Case Law[2024] ZASCA 74South Africa
Lategan and Another v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another (314/2022) [2024] ZASCA 74; 2024 (2) SACR 227 (SCA) (10 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
10 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Interpretation of statutes – sexual offences – Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007(the Act) – whether sections 58, 59 and 60 apply retrospectively to common law sexual offences committed prior to the commencement of the Act, but instituted thereafter – appeal of appellants dismissed.
Judgment
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## Lategan and Another v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another (314/2022) [2024] ZASCA 74; 2024 (2) SACR 227 (SCA) (10 May 2024)
Lategan and Another v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another (314/2022) [2024] ZASCA 74; 2024 (2) SACR 227 (SCA) (10 May 2024)
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sino date 10 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Sexual offences –
Sexual
Offences Act
–
Common
law sexual offences committed prior to commencement of Act, but
instituted thereafter – Whether provisions applicable
–
Appellants allege Act does not apply retrospectively – High
Court was correct in finding that provisions were
applicable to
future criminal proceedings of appellants –
Misinterpretation by magistrate culminated in a gross irregularity
which is susceptible to review – Appeal dismissed –
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act
32 of 2007
,
ss 58
,
59
and
60
.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 314 /2022
In the matter between:
STEPHANUS
PETRUS LATEGAN
FIRST
APPELLANT
JOHANNES
RETIEF LATEGAN
SECOND
APPELLANT
and
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
FIRST RESPONDENT
REGIONAL MAGISTRATE,
WYNBERG
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Lategan and Another v The
Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another
(314/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 74
(10 May 2024)
Coram:
Molemela P, Hughes and Weiner JJA and
Windell and Keightley AJJA
Heard:
15
August 2023
Delivered:
10 May 2024
Summary:
Interpretation of statutes – sexual offences
– Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment
Act 32 of
2007(the Act) – whether sections 58, 59 and 60 apply
retrospectively to common law sexual offences committed prior to the
commencement of the Act, but instituted thereafter – appeal of
appellants dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Ndita J and Nziweni AJ sitting
as
a full court):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including costs consequent on the employment of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Hughes
JA (Molemela P, Weiner JA, and Windell and Keightley AJJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
In 2018, the appellants were charged in the
Wynberg Regional Court under the common law for sexual offences which
were committed
from 1974 and 1979. Conspicuously, these offences were
committed before the commencement of the Criminal Law (Sexual
Offences and
Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007 (the Act).
The charge sheet indicated that the first respondent, the
Director of
Public Prosecutions, Western Cape (the DPP) would rely on
ss 58, 59 and 60 of the Act, even though the Act had not been in
existence
when the appellants committed the offences. Because the
offences were committed prior to the commencement of the Act, the
appellants
sought an amendment to the charge sheet. The basis thereof
being that the Act was not applicable to the offences for which they
were charged under the common law, as the Act was not in existence
when these offences were committed.
[2]
In the regional court proceedings, the court ordered that the DPP
remove
the offensive sections objected to by the appellants. In
making such an order, that court found that the DPP’s defence
to
the appellants’ objection was not competent, as the offences
they were charged with were predicated on the common law and
not on
the Act. The regional court reasoned that nowhere in the sections
sought to be added to the charge sheet was there an indication
that
these sections would apply retrospectively.
[3]
Subsequently, in the Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape
Town
(the high court), the DPP instituted a review of the decision of
the regional court. In the review application, the DPP sought a
determination that the sections of the Act could apply
retrospectively to common law crimes committed prior to the
promulgation
of the Act even in instances where the institution and
investigation of such offences took place after its promulgation. In
respect
of the proceedings adopted by the DPP, it contended that the
order of the regional court was irregular, and was hence subject to
review.
[4]
In the high court, the
appellants submitted that the proceedings in the regional court were
procedurally and substantively correct
and that, if the DPP was
unsatisfied with that court’s decision, they should have
proceeded by way of an appeal and not review.
To this end, they
stated that the correct avenue that the DPP ought to have pursued was
s 310 of the CPA.
[1]
A further
concern for the appellants was the DPP’s reliance on s 69 of
the Act. They submitted that this section only applies
to offences
committed, investigated and instituted before the Act, and so it did
not apply in the circumstances of this case.
