Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 403South Africa
S.M and Another v T.M and Others (38979/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 403 (25 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S.M and Another v T.M and Others (38979/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 403 (25 January 2022)
S.M and Another v T.M and Others (38979/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 403 (25 January 2022)
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sino date 25 January 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 38979/21
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
DATE:
25 January 2022
In
the matter between
S[....]
M[....]1
1
st
Applicant
S[....]
M[....]1
2
nd
Applicant
(as
father and guardian of the minor child)
N[....]
V[....]
M[....]2
And
T[....]
M[....]2
1
st
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
2
nd
Respondent
(Themba,
Hammanskraal)
PAULINA
SONO
3
rd
Respondent
THE
STATION COMMANDER, SOUTH AFRICAN
4
TH
Respondent
POLICE
SERVICE, THEMBA
PROVINCIAL
COMMISSIONER
SOUTH
AFRICAN
5
th
Respondent
POLICE
SERVICE, THEMBA
THE
MINISTER OF SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE
6
th
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF SOUTH AFRICAN
POLICE
SERVICE
7
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Munzhelele
J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (Mr M[....]1) brought an application for contempt of
court
order against the first and the third respondents (the
respondents). The applicant requests the following orders:
1.
that the first respondent be declared to be in wilful contempt of the
court order
granted on 17 August 2021
2.
That the respondents be declared to be in wilful contempt of the
court order
granted on the 12 October 2021.
3.
That the respondents each be committed to imprisonment for a period
of 90 days
without suspension, alternatively, suspended in the whole
or part on such terms and conditions considered appropriate by this
court.
4.
Second alternatively, that the court could order a punitive sanction
of a fine
in the amount of R150 000.
5.
The appointment of a
curator ad litem
Mr Stanely Malematja to
act in the minor child's best interest pending the outcome of the
report to be provided by the second respondent.
6.
The confirmation of the variation of paragraph 2.5 of the order dated
17 August
2021 with paragraph 3 of the order dated 12 October 2021.
7.
That the applicant be granted leave to file a further supplementary
affidavit
[2]
The respondents opposed the application to file a further
supplementary
affidavit. However, the respondents filed affidavits
were not signed and commissioned; as such, they were defective. The
application
for contempt of court was not opposed because the
respondents failed to apply for condonation from the court to be
allowed to file
their answering affidavits out of time. The fourth,
fifth, sixth, and seventh respondents filed their notice to abide by
the court's
decision.
# Background of the case
Background of the case
[3]
The background of this case has been obtained from the founding
affidavit
and the supplementary affidavits of the applicant. Since
April 2019 the applicant has been attempting to get an order
regulating
contact with his minor child whose primary residence and
care is with the respondents. The applicant and the first respondent
lived
together as they were in a relationship before and after the
child's birth until their separation on 28 February 2019. From then
onwards, the acrimony between the applicant and the first respondent
became serious until the matter was referred to the social
workers to
be resolved and for investigations.
[4]
The first respondent refused to engage the social worker to solve the
request by the applicant for contact with the child. On 10 June 2019,
the social worker completed her investigations and recommended
that
the minor child remain in the care of the first respondent and
maintain a connection to the applicant and his culture. The
respondents never implemented these recommendations.
[5]
In December 2020, when the applicant had financial means to pay the
attorney,
he started with the legal battle to gain access to his
minor child. But he could not succeed. In March 2021, the applicant
again
proceeded to seek contact with his child at the district court,
and the district court could not assist him.
[6]
The matter was brought on an urgent basis to the Gauteng High Court
in
Pretoria on 17 August 2021 for adjudication on the issue of
contact to the minor child, among others. The matter was heard before
Acting Judge Kuny on 17 August 2021, and an interim order was
granted. The applicant was granted the following orders pending the
outcome of Part B of the application:
1.
supervised contact with the minor child N[....] V[....] M[....]2
1.1.
every Tuesday from after school at 3.30 pm to 5.00 pm and
1.2.
every Thursday from after school at 3.30 pm to 5.00 pm
2.
the supervised contact is to commence on Tuesday the 24 August 2021
3.
