|
Citation
|
Judgment date
|
| November 2014 |
|
|
Whether "as determined by the Master" referred to an existing or future Master determination and whether an interdict was justified.
Interpretation of consent order – meaning of "as determined by the Master" – whether referring to prior Master determination or future determination; interdictory relief — requisites for final interdict (Setlogelo) and availability of alternative remedies; declaratory relief inappropriate where determination not yet made; costs reallocation for interlocutory applications.
|
14 November 2014 |
| October 2014 |
|
|
Reported
Removal of prosecutors for perceived bias must show substantive unfairness; judicial recusal test does not apply to prosecutors.
Criminal procedure – plea under s106(1)(h) – challenge to prosecutor’s title; Apprehension of bias and fair-trial right (s35(3)) — prosecutors’ role distinct from judges; Test for disqualifying prosecutors — Killian test not SARFU judicial-recusal test; Removal of prosecutor does not automatically entitle accused to acquittal under s106(4); Reservation and appeal of question of law under s319/s322 permitted in favour of the State.
|
21 October 2014 |
|
Reported
Rape by an outsider while an employee is on duty does not ordinarily arise out of employment and is not barred by COIDA.
Compensation law – COIDA s 35(1) – exclusivity requires an "accident" arising out of and in the course of employment; Causal connection – risk incidental to employment; Intentional assault by outsider – motive unconnected to employment severs COIDA exclusivity; Policy – rape/sexual assault generally not an inherent occupational risk and may give rise to common-law claims.
|
8 October 2014 |
|
Reported
Court set aside unlawful tender award and remitted the matter where substitution under PAJA was unjustified.
• Administrative law – tender evaluation – error of law in declaring tender non-responsive;
• Procurement – fairness, transparency and competitiveness under s 217 Constitution and PAJA;
• Remedy – substitution under s 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA is extraordinary and sparingly applied; remittal ordinarily appropriate;
• Late tender submissions – condonation/disqualification issues do not cure a decision affected by material legal error.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Delivery with payment and documented handover transferred ownership despite subsequent theft by the seller's employee.
Sale of goods – delivery and transfer of dominium – ownership in cash sale passes on delivery if transferor and transferee intend transfer. Company law – attribution of intention – identify directing mind relevant to particular act; limited-role brokers not necessarily directing minds. Theft by employee – subsequent dishonest act does not vitiate an earlier valid transfer of ownership. Delict – no duty to advise on invoicing and no vicarious liability where theft unrelated to performance of employment act.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Accepted s 112(2) plea showed premeditated murder; no substantial and compelling circumstances justified departing from life imprisonment.
Criminal law – Murder – Premeditation – short interval between intent and act may suffice where conduct shows steps to implement a plan (fetching petrol, pouring, locking, spreading fuel). Plea procedure – s 112(2) CPA – written plea accepted by the State fixes factual matrix for conviction and sentencing. Sentence – Minimum sentences Act (s 51(1)) – substantial and compelling circumstances absent where offence is brutal, exploited vulnerability and offender failed to render assistance. Appeal – Appellate interference limited absent material misdirection or a sentence that is shockingly inappropriate (S v Malgas).
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Reported
Appellant's conviction set aside after inadmissible confessions were admitted and no prima facie case existed.
Criminal law – Murder – Admission of statement/warning statement – written confession obtained by non-commissioned officer and while accused unrepresented – inadmissible; Criminal procedure – discharge under s 174 – presiding officer must raise mero motu if no prima facie case; Constitutional law – s 35 fair trial rights – duty of judges and prosecutors to manage trials and protect accused's rights; Prosecutorial duty – assist court, seek admissibility rulings or trial-within-a-trial; Effect – conviction and sentence set aside where inadmissible evidence induced accused to testify.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
A licensed network operator may exercise s 22 rights without landowner consent but must comply with applicable law and is reviewable under PAJA.
Electronic Communications Act s 22 – licensee’s right to enter and construct without landowner consent; s 22(2) "due regard" requires compliance with applicable law but not to limit s 22 rights; organs of state are not differently treated as landowners; actions under s 22 are administrative action reviewable under PAJA; municipal wayleave processes or moratoria do not override s 22 authority.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Applicant failed to show a reasonable prospect of business rescue under s 131(4)(a); liquidation was appropriate.
