An intriguing aspect of South Africa's Roman-Dutch jurisdictional rules is that a foreign defendant can be arrested for the purpose of assuming jurisdiction over him in a claim sounding in money. This rule, unknown to the common law, also exists in other Southern African countries and has been criticised. The rule was abolished by a recent decision of the South African Supreme Court of Appeal. The court also accepted mere presence within the jurisdiction as a basis of jurisdiction in international matters and suggested the defendant could contest whether South Africa was the forum conveniens. The former rule was unknown to Roman-Dutch law. The existence of the latter was disputed. But both are well entrenched in the common law. This paper e...
Placed uniquely at the intersection of common law and civil law, mixed legal systems are today attra...
Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2022South African jurisdictional principles governing cr...
One of the chief jurisprudential considerations of the new South Africa must be access to justice. W...
This article addresses and compares the development of statutory interpretation in South Africa and ...
Modern South African succession law adheres to many of the tenets of Roman-Dutch succession law, and...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)Legal judgements against unsuccessful defendants are handed down...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)The main exploration of this paper is whether a breach of contra...
The paper addresses the survival of Roman or rather Roman-Dutch law in South Africa during the 19th...
Under the "complementarity" regime of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), th...
A somewhat contested basis of international competence in the recognition and enforcement of foreign...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)This dissertation concerns a comparative analysis of Brazilian, ...
Because the distance in time to the Roman past is long and the ties that bound South Africa to the N...
In Southern African Litigation Centre and Another v. National Director of Public Prosecution and Oth...
In the case of Mtembre v. Webster, decided recently (19o4) in the Supreme Court of Cape Colony, Sout...
This thesis is an analysis of the law of vicarious liability and its application within the legal fr...
Placed uniquely at the intersection of common law and civil law, mixed legal systems are today attra...
Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2022South African jurisdictional principles governing cr...
One of the chief jurisprudential considerations of the new South Africa must be access to justice. W...
This article addresses and compares the development of statutory interpretation in South Africa and ...
Modern South African succession law adheres to many of the tenets of Roman-Dutch succession law, and...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)Legal judgements against unsuccessful defendants are handed down...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)The main exploration of this paper is whether a breach of contra...
The paper addresses the survival of Roman or rather Roman-Dutch law in South Africa during the 19th...
Under the "complementarity" regime of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), th...
A somewhat contested basis of international competence in the recognition and enforcement of foreign...
LL.M. (International Commercial Law)This dissertation concerns a comparative analysis of Brazilian, ...
Because the distance in time to the Roman past is long and the ties that bound South Africa to the N...
In Southern African Litigation Centre and Another v. National Director of Public Prosecution and Oth...
In the case of Mtembre v. Webster, decided recently (19o4) in the Supreme Court of Cape Colony, Sout...
This thesis is an analysis of the law of vicarious liability and its application within the legal fr...
Placed uniquely at the intersection of common law and civil law, mixed legal systems are today attra...
Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2022South African jurisdictional principles governing cr...
One of the chief jurisprudential considerations of the new South Africa must be access to justice. W...