Supervised contact is to take place at the social worker's office
located at
stand no: 80 unit 1 Temba, Hammanskraal, Gauteng or at the
location approved by the appointed social worker.
4.
The appointed social worker is to confirm with both the parties via
WhatsApp
the location of the supervised contact within 24 hours.
5.
The minor child will be dropped off at the specified location for
supervised
contact.
6.
The applicant shall have reasonable telephonic contact with the minor
child between
6.00-6.30 pm every night on days he does not exercise
his contact.
7.
If the social worker cannot attend the supervised contact, the
applicant will
exercise the supervised contact at the minor child's
home.
[7]
Even with the knowledge of the 17
th
August 2021 court
order, the first respondent continued to deny the applicant access to
the child. The third respondent was also
actively involved in
refusing the applicant's access to the child. The third respondent
was joined as the third respondent because
the minor child was
staying with her and had a direct interest in the matter. The
applicant also joined the fourth to the seventh
respondents on this
application which was heard on 12 October 2021. On 12 October 2021,
before Judge Molopa - Sethosa, the court
order of the 17th August
2021 was varied, and the following orders were made:
1.
The interim access to the child and the supervised contact by the
applicant remained
as in the order of 17 August 2021.
2.
The first applicant will collect the minor child from her residence
for her contact
session with the applicant.
3.
The respondents are ordered to hand over the minor child to the first
applicant
for their visitations.
4.
The respondents are directed to encourage the minor child to attend
the visitations.
5.
The respondents are ordered not to dissuade the minor child from
attending the
visitations.
6.
The applicant, after the visitation, will drop the minor child at her
residence.
7.
Telephonic contact remained as it was
# Contempt of court by
the first and third respondents
Contempt of court by
the first and third respondents
[8]
The first contempt was about paragraph 5 of the 17
th
August 2021 order, where the child was to be brought to the social
worker's office by the third respondent for supervised contact.
The
third respondent wanted an amount of R600,00 (six hundred rand) per
week for such drop-in of the minor child; otherwise, she
will not
comply with the order. This amount was disagreed with by the
applicant, and an AA rate of R50 was offered instead. On
26 August
2021, the contact session did not materialise because the third
respondent refused with the child.
[9]
The third respondent informed the social worker that if the applicant
wants to see the child, he should follow the third respondent to her
home at 4.00 pm. Indeed, they arrived, but he could not see
the child
because the third respondent said that the child had locked herself
inside the room and did not want to see the applicant.
The third
respondent then also said that the applicant would not be able to
exercise telephonic contact with the child because
the child cannot
use the phone. But what was surprising is the fact that the child
could operate the laptop. The applicant was
asked if they could use
the zoom to communicate since the child is familiar with the laptop.
Then the respondent changed and said
that the child would be
attending the occupational therapist sessions on Tuesdays and
Thursdays; and as such, she will be tired
when she comes back from
therapy because she would want to sleep. It was apparent that the
third respondent did not want the father
to see the child. However,
it is funny that before all these orders were pronounced orders of
the court, the parties deliberated
on them and all agreed to the
contents thereof. On 31 August 2021 at 15.45, the social worker
contacted the third respondent to
remind her of the contact sessions
with the applicant and the child. However, the third respondent
refused and said that there
had been no money forthcoming for the
petrol from the applicant; and as such, she would not bring the child
to see his father.
[10]
The respondents were served with the court orders, and they were
fully aware of the contents
thereof. Despite the knowledge of these
orders, they have constantly been breaching the said orders. Despite
all these breaches
of the court orders, the applicant had availed
himself all the time to the social workers' office in the hope that
he would be
allowed to exercise contact with his child. However,
there has never been any day that he has been allowed to see the
child.
[11]
The contempt of court orders continued until 2022. The matter for
such contempt was set
down and heard on 25 January 2022. Before the
application for contempt of order could be heard, the applicant
brought an application
to file a supplementary affidavit. This
application to file a supplementary affidavit was heard and granted
because it was found
that there is no prejudice on the side of the
respondent if the said affidavit was allowed. The supplementary
affidavit outlined
the continuation of the respondents 'disregard of
the court order regarding the applicant's contact with his minor
child.