Companies Act — business rescue (s 131(4)(a)) — requirement of a 'reasonable prospect' of rescue — applicant must place a factual foundation showing reasonable grounds; speculative or conditional third‑party offers insufficient; comparison with return in liquidation where secured creditor likely to recover capital; business rescue will not be ordered if it cannot provide a better return than liquidation.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Reported
Appellant failed to prove negligence or causation from delivery management; appeal dismissed with costs.
Delict — medical negligence — obstetric management and causation in shoulder dystocia; foetal weight estimation unreliable; emergency McRoberts’ manoeuvre permissible; informed consent—patient‑centred disclosure test not decided because negligence not established.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Reported
A 10% exchange‑control exit levy was an unlawful tax and must be repaid to the applicant with interest.
Exchange control – Exit levy – Whether regulation 10(1)(c) authorises a general revenue‑raising charge – Statutory procedure for regulations raising revenue (s 9(4) Currency and Exchanges Act) – Constitution’s money‑bill limits – Condictio indebiti and repayment of payments made under protest – Delegation to authorised dealers and ‘closed door’ policy.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Appellate court acquitted the appellant where the 15‑year‑old complainant’s contradictory, uncorroborated evidence failed to prove rape beyond reasonable doubt.
Criminal law – Rape of minor (15) – Single witness evidence – cautionary approach required – material contradictions between statements, testimony and medical report – lack of corroboration – prosecution failed to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt – conviction set aside.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Reported
Courts must defer to agreed arbitration processes; arbitrators may decide arbitrability and declaratory relief was premature.
Arbitration law — international arbitration — competence‑competence — arbitrator may decide existence, validity and scope of arbitration agreement; party autonomy respected; courts should not entertain premature declaratory relief where tribunal empowered to determine arbitrability; seat of arbitration and New York Convention support deference to arbitration.
|
1 October 2014 |
|
Conviction set aside where complainant’s recantation satisfied De Jager test and witnesses died, making remittal impossible.
Criminal procedure – appeal on merits; application to lead further evidence on appeal – De Jager requirements (explanation, prima facie likelihood, material relevance) satisfied; recantation by complainant; death of principal witnesses preventing remittal; setting aside conviction in interests of justice.
|
1 October 2014 |
| September 2014 |
|
|
Reported
Court enforces church arbitration clause, refuses secular adjudication of doctrinal dispute; appeal dismissed.
Arbitration — validity and enforcement of arbitration agreement under Arbitration Act s 3(2); voluntary association/religious body — internal disciplinary procedure and convener’s power to conclude arbitration agreement; doctrine of entanglement — avoidance of secular adjudication of core doctrinal and governance disputes; procedural complaints — delay, bias, legal representation and waiver of rights; scope for judicial review limited to legality.
|
29 September 2014 |
|
Reported
No binding contract where tender documents prescribe a formal acceptance procedure that was not followed.
Contract/Tender law – Mode of acceptance in tender documents – form of offer and acceptance and issuance of final contract required – failure to comply prevents creation of vinculum juris; Alternative tender does not displace general conditions; Municipal procurement and supply‑chain formalities binding; Internal irregularities/unauthorised acts do not create contract where formal acceptance absent.
|
29 September 2014 |
|
Circumstantial and medical evidence supported inferring the appellant killed the deceased; appeal dismissed.
Criminal law – murder (dolus eventualis); circumstantial evidence – drawing reasonable inferences (R v Blom) – expert post‑mortem evidence excludes suicide; credibility findings; s 174 discharge discretion.
|
29 September 2014 |
|
Reported
State may charge under s3 despite filed‑off serial number; ballistic report not always required to prove ammunition.
Firearms Control Act ss 3 and 4 – possession of firearm with altered/removed serial number – choice of charge under s 3 or s 4(1)(f)(iv). Prosecutorial discretion – dominus litis – courts will not ordinarily interfere with charge preference absent exceptional circumstances. Proof of ammunition – ballistic report helpful but not invariably required; admissible evidence of ammunition found in a working firearm can suffice.
|
29 September 2014 |
|
Reported
SCA: s16(1)(b) requires special leave for appeals from high‑court decisions taken on appeal; one sentence reduced, other leave refused.
Criminal procedure – appeals from high court sitting as court of appeal – Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 s 16(1)(b) requires special leave from the SCA for appeals against high‑court decisions taken on appeal to it. Criminal procedure – s 309C petitions – refusal by high court is a decision on appeal and appeal to SCA requires special leave. Appellate review of sentence – interference only where misdirection, failure of justice, or sentence so disproportionate no reasonable court could impose it. Procedure – SCA Rule 6 and requirement to demonstrate reasonable prospects and special circumstances for special leave.
|
29 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Whether a community may use a company as its section 104 MPRDA vehicle and whether the Tribal Council is the community’s authorised representative.
