Institute for Security Studies In Re S v Basson (CCT30/03B) [2005] ZACC 4; 2006 (6) SA 195 (CC); 2006 (2) SACR 350 (CC) (9 September 2005)

75 Reportability
International Law

Brief Summary

Amicus Curiae — Admission of amicus curiae — Application by Institute for Security Studies (ISS) for admission as amicus curiae in proceedings against Dr Basson — ISS sought to provide submissions on international criminal law and human security — Respondent opposed admission on grounds that issues were not before the Court and had been adequately addressed by the state — Court held that admission of amicus curiae is subject to principles of relevance and usefulness of submissions, and that consent of all parties does not guarantee admission — Application for admission refused as ISS failed to demonstrate that its submissions would provide a different perspective or raise new contentions.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an interlocutory application in the Constitutional Court for admission as amicus curiae by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in pending criminal appeal proceedings involving The State v Basson.


The ISS was the applicant seeking amicus status. The State (as appellant/party seeking to advance the prosecution position in the underlying proceedings) consented to the ISS’s participation. Dr Wouter Basson (the respondent/accused in the underlying criminal matter) declined to consent and opposed the application.


Procedurally, the ISS first sought admission on the basis of party consent, but because consent was not unanimous, it applied to the Chief Justice for admission as amicus. The application was argued on 1 December 2004. The Court refused the application on 2 December 2004, indicating that reasons would follow. The present judgment, delivered on 9 September 2005, provides those reasons.


The general subject-matter of the underlying dispute (in which the ISS sought to intervene) related to the prosecution of alleged conduct implicating international crimes, including crimes against humanity, and issues concerning conspiracy charges and the extraterritorial reach of South Africa’s duty to prosecute international crimes. However, the present judgment is confined to whether, and on what basis, the ISS should be admitted as an amicus in the Constitutional Court proceedings.


2. Material Facts


The ISS is described by the Court as a research organisation concerned with human security in Africa, engaged in research and advocacy, and having a particular interest in international criminal law. It relied on its research work concerning the implementation of the Rome Statute in South Africa and Africa, and contended it could provide a “different perspective” on the issues in the matter.


It was undisputed that the State gave the necessary consent to the ISS’s participation but that Dr Basson refused consent and opposed the ISS’s application for admission as an amicus.


The ISS indicated that it sought to address three broad themes, namely the role of crimes against humanity in South Africa’s history, the correctness of the dismissal of conspiracy-related charges, and the extraterritorial scope of a constitutional duty to prosecute international crimes. The ISS stated that it did not suggest that it would raise new matters, but asserted that it would provide a different perspective by addressing, among other things, the development of individual criminal responsibility under international law; the development of the duty to prosecute (or extradite) perpetrators of international crimes; consequences of a failure to prosecute; the absence of immunity for officials; the extraterritorial effect of amnesties (including those granted by the Administrator-General of Namibia); and consequences linked to South Africa’s foreign policy commitments.


The respondent’s opposition relied materially on two propositions. First, it was contended that issues relating to the quashing of certain charges (including conspiracy charges) were not before the Constitutional Court, because they had been abandoned by the State and because the Supreme Court of Appeal had refused condonation for an attempt to raise them. Second, it was contended that the issues the ISS sought to canvass had in substance already been canvassed by the State in its written submissions.


A further material fact relied upon by the Court was that, in its written submissions, the State had devoted extensive argument (described as some sixty pages) to customary international law crimes and related topics, including the historical development and recognition of crimes against humanity and war crimes, instruments and sources culminating in the Rome Statute and its domestic implementation, and also the extraterritorial effect of the Namibian amnesty.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the ISS met the requirements for admission as an amicus curiae under rule 10 of the Constitutional Court Rules, and whether the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, should allow the intervention.