[5]
The high court concluded that the DPP was correct in proceeding by
way
of review as the regional court committed an irregularity when it
ruled that ss 58, 59 and 60 be deleted from the charge sheet.
The
high court reasoned that, even though the Act was not retrospective,
the sections above had retrospective effect and as such
were
applicable in the appellants’ case. This appeal is with the
leave of the high court.
The
law
[6]
Fundamentally,
the
Act’s purpose was to repeal the common law offence of rape and
replace it with a new expanded statutory offence of rape;
to
comprehensively and extensively review, amend all aspects of the laws
and the implementation of the law relating to all forms
of sexual
penetration without consent, irrespective of gender.
[2]
The preamble of the Act is also instructive on the need for a new and
amended Act. The legislature took cognisance of the fact
that the
commission of sexual offences in South Africa is an issue of grave
concern against disadvantaged and vulnerable members
of society at
large, women and children being the most vulnerable members of
society.
[3]
[7]
The Bill of Rights contained in the Constitution
of South Africa guarantees that one has the right not to be subjected
to violence,
in whichever form, and protects the rights of children
and vulnerable persons. In light of the Bill of Rights, it is evident
that
the common law and statutory laws have not dealt with the
commission of sexual offences adequately, effectively and in a
non-discriminatory
manner. Section 2 of the Act succinctly sets out
the objective of the Act, which is to afford complainants of sexual
offences with
the least traumatizing protection that the law can
provide. It does this by the introduction of measures which encompass
repealing
the relevant common law offences, and expanding and
extending these offences in some instances in order to eradicate the
high prevalence
of sexual offences in our country.
[8]
The sections of the Act in issue, respectively, are couched as
follows:
‘
58.
Evidence relating to previous consistent statements by a complainant
shall be admissible in criminal proceedings involving the
alleged
commission of a sexual offence: Provided that the court may not draw
any inference only from the absence of such previous
consistent
statement’;
‘
59.
In criminal proceedings involving the alleged commission of a sexual
offence, the court may not draw any inference only from
the length of
any delay between the alleged commission of such offence and the
reporting thereof’;
‘
60.
Notwithstanding any other law, a court may not treat the evidence of
a complainant in criminal proceedings involving the alleged
commission of a sexual offence pending before that court, with
caution, on account of the nature of the offence.’
[9]
Relevant to this matter is s 68 (1)
(b)
, which repealed the
common law crimes of ‘rape, indecent assault, incest,
bestiality and violation of a corpse, in so far
as they relate to the
commission of a sexual act with a corpse’. Of significance is
the transitional provision, s 69, which
reads as follows:
‘
(1)
All criminal proceedings relating to the common law crimes referred
to in section 68(1)(
b
)
which were instituted prior to the commencement of this Act and which
are not concluded before the commencement of this Act must
be
continued and concluded in all respects as if this Act had not been
passed.
(2)
An investigation or prosecution or other legal proceedings in respect
of conduct which would have constituted one of the common
law crimes
referred to in section 68(1)(
b
) which was initiated before the
commencement of this Act may be concluded, instituted and continued
as if this Act had not been
passed.
(3)
Despite the repeal or amendment of any provision of any law by this
Act, such provision, for purposes of the disposal of any
investigation, prosecution or any criminal or legal proceedings
contemplated in subsection (1) or (2) remains in force as if such
provision had not been repealed or amended.’
The
issue
[10]
The issue in this appeal is whether ss 58, 59 and 60 of the Act apply
retrospectively when
dealing with common law offences where the
criminal acts occurred before the Act came into operation, but were
only investigated
and prosecuted after the commencement of the Act.
Further, whether the correct procedure in these circumstances was an
appeal in
terms of s 310 of the CPA rather than a review as initiated
by the DPP.
Discussion
[11]
The case of the
appellants is that if they are charged under the common law, ss 58,
59 and 60 cannot be applicable, as the Act does
not apply
retrospectively. For this assertion, the appellants placed reliance
on
S and
Another v Regional Magistrate Boksburg: Venter and another
(
Boksburg
),
where the Constitutional Court made a determination that a
presumption exists against retrospectivity of a statute, unless the
legislature either expressly or by implication intended such a
statute to apply retrospectively.
