CaseNotes LogoCaseNotes
  • Home
  • Library
  • Research
  • Discussion Hub
  • Wiki
  • Question Bank
  • Settings
S

Student

Student Account

South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
HomeLibraryResearchQuestionsSettings
Judicial Precedent
Ask AI

Adriaan Secundus van der Spuy v The General Council of the Bar of South Africa

CitationCCT 48/01
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Legal Profession Regulation
Procedural Law

Facts of the Case

The applicant, an advocate and member of the Independent Advocates Association of South Africa (IAASA), was found guilty of unprofessional conduct by the Pretoria High Court on 2 April 1998 and suspended from practice for six months. This finding was based on his breach of the 'referral rule', which prohibits advocates from taking instructions and fees directly from the public and requires them to be briefed by attorneys. The High Court refused leave to appeal, and on 19 September 2001, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) dismissed the applicant's petition for special leave to appeal. The applicant did not pursue an appeal to the Constitutional Court through normal channels (Rule 20), but instead brought an application for direct access to the Constitutional Court under Rule 17, challenging the constitutionality of the referral rule on grounds that it violated sections 22, 34, and 35(2)(b) of the Constitution. During oral argument, the applicant clarified that the challenge was actually to the referral rule at common law rather than just the GCB's rule.

Legal Issues

  • Whether direct access to the Constitutional Court should be granted under Rule 17 and section 167(6) of the Constitution
  • Whether it was in the interests of justice to grant direct access given the applicant's failure to pursue the ordinary appeal route
  • Whether the Constitutional Court should deal with constitutional matters as a court of first instance where factual disputes exist
  • Whether the application constituted a disguised appeal against the decision in De Freitas and Another v Society of Advocates of Natal

Judicial Outcome

The application for direct access was dismissed. No order for costs was made.

Ratio Decidendi

Direct access to the Constitutional Court under Rule 17 and section 167(6) of the Constitution is an extraordinary procedure that will only be granted in exceptional circumstances. The interests of justice require consideration of multiple factors including: the importance of constitutional issues; the saving of time and costs; urgency; disadvantages to the Court's roll management; and the benefit of having lower courts' views on constitutional matters. Where an applicant has failed to pursue the ordinary appeal route (particularly an application for leave to appeal under Rule 20) without explanation, and where new factual issues involving disputed facts are raised that were not addressed by lower courts, and where the matter is part of broader transformation processes being addressed through legislative and professional channels, it will not be in the interests of justice to grant direct access. The Constitutional Court should not ordinarily deal with constitutional matters as a court of first and final instance without the benefit of evidence properly tendered to a high court and without the views of the SCA, particularly on matters involving the regulation of the legal profession which falls within the SCA's inherent common law jurisdiction.

Obiter Dicta

The Court made several non-binding observations. It noted that the constitutional issue regarding the referral rule had been canvassed in De Freitas and Another v Society of Advocates of Natal and that the current application appeared to be a disguised appeal against that decision. The Court observed that there was considerable debate about the referral rule's place in modern South African legal practice, its relevance to access to justice, and how it should be enforced, and that this debate formed part of a broader debate about transformation of the legal profession and its place in the constitutional order. The Court noted that while there was general acknowledgment of the need to find acceptable solutions to difficulties facing the legal profession, there was no unanimity regarding the nature of the problem or its solution. The Court also observed that the Legal Practice Bill promoted by the Minister was under consideration and would address issues including the referral rule and transformation of the legal profession. The Court indicated that such considerations regarding ongoing legislative processes might not be sufficient to refuse direct access where grave or flagrant violations of rights were complained of, but remained relevant to determining the interests of justice. The Court also noted that the referral rule's interaction with the Competition Act was the subject of pending litigation before the SCA.

Legal Significance

This case is significant for establishing important principles regarding access to the Constitutional Court and the proper use of the direct access procedure. It reinforces that the Constitutional Court is not ordinarily a court of first instance and that direct access under Rule 17 and section 167(6) of the Constitution is an extraordinary remedy reserved for exceptional circumstances. The judgment clarifies that litigants cannot use direct access to bypass the ordinary appeal process without good reason, and that the interests of justice require the Constitutional Court to have the benefit of lower courts' views on constitutional matters, particularly where factual disputes exist. The case is also significant in the context of legal profession regulation, as it addresses (albeit procedurally) the ongoing debate about the referral rule and transformation of the legal profession in post-apartheid South Africa. The judgment demonstrates judicial restraint and respect for the ordinary court hierarchy, while acknowledging the broader transformation processes underway in the legal profession.

Case Network

Explore 17 related cases • Click to navigate

Current Case
Related Case

Practice This Case

Sign up to practise IRAC analysis, issue spotting, and argument building on this case.

Related Cases

This case references

Cites

  • The Executive Council of the Province of the Western Cape v The Minister for Provincial Affairs and Constitutional Development of the Republic of South Africa and Another; The Executive Council of KwaZulu-Natal v The President of the Republic of South Africa and OthersCCT 15/99 and CCT 18/99 (Decided 15 October 1999)
  • Elmarie Madelyn Bruce and Another v Fleecytex Johannesburg CC and OthersCCT 1/98, decided on 24 March 1998

Referenced by

Cited By

  • Bhe and Others v The Magistrate, Khayelitsha and Others2005 (1) BCLR 1 (CC)
  • Satchwell v President of the Republic of South Africa and AnotherCCT 48/02 (Constitutional Court, decided 17 March 2003)
  • Ahmed Raffik Omar v Minister of Justice and Constitutional DevelopmentCase CCT 32/03
  • Mpho Given Phenithi v The Minister of Education and OthersCCT 35/03 (decided 6 October 2003)
  • Nonkululeko Letta Bhe and Others v Magistrate, Khayelitsha and Others; Charlotte Shibi v Mantabeni Freddy Sithole and Others; South African Human Rights Commission and Another v President of the Republic of South Africa and AnotherCCT 49/03; CCT 69/03; CCT 50/03 (Constitutional Court, 15 October 2004)
  • Minister of Home Affairs v National Institute for Crime Prevention and the Re-Integration of Offenders (NICRO) and OthersCase CCT 03/04
  • Sipho Shongwe v The StateCase CCT 45/02
  • The State v Wouter Basson(CCT 30/03) [2004] ZACC 4 (10 March 2004)

Followed By

  • Xolisile Zondi v Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local Government Affairs and Others(CCT 73/03) [2004] ZACC 19