A further issue of legal interpretation arose from the structure of rule 10, namely whether a party who has obtained consent from all parties is thereby automatically admitted as an amicus, or whether (even with consent) the Court retains control and must still determine whether the underlying requirements for amicus participation are satisfied.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to the facts (whether the proposed submissions were relevant, useful, and different from the parties’ submissions), together with the Court’s discretionary evaluative judgment about what is in the interests of justice, especially in the context of a criminal appeal where fairness to an accused person is a salient consideration.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Court approached the matter by setting out the governing framework in rule 10, emphasising that an amicus is a friend of the court whose role is to assist by offering submissions on law or relevant facts that would help the Court in a way it would not otherwise be assisted.


Although rule 10 contains provisions dealing with admission by consent (rule 10(1)) and admission by application to the Chief Justice where consent is lacking (rule 10(4)), the Court stressed that admission does not follow automatically from consent. The Court highlighted that it retains a discretion and must ensure that the foundational principles for amicus participation are met. Those principles were identified as whether the proposed submissions are relevant to the issues before the Court, useful to the Court, and different from those advanced by the parties, in the sense that they raise new contentions and do not repeat what is already covered, consistent with rule 10(7).


In explaining the continued control of the Court over amicus participation, the Court relied on its earlier approach in Fose v Minister of Safety and Security. It reasoned that even where consent is obtained, the Court’s supervisory role is preserved because the terms and conditions of participation are subject to judicial control and amendment, and because admission is ultimately dependent on whether the substantive criteria for useful, distinct assistance are met. The Court considered that a reading of rule 10 that treated consent as sufficient for admission would undermine that control.


The Court further reasoned that compliance with rule 10(6)(c) requires more than general assertions that submissions will be helpful. Because it can be difficult to assess usefulness and distinctness from mere allegations, the Court indicated that, ordinarily, an amicus application should be accompanied by a summary of the written submissions intended to be advanced. This enables both the parties and the Court to evaluate properly whether the intervention will contribute something not otherwise available. The Court noted that failure to provide what is necessary for this assessment may result in refusal where the required matters are not readily ascertainable.


The Court placed this explanation in a broader practical context, expressing concern that, historically, parties had sometimes granted consent “for the mere asking” and emphasising that both parties and prospective amici should apply their minds to the principles governing admission. The Court also stated that prior admission as an amicus in another court does not itself entitle a person to admission in the Constitutional Court.


Turning to the ISS’s proposed intervention, the Court assessed whether the ISS would raise distinct, useful contentions. It found that the central issues the ISS sought to address had already been extensively covered in the State’s written argument, including the history and status of customary international crimes, the Rome Statute and its domestic implementation, and the extraterritorial effect of the Namibian amnesty. On that basis, the Court concluded it was apparent that the main focus of the ISS’s intended submissions was already canvassed, and that the ISS did not, and could not, allege that it would raise new contentions not raised by the parties.


The Court added that, to the extent some contentions were not dealt with, further directions were later issued by the acting Chief Justice calling upon the parties themselves to consider and, if necessary, lodge further argument. This reduced any need for additional assistance from an amicus on those points.


Finally, the Court treated the criminal character of the underlying matter as a significant contextual factor. It stated that, as a general matter, courts should be astute not to allow amicus submissions to “stack the odds” against an accused person. While the Court did not treat this as an inflexible rule, it considered it a factor grounded in fairness, equality of arms, and the interests of justice. Given the already wide-ranging and complex issues the respondent had to meet on appeal, and the limited additional value of the ISS’s proposed submissions, the Court concluded that admission would not be in the interests of justice.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Constitutional Court refused the ISS application for admission as amicus curiae.


The judgment, as provided, records no separate costs order in relation to the amicus application.


Cases Cited


In re Certain Amicus Curiae Applications: Minister of Health and Others v Treatment Action Campaign and Others 2002 (5) SA 713 (CC); 2002 (10) BCLR 1023 (CC).


Fose v Minister of Safety and Security [1997] ZACC 6; 1997 (3) SA 786 (CC); 1997 (7) BCLR 851 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Act 27 of 2002.


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 10 of the Rules of the Constitutional Court of South Africa.


Rule 31 of the Rules of the Constitutional Court of South Africa.


Rule 1(3) of the Rules of the Constitutional Court of South Africa.


