South Africa: Consolidated Acts
You are here: SAFLII >> Databases >> South Africa: Consolidated Acts >> Superior Courts Act 2013 | NoteupSuperior Courts Act 2013
Download original files |
[Last checked: 14
October 2024.*]
*The last
time this Act was reviewed for updates.
SUPERIOR COURTS ACT 10 OF
2013
[Updated to 11 October 2024.**]
**Date of last changes incorporated into this Act.
_________________________________
English
text signed by the President
Assented to 12 August 2013
________________________________
Published:
G. 36743 of 12
August 2013
Commencement: 23 August 2013, unless otherwise
indicated
Proc.
R36, G. 14774 of 22 August 2013
Amended
by
Courts of Law Amendment
Act 7 of 2017
(G. 42297 of 2 August 2017) [Proc R12, G. 42297 with effect from 11 March 2019]
Judicial Matters Amendment Act 8 of 2017 (G. 41018 with effect from 2
August 2017)
Criminal and Related Matters Amendment Act 12 of 2021 (G.
45822 of 28 January 2022) [Proc R75, G. 47198 with effect from 5 August 2022]
Domestic Violence Act 116
of 1998 (G. 45824 of 22 January 2022) [Proc R117, G. 48419 with effect from 14
April 2023]
Judicial Matters Amendment Act
15 of 2023 (G. 50430 with effect from 3
April 2024)
ACT
To
rationalise, consolidate and amend the laws relating to the Constitutional
Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal and the High Court
of South Africa; to make
provision for the administration of the judicial functions of all courts; to
make provision for administrative
and budgetary matters relating to the
Superior Courts; and to provide for matters incidental thereto.
PREAMBLE
NOTING THAT
section 1 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, provides
that the supremacy of the Constitution and the rule
of law form part of the
founding values of the Republic;
AND section 165 of the
Constitution provides that—
(a) the
judicial authority of the
Republic is vested in the courts;
(b) the courts are independent
and subject only to the Constitution and the law, which they must apply
impartially and without fear, favour
or prejudice;
(c) no
person or organ of state may interfere with the functioning of the courts;
(d) 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;
(e) an
order or decision by a court binds all persons to whom and all organs of state
to which it applies; and
(f) the
Chief Justice is the head of the judiciary and exercises responsibility over
the establishment and monitoring of norms and standards
for the exercise of the
judicial functions of all courts;
AND section 166 of the
Constitution provides that the courts are—
(a) the
Constitutional Court;
(b) the
Supreme Court of Appeal;
(c) the
High Court of South Africa;
(d) the
Magistrates’ Courts; and
(e) any
other court established or recognised in terms of an Act of Parliament,
including any court of a status similar to either the
High Court or the
Magistrates’ Courts;
AND section 171 of the
Constitution provides that all courts function in terms of national
legislation, and their rules and procedures
must be provided for in terms of
national legislation;
AND section 180 of the
Constitution provides that national legislation may provide for any matter
concerning the administration of
justice that is not dealt with in the
Constitution;
AND item 16(6)(a) of
Schedule 6 to the Constitution provides that as soon as practical after the
Constitution took effect all courts,
including their structure, composition,
functioning and jurisdiction, and all relevant legislation, must be
rationalised with a
view to establishing a judicial system suited to the
requirements of the Constitution;
NOTING FURTHER
that, with the advent of the democratic constitutional dispensation in 1994,
the Republic inherited a fragmented court structure
and infrastructure which
were largely derived from our colonial history and were subsequently further
structured to serve the segregation
objectives of the apartheid dispensation;
AND that, before the advent
of the democratic constitutional dispensation in 1994, the Magistrates’ Courts
were not constitutionally
recognised as part of the judicial authority and were
largely dealt with as an extension of the public service;
AND that, since the
Constitution provides that the judicial authority is vested in all the courts,
it is desirable to provide for a
uniform framework for judicial management, by
the judiciary, of the judicial functions of all courts;
AND RECOGNISING
that the rationalisation envisaged by item 16(6)(a) of Schedule 6 to the
Constitution is an on-going process that is likely to
result in further
legislative and other measures in order to establish a judicial system suited
to the requirements of the Constitution,
PARLIAMENT
of the Republic of South Africa enacts, as follows:—
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
Introductory Provisions
1. Definitions
2. Objects
and interpretation of Act
3. Introduction
of legislation dealing with court structures
CHAPTER 2
Constitutional Court,
Supreme Court Of Appeal And High Court Of South Africa
4. Constitution
and seat of Constitutional Court
5. Constitution
and seat of Supreme Court of Appeal
6. Constitution
of High Court of South Africa
7. Circuit
Courts
CHAPTER 3
Governance and
Administration of all Courts
8. Judicial
management of judicial functions
9. Access
to courts, recess periods and attendance at courts
10. Finances
11. Appointment
of officers and staff
CHAPTER 4
Manner of Arriving at
Decisions by Superior Courts
12. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Constitutional Court
13. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Supreme Court of Appeal
14. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Divisions
CHAPTER 5
Orders of Constitutional
Invalidity, Appeals and Settlement of Conflicting Decisions
15. Referral
of order of constitutional invalidity to Constitutional Court
16. Appeals
generally
17. Leave
to appeal
18. Suspension
of decision pending appeal
19. Powers
of court on hearing of appeals
20. Settlement
of conflicting decisions in civil cases
CHAPTER 6
Provisions Applicable to
High Court only
21. Persons
over whom and matters in relation to which Divisions have jurisdiction
22. Grounds
for review of proceedings of Magistrates’ Court
23. Judgment
by default
23A. Rescission
of judgment with consent of plaintiff or where judgment debt has been paid
24. Time
allowed for appearance
25. Circumstances
in which security for costs shall not be required
26. Disposal
of records and execution of judgments of Circuit Courts
27. Removal
of proceedings from one Division to another or from one seat to another in same
Division
28. Prohibition
on attachment to found jurisdiction within Republic
CHAPTER 7
Rules of Court
29. Rules
of Constitutional Court
30. Rules
of Supreme Court of Appeal and High Court
CHAPTER 8
General Provisions
Applicable to all Superior Courts
Part 1
Nature of courts
31. Nature
of courts and seals
32. Proceedings
to be carried on in open court
33. More
than one court may sit at same time
Part 2
Adducing of evidence and
procedural matters
34. Certified
copies of court records admissible as evidence
35. Manner
of securing attendance of witnesses or production of any document or thing in
proceedings and penalties for failure
36. Manner
in which witness may be dealt with on refusal to give evidence or produce
documents
37. Witness
fees
37A. Evidence
through intermediaries in proceedings other than criminal proceedings
37B. Oath and
competency of intermediaries
37C. Evidence
through remote audiovisual link in proceedings other than criminal proceedings
38. Reference
of particular matters for investigation by referee
39. Examination
by interrogatories
40. Manner
of dealing with commissions rogatoire, letters
of request and documents for service originating from foreign countries
41. Court
may order removal of certain persons
Part 3
Process of Superior Courts
42. Scope
and execution of process
43. Execution
of process by sheriff
44. Electronic
transmission of summonses, writs and other process
45. Property
not liable to be seized in execution
46. Offences
relating to execution
47. Issuing
of summons or subpoena in civil proceedings against judge
48. Acting
judges of Superior Courts
49. Regulations
CHAPTER 9
Transitional Provisions,
Amendment and Repeal of Laws, and Commencement
50. Existing
High Courts
51. Rules
in existence immediately before commencement of Act
52. Pending
proceedings when Act commences
53. References
in other laws
54. Financial
accountability
55. Repeal
and amendment of laws
56. Short
title and commencement
Schedule
1: Laws Repealed
Schedule
2: Laws Amended
CHAPTER 1
Introductory Provisions
1. Definitions
In
this Act, unless the context otherwise indicates—
“appeal”
in Chapter 5, does not include an appeal in a matter regulated in terms of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977 (Act 51 of 1977), or
in terms of any other
criminal procedural law;
“business day”
means a day that is not a public holiday, Saturday or Sunday;
“Constitution”
means the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996;
“Department”
means the Department responsible for the administration of justice;
“Director-General”
means the Director-General of the Department;
“Division”
means any Division of the High Court;
“full court”,
in relation to any Division, means a Court consisting of three judges;
“head of court”,
in relation to—
(i) the Constitutional Court, means the
Chief Justice;
(ii) the
Supreme Court of Appeal, means the President of that Court;
(iii) any
Division of the High Court, means the Judge President of that Division; and
(iv) any
court of a status similar to the High Court, the most senior judge of such
court;
“High Court”
means the High Court of South Africa referred to in section 6(1);
“judicial officer”
means any person referred to in section 174(1) of the Constitution;
“Judicial Service Commission”
means the Judicial Service Commission referred to in section 178 of the
Constitution;
“Magistrates’ Court”
means any court established in terms of section 2 of the Magistrates’ Courts
Act, 1944 (Act 32 of 1944);
“Minister”* means the Cabinet member responsible for the
administration of justice;
*Administration,
powers and functions transferred to the Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development, effective immediately before the President
assumed office on 19 June 2024 – Proc 199 / G. 51368 / 11 October 2024.
“plaintiff”
includes any applicant or other party who seeks relief in civil proceedings;
“prescribed”
means prescribed by regulation made in terms of this Act;
“President”
means the President of the Republic of South Africa;
“registrar”
means the registrar of the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal or
any Division of the High Court, as the case may
be, and includes an assistant
registrar;
“rules”
means the applicable rules of court;
“Rules Board”
means the Rules Board for Courts of Law, established by the Rules Board for
Courts of Law Act, 1985 (Act 107 of 1985);
“Secretary-General”
means the head of the Office of the Chief Justice, referred to in Column 2 of
Schedule 1 to the Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation
103 of 1994);
“Superior Court”
means the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal, the High Court and
any court of a status similar to the High Court;
“this Act”
includes any regulation.
