Monday, February 25, 2013

Ngobeni Opposition to Gauntlett's Concourt appointment


                                                              

19 February 2013

Attention: Sello Chiloane
The Judicial Services Commission
E-mail: Chiloane@concourt.org.za 


Letter of Opposition to the Appointment of Jeremy Gauntlett SC As a Judge of the Constitutional Court.

Dear Commissioners:

I have previously submitted my written opposition to the candidacy of Mr. Jeremy Gauntlett as a judge of the Western Cape High Court.   It is my understanding that you have embarked on the process of interviewing short-listed candidates for appointment as judges of the Constitutional Court in terms of section 174 (4) of the Constitution.   Section 174 of the Constitution provides for the 'appointment of judicial officers in the following terms:

            ‘(1) Any appropriately qualified woman or man who is a fit and proper person may be appointed as a judicial officer. Any person to be appointed to the Constitutional Court must also be a South African citizen.

            (2) The need for the judiciary to reflect broadly the racial and gender composition of South Africa must be considered when judicial officers are appointed.

 The JSC serves a unique and crucial function in the South African judicial system and it can be said to have sole responsibility for deciding who should be appointed as judges to the various Courts.  The performance of this crucial function of voting on the candidates and offering advice to the President can only be successful if all facts relating to candidates, favourable or unfavourable, are subject to fair scrutiny.  I submit that the scope and nature of the requisite scrutiny has been heightened by the recent Constitutional Court ruling in Democratic Alliance v President of South Africa and Others (CCT 122/11) [2012] ZACC 24 (5 October 2012).  There, the court dealt with the provision in the NPA Act requiring the appointment of “a fit and proper person, with due regard to his or her experience, conscientiousness and integrity” as NDPP.   It ruled that in undertaking the appointment task, there is an objective standard which requires that the decision-maker not ignore adverse comments about the putative candidate.  It ruled that in regard to Simelane, the Ginwala Enquiry’s report which criticized Simelane “…represented brightly flashing red lights warning of impending danger to any person involved in the process of Mr Simelane’s appointment to the position of National Director. Any failure to take into account these comments, or any decision to ignore them and to proceed with Mr Simelane’s appointment without more, would not be rationally related to the purpose of the power, that is, to appoint a person with sufficient conscientiousness and credibility.”  Likewise, in the appointment of judges here the JSC may not ignore relevant evidence which casts the short-listed candidates in a negative light and undermine their claim that they are “fit and proper” for judicial appointment.

I also submit that the recent court decision in Cape Bar Council v Judicial Service Commission and Others (11897/2011) [2011] ZAWCHC 388; 2012 (4) BCLR 406 (WCC); [2012] 2 All SA 143 (WCC) (30 September 2011) makes it imperative that the JSC consider carefully and articulate very clearly its reasons for selecting or rejecting any of the short-listed candidates.  The decision alters in a fundamental way the traditional common law rule that principles of natural justice in the United Kingdom and certain other jurisdictions do not include a general rule that reasons should be given for decisions. See, R. v. Northumberland Compensation Appeal Tribunal, ex parte Shaw (1951),[104].  I propose to deal with reasons why Mr. Gauntlett must not be appointed.


A.   Mr. Gauntlett Has Proven That He Lacks Humility, Judicial Temperament And Is Unfit for Appointment to the Bench.

I am greatly perturbed by the relentless, false and vituperative attacks on the JSC by persons such as Mr. Gauntlett, former judges, academics and politicians who claim to be critiquing alleged performance errors by the JSC during its evaluation of candidates for judicial office.   While I respect the constitutional rights of citizens to criticize any branch of our government, I believe and demonstrate here that the ideologically driven attacks on the JSC have crossed the line and have veered into flagrant total onslaught on the JSC and amount to acts of intimidation.  This is a well-orchestrated strategy to force the JSC to appoint to the judiciary certain persons selected by various politicians and interest groups and whose ideological position is favoured by these persons. 

I recognize that you as Commissioners may be hamstrung by your position from responding fully and robustly to some of the false accusations lobbed at yourself and the JSC from afar.  In an ironic sense, the JSC is being mouse-trapped by these stratagems utilized by some persons as follows:  Certain politicians and celebrities have nominated individuals such as Mr. Gauntlett for appointment to the Constitutional court.  These persons have pursued the twin agendas of attacking the JSC and discrediting its selection processes while at the same time campaigning for their preferred candidate by portraying him as a victims of alleged bias, incompetence or even discriminatory treatment by the JSC.  Should the JSC react firmly and strongly to this propaganda onslaught, these same groups will inevitably complain that there is inherent bias against their candidates.  On the other hand, the JSC’s stony silence in the face of the gross misrepresentation of its position has the unfortunate effect of solidifying in the mind of the public that the JSC is incompetent and does not understand the judicial selection criteria mandated by the Constitution.  However, we believe that no group of citizens, no matter how powerful or super-intelligent it considers itself to be, has a right to galvanize public opinion and to promote its causes, including the candidacy of certain persons by flagrantly lying and misrepresenting the position of the JSC and our Chief Justice in public.  The damage caused to the judiciary by these unwarranted and ideologically driven attacks cry out for public condemnation by the Chief Justice as a leader of the judiciary and the JSC itself. 

As you all know, the JSC did not appoint Advocate Jeremy Gauntlett as a judge of the Western Cape High court for, amongst other reasons, his lack of requisite humility and judicial temperament.   In Gauntlett’s case, the JSC honoured former judge Harms’ request by articulating reasons for not appointing Gauntlett which included amongst others, that “he has a ‘short thread’ and that he can be acerbic at times”. While some Commissioners accepted his assurance that as a judge, one is removed from the immediate combative situation that counsel usually find themselves in, others expressed “strong reservations” whether, as part of his attributes, “he has the humility and the appropriate temperament that a Judicial Officer should display”.   With characteristic arrogance, apartheid judge Harms has fired off a letter to the JSC in which he questioned “where it was agreed that humility was a required judicial attribute.”  Pierre De Vos, a UCT law professor and self-styled constitutional expert, has raised similar questions and also claimed that “some JSC members decided not to appoint him because they did not like his guts.[1]  De Vos raises a rhetorical question:

Has anyone ever heard a more ridiculous reason for not appointing a lawyer to the judiciary? Let’s face it, advocates seldom become successful because they are humble servants of the court and lack a sharp tongue. If the JSC is now going to refuse to appoint any senior advocate to the bench because he or she is not dripping with humility and is too combative, then it is going to be hard-pressed to find any half decent lawyer to appoint to the bench.

Mr. Gauntlet has also parroted the statements by Harms and De Vos in order to score cheap propaganda points against the JSC.   After the JSC announced its decision, Mr. Gauntlett gave an interview to the Sunday Times on November 11, 2012 in which he stated amongst other things the following:
(a)  Gauntlett accused the JSC of taking so long to provide him with reasons for his non-selection because the “reasons didn’t exist.”
When asked if he thinks the reasons were “created after the event” Gauntlett replied that “I know so.”  Cumulatively, these statements suggest that he was a victim of legal fraud.
(b)Gauntlett essentially accuses the Chief Justice Mogoeng of lying and the JSC of conducting a farcical hearing for judicial candidates.  The journalist asked: ”So the JSC lied on at least two fronts?”  Gauntlett merely replied: “It’s your word” but he made no attempt to condemn the accusation that the JSC “lied” and he made no effort to distance himself from the statement.  Rather, he went further and claimed that the JSC knew who it would recommend before the hearings began.  He stated: “I think they had a slate in mind, yes.”  He confirmed that he thought the JSC made “the hearings a charade” and added that they “certainly do not serve the function that they are intended to.”
(c)  When asked for his opinion on the reasons given by the JSC for not selecting him Gauntlett stated the following: “Interesting.  Firstly, they’ve introduced a new quality for judicial appointments: humility. The JSC itself has gone to great trouble to list required attributes for judges.  This is not one of them and has not been applied to any other candidate.  Unlike other candidates, I have not thought that God has called me to be a judge.” The latter was in reference to the Chief Justice.
(d)When asked about the transformation argument, Gauntlett replied: “The Constitution does not require national or regional demographics, it requires the JSC to strive to be representative.”

Commissioners, it would be unreasonable to expect you to respond to every propagandist’s criticism of the JSC.  However, even assuming the claim that the JSC engaged in post-hoc manufacture of reasons for disqualifying Gauntlett, that the JSC conducted a “charade” or farcical hearings where it had a “slate in mind” can be dismissed as puffery or mere expression of opinion, the claim that the JSC “introduced a new quality for judicial appointment: humility” is sufficiently serious to warrant a firm rebuke since it impugns the integrity of the JSC, its processes and is being used to buttress the nebulously stated claim of discrimination by Gauntlett.  

Contrary to some cynical demagogues, the requirements of humility and judicial temperament are not some recent artificially made up criteria invented by the JSC simply to disqualify certain candidates.  In fact, the personal characteristics requirements for judicial office are as old as the Bible -  independent of the methods of selection and appointment, these have not changed much over the centuries. According to the Bible in Exodus 18:21-22, Jethro advises his son-in- law Moses, to “search for able men among all the people who revere God and are honest, men who despise unfair profit“.   For self-evident reasons, Jethro counseled Moses to seek men of ability, men of godliness (such as fear God), men of truth and men hating covetuousness or unfair profit.  Along similar lines, the great Jewish thinker, Moses ben Maimon, known to English speaking audiences as Maimonides (1138-1204), who was author of the most important Code of Jewish law, wrote over 860 years ago that a judge should have “wisdom, humility, fear of God, disdain of money, love of truth, love of his fellowmen, and a good reputation“.   In fact, humility appears to be sine qua non for good leadership according to the Bible.  A revealing insight in this regard is found in Numbers 12:3 (New International Version) where it is stated: “Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth.”  Not surprisingly, these Judeo-Christian precepts influenced the development of our laws and were accepted by whites until Gauntlett was rejected by the JSC.

