Case Law[2022] ZASCA 78South Africa
Frank Mhlongo and Others v Tryphinah Mokoena N O and Others (865/2020) [2022] ZASCA 78; 2022 (6) SA 129 (SCA) (31 May 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Jurisdiction – section 21 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – statute takes precedence over practice directives – order of the High Court relying on practice directive for ousting the jurisdiction of the High Court set aside.
Judgment
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## Frank Mhlongo and Others v Tryphinah Mokoena N O and Others (865/2020) [2022] ZASCA 78; 2022 (6) SA 129 (SCA) (31 May 2022)
Frank Mhlongo and Others v Tryphinah Mokoena N O and Others (865/2020) [2022] ZASCA 78; 2022 (6) SA 129 (SCA) (31 May 2022)
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sino date 31 May 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No:
865/2020
In
the matter between:
FRANK
MHLONGO
FIRST APPELLANT
RIEBS
KHOZA
SECOND APPELLANT
DR
SIBUYI
THIRD APPELLANT
PATRICK
JONES
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
TRYPHINA
MOKOENA NO
FIRST RESPONDENT
NOMSA
MHLAWURI MANYIKE
SECOND RESPONDENT
MADODA
ISAAC TJIE NO
THIRD RESPONDENT
TOBANI
MICHAEL KHOZA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
THEMBA
TIBANE
NO
FIFTH REPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
SIXTH REPONDENT
ATTORNEY
RICHARD SPOOR
OF
THE FIRM RICHARD SPOOR
ATTORNEYS
INC
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
ATTORNEY
WIEKUS DU TOIT OF
THE
FIRM WDT ATTORNEYS
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
ATTORNEY
ERROL GOSS OF FIRM ERROL
GOSS
ATTORNEYS
NINTH RESPONDENT
THEBE
CORRIDORS COMPANY (Pty) Ltd
(Previously
named Sithole Restoration Services)
TENTH REPONDENT
THE
REGIONAL LAND CLAIMS COMMISSIONER,
MPUMALANGA
ELEVENTH RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
TWELFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation:
Frank Mhlongo and Others v Tryphinah Mokoena N O and
Others
(723/20)
[2022] ZASCA 78
(May 2022)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MOLEMELA, MAKGOKA, MBATHA JJA and MUSI AJA
Heard:
25 February 2022
Delivered:
31 May 2022
Summary:
Jurisdiction –
section 21
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
– statute takes precedence over practice directives –
order of the High Court relying on practice directive for ousting
the
jurisdiction of the High Court set aside.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Hughes J sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, is set aside
and
replaced with the following:
‘
The
eighth respondent’s point in limine pertaining to jurisdiction
is dismissed with costs.’
3
Clause 1.5 of Gauteng Division Practice Directive No 1
of 2015 is
declared null and void
ab initio
and is set aside.
JUDGMENT
Molemela
JA (Mocumie, Makgoka and Mbatha JJA and Musi AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The crisp issue in this appeal is whether it is competent for a Judge
President of a high court to remove certain areas of the court’s
jurisdiction through a practice directive; in particular,
whether the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria had jurisdiction to
determine the appellants’ application. The facts
that gave rise
to the appeal are succinctly set out in the succeeding paragraphs.
Background
facts
[2]
The appellants in this matter are beneficiaries of the
Nhlangwini Community
Trust (the Trust) and purported to be
representing 78 other beneficiaries of the Trust. The first five
respondents are the
Trustees of the Trust (the Trustees); the sixth
respondent is the Master of the High Court, Pretoria; the seventh
respondent is
a firm of attorneys which previously represented the
Trustees, while the eighth respondent was a firm that legally
represented
them as at the time when the application was launched.
The ninth respondent is a firm of attorneys acting as the agent of
the tenth
respondent, a private company which had leased the Trust’s
property. The appellants approached the Gauteng Division of the
High
Court, Pretoria (the high court) seeking an order compelling the
Trustees and their attorneys, who were all cited as co-respondents,
to inter alia furnish them with various documents, including the
Trust’s bank statements, and to disclose information
pertaining to any funds previously paid or still due to the Trust. In
addition, the appellants sought orders prohibiting the Trustees’
attorneys from paying out any monies that were due to the Trust, and
demanded that the attorneys furnish them with the trust account
journals relating to all the financial affairs of the Trust.