2. Objects
and interpretation of Act
(1) The
objects of this Act are—
(a) to
consolidate and rationalise the laws pertaining to Superior Courts as
contemplated in item 16(6) of Schedule 6 to the Constitution;
(b) to
bring the structure of the Superior Courts in line with the provisions of
Chapter 8 and the transformation imperatives of the
Constitution; and
(c) to
make provision for the administration of the judicial functions of all courts,
including governance issues, over which the Chief
Justice exercises
responsibility.
(2) This
Act must be read in conjunction with Chapter 8 of the Constitution, which
contains the founding provisions for the structure
and jurisdiction of the
Superior Courts, the appointment of judges of the Superior Courts and matters
related to the Superior Courts.
(3) The
provisions of this Act relating to Superior Courts other than the
Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal or the High
Court of South
Africa, are complementary to any specific legislation pertaining to such
Courts, but in the event of a conflict
between this Act and such legislation,
such legislation must prevail.
3. Introduction
of legislation dealing with court structures
The Minister must be consulted prior to the
introduction in Parliament, by a person other than the Minister, of any bill—
(a) providing
for the establishment of any court of law;
(b) providing
for the establishment of any tribunal contemplated in section 34 of the
Constitution;
(c) that
amends the structure or functions of any court of law or tribunal referred to
in paragraph (a) or (b);or
(d) that
assigns functions to judicial officers, other than in terms of this Act.
CHAPTER 2
Constitutional Court,
Supreme Court of Appeal and High Court of South Africa
4. Constitution
and seat of Constitutional Court
(1)
(a) The
Constitutional Court consists of the Chief Justice of South Africa, the Deputy
Chief Justice of South Africa and nine other
judges of the Constitutional
Court.
(b) The
seat of the Constitutional Court is in Johannesburg, but whenever it appears to
the Chief Justice that it is expedient or in
the interests of justice to hold
its sitting for the hearing of any matter at a place elsewhere than at the seat
of the Court,
it may hold such sitting at that place.
(2) The
Deputy Chief Justice must—
(a) exercise
such powers or perform such functions of the Chief Justice in terms of this or
any other law as the Chief Justice may assign
to him or her; and
(b) in
the absence of the Chief Justice, or if the office of Chief Justice is vacant,
exercise the powers or perform the functions of
the Chief Justice, as Acting
Chief Justice.
5. Constitution
and seat of Supreme Court of Appeal
(1)
(a) The
Supreme Court of Appeal consists of—
(i) the
President of the Supreme Court of Appeal;
(ii) the Deputy President of the Supreme Court of Appeal; and
(iii) so many other judges as may be determined in accordance with the
prescribed criteria, and approved by the President.
(b) Subject
to section 9(1), the seat of the Supreme Court of Appeal is in Bloemfontein,
but whenever it appears to the President of
the Supreme Court of Appeal that it
is expedient or in the interests of justice to hold its sitting for the hearing
of any matter
at a place elsewhere than at the seat of the Court, it may hold
such sitting at that place.
(2) The
Deputy President of the Supreme Court of Appeal must—
(a) exercise
such powers or perform such functions of the President of the Supreme Court of
Appeal in terms of this or any other law
as the latter may assign to him or
her; and
(b) in
the absence of the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal, or if the office
of President of the Supreme Court of Appeal is
vacant, perform the functions of
the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal, as Acting President of the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
6. Constitution
of High Court of South Africa
(1) The
High Court of South Africa consists of the following Divisions:
(a) Eastern
Cape Division, with its main seat in Grahamstown.
(b) Free
State Division, with its main seat in Bloemfontein.
(c) Gauteng
Division, with its main seat in Pretoria.
(d) KwaZulu-Natal
Division, with its main seat in Pietermaritzburg.
(e) Limpopo
Division, with its main seat in Polokwane.
(f) Mpumalanga
Division, with its main seat in Nelspruit.
(g) Northern
Cape Division, with its main seat in Kimberley.
(h) North
West Division, with its main seat in Mahikeng.
(i) Western Cape Division, with its main seat
in Cape Town.
(2) Each
Division of the High Court consists of—
(a) a
Judge President and one or more Deputy Judges President, as determined by the
President, each with specified headquarters within
the area under the
jurisdiction of that Division; and
(b) so
many other judges as may be determined in accordance with the prescribed
criteria, and approved by the President.
(3)
(a) The
Minister must, after consultation with the Judicial Service Commission, by
notice in the Gazette, determine the area under the
jurisdiction of a Division,
and may in the same manner amend or withdraw such a notice.
(b) The
area under the jurisdiction of a Division may comprise any part of one or more
provinces.
(c) The
Minister may, after consultation with the Judicial Service Commission, by
notice in the Gazette establish one or more local
seats for a Division, in
addition to the main seats referred to in subsection (1), and determine the
area under the jurisdiction
of such a local seat, and may in the same manner
amend or withdraw such a notice.
(d) The
publication of a notice referred to in paragraph (a) or (c) does not affect any
proceedings which are pending at the time of
such publication.
(4) If a
Division has one or more local seats—
(a) the
main seat of that Division has concurrent appeal jurisdiction over the area of
jurisdiction of any local seat of that Division,
and the Judge President of the
Division may direct that an appeal against a decision of a single judge or of a
Magistrates’ Court
within that area of jurisdiction may be heard at the main
seat of the Division;
(b) the
Judge President of that Division must compile a single court roll for that
Division; and
(c) the
Judge President of that Division may assign all the judges of that Division
within the Division as he or she deems fit.
(5) If a
judge of one Division is to be temporarily assigned to another Division, such
assignment must take place by way of an acting
appointment in terms of section
175(2) of the Constitution.
(6)
(a) Subject
to paragraph (b), a Deputy Judge President of a Division must—
(i) exercise
such powers or perform such functions of the Judge
President in terms of this or any other law as the latter may assign to him or
her; and
(ii) in the absence of the
Judge President of that Division, or if the office of the Judge President is
vacant, exercise the powers or
perform the functions of the Judge President, as
the Acting Judge President of that Division.
(b) If
more than one Deputy Judge President is appointed in respect of a Division, the
most senior Deputy Judge President of that Division
must exercise the powers or
perform the functions of the Judge President in the circumstances referred to
in paragraph (a)(ii).
(7) Whenever
it appears to the Judge President of a Division that it is expedient or in the
interests of justice to hold a sitting for
the hearing of any matter at a place
elsewhere than at the seat or a local seat of the Division, he or she may,
after consultation
with the Minister, hold such sitting at that place.
7. Circuit
Courts
(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 a 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.
CHAPTER 3
Governance and
administration of all courts
8.
Judicial management of judicial functions
(1) For
the purpose of any consultation regarding any matter referred to in this
section, the Chief Justice may convene any forum of
judicial officers that he
or she deems appropriate.
(2) The
Chief Justice, as the head of the judiciary as contemplated in section 165(6)
of the Constitution, exercises responsibility
over the establishment and
monitoring of norms and standards for the exercise of the judicial functions of
all courts.
(3) The
Chief Justice may, subject to subsection (5), issue written protocols or
directives, or give guidance or advice, to judicial
officers—
(a) in
respect of norms and standards for the performance of the judicial functions as
contemplated in subsection (6); and
(b) regarding
any matter affecting the dignity, accessibility, effectiveness, efficiency or
functioning of the courts.
(4)
(a) Any
function or any power in terms of this section, vesting in the Chief Justice or
any other head of court, may be delegated to
any other judicial officer of the
court in question.
(b) The
management of the judicial functions of each court is the responsibility of the
head of that court.
(c) Subject
to subsections (2) and (3), the Judge President of a Division is also
responsible for the co—ordination of the judicial
functions of all Magistrates’
Courts falling within the jurisdiction of that Division.
(5) Any
protocol or directive in terms of subsection (3)—
(a) may
only be issued by the Chief Justice if it enjoys the majority support of the
heads of those courts on which it would be applicable;
and
(b) must
be published in the Gazette.
(6) The
judicial functions referred to in subsection (2) and subsection (4)(b) include
the—
(a) determination
of sittings of the specific courts;
(b) assignment
of judicial officers to sittings;
(c) assignment
of cases and other judicial duties to judicial officers;
(d) determination
of the sitting schedules and places of sittings for judicial officers;
(e) management
of procedures to be adhered to in respect of—
(i) case
flow management;
(ii) the finalisation of any matter before a
judicial officer, including any outstanding judgment, decision or order; and
(iii) recesses of Superior Courts.
(7) The
Chief Justice may designate any judge to assist him or her in his or her
judicial leadership functions.
9.
Access to courts, recess periods and attendance at courts
(1) All
Superior Courts—
(a) must
be open to the public every business day; and
(b) may
perform the functions of the court on any Saturday, Sunday or public holiday as
may be required from time to time.
(2) Superior
Courts may have such recess periods as may be determined by the Chief Justice
in consultation with the heads of court and
the Minister in order to enable
judges to do research and to attend to outstanding or prospective judicial
functions that may be
assigned to them.
(3) During
each recess period, the head of each court must ensure that an adequate number
of judges are available in that court to deal
with any judicial functions that
may be required, in the interests of justice, to be dealt with during that
recess period.
(4) Subject
to subsections (1) and (2), the head of each Superior Court is responsible to—
(a) ensure
that sufficient judges of that court are available to conduct the business of
the court at all times that the court is open
for business;
(b) issue
directions to the judges of that court with respect to their attendance at the
court and absences from the court during recess
periods;
(c) approve
any extraordinary absence of a judge from the court; and
(d) keep
a register, in the prescribed manner and form, of vacation periods allocated
to, or extraordinary absence approved for, a judge
of that court.
10. Finances
Expenditure
in connection with the administration and functioning of the Superior Courts
must be defrayed from moneys appropriated
by Parliament.
11. Appointment
of officers and staff
(1)
(a) Subject
to paragraph (b), the Minister must appoint for the Constitutional Court, the
Supreme Court of Appeal and each Division
a court manager, one or more
assistant court managers, a registrar, assistant registrars and other officers
and staff whenever
they may be required for the administration of justice or
the execution of the powers and authorities of the said court.
