Media 24 Limited and Others v National Prosecuting Authority and Others (55656/10) [2011] ZAGPPHC 64; 2011 (2) SACR 321 (GNP) (29 April 2011)

78 Reportability

Brief Summary

Media Law — Access to court proceedings — Application for media access to trial of minor accused under Section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 — Applicants, comprising media entities, sought permission for journalists to attend trial concerning murder of Eugene Terre'blanche — Respondents did not oppose the application — Court considered the balance between public interest in open justice and the protection of the minor's rights — Held that the presiding officer has discretion to permit media attendance, emphasizing the importance of freedom of expression while safeguarding the child's best interests.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an application in the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, brought in terms of section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008. The proceedings concerned whether, and on what conditions, members of the news media (and initially also members of the public) could be permitted to attend and report on a criminal trial in which one accused was an adult and one accused was a minor, arising from a charge of murder.


The applicants were Media 24 Limited, the South African Editors Forum, e.tv (Pty) Limited, and e.sat TV (Pty) Limited. Media Monitoring Africa was admitted as amicus curiae. The respondents were the National Prosecuting Authority, Chris Mahlangu (the adult accused), and Minor X (the child accused). The Terre’blanche family later entered the litigation as an intervening party during subsequent proceedings directed at rescission and/or variation of the court’s earlier order.


The matter had a notable procedural history. The substantive application for access was not opposed by the respondents, who elected to abide the court’s decision. The third and fourth applicants intervened before the hearing and were joined. The amicus was admitted under Rule 16A. The court initially issued an order only on 2 December 2010, indicating that reasons would follow later. Thereafter, an application for rescission and/or variation was pursued in relation to the terms of the order; this process led to the joinder of the Terre’blanche family and culminated in a clarified and amended order. The judgment delivered on 29 April 2011 furnished the reasons for the earlier order and recorded the later rescission/variation and substituted order.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the proper interpretation and application of section 63(5) in the context of constitutional and international-law considerations, specifically the tension between open justice and media freedom on the one hand, and the best interests, privacy, dignity, and fair-trial rights of a child accused on the other, in a politically and socially high-profile murder trial (the alleged victim being Eugene Terre’blanche, leader of the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging).


2. Material Facts


Eugene Terre’blanche was found dead on 3 April 2010 on his farm near Ventersdorp. The National Prosecuting Authority alleged that he was murdered by the second and third respondents (the accused persons), both of whom were described as workers on the farm, and one of whom was a minor. The criminal trial to which the application related was thus a joint trial of an adult accused and a child accused on a charge of murder.


The court treated as material and largely undisputed that the death and the prosecution attracted extensive media coverage, both locally and internationally, and that reporting and public commentary included multiple narratives about motive. Those narratives included accounts of a wage dispute, allegations connecting the killing to broader political or racial tensions (including reporting on the singing of the struggle song “Dubula ibhunu” / “kill a Boer” by Julius Malema and reactions by some supporters of the AWB), suggestions of a broader campaign of farm killings, and speculation that the death was linked to sexual circumstances (including reporting about a crimen injuria allegation that the deceased had been found with his trousers pulled down, allegedly to humiliate him). The court also noted that these reports and rumours had contributed to a heightened level of public controversy and curiosity around what the trial would reveal.


It was further material that section 63(5) creates a default position of excluding the public from child justice court proceedings unless their presence is necessary or the presiding officer grants permission. The applicants sought permission under the discretionary portion of section 63(5) for journalists to attend the proceedings in order to report as evidence emerged. In the alternative formulations advanced by the applicants, a defined number of nominated journalists would be permitted to attend for the duration of the trial.


In the later procedural phase, it became material that the amicus sought rescission and/or variation of aspects of the initial order, and that the Terre’blanche family sought joinder as intervening party because the rescission application implicated their ability to attend the trial. The parties ultimately informed the court that the rescission/variation dispute had been settled to the extent that members of the Terre’blanche family would be allowed to attend, but that the general public would be prohibited from attending, and that the order required clarification because the applicants and the prosecuting authority differed on whether the media would sit in the courtroom itself or in a closed-circuit television room.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the proper interpretation and application of section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008, namely whether the court should exercise its discretion to permit attendance by the media (and, in the initial order, members of the public and the deceased’s family), despite the statutory default position excluding the public from child justice court proceedings.


The dispute was primarily one of law and the application of law to fact, requiring the court to determine the standard governing the exercise of discretion under section 63(5), and then to apply that standard to the circumstances of a high-profile trial involving a child accused. The court also had to make an evaluative judgment regarding the appropriate balance between competing constitutional rights and values, including the best interests of the child and fair-trial protections, as against freedom of expression, the public’s right to receive information, and the principle of open justice.


A further legal issue arose in the rescission/variation stage: whether, and on what basis, the court could rescind or vary aspects of its earlier order, with reference to Rule 42, the doctrine of functus officio, and the recognised bases for clarification or correction of orders.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached section 63(5) as legislation that had to be interpreted and applied consistently with constitutional values and, where reasonably possible, consistently with international law. It noted that the Child Justice Act commenced on 1 April 2010 and repealed section 153(4) of the Criminal Procedure Act, with the consequence that section 63(5) remained the operative provision governing attendance at child justice court proceedings. The court emphasised interpretive principles requiring that statutory interpretation should advance the values underlying the Bill of Rights (with reference to Bato Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism 2004 (7) BCLR (CC)) and that courts should prefer a reasonable interpretation consistent with international law (with reference to Progress Office Machines CC v South African Revenue Services and Others 2008 (2) SA 13 (SCA)).


In framing the core balance, the court accepted that open justice is a foundational tenet of criminal procedure and is constitutionally anchored (including through fair-trial rights), and that the media play a constitutionally important role as agents of the public in disseminating information. At the same time, the court treated the protection of vulnerable participants in criminal proceedings as a well-established justification for restricting public access, and held that similar considerations apply to youthful accused persons. It relied on the protective purpose of section 63(5) as recognising the need to shield children from public exposure and potential emotional or psychological harm, while remaining attentive to the public’s entitlement to scrutiny of the administration of justice.


The court accepted the amicus’s submission that section 63(5) should generally be understood to exclude public attendance in child justice proceedings, grounded in the child’s rights to privacy, dignity, and a fair trial, and the constitutional injunction that the best interests of the child are of paramount importance. However, it rejected a reading in which the best-interests principle would automatically and invariably override public-interest considerations irrespective of the case. Instead, the court reasoned that the legislature must have envisaged exceptions because section 63(5) expressly provides for permission to attend at the discretion of the presiding officer.