[3]
The eighth
respondent raised a point
in
limine
(preliminary point) contending that the Gauteng Division did not have
jurisdiction to adjudicate the application because the leased
property (the farm owned by the Trust) was situated in the province
of Mpumalanga. Relying on the provisions of Gauteng Division
Practice
Directive No 1 of 2015
[1]
(the
Practice Directive), the eighth respondent contended that the
appellants’ application ought to have been launched in
the
Mbombela or Middelburg circuit courts, as the high court had
ceased to have jurisdiction in any matters emanating and
arising from
magisterial districts in the Mpumalanga province. The appellants
contended that the high court had jurisdiction in
terms of
s 21(2)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, by virtue of the fact that the
office of the sixth respondent was in Pretoria, that the practice of
the ninth respondent was situated
in Johannesburg and that the
registered address of the tenth respondent was also situated in
Johannesburg.
[4]
In upholding the point
in limine
, the high court inter alia
alluded to the Practice Directive and quoted the clause which
stipulated that the high court ‘shall’
cease to have
jurisdiction in any matters emanating and arising in and from
specified magisterial districts in Mpumalanga. More
about that later.
The high court, accordingly, found that it did not have the
jurisdiction to adjudicate the application. Consequently,
the merits
of the matter were not considered.
[5]
Aggrieved by the order granted by the high court, the appellants
sought
the high court’s leave to appeal its order but were
unsuccessful. The appellants then approached this Court, on
petition,
which granted leave to appeal on a limited basis. The order
granting leave limited the issues as follows:
‘
3.1
Whether the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria had
jurisdiction to hear the application.
3.2
Whether the Judge President, Gauteng had the power in terms of
s 7(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, when constituting circuit
courts in Mpumalanga by way of the notice dated 1 September 2017, to
exclude the jurisdiction of the
Gauteng Division of the High
Court in respect of the matters arising in the area of jurisdiction
of those circuit courts,
prior to the promulgation by the Minister of
Justice and Constitutional Development of a notice in terms of
s 6(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act in
relation to the Mpumalanga Division of
the High Court.’
[6]
Asserting
that the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development (the
Minister) had a direct and substantial interest in the
outcome of
this matter in light of paragraph 3.2 of this Court’s order,
which essentially called upon this Court to pronounce
on the validity
of a published Practice Directive and Notice which had been endorsed
by the Chief Justice, the appellants brought
an application joining
the Minister as a co-respondent in this matter. The Minister did not
oppose the application and indicated
that he would abide the decision
of the court. An affidavit was, however, filed by the
Director-General: Court Services in the
Department of Justice and
Constitutional Development expressing certain views on the matter.
The input given by the latter served
to confirm that the Minister
indeed had a substantial interest which warranted the granting of the
application for joinder.
[2]
An
order joining the Minister as the twelfth respondent was,
accordingly, granted. I turn now to the issues that have to be
determined
in this matter.
[7]
The
starting point is the Practice Directive which persuaded the high
court to conclude that it was not the appropriate forum for
the
adjudication of the application and finding instead that one of the
two Mpumalanga circuit courts was the court clothed with
the
jurisdiction to entertain the matter. On 1 September 2017 the
Judge President of the Gauteng Division of the High Court
(the
Judge President), within the contemplation of
s 7(1)
of the
Superior
Courts Act, issued
a Practice Directive
[3]
which purported to determine the jurisdictional boundaries of the
Circuit Courts of the Mpumalanga Division.
[4]
Clause 1.5 of the notice reads as follows:
‘
1.5
The Gauteng Division of the High Court shall, with the coming into
effect of this Notice, cease to have jurisdiction in any
matters
emanating and arising in and from the Magesterial Districts set out
in parts A and B respectively.’