[4]
Since the Constitutional Court has pronounced that sexual
offences committed by individuals prior to the Act are to be charged
in terms of the common law,
[5]
the incorporation of ss 58, 59 and 60 of the Act to the
appellants’ case, would undermine and contradict
the
ruling of the Constitutional Court in
Boksburg
,
so they aver. They contended that s 69 of the Act specifically
creates a clear divide between matters that fall under the common
law
and those that fall under the Act. The intention of the legislature
is therefore clear: common law sexual offences, regardless
of the
status of their prosecution, ought to be concluded under common law
as if the Act did not exist.
[12]
In contrast, the DPP contends that ss 58, 59 and 60, being the
sections sought to
be incorporated in the charge sheet, are
procedural in effect. They relate to evidence and issues of
admissibility that are applicable
during the trial proceedings. They
do not relate to the elements of the charges preferred and, as such,
they will not be determinative
of the outcome, whether the appellants
are acquitted or convicted. As such, the provisions would not impact
on the appellants’
substantive rights, in respect of their
rights to a fair trial in terms of s 35 of the Constitution as well
as their rights under
the common law. The DPP contends that these
sections, being procedural rather than substantive in nature, are
prospective in operation.
However, as they ‘attach new
consequences for the future to an event that took place before the
statute was effected’,
these sections, the DPP contended, do
not encroach on any of the appellants’ existing rights, nor are
they detrimental to
any of their substantive rights. Further, there
can be no doubt in relation to the applicability of these sections in
the future
prosecution of the appellants.
[13]
It is prudent that I reiterate what the situation is in this matter
before dealing with
the concerns of the appellants. In this matter
the sexual offences occurred before the enactment of the Act.
However, the criminal
proceedings in the matter were only instituted
after the date that the statute took effect (16 December 2007).
Hence, the old procedure
is no longer applicable. In terms of s 69,
only in matters where investigations had commenced, or where the
trial was already underway
before the promulgation of the statute,
would the old procedure be applicable. The fact that this case deals
with the procedure
to be adopted for those matters investigated,
instituted and prosecuted after the Act, is notable.
[14]
The starting point is to
restate that which is trite, that is, that there is a presumption in
our common law against the operation
of statutes retrospectively
unless the ‘contrary intention is indicated, either expressly
or by clear implication’.
In
Boksburg
,
the Constitutional Court affirmed that, even though the crime of rape
had been repealed in terms of s 68(1)(
b
),
it had not been repealed retrospectively. It reasoned that, if that
were so, it would have resulted in extinguishing criminal
liability
incurred before the Act.
[6]
[15]
It is trite that no statute is to be construed as having
retrospective effect unless the
legislature clearly intended it to
have that effect. Thus, it is prospective in operation, that is
forward or future operating,
rather than retroactive, that is
backward operating, with effect from its enactment. In respect of the
issue of retrospectivity,
it is imperative to restate the
time-honoured principle that is globally recognised on the premise
that the legislature would not
promote an unjust result:
‘
An
important legal rule forming part of what may be described as our
legal culture provides that no statute is to be construed as
having
retrospective operation (in the sense of taking away or impairing a
vested right acquired under existing laws) unless the
legislature
clearly intended the statute to have that effect: see
Peterson
v Cuthbert & Co Ltd
1945
AD 420
at 430. . . Consistent with the underlying rationale of the
presumption and the requirement that it can be rebutted only by
express
terms or clear implication, is the rule that if the court is
left in doubt as to the operation of the statute, the law as existing
before the enactment must be applied.
.
. .
This
canon of interpretation was described by my brother Olivier JA in
Transnet Ltd v Chairman, National Transport Commission
1999
(4) SA 1(SCA)
at 7 A as a “time-honoured principle” and
in
Gardner
v
Lucas
(1878) 3 App Cas. 582, a decision of
the House of Lords, Lord Blackburn (at 603) described it as a
“general rule, not merely
of England and Scotland, but, I
believe, of every civilised nation”.
. .
.
In
Benner v Canada (Secretary of State)
(1997) 42 CRR (2d) 1
(SCC), a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, Lacobucci J
referred (at 17) to the fact that the terms
“retroactivity”
and “retrospectivity” can be confusing and he quoted with
approval definitions of the two
terms given by the well-known
Canadian writer on the interpretation of statutes, Elmer A Driedger,
in an article in
(1978) 56 Canadian Bar Review 264
at 268-9 as
follows:
“
A
retroactive statute is one that operates as of a time prior to its
enactment. A retrospective statute is one that operates for
the
future only. It is prospective, but it imposes new results in respect
of a past event. A retroactive statute
operates
backwards
.