What renders Gauntlett’s false claim particularly disturbing is the fact that the JSC’s articulated position was discussed in the recent judgment, Cape Bar Council v Judicial Service Commission and Others (11897/2011) [2011] ZAWCHC 388; 2012 (4) BCLR 406 (WCC); [2012] 2 All SA 143 (WCC) (30 September 2011).  There the JSC explicitly stated in Court that a candidate who is qualified in terms of technical skills and knowledge, “may be found to be wanting in other important and relevant qualities and criteria, such as for example judicial temperament, patience and humility, which may render a particular candidate not suitable for appointment.  As the JSC’s position was discussed long before Gauntlett was considered a judicial candidate,  Gauntlett’s statement that the JSC introduced “a new quality” is a blatant false accusation against the JSC and is deliberate.  Even worse, Gauntlett is a member of the Cape Bar and he knew or should have known that the JSC named judicial temperament and “humilty” as relevant qualities long before it even considered Gauntlett’s qualities.  Ironically Gauntlett has, through his reckless accusation, made it impossible for the JSC to consider him a fit and proper person for further judicial appointment.  After all, how can the JSC which determined Gauntlett to be lacking in “humility” and judicial temperament miraculously somersault and retreat from that position simply because Gauntlett’s celebrity friends want to see him on the Concourt? But that is besides the point – what matters is whether Gauntlett’s statement that the JSC singled him out for disparate treatment and applied a “new quality” (humility) which was not one of the selection criteria is honest and factually true.  The Cape Bar Council v Judicial Service Commission   clearly shows that Gauntlett is guilty of making false accusations against the JSC and the Chief Justice on this score.

Contrary to Gauntlett’s startling assertion, the Concourt itself has stated that judges exercise certain tasks with requisite humility as an essential part of decision-making.  In S v Shinga (Society of Advocates (Pietermaritzburg)) as Amicus Curiae) , S v O'Connell and Others (CCT56/06, CCT80/06) [2007] ZACC 3; 2007 (5) BCLR 474 (CC); 2007 (2) SACR 28 (CC) (8 March 2007) (Langa CJ, Moseneke DCJ, Kondile AJ, Madala J, Mokgoro J, Nkabinde J, O’Regan J, Sachs J, van der Westhuizen J, van Heerden AJ concurred  in the judgment of Yacoob J) the Concourt stated that in determining whether to grant leave to appeal, the magistrate is called upon to consider carefully whether another court may reach a different conclusion. This requires a careful analysis of both the facts and the law that have underpinned the conviction, and a consideration of the possibility that another court may differ either in relation to the facts or the law or both. “This is a task that has been carried out by High Court judges for many years,It is a judicial task of some delicacy and expertise. It should be approached on the footing of intellectual humility and integrity, neither over-zealously endorsing the ineluctable correctness of the decision that has been reached, nor over-anxiously referring decisions that are indubitably correct to an appellate court..  without possessing humility, a judge will be unable to perform such task.”  It is therefore asinine for Gauntlett who is dubbed the “best legal mind” to attack the JSC for simply requiring him to have qualities routinely demanded of judges whenever leave for appeal is sought. Contratry to Gauntlett and his retinue of celebrity supporters, there is nothing novel in the idea that humility is an essential attribute of a judge.  A judge lacking in humility will be unable to decide simple matters such application for leave which is a ‘judicial task of some delicacy and expertise.”  In short, courts have discussed judicial humility in the context of leave to appeal, and statements emanating therefrom makes it clear that the JSC knows what it is talking about.  See, Stephanus and Another v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a First National Bank (21862/10) [2010] ZAGPJHC 156 (11 October 2010) where Willis J stated:
 [4] I am also mindful of that fact that the SCA, in a famous case, which shall not be mentioned here today, said that when it comes to novel points of law, judicial humility is especially appropriate when considering applications for leave to appeal. Mindful of the appropriate humility that is appropriate for this court and mindful, too, of the variety of different opinions when it comes to interpretations of the National Credit Act it seems to me that there is indeed a reasonable aspect that another court would come to a different conclusion from my own in this matter.”

I submit that Gauntlett’s statements could not be the result of a genuine error. Suffice it to say that the late Chief Justice Ismail  Mahomed, the first black Chief Justice of a democratic South Africa, eloquently elaborated on these evaluation criteria as follows:

Society is . . . entitled to demand from judges fidelity to those qualities in the judicial temper which legitimize the exercise of judicial power. Many and subtle are the qualities which define that temper. Conspicuous amongst them are scholarship, experience, dignity, rationality, courage, forensic skill, capacity for articulation, diligence, intellectual integrity and energy. More difficult to articulate, but arguably even more crucial to that temper, is that quality called wisdom, enriched as it must be by a substantial measure of humility, and by an instinctive moral ability to distinguish right from wrong and sometimes the more agonising ability to weigh two rights or two wrongs against each other which comes from the consciousness of our own imperfection.
Ismail Mahomed: Chief Justice of South Africa:  The independence of the judiciary’ 1998 (115) SALJ 658 at 666.

Former Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo, dealt squarely with the issue of humility from the very first day he ascended to the position until the very last day in office.  When he was first appointed, Chief Justice Ngcobo succinctly spelt out his vision and goals for the bench. See, My judicial philosophy - Sandile Ngcobo

In a memorable speech, Ngcobo CJ stated:
Mr Speaker, one of the fundamental principles that underlie my judicial philosophy is respect for other branches of government, which means you must never intrude into the domain of other branches of government.
The recognition of the contribution of others to my appointment reinforces my view, however, that the judiciary's role must always be characterised by a certain humility. Judges, after all, are servants of the law, and not the other way round.
The Office of the Chief Justice is a great honour, but it carries with it a huge responsibility. Judicial humility is particularly important in South Africa. We are still very much a nation in transition. Our Constitution is the bridge that carries us from the injustices of the past to the society based on democratic values and fundamental human rights that is our future and, increasingly, our present.
Our judiciary has been given wide powers to uphold our constitutional democracy and bring the law into line with our new Constitution. In exercising these powers, our courts must appreciate the role of other branches of government in our constitutional democracy. They must also recognise the difficulties inherent in governing a country with a history such as ours, stained by injustice, where resources are limited and the demands are huge.
Judges must ensure that other branches of government play by the rules, but they, too, must observe the vital limits on their power. They are bound by the Constitution and the principle of the separation of powers. Above all, judges must remain vigilant to the fact that the breadth of judicial power must always be matched by the real depth of judicial responsibility.

During his farewell speech at the Constitutional Court, Chief Justice Ngcobo said judicial powers should be exercised with humility and respect and stated: “The powers we exercise are far reaching but we must operate with humility, ensuring that other branches of government play by the rules while at the same time offering them adequate space to perform their duties.”  See, Ngcobo 'showed no fear, favour or prejudice' 11 Aug 2011 http://mg.co.za/article/2011-08-11-ngcobo-showed-no-fear-favour-or-prejudice.  He was also a living embodiment of the principles he preached. 
In a special joint sitting of the National Assembly and National Council of Provinces called to bid farewell to former chief justice Sandile Ngcobo and welcome Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, the DA’s Mazibuko paid tribute to Ngcobo for "his quiet humility and love of the law; for his steadfastness in defending and upholding the Constitution of this land." 

Similar qualities of humility were also observed in former Chief Justice Arthur Chaskalson.  On July 27, 2002, the Johannesburg Bar gave the biggest dinner party in its history to celebrate its centenary. In attendance was former Chief Justice Chaskalson on whom honorary membership of the Bar was conferred. Judge Dikgang Moseneke (as he then was), introducing the guest of honour, spoke on Justice Chaskalson's international recognition as a leading lawyer. He considered his three outstanding characteristics to be: “wisdom, a formidable intellect, and humility.” http://www.sabar.co.za/law-journals/2002/august/2002-august-vol015-no2-pp25-27.pdf.    Similar observations were made about Chief Justice Chaskalson when he celebrated his 77th birthday.  His LRC colleagues stated: “The former Chief Justice of South Africa and one of the leading jurists of this country, …  Thirty years ago, Arthur helped to found the LRC and he still serves as a Trustee member. Arthur's humility, modesty and his commitment to human rights are an inspiration to us all.” http://www.lrc.org.za/component/acajoom/?act=mailing&task=view&listid=2&mailingid=27

Another former Chief Justice, Langa, wrote eloquently about “humility in the court.”  In an article entitled “The Constitutional Court and Supreme Court of Appeal after 1994” which he co-authored with Edwin Cameron, Justice of the Constitutional Court, the following is stated: 

This educative role does not arise from a misguided sense of
paternalism or condescension on the part of the court. Instead, it is a
necessary function of a Constitution that seeks to establish ‘an objec-
tive, normative value system’ , one that places values of freedom,
equality and human dignity above ephemeral public opinion. The         
rationale for this is powerfully expressed in the judgment of Sachs J
in Fourie: 
‘Majoritarian opinion can often be harsh to minorities that
exist outside the mainstream. It is precisely the function of the Constitution and the law to step in and counteract rather than reinforce [majoritarianism]. The test, whether majoritarian or minoritarian positions are involved, must always be whether the measure under scrutiny promotes or retards the achievement of human dignity, equality and freedom.’  This illuminates the court’s commitment to ensuring that the law and the Constitution should not exist in a vacuum, hermetically sealed from the often-grim realities South Africans must confront in their lives. Violence, deprivation and corruption are the lived realities of many South Africans. This fosters a sense of humility in the court, which appreciates that much more needs be to be done to promote a deep-going constitutional culture. www.sabar.co.za/law-journals/.../2010-april-vol023-no1-pp25-33.pdf.  