[5]
[8]
As mentioned before, the appellants rely on the provisions of
s 21(1)
and
21
(2) of the
Superior Courts Act as
a basis for their contention
that the High Court had the necessary jurisdiction to adjudicate
their application. It is therefore
necessary to juxtapose the
provisions of the Practice Directive with the relevant provisions of
the
Superior Courts Act in
order to assess whether there are any
inconsistencies between the two. This exercise is necessary because,
as explained by this
Court in
The
National Director of Public Prosecutions (Ex Parte Application)
,
[6]
‘[p]ractice directives may not derogate from legislation, the
common law or rules of court that have binding force . . .’.
The salient provisions of the
Superior Courts Act are
set out in the
next paragraph.
[9]
Section 6(3)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act provides
that
‘[t]he Minister must, after consultation with the Judicial
Service Commission [the JSC], by notice in the [Government]
Gazette
,
determine the area under the jurisdiction of a Division, and may in
the same manner amend or withdraw such notice’. In this
regard
it bears mentioning that the Minister published a notice contemplated
in
s 6(3)
(a)
establishing the Mpumalanga Division, with a
description of its territorial reach, in Government Notice No 615
published in Government
Gazette No 42420 on 26 April, which took
effect on 1 May 2019. Until that date, the Gauteng Division also
functioned as the Mpumalanga Division
and had jurisdiction in
the geographical area of Mpumalanga.
Section
7
provides as follows:
‘
7
.
(1) The Judge President of a Division may by notice in the
Gazette
within the area under the jurisdiction of that Division establish
circuit districts for the adjudication of civil or criminal matters,
and may by like notice alter the boundaries of any such district.
(2)
In each circuit district of the Division there must be held, at least
twice a year and at such times and places as may be determined
by the
Judge President concerned, a court which must be presided over by a
judge of that Division.
(3)
A court referred to in subsection (2) is called a circuit court of
the Division in question.'
Section
21
provides:
‘
21
.
(1) A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being
in, and in relation to all causes arising and all offences
triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it
may according to law take cognisance. . .
.
. .
(2)
A Division also has jurisdiction over any person residing or being
outside its area of jurisdiction who is joined as party to
any cause
in relation to which such court has jurisdiction or who in terms of a
third party notice becomes a party to such a cause,
if the said
person resides or is within the area of jurisdiction of any other
Division.
.
. . .’
Section
50(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act provides
:
‘
Notwithstanding
section 6(1)
, the Gauteng Division shall also function as the Limpopo
and Mpumalanga Divisions, respectively, until a notice published in
terms
of
section 6(3)
in respect of those Divisions comes into
operation.’
The
reference to ‘Gauteng Divisions’ was apparently intended
to refer to both the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria,
and the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg.
Discussion
[10]
The principles applicable to the interpretation of statutes are
trite. As stated in
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
,
[7]
‘[a] fundamental tenet of statutory interpretation is that the
words in a statute must be given their ordinary grammatical
meaning,
unless to do so would result in an absurdity. . .’. The words
in the relevant sections of the
Superior Courts Act are
clear and
unambiguous. Nothing in any of the clear and unambiguous provisions
mentioned in the preceding paragraph suggests that
a particular
Division does not retain jurisdiction in respect of matters which
have been initiated in circuit courts falling within
that Division’s
area of jurisdiction. On a proper interpretation and application of
the provisions of
s 21(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act, read
with
ss 7
and
50
(2) respectively, the circuit courts that were established
in terms of the practice directive were not established as
self-standing
Divisions. Thus, the High Court retained its
territorial jurisdiction over the areas which did not yet fall
exclusively within
the jurisdiction of any other Division.
[11]
The position as at May 2018, when the application was launched, was
that the High Court functioned
as the Mpumalanga Division as
envisaged in
s 50(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act. As
at the
date of the publication of the Practice Directive (1 September
2017), the Minister had not yet constituted the Mpumalanga
Division
of the Gauteng High Court as a separate Division within the
contemplation of
s 6(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act. A
significant
common cause fact is that the Notice issued by the Minister
establishing the area of jurisdiction of the Mpumalanga
Division
within the contemplation of
s 6(3)
only came into operation on 1 May
2019. This means that until 1 May 2019 the Gauteng High Court
continued to retain its jurisdiction
over Mbombela and Middelburg as
circuit courts.