(b) Any
appointment by the Minister in terms of paragraph (a) must be made—
(i) in
consultation with the head of court; and
(ii) in accordance with the laws governing the public service.
(c) A
court manager is the senior executive officer of the court where he or she has
been appointed, and exercises administrative control
over the other persons
referred to in paragraph (a), and, under the control and direction of the head
of court concerned performs
such other functions as may be determined by the
Secretary-General and the Chief Justice.
(2) Whenever
by reason of absence or incapacity any court manager, registrar or assistant
registrar is unable to carry out the functions
of his or her office, or if his
or her office becomes vacant, the Minister may, after consultation with the
head of court concerned,
authorise any other competent officer in the public
service to act in the place of the absent or incapacitated officer during such
absence or incapacity or to act in the vacant office until the vacancy is
filled.
(3) Any
person appointed under subsection (1) may hold more than one of the offices
mentioned in that subsection simultaneously.
(4) The
Minister may delegate any of the powers vested in him or her under this section
to the Secretary-General.
CHAPTER 4
Manner of arriving at
decisions by Superior Courts
12. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Constitutional Court
(1) In
accordance with section 167(2) of the Constitution, any matter before the
Constitutional Court must be heard by at least eight
judges.
(2) If,
at any stage after a hearing has commenced, any judge of the Constitutional
Court is absent or unable to perform his or her
functions, or if a vacancy
among the members of the court arises, and—
(a) the
remaining members of the court are not less than eight in number—
(i) such
hearing must continue before the remaining judges of
the court; and
(ii) the decision of the majority of the remaining judges of
the court shall, if that majority is also a majority of the judges of the court
before
whom the hearing commenced, be the decision of the court; or
(b) the
remaining members of the court are fewer than eight in number, the proceedings
must be stopped and commenced de novo.
(3) No
judge may sit at the hearing of an appeal against a judgment or order given in
a case which was heard before him or her.
13. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Supreme Court of Appeal
(1) Proceedings
of the Supreme Court of Appeal must ordinarily be presided over by five judges,
but the President of the Supreme Court
of Appeal may—
(a) direct
that an appeal in a criminal or civil matter be heard before a court consisting
of three judges; or
(b) whenever
it appears to him or her that any matter should in view of its importance be
heard before a court consisting of a larger
number of judges, direct that the
matter be heard before a court consisting of so many judges as he or she may
determine.
(2)
(a) The
judgment of the majority of the judges presiding at proceedings before the
Supreme Court of Appeal shall be the judgment of
the court.
(b) Where
there is no judgment to which a majority of such judges agree, the hearing must
be adjourned and commenced de novo before
a new court constituted in such
manner as the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal may determine.
(3) If,
at any stage after the hearing of an appeal has commenced, a judge of the
Supreme Court of Appeal is absent or unable to perform
his or her functions, or
if a vacancy among the members of the court arises—
(a) the
hearing must, where the remaining judges constitute a majority of the judges
before whom the hearing was commenced, proceed
before the remaining judges, and
the decision of a majority of the remaining judges who are in agreement shall,
if that majority
is also a majority of the judges before whom the hearing was
commenced, be the decision of the court; or
(b) in
any other case, the appeal must be heard de novo, unless all the parties to the
proceedings agree unconditionally in writing
to accept the decision of the
majority of the remaining judges or, if only one judge remains, the decision of
that judge as the
decision of the court.
(4) Two
or more judges of the Supreme Court of Appeal, designated by the President of
the Supreme Court of Appeal, have jurisdiction
to hear and determine
applications for interlocutory relief, including applications for condonation
and for leave to proceed in
forma pauperis, in chambers.
(5) No
judge may sit at the hearing of an appeal against a judgment or order given in
a case which was heard before him or her.
14. Manner
of arriving at decisions by Divisions
(1)
(a) Save
as provided for in this Act or any other law, a court of a Division must be
constituted before a single judge when sitting
as a court of first instance for
the hearing of any civil matter, but the Judge President or, in the absence of
both the Judge
President and the Deputy Judge President, the senior available
judge, may at any time direct that any matter be heard by a court
consisting of
not more than three judges, as he or she may determine.
(b) A
single judge of a Division may, in consultation with the Judge President or, in
the absence of both the Judge President and the
Deputy Judge President, the
senior available judge, at any time discontinue the hearing of any civil matter
which is being heard
before him or her and refer it for hearing to the full
court of that Division as contemplated in paragraph (a).
(2) For
the hearing of any criminal case as a court of first instance, a court of a
Division must be constituted in the manner prescribed
in the applicable law
relating to procedure in criminal matters.
(3) Except
where it is in terms of any law required or permitted to be otherwise
constituted, a court of a Division must be constituted
before two judges for
the hearing of any civil or criminal appeal: Provided that the Judge President
or, in the absence of both
the Judge President and the Deputy Judge President,
the senior available judge, may in the event of the judges hearing such appeal
not being in agreement, at any time before a judgment is handed down in such
appeal, direct that a third judge be added to hear
that appeal.
(4)
(a) Save
as otherwise provided for in this Act or any other law, the decision of the
majority of the judges of a full court of a Division
is the decision of the
court.
(b) Where
the majority of the judges of any such court are not in agreement, the hearing
must be adjourned and commenced de novo before
a court consisting of three
other judges.
(5) If,
at any stage during the hearing of any matter by a full court, any judge of
such court is absent or unable to perform his or
her functions, or if a vacancy
among the members of the court arises, that hearing must—
(a) if
the remaining judges constitute a majority of the judges before whom it was
commenced, proceed before such remaining judges;
or
(b) if
the remaining judges do not constitute such a majority, or if only one judge
remains, be commenced de novo, unless all the parties
to the proceedings agree
unconditionally in writing to accept the decision of the majority of the
remaining judges or of the one
remaining judge as the decision of the court.
(6) The
provisions of subsection (4) apply, with the changes required by the context,
whenever in the circumstances set out in subsection
(5) a hearing proceeds
before two or more judges.
(7) During
any recess period, one judge designated by the Judge President shall,
notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or any
other law, but subject to
subsection (3), exercise all the powers, jurisdiction and authority of a
Division.
(8) No
judge may sit at the hearing of an appeal against a judgment or order given in
a case which was heard before him or her.
CHAPTER 5
Orders of constitutional
invalidity, appeals and settlement of conflicting decisions
15. Referral
of order of constitutional invalidity to Constitutional Court
(1)
(a) Whenever
the Supreme Court of Appeal, a Division of the High Court or any competent
court declares an Act of Parliament, a provincial
Act or conduct of the
President invalid as contemplated in section 172(2)(a) of the Constitution,
that court must, in accordance
with the rules, refer the order of
constitutional invalidity to the Constitutional Court for confirmation.
(b) Whenever
any person or organ of state with a sufficient interest appeals or applies
directly to the Constitutional Court to confirm
or vary an order of
constitutional invalidity by a court, as contemplated in section 172(2)(d) of
the Constitution, the Court must
deal with the matter in accordance with the
rules.
(2) If
requested by the Chief Justice to do so, the Minister must appoint counsel to
present argument to the Constitutional Court in
respect of any matter referred
to in subsection (1).
16. Appeals
generally
(1) Subject
to section 15(1), the Constitution and any other law—
(a) an
appeal against any decision of a Division as a court of first instance lies,
upon leave having been granted—
(i) if
the court consisted of a single judge, either to the Supreme Court of Appeal or
to a full court of that Division, depending on
the direction issued in terms of
section 17(6); or
(ii) if the court consisted
of more than one judge, to the Supreme Court of Appeal;
(b) an
appeal against any decision of a Division on appeal to it, lies to the Supreme
Court of Appeal upon special leave having been
granted by the Supreme Court of
Appeal; and
(c) an
appeal against any decision of a court of a status similar to the High Court,
lies to the Supreme Court of Appeal upon leave
having been granted by that
court or the Supreme Court of Appeal, and the provisions of section 17 apply
with the changes required
by the context.
(2)
(a)
(i) When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues
are of such a nature that the decision sought will have no practical effect or
result, the appeal may be
dismissed on this ground alone.
(ii) Save under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the
decision would have no practical effect or result is to be determined without
reference
to any consideration of costs.
(b) If,
at any time prior to the hearing of an appeal, the President of the Supreme
Court of Appeal or the Judge President or the judge
presiding, as the case may
be, is prima facie of the view that it would be appropriate to dismiss the
appeal on the ground set
out in paragraph (a), he or she must call for written
representations from the respective parties as to why the appeal should not
be
so dismissed.
(c) Upon
receipt of the representations or, failing which, at the expiry of the time
determined for their lodging, the President of
the Supreme Court of Appeal or
the Judge President, as the case may be, must refer the matter to three judges
for their consideration.
(d) The
judges considering the matter may order that the question whether the appeal
should be dismissed on the ground set out in paragraph
(a) be argued before
them at a place and time appointed, and may, whether or not they have so
ordered—
(i) order
that the appeal be dismissed, with or
without an order as to the costs incurred in any of the courts below or in
respect of the costs of appeal, including the
costs in respect of the
preparation and lodging of the written representations; or
(ii) order that the appeal proceed in the ordinary course.
(3) Notwithstanding
any other law, no appeal lies from any judgment or order in proceedings in
connection with an application—
(a) by
one spouse against the other for maintenance pendente lite;
(b) for
contribution towards the costs of a pending matrimonial action;
(c) for
the interim custody of a child when a matrimonial action between his or her
parents is pending or is about to be instituted;
or
(d) by
one parent against the other for interim access to a child when a matrimonial
action between the parents is pending or about
to be instituted.
17. Leave
to appeal
(1) Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are of the
opinion that—
(a)
(i) the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be
heard, including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b) the
decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of section 16(2)(a);
and
(c) where
the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the issues in the
case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues
between the parties.
(2)
(a) Leave
to appeal may be granted by the judge or judges against whose decision an
appeal is to be made or, if not readily available,
by any other judge or judges
of the same court or Division.