Former Chief Justice Langa, in his 2008 address at an international conference for the Commonwealth Magistrates' and Judges' Association made the following poignant observations:

"Our tools of trade are our integrity, our impartiality and our independence. Without these we should not be part of the judiciary at all.  We do wield great power, which we should exercise with vigilance and humility." 
Chief justice warns on intimidated judiciary; October 7 2008; By Deon de Lange  http://www.thepost.co.za/chief-justice-warns-on-intimidated-judiciary-1.419150#.UKYggoXSSUc


International Jurisprudence Consistently Support the View that Judicial Humility Is among the Required Attributes for Judges.   The ‘Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct’ were endorsed in 2003 and set out a code of judicial conduct. They are intended to complement the United Nation’s Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary and the role of lawyers. The Judicial Integrity Group, at its Meeting held in Lusaka, Zambia on 21 and 22 January 2010, adopted “Measures For the Effective Implementation of The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct” (The Implementation Measures). See, www.summitofhighcourts.com/docs/standarts/UN2.pdf .  These state in relevant part as follows:

11.2 The assessment of a candidate for judicial office should involve
consideration not only of his or her legal expertise and general
professional abilities, but also of his or her social awareness and
sensitivity, and other personal qualities (including a sense of ethics,
patience, courtesy, honesty, commonsense, tact, humility and
punctuality) and communication skills. 

We have no reason to believe that the listing of personal qualities such as “commonsense, tact, humility “ was deliberately introduced by these international jurists to disqualify judicial candidates in Gaunlett’s position.  In fact, these are universally regarded as valid and important criteria in the evaluation of applicants for judicial office.

In the United States, the American Bar Association's Guidelines for Reviewing Qualifications of Applicants for State Judicial Office, which is used in almost all states as guidance for determining fitness for office, affirmatively includes “humility” and judicial temperament amongst the key criteria for evaluating applicants.  The ABA states this in the following emphatic terms:
e. Judicial Temperament. An applicant should possess a judicial temperament, which includes common sense, compassion, decisiveness, firmness, humility, open-mindedness, patience, tact and understanding.
Judicial temperament is universally regarded as a valid and important criterion in the evaluation of an applicant. There are several indicia of judicial temperament which, while premised upon subjective judgment, are sufficiently understood by lawyers and non-lawyers alike to afford workable guidelines for the evaluator.
Among the qualities which comprise judicial temperament are patience, open-mindedness, courtesy, tact, firmness, understanding, compassion and humility. Because the judicial function is essentially one of facilitating conflict resolution, judicial temperament requires an ability to deal with counsel, jurors, witnesses and parties calmly and courteously, and the willingness to hear and consider the views of all sides. It requires the ability to be even-tempered, yet firm; open-minded, yet willing and able to reach a decision; confident, yet not egocentric. Because of the range of topics and issues with which a judge may be required to deal, judicial temperament requires a willingness and ability to assimilate data outside the judge's own experience. It requires, moreover, an even disposition, buttressed by a keen sense of justice which creates an intellectual serenity in the approach to complex decisions, and forbearance under provocation. Judicial temperament also implies a mature sense of proportion; reverence for the law, but appreciation that the role of law is not static and unchanging; understanding of the judge's important role in the judicial process, yet recognition that the administration of justice and the rights of the parties transcend the judge's personal desires. Judicial temperament is typified by recognition that there must be compassion as the judge deals with matters put before him or her.
Factors which indicate a lack of judicial temperament are also identifiable and understandable. Judicial temperament thus implies an absence of arrogance, impatience, pomposity, loquacity, irascibility, arbitrariness or tyranny. Judicial temperament is a quality which is not easily identifiable, but which does not wholly evade discovery. Its absence can usually be fairly ascertained.

The concept of humility for judges was eloquently stated in the “Statement of Circuit Judge Randall R. Rader United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Representing The Federal Judges Association Before the United States House of Representatives Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual Property” on May 15, 1997.

 Judge Rader explained the concept of humility to the Committee in the following terms:

With some trepidation, I would pass on the counsel I used to hear often from Chairman Strom Thurmond. When serving as the Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman, Strom Thurmond would often ask of candidates for a judicial office, "Can you, young man, be humble? Do you understand how important it is for judges to be humble?" Indeed his implicit counsel seems equally valid for all our branches of Government. We need to practice an active humility.

For me this active humility means the following: Each branch first needs to recognize its constitutional limits and constantly seek to adhere to those legal strictures. Next, each branch needs to realize that it has, on occasion, ignored or exceeded constitutional limits - usually not intentionally, usually for the best of motives - but exceeded constitutional limits nonetheless. The legislative branch has ignored or exceeded constitutional limits; the executive branch has ignored or exceeded constitutional limits; and the judicial branch has ignored or exceeded constitutional limits. For the most part, each branch, perhaps on occasion spurred by the other branches, has corrected itself in those rare times of divergence from the aspirations of the Constitution.

Judge Rader further explained the importance of humility in the court’s exercise of self-correction.  He stated: “The Judiciary too has ignored or exceeded constitutional limits. The most chilling reminders of judicial excess are Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1856) and Plessy v. Ferguson. 163 U.S. 537 (1896).” The Dred Scott Decision, was a landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that people of African descent brought into the United States and held as slaves (or their descendants, (whether or not they were slaves) were not protected by the Constitution and were not U.S. citizens.  Plessy v. Ferguson is a disgraceful US  Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of state laws requiring racial segregation in public facilities under the doctrine of "separate but equal. Judge Rader pointed out the benefits of a humble judiciary in the following terms:

The genius of the constitutional system, however, is that it facilitates self-correction. The legislative branch can and does often change course and correct policies that have not achieved their objectives. Through the appeal process, federal courts of appeal often correct federal district courts and the Supreme Court corrects the entire branch. More important, by one count the Supreme Court had overturned its own decisions 196 times by 1990 - a clear indication of a body very concerned about humble self-correction and monitoring its own compliance with constitutional limits. Killian, J., ed., The Constitution of the United States, Analysis and Interpretation (Congressional Research Service) 1990.

Based on the “active humility” and ‘humble self-correction” concepts discussed by Rader, the JSC was entitled to evaluate a judicial candidate’s ability to set aside his own arrogant know-it- all attitude, to examine his ability to set aside attitudes and beliefs assimilated during the apartheid era and to judge whether an advocate who had fierce running battles with a Judge President (Hlophe) and who is unwilling to admit that he was wrong in his position that aspirant acting judges must be selected only from the ranks of senior counsel (“silks”) can nevertheless be promoted to the Bench.

Still in the US, the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, which was formed in 1963 at the request of President John F. Kennedy to involve the private bar in providing legal services to address racial discrimination also endorses the view that an ideal judicial candidate must display an “ability to navigate opinions and suggestions with grace and humility.”

In Canada, the concept of humility in judicial appointments has been widely endorsed. Jeremy Webber’s “THE ADJUDICATION OF CONTESTED SOCIAL VALUES: IMPLICATIONS OF ATTITUDINAL BIAS FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF JUDGES” is featured in the Ontario Law Reform Commission’s "Appointing judges : philosophy, politics and practice"; Papers Prepared for the Ontario Law Reform Commission,1991.

 Webber eloquently states the active humility concept as follows:

It is therefore critical to effective adjudication that judges adopt an
active humility. Judges must be willing to place their own conceptions of justice at risk, realizing that those conceptions are based on a limited experience of the world, shaped in large measure by their gender, cultural background or social class. This does not mean that they should try to approach each case with no opinions whatever. On the contrary, the description of the process of constructing theories of justice given above — one of comparing how competing theories order experience — requires some pre-existing conception of right. That conception gives direction to the enquiry, furnishing preliminary criteria of evaluation. What is more, the effort required to overcome barriers to understanding may well require passionate commitment to the pursuit of justice. The possession of preconceptions is not the problem, then; it is the use one makes of them. Judges' commitment should be to the idea of justice, not a particular theory. They should welcome challenge as an opportunity for growth.   

The simple willingness to question one's own assumptions is insufficient, however. Judges must also adopt a sympathetic stance to those appearing before them. Their obligation is to search for some synthesis that might unite different visions of right (consistent, that is, with constitutional or legislatively-declared norms). They must therefore treat the parties' submissions as presenting alternative conceptions of justice having integrity — an integrity not only for the parties themselves, but also for the judge. The conceptions of justice contained in the submissions are, it is true, partial, but no more partial than the opinion of the judge himself. The visions proposed by the parties are themselves rooted in an experience derived from this society, even if that experience is remote from that of the judge; in any attempt to hammer out norms to govern society as a whole, they deserve to be heard.

I submit that the when viewed against South Africa’s background of  apartheid oppression and gross human rights abuses, the concept of humility for our judges is even more critical. To paraphrase Webber, we need judges who are willing to subject their own conception of justice to rigorous scrutiny, realizing that those conceptions are based on a limited experience of the world, shaped in large measure by their gender, cultural background or social class in apartheid South Africa. 