[12]
As can be determined from the provisions of
s 7
of the
Superior
Courts Act, the
powers of a Judge President in relation to the
establishment of circuit court districts and their boundaries are
circumscribed
by legislation; the Judge President cannot exercise any
more power than that granted to him or her by legislation. It is
clear
that in terms of
s 6(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act, only
the
Minister has the power to determine the jurisdictional areas of the
various Divisions of the High Court. The fact that a Judge
President,
may, in terms of
s 7(1)
alter the boundaries of any circuit courts
that have been established under a particular Division should not be
equated with the
power, granted exclusively to the Minister, to
determine the area under the jurisdiction of that Division.
[13]
It is plain from the provisions of
s 21(2)
of the
Superior Courts
Act, read
with
ss 7
and
50
(2) respectively, that the circuit courts
that were established in terms of the Practice Directive were not
established as self-standing
Divisions. Thus, the high court retained
its territorial jurisdiction over all the areas which did not as yet
fall within the jurisdiction
of any other Division(s). Since the
Gauteng Divisions retained their territorial jurisdiction, the newly
established circuit courts,
established in terms of the Practice
Directive, could not have ousted the jurisdiction granted by that
legislation. The effect
of clause 1.1 and 1.2 of the Practice
Directive is that there is an overlap of jurisdiction between the
high court and the Mbombela
and Middelburg circuit courts. They have
concurrent jurisdiction.
[8]
What
is quite striking is that the Mbombela and Middelburg circuit courts
were the circuit courts of the Gauteng Division, and
ordinarily, the
only judges that may preside in those courts are the judges of the
Gauteng Division (see
s 7(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act). All
these
circumstances lead me to conclude that the high court erred when it
found that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the appellants’
application. This conclusion addresses the first issue which this
Court had to determine (paragraph 3.1 of the order granting leave
to
appeal), as set out in paragraph 5 of this judgment.
[14]
With regard to the second issue set out in paragraph 3.2 of the
order,
[9]
it follows that the
Judge President did not have the power, when constituting circuit
courts in Mpumalanga by virtue of the notice
dated 1 September 2017,
to exclude the jurisdiction of the Gauteng Divisions, bestowed on
them in terms of
s 21
of the
Superior Courts Act, in
respect of the
matters arising in the area of jurisdiction of those circuit courts
prior to the date on which the Minister promulgated
the determination
of the Mpumalanga Division of the High Court, namely 1 May 2019. In
purporting to oust the jurisdiction of the
Gauteng Divisions by dint
of clause 1.5 of the Practice Directive, he acted beyond his powers,
which conduct is invalid.
[10]
It follows that clause 1.5 of the Practice Directive ought to be
declared null and void
ab
initio
.
[15]
As already mentioned, in its order, the high court dismissed the
appellants’ application
on the basis of lack of jurisdiction.
Apart from the fact that it was wrong as demonstrated above, the high
court equally erred
in dismissing the application. As regards the
submission that the order dismissing the application was in any event
erroneous because
the high court had only adjudicated the points
in
limine
and not the merits of the matter, it suffices to merely
re-affirm the trite principle that an appropriate order to be granted
when
upholding a preliminary point like jurisdiction, is to strike
the application off the roll and not to dismiss it, as the merits
would not have been entertained. The high court’s order can
therefore not stand. With regard to costs, there is no basis
to
deviate from the general rule that costs follow the result.
[16]
For all the reasons set out above, the following order is granted:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, is set aside
and
replaced with the following:
3
‘The eighth respondent’s point in limine pertaining
to
jurisdiction is dismissed with costs.’
4
Clause 1.5 of Gauteng Division Practice Directive No 1
of 2015 is
declared null and void
ab initio
and is set aside.