Arguments
by the applicant's counsel
[12]
The
applicant's counsel submits that on the issue of contempt of court,
the applicant has proved beyond reasonable doubt that the
respondents
had no intention of
complying
with the order.
They
further submit that the respondents denied the
minor
child's constitutional rights and rights in terms of the Children's
Act
[1]
.
These
rights include the right to contact her parents, have a relationship
with them, know their culture, and know her roots.
[13]
The counsel continued her submissions, saying that the applicant has
demonstrated on his
affidavits how the respondents have wilfully and
ma/a fide
conducted themselves throughout since 2019. The
respondents have the onus to rebut the inference of wilfulness and
ma/a fide
on a balance of probabilities which they had failed
to do.
The
applicant requested the court to impose an imprisonment punishment,
alternatively a fine.
Curator
ad /item
appointment
[14]
In light of the fact that the minor child's rights were trampled upon
daily, it was requested
that the court appoint a
curator ad /item.
It was submitted by counsel for the applicant that Mr Stanley
Malematja, who is an attorney by profession, has consented to act as
a
curator ad /item
for the child and shall protect the rights
of this minor child.
# Variation of the court
order
Variation of the court
order
[15]
Counsel for the applicant submits that the order which stipulates
that the respondent will
transport the child to the social worker for
contact sessions was creating unending issues or excuses between the
applicant and
the respondents. The applicant applied to vary the said
orders as follows:
The
order of the 17th August 2021 is varied in the following manner by
the deletion of paragraph 2.5 and the insertion of the 2.5
below:
2.5.
2.5.1.
The applicant will collect the minor child from her residence for the
purpose of her contact session with the applicant;
2.5.2.
The respondents, as the case may be, are ordered to hand over the
minor child to the applicant for their visitations;
2.5.3.
The respondents, as the case may be, are directed to encourage the
minor child to attend the visitations;
2.5.4.
The respondents are ordered not to dissuade the minor child from
attending the visitations;
2.5.5.
The applicant, after their visitation, will drop the minor child at
her residence.'
# Costs
Costs
[16]
Counsel for the applicant argued that the respondents should be
ordered to pay costs on
attorney and client scale because they have
blatantly disregarded the court orders.
# The principle
The principle
[17]
Contempt of court cuts deep into the rule of law and the Constitution
of South Africa.
Section 165(4) and (5) of the Constitution of South
Africa provides that:
"……
(4)
Organs of state, through legislative and other measures, must assist
and protect the courts to ensure the independence, impartiality,
dignity, accessibility and
effectiveness of
the
courts
.
(5)
An order or decision issued by
a
court
binds all persons to whom and organs of
state to which
it applies.
"
[18]
If the
respondents could just ignore the court orders without recourse, the
courts could be undermined, and there will be chaos.
The respondents
have put the administration of justice into disrepute. This is a
fundamental concern for courts and the society
that seeks to base
itself on the rule of law. Society places reliance on court decisions
and arranges their affairs around them,
with the expectation that
they are made lawfully and will be carried out; when they experience
a total disregard of such decisions,
that could lead to the prejudice
of their fundamental rights and interests as innocent people and the
rule of law would suffer
a blow and the society will take the law
into their own hands. See also
Constitutional
Court Review
2019
Volume 9
[2]
.
[19]
It is trite law that to apply for contempt of court successfully, an
applicant must prove
the contempt beyond a reasonable doubt. One
should prove the following:
1.
That there is an underlying court order
2.
That the respondent knew the court order and
3.
With the
knowledge
of
the
order,
the
respondent acted
in
a
manner that
conflicts with the terms of that order.
See
Dezirus V Dezirus
[3]
.
[20]
Similarly,
In
Fakie
No V CCII Systems Pty Ltd
[4]
it was
said:
'The civil contempt
procedure is a valuable and important mechanism for security
compliance with the court order and survives constitutional
scrutiny
in the form of a motion court application adapted to constitutional
requirements. The respondent in such proceedings is
not an accused
person but is entitled to analogous protection - as are appropriate
to motion proceedings in particular the applicant
must prove the
requisites of contempt (the order, service, or notice, non
-compliance and wilfulness, and mala tides) beyond a
reasonable
doubt. But, once the applicant has proved the order, service, or
notice and non-compliance the respondent bears an evidential
burden
concerning wilfulness and mala tides. should the respondent fail to
advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt
as to whether
non-compliance was wilful and mala fide. Contempt will have been
established beyond a reasonable doubt.'
