2
which often appear to act towards the students they are meant to care for in
an alienating and hostile manner. It does not surprise me that, caught in these
riptides, students sometimes engage in disruptive protest against what they
perceive to be thoughtless and inefficient university authorities.
2 Some degree of disruption is inherent in any protest. Picketers interfere with
access to the property they picket. Demonstrators may be noisy, obstructive
and sometimes aggressive, but they must be tolerated so long as they remain
peaceful. Sit-ins, occupations and the public formation of other temporary
communities of dissent, such as encampments on or near public or private
property are all time-honoured forms of protest. Depending on the
circumstances, they may all find protection under the constitutional
entrenchment of the right to peacefully assemble, demonstrate, picket, and
petition in section 17 of the Constitution, 1996, even if they disrupt the
activities of others.
3 The applicants in this case all stand accused, in pending disciplinary
proceedings taken by the first respondent, the University of Johannesburg, of
having engaged in disruptive protest contrary to the University’s code of
student conduct. They approach me on an urgent basis to set aside the
University’s decision to suspend them pending a disciplinary inquiry which is
set to proceed on 22 October 2025. They also seek to interdict and restrain
the University from proceeding with that inquiry.
4 Critically, the applicants do not challenge the University’s code of conduct
itself. They do not say that the University may not lawfully sanction
participation in a disruptive protest. I must accordingly decide this case on the
3
assumption that the University is perfectly entitled to discipline its students for
participating in disruptive protest – an assumption that I make reluctantly,
while expressly leaving the underlying question open.
5 The protest in which the applicants participated took place on 8 September
2025. It took the form of a sit-in at the University’s student finance office. The
facts surrounding the sit-in are contested. While it initially alleged that the
conduct of some of the protestors was violent or criminal in nature, the
University no longer appears to suggest that this is so. Still, the University
alleges that a group of students, led by the applicants, entered and occupied
the student finance office, banged on doors, attempted to force their way into
offices and refused to leave when directed to do so. The University’s case at
the disciplinary inquiry is that the applicants’ conduct was disruptive enough
to contravene its code of student conduct.
6 The applicants advance a different version of events. They suggest that they
did no more than lead a delegation of students who, while “visibly agitated”
were never actually in occupation of the student finance office, and who
sought no more than an engagement with the University administration about
the fact that their government financial aid had been arbitrarily withdrawn.
7 It forms no part of my function to adjudicate that dispute. The question before
me is whether the applicants’ suspension and the institution of disciplinary
proceedings against them was so grossly unfair and unlawful as to justify my
interference with those proceedings. This is, I think, the nub of the “exceptional
circumstances” test developed in a number of cases in which courts have
been asked to interfere with the conduct of domestic tribunals. For example,
4
in Jiba v Minister: Department of Justice & Constitutional Development (2010)
31 ILJ 112 (LC), Van Niekerk J held that the power to intervene in uncompleted
disciplinary proceedings ought only to be exercised in “truly exceptional
circumstances”. The underlying point is that a court is bound to respect the
proceedings of domestic tribunals, such as disciplinary inquiries, generally
only intervening after they have been completed, and the court is asked to
exercise its powers of review.
8 The “exceptional circumstances” test adverted to in Jiba posits a residual
power to intervene in disciplinary proceedings midstream, but only where they
are so unlawful, unfair or otherwise flawed that to subject a person to them
would be manifestly unjust. A good example of such a situation is the conduct
of t he chair of the disciplinary inquiry in the matter of Dyantyi v Rhodes
University 2023 (1) SA 32 (SCA), where the outcome of a student disciplinary
inquiry was set aside on the basis that the chairperson had postponed it to a
date on which the student’s legal representatives could not attend, and then
proceeded in Ms. Dyantyi’s absence to convict her of misconduct without
hearing her version. Although those proceedings were set aside after the fact,
rather than interdicted midstream, they provide a fair illustration of the kind of
manifest injustice that would meet the “exceptional circumstances” test.
9 At the outset of the argument before me, I asked counsel to address me on
whether the exceptional circumstances test applies to this case, and whether,
if it does, it has been met. Although Ms. Mkhwanazi, who appeared for the
applicants, did not explicitly concede that the test does apply, her submissions
departed from the proposition that it does. I think that was a sensible approach.
5
It seems to me that the University is entitled to the benefit of the exceptional
circumstances test. It is a higher education institution, which is specifically
empowered, under section 36 of the Higher Education Act 101 of 1997, to
subject its students to “such disciplinary measures and disciplinary
procedures” as it may determine. A court ought not to intervene too readily in
the lawful exercise of those powers.