M
B MOLEMELA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Makgoka JA (Mocumie,
Molemela, Mbatha JJA and Musi AJA concurring)
[17]
I agree with the order of the judgment prepared by my Colleague,
Molemela JA (the first judgment)
and the reasons underpinning it. I
write separately to deal with two aspects. The first is the eighth
respondent’s reliance
on
ss 173
and
34
to support the judgment
of the high court. Second, I deal with the eighth respondent’s
reliance on the decision in
First National Bank
v Lukhele
and Seven Other Cases [2016]
ZAGPPHC 616 (
Lukhele
) and consider the status of that
decision in the light of this Court’s decision in
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd and Others v Thobejane and Others
;
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Gqirana N O
and Another
[2021] ZASCA 92
;
[2021] 3
All SA 812
(SCA);
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA) (
Thobejane
).
I consider these aspects, in turn.
Sections
173
and
34
arguments
[18]
Counsel for the eighth respondent submitted, among others, that the
impugned practice directive
was justified by the court’s power
to regulate its own process in terms of
s 173 of
the Constitution, and that the objective of creating the two
Mpumalanga circuit courts was to promote access to courts
as
envisaged in s 34 of the Constitution.
[19]
Jurisdiction is a matter of law, and not of discretion or equity,
which is what ss 173 and 34
are concerned with. In the present case,
jurisdiction is governed by
s 21
of the
Superior Courts Act, which
regulates the jurisdiction of the various divisions of the high court
over persons and in relation to matters. Thus, whether the
court has
jurisdiction or not, is determined with reference to that section
only. If it has jurisdiction, that is the end of the
enquiry. The
court does not need either
s 173
or
s 34
to justify exercising it.
Similarly, if a court does not have jurisdiction, the enquiry ends
there.
[20]
As explained by the Constitutional Court in
S
v Molaudzi
,
[11]
a
court cannot use the
s 173
power to assume jurisdiction that it does
not otherwise have. Axiomatically, it cannot use the
s 173
power to
oust jurisdiction which it ordinarily has. The same applies with
equal force to the right of access to courts guaranteed
in
s 34.
The
section has no place to the enquiry as to whether or not a court has
jurisdiction. No reasons of equity could ever clothe a
court with
jurisdiction it does not have.
[21]
It follows that the
ss 173
and
34
considerations are totally
irrelevant to the enquiry whether a court has jurisdiction or not.
Equally irrelevant to the jurisdiction
enquiry, are the objectives
sought to be achieved through the practice directive. The eighth
respondent’s submissions on
these two constitutional provisions
therefore falter as a matter of law, and must be rejected on that
basis alone.
Lukhele
[22]
Counsel for the eighth respondent submitted that the high court was
entitled to decline to exercise
its jurisdiction over matters that
can more conveniently be heard by other courts or circuit courts, and
that doing so is not akin
to the exclusion of a court’s
jurisdiction. In my view, this submission is not properly
conceptualised. The present case
is not about a court declining to
exercise its jurisdiction, as was the case in
Thobejane
and in
Lukhele
.
[12]
In
the present case, the court’s jurisdiction had been ousted by a
practice directive. For that reason,
Lukhele,
like
Thobejane,
is
unhelpful in determining the question in paragraph 3.2 of this
Court’s order granting leave to appeal.
[23]
That notwithstanding, it is
necessary to examine
Lukhele
closely, to determine whether its key holding withstand the scrutiny
of this Court’s decision in
Thobejane
.
It is important for the Judges, practitioners and litigants in
Mpumalanga to have clarity as to whether
Lukhele
is still authoritative in that
division. The mere fact that counsel for the eighth respondent relied
on it underscores this point.
[24]
To recap, in that case,
the
Gauteng Division (
functioning
as Mpumalanga Division, Mbombela
) had declined to
determine matters within its jurisdiction on the basis that the
matters would conveniently be dealt with by the
circuit court in
Middelburg where the defendants, who had not defended the actions,
were resident. In its reasoning, the court
held that in Mpumalanga,
plaintiffs were obliged to institute actions
in
the circuit court closest to the defendant’s place of
residence. The court based this conclusion on
ss 173
and
34
justifications.
[25]
This
Court in
Thobejane
rejected those justifications as a basis for a court to decline
exercising its jurisdiction. Significantly, the court expressly
rejected the proposition (a key holding in
Lukhele
)
that a plaintiff had to institute action in a court closest to a
defendant’s place of residence. At para 25 the court said
the
following:
‘
Self-evidently,
litigation begins by a plaintiff initiating a claim. Axiomatically,
it must be the plaintiff who chooses a court
of competent
jurisdiction in just the same way that a game of cricket must begin
by a ball being bowled. The batsman cannot begin.