(b) If
leave to appeal in terms of paragraph (a) is refused, it may be granted by the
Supreme Court of Appeal on application filed with
the registrar of that court
within one month after such refusal, or such longer period as may on good cause
be allowed, and the
Supreme Court of Appeal may vary any order as to costs made
by the judge or judges concerned in refusing leave.
(c) An
application referred to in paragraph (b) must be considered by two judges of
the Supreme Court of Appeal designated by the President
of the Supreme Court of
Appeal and, in the case of a difference of opinion, also by the President of
the Supreme Court of Appeal
or any other judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal
likewise designated.
(d) The
judges considering an application referred to in paragraph (b) may dispose of
the application without the hearing of oral argument,
but may, if they are of
the opinion that the circumstances so require, order that it be argued before
them at a time and place
appointed, and may, whether or not they have so
ordered, grant or refuse the application or refer it to the court for
consideration.
(e) Where
an application has been referred to the court in terms of paragraph (d), the
court may thereupon grant or refuse it.
(f) The
decision of the majority of the judges considering an application referred to
in paragraph (b), or the decision of the court,
as the case may be, to grant or
refuse the application shall be final: Provided that the President of the
Supreme Court of Appeal
may, in circumstances where a grave failure of justice
would otherwise result or the administration of justice may be brought into
disrepute, whether of his or her own accord or on application filed within one
month of the decision, refer the decision to the
court for reconsideration and,
if necessary, variation.
[S 17(2)(f) substituted by s 28 of Act 15 of 2023 with effect from 3
April 2024.]
(3) An
application for special leave to appeal under section 16(1)(b) may be granted
by the Supreme Court of Appeal on application filed
with the registrar of that
court within one month after the decision sought to be appealed against, or
such longer period as may
on good cause be allowed, and the provisions of
subsection (2)(c) to (f) shall apply with the changes required by the context.
(4) The
power to grant leave to appeal—
(a) is
not limited by reason only of the fact that the matter in dispute is incapable
of being valued in money; and
(b) is
subject to the provisions of any other law which specifically limits it or
specifically grants or limits any right of appeal.
(5) Any
leave to appeal may be granted subject to such conditions as the court
concerned may determine, including a condition—
(a) limiting
the issues on appeal; or
(b) that
the appellant pay the costs of the appeal.
(6)
(a) If
leave is granted under subsection (2)(a) or (b) to appeal against a decision of
a Division as a court of first instance consisting
of a single judge, the judge
or judges granting leave must direct that the appeal be heard by a full court
of that Division, unless
they consider—
(i) that
the decision to be appealed involves
a question of law of importance, whether because of its general application or
otherwise, or in respect of which
a decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal is
required to resolve differences of opinion; or
(ii) that the administration of justice, either generally or in the
particular case, requires consideration by the Supreme Court of Appeal of the
decision,
in which case they must direct that the appeal be heard by the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
(b) Any
direction by the court of a Division in terms of paragraph (a), may be set
aside by the Supreme Court of Appeal of its own accord,
or on application by
any interested party filed with the registrar within one month after the
direction was given, or such longer
period as may on good cause be allowed, and
may be replaced by another direction in terms of paragraph (a).
(7) Subsection
(2)(c) to (f) apply with the changes required by the context to any application
to the Supreme Court of Appeal relating
to an issue connected with an appeal.
18. Suspension
of decision pending appeal
(1) Subject
to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and execution
of a decision which
is the subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is
suspended pending the decision of
the application or appeal.
(2) Subject
to subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders
otherwise, the operation and execution of a decision
that is an interlocutory
order not having the effect of a final judgment, which is the subject of an
application for leave to appeal
or of an appeal, is not suspended pending the
decision of the application or appeal.
(3) A
court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the
party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves on a
balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable harm if the
court does not so order and
that the other party will not suffer irreparable
harm if the court so orders.
(4)
(a) If
a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1)—
(i)
the court must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii) the aggrieved party has an automatic
right of appeal to the next highest court;
(iii) the court hearing such an appeal must
deal with it as a matter of extreme urgency; and
(iv) such order will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of such appeal.
(b) 'Next
highest court', for purposes of paragraph (a)(ii), means—
(i)
a full court of that Division, if the appeal is against a decision of a single
judge of the Division; or
(ii) the Supreme Court of Appeal, if the appeal is against a decision of two judges or
the full court of the Division.
[S 18(4) substituted by s. 29 of Act 15 of 2023 with effect from 3 April
2024.]
(5) For
the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or of an appeal,
as soon as an application for
leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is lodged with the registrar in terms of
the rules.
19. Powers
of court on hearing of appeals
The
Supreme Court of Appeal or a Division exercising appeal jurisdiction may, in
addition to any power as may specifically be provided
for in any other law—
(a) dispose
of an appeal without the hearing of oral argument;
(b) receive
further evidence;
(c) remit
the case to the court of first instance, or to the court whose decision is the
subject of the appeal, for further hearing,
with such instructions as regards
the taking of further evidence or otherwise as the Supreme Court of Appeal or
the Division deems
necessary; or
(d) confirm,
amend or set aside the decision which is the subject of the appeal and render
any decision which the circumstances may
require.
20. Settlement
of conflicting decisions in civil cases
Whenever
a decision on a question of law is given by a court of a Division which is in
conflict with a decision on the same question
of law given by a court of any
other Division, the Minister may submit such conflicting decisions to the Chief
Justice, who must
cause the matter to be argued before the Constitutional Court
or the Supreme Court of Appeal, as the case may be, in order to determine
the
said question of law for guidance.
CHAPTER 6
Provisions applicable to
High Court only
21. Persons
over whom and matters in relation to which Divisions have jurisdiction
(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, and has the power—
(a) to
hear and determine appeals from all Magistrates’ Courts within its area of
jurisdiction;
(b) to
review the proceedings of all such courts;
(c) in
its discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to enquire into
and determine any existing, future or contingent
right or obligation,
notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any relief consequential upon the
determination.
(2) A
Division also has jurisdiction over any person residing or being outside its
area of jurisdiction who is joined as a 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.
(3) Subject
to section 28 and the powers granted under section 4 of the Admiralty
Jurisdiction Regulation Act, 1983 (Act 105 of 1983),
any Division may issue an
order for attachment of property to confirm jurisdiction.
22. Grounds
for review of proceedings of Magistrates’ Court
(1) The
grounds upon which the proceedings of any Magistrates’ Court may be brought
under review before a court of a Division are—
(a) absence
of jurisdiction on the part of the court;
(b) interest
in the cause, bias, malice or corruption on the part of the presiding judicial
officer;
(c) gross
irregularity in the proceedings; and
(d) the
admission of inadmissible or incompetent evidence or the rejection of
admissible or competent evidence.
(2) This
section does not affect the provisions of any other law relating to the review
of proceedings in Magistrates’ Courts.
23. Judgment
by default
A
judgment by default may be granted and entered by the registrar of a Division
in the manner and in the circumstances prescribed
in the rules, and a judgment
so entered is deemed to be a judgment of a court of the Division.
23A. Rescission of judgment with consent of plaintiff or where
judgment debt has been paid
(1) If a
plaintiff in whose favour a default judgment has been granted has consented in
writing that the judgment be rescinded, a court
may rescind such judgment on
application by any person affected by it.
(2)
(a) Where
a judgment debt, the interest thereon at the rate granted in the judgment and
the costs have been paid, whether the consent
of the judgment creditor for the
rescission of the judgment has been obtained or not, a court may, on
application by the judgment
debtor or any other person affected by the
judgment, rescind that judgment.
(b) The
application contemplated in paragraph (a)—
(i) must
be made on a form which corresponds substantially
with the form prescribed in the rules;
(ii) must be accompanied by reasonable proof that the judgment debt,
the interest thereon and the costs have been paid;
(iii) must be accompanied by proof that the application has been
served on the judgment creditor, at least 10 business days prior to the hearing
of the intended
application;
(iv) may be set down for
hearing on any day, not less than 10 business days after service thereof; and
(v) may be heard by a judge
in chambers.
(c) A
court may make any cost order it deems fit with regard to an application
contemplated in paragraph (a).
[S 23A inserted by s 14 of Act 7 of 2017 with effect from 11 March 2019.]
24. Time
allowed for appearance
The time allowed for entering an appearance to a
civil summons served outside the area of jurisdiction of the Division in which
it was issued, shall be not less than—
(a) one
month if the summons is to be served at a place more than 150 kilometres from
the court out of which it was issued; and
(b) two
weeks in any other case.
25. Circumstances
in which security for costs shall not be required
If a plaintiff in civil proceedings in a Division
resides within the Republic, but outside the area of jurisdiction of that
Division,
he or she shall not by reason only of that fact be required to give
security for costs in those proceedings.
26. Disposal
of records and execution of judgments of Circuit Courts
(1) Within
one month after the termination of the sittings of any Circuit Court, the
registrar thereof must, subject to any directions
of the presiding judge or
judges, transmit all records in connection with the proceedings in that court
to the registrar of the
Supreme Court of Appeal or the Division concerned, as
the case may be, to be filed as records of that Court or Division.
(2) Any
judgment, order or sentence of a Circuit Court may, subject to any applicable
rules for the time being in force, be carried
into execution by means of
process of the Supreme Court of Appeal or the Division concerned, as the case
may be.
27. Removal of proceedings from one Division to another or from
one seat to another in same Division
(1) If
any proceedings have been instituted in a Division or at a seat of a Division,
and it appears to the court that such proceedings—
(a) should
have been instituted in another Division or at another seat of that Division;
or
(b) would
be more conveniently or more appropriately heard or determined—
(i) at
another seat of that Division; or
(ii) by another Division,
that court may, upon application by any party
thereto and after hearing all other parties thereto, order such proceedings to
be
removed to that other Division or seat, as the case may be.
(2) An
order for removal under subsection (1) must be transmitted to the registrar of
the court to which the removal is ordered, and
upon the receipt of such order
that court may hear and determine the proceedings in question.
28. Prohibition on attachment to found jurisdiction within
Republic
No attachment of property to found jurisdiction
shall be ordered by a Division against a person who is resident in the
Republic.
