Featured Articles

The Privilege Checklist
Due to the expanding role that attorneys play in their client’s businesses today and the general proliferation of documentation, it is necessary for businessmen to understand the extent to which such documented communications are protected, or "privileged",
Contracting With Foreigners
A choice of South African law as the proper law of the agreement is enough evidence of an intention to consent to South African jurisdiction.
The implications for a patient signing an indemnity before admittance to a hospital
If you sign an indemnity before an operation, are the hospital, doctors or staff liable if negligence occurs?
Interest and the in duplum rule
The in duplum rule as developed in our law, provides inter alia that interest due in respect of certain debts ceases to run when it reaches the amount of the unpaid capital sum.
An introduction to our courts and court procedure
Attorney Paul Jacobson provides a basic introduction to our civil court system.
Actions and applications: forms of court proceedings
There are two forms of legal proceedings in our civil court system: actions (“also known as ”trials“) and applications (also known as ”motion proceedings“).  Each form of proceeding follows its own rules and has a different application in civil law. 
"Non-variation" clauses that can be varied
The non-variation clauses that are found in so many contracts can have loopholes that render them useless. The end result is that your contracts can be amended informally with terrible consequences.
Driving a Hard Bargain – A Case of Applying Economic Pressure to an Agreement
The Supreme Court of Appeal recently examined the distinction to be drawn between agreements concluded as a consequence of normal and acceptable economic bargaining on the one hand, and unconscionable and unlawful duress on the other hand.
Court Clarifies the ‘In Duplum’ Rule
There has been much debate in the past about the meaning and effect of the in duplum rule. Any uncertainty has been clarified by a recent judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal, delivered in September 2005 in the matter of Ethekwini Municipality v Verulam Medicentre (Pty) Ltd.
Representation in Court – Legal or Not?
The courts may permit a one-person company to be represented at a court hearing by its alter ego. However it must be stressed that this will only be the case if exceptional circumstances exist.
Poor Reference Check Results In Damages
A Canadian court found Drake International liable in damages for not properly screening a candidate that turned out to have a history of fraudulent activities. This case serves a clear reminder to placement agencies of their obligations and potential liabilities in referring candidates to their clients. In addition to their contractual obligations, such agencies must adhere to a reasonable standard of care in performing their duties or face damages under tort (delict or damages) law. The decision also serves to remind employers of their exposure to potential liabilities for misrepresenting former employees to employers during reference checks. The same position would apply in South Africa.
Application of the Pari Delictum Rule
Proprietors of liquor businesses should take heed of a recent decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal reported in the case of Hitler Adolf Klokow v Michael Boyton Sullivan.
When is a risk of medical treatment material?
This articles discusses a Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in relation to various tests courts use to determine whether a particular risk should have been disclosed to the patient.
The place for early dispute resolution
Increasingly, clients are asking whether law firms address their business needs for speed, efficiency, risk-reduction and cost containment. In particular, they doubt whether the litigation service offered by the traditional law firm delivers the kind of outcomes which today’s business requires
Must Sales Of Investment Properties Be Advertised In Accordance With Section 34 Of The Insolvency Act?
It can now be accepted that sales of "letting enterprises" do not have to be advertised in terms of Section 34 of the Act.
Refusing Information In Terms of the Promotion of Access To Information Act No. 2 Of 2000
The Promotion of Access to Information Act No. 2 of 2000 ("the Information Act") has already received much attention from our courts. In a recent unreported judgment in the Witwatersrand Local Division, further principles concerning the manner in which information may be requested and refused were elucidated by the court.
Plaintiff beware the perils of suing for defamation
The law of defamation aims to protect a person’s right to an unimpaired reputation. But the history of defamation law reveals a sober warning to defamation plaintiffs: institute defamation proceedings at your peril.