In British Columbia,Canada, where Provincial Court Judges are appointed on the recommendation of the Judicial Council, the  latter assesses each applicant using the following criteria:
  1. Typically 10 years in the active practice of law. Those with less legal practice are considered if they have a range of related experience.
  2. Legal reputation, including
    • reference from the Canadian Bar Association and Judges before whom the applicant has appeared; and
    • review of candidate's professional record from the Law Society of British Columbia.
  3. General knowledge of and experience in the law and Provincial Court procedure, preferably with recent practice in criminal, family, and /or civil litigation.
  4. Experience in mediation or alternative dispute resolution.
  5. Willingness to learn and a demonstrated commitment to continuing professional education.
  6. Knowledge of and sensitivity to current issues facing the courts, the judiciary and the justice system.
  7. Ability to listen and communicate effectively.
  8. Personal characteristics such as decisiveness, evenness of temperament, fairness, open-mindedness, and common sense.
  9. Compassion for those coming before the Court and an understanding of their circumstances.
  10. Respect in the community.
  11. Good health.
  12. Passion and enthusiasm.
  13. Balanced relationships with peers and subordinates.
  14. Adaptability and flexibility with respect to job changes.
  15. Humility.
  16. Appreciation of and experience with diversity.
  17. Demonstrated dedication to public service.
  18. Ability to cooperate and work with others.
  19. Understanding of the role of the Court in society, and respective roles of the judiciary and other participants in the justice system.
  20. Willingness to travel and to adjudicate in all subject areas.

According to the Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs,
Canada, professional competence and overall merit are the primary qualifications for judicial office.  Committee members are provided with Assessment Criteria for evaluating fitness for the bench.  These criteria include “personal characteristics such as a sense of ethics, patience, courtesy, honesty, common sense, tact, integrity, humility, fairness, reliability, tolerance, a sense of responsibility, and consideration for others.”  See, http://www.parl.gc.ca/Content/HOC/Committee/391/JUST/Reports/RP2970953/391_JUST_Rpt14/391_JUST_Rpt14_Pg01-e.html

Chief Justice McLachlin of the Supreme Court of Canada has considered the role of judges in that society and the importance of humility in judging modern society.  She observed:
                        The nature of the questions they decide, and the public expectation that they will decide them fairly and well, place new demands on judges. It no longer suffices to be a competent legal scholar and a fair arbiter. To perform their modern role well, judges must be sensitive to a broad range of social concerns. They must possess a keen appreciation of the importance of individual and group interests and rights. And they must be in touch with the society in which they work, understanding its values and its tensions. The ivory tower no longer suffices as the residence of choice for judges. The new role of judges in social policy also demands new efforts of objectivity. Often the judge will have strong personal views on questions which a judge is asked to decide: questions like abortion, capital punishment or euthanasia. But the task of judging is not accomplished simply by plugging one's personal views into the legal equation. The judge must strive for objectivity. This requires an act of imagination. And it requires an attitude of "active humility", which enables the judge to set aside preconceptions and prejudices and look at the issue afresh in the light of the evidence and submissions. The judge must seek to see and appreciate the point of view of each of the protagonists. She must struggle to enunciate the values at issue. Then she must attempt to strike the balance between the conflicting values which most closely conforms to justice as society, taken as a whole, sees it. It is impossible to eliminate the judge's personal views. But by a conscious act of considering the other side of the matter, the judge can attain a level of detachment which enables him or her to make decisions which are in the broader interests of society. In the end, the judge can know no other master than the law, in its most objective sense.
McLachlin, B. “The Role of Judges in Modern Society” The Fourth Worldwide Common Law Judiciary Conference, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, May 5, 2001. http://www.scc-csc.gc.ca/court-cour/ju/spe-dis/bm01-05-05-eng.asp .

Commissioners, it is grossly unfair for individuals who are driven by their own agendas to distort well-known judicial selection principles for the sake of vilifying the JSC and discrediting that body in the eyes of the public.  But at a fundamental level this raises questions about whether individuals who unleash a tirade against the JSC based on false statement of the facts and law must be allowed to continue unabated.   It has become increasingly obvious that some former judges, academics and advocates have no qualms about deliberately distort well-established legal principles simply to score cheap propaganda points against the JSC, a body that has proven too independent and too competent for their liking.  It would be a grave error for the JSC which recognized Gauntlett’s lack of humility and judicial temperament a few months ago to somersault now and reward him with an appointment on the nation’s highest court.  In a real sense, Gauntlett’s own propaganda statements against the JSC vindicate those JSC members who correctly detected his lack of humility.  In reaction to the JSC decision not to recommend his appointment Gauntlett resorted to vilifying the JSC and suggesting in newspaper interviews that the JSC was biased, incompetent and corrupt.  Certainly the JSC cannot now appoint to the Constitutional Court a person it rejected for appointment to the Western Cape High court a mere three months ago.


B.   Gauntlett’s Previous Attacks on JSC Decisions and And Undermining of the JSC Process.

Unfortunately Gauntlett’s attacks on the JSC are not an isolated incident – Gauntlett has engaged in a pattern and practice of attacking the JSC when he is confronted with decisions he does not like. In the aftermath of the 2007 JSC ruling not to recommend the impeachment of Judge President Hlophe in connection with the Oasis complaint, Gauntlett and several of his cohorts penned a letter highly critical of the JSC and Judge President Hlophe.[2] The letter read in part:

We are all senior counsel in practice at the Cape Bar. Some of us are
former chairs of the Bar, and of the General Council of the Bar of
South Africa and from time to time have served, too, as acting High
Court judges.
For a period of nearly two years we have viewed with deep
concern the lodging with the Judicial Services Commission (JSC) of a
series of complaints against the conduct of Cape Judge President JM
Hlophe. We have thought it only right that the JSC should have the
fullest opportunity to deal with these matters, and Judge President
Hlophe to exonerate himself...
The JSC has now determined that its process is at an end. By majority, it has decided not to proceed further with its inquiry. That would have entailed summoning the Judge President to be orally examined on such responses as he has chosen to give to the JSC’s investigation. Unanimously, however, it has found Judge Hlophe’s explanations for receiving money from Oasis Management Group ‘unsatisfactory in certain respects’. It also considered his failure to disclose his relationship with Oasis at the time he gave it permission to sue another Cape judge ‘inappropriate’. And it has (again unanimously) directed its chair, the Chief Justice, together with the President of the SCA and the Judge President of Gauteng to meet him to convey the JSC’s concerns and its expectations regarding his future conduct.
In an important public statement on the issue, Johann Kriegler, former Johannesburg High Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and Constitutional Court judge, has observed that while judges are fallible, what the public are entitled to demand is at least honesty and impartiality. He has pointed to improbabilities, inconsistencies and vagaries in Judge Hlophe’s account to the JSC. Judge Kriegler writes: ‘[t]he ugly fact remains that on his own showing Judge Hlophe was guilty of grossly improper conduct….no judge dare receive any surreptitious payment of money from any financial institution carrying on business within that judge’s area of jurisdiction. It is inherently improper’.
Pointing to Judge Hlophe’s position as head of the Cape judiciary, controlling its rolls, allocating judges to cases and setting the whole ethical tone for the division, he concludes: ‘Judge Hlophe is not a fit and proper person to be a judge. His retention of office constitutes a threat to the dignity and public acceptance of the integrity of the courts.’
We find ourselves bound to support Justice Kriegler’s analysis and conclusions. We do so with heavy hearts. As Justice Kriegler himself notes, this state of affairs is indeed tragic, ‘for this highly talented man carried the hopes of all who are passionate about transformation of the judiciary’. Our Bar supported his nomination as a judge, when - recruited from the University of Transkei - in 1994 he became (at the age of 35) one of the youngest judges in South Africa since Union. And we supported him again in due course as a Bar for the judge presidency of the Cape. We record these things, lest by reflex we be accused of personal antipathy or racism.  We believe that there cannot be public confidence in the continuation in office now of Judge Hlophe. Even the conduct he has admitted, and the JSC’s characterisation of it, oblige this conclusion.
In all the circumstances, we believe the right thing for Judge Hlophe to do is to resign as judge president and as a judge.
As regards the JSC, we find it puzzling that despite its (unanimous) characterisation of Judge Hlophe’s responses as ‘unsatisfactory’, it (by majority vote) decided to desist from requiring him to be examined in relation to these answers. Public confidence in the JSC as a principled upholder of judicial independence and integrity may not have been served by these events.

The jeremiad by these senior advocates was grossly misleading in that the JSC decision was based on a correct reading Section 177 of the Constitution – this states that a judge may be removed from office only upon a finding by the JSC that the judge is grossly incompetent or is guilty of gross misconduct. Acts of “gross” misconduct are typically intentional, wanton, wilful, deliberate, reckless, or in deliberate indifference to whether some wrongdoing occurs.   The JSC finding of “inappropriate” conflict of interest in Hlophe’s case can hardly be equated with “gross misconduct” as a matter of law.  It was patently unfair and disingenuous for the lawyers to continue misleading the public on this subject.  There was no quid pro quo implied in the payments Judge Hlophe allegedly received from Oasis. He would have been compelled by the provisions of section 34 of the Constitution to grant the requested permission in any event.  There was never an argument made that the payments from Oasis influenced the decision to grant the permission to sue in any manner whatsoever. The rules about permission for judges to do outside consulting or other work such as teaching or lecturing for remuneration have only recently been clarified.  In the views of these senior advocates, the rules could be applied selectively and opportunistically to disadvantage Hlophe, notwithstanding the JSC ruling. Even assuming the litigants in the Oasis matter were aggrieved by Judge President Hlophe’s actions, they could have raise proper objections through a proper motion seeking recusal because of the relationship between Hlophe and Oasis.  The rule of automatic disqualification would have been beneficial to them.  The House of Lords in Regina v. Bow Street MetropolitanStipendiary Magistrate, Ex parte Pinochet Ugarte (No: 2), (2000) 1A.C. 119, revisited the rule of automatic disqualification. In that case, the House of Lords dealt with a situation in which Lord Hoffmann had participated in a decision where Amnesty International was an intervener, while sitting as a director and chairperson of a charity closely allied with Amnesty International and sharing its objects. In that context, it was found that the rule of “automatic disqualification” extended to a limited class of non-financial interests, where Lord Hoffman has such a relevant interest in the subject matter of the case that he is effectively in the position of a party to the cause. Consequently, Lord Hoffman was disqualified, and the entire decision of the House of Lords was set aside.

