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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Christian Education South Africa v The Minister of Education of the Government of the Republic of South Africa

CitationCCT 13/98
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Education Law
Administrative Law
Procedural Law

Facts of the Case

Christian Education South Africa (CESA), a voluntary association to which 209 independent schools were affiliated in all nine provinces of South Africa, applied for direct access to the Constitutional Court. The applicant's member schools subscribed to the belief that corporal punishment in their schools, as in the home, forms part of a system of discipline based on the Christian faith and scriptures. The applicant sought to challenge section 10 of the South African Schools Act, 1996 (Act 84 of 1996), which prohibited corporal punishment in schools. The applicant contended that such corporal correction was part of the common culture of such schools and was protected by sections 15(1) (freedom of religion), 29(3) (right to establish independent educational institutions), and 31(1) (cultural and religious rights) of the Constitution. The Act had been in force since 1 January 1997, eighteen months before the proceedings were launched. The applicant distinguished this from juvenile corporal punishment in judicial sentences or in public schools, and argued that moderate corporal correction with parental consent was not contrary to common law.

Legal Issues

  • Whether direct access to the Constitutional Court should be granted under rule 17 of the Constitutional Court Rules, 1998
  • What factors should be considered in determining whether it is in the interests of justice to grant direct access
  • Whether the matter involved sufficient urgency or public importance to justify bypassing the ordinary court hierarchy
  • Whether the High Court should first be given the opportunity to exercise its constitutional jurisdiction

Judicial Outcome

The application for direct access was refused.

Ratio Decidendi

Direct access to the Constitutional Court under rule 17 of the Constitutional Court Rules is an extraordinary procedure that should only be granted in exceptional circumstances where compelling reasons exist. The interests of justice ordinarily require that: (1) the High Court, which has constitutional jurisdiction under section 169 of the Constitution, should first be given the opportunity to consider constitutional challenges to legislation; (2) the Constitutional Court should not sit as a court of first and last instance without the possibility of appeal, as decisions are more likely to be correct when more than one court has considered the issues; (3) the Constitutional Court should have the benefit of the views of other courts with constitutional jurisdiction before making final determinations; and (4) mere importance of a constitutional issue, potential legal uncertainty, or the disputed validity of legislation is insufficient to justify direct access - there must be additional factors such as sufficient urgency, public importance, and proof of prejudice to the public interest or the ends of justice and good government.

Obiter Dicta

The Court made several non-binding observations: (1) It noted that the prohibition in section 10 is concerned only with corporal punishment imposed within a school context and does not make such severe inroads into the disciplining of children as to create urgency. (2) The Court observed that the applicant had distinguished corporal correction in independent schools with parental consent from juvenile corporal punishment in judicial sentences or in public schools, and noted that decisions from the United States and European Court of Human Rights had found moderate corporal correction not contrary to their respective legal frameworks. (3) The Court emphasized the principle from Mistry that the Constitution does not mean whatever judges might wish it to mean, and that cases must be decided on a principled basis, with each decision adding to the body of South African constitutional law and establishing principles relevant to future cases. (4) The Court noted that additional costs and delay resulting from following normal procedures are relevant considerations, but emphasized these factors must be weighed against the constitutional design of a tiered court system.

Legal Significance

This case is significant in South African constitutional law for reinforcing the strict approach the Constitutional Court takes to applications for direct access. It establishes clear guidelines for when direct access will be granted, emphasizing that: (1) direct access is extraordinary and requires compelling reasons; (2) the Constitution contemplates a tiered court system where High Courts should first exercise their constitutional jurisdiction; (3) mere importance of a constitutional issue or disputed validity of legislation is insufficient to warrant direct access; (4) the interests of justice favor having more than one court consider issues to improve the quality of decision-making; (5) urgency must be genuine and substantial, not manufactured by parties choosing to ignore the law; and (6) the procedure for direct access (rule 17) is distinct from direct appeals (rule 18) and the requirements should not be conflated. The case demonstrates the Court's commitment to developing constitutional jurisprudence through the ordinary court hierarchy and its reluctance to bypass the jurisdictional role given to High Courts by the Constitution. This approach promotes the development of a rich body of constitutional law through multiple levels of judicial consideration.

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This case references

Cites

  • The State v Henry Williams, Jonathan Koopman, Tommy Mampa, Gareth Papier, Jacobus Goliath, Samuel WitbooiCCT/20/94
  • Lafras Luitingh v Minister of DefenceCase CCT 29/95
  • Zuma and Two Others v The StateCCT/5/94
  • Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others1996 (1) SA 984 (CC); 1996 (1) BCLR 1 (CC); CCT 5/95
  • The State v Wellington Mbatha and The State v Nicolaas Marthinus PrinslooCCT 19/95 and CCT 35/95
  • Hekpoort Environmental Preservation Society and Another v The Minister of Land Affairs and OthersCase CCT 21/97 (decided 8 October 1997)
  • Ashok Rama Mistry v The Interim National Medical and Dental Council of South Africa and OthersCase CCT 13/97; heard 24 February 1998, decided 29 May 1998

Follows

  • Elmarie Madelyn Bruce and Another v Fleecytex Johannesburg CC and OthersCCT 1/98, decided on 24 March 1998
  • The State v Wellington Mbatha and The State v Nicolaas Marthinus PrinslooCCT 19/95 and CCT 35/95
  • Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others1996 (1) SA 984 (CC); 1996 (2) BCLR 102 (CC); CCT 5/95