CHAPTER 7
Rules of court
29. Rules
of Constitutional Court
(1) The
Chief Justice, after consultation with the Minister, makes rules relating to
the manner in which the Constitutional Court may
be engaged in any matter,
including the matters referred to in section 172 of the Constitution, and all
matters relating to the
proceedings of and before the Court.
(2) The
Minister must table every rule and every amendment or repeal thereof in
Parliament at least 30 days before the publication thereof.
(3) The
rules must, when it is in the interests of justice and with the leave of the
Court, allow a person—
(a) to
bring a matter directly
to the Court; or
(b) to
appeal directly to the Court from any other court.
[S 29 commencement: To be proclaimed.]
30. Rules of Supreme Court of Appeal and High Court
(1) Rules
for the Supreme Court of Appeal, the High Court and the Magistrates’ Courts are
made in accordance with the Rules Board
for Courts of Law Act, 1985 (Act 107 of
1985).
(2) The provisions of section 29(2) and (3)
also apply to rules referred to in subsection (1).
CHAPTER 8
General provisions
applicable to all Superior Courts
Part 1
Nature of courts
31. Nature of courts and seals
(1) Every
Superior Court is a court of record.
(2) Every
Superior Court must have for use, as occasion may require, a seal of such
design as may be prescribed by the President by
proclamation in the Gazette.
(3) The
seal of a Superior Court must be kept in the custody of the Registrar.
32. Proceedings
to be carried on in open court
Save as is otherwise provided for in this Act or any
other law, all proceedings in any Superior Court must, except in so far as any
such court may in special cases otherwise direct, be carried on in open court.
33. More than one court may sit at same time
The Supreme Court of Appeal and any Division may at
any time sit in so many courts constituted in the manner provided for in this
Act or any other applicable law as the available judges may allow.
Part 2
Adducing of evidence and
procedural matters
34. Certified copies of court records admissible as evidence
Whenever a judgment, order or other record of any
Superior Court is required to be proved or inspected or referred to in any
manner,
a copy of such judgment, order or other record duly certified as such
by the registrar of that court under its seal shall be prima
facie evidence
thereof without proof of the authenticity of such registrar’s signature.
35. Manner of securing attendance of witnesses or production of
any document or thing in proceedings and penalties for failure
(1) A
party to proceedings before any Superior Court in which the attendance of
witnesses or the production of any document or thing
is required, may procure
the attendance of any witness or the production of any document or thing in the
manner provided for in
the rules of that court.
(2) Whenever
any person subpoenaed to attend any proceedings as a witness or to produce any
document or thing—
(a) fails
without reasonable excuse to obey the subpoena and it appears from the return
of the person who served such subpoena, or from
evidence given under oath, that—
(i) the
subpoena was served upon the person to whom it is directed and that his or her
reasonable expenses calculated in accordance
with the tariff framed under
section 37(1) have been paid or offered to him or her; or
(ii) he or she is evading
service; or
(b) without
leave of the court fails to remain in attendance,
the court concerned may issue a warrant directing
that he or she be arrested and brought before the court at a time and place
stated
in the warrant or as soon thereafter as possible.
(3) A
person arrested under any such warrant may be detained thereunder in any prison
or other place of detention or in the custody
of the person who is in charge of
him or her, with a view to securing his or her presence as a witness or
production of any document
or thing at the proceedings concerned: Provided that
any judge of the court concerned may release him or her on a recognisance with
or without sureties to attend as a witness or to produce any document or thing
as required.
(4) Any
person subpoenaed to attend any proceedings as a witness or to produce any
document or thing who fails without reasonable excuse
to obey such subpoena, is
guilty of an offence and liable upon conviction to a fine or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding
three months.
(5) If a
person who has entered into any recognisance in terms of subsection (3) to
attend such proceedings as a witness or to produce
any document or thing fails
without reasonable excuse so to attend or to produce such document or thing, he
or she forfeits his
or her recognisance and is guilty of an offence and liable
upon conviction to a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
three
months.
36. Manner in which witness may be dealt with on refusal to give
evidence or produce documents
(1) Whenever
any person who appears either in obedience to a subpoena or by virtue of a
warrant issued under section 35 or who is present
and is verbally required by
the Superior Court concerned to give evidence in any proceedings—
(a) refuses
to take an oath or to make an affirmation;
(b) having
taken an oath or having made an affirmation, refuses to answer such questions
as are put to him or her; or
(c) refuses
or fails to produce any document or thing which he or she is required to
produce,
without any just excuse for such refusal or failure,
the court may adjourn the proceedings for any period not exceeding eight days
and may, in the meantime, by warrant commit the person so refusing or failing
to prison unless the person consents to do what is
required of him or her
before he or she is so committed to prison.
(2) If
any person referred to in subsection (1) again refuses at the resumed hearing
of the proceedings to do what is so required of
him or her, the court may again
adjourn the proceedings and commit him or her for a like period and so again
from time to time
until such person consents to do what is required of him or
her.
(3) Nothing
contained in this section prevents the court from giving judgment in any matter
or otherwise disposing of the proceedings
according to any other sufficient
evidence taken.
(4) No
person is bound to produce any document or thing not specified or otherwise
sufficiently described in the subpoena unless he
or she actually has it in
court.
(5) When
a subpoena is issued to procure the attendance of any person as a witness or to
produce any book, paper or document in any
proceedings, and it appears that—
(a) he
or she is unable to give any evidence or to produce any book, paper or document
which would be relevant to any issue in such
proceedings; or
(b) such
book, paper or document could properly be produced by some other person; or
(c) to
compel him or her to attend would be an abuse of the process of the court,
any judge of the court concerned may,
notwithstanding anything contained in this section, after reasonable notice by
the Registrar
to the party who sued out the subpoena and after hearing that
party in chambers if he or she appears, make an order cancelling such
subpoena.
37. Witness fees
(1) The
Minister may, in consultation with the Minister of Finance, by notice in the
Gazette prescribe a tariff of allowances which
must be paid to a witness in
civil proceedings or to any person who is to accompany any such witness on
account of the youth or
infirmity due to old age or any disability of such
witness.
(2) Such
notice may differentiate between persons according to—
(a) the
distances which they have to travel to attend the court to which they are
summoned or subpoenaed; or
(b) their
professions, callings or occupations,
and may empower such officers in the service of the
State as may be specified therein to order payment of allowances in accordance
with a higher tariff than the tariff so prescribed in cases where payment of
allowances in accordance with the prescribed tariff
may cause undue hardship.
(3) Notwithstanding
any other law, a Superior Court may order that no allowances or only a portion
of the allowances prescribed shall
be paid to any witness.
[S 37 commencement: To be proclaimed.]
37A. Evidence through
intermediaries in proceedings other than criminal proceedings
(1) A
Superior Court may, on application by any party to proceedings, other than
criminal proceedings before the court, or of its own
accord and subject to
subsection (4), appoint a competent person as an intermediary in order to
enable a witness—
(a) under
the biological or mental age of 18 years;
(b) who
suffers from a physical, psychological, mental or emotional condition; or
(c) who
is an older person as defined in section 1 of the Older Persons Act, 2006 (Act
13 of 2006),
to give his or her evidence through that
intermediary, if it appears to that court that the proceedings would expose
such a witness
to undue psychological, mental or emotional stress, trauma or
suffering if he or she testifies at such proceedings.
(2)
(a) No
examination, cross-examination or re-examination of any witness in respect of
whom a court has appointed an intermediary, except
examination by the court,
may take place in any manner other than through that intermediary.
(b) The
intermediary may, unless the court directs otherwise, convey the general
purport of any question to the relevant witness.
(3) If a
court appoints an intermediary in terms of subsection (1), the court may direct
that the relevant witness gives his or her
evidence at any place—
(a) which
is informally arranged to set that witness at ease;
(b) which
is so situated that any person whose presence may upset that witness, is
outside the sight and hearing of that witness; and
(c) which
enables the court and any person whose presence is necessary at the relevant
proceedings to see and hear, either directly
or through the medium of any
electronic or other devices, that intermediary, as well as that witness, during
his or her testimony.
(4)
(a) The
Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, determine the persons or the category
or class of persons who are competent to be appointed
as intermediaries.
(b) An
intermediary appearing at proceedings in terms of this section who is not in
the full-time employment of the State must be paid
such travelling and
subsistence and other allowances in respect of the services rendered by him or
her as is prescribed by the
rules made—
(i) by
the Rules Board for Courts of Law under the Rules
Board for Courts of Law Act, 1985, in respect of the High Court; or
(ii) in terms of section 29 of this Act, in respect of the
Constitutional Court.
(5)
(a) A
court must provide reasons for refusing any application for the appointment of
an intermediary, immediately upon refusal, which
reasons must be entered into
the record of the proceedings.
(b) A
court may, on application by a party affected by the refusal contemplated in
paragraph (a), and if it is satisfied that there
is a material change in
respect of any fact or circumstance that influenced that refusal, review its
decision.
(6) An
intermediary referred to in subsection (1) may be summoned to appear in court
on a specified date and at a specified place and
time to act as an
intermediary.
(7) If,
at the commencement of or at any stage before the completion of the proceedings
concerned, an intermediary appointed by the
court is for any reason absent,
becomes unable to act as an intermediary, in the opinion of the court, or dies,
the court may,
in the interests of justice and after due consideration of the
arguments put forward by the parties—
(a) postpone
the proceedings in order to obtain the intermediary’s presence;
(b) summons
the intermediary to appear before the court to advance reasons for being
absent;
(c) direct
that the appointment of the intermediary be revoked and appoint another
intermediary; or
(d) direct
that the appointment of the intermediary be revoked and that the proceedings
continue in the absence of an intermediary.
(8) The
court must immediately give reasons for any direction or order referred to in
subsection (7)(c) or (d), which reasons must be
entered into the record of the
proceedings.
[S 37A inserted by s 18 of Act 12 of 2021 with effect from 5 August
2022.]