The JSC had properly concluded that Hlophe’s ethical lapses do not warrant further investigation or formal hearing.   The JSC did not shirk its responsibility in its investigation of Hlophe.  It was a difficult and most unpalatable job of judges sitting in judgment over a valued colleague. The JSC jurists obviously performed their job too well and much to the chagrin of those who were baying for Hlophe’s blood at all costs.   His critics know all too well that Judge Hlophe cannot enter the fray of political or any other debates if judicial integrity is to be protected.  These publicity-hungry critics have ignored the very statutes and constitution setting forth the standard for removal of judges in their rush to recklessly attack Hlophe and to mislead the public through half-baked theories.  In the name of protecting our democracy they unabashedly and deliberately nourish a culture of sound bites and interest group politics that threatens to erode public perceptions and understanding of the judiciary.

Irresponsible criticism which seeks to bring about the removal of black judges from office or influence their decisions based on intimidation is the very antithesis of judicial independence and the rule of law. It is irresponsible to attack a judge for the purpose of bullying him into resigning even after the JSC has reached a decision that did not call for such drastic step.  Those who criticize irresponsibly often focus on the results of a single decision without considering the underlying facts and legal principles which governed the JSC’s decision in the case.  It is remarkable that Gauntlett who was admitted to the Bar in the 1970s never attacked fellow white judges with such venom during the apartheid years. 

The JSC must take into account that courts in other countries have recognized that legitimate restrictions may be placed on attorney speech conduct that degrades the integrity of the court and that unjust attorney criticism of judicial officers may be prohibited. Rules that restrict attorney criticism of the judiciary are neither intended nor desired to protect judges from offensive or unsettling criticism, but intended to preserve public faith and confidence in the fairness and impartiality of the judicial system.'  See, e.g., In re Terry, 394 N.E.2d 94, 95-96 (Ind. 1979) (disbarring lawyer for making false accusations against judge to members of jury and public officials); In re Frerichs, 238 N.W.2d 764, 768-69 (Iowa 1976) (admonishing attorney for criticism of court's decision and explaining that lawyers have fewer free speech rights than private citizens); Kentucky Bar Ass'n v. Heleringer, 602 S.W.2d 165, 168-69 (Ky. 1980) (disciplining attorney for public statements about sitting judge); In re Raggio, 487 P.2d 499, 500-01 (Nev. 1971) (reprimanding attorney for criticism of court's holding); Bradley v. Fisher, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 335, 355 (1871) (recognizing that valid purpose behind sanctioning attorneys is need to limit offensive conduct and insulting language about integrity of judiciary). Courts repeatedly have endorsed ethical rules regulating attorney criticism of the judiciary based on the rationale that allowing such criticism to flourish would severely diminish the public's confidence in the judiciary and thus hinder the efficient administration of justice.'   See, e.g., In re Evans, 801 F.2d 703, 706-08 (4th Cir. 1986) (stating that attorney's letter to judge questioning judge's competence and impartiality, written during pendency of appeal, amounted to attempt to prejudice administration of justice); In re Shimek, 284 So. 2d 686, 689 (Fla. 1973) (finding that attorney's statement that judge was avoiding performance of his sworn duty was "calculated to cast a cloud of suspicion upon the entire judiciary"); Terry, 394 N.E.2d at 96 ("Unwarranted public suggestion by an attorney that a judicial officer is motivated by criminal purposes and considerations does nothing but weaken and erode the public's confidence in an impartial adjudicatory process."); Committee on Prof 1 Ethics & Conduct v. Horak, 292 N.W.2d 129, 130 (Iowa 1980) ("To permit unfettered criticism regardless of the motive would tend to intimidate judges in the performance of their duties and would foster unwarranted criticism of our courts."); Heleringer, 602 S.W.2d at 168 (declaring that attorney's press conference statements that judge's behavior was unethical and grossly unfair tended to "bring the bench and bar into disrepute and to undermine public confidence in the integrity of the judicial process").

Additionally, courts have stated that attorneys are officers of the court who have voluntarily relinquished certain rights as members of a regulated profession. See, e.g., In re Snyder, 472 U.S. 634, 644-45 (1985) (reasoning that "license granted by the court requires members of the bar to conduct themselves in a manner compatible with the role of courts in the administration of justice"); In re Sawyer, 360 U.S. 622, 646-47 (1959) (Stewart, J., concurring) (stating that "[o]bedience to ethical precepts may require abstention from what in other circumstances might be constitutionally protected speech"); In re Frerichs, 238 N.W.2d 764, 769 (Iowa 1976) (recognizing that "lawyer, acting in professional capacity, may have some fewer rights of free speech than would a private citizen"); In re Johnson, 729 P.2d 1175, 1179 (Kan. 1986) (finding that one purpose of disciplinary action is to enforce "honorable conduct on the part of the court's own officers"); State ex rel. Neb. State Bar Ass'n v. Michaelis, 316 N.W.2d 46, 53 (Neb. 1982) (proclaiming that "[a] lawyer belongs to a profession with inherited standards of propriety and honor, which experience has shown necessary in a calling dedicated to the accomplishment of justice").

Gauntlett’s attitude toward the JSC and Judge President Hlophe stands in sharp contrast to his attitude towards his controversial friends who are serving as judges in the neighboring countries and who have been condemned for their anti-democratic actions.  Immediately upon learning through leaked JSC documents that Gauntlett was not appointed as a judge in 2010, a group of judges serving in Lesotho and Swaziland  expressed their outrage and dismay that Jeremy Gauntlett has been overlooked for one of three vacant seats on the Western Cape High Court, as reported in leaks to the media.”[3]  The unprecedented letter, penned by Swaziland Chief Justice Mathealira Ramodebedi, Justice DG Scott, Justice LS Melunsky, and retired justices Johan Steyn, Craig Howie and John Smalberger, expressed their "surprise and dismay" at the exclusion of Gauntlett from the bench.  The letter states in relevant part the following:

Several of us have served as judges on the courts of South Africa. Three of us have recently retired as members of the Supreme Court of Appeal. In our capacities as such, advocate Gauntlett frequently appeared before us…We testify that he is an outstanding lawyer and one of the leading senior advocates in South Africa. He is principled and conscientious. He also has great forensic skills… He is, in short, a most able lawyer and highly qualified in all respects for judicial appointment in South Africa.

We express our surprise and dismay at the decision of the JSC not to recommend his appointment as a judge. Southern Africa, and South Africa in particular, have been denied the opportunity to benefit from the great contribution he would have made to the development of the law…" 

In a typical response, Paul Hoffman, director of the Institute for Accountability, said Gauntlett's omission was proof that neither merit nor transformation had been considered by the JSC. "It seems that the JSC gave greater weight to its consideration of the need for the judiciary to reflect broadly racial and, particularly in this instance, gender demographics than to appropriate qualification. If merit had been accorded its proper place he would have been successful; none of the other candidates have as much 'heavy duty' experience of litigation both at the Bar and on the Bench," said Hoffman. Id.

Swaziland Chief Justice Mathealira Ramodebedi, also nicknamed “Makhulubaas” is a controversial figure who has allegedly wreaked havoc in the judiciary of Swaziland. Ramodibedi, from the nearby kingdom of Lesotho, was brought in June 2011 by Mswati to become chief justice. One of his first acts was an order preventing anyone from “directly or indirectly” suing the king.  He subsequently sparked controversy by suspending judge Thomas Masuku for “insulting” King Mswati III. 

In 2011, the Botswana Law Society condemned Ramodibedi and described his action as “an assault on the judiciary and rule of law in Swaziland”[4]  The newspapers summarized the statement of the Botswana Law Society as follows:
The Law Society of Botswana also fears that Justice Ramodibedi’s way of doing things and his ‘warped’ sense of justice may find its way into Botswana, although they vowed to guard against that.
Justice Ramodibedi is also a sitting judge of the Court of Appeal of Botswana, while Justice Masuku was until recently a Judge at the High Court of Botswana in Francistown.
The charges were described by Batswana lawyers as ‘patently spurious’ and Judge Masuku seen as ‘a victim of abuse’ in this whole scenario.
“The Law Society of Botswana would think that the honourable Ramodibedi as a member of our Court of Appeal should inspire confidence in all of us who believe in judicial independence, the rule of law and democratic governance,” Botswana Law Society Executive Secretary Tebogo Moipolai said in a statement, further observing that “the world has shrunk to a very small global village of which the BOLESWA countries are only a tiny ward”.
The statement also reads: “Our fear is that honourable Ramodibedi’s way of doing things and the way he understands democracy (in the eyes of the beholder) is inimical to the development of a progressive judicial system that we would love to see for Botswana and indeed within and outside the BOLESWA region”.
Other organisations that condemned Justice Ramodibedi’s actions include the SADC Lawyers Association, Southern African Association of Jurists, Civic Organisations and other international bodies.
Justice Masuku was slapped with 12 counts of misconduct which include insulting the King and being intimately involved with a fellow judge. 
The Law Society of Botswana assures its Swazi counterparts and the citizens of its support as they fight to protect and enhance the rule of law in Swaziland.[5]

In July 2011, the Law Society of Swaziland lawyers filed a sexual harassment complaint with the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) in which it accused Ramodibedi of sexual harassment, based on complaints from five female court workers.[6]  The complaint stated: “Justice Ramodibedi has conducted himself in an inappropriate manner towards female employees of the High Court of Swaziland.” It also stated: “There is prima facie evidence that the chief justice is guilty of charges of sexual harassment.”    Swazi lawyers went on strike to protest against Chief Justice Michael Ramodibedi’s decision to suspend judge Thomas Masuku over 12 misdemeanour offences, including a reference to Mswati as “forked-tongued” in a 2010 ruling and a sexual affair with a female judge.   Masuku is also accused of “actively associating with those who want to bring about unlawful change to the regime”.[7]

