in and suspension to allow parliamentary cure.
30 May 2023
Reported
Parliament failed to reasonably facilitate public participation in passing the Traditional and Khoi‑San Leadership Act, rendering it constitutionally invalid (suspended).
• Constitutional law – Parliamentary and provincial obligation to facilitate public involvement – Sections 59(1)(a), 72(1)(a), 118(1)(a) – reasonableness standard for public participation. • Administrative/constitutional procedure – adequacy of notice, pre‑hearing education, accessibility, translation, accurate recording and transmission of submissions. • NCOP–provincial relationship – NCOP may not rely on provincial hearings unless delegates attend or receive accurate reports; provincial shortcomings imputable to NCOP. • Remedy – declaration of invalidity for failure to facilitate public participation; suspension of invalidity to allow re‑enactment. • Costs – adverse costs order against those who opposed the challenge, including costs of three counsel.
30 May 2023
April 2023
Reported
20 April 2023