37B. Oath
and competency of intermediaries
(1) Subject
to subsection (3), any person who is competent to be appointed as an
intermediary in terms of section 37A(4) of this Act
must, before commencing
with his or her functions in terms of section 37A, take an oath or make an
affirmation subscribed by him
or her, in the form set out below, before the
judicial officer presiding over the proceedings:
“I,
............................ do hereby swear/truly affirm that, whenever I may
be called upon to perform the functions of
an intermediary, I shall truly and
correctly, to the best of my knowledge and ability—
(a) perform my functions as an intermediary;
and
(b) convey properly and accurately all
questions put to witnesses and, where necessary, convey the general purport of
any question to
the witness, unless directed otherwise by the court”.
(2)
(a) Subject
to subsection (3), before a person is appointed to perform the functions of an
intermediary in a Superior Court, the judicial
officer presiding over the
proceedings must enquire into the competence of the person to be appointed as
an intermediary.
(b) The
enquiry contemplated in paragraph (a) must include, but is not limited to, the
person’s—
(i)
fitness as a person to be an intermediary;
(ii) experience, which has a bearing on the
role and functions of an intermediary;
(iii) qualifications;
(iv) knowledge, which has a bearing on the
role and functions of an intermediary;
(v) language and communication proficiency;
and
(vi) ability to interact with a witness under the biological or mental age of 18
years or a witness who suffers from a physical, psychological,
mental or
emotional condition, or a witness who is an older person as defined in section
1 of the Older Persons Act, 2006.
(3)
(a) The
head of a court may, at his or her discretion and after holding an enquiry
contemplated in subsection (2), issue a certificate
in the form prescribed by
the Minister by notice in the Gazette, to a person whom he or she has found to
be competent to appear
as an intermediary in a Superior Court.
(b) Before
the head of a court issues a certificate referred to in paragraph (a), he or
she must cause the person who has been found
competent to be appointed as an
intermediary, to take the oath or make the affirmation referred to in
subsection (1) and must endorse
the certificate with a statement of the fact
that it was taken or made before him or her and of the date on which it was so
taken
or made and append his or her signature thereto.
(c) A
certificate contemplated in paragraph (a) may be accepted as proof—
(i)
of the competency of a person to be appointed as an intermediary; and
(ii) of the fact that the person has taken the oath or made the affirmation
contemplated in subsection (1),
for
purposes of this section, in any subsequent proceedings in terms of this Act,
before a Superior Court and it is not necessary
for the presiding judicial
officer presiding over the proceedings in question to administer the oath or
affirmation or to hold
an enquiry into the competence of the person to be
appointed as an intermediary.
(d) Paragraph
(c) must not be construed as prohibiting a judicial officer who presides over
proceedings in a Superior Court from holding
an enquiry, at any stage of
proceedings, regarding the competence of a person to act as an intermediary.
[S 37B inserted by s 18 of Act 12 of 2021 with effect from 5 August
2022.]
37C. Evidence through remote audiovisual link in
proceedings other than criminal proceedings
(1) A
Superior Court may, on application by any party to proceedings before that
court or of its own accord, order that a witness, irrespective
of whether the
witness is in or outside the Republic, if the witness consents thereto, give
evidence by means of audiovisual link.
(2) A
court may make an order contemplated in subsection (1) only if—
(a) it
appears to the court that to do so would—
(i)
(aa) prevent
unreasonable delay;
(bb) save costs;
(cc) be convenient; or
(dd) prevent the likelihood that any person
might be prejudiced or harmed if he or she testifies or is
present at such proceedings; and
(ii) otherwise be in the interests of justice;
(b) facilities
therefor are readily available or obtainable at the court; and
(c) the
audiovisual facilities that are used by the witness or at the court enable—
(i)
persons at the courtroom to see, hear and interact with the witness giving evidence;
and
(ii) the witness who gives evidence to see, hear and interact with the persons at the
courtroom.
(3) The
court may make the giving of evidence in terms of subsection (1) subject to
such conditions as it may deem necessary in the
interests of justice.
(4) The
court must provide reasons for—
(a) allowing
or refusing an application by any of the parties; or
(b) its
order and any objection raised by the parties against the order,
as
contemplated in subsection (1).
(5) For
purposes of this Act, a witness who gives evidence by means of audiovisual
link, is regarded as a witness who was subpoenaed
to give evidence in the court
in question.
(6) For
purposes of this section “audiovisual link” means facilities that enable both
audio and visual communications between a
witness and persons at a courtroom in
real-time as they take place.
[S 37C inserted by s 18 of Act 12 of 2021 with effect from 5 August
2022.]
38. Reference of particular matters for investigation by referee
(1) The
Constitutional Court and, in any civil proceedings, any Division may, with the
consent of the parties, refer—
(a) any
matter which requires extensive examination of documents or a scientific,
technical or local investigation which in the opinion
of the court cannot be
conveniently conducted by it; or
(b) any
matter which relates wholly or in part to accounts; or
(c) any
other matter arising in such proceedings,
for enquiry and report to a referee appointed by the
parties, and the court may adopt the report of any such referee, either wholly
or in part, and either with or without modifications, or may remit such report
for further enquiry or report or consideration by
such referee, or make such
other order in regard thereto as may be necessary or desirable.
(2) Any
such report or any part thereof which is adopted by the court, whether with or
without modifications, shall have effect as if
it were a finding by the court
in the proceedings in question.
(3) Any
such referee shall for the purpose of such enquiry have such powers and must
conduct the enquiry in such manner as may be prescribed
by a special order of
the court or by the rules of the court.
(4) For
the purpose of procuring the attendance of any witness (including any witness
detained in custody under any law) and the production
of any document or thing
before a referee, an enquiry under this section shall be deemed to be civil
proceedings.
(5)
(a) Any
person summoned to attend as a witness or to produce any document or thing
before a referee and who, without sufficient cause—
(i) fails
to attend at the time and place specified;
(ii) fails to remain in attendance until the conclusion of the
enquiry or until he or she is excused by the referee from further attendance;
(iii) refuses to take an oath or to make an affirmation as a
witness; or
(iv) having taken an oath or made an affirmation, fails to—
(aa) answer
fully and satisfactorily any
question put to him or her; or
(bb) produce
any document or thing in his or her
possession or custody, or under his or her control, which he or she was
summoned to produce,
is
guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine or to imprisonment for
a period not exceeding three months.
(b) Any
person who, after having taken an oath or having made an affirmation, gives
false evidence before a referee at an enquiry, knowing
such evidence to be
false or not knowing or believing it to be true, is guilty of an offence and
liable on conviction to the penalties
prescribed by law for perjury.
(6) Any
referee is entitled to such remuneration as may be prescribed by the rules or,
if no such remuneration has been so prescribed,
as the court may determine and
to any reasonable expenditure incurred by him or her for the purposes of the
enquiry, and any such
remuneration and expenditure must be taxed by the taxing
master of the court and shall be costs in the cause.
39. Examination by interrogatories
(1) The
Constitutional Court and, in connection with any civil proceedings pending
before it, any Division, may order that the evidence
of a person be taken by
means of interrogatories if—
(a) in
the case of the Constitutional Court, the court deems it in the interests of
justice; or
(b) in
the case of a Division, that person resides or is for the time being outside
the area of jurisdiction of the court.
(2) Whenever
an order is made under subsection (1), the registrar of the court must certify
that fact and transmit a copy of his or
her certificate to a commissioner of
the court, together with any interrogatories duly and lawfully framed which it
is desired
to put to the said person and the fees and the amount of the
expenses payable to the said person for his or her appearance as hereinafter
provided.
(3) Upon
receipt of the certificate, the interrogatories and the amounts contemplated in
subsection (2), the commissioner must, in respect
of the person concerned—
(a) summon
that person to appear before him or her;
(b) upon
his or her appearance, take that person’s evidence as if he or she was a
witness in a civil case in the said court;
(c) put
to him or her the said interrogatories, with any other questions calculated to
obtain full and true answers to the said interrogatories;
(d) take
down or cause to be taken down the evidence so obtained; and
(e) transmit
the evidence, certified as correct, to the registrar of the court wherein the
proceedings in question are pending.
(4) The
commissioner must further transmit to the said registrar a certificate showing
the amount paid to the person concerned in respect
of the expenses of his or
her appearance, and the cost of the issue and service of the process for
summoning such person before
him or her.
(5) Any
person summoned to appear in terms of subsection (3) who without reasonable
excuse fails to appear at the time and place mentioned
in the summons, is
guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine or to imprisonment for
a period not exceeding three
months.
(6) Any
interrogatories taken and certified under the provisions of this section shall,
subject to all lawful exceptions, be received
as evidence in the proceedings
concerned.
40. Manner of dealing with commissions rogatoire,
letters of request and documents for service originating from foreign countries
(1) Whenever
a commission rogatoire or letter of request in
connection with any civil proceedings received from any state or territory or
court outside the Republic,
is transmitted to the registrar of a Division by
the Director-General of the Department, together with a translation in English
if the original is in any other language, and an intimation that the Minister
considers it desirable that effect should be given
thereto without requiring an
application to be made to such court by the agents, if any, of the parties to
the action or matter,
the registrar must submit the same to a judge in chambers
in order to give effect to such commission rogatoire
or letter of request.
(2) Whenever
a request for the service on a person in the Republic of any civil process or
citation received from any state, territory
or court outside the Republic, is
transmitted to the registrar of a Division by the Director-General of the
Department, together
with a translation in English if the original is in any
other language, and an intimation that the Minister considers it desirable
that
effect should be given thereto, the registrar must cause service of the said
process or citation to be effected in accordance
with the rules by the sheriff
or a deputy sheriff or any person specially appointed thereto by a judge of the
court concerned.
(3) The
registrar concerned must, after effect has been given to any such commission rogatoire, letter of request, process or citation,
return all relevant documents, duly verified in accordance with the rules of
court, to
the Director-General of the Department for transmission.
(4) Except
where the Minister directs otherwise, no fees other than disbursements shall be
recovered from any state, territory or court
on whose behalf any service
referred to in this section has been performed.