Mineral law – Preferent community prospecting rights – Whether a corporate vehicle may act as a community under s 104 MPRDA – control, shareholding and community benefit requirements. Traditional leadership – Recognition and locus of traditional/tribal council – interplay of TLGFA transitional provisions and provincial legislation. Administrative law – Procedural fairness – duty to consult communities and to heed Constitutional Court guidance when granting prospecting rights. Company/shareholders – Protective veto and anti‑dilution measures can ensure effective community control for section 104 purposes.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Reported
High court erred in replacing a carefully reasoned non‑custodial sentence with direct imprisonment without factual or legal justification.
Criminal law – Sentence – Fraud – Appropriateness of correctional supervision combined with suspended imprisonment – Appellate interference only where material misdirection or shockingly inappropriate sentence; speculative reasoning by appeal court improper.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Where parties settle all disputes, an appeal that would have no practical effect must be dismissed under s16(2)(a)(i).
Superior Courts Act s 16(2)(a)(i) – dismissal of appeal when decision sought will have no practical effect; mootness and absence of lis where parties settle; limited discretion to hear academic appeals only in narrow public-law circumstances; deference to institutional decision-making on allocation of state-funded legal aid.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Whether pressure-care that risked life could be required to prevent pressure sores in a haemodynamically unstable patient.
Medical negligence – pressure sores in critically ill patient – causation and avoidability – evaluation of conflicting expert opinion – application of Bolam refined by Bolitho (logical basis and weighing comparative risks and benefits).
|
26 September 2014 |
|
A charge-sheet error citing the wrong minimum-sentence subsection does not automatically bar imposition of life imprisonment.
Criminal Law – Minimum sentences – s 51(1) v s 51(2) of Criminal Law Amendment Act – charge-sheet misdescription – effect on fair trial – prejudice required to vitiate sentence; life imprisonment may be imposed where facts invoke Part I despite clerical/statutory reference error.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Youthfulness and first‑offender status rendered life imprisonment disproportionate for rape of a six‑year‑old; sentence reduced to 20 years.
Criminal law – Sentencing – Rape of a child under 16 – Application of s 51 Criminal Law Amendment Act (minimum sentences) – Duty to consider substantial and compelling circumstances and proportionality – Youthfulness and first‑offender status as mitigating factors – Appellate substitution of sentence where remittal impractical.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Majority: failure to secure an informed waiver of legal representation and assist an undefended accused vitiated the trial.
Criminal law – right to legal representation – validity of waiver by unrepresented accused; assistance to undefended accused with cross‑examination; admission of medical report without viva voce evidence; prejudice and vitiation of trial; high court's duty to ensure lower court proceedings were 'in accordance with justice'.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Inadequate s162/s164 questioning and inconsistent, uncorroborated evidence rendered the child testimony inadmissible; conviction set aside.
Criminal law — Evidence — Child witnesses — Competence and admissibility — s162–s164 Criminal Procedure Act — Presiding officer’s duty to enquire and properly admonish — Inadequate questioning renders testimony inadmissible; contradictions and absent medical testimony render conviction unsafe.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
No duty to forewarn accused of intent to exceed statutory minimum; 17‑year sentence for aggravated robbery upheld.
Criminal law – Sentencing – Robbery with aggravating circumstances – No duty to forewarn accused of intention to exceed statutory minimum – Adequate reasons required to depart from minimum – 17 years’ imprisonment upheld.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Asylum seekers and refugees lawfully present may apply for trading licences; closures under valid permits are unlawful.
Refugee and asylum-seeker rights – right to seek employment and self-employment – interaction of s22 Constitution and s27(f) Refugees Act – Lebowa Business Act, Businesses Act and municipal land-use scheme do not bar non-citizens from applying for trading licences – closures and confiscations under policing operations unlawful – dignity and international obligations considered.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Forensic social worker’s evaluative evidence upheld a child’s account to sustain one indecent-assault conviction, but not another.