This elementary
fact is recognised as a rule of the common law, founded, as it is, on
common sense. The right of a plaintiff to
do so was recognised in a
Full Court of the Gauteng Division in
Moosa
v Moosa.
That Court relied on
Marth
v Collier
where it was stated:
“
The
granting of an order for the transfer of legal proceedings from the
Supreme Court to the Magistrates’ Court, in the absence
of a
Plaintiff ’s consent, would clearly infringe upon the
latter’s substantive right to choose the forum in which
he or
she wishes to institute proceedings. As little as our courts have the
inherent power to create substantive law (See: the
Cerebos
Foods
case (
supra
)
at 173D;
Universal City Studios Inc
& Others v Network Video (Pty) Ltd
1986 (2) SA 734 (A)
at 754E-755E) do they have the power, in the absence of statutory -
or common law authorisation
or legal precedent. . . to make orders
which infringe upon the substantive rights of litigants or others
(See:
Eynon v Du Toit
1927
CPD 76
;
E v E and Another
1940
TPD 333)
, such as the right of a Plaintiff, as
dominus
litis
, to decide in which of
concurrent
fora
he
or she wishes to enforce his or her rights.”’ (Footnotes
omitted.)
[26]
This Court also concluded, and made
an order to that effect, that the main seat of a Division of a High
Court is obliged to entertain
matters that fall within the
jurisdiction of a local seat of that Division because the main seat
has concurrent jurisdiction.
[27]
Given these findings, and to the
extent contrary views were expressed in
Lukhele
,
the latter must be considered to have been overturned by
Thobejane
.
In the result, the eighth respondent’s reliance on
Lukhele
was misplaced.
Conclusion
[28]
Save for these brief observations, I
concur in the order of the first judgment.
TATI
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants: J C
Klopper
Instructed
by:
DBM Attorneys, Centurion
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
8
th
respondent: J de Beer (with A C J van Dyk)
Instructed
by:
Wiekus du Toit Attorneys, Mbombela
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Notice
issued by the Judge President, Gauteng, namely Government Notice no
956 issued and published on 1 September 2017.
[2]
See
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949
(3) SA 637
(A) at 659.
[3]
Government
notice 956 published on 1 September 2017.
[4]
On the same day (1 September 2017), the Chief Justice of the
Republic of South Africa had, within the contemplation of
s 8(3)
read with
s 5
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
also issued a
Practice Directive which was published in
Government
Notice 955.
Clause 1 thereof stipulated as follows:
‘
1.
All action and motion proceedings including urgent applications as
well as appeals in any area in the Mpumalanga province shall,
with
effect from 1 February 2016, be enrolled and heard at Mbombela and
Middelburg Circuit Courts.’
[5]
Part
A listed Mbombela Areas of jurisdiction, while Part B listed
Middelburg areas of jurisdiction.
[6]
The
National Director of Public Prosecutions (Ex Parte Application)
[2021]
ZASCA 142
;
2022
(1) SACR 1
(SCA para 19.
[7]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
[2014]
ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
; para 28.
[8]
See
para 33 of
Thobejane.
[9]
See
para 5 of this judgment.
[10]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa and Another: In re Ex
Parte President of the RSA
and
Others
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC) para 50.
Affordable
Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC); 2005(6) BCLR 529 (CC) para 50.
[11]
S v
Molaudzi
[2015]
ZACC 20
;
2015 (8) BCLR 904
(CC);
2015 (2) SACR 341
(CC) para 34.
[12]
In
Thobejane
this
Court had to consider two judgments, respectively from the Gauteng
and the Eastern Cape Divisions of the High Court. The
Gauteng
judgment is the
Thobejane
part of the judgment, where this Court had to decide whether a high
court division could competently refuse to hear a matter
within its
jurisdiction on the basis that another court (such as a local
division or a magistrates’ court) had concurrent
jurisdiction.
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