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Dikgang Moseneke

Dikgang Ernest Moseneke (born 20 December 1947) is a South African judge and former Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa.[1]

Dikgang Moseneke
Acting Chief Justice of South Africa
In office
4 November 2013 – 31 March 2014
DeputyThembile Skweyiya (Acting)
Preceded byMogoeng Mogoeng
(Chief Justice)
3rd Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa
In office
1 June 2005 – 20 May 2016
Appointed byThabo Mbeki
Chief JusticePius Langa
Sandile Ngcobo
Mogoeng Mogoeng
Preceded byPius Langa
Succeeded byBess Nkabinde (Acting)
Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa
In office
29 November 2002 – 20 May 2016
Appointed byThabo Mbeki
8th Chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand
In office
7 September 2006 – 1 December 2018
Vice-ChancellorAdam Habib
Preceded byRichard Goldstone
Succeeded byJudy Dlamini
Personal details
Born (1947-12-20) 20 December 1947 (age 75)
Pretoria, South Africa
SpouseKhabo Moseneke
Children3
Alma materUniversity of South Africa

Biography

Moseneke was born in Pretoria and went to school there.[1] He joined the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC) at the age of 14.[2] The following year he was arrested, detained and convicted of participating in anti-apartheid activity. He spent ten years as a prisoner on Robben Island, where he met and befriended Nelson Mandela and other leading activists.[3] While imprisoned he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science and a B.Iuris degree, and would later complete a Bachelor of Laws, all from the University of South Africa. He also served on the disciplinary committee of the prisoners' self-governed association football body, Makana F.A.[4]

Moseneke started his professional career as an attorney's articled clerk at Klagbruns Inc in Pretoria in 1973.[1] He was admitted as an attorney in 1976 and practised for five years at Maluleke, Seriti and Moseneke, mainly before the Company Court in liquidation matters and in criminal trials. In 1983 he was called to the Pretoria Bar. His application had sparked a dispute within the Bar which culminated in its abolishing its "whites-only" membership rule.[2] Moseneke practised as an advocate in Johannesburg and Pretoria and was noted for his Company Law, Bankruptcy and Indirect Tax practice and was briefed extensively by black and Asian businessmen. He was awarded senior counsel status ten years later. Moseneke worked underground for the PAC during the 1980s and became its Deputy President when it was unbanned in 1990.[2] Moseneke also served on the technical committee that drafted the interim constitution of 1993.[1] In 1994 he was appointed Deputy Chairperson of the Independent Electoral Commission, which conducted the first democratic elections in South Africa.

Judicial career

In September 1994, while practising as a silk, Moseneke accepted an acting appointment to the Transvaal Provincial Division.[1] Between 1995 and 2001, however, Moseneke left the Bar to pursue a full-time corporate career, most famously as the chair of Telkom. In November 2001, Moseneke was appointed to the High Court in Pretoria, his hometown, by then President Thabo Mbeki. A year later, he was made a judge in the Constitutional Court and, in June 2005, became Deputy Chief Justice. On 4 November 2013, Moseneke was appointed Acting Chief Justice during the long-term leave of Mogoeng Mogoeng.[5]

Moseneke was regarded as one of the strongest judges on South Africa's Constitutional Court. For example, he was praised for his "towering legal mind" and "commitment to fairness and justice"[6] and described as "a most independent-minded and imaginative jurist".[7] Moseneke's judgments include:

Also well-known are his two leading judgments on affirmative action, Minister of Finance v Van Heerden[14] and SAPS v Barnard.[15]

Moseneke made a significant contribution to South African property law. He penned the Constitutional Court's last three majority judgments on the Restitution of Land Rights Act[16] and decided a leading case on expropriation in 2014.[17] The following year, in Shoprite v MEC, Eastern Cape, which dealt comprehensively with the meaning of the constitutional right to property, Moseneke's judgment attracted the most concurrences.[18]

 

Most celebrated is Moseneke's judgment in Glenister v President, co-authored with Justice Edwin Cameron, which struck down amendments to the National Prosecuting Act and South African Police Service Act on the basis that they failed to create an "adequately independent" anti-corruption unit.[19] This was hailed as an "imaginative"[20] and "brilliant"[21] judgment by commentators and means South Africa must have an independent corruption-fighting agency notwithstanding the ruling ANC's controversial disbanding of the Scorpions.