Criminal law – indecent assault – adequacy of conduct (kissing lower stomach vs deliberate exposure) to constitute indecent assault. Child sexual abuse – single child witness – role and weight of forensic social worker’s evaluative evidence beyond hearsay. Evidence – sensory descriptions (taste/texture of ejaculate) by a child as probative of sexual assault.
|
26 September 2014 |
|
Premature resignation from a fixed-term retention contract constitutes breach; employer may elect to claim the unpaid balance.
Contract interpretation – fixed-term employment – retention scheme – premature resignation as repudiation – employer’s election under breach clause to claim paid amounts or balance for remaining term.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Long‑term incestuous rape of daughters upheld; medical and corroborative evidence supported convictions and life sentences.
Criminal law – Rape – Incestuous rape of young daughters by father – Credibility and corroboration of young witnesses; medical evidence (Form J88) – Pregnancy and termination arranged by accused as corroboration – Sentencing – application of s 51(1) Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997; substantial and compelling circumstances; failure to adduce mitigation – Procedural – mero motu grant of leave to appeal questioned.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Accrual proved to defendant’s estate; accountant’s compilations admissible and cross‑examination admissions binding, award amended to R6,478,717.75.
Family law – Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 – accrual claim under s 3(1); antenuptial contract – effect of excluded‑assets clause on commencement value; discovery – s 7 obligations and consequences of non‑compliance; admissibility – accountant’s compilation from discovered documents; admissions in cross‑examination binding defendant; calculation of inflated commencement value by CPI.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Failure to prove the expert’s four‑hour closed‑reduction theory meant the department’s delay was not shown to cause paralysis.
But‑for (factual) causation; expert medical evidence reliability; closed reduction of cervical facet dislocation; four‑hour cut‑off theory; balance of probabilities standard; negligence and wrongfulness tied to causation.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Fraudulent hunting permits and misuse of customs documents required substantial custody and a heavy fine, but a 30‑year term was disproportionate.
Environmental law (NEMBA) – restricted activities and permits – fraudulent procurement of hunting permits for illegal trade in rhino horn; Customs and Excise Act s 80(1)(i) – improper use of documents; Sentencing – weight of guilty plea, pre‑trial custody, inappropriate grouping of counts, misdirection by trial and high courts; Conservation – constitutional duty to protect biodiversity; Institutional failures in permit supervision.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Sentencing appeal dismissed: insufficient mitigation and serious, planned breach of trust justified custodial sentence.
Criminal procedure – sentencing appeal – standard for appellate interference (material misdirection or striking disparity); sentencing of white‑collar offences – position of trust, planning and amount as aggravating factors; duty of accused to place sufficient mitigation evidence before court; role of restitution and remorse in mitigation.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Whether the delictual action for adultery should be retained — court finds it outdated and abolishes it.
Delict – actio iniuriarum – adultery – contumelia and loss of consortium – whether cause of action should be retained – court abolishes adultery-based delictual claim as outdated; leaves open patrimonial (lex Aquilia) remedies and other marriage-related delicts.
|
25 September 2014 |
|
The President may refer a two-judge leave refusal only in truly exceptional circumstances; applicant’s case failed.
Superior Courts Act s 17(2)(f) – President’s power to refer two-judge decisions in 'exceptional circumstances'; meaning and strict application of 'exceptional circumstances'; limits on rehearing/re-argument; approbate and reprobate; accounting disputes not ordinarily warranting referral.
|
23 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Prosecutorial failure to disclose relevant information at a bail hearing can attract delictual liability; s 42 immunity unavailable for negligent omissions.
Delict – omissions – prosecutorial duty at bail hearings – duty to place all relevant information before the court; failure may be wrongful and actionable. Negligence – standard of reasonable prosecutor; foreseeability of violent conduct by accused. Causation – factual ('but for') and legal causation where inadequate disclosure leads to release and subsequent harm. Statutory immunity – s 42 NPA Act: must be pleaded; requires good faith and exercise of power with due care; does not cover negligent omissions. Quantum – psychiatric injury proven by expert evidence.
|
23 September 2014 |
|
Reported
Police who knowingly withhold evidence and instigate prosecution render detention unlawful and state liable.
Delict — unlawful arrest and detention; malicious prosecution — absence of reasonable grounds and animus iniuriandi; police duty to disclose material facts to prosecutor and court; constitutional right to freedom (s 12(1)(a)) — continued detention despite remand orders may remain unlawful where police misled authorities.
|
23 September 2014 |
|
Appeal confined to costs dismissed: no exceptional circumstances under s 21A(3); intervenor lacked requisite interest under s 35(11).