On the structure of section 63(5), the court reasoned that the first portion (“no person may be present...”) should be understood as prohibiting the opening of the courtroom to a class of persons such as “the media” or “the public”, whereas the second portion (“or the presiding officer has granted him or her permission...”) permits access to be granted within the court’s discretion. That discretion had to be exercised in a manner that properly accounted for constitutional rights, including freedom of expression and the public’s right to receive information, but also required a balance with fair-trial interests and child-protection imperatives.


The court treated the granting of such permission as requiring extraordinary and exceptional circumstances, understood as circumstances that are out of the ordinary or unusual, and emphasised that such an approach was necessary to avoid opening the “floodgates” to routine media attendance in child-accused trials. In assessing whether exceptional circumstances existed, the court considered the intense public interest and international attention in the prosecution, including the political status of the deceased, the racial and political tensions reported around the death, and the proliferation of rumours and speculative narratives. The court expressly cautioned that it had no evidence before it establishing a causal link between political chanting and the alleged acts of the accused, but nevertheless reasoned that public perceptions and speculation could generate a “myth” which contributed to the exceptional character of the matter. In that context, it considered that a limited degree of access could serve to allow the trial to be subjected to public scrutiny, thereby supporting open justice and the public’s right to receive information.


In designing relief, the court rejected both extremes presented in argument. It did not accept that a relatively large number of journalists in the courtroom would have no likely impact on the child accused’s rights, and it did not accept that the appropriate solution was to open the courtroom broadly (including by allocating a large portion of the public gallery to the media). It instead chose a more restrictive mechanism: permitting nominated media (and, in the final order, nominated members of the deceased’s family) to follow the proceedings via closed-circuit television, rather than physically attending in the same courtroom as the child accused, while also enforcing strict non-publication rules regarding any identifying details of the minor.


In supporting the possibility of limiting children’s rights where justified, the court relied on authority that children’s rights, like other constitutional rights, are subject to reasonable and justifiable limitation under section 36 (with reference to De Reuck v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division and Others [2003] ZACC 19; 2004 (1) SA 406 (CC)). It further emphasised statutory protection against publication of a child accused’s identity through section 63(6) (incorporating section 154(3) of the Criminal Procedure Act). It also referred to international-law instruments and comparative material in highlighting the need for sensitivity to the child’s age, including the potential prejudicial effects of extensive publicity.


On rescission and variation, the court explained that there had been a misunderstanding about the earlier order’s meaning (particularly whether journalists could sit in the courtroom or only in the CCTV room). Applying the principles governing Rule 42 and the limited circumstances in which a court may clarify, correct, or rescind its own order notwithstanding functus officio, the court relied on the approach summarised in Firestone South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG 1977 (4) SA 298 (A) and explained in Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape) 2003 (6) SA 1 (SCA). It treated the amendment to paragraph 1 as a permissible clarification to give effect to its true intention, and it rescinded and replaced paragraph 5 (which had initially allowed members of the general public access via CCTV) so as to exclude the general public entirely, consistent with the later settlement and the protective approach adopted.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted the applicants limited permission under section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 for nominated journalists to attend the proceedings for the duration of the trial, but only by observing and hearing the proceedings in a closed-circuit television room, rather than sitting in the courtroom with the child accused. The court also imposed strict protective measures, including prohibitions on publication of information revealing or potentially revealing the identity of the minor accused, and directions allowing removal of observers if their presence impeded the minor’s rights to privacy, dignity, or a fair trial.


Following the rescission/variation process, the court rescinded and varied the earlier order and substituted it with a revised order that (i) clarified that media attendance would be in the CCTV room, (ii) permitted a limited number of nominated members of the deceased’s family to attend via CCTV, (iii) excluded the general public from the CCTV room (reserving remaining space for court officials), and (iv) required that the minor accused’s identity be obscured on the CCTV feed by camera placement, blurring, or other means.


The judgment, as provided, does not record a distinct costs order.


Cases Cited


Bato Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism 2004 (7) BCLR (CC)


S v Mokoena; S v Phaswane [2008] ZAGPHC 148; 2008 (2) SACR 216 (T)


S v Du Toit en ander 2005 (1) SACR 47 (T)


Progress Office Machines CC v South African Revenue Services and Others 2008 (2) SA 13 (SCA)


Director of Public Prosecutions v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others 2009 (4) SA 222 (CC)


S v Staggie and Another 2003 (1) BCLR 43 (C)


Financial Mail (Pty) Ltd and Others v Sage Holdings Ltd and Another [1993] ZASCA 3; 1993 (2) SA 451 (A)


Lion Laboratories Ltd v Evans and Others [1984] 2 All ER 417 (CA)


South African Broadcasting Corporation v Avusa Limited and Another 2010 (1) SA 280 (GSJ)


De Reuck v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division and Others [2003] ZACC 19; 2004 (1) SA 406 (CC)


Giddey NO v JC Barnard and Partners [2006] ZACC 13; 2007 (5) SA 525 (CC)


Dotcom Trading 121 (Pty) Ltd v King and Others 2000 (4) SA 973 (C)


Mpange and Others v Sithole 2007 (6) SA 578 (W)


eTV (Pty) Ltd and Others v Judicial Service Commission and Others 2010 (1) SA 537 (GSJ)


Mail and Guardian Limited and Others v Judicial Service Commission and Others 2010 (6) BCLR 615 (GSJ)


South African Broadcasting Corporation Limited v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others [2006] ZACC 15; 2007 (1) SA 523 (CC)


Khumalo and Others v Holomisa [2002] ZACC 12; 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC)


Centre for Child Law v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others 2009 (6) SA 632 (CC)


T v United Kingdom [2000] 30 E.H.R.R. 121


Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape) 2003 (6) SA 1 (SCA)


Firestone South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG 1977 (4) SA 298 (A)


Children’s Estates Stores v Standard Bank of South Africa Limited 1924 OPD 163


De Wet and Others v Western Bank Limited 1979 (2) SA 1031 (A)


Legislation Cited


Child Justice Act 75 of 2008, sections 63(4), 63(5), and 63(6)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 153(4) (repealed) and section 154(3)


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, sections 12, 16, 28(2), 35, 35(3)(c), 36, and 39(2)


Convention on the Rights of the Child, Article 40


African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, Article 4


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 16A


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 42


Held


The court held that section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 establishes a default position that child justice court proceedings are closed to the public, reflecting the need to protect a child accused’s best interests, privacy, dignity, and fair-trial rights. However, the section confers a discretion on the presiding officer to permit attendance by persons whose presence is not necessary, and that discretion must be exercised in light of constitutional values, including freedom of expression, the public’s right to receive information, and the principle of open justice.