Discussion
[21]
It is evident from the papers filed by the applicant that there have
been court orders
on 17 August 2021 signed by Judge Kuny and on 12
October 2021, signed by Acting Deputy Judge President Molopa-Sethosa,
which allowed
the applicant supervised contact with the minor child
N[....] V[....] Mokaa on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 3:30 pm until 5:00
pm.
[22]
The respondents were aware of these court orders because there is
proof that they were
served at their home in Temba, Hammanskraal and
through the email address of the first respondent. I do not doubt
that the respondents
know these court orders. They are well aware of
the contents of these court orders not only because they were served
with the court
orders but, they formed part of the deliberations
through their attorney before the draft orders could be made an order
of the
court.
[23]
These court
orders remain operative, valid, and enforceable until reviewed or set
aside. In
Eke
v Parsons
[5]
the
Constitutional Court affirmed the essential characteristics of a
court order. It accepted that a court order must be effective,
enforceable and immediately capable of execution. In a minority
concurring judgment, Jafta J stated that:
The
rule of law requires not only that a court order be couched in clear
terms but also that its purpose be readily ascertainable
from the
language of the order. This is because disobedience of a court order
constitutes a violation of the Constitution.'
[24]
I have seen and read these court orders, which the respondents were
to adhere to; they
contained simple issues to understand and execute.
The language used is understandable by an ordinary person who could
read. Therefore,
there can never be any excuse for not abiding by the
court orders.
[25]
The respondents disobeyed these court orders. The applicant, through
his attorneys, filed
affidavits that narrated in detail how the
respondents failed to comply with the two court orders. At first,
they refused to give
him contact with the child because he did not
pay for transportation costs which costs were never part of the court
order. After
he had tendered the costs, they still declined to adhere
to the court order. The applicant could also not contact the child
telephonically
because the respondents said that the child could not
operate the phone, but the same child could operate a laptop. This
clearly
indicated that the respondents were not willing to allow the
applicant to have any access mentioned on the court orders.
[26]
The applicant even involved the South African Police Service in
assisting him in having
access to the child, but there was no one
when he arrived at the house where the child was. The neighbour
informed him that the
third respondent had just gone out with the
child not so long. At some point, the gate was closed, and the
applicant could not
access the child. On another occasion, he was
informed that the third respondent was at the shops and could not
come back at that
point. The third respondent had constantly
disobeyed the court order. The first respondent did nothing to assist
the applicant
in accessing the child either.
[27]
The applicant ended up paying an amount of R600,00 for transport for
Tuesday and Wednesday,
but he was only able to see the child on
Tuesday. On Thursday, 9 September 2021, the child was no longer
brought even when he had
paid the transportation costs for the child.
The social worker even changed the venue to a closer location to
where the child resides.
Even when the venue was nearby, the
respondents did not allow the father to see or contact the child.
This was a clear indication
that it was never about the transport
money nor the distance, but it was because the respondents did not
want the applicant to
have access to the child.
[28]
With the knowledge of the existing court orders and their terms, the
respondents acted
in a manner that totally disregarded the existence
of such orders. Suppose the respondent felt that the court orders
given were
impossible to perform. In that case, they should have
informed their attorney about opposing or not to agree with the
proposal
during engagement and deliberations of how this access to
the child should be carried forward. This is a question of fact. It
must
be shown on papers that compliance with the court orders will be
impossible. But, they did not do so, and the orders were granted
and
made an order of court. They did not even bring an application to
vary these court orders; instead, the applicant was the one
who again
had to bring the variation of the court order to accommodate the
respondents.
[29]
Subsequently, I find that the applicant managed to prove beyond
reasonable doubt that there
were two interim court orders which
emphasized the applicant's supervised access to the minor child. I
again am satisfied that
the court orders were appropriately served to
the respondents, and they knew the contents of the court orders.
However, they continue
to disobey them.