At the 12th SADC Lawyers Association Annual General Meeting and Conference held in Maputo, Mozambique from the 4th-6th of August 2011 under the theme “towards democratic elections and the peaceful transfer of power in the SADC Region”, attended by bar leaders, judges, lawyers and civil society representatives from the SADC region and beyond, the following resolution was adopted regarding the administration of Justice in Swaziland and Ramodibedi:

i.   That the Association is deeply concerned by the serious breakdown of the administration of justice in Swaziland and in particular the role reportedly played by the Chief Justice of that country, Justice M.M. Ramodebedi in undermining the independence of the judiciary

ii.     That the SADC Lawyers Association expects any Chief Justice in the SADC region to lead by example and ensure that all processes concerning the administration of justice fully comply with the law

iii.   That the Association is seriously concerned by the fact that the Chief Justice is undermining the independence of the very  judiciary that he leads and calls upon the Judicial Services Commission of Swaziland to expeditiously ensure that the Chief Justice does not become the judge and the jury in his own cause in relation to the charges that are being preferred against Justice Thomas Masuku

iv.    The SADC Lawyers Association fully supports the call made by the Law Society of Swaziland for the Chief Justice to answer to the complaints that have been made against him by the law society and that in the meantime he must be suspended pending the outcome of his hearing

v.   That the SADC Lawyers Association  further supports the demand made by the Law Society of Swaziland that the hearing for Justice Thomas Masuku set for the 11th of August 2011 must be carried out in public.

 In contrast to his stance on the Judge President Hlophe matter, Gauntlett and his group of senior members of the Cape Bar have not spoken out against “Makhulubaas” probably because of the support he gave to Gauntlett.  It should also be noted that one of the judges who expressed outraged at the JSC’s alleged snubbing of Gauntlett was Justice Melunsky who is notorious for commiserating with a white serial killer who killed 39 blacks while working as a security guard in East London.[8]  Prosecutors had “demanded the death penalty or a long jail term, and the time van Schoor will serve is short compared with other mass killers sentenced recently in South Africa.” Judge Lionel Melunsky chastised police for their failure to arrest Louis van Schoor sooner, saying Van Schoor ''should have have been stopped in his tracks'' years ago. Melunsky said he showed ''callous disregard'' for human life but added he believed van Schoor, who had no prior arrests and once worked as a police officer, could be rehabilitated. The judge “saved his harshest words for police, whom he accused of ineptitude. If they had done their jobs, van Schoor ''could have and should have been stopped in his tracks in 1987'' after several shootings, and other lives would have been spared, Melunsky said.”  Melunsky also “blamed society in general, saying South Africa's violent environment could have affected van Schoor's actions.” 

It was unethical and a damnable practice for the Chief Justice and other judges to comment on a pending before the JSC and on the basis of leaked documents.  Gauntlett should have condemned the said actions but he displayed poor judgment by maintaining silence simply because the said unethical actions benefited him. The JSC cannot countenance a situation where a Chief Justice of a repressive regime is allowed to interfere in the internal affairs of our judiciary especially relying in stolen information.  This state of affairs must give the JSC even more reason to scrutinize the matter of Gauntlett’s citizenship – the Constitution stipulates that the selected judge must be a South African citizen for a reason.   Where the person being considered is a dual British –South African citizen and there is evidence to suggest that foreign judges from the British Commonwealth countries are willing to attack our JSC on his behalf we must all be alarmed by that.  In regard to the Constitutional Court appointment, the constitution expressly requires that the appointed person must be a South African citizen.   Where a person with dual citizenship has demonstrated a penchant for falsely accusing the JSC and has even allowed attacks on the JSC by his foreign-based supporters, the JSC must seriously question the candidate,


C.    The JSC Must Promote Consistency of Principles and Equal Treatment During Its Evaluation of Gauntlett’s Candidacy.

There is a phenomenon I call the “Angry White Boy(AWB)” syndrome which repeatedly rears its ugly head every time a white male candidates favoured by the DA or some white interest groups fail in their bid to be recommended for appointment as judges by the JSC.  This syndrome manifests itself in the following manner:  The non-selection of the white male candidate preferred  by these lobbyist groups is invariably blamed on affirmative action and reverse discrimination against whites.  The reaction has involved demonizing the JSC itself for alleged incompetence and political partisanship or even outright anti-white agenda.  In some cases, it has involved unfair attacks on the qualifications of the selected female or black judge in an effort to buttress the argument that the “overlooked” or “snubbed’ white male candidate was more qualified and the JSC would have selected him if only it had intelligent people in its ranks.  In another instance involving Gauntlett, the “snubbing” was alleged to have provoked shock and outrage in some quarters, with one senior Cape Town lawyer saying it was "disgusting".[9]     As shown above Gauntlett has been harping on the same theme and has publicly suggested that the failure of his candidacy was due to the JSC’s bias, incompetence, mendacity and corruption.

It is a matter of record that the DA successfully challenged in court the appointment of Menzi Simelane by claiming, in part, that Simelane was unfit because he had been criticized by the Ginwala Commission and courts in a manner suggesting his lack of integrity.   In Gauntlett’s case, the JSC itself has commented on his lack of humility and judicial temperament.  In reaction to that Gauntlett launched attacks based on false allegations against the JSC.  The JSC musyt determine whether a candidate for judicial office who falsely accuses the appointing body of bias and other  malpractices has integrity to be appointed a judge.   Just as Ginwala Commission could evaluate Simelane’s statements and comment thereon, the JSC is similarly entitled to determine whether Gauntlett’s accusations could be said to emanate from a person with integrity.  But unlike Ginwala, the JSC is duty-bound to resolve that question and it may not shirk its responsibility by merely holding that Gauntlett has the right to free speech.


 Gauntlett has sought to exploit the propagandists’ theme of white exclusion by the JSC – a fact that has been harped upon in Gauntlett’s numerous unsuccessful applications for judicial appointment.  Recently the argument of white exclusion was taken even further by the Centre for Constitutional Rights, an outfit unit of the F W de Klerk foundation, a registered charitable trust in Cape Bar Council v Judicial Service Commission and Others (11897/2011) [2011] ZAWCHC 388; 2012 (4) BCLR 406 (WCC); [2012] 2 All SA 143 (WCC) (30 September 2011).  This outfit argued that the unsuccessful white candidates’ rights to dignity have been infringed in that “the JSC is not permitted to extend an open invitation to members of the legal fraternity to make themselves available for nomination as a Judge, if some of its members have adopted a policy in terms of which non-black members will not be appointed.”  Cape Bar Council v Judicial Service Commission and Others at para.146.  It is significant that the Court ultimately rejected the submission by the De Klerk outfit that “a policy has been adopted in terms of which non-black members would not be appointed” as “speculative and without an evidential basis.” But that has not prevented Gauntlett from publicly accusing the JSC of having a “slate in mind” and suggesting that he is the victim of JSC’s over-emphasis of transformation and affirmative action. This underscores the fact that there is an intimidation campaign to label as racists with an anti-white agenda some members of the JSC who must evaluate the qualifications of certain white judicial candidates preferred by the minority opposition parties and lobby groups.   The JSC may either succumb to the these pressure tactics and blackmail or it can stand firm and advance the objectives in section 174 (2) of the Constitution.  Predictably, no similar shock and outrage is expressed when eminently qualified black candidates are not selected. 

Gauntlett’s statements about the JSC are based on falsehood – it should not matter that the lies about the JSC and the Chief Justice were told to journalists and not the JSC itself.  

D.   During his  October 17, 2012 Interview Gauntlett Was Not Candid In His Response to the JSC Regarding His Relationship with Judge President Hlophe.

It is undisputed that Mr. Gauntlett wrote an email to the Chaipersons of the CBC on 7 September 2012 in which he urged the Cape Bar Council urgently to issue “a statement calling for suspension” of Judge President Hlophe.   In the same document, Gauntlett likened Judge President Hlophe to Gen. Richard Mdluli and stated that on “principle,” a public official – “a fortiori, one sitting in daily judgment on others – facing charges which may lead to his removal from office should be suspended.  The CBC Chairperson Jamie responded to the email on the same day and pointed out that he considered “any call for suspension now to be premature.”  Jamie stated that he “intend waiting for the outcome of the JSC deliberations, and will then recommend to Council.”   Undeterred by that  response Gauntlett responded that “a judge considered by a preliminary investigative and deliberative body such as the JCC prima facie properly to be impeached …cannot thereafter sit until convicted or cleared.  He added, the “issue is not just one of principle.  The implications of not applying the principle now can be severe.  Just one example has been the internationally-publicised phenomenon of the JP continuing to sit (inter alia in relation to the Dewani matter).  The harm done to the administration of justice and the reputation of the Western Cape judiciary is clear.” 