The court held that permission for media attendance in child-accused proceedings should be granted only in exceptional circumstances, assessed on a case-by-case basis, and that the circumstances surrounding the Terre’blanche murder trial justified a limited exception due to acute public interest and pervasive speculation. The court held that access could be granted in a manner that protected the child accused by restricting observation to a closed-circuit television facility, by limiting the number of authorised observers, by ensuring the minor’s identity was not disclosed and was obscured on the CCTV feed, and by reserving a power to exclude observers if their presence prejudiced the child’s rights.


In later proceedings, the court held that it was entitled, within the limits of the law governing variation and rescission of orders, to clarify its earlier order to reflect its true intention and to rescind and replace parts of it, including the provision that had allowed members of the general public to attend via CCTV, thereby excluding the general public and limiting access to nominated media, nominated members of the deceased’s family, and court officials.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 63(5) of the Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 creates a presumptive exclusion of public attendance at child justice court proceedings, grounded in the protection of the child accused’s best interests and associated rights, but it simultaneously confers a judicial discretion to permit attendance by specific persons.


The discretion under section 63(5) is not to be exercised by opening proceedings to broad classes such as “the media” or “the public” as a general rule; rather, any permission should be framed narrowly and tailored to the circumstances, with safeguards directed at preserving the child accused’s privacy, dignity, and fair-trial entitlements.


When discretion implicates constitutional rights, it must be exercised in a manner that promotes the spirit, purport, and objects of the Bill of Rights, balancing the child’s interests and fair-trial rights against the constitutional values of open justice and the public’s right to receive information through freedom of expression.


Children’s rights, including those arising under section 28(2) of the Constitution, are not absolute and may be limited where the limitation is reasonable and justifiable under section 36; correspondingly, media access and open justice may also be limited to protect the integrity and fairness of proceedings involving child accused persons.


Statutory protections against identification of child accused persons, including the prohibition on publishing information revealing or potentially revealing a child’s identity, are integral to the balancing exercise and may be reinforced by court-crafted safeguards such as obscuring the minor’s image on any broadcast or closed-circuit feed.


A court may rescind or vary aspects of its own order only within narrowly defined limits, including the power to clarify an ambiguous order to give effect to its true intention without altering its sense and substance, and the power to act under Rule 42 where an order was erroneously sought or granted, subject to the constraints imposed by the doctrine of functus officio.

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[2011] ZAGPPHC 64
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Media 24 Limited and Others v National Prosecuting Authority and Others (55656/10) [2011] ZAGPPHC 64; 2011 (2) SACR 321 (GNP) (29 April 2011)

REPORTABLE
IN THE HIGH COURT
SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTH GAUTENG HIGH
COURT)
Case number: 55656/10
DATE:29/04/2011
In
the matter between:
Media
24
Limited
..................................................................................................
First Applicant
The
South African Editors
Forum
.....................................................................
Second
Applicant
e.tv (Pty)
Limited
..................................................................................................
Third
Applicant
e.
sat TV (Pty)
Limited
.......................................................................................
Fourth Applicant
Media
Monitoring
Africa
........................................................................................
Amicus
Curiae
Terre'blanche
family
...........................................................................................
Intervening
party
and
The
National Prosecuting
Authority
.................................................................
First Respondent
Chris
Mahlangu
..........................................................................................
Second Respondent
Minor
X
...........................................................................................................
Third Respondent
In re: The State
Vs
Chris
Mahlangu and Minor
X
..............................................................
First
and Second Accused
JUDGMENT
RAULINGA
J,
INTRODUCTION
[1] This application is
premised on the provisions of Section 63 (5) of the Child Justice Act
75 of 2008 (the Act) which concerns
the trial of an adult accused and
a minor accused, on a charge of murder. The alleged victim is the
late Mr Eugene Terre'blance
(Terre'blanche) the leader of the
political organisation, the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging ("AWB")
.
The Applicants seek the
opportunity to have journalists employed by them attend the
proceedings, in order to report on the evidence
and issues as they
emerge. The amicus curiae (amicus) however, wishes to deal with the
special status accorded under South African
and International law to
the protection of children's rights, the interpretation of Section
63(5) of the Act, and the order that
was proposed by the Applicants.
Section 63 (5) of the
Act, provides, as the default position, that proceedings in a trial
of a minor accused are to be held in the
absence of any member of the
public barring the necessary parties.
On the 2
nd
December 2010, when the court reconvened, for a judgment, I handed
down an order only and indicated that my reasons will follow.
I now
deal with those reasons in this judgment.
[2] All the Respondents
did not oppose the application, and have elected instead to abide by
the order of the court. Initially the
1
st
and 2
nd
Applicants were the only parties who moved the original
application. Prior to the hearing of the application e.tv (Pty)
Limited
and e. sat (Pty) Limited launched an application to
intervene. Since the application to intervene was not opposed they
were accordingly
joined as third and fourth Applicants. When the
matter was called on the 22
nd
November 2010,
Media Monitoring Africa, moved an application in terms of Rule 16 A
of this court for leave to be admitted as amicus
in the matter.
The said application was
not opposed and as a consequence Media Monitoring Africa was granted
leave and admitted as amicus. When
the matter was argued the
Applicants submitted one set of heads of argument although two
Counsel appeared on their behalf. The
amicus submitted separate heads
of argument. I am indebted to the three Counsel for their well
prepared and precise heads.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[3] Mr Eugene
Terre'blanche who was the leader of the "AWB" was found
dead on the 3
rd
April 2010 on the outskirts of Ventersdorp
- on his farm. The National Prosecuting Authority alleges that
Terre'blanche was murdered
by the second and the third Respondents
("the accused") both of whom were workers on Terre'blanche
farm. The death of
Terre'blanche was widely reported in the print and
electronic media. Some reports allege that Terre'blanche was killed
following
a dispute over unpaid wages. Other reports also alluded to
the close proximity in time between the death of Terre'blanche and
the
singing of a struggle song entitled " Dubula ibhunu" or
"kill a Boer" by the President of the African National