41. Court may order removal of certain persons
(1) Any
person who, during the sitting of any Superior Court—
(a) wilfully
insults any member of the court or any officer of the court present at the
sitting, or who wilfully hinders or obstructs
any member of any Superior Court
or any officer thereof in the exercise of his or her powers or the performance
of his or her duties;
(b) wilfully
interrupts the proceedings of the court or otherwise misbehaves himself or
herself in the place where the sitting of the
court is held; or
(c) does
anything calculated improperly to influence any court in respect of any matter
being or to be considered by the court,
may,
by order of the court, be removed and detained in custody until the court
adjourns.
(2) Removal
and detention in terms of subsection (1) does not preclude the prosecution in a
court of law of the person concerned on
a charge of contempt of court.
Part 3
Process of Superior Courts
42. Scope and execution of process
(1) The
process of the Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal runs
throughout the Republic, and their judgments and orders
must, subject to any
applicable rules of court, be executed in any area in like manner as if they
were judgments or orders of the
Division or the Magistrates’ Court having
jurisdiction in such area.
(2) The
civil process of a Division runs throughout the Republic and may be served or
executed within the jurisdiction of any Division.
(3) Any
warrant or other process for the execution of a judgment given or order issued
against any juristic person, partnership or firm
may be executed by attachment
of the property or assets of such juristic person, partnership or firm.
43. Execution of process by sheriff
(1) The
sheriff must, subject to the applicable rules, execute all sentences,
judgments, writs, summonses, rules, orders, warrants,
commands and processes of
any Superior Court directed to the sheriff and must make return of the manner
of execution thereof to
the court and to the party at whose instance they were
issued.
(2) The
return of the sheriff or a deputy sheriff of what has been done upon any
process of a court, shall be prima facie evidence of
the matters therein
stated.
(3) The
sheriff must receive and cause to be detained all persons arrested by order of
the court or committed to his or her custody
by any competent authority.
(4) A
refusal by the sheriff or a deputy sheriff to do any act which he or she is by
law required to do, is subject to review by the
court concerned on application ex
parte or on notice as the circumstances may
require.
44. Electronic transmission of summonses, writs and other process
[S 44 heading substituted by s 40(a) of Act 8 of 2017 with effect from 2
August 2017.]
(1)
(a) In
any civil proceedings, any summons, writ, warrant, rule, order, notice,
document or other process of a Superior Court, or any
other communication which
by any law, rule or agreement of parties is required or directed to be served
or executed upon any person,
or left at the house or place of abode or business
of any person, in order that such person may be affected thereby, may be
transmitted
by facsimile, or by means of any other electronic medium, to the
person who must serve or execute such process or communication.
[S 44(1)(a) substituted by s 40(b) of Act 8 of 2017 with effect from 2
August 2017.]
(b) The
document received or printed as a result of the transmission contemplated in
paragraph (a) is of the same force and effect as
the original thereof.
[S 44(1)(b) substituted by s 40(b) of Act 8 of 2017 with effect from 2
August 2017.]
(2) A
notice transmitted by facsimile, or any other electronic medium as contemplated
in subsection (1)—
[S 44(2), words preceding (a), substituted by s 40(c) of Act 8 of 2017 with
effect from 2 August 2017.]
(a) from
any judicial or police officer, registrar, assistant registrar, sheriff, deputy
sheriff or clerk of the court; and
(b) stating
that a warrant or writ has been issued for the arrest or apprehension of any
person required to appear in or to answer any
civil suit, action or proceeding,
is sufficient authority to any officer authorised by
law to execute any such warrant or writ for the arrest and detention of such
person.
(3)
(a) A
person arrested as contemplated in subsection (2) may be detained for the
shortest period reasonably necessary, but not exceeding
48 hours, in order to
bring the person before a judge of a Superior Court.
(b) The
judge referred to in paragraph (a) must make an order regarding the attendance
by the person in question of any further court
proceedings and warn the person
that any failure to abide by the order is an offence punishable by a fine or by
imprisonment not
exceeding one year.
(c) Any
person who fails to abide by an order referred to in paragraph (b), is guilty
of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine
or to imprisonment not
exceeding one year.
45. Property not liable to be seized in execution
The sheriff or a deputy-sheriff may not seize in
execution of any process such belongings of the debtor as prescribed, but the
Court
concerned may in exceptional circumstances and on such conditions as it
may determine, in its discretion allow a specific deviation
from the prescribed
provisions.
[S 45 commencement: To be proclaimed.]
46. Offences relating to execution
Any
person who—
(a) obstructs
a sheriff or deputy sheriff in the execution of his or her duty;
(b) being
aware that goods are under arrest, interdict or attachment by a Superior Court,
destroys or disposes of those goods in a manner
not authorised by law, or
knowingly permits those goods, if in his or her possession or under his or her
control, to be destroyed
or disposed of in such a manner;
(c) being
a judgment debtor and being required by a sheriff or deputy sheriff to point
out property to satisfy a warrant issued in execution
of judgment against that
person—
(i) falsely
declares to the sheriff or deputy sheriff that he or
she possesses no property or insufficient property to satisfy the warrant; or
(ii) although knowing of
such property, neglects or refuses to point out that property or to deliver it
to the sheriff or deputy sheriff
when requested to do so; or
(d) being
a judgment debtor, refuses or neglects to comply with any requirement of a
sheriff or deputy sheriff in regard to the delivery
of documents in his or her
possession or under his or her control relating to the title of immovable
property under execution,
is guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to
a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year.
47. Issuing of summons or subpoena in civil proceedings against
judge
(1) Except
for an application made in terms of the Domestic Violence Act, 1998 (Act 116 of
1998), no civil proceedings by way of summons
or notice of motion may be instituted against any judge of a Superior
Court, and no subpoena in respect of civil proceedings may be served on any
judge of
a Superior Court, except with the consent of the head of that court or, in the case of
a head of court or the Chief Justice, with the consent of the Chief Justice or
the
President of the Supreme Court of Appeal, as the case may be.
[S 47(1) substituted by s 20 of Act 116 of 1998 with effect from 14 April
2023.]
(2) Where
the issuing of a summons or subpoena against a judge to appear in a civil
action has been consented to, the date upon which
such judge must attend court
must be determined in consultation with the relevant head of court.
48. Acting judges of Superior Courts
Any person who has been appointed as an acting judge
of a Superior Court must be regarded as having been appointed also for any
period during which he or she is necessarily engaged in the disposal of any
proceedings in which he or she has participated as such
a judge, including an
application for leave to appeal that has not yet been disposed of at the expiry
of his or her period of appointment.
49. Regulations
(1) The
Minister may, on the advice of the Chief Justice, make regulations regarding—
(a) any
matter that may be necessary or expedient to prescribe regarding the
administrative functions of courts and the efficient and
effective functioning
and administration of the courts, including the furnishing of periodical
returns of statistics relating to
any aspect of the functioning and
administration of courts and the performance of judicial functions;
(b) the
criteria to be applied for determining the number of judges to be appointed to
the Supreme Court of Appeal and to any specific
Division;
(c) any
protocol to be observed in respect of any process of consultation required in
terms of this Act;
(d) the
determination of recess periods of the Superior Courts;
(e) property
not liable to be seized in execution, as contemplated in section 45;
(f) the
manner in which representatives of the magistracy must be engaged in the
application of section 8.
(2) Any
regulation made under subsection (1) must be submitted to Parliament before
publication thereof in the Gazette.
CHAPTER 9
Transitional provisions,
amendment and repeal of laws, and commencement
50. Existing High Courts
(1) On
the date of the commencement of this Act, but subject to the issuing of any
notice referred to in section 6(3)(a) or (c), the—
(a) Eastern
Cape High Court, Bhisho, becomes a local seat of the
Eastern Cape Division;
(b) Eastern
Cape High Court, Grahamstown, becomes the main seat of the Eastern Cape
Division;
(c) Eastern
Cape High Court, Mthatha, becomes a local seat of the Eastern Cape Division;
(d) Eastern
Cape High Court, Port Elizabeth, becomes a local seat of the Eastern Cape
Division;
(e) Free
State High Court, Bloemfontein, becomes the main seat of the Free State
Division;
(f) KwaZulu-Natal
High Court, Durban, becomes a local seat of the KwaZulu-Natal Division;
(g) KwaZulu-Natal
High Court, Pietermaritzburg, becomes the main seat of the KwaZulu-Natal
Division;
(h) Limpopo
High Court, Thohoyandou, subject to subsection (2), becomes a local seat of the
Limpopo Division;
(i) Northern Cape High Court, Kimberley,
becomes the main seat of the Northern Cape Division;
(j) North
Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, becomes the main seat of the Gauteng Division;
(k) North
West High Court, Mahikeng, becomes the main seat of
the North West Division;
(l) South
Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg, becomes a local seat of the Gauteng Division;
and
(m) Western
Cape High Court, Cape Town, becomes the main seat of the Western Cape Division,
of the High Court of South Africa, and the area of
jurisdiction of each of those courts becomes the area of jurisdiction or part
of the area of jurisdiction, as the case may be, of the Division in question.
(2) 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.
(3) Any
circuit court established under any law repealed by this Act and in existence
immediately before the commencement of this Act,
shall be deemed to have been
duly established in terms of this Act as a Circuit Court of the Division
concerned.
(4) Any
person holding office as the Judge President, a Deputy Judge President or a
judge of a High Court referred to in subsection
(1) when this Act takes effect,
becomes the Judge President, a Deputy Judge President or a judge of the
Division in question, as
the case may be.
(5) The
President may, with the view to facilitating and promoting the effective and
efficient administration of justice in the Divisions
established in terms of
this Act, after consultation with the Chief Justice and the Minister, and with
the consent of the judge
concerned, transfer any judge of a Division to the
Limpopo, Mpumalanga or North West Division.
51. Rules in existence immediately before commencement of Act
The rules applicable to the Constitutional Court,
Supreme Court of Appeal and the various High Courts immediately before the
commencement
of this section remain in force to the extent that they are not
inconsistent with this Act, until repealed or amended.