Rule 9 of the Rules of the Constitutional Court of South Africa (referred to in the quotation from Fose v Minister of Safety and Security).


Held


The Court held that admission as an amicus curiae is not automatic, even where consent is obtained, because the Court retains a discretion to ensure that the proposed submissions are relevant, useful, and different from those of the parties, and that they raise new contentions rather than duplicating existing argument.


On the facts, the Court found that the issues the ISS sought to address were substantially already covered by the State’s written submissions, that any residual matters could be addressed by the parties pursuant to further directions, and that in a criminal appeal the Court must exercise caution to avoid unfairly strengthening the case against an accused. In these circumstances, it was not in the interests of justice to admit the ISS as amicus, and the application was refused.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment affirms that the Constitutional Court has a discretionary power and duty to control amicus participation and to admit an amicus only where the proposed intervention will assist the Court on the issues it must decide. The core criteria are that the submissions must be relevant to the issues, useful to the Court, and distinct from what the parties advance, in the sense of raising new contentions and not repeating existing argument.


The judgment further establishes, as a matter of the proper construction and operation of rule 10, that party consent does not guarantee admission. Consent is treated as a factor in the discretionary assessment rather than a determinant of outcome, and the Court retains supervisory control to prevent unnecessary or unhelpful interventions.


In addition, the judgment articulates a procedural expectation that amicus applications should ordinarily be supported by sufficient material—typically a summary of the proposed written submissions—to enable the Court and the parties to assess compliance with rule 10(6)(c) and the underlying principles. A failure to provide what is needed for this assessment may justify refusal.


Finally, the judgment recognises a fairness-based consideration particularly salient in criminal proceedings: while not absolute, there is a need for caution where amicus submissions may effectively strengthen the case against an accused, implicating fairness, equality of arms, and the interests of justice.

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Institute for Security Studies In Re S v Basson (CCT30/03B) [2005] ZACC 4; 2006 (6) SA 195 (CC); 2006 (2) SACR 350 (CC) (9 September 2005)