• Civil procedure – appealability of costs-only appeals – s 21A(1) & (3) Supreme Court Act – requirement of 'exceptional circumstances'.
• Restitution of Land Rights Act – s 35(11) – rescission of order – requirement that pending appeal relate to the order and that applicant be affected.
• Intervention – direct and substantial interest required to intervene in pending appeal.
• Costs – restraint in awarding costs in restitution matters to avoid deterring claims.
|
22 September 2014 |
|
Appellate court orders robbery sentence to run concurrently with murder sentence where offences were inextricably linked; effective term reduced to 20 years.
Criminal law – sentencing discretion – appellate interference where trial court misdirects or fails to consider cumulative effect; Concurrent sentences – offences inextricably linked by locality, time, protagonists and common intent justify concurrency; Antedating of sentence – s 282 Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977.
|
22 September 2014 |
|
Reported
A referee’s s19bis factual findings stand unless impugned by admissible evidence showing they were unreasonable, irregular or wrong.
Section 19bis (Superior Courts Act) – referee appointed to enquire into accounts – referee’s report adopted by court equates to court’s factual finding; standard of impugning: only if unreasonable, irregular or wrong. Motion proceedings – factual disputes must be raised by admissible evidence; hearsay expert reports unsupported by primary confirmatory affidavits are inadmissible. Burden on challenger to persuade court to remit or reject referee’s findings.
|
22 September 2014 |
|
Whether a purchaser has standing to seek a declaration and when municipal bulk contribution becomes payable under ss 48 and 63 of the Ordinance.
Administrative law; declaratory relief – standing under s 19(1)(a)(iii) – requirement of a direct and substantial interest. Town Planning and Townships Ordinance – construction of ss 48 and 63 – timing and enforceability of bulk services contributions; payment tied to implementation of scheme or transferee undertakings. Effect of municipal direction – fixes amount but not immediate payment demand.
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Reported
A consent order admitting creditor status under s345(1)(a) establishes a due debt and supports liquidation; punitive costs awarded.
Companies Act s 345(1)(a) — creditor status — consent agreement made an order of court admitting indebtedness — effect on locus standi and liquid debt; provisional winding-up; rebuttable presumption of insolvency; abuse of process; punitive costs (attorney-and-client including two counsel).
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Applying s 51 minimum-sentence provisions without timely notice to the accused is a material misdirection vitiating sentence.
Sentencing — Minimum sentences (s 51 Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997) — Requirement to give accused timely notice the State will rely on prescribed minimum — Failure to warn constitutes procedural irregularity and material misdirection — Right to fair trial (s 35) — Remittal for reconsideration and pre-sentencing report where record insufficient to impose sentence on appeal.
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Reported
A generically manufactured contraceptive infringes a valid, inventive divisional patent; divisional status and claim breadth upheld.
Patent law – claim construction – purposive construction from perspective of skilled formulator; scope includes any known method achieving claimed dissolution rate. Patentability – inventive step – unexpected in vivo bioavailability of rapidly dissolving, acid‑labile drospirenone not obvious; guard against hindsight and ‘obvious to try’ without reasonable expectation of success. Divisional patents (s 37) – divisional may have different/broader claims than parent if within parent disclosure; improper divisional registration challenge is generally a review matter not a ground for revocation.
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Reported
A PAIA judicial ‘peek’ is permitted, but s80(3)(a) cannot be used to introduce new evidence to justify withholding.
Promotion of Access to Information Act – s 80 judicial inspection (judicial ‘peek’) – s 80(3)(a) ex parte representations must relate to contents of inspected record and cannot introduce new extraneous evidence – exemptions under ss 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a) – burden of proof on public body (s 81(3)) – public interest override (s 46).
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Main claim defective for non-joinder and inconsistency; alternative delictual misrepresentation claim stands.
Exception; pleadings — putative customary marriage v universal partnership; non-joinder of spouse; delict — fraudulent misrepresentation; pro tanto exception; appealability of orders granting leave to amend.
|
19 September 2014 |
|
Appellant’s life sentence for rape set aside where charges and s 51(1) application were defective; re-sentenced to eight years.
Criminal law – fair trial – accused must be informed of charges and possible minimum sentences under s 51(1) before being tried; Rape – evaluation of identification and corroboration; Duplication of convictions – kidnapping as part of rape; Sentencing – misapplication of minimum sentence provisions and need for pre-sentencing and victim impact reports.
|
19 September 2014 |