Restraints of trade – latest developments
Whether or not a court will enforce an agreement in restraint of trade is case-specific. The court must balance the importance of ensuring that contracts are enforced when they are freely and willingly entered into against the right of every person to choose his or her trade, occupation or profession without hindrance.
Holding directors personally liable for company debts
There have been a number of high profile corporate nose-dives recently (Tollgate, Leisurenet and Fidentia), with hefty jail time being handed out to directors or officials who have run their business recklessly or fraudulently. These big cases has caught the attention of the media, but what about smaller companies that are run into the ground by the recklessness or fraud of their owners?
Interdicting the Media – A Losing Strategy
When faced with the prospect of being implicated in a story by an investigative journalist, many influential business people instruct their lawyers to urgently apply to court to prevent the publication of the story. Generally such applications for an interdict are ill-advised, because our courts approach attempts to restrain publication with caution.
The Prescription Act and Judgment Debt - Good News for Creditors, Bad News for Sureties
A judgment against a surety prescribes only after 30 years
Shareholder, Know Your Rights 
Letseng Diamonds was a shareholder in JCI Ltd. It tried, unsuccessfully to set aside an agreement concluded between JCI Ltd and Investec Bank Ltd.
AFSA Dispute Resolution Clause
To avoid having to go to court in the event of a dispute, contracts with your suppliers, etc, should contain a deadlock clause
Is marriage still a sacred institution?
A Pretoria High Court judge says marriage is still a sacred institution and instituting a damages claim by an aggrieved spouse as a result of adultery is not outdated
Securing the keys: A parent’s personal liability for failing to supervise a child
In Wessels v Pretorius 2007 JDR 0861 (SCA) the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) dealt with the negligence and personal liability of a father who had permitted his minor son to use his motor vehicle.
How do you recover a bad debt?
If a debtor owes you money and doesn’t pay how do you go about recovering the amount due?
Piercing the corporate veil
Both the Close Corporations Act and the Companies Act have similar provisions that grant a court power to attach personal liability for the debts of a corporation or company to its members or directors if they are knowingly party to reckless or fraudulent trading by the corporation or company.
The binding effect of marriages in community of property
Can one party in a marriage in community of property bind the joint estate without the consent of the other party to the marriage?
Everything you wanted to know about the Small Claims Court
If you are an individual and have a claim under R7 000 then you should sue out of this court
New court judgment affects commercial and residential properties
Landlords should carefully check their mortgage agreements on both commercial and residential properties. If they contain a cession of rentals they need to obtain the bank’s permission before they may sue for unpaid rentals.
Vicarious Liability
Liability imputed to one person for the actions of another, where the law contemplates that the other should be held responsible for a wrong in fact committed by someone else.
Duty to Mediate
There is a duty on parties to a dispute to attempt to mediate the dispute and an obligation on opposing attorneys to encourage mediation, before litigation commences
Regional Courts Get More Power
The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development has amended the Magistrates’ Courts Act of 1944 giving powers to Regional Courts to deal with civil cases. President Jacob Zuma announced the commencement of the Jurisdiction of Regional Courts Amendment Act which came into effect on 9th August 2010, the National Women’s Day.
Court cannot order return of son from China, says judge
As China is not a signatory to The Hague Convention on International Child Abduction, it is not bound by procedures to expedite child custody cases across state lines.
Class Actions and Collective Redress Litigation in South Africa
Are class actions a part of the South African legal landscape?
Legal entities may claim general damages in defamation matters
A trading corporation has an interest in its reputation that requires legal protection
Personal liability as a member of a deregistered CC
A recent decision confirmed that members of a Close Corporation will be personally liable for the debts of the CC that remain unpaid at the time of deregistration of the CC: Edward Street Property Investments CC v Lambrechts and Others (3657/07) [2010] ZAWCHC 218 (1 December 2010)
What is Emancipation?
A child becomes a major in the eyes of our law when he or she turns 18. When can a minor (a child under 18) be liable for contracts that he or she enters into?