Links to summary

CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT
30/03
INSTITUTE FOR SECURITY
STUDIES Applicant
in re:
THE STATE
versus
BASSON
Heard on : 1 December
2004
Decided on : 2
December 2004
Reasons delivered
on: 9 September 2005
JUDGMENT
THE COURT
Introduction
This judgment
deals with the application for admission as amicus curiae
by
the Institute for Securities Studies (ISS). The ISS applied for
admission as an amicus in these proceedings. The state gave
the
necessary consent while Dr Basson, the respondent, declined to do
so. The ISS subsequently applied to the Chief Justice
for
admission as amicus curiae. The application was opposed by the
respondent. After hearing argument on 1 December 2004, the
Court
refused the application and intimated that it would furnish its
reasons later. These are the reasons.
Background
The ISS is a
research organisation which is concerned with human security in
Africa. It conducts research and engages in advocacy
on matters
concerning human security debate in Africa. It has an interest in
international criminal law. The ISS sought to
make submissions on
three aspects, namely, the role and place of crimes against
humanity in the context of the history of South
Africa; the
correctness or otherwise of the dismissal of the charges relating
to conspiracy; and the extraterritorial reach of
the constitutional
duty to prosecute international crimes. The ISS did not however
suggest that it would raise new matters.
Based on its
research and ongoing work in the areas relating to the
implementation of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court in South Africa, and in Africa, in general, and in particular
in relation to war crimes, crimes against humanity, the ISS
alleged
that it would provide a different perspective on the issues before
this Court. It alleged that its argument would differ
in that it
would address among other issues, the history of individual
criminal responsibility under international law, the history
of the
duty to prosecute crimes against humanity and war crimes, the legal
and political consequences for failure by South Africa
to prosecute
and punish international crimes, amnesty for international crimes
and the extra-territorial effect of amnesties
such as that granted
by the Administrator–General of Namibia.
The respondent
did not oppose the application “in principle”. He took the
point that the issues relating to the quashing
of the charges were
not before this Court because (a) they were abandoned by the state
and (b) the SCA refused an application
for condonation which sought
to raise these issues. In argument in this Court, the respondent
also submitted that the issues
sought to be canvassed by the ISS
had been canvassed by the state in its written submissions.
The applicable
legal principles
Applications
for admission of amici are governed by rule 10. That rule
provides:
“
(1) Subject
to these rules, any person interested in any matter before the Court
may, with the written consent of all the parties
in the matter
before the Court, given not later than the time specified in subrule
(5), be admitted therein as an amicus curiae
upon such terms and
conditions and with such rights and privileges as may be agreed upon
in writing with all the parties before
the Court or as may be
directed by the Chief Justice in terms of subrule (3).
(2) The
written consent referred to in subrule (1) shall, within five days
of it having been obtained, be lodged with the Registrar
and the
amicus curiae shall, in addition to any other provision, comply with
the times agreed upon for the lodging of written argument.
(3) The
Chief Justice may amend the terms, conditions, rights and privileges
agreed upon as referred to in subrule (1).
(4) If
the written consent referred to in subrule (1) has not been secured,
any person who has an interest in any matter before
the Court may
apply to the Chief Justice to be admitted therein as an amicus
curiae, and the Chief Justice may grant such application
upon such
terms and conditions and with such rights and privileges as he or
she may determine.
(5) If
time limits are not otherwise prescribed in the directions given in
that matter an application pursuant to the provisions
of subrule (4)
shall be made not later than five days after the lodging of the
respondent's written submissions or after the time
for lodging such
submissions has expired.
(6) An
application to be admitted as an amicus curiae shall-
(a) briefly
describe the interest of the amicus curiae in the proceedings;
(b) briefly
identify the position to be adopted by the amicus curiae in the
proceedings; and
(c) set
out the submissions to be advanced by the amicus curiae, their
relevance to the proceedings and his or her reasons for believing
that the submissions will be useful to the Court and different from
those of the other parties.
(7) An
amicus curiae shall have the right to lodge written argument,
provided that such written argument does not repeat any matter
set
forth in the argument of the other parties and raises new
contentions which may be useful to the Court.
(8) Subject
to the provisions of rule 31, an amicus curiae shall be limited to
the record on appeal or referral and the facts found
proved in other
proceedings and shall not add thereto and shall not present oral
argument.
(9) An
order granting leave to be admitted as an amicus curiae shall
specify the date of lodging the written argument of the amicus
curiae or any other relevant matter.
(10) An
order of Court dealing with costs may make provision for the payment
of costs incurred by or as a result of the intervention
of an amicus
curiae.
(11) The
provisions of rule 1(3) shall be applicable, with such modifications
as may be necessary, to an amicus curiae.”
It might be
thought from a reading of subrules 10(1) and (4) that a person may
be admitted as an amicus either on the basis of
the written consent
of all the parties in the proceedings or on the basis of an
application addressed to the Chief Justice.
1
This, however, is not the case. An amicus is a friend of the
court and no person may be admitted as an amicus without the

consent contemplated in subrule 10(4). That subrule provides that
“. . . any person may, with the written consent of all the
parties . . . be admitted . . . as an amicus curiae.” The
footing on which the amicus is heard is that the person will offer
submissions on law or relevant facts which will assist the Court in
a way in which the Court would otherwise not have been assisted.