Congress Youth League, Julius Malema( "Malema") and
reported the views of a number of AWB supporters to the effect that

the killing of Terre'blanche was linked to Malema's singing of the
song.
[4] It was also reported
that Terre'blanche's alleged killing might have been part of a
broader campaign to kill farmers. There
are also published reports by
various newspaper articles suggesting that Terre'blanche's death was
a sex killing. These reports
have received extensive publicity in the
print and electronic media both in South Africa and abroad.
I will only refer to a
few of those reports in order to avoid burdening this judgment.
[5] The Star of the 16
th
April 2010 reflects the following: "Terre'blanche's murder came
at a time when racial tensions were already heightened by
the
comments of ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema. Already, there are
some in Afrikaner right wing circles who have sought
to link Malema's
singing of the "shoot the Boer" song to the murder of the
Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging leader".
On the other hand; The
New York Times reported as follows: "Mr Terre'blanche, who was
sentenced to six years in prison in 1997
for beating one of his black
workers and setting his dogs on a gas station attendant, was beaten
to death by workers on his farm
on Saturday, who said they had argued
with him over unpaid wages, the police told the South African Press
Association".
The headline appearing on
the Business Week of the 6
th
April 2010 reads as follows:"
South African Court Delays Case of National Leader's Murder".
An article in the News 24
reads: "The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) will oppose the
legal bid by media houses to win
access to the trial of Eugene
Terre'blanche's alleged killers, National director of Public
Prosecutions, Menzi Simelane said on
Tuesday."
A very emotive article
apparently sourced from, the Sunday Argus by The SA Media - the
University of the Free State, of the 28
th
April 2010
carries the following headline "SA family seeks 'repatriation'
to Netherlands".
[6] On the sex allegation
The Times of the 11
th
April 2010 carries the headlines
"Hawks take over ET case as sex claims fly" whereas the SA
Media - University of the
Free State dated 18 April 2010 and sourced
from the City Press has a headline in bold letters, reading: "Cele
confirms ET
sex links".
The media was informed
that the crimen injuria charge related to the fact that Terre'blanche
had been found with his trousers pulled
down and that the State
alleged that this had been done by the accused in order to humiliate
him. What exacerbated the anger is
said to be the release of the
second Respondent on bail on the 14
th
April 2010. The said
bail has since been cancelled and the second respondent remains in
custody and as matters stand his status
has not changed. The
Applicants are of the view that as a result of this rumours they
should be allowed access to sit in court
during the trial of the
second and third Respondents despite the fact that Section 63 (5)
restricts such access. They insist that
the myth created around this
case should be demystified.
[7]
ARGUMENTS BY THE PARTIES
The Applicants argued
that the court ought to permit journalists employed by them to be
present during the trial of the second and
third Respondents, one of
whom is a minor because:
1. the trial is in
respect of an alleged murder, and concerns issues, of profound public
interest;
2.
the holding of a trial completely closed to the media will
significantly limit the right of freedom to receive information of

members of the public and undermine the principle of open justice;
and
3.
there is a simple mechanism available to protect the best interests
of a minor accused while preserving the right of members
of the
public to have knowledge of the proceedings.
[8]
Section 63 (5) of the Act provides that:
"No person may be
present at any sitting of a child justice court, unless his or her
presence is necessary in connection with
the proceedings of the child
justice court or the presiding officer has granted him or her
permission to be present".
As the default position
the section provides that proceedings in a trial of a minor accused
person are to be held in the absence
of any member of the public
barring the necessary parties. The Section also makes it expressly
clear that the presiding officer
in any such proceedings may give
permission to any person to attend the trial.
It is under this second
part of the section that Applicants seek the opportunity to have
journalists employed by them attend the
proceedings, in order to
report on the evidence and issues as they emerge.
[9] The first and second
Applicants request, in the alternative, that two journalists employed
by the first Applicant and ten journalists
from the print and
broadcast media nominated by the second Applicant be present in the
court room for the duration of the trial.
Whereas the third and
fourth Applicants request, in the alternative, that at least two
journalists employed by one or either of
them, are permitted into the
court room to observe and report on criminal trial of the first and
second accused.
[10] The amicus curiae
submits that by raising manifest public interest in the criminal
trial, the Applicants correctly emphasise
the importance of the right
to freedom of expression and the vital function that the media fulfil
in protecting the public's right
to receive or impart information,
protecting the principle of open justice and enhancing the
constitutional values of openness,
responsiveness and accountability.
However, the amicus argues that these are not the only relevant
considerations in a section
63(5) enquiry. Equally important is the
protection of the child's best interest in all matters concerning him
or her as well as
his or her rights to privacy, dignity and fair
trial.
Further those important
questions are therefore raised by the section 63(5) application
procedure: whether "the public interest"
should be the
standard to which the section 63 (5) Applicants should be held and
the manner in which the presiding officer's discretion
should be
exercised in light of various constitutional imperatives.
[11]
EVALUATION AND ANALYSIS
The
Child Justice Act 75
of 2008
came into operation on the 1
st
April 2010. It
amends several sections in the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
Section 153
(4) has been repealed by schedule 4 of the Act (item (i)
under amendments to the Criminal Procedure Act. Subsection (i)
amended
by schedule 4 of the Act). This therefore means that Section
63(5) remains the only provision that governs the presence or not of