52. Pending proceedings when Act commences
(1) Subject
to section 27, proceedings pending in any court at the commencement of this
Act, must be continued and concluded as if this
Act had not been passed.
(2) Proceedings
must, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to be pending if, at the
commencement of this Act, a summons had been
issued but judgment had not been
passed.
(3) Subsections
(1) and (2) are also applicable, with the changes required by the context, in
respect of proceedings pending on the
date when a notice contemplated in
section 50(2) comes into operation.
53. References in other laws
Any
reference in any law—
(a) to
the Supreme Court Act, 1959, or a provision of the said Act, must be construed
as a reference to this Act or a corresponding
provision of this Act;
(b) to
a Supreme Court, a High Court, or a provincial or local division of a Supreme
Court, must be construed as a reference to the
High Court of South Africa or a
Division referred to in this Act, as the context may require; and
(c) to
the Appellate Division of a Supreme Court, must be construed as a reference to
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
54. Financial accountability
(1) The
Minister must consider and address requests for funds needed for the
administration and functioning of the Superior Courts,
as determined by the
Chief Justice after consultation with the other heads of Court, in the manner
prescribed for the budgetary
processes of departments of state.
(2) The
Secretary-General, as accounting officer of the Office of the Chief Justice in
terms of the Public Finance Management Act, 1999
(Act 1 of 1999), is charged
with the responsibility of accounting for money received or paid out for or on
account of the administration
and functioning of the Superior Courts, and must
cause the necessary accounting and other related records to be kept, in terms
of that Act.
55. Repeal and amendment of laws
(1) The
laws mentioned—
(a) in
Schedule 1 are hereby repealed to the extent set out in the fourth column of
that Schedule;
(b) in
Schedule 2 are hereby amended to the extent set out in the fourth column of
that Schedule.
(2) Anything
done under any provision of a law repealed or amended by subsection (1), shall,
in so far as it may be necessary or appropriate,
be deemed to have been done
under the corresponding provision of this Act.
56. Short title and commencement
This Act is called the Superior Courts Act, 2013,
and comes into operation on a date fixed by the President by proclamation in
the
Gazette.
SCHEDULE 1
Laws Repealed (Section
55(1)(a))
Item
No. |
No.
and year of law |
Short
title |
Extent
of repeal |
1 |
Act 59 of 1959 |
Supreme Court Act, 1959 |
The whole |
2 |
Act 59 of 1959 (Venda) |
Supreme Court Act, 1959 |
The whole |
3 |
Act 15 of 1969 |
Establishment of the Northern Cape
Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa Act, 1969 |
The whole |
4 |
Act 15 of 1976 (Transkei) |
Republic of Transkei Constitution
Act, 1976 |
Sections 44 up to and including 53 |
5 |
Act 18 of 1977 (Bophuthatswana) |
Republic of Bophuthatswana
Constitution Act, 1977 |
Sections 59 up to and including 67 |
6 |
Act 9 of 1979 (Venda) |
Republic of Venda Constitution Act,
1979 |
Sections 42 up to and including
section 52 |
7 |
Act 32 of 1982 (Bophuthatswana) |
Supreme Court of Bophuthatswana Act,
1982 |
The whole |
8 |
Act 5 of 1983 (Transkei) |
Supreme Court Act, 1983 |
The whole |
9 |
Decree 43 of 1990 (Ciskei) |
Supreme Court Decree, 1990 |
The whole |
10 |
Decree 45 of 1990 (Ciskei) |
Republic of Ciskei Constitution
Decree, 1990 |
Sections 27 and 28 |
11 |
Act 13 of 1995 |
Constitutional Court Complementary
Act, 1995 |
The whole |
[Commencement of Schedule 1, item11 insofar as it
repeals s 16: To be proclaimed.] |
|||
12 |
Act 41 of 2001 |
Interim Rationalisation of
Jurisdiction of High Courts Act, 2001 |
The whole |
13 |
Act 30 of 2008 |
Renaming of High Courts Act, 2008 |
The whole |
SCHEDULE 2
Laws Amended (Section
55(1)(b))
Item No. |
No. and year of law |
Short title |
Extent of amendment |
1 |
Act 107 of 1985 |
Rules Board for Courts of Law Act, 1985 |
1. Amendment of
section 3 by the substitution for paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of the
following
paragraph: ”(a) [a judge of the
Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal or a High Court, whom the
Minister designates] the Chief Justice as the
chairperson;”. (Commencement Schedule 2, item 1.1: To be proclaimed.] 2. Amendment of
section 6— (a) by the substitution
for the words preceding paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of the following
words: “The Board may, with a view to the
efficient, expeditious and uniform administration of justice in the Supreme
Court of Appeal,
the [High Courts and the lower courts] High
Court of South Africa and the Lower Courts, from time to time on a
regular basis review existing rules of court and, subject to the approval of
the Minister, make, amend
or repeal rules for the Supreme Court of Appeal,
the [High Courts and the lower courts] High Court of
South Africa and the Lower Courts regulating—”; (b) by the substitution
for paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of the following paragraph: “(e) the practice and procedure in
connection with the reference of any matter to a referee under [section
19 of the Supreme Court Act, 1959 (Act 59 of 1959)] section 38 of
the Superior Courts Act, 2013, and the remuneration payable to any such
referee;”; (c) by the substitution
for paragraph (p) of subsection (1) of the following paragraph: “(p) the custody and disposal of
records or minutes of evidence and proceedings in the Supreme Court of Appeal
and the [High Courts] High Court of South Africa;”; (d) by the substitution
for paragraph (t) of subsection (1) of the following paragraph: “(t) generally any matter which
may be necessary or useful to be prescribed for the proper despatch and
conduct
of the functions of the Supreme Court of Appeal, the [High
Courts and the lower courts] High Court of South Africa and the
Lower Courts in civil as well as in Criminal proceedings.”; (e) by the substitution
for paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of the following paragraph: “(a) Different rules may be made in
respect of the Supreme Court of Appeal, the [High Courts and the
lower courts] High Court of South Africa and the Lower Courts and
in respect of different kinds of proceedings.”; (f) by the deletion of
subparagraph (i) of subsection (2)(b); and (g) by the substitution
for subparagraph (ii) of subsection (2)(b) of the following subparagraph: “(ii) the different [High
Courts] Divisions of the High Court of South Africa; or”. |
2 |
Act 66 of 1995 |
Labour Relations Act, 1995 |
1. Amendment of
section 151 by the substitution for subsection (2) of the following
subsection: “(2) The Labour Court is a superior
court that has authority, inherent powers and standing, in relation to
matters
under its jurisdiction, equal to that which a court of a [provincial
division] Division of the [Supreme Court] High
Court of South Africa has in relation to matters under its
jurisdiction.”. 2. Amendment of
section 154— (a) by the substitution
for subsection (1) of the following subsection: “(1) A judge of the Labour Court [must
be appointed for a period determined by the President at the time of
appointment] holds office until discharged from active service in
terms of the Judges’ Remuneration and Conditions of Employment Act, 2001
(Act
47 of 2001).”; (b) by the substitution
for subsection (2) of the following subsection: “(2) A judge of the Labour Court who
is also a judge of the High Court may resign as a judge of
the Labour Court by giving written notice to the President.”; (c) by the deletion of
subsection (3); (d) by the substitution
for subsection (4) of the following subsection: “(4) Neither the tenure of office nor
the remuneration and terms and conditions of appointment
applicable to a judge of the High Court in terms of the Judges’ Remuneration
and Conditions of Employment Act, [1989 (Act 88 of 1989)] 2001,
is affected by that judge’s appointment and concurrent tenure of office as a
judge of the Labour Court.”; (e) by the substitution
for subsection (5) of the following subsection: “(5) [(a) The remuneration payable
to a judge of the Labour Court who is a person referred to in section
153(6)(a)(ii), must be the same as that
payable to a judge of the High Court. (b) The terms and conditions of
appointment of a judge of the Labour Court referred to in paragraph (a) must
be similar to those of a judge of the High Court] The Judges’ Remuneration and Conditions
of Employment Act, 2001, as applicable to a judge of the High Court, apply,
read with
the changes required by the context, to a judge of the Labour Court
who is not a judge of the High Court.”; (f) by the deletion of
subsection (7); (g) by the substitution for subsection (9) of the following
subsection: “(9) The provisions of
subsections [(2) to (8)] (4), (5), (6) and (8) apply,
read with the changes required by the context, to acting judges appointed in
terms of section 153(5).”; and (h) by the addition of the
following subsection: “(10)(a) Any judge of the Labour Court holding
office immediately before the commencement of Schedule 2 of the Superior
Courts
Act, 2013, who is not a judge of the High Court, may not later than 30
days after such commencement, inform the Minister of Justice
in writing that
he or she chooses to continue in office in terms of this section as it
existed prior to such commencement. (b) Any judge referred to
in paragraph (a) who does not choose to continue in office in terms of this
section as it existed prior to such commencement— (i) shall
continue to hold that office in accordance with this section as amended by
Schedule 2 to the
Superior Courts Act, 2013; and (ii) his or her period of
service as a Labour Court judge prior to such commencement shall, for the
purposes
of the Judges’ Remuneration and Conditions of Employment Act, 2001,
be deemed to be active service as contemplated in that Act.”. 3. Amendment of
section 170— (a) by the substitution
for subsection (2) of the following subsection: “(2) A judge of the Labour Appeal
Court may resign from that office by giving written notice
to the President.”; (b) by the substitution
for subsection (4) of the following subsection: “(4) Neither the tenure of office nor
the remuneration and terms and conditions of appointment applicable to a
judge of the High Court in terms of the Judges’ Remuneration and Conditions
of Employment Act, [1989 (Act 88 of 1989)] 2001 (Act 47
of 2001), is affected by that judge’s appointment and concurrent tenure
of office as a judge of the Labour Appeal Court.”; and (c) by the deletion of
subsection (5). |