Thus subrule 10(3) makes provision for the amendment of the terms,
conditions, rights and privileges that may have been agreed
upon by
the parties.
In the
exercise of its discretion whether or not to admit a person as an
amicus this Court will have regard to the principles
that govern
the admission of an
amicus
.
These principles are
whether the submissions sought to be advanced are relevant to the
issues before the court, will be useful
to the court and are
different from those of the other parties. As subrule 10(7)
indicates, the submission should raise new
contentions and should
“not repeat any matter set forth in the argument of the other
parties.” It is the duty of this Court,
in the exercise of its
discretion to ensure that these principles are satisfied before a
person can be admitted as an amicus.
Where these principles are
not satisfied, a person cannot be admitted as an amicus. It
follows therefore that this Court is
not bound to admit a person
who has obtained written consent of all the parties. This Court
may refuse to admit such a person
where the underlying principles
referred to above are not satisfied. Nor does the fact that a
person was admitted as an amicus
curiae in the court below matter.
It is true
that subrule 10(2) read with subrule 10(4) may appear to be
suggesting that a person who has obtained a written consent
contemplated in subrule 10(1), need not make an application for
admission as an amicus. These subrules must be read in the light
of rule 10 as a whole, in particular, the underlining principles
governing the admission of an amicus. As pointed out above,
this
Court has a discretion whether or not to admit a person as an
amicus and that discretion must be exercised in the light
of the
principles that govern the admission of an amicus. The fact that a
person has obtained the required written consent neither
detracts
nor diminishes the control which this Court exercises over the
admission of persons as amici. In
Fose v Minister of Safety and
Security
,
2
this Court held:
“
It
is clear from the provisions of Rule 9 that the underlying
principles governing the admission of an amicus in any given case,
apart from the fact that it must have an interest in the
proceedings, are whether the submissions to be advanced by the
amicus
are relevant to the proceedings and raise new contentions
which may be useful to the Court. The fact that a person or body
has,
pursuant to Rule 9(1), obtained the written consent of all
parties does not detract from these principles; nor does it diminish
the Court’s control over the participation of the amicus in the
proceedings, because in terms of subrule (3) the terms, conditions,
rights and privileges agreed upon between the parties and the person
seeking amicus status are subject to amendment by the President.”
(footnote omitted)
In the light
of this, these subrules cannot be construed to mean that a person
who has obtained the required consent is automatically
admitted as
an amicus. They must be construed to mean that the fact that a
person has obtained the written consent contemplated
in subrule
10(1) is a factor to be taken into consideration in the exercise of
the discretion whether or not to admit a person
as an amicus. Thus
construed, it is implicit, if not explicit, from subrule 10(1) that
after obtaining the necessary consent
an applicant for admission as
an amicus must still make an application to the Chief Justice for
admission as an amicus. This
will enable a determination to be
made as to whether or not the principles governing the admission of
a person as an amicus have
been satisfied. Were it to be
otherwise, it would mean that this Court will be deprived of the
control over admission of persons
as amici and thus the discretion
that it exercises over the admission of an amicus.
Subrule
10(6)(c) requires an application for admission as an amicus curiae
to set out the submissions to be advanced, their relevance
to the
proceedings, the reasons for believing that the submissions would
be useful to the Court and different from those of the
other
parties to the proceedings. It is not always easy to assess these
matters from mere allegations in the affidavit in support
of an
application for admission as amicus. Nor is it possible to assess
them from a letter requesting consent to be admitted
as amicus
curiae. For a proper assessment of these matters to be made, the
application for admission as an amicus must ordinarily
be
accompanied by a summary of the written submissions sought to be
advanced. This will enable the Court to assess the application
properly and evaluate the submissions sought to be advanced in the
light of the principles governing the admission of an amicus.
An
applicant who fails to comply with this requirement runs the risk
of the application being refused if the matters required
by subrule
10(6)(c) are not readily ascertainable from the application. This
requirement applies equally to a request addressed
to the parties
for their consent. The parties must be placed in a position where
they can assess properly whether the request
complies with the
underlying principles governing applications for admission as
amicus curiae.
We have dwelt
at length on the principles governing the admission of an amicus
because we consider it necessary that both the
parties to a case
and persons seeking to be admitted as amici be familiar with these
principles that govern applications for
admission of amici.
Compliance with these principles will ensure proper assessment of
these applications. We are mindful that
in the past there has been
a tendency to grant consent for the mere asking. Consent should
not be given as a matter of course.
Parties who are requested to
give consent must apply their minds to these principles. The fact
that a person was admitted as
an amicus in the court below does not
in itself give such a person the right to be admitted as amicus in
this Court. This judgment
must be regarded as a general
instruction on how to prepare an application for admission as an
amicus.
The application
of the legal principles to the facts
The ISS
alleged that its submissions will differ from that of the other
parties in that they will address:
“
12.1 The development of
individual criminal responsibility under international law;
including, but not limited to, an analysis of
when the jurisdiction
to prosecute conduct committed abroad was founded for South African
courts;
12.2 The development of the
duty upon all States, including South Africa, to try or extradite
persons responsible for international
crimes, and particularly
crimes against humanity and war crimes. Thus, any unlawful
acquittal would leave open the possibility
of a successful request
for extradition in respect of international crimes;
12.3 The legal and political
consequences of the failure by South Africa to prosecute and punish
international crimes and to cooperate
in the detection, arrest,
extradition and punishment of persons implicated in these crimes;
12.4 The official position of
individuals, as responsible officials in Government Departments, and
the absence of immunity for international
crimes, more particularly,
crimes against humanity and war crimes;
12.5 The extra-territorial
effect of amnesties granted such as those granted by the
Administrator-General of Namibia, more particularly,
the effect of
such amnesties in international law and foreign States, as well as
the effect of such amnesties in the context of
requests for
extradition;
12.6 That in light of South
Africa’s foreign policy commitments, flowing from its membership
and leadership of the African Union
and its leading role in NEPAD
and SADC, the consequences of a failure to give legal effect to
prosecution of international crimes.”
In its written
submissions, the state devoted some sixty pages to addressing
crimes under customary international law, crimes
against humanity,
war crimes and apartheid. In doing so, the state dealt with, among
other issues, the history of the recognition
of customary
international crimes such as crimes against humanity, and war
crimes tracing the development of these crimes from
the Hague
Convention of 1907 Concerning Law and Custom of War on Land,
through World War I and World War II, including the Nuremberg
Principles of 1950, all the way to the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court that was adopted in 1998. It also