The much-anticipated Judicial Service Commission (JSC) interview of Jeremy Gauntlett SC proceeded on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 a mere 41 days after his email exchanges with members of the Cape Bar Council involving planned suspension of Hlophe JP.   At the JSC interview Gauntlett adopted a chameleon-like change of position. 
Commissioner Dumisa Ntsebeza SC said he was concerned that, if Mr Gauntlett were to appointed, that he would have a "toxic" relationship with Judge President Hlophe, especially since Freedom Under Law, on whose board Mr Gauntlett sits, had brought a complaint to the JSC about the judge president.  Without revealing that he actively campaigned amongst his colleagues for Hlophe JP’s suspension only a few weeks before the interview, Mr Gauntlett said he did not believe there would be any "toxicity". He said Judge Hlophe had previously said he would not see working together as problem.  Gauntlett added: “I don’t see it as problem," and added that since neither of them saw it as problem, "you’ve got to ask why is there a problem."  At no point did Gauntlett reveal that he urged the Bar Council urgently to issue “a statement calling for suspension” of Judge President Hlophe a mere 41 days before the interview.  At no point did Gauntlett reveal that considered it inappropriate for Judge Hlophe who he deems “prima facie properly to be impeached …[and]cannot thereafter sit until convicted or cleared.” At no point did Gauntlett reveal that just over one month prior to his “I don’t see it as a problem” statement to the JSC, he had stated in regard to Hlophe’s conduct that: “The harm done to the administration of justice and the reputation of the Western Cape judiciary is clear.”   
It stretches credulity and is improbable that Gauntlett sincerely meant that he could work under a man he likened to Gen. Richard Mdluli (then a murder accused).  After all, Gauntlett had stated his belief that on “principle,” a public official – “a fortiori, one sitting in daily judgment on others – facing charges which may lead to his removal from office should be suspended.” Was he now, in a chameleon-like fashion willing to turn his back on his principles? Was he willing to discard these “principle” like a pair of dirty panties simply to secure his own appointment as a judge?  Was the feigned congeniality towards Hlophe a genuine change of heart and an honest statement to the JSC?  This a damnable misrepresentation and feigned congeniality conveniently packaged to secure Gauntlett’s appointment as a judge.

In fact, Gauntlett not only misrepresented his own position on the matter but he misrepresented that of Judge President Hlophe as well.  It is literally true that Hlophe JP had “previously said he would not see working together as problem” but that statement was some years ago and should have been supplemented with facts exclusively in Gauntlett’s position and which cast different light on the relationship.  It is unfathomable that Hlophe JP would have held such a sanguine view of his relationship with Gauntlett if he had known about Gauntlett’s “principled” opposition to him serving as a Judge President while under investigation by the JSC.  It was unethical and active misrepresentation for Gauntlett to imply that Hlophe JP would have maintained the same attitude if he knew that Gauntlett actively campaigned for him to be suspended and that he had been likened with Gen. Richard Mdluli’s case involving murder allegations.

It is now a matter of record that, within days of Gauntlett’s being denied appointment by the JSC, Advocate Jamie, as the Chairperson of the Cape bar and another person went to Judge President Hlophe to ask him to voluntarily take leave of absence as they were considering calling for his suspension – all in line with Gauntlett’s importuning. Hlophe JP was deeply affronted and considered that visit to be unwarranted and as a threat to judicial independence.  It is palpable lack of candour for Gauntlett to represent that Hlophe JP would “not see working together as a problem” under circumstances where he knew that the Cape Bar Council, at his encouragement and request, was poised to call for Hlophe’s suspension within days of the JSC meeting.   This is vital piece of information that would have assisted the JSC in assessing the nature of the toxicity of the Gauntlett-Hlophe relationship if any.  But Gauntlett’s case is even more egregious.  He answered the question about his “toxic relationship” with Hlophe JP in beguilingly simplistic terms – failed and refused to disclose adverse facts which would have exposed as a feckless lie his claim that: “I don’t see it as a problem."  It is unfathomable that a man who harbours a “principled opposition” to his supervisor’s continued employment and is actively campaigning for his suspension can claim, with a straight face, that their relationship should not be seen “as a problem.” He knowingly maintained a false pretence and could have been guilty of misleading the JSC.

Mr. Gauntlett’s conduct is worse than the typical cases where advocates have been found guilty of lack of candour with the court or a tribunal.  The duty of candour to a tribunal is a cardinal principle which provides that a lawyer may not knowingly fail to disclose to the tribunal legal authority in the controlling jurisdiction known to the lawyer to be directly adverse to the position of the client and not disclosed by opposing counsel.  This rule is designed to ensure that when lawyers are representing clients in court, they preserve the integrity of the judicial system by not allowing the court to be misled by a false understanding of the law or facts. In the Matter Of: The Complaint of Mike's, Inc. and Mike's Marine, Inc., for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability, 337 F.3d 909 (2003), the US Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit condemned as “bad faith” the behavior similar to the one attributed to Gauntlett here.   The Court stated:

What concerns us more about appellants' conduct was their specific failure to bring the Mers case to the Missouri district court's attention. Not only was Mers decided contrary to appellants' position and in the Eastern District of Missouri, but the firm representing appellants was also counsel to the party bringing the limitation action in Mers. This is not a case where the appellants can claim they were unaware of the contrary authority through lax research or some other reason. Here appellants' counsel had actual knowledge of the Mers decision (they acknowledged this much at oral arguments) and were clearly in the best position of any party to bring this case to everyone's attention.

The court recognized the simple fact that vigorous advocacy is, necessarily, truthful advocacy.  This precludes a lawyer whose desire to win leads him to muddy the headwaters of decision and who distorts and obscures the true nature of a case by blatantly trespassing the obligations of professional responsibility.   A lawyer should not be able to proceed with impunity in real or feigned ignorance of authorities which render his argument meritless.

A lawyer cannot knowingly offer or rely on false evidence or misstate evidence.  Misleading the court includes actions such as knowingly misrepresenting or misstating the facts in argument, inducing a witness to state misleading evidence and knowingly maintaining a false pretence.  Similar to blatantly offering false evidence, knowingly maintaining false pretences is another way a lawyer can mislead the court.  Where counsel knows that the court is operating under a mistaken assumption and actively maintains the false pretence, the lawyer is guilty of misleading the court.  An example of such unacceptable behaviour would be a circumstance in which a judge is referring to a witness by an improper title (i.e. referring to a Certified General Accountant as a Chartered Accountant or referring to a defendant as a Chief Inspector when he had been demoted to the rank of station sergeant without being corrected.  See Meek v. Fleming, [1961] 2 Q.B. 366.  Failing to correct a false statement or maintaining a pretence is a breach of a lawyer's duty of candour.

In Gauntlett’s case, he created a false pretence of a good and non-toxic relationship with Judge President Hlophe and failed to disclose that he had recently adopted a position “on principle” contrary to the one he falsely maintained before the JSC.  It was incumbent upon Gauntlett to inform Commissioner Ntsebeza and the JSC that he did not expect to have a working relationship with Hlophe JP for a considerable period of time because he expected that there would be calls emanating from the Cape Bar Council for Hlophe to be suspended.  He acquired this information directly from Jamie, as Chairperson of Cape Bar Council and was thus in a position to take the JSC into his confidence.  Because of his “in principle” opposition to working with a man he deemed “prima facie properly to be impeached” and a man who “…cannot thereafter sit until convicted or cleared”, Gauntlett should have disclosed that he could not suffer continued service by Hlophe on the Bench.  His failure to do so is particularly egregious in light of his condemnation of Hlophe JP.  He feigned congeniality towards Hlophe and maintained stilted respect without revealing that he had stated in regard to Hlophe’s conduct that: “The harm done to the administration of justice and the reputation of the Western Cape judiciary is clear.”   It stretches credulity and is improbable that Gauntlett sincerely meant that he could work under a man he likened to Gen. Richard Mdluli (then a murder accused).  After all, Gauntlett had stated his belief that on “principle,” a public official – “a fortiori, one sitting in daily judgment on others – facing charges which may lead to his removal from office should be suspended.” He fully anticipated that Hlophe would be suspended by the JSC based on a campaign he initiated and based on an undertaking from you as leaders of the Cape Bar Council that such initiatives would come to fruition. 
 The lack of candour hear is worse than what was alleged against Simelane.
In addition, Gauntlett’s answer to Commissioner Ntsebeza’s question with specific regard to a “toxic relationship” with Hlophe JP is a classic, textbook case of lack of candour with a tribunal.  What renders the transgression here devastatingly serious is that it was perpetrated during interviews for judicial appointment and under circumstances where the JSC is entitled to rely on the absolute and unreserved candour of the candidates.  


E.            Advocate Gautlett’s Has Advocated Racially discriminatory Judicial Selection Criteria with Disparate Impact on Africans.

To speak of a judicial appointment is to speak of selecting a leader in one of the most important branches of government. Leadership is a quality on which we all must focus.  The most important attributes of leadership in the judiciary are restraint, modesty, humility and tenacity and Jeremy Gauntlett has none of these attributes.   He has through his words and deeds showed that he keen intelligence and extraordinary communications skills but lacks the rudimentary passion for inclusiveness.    Mr. Gauntlett demonstrated his insouciance towards the constitution’s imperative for transformation. 

In 2005, a City Press article[10] reported that Gauntlett had urged the Bar  to take 'principled position' that would see no African acting judge in Western Cape.”  The paper reported that “Judge President John Hlophe and top lawyer Jeremy Gauntlett (SC) are engaged in an acrimonious battle over the appointment of acting judges, some of whom Gauntlett believes are not fit for the positions.”   Gauntlett was “proposing the appointment of only senior counsel which, if agreed, could put an end to the appointment of African advocates.”  At that time the paper reported that “none of the five Africans in the Cape are senior advocates. There are about 44 senior white advocates and six senior blacks (coloured/Indian).”  Reportedly Gauntlett was “urging his colleagues to take a "principled position" against the current system, being implemented by Hlophe to appoint junior counsel, who are in the main Africans, as acting judges, without allegedly "vetting" them.”  At the centre of the row was “the issue of whether attempts to deal with backlogs in the courts should be strictly implemented as such, or whether they should be used to advance the cause of transformation by bringing more blacks and particularly Africans into the courts as judges. Should the positions be reserved for senior counsel alone, as Gauntlett argues , no African would act in that court because there are no African senior counsel. It would effectively mean that except for the six coloured and Indian senior counsel, all the other appointees would be white.
 The proposal could rekindle tensions between Hlophe, who had a tiff with the Cape Bar after his racism report earlier this year.