[30]
The respondents are required to prove that their actions were not
wilful or mala
fide. See the Fake
case above. There is no
version by the respondents to explain whether they did not act in
wilful disobedience of the court order.
[31]
The
respondents' actions as narrated by the applicant above clearly shows
that the respondents had wilfully and deliberately intended
to
disregard the court order without any justifiable cause. This
behaviour of the respondents prejudices the child's interest and
robs
her of the relationship
with her
father arbitrarily. Section 7(1) (f) of the Children's Act
[6]
provides that when determining the best interest of the child, the
court should be guided by:
7(1) (f) "The
need for the
child
is
-
(i)
to remain in the
care
of their
parent,
family and extended family; and
(ii)
to maintain
a
connection with their family, extended
family, culture or tradition;"
[32]
The father of the child, on the other hand, is also deprived of his
rights to access the
child and to form the relationship with his
daughter as stated in the court orders and also provided in terms of
section 21 (1)
of the Children Act, which provides that:
"The biological
father of
a
child who does not have parental responsibilities
and rights in respect of the child in terms of section 20,
acquires
full parental responsibilities and rights in
respect
of the child-
(a) if at the time of
the child's birth he is living with the mother in
a
permanent
life-partnership."
We
already know that the child was born while the father and mother were
staying together, so the father has complied with the act
as
required, and there is a court order that declares his supervised
visitation rights. The respondents should respect such rights.
[33]
The mother and the grandmother of the minor child should know that in
terms of section
28(2) of the Constitution of South Africa when a
court makes a decision that affects the interest of the child and
that of her
parents, the child's best interests becomes of paramount
importance in arriving at a just decision. The best interest of the
child,
in this case, is the child's right to have a relationship with
her father and to know her roots and culture, which will be
accentuated
over that of her mother and the grandmother. The mother
and grandmother's rights will recede to the background in these
circumstances.
The rights to a child should never be deliberately and
arbitrarily obstructed without justification to do so by anyone.
[34]
Like any other person, the applicant has a right to be treated
equally before the law and
has the right to equal protection and
benefit of the law, which includes the full and equal enjoyment of
all rights and freedoms
towards his child. The court will strive to
promote the achievement of such equality as protected in the Bill of
Rights. See section
9 of the Constitution of South Africa 1996. The
father has been disadvantaged unfairly while having court orders in
his disposal.
The respondents have reduced the court orders into a
mere paper that has no value in the hands of the aggrieved father.
They have
disrespected the applicant and the courts and should be
stopped in their tracks to abuse the applicant while he is in
possession
of valid court orders.
[35]
Section 35 of the children's Act provides that:
'(1)Any person having
care or custody of
a
child who, contrary to an order of any
court or to
a
parental responsibilities and rights agreement
that has taken effect as contemplated in section 22(4),
refuses
another person who has access to that child or
who
holds parental responsibilities and rights in respect of that child
in terms of that
order
or agreement
to exercise such access or such responsibilities and rights
or
who
prevents that person from exercising such
access or such responsibilities and rights is
guilty
of an offence and liable on conviction to
a
fine or to imprisonment
for
a
period
not exceeding one
year
.
[36]
The respondents acted wilfully with
ma/a fide
to spite the
applicant because the applicant and the first respondent were no
longer staying together. I have found that the applicant
proved
beyond reasonable doubt that the respondents are in contempt of court
regarding the court orders dated 17 August 2021 and
12 October 2021.
The respondents are found guilty of contempt of court orders of 17
August 2021 and 12 October 2021.
[37]
The
Children's Act
[7]
has set out
the sentence which the person who has committed a contempt of court
order should be sentenced as stated above. However,
sentencing is
within the discretion of the court. The applicant requested this
court on their papers to sentence the respondents
each to ninety (90)
days imprisonment, which is suspended with appropriate conditions set
by the court alternatively a fine to
the amount of R150 000,00 (one
hundred and fifty thousand rand).
[38]
The respondents' dignity should be respected and protected, and their
freedom should not
be arbitrarily deprived without just cause.
However, every right is limited. They have been found guilty to have
wilfully disobeyed
the court order; therefore, the court is entitled
to impose a sanction on them. The sanction should be appropriate in
the circumstances
of this case.