dealt with the implementation of the Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court by the Rome Statute of the
International
Criminal Court Act 27 of 2002. In addition, the
state referred to a number of international instruments and
treatises on international
law and international jurisprudence on
these issues. It also dealt with the extraterritorial effect of
the amnesty granted by
the Administrator-General of Namibia.
It was
therefore apparent that the central issue that the ISS sought to
deal with was canvassed in the written argument of the
state. The
ISS did not, and could not therefore allege that it would raise new
contentions that had not been raised by the parties.
To the extent
that they were not dealt with, shortly after this application was
dismissed, the acting Chief Justice issued further
directions
calling upon the parties to consider these contentions and lodge
further argument on them, if necessary. The other
matters were
relatively tangential. At the same time it had to be borne in mind
that this was an appeal in a criminal matter,
in which Dr Basson
was already called upon to canvass an extremely wide range of
complex legal and factual matters.
As a general
matter, in criminal matters a court should be astute not to allow
the submissions of an amicus to stack the odds
against an accused
person. Ordinarily, an accused in criminal matters is entitled to
a well-defined case emanating from the
state. If the submissions
of an amicus tend to strengthen the case against the accused, this
is cause for caution. This, however,
is not an inflexible rule.
But it is a consideration based on fairness, equality of arms, and
more importantly, what is in the
interests of justice.
In these
special circumstances we did not consider it to be in the interests
of justice to admit the applicant as an amicus.
In the event, the
application for admission as an amicus was refused.
Langa DCJ,
Moseneke J, Madala J, Mokgoro J, Ngcobo J, O’Regan J, Sachs J,
Skweyiya J, Van der Westhuizen J, Yacoob J.
For the Amicus
Curiae: JA Cassette, instructed by Chris Watters Attorneys.
For the
respondent: JG Cilliers and MMW Van Zyl, instructed by Adolf Malan
and Vermeulen Inc.
1
In re Certain Amicus Curiae Applications: Minister of Health and
Others v Treatment Action Campaign and Others
2002 (5) SA 713
(CC);
2002
(10) BCLR 1023
(CC) at para 3.
2
[1997] ZACC 6
;
1997 (3) SA 786
(CC);
1997 (7) BCLR 851
(CC) at para 9.