A retrospective statute
operates
forwards
,
but it looks backwards in that it attaches new consequences
for
the future
to an event that took place before the statute was enacted. A
retroactive statute changes the law from what it was; a retrospective
changes the law from what it otherwise would be with respect to a
prior event.”
In
terms of this terminology the expression “retroactivity”
is used for retrospectivity in the “strong”
sense while
the expression “retrospectivity” is reserved for what is
described as retrospectivity in the “weaker”
sense’.
[7]
[16]
It is important to recognise, as noted in the above extract, that the
presumption against
retrospectivity is founded on the need to avoid
unjust interference with vested, substantive rights. The same
principle does not
apply in respect of matters of procedure. At
the hearing of this appeal, the appellants’ counsel was invited
to point
out which substantive rights, of the appellants, if any,
would be affected if the sections in question were to be applied in
the
appellants’ prosecution and trial. At best, the appellants’
counsel submitted that the provisions in question created
uncertainty. He submitted that unless the Act stipulates
retrospectivity, then they are entitled to the presumption against
retrospectivity
in their favour. Astonishingly, the additional
response from counsel for the appellants was that they had the right
not to be charged
with offences which were no longer an offence.
Evidently, they rely on the repeal of the crime of rape in terms of s
68(1)(
b
) of the Act. The gist of the submission was that new
procedures laid down in a statute cannot be applied in circumstances
where
the accused person has been charged under the common law.
[17]
In my view, the
appellants’ reliance on
Boksburg
and
Kaknis v
Absa Bank Limited & Another
,
[8]
in this case, is misplaced. In
Boksburg
,
the court did not deal with the procedural aspects of the Act at all.
That case dealt with the elements of the offence, and thus
with the
accused person’s vested substantive rights. On behalf of the
DPP, it was argued that the appellants’ contention
that ss 58,
59 and 60 will extinguish existing rights and affect the appellants
detrimentally in the future trial is wrong. I agree.
This Court’s
judgment in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions of South Africa v Carolus and
Others
[9]
is apposite when assessing whether the presumption against
retrospectivity has been rebutted. This Court held that an important
legal principle forming part of our legal culture is that ‘no
statute is to be construed as having retrospective operation
(in the
sense of taking away or repairing a vested right acquired under
existing laws) unless the legislature clearly intended
the statute to
have that effect’.
[10]
[18]
There is no provision in the Act, for it to apply retrospectively.
However, the sections in question deal with
procedural aspects. As
such, where the statute deals with procedural matters, it is termed a
‘procedural exception’.
Though it equates to
retrospectivity, it does so in the ‘weak sense’. As the
provisions of the Act operate forward
it does not amount to
retroactivity, being retrospectivity in the ‘strong sense,’
as discussed in
Carolus
.
[11]
[19]
In
Boksburg
,
[12]
the Constitutional Court reiterated that the exclusion does not apply
to prosecutions not yet instituted at the date of enactment.
There
is, therefore, no ambiguity. This is particularly so if one also has
regard to the long title and the preamble referred to
earlier in this
judgment. No substantive rights of the appellants are affected or
encroached upon. As such, the presumption is
that the legislature
intended,
ex
facie
the
sections in question, that the prosecution of sexual offences outside
the provided exclusion be in terms of the procedure as
set out in the
Act. Therefore, it is apparent that the sections are applicable to
the future prosecution of sexual offences which
are in the
prosecutorial system after the enactment of the Act.
[20]
The question is whether any of the appellants’ existing rights
have been adversely affected. In answering
this question, it is
necessary to juxtapose the provisions of ss 58, 59 and 60 vis-à-vis
the common law position. In doing
so, the courts’
interpretation of the applicable common law position is relevant. The
common law requirement pertaining to
the admission of a previous
consistent statement was that such evidence was admissible if
presented voluntarily by a complainant
who had made the complaint
within a reasonable time after the commission of a sexual offence.