[39]
Contempt of
court is a crime that affects the dignity and authority of the court.
In Argus
Printing and Publishing
Co
Ltd
and Others v Esselen's Estate
[8]
the
court said:
"The purpose which
the law seeks to achieve by making contempt a criminal offence is to
protect 'the fount of justice' by preventing
unlawful attacks upon
individual officers or the administration of justice in general which
are calculated to undermine public
confidence in the court.
Also, in Uncedo Taxi
Service Association v Maninjwa and Others 1998(2) SACR 166 ECO at
167h-j:
It would appear from
cases ... that the object of this type of procedure is the imposition
of a penalty in order to vindicate the
Court's honour consequent upon
the disregard of its order ... and to compel the performance
thereof..."
[40]
If the
respondents are not punished for having disrespected the court that
authorized the two court orders, the court, the Constitution,
and the
rule of law will be in
crisis. The
sentence aims to protect the courts' dignity and the applicant's
rights; otherwise, the applicant will lose faith in
court. He will
then fall into the statistics of fathers abused by their ex-partners.
It should be seen through our sanctions that
the rights which the
fathers have to their children are also equally important.
In
Coetzee v Government of the Republic of South Africa
[9]
the
court said:
"If we are truly
dealing with contempt of court, then the need to keep the committal
proceedings alive would be strong because
the rule of law requires
that the dignity and authority of the court, as well as their
capacity to carry out their functions, should
always be maintained."
[41]
In the spirit of upholding the Constitution and the rule of law, I
find an appropriate
sentence for the respondents to be of a custodial
sentence. However, this sentence should be suspended to give the
respondents
a chance to adhere to the court order.
[42]
The respondents are each sentenced to thirty (30) days imprisonment;
the whole sentence
is suspended for five years on the condition that
the respondents adhere to court orders of 17 August 2021 and 12
October 2021
during the period of suspension.
# Appointment of a
curatorad /itemfor the minor child
Appointment of a
curator
ad /item
for the minor child
[43]
Looking at the evidence that the applicant has provided through his
affidavits, the child
requires someone who will act in her best
interest in these circumstances. What the child has been subjected to
by the third respondent
is totally not in her interest or proper
upbringing. The child should not be hidden away from his father. I
find it proper that
curator
ad
/item
should be
appointed.
# Variation of the order
Variation of the order
[44]
Paragraph 3 of the variation is for the benefit of the third
respondent. This will make
access to the child easy. I find that the
variation clause is proper and will be granted.
# Costs
Costs
[45]
The applicant submits that the respondents have disregarded the rules
for quite a long
time. Out of all the days the applicant wanted to
have contact with his daughter, he had only seen his daughter once
since 2019.
This has been fueled by acrimony between the applicant
and the first respondent, which spilt over to the respondents'
family. They
have abused the applicant. They have disrespected the
courts' authority. The respondents should pay the cost on an attorney
and
own client scale.
# Order
Order
[46]
As a result, the following order is made:
1.
The draft order I signed on 25 January 2022 remains an order of
court.
M.
Munzhelele
Judge
of the High Court Pretoria
Heard:
24, 25 & 28 January 2022
Electronically
Delivered: 25 January 2022
Appearances:
For
the Applicant: Adv. N Strathern
Instructed
by: Ulrich Roux & Associates
For
the Respondent: Adv. R Ngobeni
Instructed
by: Seribe Mathabatha Attorneys
[1]
38 of 2005
[2]
283-315 https://doi org/10 2989/CCR 2019 0011 (c) The Invalid Court
Orders, The Author, Mitchell Nold De Beer. (Constitution
of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 s 1(c) ('The Republic of South Africa
is one, sovereign, democratic state founded on ...
[s]upremacy of
the constitution and the rule of law')).
[3]
2006
[2AGPHC
77] (21 August 2006) para 16
[4]
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4)
SA
326
(SCA)
para
42
[5]
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC)
(2015 (11) BCLR 1319
; (2015] ZACC 30) para 64
[6]
38 of 2005
[7]
38 of 2005
[8]
1994(2) SA 1 AD at 29E-F
[9]
1995(4) SA 631 CC at para 61
sino noindex
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