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

Michiel de Kock, NO and Others v Thomas Frederick van Rooyen

CitationCase no: 640/2002 [2004] SCA (unreported)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Criminal Procedure
Judicial Independence
Administrative Law

Facts of the Case

Van Rooyen was convicted in October 1997 by Regional Magistrate de Kock of housebreaking with intent to steal and theft, and sentenced to six years' imprisonment. The magistrate had retired in February 1994 but was immediately re-appointed in an acting capacity under a contract that could be terminated by either party on 14 days' notice. Van Rooyen challenged the magistrate's competence to try him on the basis that this contract, subject to the Public Service Act and terminable on short notice, was unconstitutional as it made the magistrate a civil servant without security of tenure, thus violating judicial independence. The Pretoria High Court set aside the trial as null and void. The Minister and DPP appealed. The Constitutional Court had already decided Van Rooyen (1) (2002 (5) SA 246 (CC)) four months before the High Court judgment, finding certain magistrate appointment provisions unconstitutional but suspending the invalidity for one year and refusing to set aside completed trials.

Legal Issues

  • Whether a magistrate appointed on a contract terminable on 14 days' notice had sufficient security of tenure to comply with constitutional requirements of judicial independence
  • What relief was appropriate given the Constitutional Court's decision in Van Rooyen (1) which suspended the declaration of invalidity of s 9(4) of the Magistrates' Courts Act
  • The effect of a suspended declaration of invalidity where Parliament fails to act within the specified time period
  • Whether the doctrine of objective invalidity required retrospective nullification of trials despite suspension of the invalidity order
  • Whether High Courts are bound by Constitutional Court decisions and the proper application of precedent
  • Whether constitutional issues should be decided when non-constitutional grounds for decision exist

Judicial Outcome

The appeal succeeded. The High Court's order setting aside the trial as null and void was replaced with an order dismissing the review application. The appeal against conviction and sentence was remitted to the High Court for determination on its merits. No costs order was made initially, with the appellants given leave to make representations on costs within 10 days.

Ratio Decidendi

Where the Constitutional Court suspends a declaration of invalidity under s 172(1)(b)(ii) of the Constitution, the effect of that suspension depends on the terms and context of the court's order, not solely on whether the legislature acts within the specified time. When a suspended declaration of invalidity is expressly intended to protect completed proceedings, those proceedings remain valid even if the legislature fails to remedy the constitutional defect timeously. The doctrine of objective constitutional invalidity does not dictate automatic retrospective invalidation where a declaration has been suspended. High Courts are bound to follow and apply Constitutional Court decisions on constitutional matters. Constitutional issues should not be decided when a case can be resolved on non-constitutional grounds.

Obiter Dicta

The court observed that there is no constitutional objection in principle to appointing acting magistrates or re-appointing retired magistrates in acting capacity, provided such appointments are for a fixed or determinate period ensuring security of tenure. The court noted that sparse Legal Aid Board funds were wasted by the unnecessary constitutional litigation when the appeal should have been decided on its merits first. Cameron JA remarked that the High Court's failure to apply Van Rooyen (1) created an impression of a dissonant judicial system at variance with itself, with detriment to public faith in constitutional processes. The court commented that in the absence of particular complaint, there was no reason to believe the magistrate had not administered justice impartially, independently and in accordance with his constitutional oath, despite the technical flaw in his appointment.

Legal Significance

This case is significant for clarifying the effect of suspended declarations of invalidity under s 172(1) of the Constitution. It establishes that the consequences of such suspension depend on the terms and context of the Constitutional Court's order, not automatically on whether Parliament acts timeously. The judgment overrules S v Danster and confirms that where the Constitutional Court suspends invalidity to protect completed proceedings, those proceedings remain valid even if Parliament fails to remedy the defect within the specified period. The case also reinforces the fundamental principle that High Courts must follow and apply Constitutional Court decisions, and that constitutional issues should not be decided when cases can be resolved on other grounds. It demonstrates the court's concern for finality in criminal proceedings and the practical administration of justice, balancing constitutional requirements with the need to avoid disrupting the entire justice system retrospectively.

Case Network

Explore 5 related cases • Click to navigate

Current Case
Related Case

Related Cases

This case references

Applies

  • 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
  • African National Congress and Another v Minister of Local Government and Housing, KwaZulu-Natal and Others(CCT 19/97) [1998] ZACC 4 (24 March 1998)

Cites

  • Mhlungu and Four Others v The State

Practice This Case

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

CCT/25/94
  • African National Congress and Another v Minister of Local Government and Housing, KwaZulu-Natal and Others(CCT 19/97) [1998] ZACC 4 (24 March 1998)
  • Bruce Robert Sanderson v The Attorney-General, Eastern CapeCCT 10/97
  • Related To

    • The Minister of Justice v Nicko NtuliCase CCT 17/95, CCT 15/97 (decided 5 June 1997)