persons at a sitting of a child justice court.
The interpretation of the
Act in general, and in particular Section 63 (5) should be
interpreted within the context of the dictum
in Bato Star Fishing
(Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism 2004 (7) BCLR
(CC) at paras 72, 80 and 90. The
interpretation that is
placed upon a statute must advance the values underlying the Bill of
Rights. Notable also, is the observation
by Bertelsmann J in S v
Mokoena; S v Phaswane
[2008] ZAGPHC 148
;
2008 (2) SACR 216
(T) that one of the basic
tenets of criminal justice is that a trial should be held in public.
It is a principle enshrined in the
Constitution in Section 35 (3) (C)
and is of indisputable importance to ensure the public's trust in the
independence and functioning
of the courts - See also S v Du toit en
ander
2005 (1) SACR 47
(T).
When interpreting Section
63(5) of the Act, the court is bound to prefer any reasonable
interpretation of legislation that is consistent
with international
law, over any alternative interpretation that is inconsistent with
international law - Progress Offices Machines
CC V South African
Revenue Services and others
2008 (2) SA 13
(SCA).
[12] It is also trite
that vulnerable witnesses must be protected from public exposure,
either because disclosure of their identity
may endanger their lives
or safety or because of discomfort or embarrassment at having to
testify before an audience. Of paramount
importance is that the
witness may be exposed to emotional or psychological harm. Similar
considerations apply to youthful accused
persons. Section 63 (5) of
the Act, therefore, is a recognition of the need to afford utmost
protection to such witnesses. - See
Du Toit et al 22 - 6 D Service 44
-2010.
It has been submitted by
the amicus that, Section 63(5) of the Act raises important questions
regarding the standard to which Applicants
should be held and the
manner in which the presiding officers' discretion should be
exercised in light of various constitutional
imperatives. It
therefore means that such an application in favour of the Applicants
can only be granted under extraordinary and
exceptional
circumstances.
[13] I must immediately
mention that it is difficult to discern between extraordinary and
exceptional, but for the purposes of this
judgment, the two terms
will be dealt with conjunctively for a better understanding in this
context. It simply means something
out of the ordinary or unusual.
Within the meaning of Section 63(5) the fundamental principle of
"best interest of the child"
does not automatically trump
the principle of "public's interest" irrespective of the
circumstances of the individual
case. The principle of "the best
interest of the child" which underpins the holding of criminal
proceedings in camera
remains an extraordinary and exceptional step.
It is therefore necessary to establish if exceptional circumstances
do exist on
a case by case basis. This approach will permeate all the
discussions which are going to be dealt with herein below.
[14] I am in agreement
with the amicus that the best interests principle, coupled with the
law's requirements that the child accused's
dignity, privacy and fair
trial interest be protected, require that, as a general rule, Section
63(5) of the Act must be understood
to exclude public attendance at
child justice court proceedings. However, this should be interpreted
with the understanding that
the legislature foresaw a possibility of
exceptions.
It is for that reason
that the first part of the Section; "no person may be
present....... " should be interpreted as
prohibiting the
presiding officer from opening the child justice court room to a
class of persons, such as "the media"
or "the public".
The second part of the Section "or the presiding officer has
granted him or her permission to be
present" allows access to
the criminal proceedings within the discretion of the court which
must be exercised with reference
to the values of the Constitution,
including the right to freedom of expression and the right to receive
information. In doing
so the court must strike a balance between
"fair trial interest" and "public interest".
In comparing Section 153
(4) to various other sections of the
Criminal Procedure Act, which
is
the predecessor of Section 63(5) of the Act, the Constitutional Court
in Director of Public Prosecutions v Minister of Justice
and
Constitutional Development and others 2009(4) SA 222(CC) para 131
said the following: "What distinguishes the child accused
from
the child complainant is that the child accused must remain in court
throughout the proceedings. The child accused is entitled
to hear all
the evidence against him or her so as to confront it. Indeed one of
the fair trial rights of an accused is the right
to be present when
being tried. To the extent that the child accused is obliged to
remain in court throughout the entire proceedings,
the proceedings
must be in camera............ in these circumstances, the
differentiation that the subsections make between, on
the one hand,
child complainants in sexual offence cases and, on the other hand,
the child accused, is rationally related to the
duration of that time
that each is required to spend in the proceedings".
[15] This dictum should
be read together with the other parts of the judgment. In the same
judgment paragraphs 145 and 146 at 27
4 (F-J), the court also held
that; "Given the wide-ranging nature of the evidence that child
witnesses in general could be
called upon to give, and the wide
ranging ages of the child witnesses, it was desirable that the
question whether proceedings should
be held in camera should be
answered on case by case basis. Indeed, it was desirable that courts
should have discretion in each
case to assess whether, having regard
to the nature of the evidence to be given and the age of the child,
the proceedings should
be held in camera or whether the child should
testify in camera?" It is my considered view that by sanctioning
discretion,
the court envisaged the possibility of exceptional
circumstances.
I agree with the judgment
in S v Staggie and Another
2003 (1) BCLR 43
(C) in which it was held
that "there are well recognised exceptions in our criminal
procedure to the general rule that criminal
proceedings are to be
conducted in open court". In the instant case, the discretion
exercised and the exceptions which are
found to be present must be
such that we don't open the floodgates to abuse the provisions of
Section 63 (5).
[16] Corbett JA (as he
then was) in the case of Financial Mall (Pty) Ltd and others V Sage
Holdings Ltd and Another
[1993] ZASCA 3
;
1993 (2) SA 451
(A), quoting from the
English case of Lion Laboratories Ltd v Evans and others
[1984] 2 ALL
ER 417
(CA), stated, inter alia, at 464C:
"(1) There is a wide
difference between what is interesting to the public and what is in
the public interest to make known.
(2) The media have
private interests of their own in publishing what appeals to the
public and may increase their circulation or
the numbers of their
viewers or listeners; and they are peculiarly vulnerable to the error
of confusing the public interest with
their own interest ./'See also
SABC v Avusa Ltd and Another
2010 (1) SA 280
(GSJ) para 4.
One should bear in mind
that the constitutional promise of a free press is not one that is
made for the protection of the special
interests of the press.... The
constitutional promise is made rather to serve the interest that all
citizens have in the free flow
of information, which is possible only
if there is a free press. To abridge the freedom of the press is to
abridge the rights of
all citizens and not merely the rights of the
press itself.
I
agree with the amicus that the default position should not be shifted
to an "open to the media" position simply because
the
proceedings are newsworthy or controversial. Accordingly, each
application to enter child justice court proceedings should
always be
assessed on its own merits and with the best interests of the child
at the forefront of the presiding officer's mind.
In
the same vein, one is persuaded to yield to the argument by the
Applicants that it is now welt-accepted that a discretion of
the
court pertaining to issues such as section 63 (5) of the Act, must be
exercised with reference to the values of the Constitution,
including
the right to freedom of expression and the right to receive
information. Indeed if the application is refused, it will
have the
effect of substantially limiting the right to receive information of
members of the public and, therefore the right to
freedom of
expression. The public will not know the circumstances of the
killing. In the converse, if the media is allowed access
into the
court-room, this may prejudice the right of the minor accused to be
tried in camera. The minor accused may suffer emotional
trauma and he
may feel intimidated by the presence of the media.
A
choice will therefore have to made between limiting the rights of the
accused to a trial by hearing the matter behind closed doors,
and by
that limit the rights of the public or to limit the rights of the
accused in terms of section 36 of the Constitution and
yield to the
rights of freedom to receive information. It is important to observe
that the unusual circumstances in this case may
justify the exception
to the general rule.
[17] The Constitutional
court has made it clear that, children's rights may be limited like
all other rights.
In De Reuck v Director of
Public Prosecutions Witwatersrand Local Division and others
[2003] ZACC 19
;
2004 (1)
SA 406
(CC) para 55 at 429 (B-C) the court held that...
Constitutional rights were mutually interrelated and interdependent
and formed
a single constitutional value system. Section 28(2) of the
Constitution, like the other rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights,

was subject to limitations that were reasonable and justifiable in
compliance with Section 36.
In Giddey NO V JC Barnard
and Partners
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (5) SA 525
CC at paragraph 16, the court was of the
view that the Uniform Rules of Court may well contemplate that at
times the right of access
to court will be limited...... very often
the interpretation and application of the Rule will require
consideration of the provisions
of the Constitution, as section 39
(2) of the Constitution instructs. A court that fails to adequately
consider the relevant constitutional
provisions will not have
properly applied the Rules at all...See also Dotcom Trading v King
and others
2000 (4) SA 973
(C).
Against the background of
this reasoning would be the following factors, that:
(a) public interest in
knowing what transpires during the trial is acute;
(b)
the order that must be made by the court must prohibit the
disclosure of the identity of the minor accused;
(c)
the order must also protect the best interest of the child;
(d)
the details of the trial must be subjected to public scrutiny, to
vindicate the principles underpinning the right of every accused