[21]
As regards the statutory position introduced by the Act, the essence
of ss 58 and 59 is to clearly
stipulate that no adverse inferences
may be drawn solely from the absence of a previous consistent
statement made by the complainant
in a sexual offence (s 58), and
from the length of the delay between the alleged commission of that
offence and the reporting thereof
(s 59). Although the approach of
the courts in dealing with the admission of a previous consistent
statement in sexual offences
has not always been uniform, there are
many judgments, decided before the commencement of the Act, that have
laid down the correct
approach to the evaluation of such evidence.
[22]
In
S v
S
,
[13]
the accused was charged with the rape of an eleven-year-old girl.
In considering the evidence that the complainant had not
reported the
incident at her school at all and had subsequently not reported it to
her mother in detail, the court said:
‘
Out
of context, this erratic behaviour might well present the prosecution
with an insuperable problem, for it is a generally accepted
evidential requirement that the complainant should report the offence
at the earliest opportunity. I should emphasise that this
requirement
… admits of exceptions in appropriate cases.’
In
S v
Cornick and Another
,
[14]
the sexual offences were allegedly committed before the coming into
operation of the Act. This Court confirmed rape convictions
even
though the charges pertaining to the offences perpetrated on a
14-year-old complainant were only laid against the perpetrator
19
years later. Responding to the contention that it was improbable that
the complainant, if she had been raped, would have failed
to report
the incident to her grandmother or her parents, this Court said:
‘
It
does not seem to me to be improbable that a young woman who has tried
to bury memories of a traumatic event for many years would
not
appreciate until her mid-twenties … the full extent of what
happened only later’.
[15]
[23]
The aforementioned authorities attest to the fact that the presence
or absence of a previous
consistent statement or the delay in
reporting a rape have always been assessed in the context of all the
circumstances of the
case as opposed to being considered in
isolation. In my view, the effect of ss 58 and 59 is not prejudicial
to the appellants because
it accords with a long-established approach
of this Court; courts have consistently been cautioned to consider
all the circumstances
of the case when evaluating evidence.
[24]
In terms of s 60 of the Act, a court may not apply a special
cautionary rule to sexual offences.
It is noteworthy that in
S
v J
,
[16]
approximately nine years before the enactment of the Act, this Court
held that the cautionary rule in sexual offences cases was
based on
an irrational and outdated perception, and that it unjustly
stereotyped complainants in sexual offences cases. It stated
that
‘[t]he evidence in a particular case may call for a cautionary
approach, but that is a far cry from the application
of a general
cautionary rule'. It is therefore clear that s 60 of the Act
reiterates the legal position that was laid down by the
courts even
before the enactment of the Act.
[25]
Thus, the conclusion I reach is that the retrospectivity, in this
instance, does not impinge
on any of the substantive rights of the
appellants in respect of their future criminal proceedings. Insofar
as this retrospectivity
is a ‘weak’ retrospectivity
relating only to procedural rules of evidence, no unfairness will be
visited upon the appellants
in respect of the defence that they may
wish to mount during the criminal proceedings. The high court was
therefore correct in
finding that the provisions of ss 58, 59 and 60
were applicable to the future criminal proceedings of the appellants.
Review
or appeal
[26]
The appellants argued that the DPP ought to have dealt with
this matter in terms of s 310 of
the CPA and not by way of review. As
the high court confirmed, review proceedings were correctly
instituted. The DPP submitted
that the institution of review
proceedings was in terms of
s 22(1)
(c)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
and s 24(1)
(c)
of the Supreme Court Act 59 of
1959, in that, the court
a quo
committed ‘a gross
irregularity’ when it misinterpreted the law and applied the
law incorrectly. Conspicuously, these
two sections, which appears in
the current and old act, respectively, are the same.
[27]
This Court, through its jurisprudence, has had occasion to deal with
what warrants review rather than appeal
proceedings in circumstances
where a magistrate made a material error in interpreting the law. The
process to be adopted, if the
exercise of the judicial officer’s
powers is exercised wrongly and the process leads to a decision which
is challenged, is
that of review and not of appeal. In
Hira and
Another v Booysen and Another
, this Court explains why the
position is so in the following passage:
‘
Whether
or not an erroneous interpretation of a statutory criterion, such as
is referred to in the previous paragraph (ie where
the question of
interpretation is not left to the exclusive jurisdiction of the
tribunal concerned), renders the decision invalid
depends upon its
materiality. If, for instance, the facts found by the tribunal are
such as to justify its decision even on a correct
interpretation of
the statutory criterion, then normally (ie in the absence of some
other review ground) there would be no ground
for interference.