 Gauntlett was effectively advocating a racially discriminatory selection criterion or what would be characterized in the United States as disparate impact theory of discrimination.  The Supreme Court first described the disparate impact theory in 1971, in Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424, 431-2 (1971) where it held that anti-discrimination law, Title VII "proscribes not only overt discrimination but also practices that are fair in form, but discriminatory in operation. The touchstone is business necessity. . . . [G]ood intent or absence of discriminatory intent does not redeem employment procedures or testing mechanisms that operate as 'built-in headwinds' for minority groups and are unrelated to measuring job capability." The doctrine of disparate impact holds that employment practices may be considered discriminatory and illegal if they have a disproportionate "adverse impact" on members of a minority group.
The doctrine entails that a facially neutral employment practice is one that does not appear to be discriminatory on its face; rather it is one that is discriminatory in its application or effect. Where a disparate impact is shown, the plaintiff can prevail without the necessity of showing intentional discrimination unless the defendant employer demonstrates that the practice or policy in question has a demonstrable relationship to the requirements of the job in question.  At issue in Griggs was the requirement that employees hired into service jobs at the power company's facilities had to possess a high-school diploma and achieve a minimum score on an IQ test. The plaintiffs argued that these rules disqualified too many black job applicants, thereby violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

The US Supreme Court agreed, ruling that job criteria with an adverse or exclusionary effect on minorities — even if those criteria were "neutral on their face, and even neutral in terms of intent" — could violate the Title VII ban on race discrimination in hiring. The Court further stipulated that employers could escape liability for "disparate impact" only if they demonstrated that their adverse selection practices had "a manifest relationship to the employment in question" or that they were justified by "business necessity." In examining the criteria for positions at the Duke Power Company, the Court found insufficient evidence to satisfy the job-relatedness defense, and so ruled against the utility. 
According to the Griggs Court, the purpose of the newly established disparate-impact rule was to "achieve equality of employment opportunities" by removing "built-in headwinds" and "barriers that had operated in the past" to impede minorities' workplace advancement. 
“Under disparate impact analysis . . . a prima facie case is established by showing that the challenged practice of the defendant actually or predictably results in racial discrimination; in other words that it has a discriminatory effect.” Huntington Branch, NAACP v. Town of Huntington, 844 F.2d 926, 934 (2d Cir.) (internal quotation marks omitted), judgment aff’d, 488 U.S. 15 (1988); see Tsombanidis v. W. Haven Fire Dep’t, 352 F.3d 565, 575 (2d Cir. 2003) (under FHA, “[a] plaintiff need not show the defendant’s action was based on any discriminatory intent.”);

Mr. Gauntlett demonstrated his insensitivity and lack of fealty to the Constitution.  As a lawyer, he knew that even the Constitutional Court has commented on the effect of the “Coloured Labour preference policy” on social policy and the transformational process in general and exclusion of Africans in particular. The Concourt has noted the adverse effect of such past policies against Africans in particular.  It did so in the Government of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Grootboom and Others (CCT11/00) [2000] ZACC 19; 2001 (1) SA 46; 2000 (11) BCLR 1169 (4 October 2000) case where Justice Yacoob stated:

[6]            The cause of the acute housing shortage lies in apartheid. A central feature of that policy was a system of influx control that sought to limit African occupation of urban areas. Influx control was rigorously enforced in the Western Cape, where government policy favoured the exclusion of African people in order to accord preference to the coloured community: a policy adopted in 1954 and referred to as the “coloured labour preference policy.” In consequence, the provision of family housing for African people in the Cape Peninsula was frozen in 1962. This freeze was extended to other urban areas in the Western Cape in 1968. Despite the harsh application of influx control in the Western Cape, African people continued to move to the area in search of jobs. Colonial dispossession and a rigidly enforced racial distribution of land in the rural areas had dislocated the rural economy and rendered sustainable and independent African farming increasingly precarious. Given the absence of formal housing, large numbers of people moved into informal settlements throughout the Cape peninsula. The cycle of the apartheid era, therefore, was one of untenable restrictions on the movement of African people into urban areas, the inexorable tide of the rural poor to the cities, inadequate housing, resultant overcrowding, mushrooming squatter settlements, constant harassment by officials and intermittent forced removals. The legacy of influx control in the Western Cape is the acute housing shortage that exists there now.

That Concourt also discussed the background to this policy fully in the majority judgment of that court,  Ex Parte Western Cape Provincial Government and Others: In Re DVB Behuising (Pty) Ltd v North West Provincial Government and Another 2000 (4) BCLR 347 (CC) paras 41-47.  It recently did so in Residents of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others (CCT 22/08) [2009] ZACC 16; 2009 (9) BCLR 847 (CC) ; 2010 (3) SA 454 (CC) (10 June 2009)  paras 192-197.    It is the highest form of irresponsibility and manifestation of racially discriminatory attitude for a lawyer to advocate the continued use of selection criteria which perpetuate the legacy of apartheid under the guise of maintaining “principled” opposition to “lowering of standards.”   That lawyer would certainly not qualify to be appointed a judge in the Western Cape Province where the need to undo the vestiges of apartheid and all its manifestations in the form of “coloured labour preference” urgent.     It would defeat the very purpose of the constitutional transformational imperative if the JSC appoints to the Constitutional court a lawyer who remains completely oblivious to the unique nature of racial discrimination in the Western Cape despite having received his college education in the area and despite maintaining his law practice here.   Gauntlett states that his position was “principled” and therefore the JSC cannot brush it aside as mere differences of opinions between Gauntlett and Judge President Hlophe- it is a calculated anti –transformation agenda bristling with extreme arrogance.


F.            Mr. Gauntlett is The Subject of Pending Misconduct Complaint

I have brought to the attention of the members of the Judicial Services Commission the fact that I filed misconduct complaints against Mr. Gauntlett.  The Cape Bar Council dismissed the complaint on January 24, 2013 and I am currently pursuing an appeal in regard to this matter.  I trust that Mr. Gauntlett, who had a continuing duty to make disclosure, did timeously disclose to the JSC that there was a complaint filed against him on November 21, 2012 and before the JSC shortlisted him for the currently pending interviews.  If Mr. Gauntlett SC did not make such disclosure that fact in itself should weigh heavily against his candidacy. 
 To the extent that Mr. Gauntlett argued that his appearance before the JSC did not involve a “professional” capacity the JSC must decide for itself whether a candidate for judicial office who engages in conduct described herein can still be considered to have integrity for appointment as a judge.  A judicial candidate who falsely states the law and facts in public newspapers and casts aspersion on the JSC is unfit for office.


B.  Conclusion.

It cannot be gainsaid that Gauntlett’s statement that the JSC “introduced a new quality for judicial appointments: humility” constitutes a false statement of fact and law.  The statement was made to further Gauntlett’s own ambition of being appointed to the Constitutional Court and to increase pressure on the JSC to accede to his demands.  The damage done to the judiciary is incalculable – the public is mislead into thinking that the JSC was so biased against Gauntlett that it conducted a farcical inteview with biased and prejudiced minds, that the Chief Justice lied and manufactured reasons for not appointing Gauntlett and that “humility’ was introduced as an after-thought to justify not appointing Gauntlett to the bench.  Gauntlett has established a pattern and practice of attacking JSC decisions he does not like.  Mr. Gauntlett’s response to Commissioner Ntsebeza’s questions was misleading and lacked candour.  For these and other reasons articulated herein the JSC must not recommend Gauntlett’s appointment to the Concourt.  Given his belittling comments about the Chief Justice’s religious views and his accusation that the JSC over which the Chief Justice presides manufactured reasons after the fact, was biased against him and acted unlawfully, it is inconceivable that Gauntlett would work in a collegial relationship with the Chief Justice.

Submitted
Paul M. Ngobeni
Paul M. Ngobeni


[1] Running the Gauntlett: Why the struggle for appointment?  Pierre de Vos
[2] See, 'Judge Hlophe betrayed the nation with his greed' - General Council ...

[3] Judges fume after Gauntlett snub April 19 2010  By Quinton Mtyala; http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/judges-fume-after-gauntlett-snub-1.481028#.UHkyuRjSSUc

[4] Botswana Law Society condemns Makhulu Baas, Swazi Observer, 16 July, 2011 11:35:00 By Hlengiwe Ndlovu;  http://www.observer.org.sz/index.php?news=27446


[5] Id.
[6]      See, Lawyers accuse Swazi chief justice of sexual harassment 14 Jul 2011; http://mg.co.za/article/2011-07-14-lawyers-accuse-swazi-chief-justice-of-sexual-harassment

[7] Judge charged with insulting Swazi king's 'forked tongue' 30 Jun 2011; http://mg.co.za/article/2011-06-30-swazi-judge-faces-suspension-for-insulting-kings-forked-tongue

[8]  Security Guard Who Murdered Seven Blacks Gets 20 Years Tina Susman, AP News Archive  Jun. 16, 1992; http://www.apnewsarchive.com/1992/Security-Guard-Who-Murdered-Seven-Blacks-Gets-20-Years/id-773f35e577da4d133d081d5549f74f8e

[9] JSC's snub to 'combative' Gauntlett shocks lawyers by FRANNY RABKIN, April 16 2010, http://www.bdlive.co.za/articles/2010/04/16/jsc-s-snub-to-combative-gauntlett-shocks-lawyers.


[10] Hlophe's appointments come under fire; City Press 2005-04-23; Mpumelelo Mkhabela; http://www.citypress.co.za/SouthAfrica/News/Hlophes-appointments-come-under-fire-20100614


No comments:

Post a Comment