person to a public trial and the principles of open justice.
This should be done
mindful of the fact that the media are agents of the public. There
exists a tacit contract between the public
and the media, that the
media are the ears of the public. In view of the fact that the media
are the messengers, the public will
always prevail over the media.
However, the media should be allowed to carry out its mandate on
behalf of the public.
[18] Where a court's
exercise of discretion implicates constitutional rights, it must be
interpreted and applied with appropriate
regard to the spirit,
purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. - Mpange and others v
Sithole
2007 (6) SA 578
(W).
In eTV (Pty) Ltd and
others v Judicial Service Commission and others
2010 (1) SA 537
(GSJ)
and Mail and Guardian Ltd and others v Judicial Service Commission
and others
2010 (6) BCLR 615
GSJ, the court held that the JSC had
exercised its discretion for insubstantial reasons and without giving
proper account to freedom
of expression and the public interest in
the matters concerned.
The Constitution is the
supreme law of the Republic, and therefore the court must have due
regard to the requirements of the Constitution
by promoting the
spirit, purport and object of the Bill of Rights. This should
therefore be interpreted to mean that the meaning
of the second part
of section 63 (5) of the Act, can be interpreted in a manner that its
application can be limited to the extent
that the trial be heard in
an open court.
[19] Whether a trial is
held in camera or in an open court, the right to a fair trial still
applies. Children have the right to
adduce and challenge evidence. It
is indeed true that the trial court environment is an intimidating
and frightening one. The fair
trial standard associated with trying
adult accused cannot be equated to a fair trial context of a child
accused. It is always
important to create a more sensitive court room
environment for children. In doing so, the objectives of the Act
regarding the
protection of the rights of children are paramount.
The
issue of right to privacy and dignity also arises. Children are
particularly susceptible to stigmatization. South African domestic

iaw and international law seek to protect children from the adverse
effects that may result from publication in the media and public

attendance at trial.
In
addition to the requirements of Section 63 (5) of the Act, Section 63
(6) incorporates sectionl54 (3) of the
Criminal Procedure Act which
prohibits the publication of any information which reveals the
identity of the accused under the age of eighteen years. The
underlying
principle is therefore that criminal proceedings involving
children accused, should be that the court room should be closed from

the public and entry should only be permitted by the presiding
officer in very exceptional circumstances. The invasion of the child

accused's privacy and dignity should be avoided at all costs.
To
this end, Section 63 (4) of the Act states: a child justice court
must during the proceedings, ensure that the best interest
of the
child are upheld, and to this end.......... must, during all stages
of the trial, especially during cross-examination of
a child, ensure
that the proceedings are fair and not unduly hostile and are
appropriate to the age and understanding of the child.
This principle
is also articulated in Article 40 of the Convention on the Rights of
the Child as well as in Article 4 of the African
Charter on the
Rights and Welfare of the Child. Section 28 of the Constitution
confers to children the rights under Sections 12
and 35 of the
Constitution. Section 35 includes the right to a fair trial - that
includes the right to be represented when being
tried, adduce and
challenge evidence. These rights were elucidated in Centre for Child
Law v Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development and Others
2009 (6) SA 632
(CC).
[20] The test of a fair
trial environment involving children was presented in TV United
Kingdom [2000] 30 E.H.R.R 121, which concerned
two children accused,
both aged 11, who had been found guilty of murder and abduction. The
European Court of Human Rights took
notice of the fact that the trial
had been accompanied by massive national and international publicity
and a hostile crowd had
been present throughout the criminal
proceedings. The court remarked that it was "essential to deal
with a child in a way
which took full account of his age and level of
intellectual capabilities". My view is that the court a quo went
to the extreme
by allowing the trial to be heard in an open
courtroom.
The amicus is correct in
arguing that the security of the alleged criminal acts and the
political and racial tensions surrounding
the accused are erroneous
and that the court should be guided by the ECHR's interpretation of
the right to a fair trial.
The gist of the matter is
that although the ECHR made adverse remarks about the plight of the
two minor accused, the trial court
had tried the matter in an open
courtroom. This therefore entails that although the best interest of
the child is paramount, in
certain instances such a right may be
limited. In the instant case Section 36 of the Constitution may
apply.
[21] The right of a fair
trial should also be balanced against the right to free flow of
information and open justice. The rights
enshrined in Section 16 of
the Constitution include: the freedom of the press and other media
and the freedom to receive or impart
information and ideas. Freedom
of expression lies at the heart of democracy and individuals in
society need to be able to hear,
form and express opinions and views
freely on a wide range of matters.
In
the case of South African Broadcasting Corp Ltd V National Director
of Public Prosecutions and others
[2006] ZACC 15
;
2007 (1) SA 523
(CC) the
Constitutional Court dealt with a number of Constitutional issues
encompassing, free -flow of information, open justice,
fair trial and
public interest.
On
freedom of expression the court expressed itself as follows: "Freedom
of expression had an instrumental function as a quantum
of democracy.
The media were key agents in this regard, being both bearers of
rights and constitutional obligations relating to
freedom of
expression.... The ability of each citizen to be a responsible and
effective member of our society depends upon the
manner in which the
media carry out their constitutional mandate. The media thus rely on
freedom of expression and must foster
it." Para 24 at 536 (A-C).
In
articulating the concept of open justice and fair trial the court
remarked as follows: "courts should in principle welcome
public
exposure of their work in the court room, subject of course, to their
obligations to ensure that proceedings are fair. The
fundamental
constitutional values of accountability, responsiveness and openness
apply to the functioning of the judiciary as much
as to the other
branches of government. These values underpin both the right to a
fair trial and the right to a public hearing
(i.e the principle of
open courtrooms). The public is entitled to know exactly how the
judiciary works and to be reassured that
it always functions within
the terms of the law according to time honoured standards of
independence, integrity, impartiality and
fairness". - para 32
at 538 -539 (H-A).
I cannot agree more with
this statement, justice must be seen to be done. Courts cannot only
order other branches of government
to apply the principle of openness
in the performance of their duties, whereas the courts themselves
carry out their duties behind
closed doors.
[22] The media are
recognised as role players in any democratic society as was espoused
by the court in Khumalo and others v Holomisa
[2002] ZACC 12
;
2002 (5) SA 401
(CC)
para 22 -24 at 417 (E -G) - In a democratic society, then, the mass
media play a role of undeniable importance. They bear
an obligation
to provide citizens both with information and with a platform for the
exchange of ideas which is crucial to the development
of a democratic
culture. As primary agents of the dissemination of information and
ideas, they are, inevitably, extremely powerful
institutions in a
democracy and they have a constitutional duty to act with vigour,
courage,  integrity and responsibility.....
The Constitution
thus asserts and protects the media in the performance of their
obligations to the broader society, principally
through the
provisions of Section 16".
I have no doubt that the
media have always carried out their mandate responsibly and in an
accountable manner. We should also be
mindful of the fact that,
because the media are run and managed by human beings, there will
always be some mistakes made - "to
err is human" 'If they
vacillate in the performance of their duties, their constitutional
goals will be imperilled':
However there will be
instances in which a measure of caution will have to be applied. Such
limitation of rights of the media must
be carried out in compliance
with Section 36 of the Constitution; which must be proportional to
the purpose which the limitation
seeks - it must be reasonable and
justifiable in an open and democratic society based on human dignity,
equality and freedom taking
into account all the relevant factors. In
casu, such factors would be the public interest right and the right
to free flow of information
including the right to freedom of
expression.
[23] I have already
alluded to the principle of the public interest and how it should be
linked to the fair trial interest. As argued
by the Applicants, the
two are interrelated.
First
the democracy enhancing goal of ensuring that the public has access
to information which engages the public interest; and
Secondly, the
need, both in the interest of public confidence in the courts and
fairness to the accused, to allow security of the
judicial process.
It is indeed true that
the alleged killing of Terre'blanche sparked a public debate on race
relations in South Africa. There are
also questions whether his
alleged killing was politically motivated. There have been
speculations and assumptions on this issue.
The media linked this
speculation to the role of the singing of the "kill the Boer"
song, by Malema and the ANCYL Such
speculation has attracted media
and public interest in the alleged killing, both in South Africa and
abroad.
I must however caution
that, when one speculates, the temptation to exaggerate cannot be
excluded. Based on the facts before me
there is no iota of evidence
that links the utterances and the singing of the song "kill the
Boer" by Malema to the alleged
acts of the two accused. There is
no nexus that penetrates into the time from which the song was sung
and the time when the events
of the alleged killing of Terre'blanche
emerged. One can only think that some of the conclusions are based on
assumption and speculation.
However, the majority of
the perceptions by the public still remain covered with clouds. This
is something that one cannot unfold
from the surface of the hearts of
the people and bring it to the open for everyone to understand. It is
these perceptions which
may create the myth. It is this myth that has
gravitated the presence of exceptional circumstances, which may
justify a need for
the court to grant the relief sought.
[24] In my view, the
following factors have attracted public interest in this matter:

the status of
Terre'blanche as a leader of a political organisation.

the fact that the Hawks took over the investigation into the alleged
murder because of Terre'blanche's status in this
regard.

the fact that around the
time of the death, there was a degree of racial tension and
suggestions that the AWB would attempt to avenge
Terre'blanche's
death.

there were also
speculations that the death was linked to sexual activities.

there were also
perceptions that the singing of the song "kill the boer" is
linked to the alleged killing of Terre'blanche,
(although this might
be remote).
One must accept that the
alleged murder of such a notorious figure who was the leader of a
political organisation would raise a
wide range of speculation. It is
therefore not suprising that the public is curious to know what the
trial would reveal. The public
is therefore entitled to know through
the media or on their own as to what information is contained in the
case. The trial should
to an extent be allowed to be heard in the
public domain.
It is worth remembering
that we came from a past in which the freedom of expression and media
independence were almost devoured
by the apartheid repression. We
therefore, have a duty to hoist media freedom to the level of
international standards and practices.
One should however be mindful
of the fact that depending on circumstances, the media may sometimes
adopt a subjective or objective
approach in order to defend
themselves. Since we live in a society in transition, we should all
congregate in an effort to promote
a vigorous democracy, which is
enshrined in our Constitution. There can be no holy cows in an
endeavour to achieve equality for
all, even for the feeble and weak
of our society.
CONCLUSION
[25] The fundamental
nature of the rights of children under our Constitution, including
the rights in terms of Section 28 (2) of
the Constitution provides
that the best interests of a child shall be of paramount importance
in all matters concerning that child.
Therefore, any permission for a
trial to be heard in an open court room should be granted on a case
by case basis, so that it does
not militate against the proper
consideration of exceptional circumstances.
[26] While I agree with
the Applicants that given the degree of protection of speech
implicated in this case, based on the discussion
above, it has been
shown that the minor accused rights would be limited by granting
media access to the trial, I am of the view
that, that right must
still be balanced against the competing rights of the child.
However, I don't agree
with the Applicants that an order along the lines suggested by them
will not likely limit the minor accused's
rights at all. While the
Applicants have not proposed a totally open hearing, they seek a
total of 14 journalists to be able to
attend the proceedings in an
open court. I also don't agree with the amicus that the court should
assign a maximum of one third
of the court room space usually
allocated to the public gallery to accommodate members of the news
media and allocate available
seats to the Applicants, in the open
courtroom.
[27] While I am inclined
to grant the Applicants permission to attend the proceedings, I am of
the view that such permission must
be more restrictive. One cannot
open a pandora's box. I have already stated that such permission can
only be granted under exceptional
circumstances, which I agree exist
in this case.
Instead of granting
permission to the media and the public to sit in an open court where
the child accused will be sitting, I am
of the view that the media
and the public can only be allowed to sit in a close circuit tv room
from which they will view the trial.
In terms of
Section 63
(5) of the
Child Justice Act 75 of 2008
it is ordered that:
1. Two journalists
nominated by the first Applicant, two journalists nominated by the
third and fourth Applicants and ten journalists
nominated by the
second Applicant can attend the proceedings for the duration of the
trial. Each of the Applicants shall supply
the names of the
journalists nominated by them, in writing, to the Registrar of the
High Court.
2. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager assign specific seats to members of
the news media in a room in which they
will be able to view and hear
the child's testimony on closed circuit television;
3. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager makes available, with the assistance
of the Department of Justice and Constitutional
Development to
members of the news media and the general public necessary equipment
with which the child's accused testimony can
be viewed and heard by
members of the news media and the general public.
4. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager assigns a maximum of four (4)
specific seats to the members of the Terre'blanche's
family
(deceased's family) in the dosed circuit television room where they
will be able to view the child accused's testimony.
Each of the
members of the Terre'blanche's family shall supply their names to the
Registrar of the High Court.
5. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager assigns a maximum of sixteen (16)
seats to the members of the general public
on a first come first
serve basis, in the close circuit television room where they will be
able to view the child accused's testimony.
Each of the members of
the general public shall supply their names in writing to the
Registrar of the High Court.
6. The remaining four (4)
seats and other standing places will be utilised by officials of the
court including police officers.
7. In the event that it
becomes apparent that the presence of the media or anyone else in the
close circuit television room is
impeding the child accused's right
to privacy, dignity and/or his rights to a fair trial, that they be
directed to leave the court
room; and
8. Members of the news
media and including members of the general public are prohibited from
publishing in any manner any information
which reveals or may reveal
the identity of the child accused.
[28]
The rescission and variation application
On the 24
th
January 2011, the amicus sought a date for the hearing of an
application for rescission and/or variation of the above order. In