10 Ms. Mkhwanazi submitted that the “exceptional circumstances” test is satisfied
in this case because the suspension of the applicants was unlawful. The
argument was that the applicants were suspended in breach of section 5 of
the University’s Regulations for Student Discipline, which empower the
second respondent, the Vice-Chancellor, or his delegee, to suspend a student
if and only if there is information which gives rise to a reasonable belief that a
student “poses a threat to the orderly academic process; endangers the safety
of other students or staff of the University; is a risk to the property, facilities,
possessions or buildings of other students, staff or the University; [or] has
disregarded a direct instruction of the Management Executive Committee”.
11 Ms. Mkhwanazi did not suggest that the registrar, who acted as the Vice
Chancellor’s delegee in this case, did not have information on which she
formed the belief that the applicants pose a threat to the orderly academic
process. Ms. Mkhwanazi argued only that, on the information before her, the
registrar could not reasonably have formed that belief.
12 I do not think that is correct. On the statements presented to the registrar, the
applicants had led a large group of “agitated” students in an attempt to force
their way into the student finance office. Administrators at the finance office
6
locked themselves in their offices, obviously in fear for their safety. The police
were called and arrived at the scene. This, it seems to me, is more than
enough material on which to form the reasonable belief that the applicants
pose a threat to the orderly academic process. I emphasise that I do not have
to adopt the statements as fact to reach that conclusion. Nor do I need to find
the statements particularly persuasive. In fact, I could adopt the view,
advanced by the applicants, that the statements are exaggerated and that the
threat alleged is overblown, but nevertheless conclude that the University’s
disciplinary process should be left to run its course undisturbed.
13 What I subjectively believe the truth of the situation to be does not matter. All
the University needs to demonstrate is that there was material on which the
required belief could be formed , and that the registrar’s reliance on it was
reasonable. This has plainly been demonstrated. The truth of the material falls
to be tested in the pending disciplinary hearing, but it is more than enough to
justify a precautionary suspension.
14 Nor does it make a difference that the statements were disputed by the
applicants when they were asked to advance reasons why they should not be
suspended. For the purposes of considering whether the applicants should
temporarily be suspended, the registrar was entitled, as she did, to adopt the
material submitted by the staff of the University’s finance and security offices
and reject the applicants’ statements to the contrary. It has not been shown
that her decision to do just that was unlawful or inherently unfair.
15 I need not decide whether a breach of section 5 of the Regulations for Student
Discipline would in itself constitute the exceptional circumstances that would
7
justify interfering with the applicants’ suspension. That, it seems to me,
remains an open question. The fundamental point is that the applicants have
demonstrated no such breach.
16 Faced with that reality, Ms. Mkhwanazi turned to criticise the scope of the
suspensions under which the applicants have been placed. They have
effectively been excluded from University life. They may not live in University
residences, go to classes, be on campus, write exams, or discharge their
functions as members of the Student Representative Council.
17 Given the nature of the conduct alleged against the applicants, the scope of
the suspensions seems to me to be overbroad. But the problem is that a case
of overbreadth forms no part of the contentions advanced on the applicants’
affidavits. Nor is it foreshadowed in the relief sought. Had it been, the
University might have been able to adduce facts to justify the scope of the
suspensions. At the very least, I would have been placed in possession of the
material necessary to evaluate that scope fairly. I do not have that material,
and it would be unfair to the University for me to adjust the scope of the
suspensions without it – and without that specific relief having been sought in
the applicants’ founding papers.
18 In any event, the suspensions have almost run their course. The disciplinary
hearing is soon to proceed. It seems to me that any prejudice to the students
I would ameliorate by interfering with their suspensions at this late stage is too
slight to justify my intervention. The amelioration of such prejudice is plainly
not “exceptional” in the sense conveyed by the applicable test.
8
19 I now turn to the relief sought in paragraph 4 of the applicants’ notice of motion,
in which the applicants seek an order restraining the disciplinary process itself.
Ms. Mkhwanazi was unable to identify any facts on the papers that would
justify such an order. She in fact conceded that the applicants have been
charged with colourable transgressions of the student disciplinary code, and
that there is an adequate factual substrate to support such charges. The
University’s answering papers are replete with such material.
20 Whether that material can survive interrogation during the disciplinary process
itself, whether the transgressions alleged can be sustained, and what the
ultimate sanction imposed, if any, will be, are of course matters that remain to
be determined. But there is nothing on the papers that justifies the inference
that the disciplinary process will not be fairly, rationally and lawfully conducted.
Even if the process turns out to be flawed, the applicants will have their
remedies on review.
21 It follows that the applicants have failed to establish the facts necessary to
justify my intervention in their disciplinary process – whether by setting aside
or narrowing the scope of their suspensions, or by preventing the disciplinary
inquiry from going ahead.
22 That is not the same as saying that the applicants have actually misconducted
themselves, that the grievances they were pursuing on 8 September 2025
were not real or that their conduct was anything other than reasonable in the
circumstances. All of that remains to be determined.
23 The narrow conclusion I reach here is that it has not been shown that the
applicants stand in peril of unfairness or unlawfulness so clear or egregious