Aliter, if applying the correct criterion, there are no facts upon
which the decision can reasonably be justified.
In this latter type
of case it may justifiably be said that, by reason of its error of
law, the tribunal" asked itself the
wrong question", or
"applied the
wrong
test", or "based its decision on some matter not prescribed
for its decision", or "failed to apply its
mind to the
relevant issues in accordance with the behests of the statute";
and that as a result its decision should be set
aside on review
’
.
[17]
[28]
I agree with the DPP’s contention that the decision taken by
the second respondent that the provisions
of the Act do not apply to
the prosecution of the appellants, flies in the face of the
significance and interpretation of s 69
of the Act. As is
evident from a reading of s 69, no mention is made of crimes
committed before the commencement of the Act,
but prosecuted
thereafter. It stands to reason that those crimes would not be
affected by this section and as such the section
‘does not
confer
prosecutorial power on
the State in respect of common law crimes, but rather
confirms
it’. This is
apparent as ‘[i]t would therefore be inappropriate to interpret
it as a provision that could
curtail
the State’s
prosecutorial power, which is sourced elsewhere: in the National
Prosecuting Authority Act and, ultimately the
Constitution’.
[18]
This misinterpretation by the second respondent culminated in a gross
irregularity having been committed by the second respondent
and as
such, is susceptible to review proceedings. In addition, the
proceedings have not reached finality and were adjourned for
determination of the review application; finality being a requisite
for appeal proceedings to be instituted.
[29]
For all those reasons the appeal must fail. I make the following
order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs
, including costs
consequent on the employment
of two counsel.
W HUGHES
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
R
Liddell with S Webb
Instructed
by:
Liddell,
Weeber & Van der Merwe Inc
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
AC
Webster with MD Titus
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Johannesburg
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section 310 of the CPA provides as follows:
‘
Appeal
from lower court by prosecutor
(1)
When a lower court has in criminal proceedings given a decision in
favour of the accused on any question of law, including
an order
made under section 85 (2), the attorney-general or, if a body or a
person other than the attorney-general or his representative,
was
the prosecutor in the proceedings, then such other prosecutor may
require the judicial officer concerned to state a case
for the
consideration of the provincial or local division having
jurisdiction, setting forth the question of law and his decision
thereon and, if evidence has been heard, his findings of fact, in so
far as they are material to the question of law.’
[2]
Evident from the long title of the Act.
[3]
The Preamble of the Act.
[4]
S and
Another v Regional Magistrate Boksburg
:
Venter
and Another
[2011]
ZACC 22
;
2011 (2) SACR 274
(CC);
2012 (1) BCLR 5
(CC) para 16.
[5]
Ibid para 19-23.
[6]
Boksburg
para 16;
National
Director of Public Prosecutions of South Africa v Carolus and Others
[1999] ZASCA 101
;
[2000]
1 All SA 302
(A);
2000 (1) SA 1127
(SCA) para 31-32 (
Carolus
).
Approved by the Constitutional Court in
Veldman
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division
[2005]
ZACC 22
;
2007 (3) SA 210
(CC);
2007 (9) BCLR 929
(CC);
2006 (2) SACR
319
(CC) para 26-27
.
[7]
Carolus
para 31-35.
[8]
Kaknis
v Absa Bank Limited & Another
[2016]
ZASCA 206
;
[2017] 2 All SA 1
(SCA);
2017 (4) SA 17
(SCA) para 37.
[9]
Carolus
para 31.
[10]
Carolus
para
31.
[11]
Carolus
para 35.
[12]
Boksburg
para 19.
[13]
S
v S
1995
(1) SACR 50
(ZS) at 56.
[14]
S v
Cornick
and
Another
2007(2)
SACR 115 (SCA).
[15]
Ibid para 32.
[16]
S v J
1998 (1) SACR 470
(SCA)
at 476E.
[17]
Hira
and Another v Booysen and Another
[1992]
ZASCA 112
;
1992 (4) SA 69
(AD);
[1992] 2 All SA 344
(A) at 93G-I.
[18]
Boksburg
para 19 and 20.
sino noindex
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