view of the fact that during February and March 2011 I was on
circuit, this application could not be heard timeously.
On the 7
th
April 2011 when the court sat to hear the application the
Terre'blanche family appeared and moved an application to be joined
as intervening party. This was in view of the fact that in its
application for rescission, the amicus was of the view that members

of the Terre'blanche family should be prohibited from attending the
trial.
Having joined the
Terre'blanche family as intervening party, the matter was then
adjourned to the 21
st
April 2011 to allow them to file
their papers and also to allow the amicus to file theirs.
[29] On the 21
st
April 2011 when the matter was called, the parties informed the
court, that the matter had been settled. This was to the extent
that
members of the Terre'blanche family would be allowed to sit at the
trial. However, the parties agreed that the general public
should be
prohibited from attending the trial.
In the course of the
submissions, Counsel for Media 24 indicated that there was a
misunderstanding of paragraph 1 of the order in
that Media 24 was of
the view that the media would be allowed to sit in the court room
where the child will appear, whereas, the
NPA was of the view that
the media would be allowed to sit in the close circuit television
room. The court then clarified the matter
by emphatically stating
that it was never its intention that the media would sit in an open
court room where the child will appear.
It was always the intention
of the court that the media will sit in the close television room.
The parties then agreed
to prepare a draft order. This then dispensed with any further
submissions on the application for rescission
and/or variation of the
order.
[30] However, I need to
mention that in view of the misunderstanding by the Applicants of
paragraph 1 of the order it is important
to elaborate on the
rescission and/or variation application.
A clear interpretation of
Rule 42
appears in Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed
Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) in which the court stated the
following -
" the question is
whether in these circumstances the judgment can be rescinded in terms
of Rule 42(1) (a) of the Uniform Rules
of Court. Rule 42 (1) (a)
provides that the High Court may, in addition to any other powers it
may have, mero motu or upon the
application of any party affected,
rescind or vary an order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence
of any party affected
thereby........ the guiding principle of the common law is certainty
of judgments. Once judgment is given
in a matter it is final. It may
not thereafter be altered by the Judge who delivered it. He becomes
functus officio and may not
ordinarily vary or rescind his own
judgment (Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A)
at 306 F - G) that is the function of a Court of appeal. There are
exceptions. After evidence is led and the merits of the
dispute have
been determined, rescission is permissible only in the limited case
of a judgment obtained by fraud or, exceptionally,
Justus error
(Children Estates Stores v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
1924 OPD 163
, De
Wet and Others v Western Bank Ltd 1979(2) SA 1031 (A) at 1040. And
see Harms Civil Procedure in the Supreme Court at B42 -10
and the
authorities collected in fns 3, 4 and 5. Secondly, rescission of a
judgment taken by default may be ordered where the party
in default
can show sufficient cause. There are also, thirdly, exceptions which
do not relate to rescission but to the correction,
alteration and
supplementation of a judgment or order. These are for the most part
conveniently summarised in the headnote of Firestone
SA (Pty) Ltd v
Genticuro AG (supra) (The headnote is an accurate summary of the
passage in the judgment appearing at 306H - 308A)
as follows:
1. The principal judgment
or order may be supplemented in respect of accessory or consequential
matters, for example, costs or interest
on the judgment debt, that
the Court overlooked or inadvertently omitted to grant.
2.
The Court may clarify its judgment or order, if, on a proper
interpretation, the meaning thereof remains obscure, ambiguous or

otherwise uncertain, so as to give effect to its true intention,
provided it does not thereby alter "the sense and substance"

of the judgment or order.
3.
The Court may correct a clerical, arithmetical, or other error in
its judgment or order so as to give effect to its true intention.

This exception is confined to the mere correction of an error in
expressing the judgment or order; it does not extent to altering
its
intended sense or substance.
In
varying paragraph 1 of the order I rely on paragraph 2 of the
Firestone judgment, that "the court may clarify its judgment
or
order, if on a proper interpretation the meaning thereof remains
obscure, ambiguous or otherwise uncertain, so as to give effect
to
its true intention" I therefore would insert the words "in
the closed circuit television room" to give effect
to my true
intention.
On
the rescission of paragraph 5 of the order I rely on Rule 42 and the
decision in Colbyn supra, in particular Justus error.
[31] The order is
therefore rescinded and varied and the following order is made in its
stead:
1.
Two journalists nominated by the first Applicant, two journalists
nominated by the third and fourth Applicants, and 10 journalists

nominated by the second Applicant can attend the proceedings for the
duration of the trial in the closed circuit television room.
Each of
the Applicants shall supply the names of the journalists nominated by
them in writing to the Registrar of the High Court.
2. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager shall assign seats to members of the
news media in a room in which they
will be able to view and hear the
trial on closed circuit television.
3. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager shall make available, with the
assistance of the Department of Justice
and Constitutional
Development to members of the news media, necessary equipment with
which the trial can be viewed and heard by
members of the news media.
4. The Registrar of the
High Court or the Court Manager shall assign a maximum of four (4)
seats to the members of the Terre'blanche's
family (deceased's
family) in the closed circuit television room where they will be able
to view and hear the trial. The names
of the four (4) family members
shall be provided to the Registrar of the High Court prior to the
commencement of the trial.
5. The identity of the
minor accused on CCTV screen shall be obscured through either the
placing of the camera, blurring of the
image or other means.
6. The remaining seats in
the closed circuit television room may only be utilised by officials
of the court, including police officers.
7. In the event that it
becomes apparent that the presence of the media or anyone else in the
close circuit television room is
impeding the minor accused's rights
to privacy, dignity and/or his rights to a fair trial, that they be
directed to leave the closed
circuit television room.
8. Members of the news
media and members of the Terre'Blanche family are prohibited from
publishing in any manner any information
which reveals or may reveal
the identity of the minor accused.
TJ RAULINGA JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT
For Amicus Curiae
Centre Of Child Law
Unv Of Pretoria
(012) 420 4502
For 1
st
&
2
nd
Applicants
WEBBER WENZEL ATTORNEYS
(012) 530 5232
For 1
st
Respondent
NATIONAL PROSECUTING
AUTHORITY
For 2
nd
Respondent
Mr Puna Morako
For 3
rd
Respondent
Mr Zola Majura
41 Stanley Ave, Milpark
For Intervening Party
(Terreblanche family)
Mr G Basson
Krugersdorp