
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Authors
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- The Human Right to Accessible and Foreseeable Justice
- Fundamental Procedural Rights from a National Angle
- Doing Justice: Chinese Civil Procedure and its Reform
- The Presumption of Innocence in Civil Cases
- Fighting Recession at the Expense of Access to Justice. The Case of the Croatian Financial Operations and Pre-Bankruptcy Settlement Act
- The Right Principles – What Outcome? Fundamental Procedural Rights and their Implementation in Romanian Civil Procedure and Other Legal Systems
- What is Happening to Fundamental Procedural Guarantees in the Area of Civil Justice? A View from South Africa
- Judicial Reform in Russia and its Impact on Procedural Human Rights and Access to Justice
- Conditions of Admissibility and Access to Justice – A Slovenian Perspective
- Wheels of History: Fair Trial Rights in Historical Perspective
- Equal Justice for all: Empirical and Normative Approaches to Legal Aid and Assistance in Civil and Administrative Cases
- Ius Commune Europaeum
What is Happening to Fundamental Procedural Guarantees in the Area of Civil Justice? A View from South Africa
from Fundamental Procedural Rights from a National Angle
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 October 2018
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Authors
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- The Human Right to Accessible and Foreseeable Justice
- Fundamental Procedural Rights from a National Angle
- Doing Justice: Chinese Civil Procedure and its Reform
- The Presumption of Innocence in Civil Cases
- Fighting Recession at the Expense of Access to Justice. The Case of the Croatian Financial Operations and Pre-Bankruptcy Settlement Act
- The Right Principles – What Outcome? Fundamental Procedural Rights and their Implementation in Romanian Civil Procedure and Other Legal Systems
- What is Happening to Fundamental Procedural Guarantees in the Area of Civil Justice? A View from South Africa
- Judicial Reform in Russia and its Impact on Procedural Human Rights and Access to Justice
- Conditions of Admissibility and Access to Justice – A Slovenian Perspective
- Wheels of History: Fair Trial Rights in Historical Perspective
- Equal Justice for all: Empirical and Normative Approaches to Legal Aid and Assistance in Civil and Administrative Cases
- Ius Commune Europaeum
Summary
1. Introduction
A civil action could, in the words of Eduardo Couture, be described as ‘civilisation's substitute for vengeance’.
In a civilised country, it is therefore to be expected that:
(a) the right of all;
(b) to have access to courts;
(c) by means of civil proceedings;
(d) to have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law decided;
(e) be guaranteed.
In South Africa, where post-apartheid the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, reigns supreme, that right is guaranteed in the Bill of Rights embodied in the Constitution, Section 34 whereof provides:
Access to courts
34. Everyone has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law decided in a fair public hearing before a court or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or forum.
As explained in a previous contribution, the word ‘procedure’ means ‘going forward’ and, viewed as such, (a) aims at moving forward the dispute between the parties up to the point of its eventual determination by a court and (b) aims at reflecting the evolution of society and its needs.
The question therefore arises, as far as South Africa is concerned, what is happening to fundamental procedural guarantees in the area of civil justice – is it ‘going forward’, or not?
In answering this question, it is of material importance to keep in mind that 20 years ago South Africa advanced from a system of parliamentary sovereignty to one of constitutional supremacy and that, as such, the way was paved for a rights-based jurisprudence, in which the rules of civil procedure themselves are from time to time subject to constitutional scrutiny and challenge.
In our new dispensation the state is required to ‘respect, protect, promote and fulfil’ the rights in the Bill of Rights which rights, as stated above, include the right of access to courts. In other words, the state is constitutionally required ‘to lead by example’.
What is Happening to Fundamental Procedural Guarantees in South Africa in the Area of Civil Justice?
An analysis of the right of access to courts, as embodied in Section 34 of the Constitution, demonstrates that guaranteed by that right are, inter alia, the principles of:
(a) equality (‘everyone has the right’); and
(b) audi alteram partem (‘a … hearing before a court’).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Revisiting Procedural Human RightsFundamentals of Civil Procedure and the Changing Face of Civil Justice, pp. 179 - 194Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2017