Before his judicial appointment, Moseneke had succeeded, as a litigant, in having South Africa's racially discriminatory system of estate administration declared constitutionally invalid.[22]

Moseneke is also known for his independence. At public events, he has distanced himself from ANC interests, criticised the government's flouting of court orders, and decried the extensive powers afforded the President - in each case triggering an angry response from the ruling party.[6][23][24] Moseneke has twice been passed over for appointment as Chief Justice, despite being the most senior judge on the Court. On the second occasion, when Mogoeng was appointed, many prominent figures said Moseneke was the better candidate, and questioned the ANC's motives in snubbing him.[25][26][27][28] Mogoeng was one of the Constitutional Court's most junior members, having been appointed to it less than two years earlier, and having had a relatively short judicial career at one of the smallest High Court divisions prior to that.[29][30] His nomination ahead of Moseneke reminded many of the notorious supersession by L. C. Steyn, a National Party favourite, of Oliver Schreiner.[30][31] Finally, whereas Moseneke had been active in the struggle against apartheid, Mogoeng had been a prosecutor in a bantustan.[32][33]

Moseneke retired from the Constitutional Court in May 2016.[34]

Other positions and awards

Moseneke has seven honorary doctorates from the University of the North, University of Natal, University of Pretoria, Tshwane University of Technology, University of South Africa, University of Cape Town and CUNY.[1]

In 2006, he succeeded Justice Richard Goldstone as Chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand.[35][36] Moseneke was also named as an executor of the will of Nelson Mandela, who died in late 2013.[37] He is currently chairman of the Board of Directors of the Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra.[38]

Moseneke was the 2020 recipient of the Bolch Prize for the Rule of Law[39] awarded by the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law School.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke". Constitutional Court of South Africa. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
  2. ^ a b c "Honorary degree citation: Dikgang Moseneke", Wits University[permanent dead link].
  3. ^ "Dikgang Moseneke tries as a judge to live out Mandela's ideals". News24. 7 December 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  4. ^ . SouthAfrica.info. 30 June 2009. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  5. ^ . SABC. 4 November 2013. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  6. ^ a b de Vos, Pierre (17 January 2008). "ANC pulls back from the brink on Moseneke". Constitutionally Speaking. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  7. ^ Tolsi, Niren (18 October 2013). "Applause for Mogoeng's judicial cadenza".
  8. ^ Thebus and Another v S (2003) ZACC 12.
  9. ^ Steenkamp NO v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape (2006) ZACC 16.
  10. ^ Masetlha v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another (2007) ZACC 20.
  11. ^ National Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others (2012) ZACC 18.
  12. ^ Mazibuko v Sisulu and Another (2013) ZACC 28.
  13. ^ Minister of Police and Others v Premier of the Western Cape and Others (2013) ZACC 33.
  14. ^ Minister of Finance and Another v Van Heerden (2004) ZACC 3.
  15. ^ South African Police Service v Solidarity obo Barnard (2014) ZACC 23.
  16. ^ Department of Land Affairs and Others v Goedgelegen Tropical Fruits (Pty) Ltd (2007) ZACC 12; Kwalindile Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and Others; Zimbane Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and Others (2013) ZACC 6; Florence v Government of the Republic of South Africa (2014) ZACC 22.
  17. ^ Arun Property Development (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town (2014) ZACC 37.
  18. ^ Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Limited v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development, Environmental Affairs And Tourism, Eastern Cape and Others (2015) ZACC 23.
  19. ^ Glenister v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (2011) ZACC 6
  20. ^ Boonzaier, Leo (25 March 2015). "A constitutional obligation to disclose political party funding?". African Legal Centre. Retrieved 18 May 2015.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ De Vos, Pierre (18 March 2011). "Glenister: A monumental judgment in defence of the poor". Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  22. ^ Moseneke and Others v Master of the High Court (2000) ZACC 27.
  23. ^ "Moseneke in new clash with Zuma". Sunday Independent. 14 May 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  24. ^ Meyer, Walda (2 March 2015). "SA judiciary independence questioned". IOL. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  25. ^ Calland, Richard (2013). The Zuma Years. Zebra Press.
  26. ^ Mbanjwa, Xolani (17 August 2011). . The New Age. Archived from the original on 19 May 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  27. ^ Nodoba, Gaontebale (18 August 2011). "What does Zuma have against Moseneke? - AZAPO". Politicsweb. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  28. ^ "Moseneke for Chief Justice" Democratic Alliance press release.
  29. ^ Oxtoby, Chris (2013). "New Appointments to the Constitutional Court 2009-2012". South African Law Journal: 219–230.
  30. ^ a b Pretoria Centre for Human Rights (17 August 2011), Press release on the nomination of the Chief Justice. Retrieved 25 July 2014
  31. ^ Grootes, Stephen (18 August 2011). "Chief Justice controversy: A historical digression". The Daily Maverick.
  32. ^ SAPA (3 September 2011). "Cosatu slams Mogoeng nomination". News24. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  33. ^ Vegter, Ivo (4 September 2011). "Mogoeng: Lock up your daughters". The Daily Maverick. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  34. ^ "Six sets of wise words from Moseneke". Mail and Guardian. 20 May 2016.
  35. ^ IOL News, Dikgang Moseneke to be Wits chancellor, retrieved 28 December 2011
  36. ^ Jo'burg News, Moseneke takes on chancellor's mantle, retrieved 28 December 2011.
  37. ^ "Madiba's last will and testament is read today", Nelson Mandela Foundation press release, 3 Feb 2014.
  38. ^ "JPO and KZNPO in concert together to celebrate Justice Dikgang Moseneke - The Next 48hOURS". The Next 48hOURS. 21 October 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  39. ^ "Dikgang Moseneke, former deputy chief justice of the South African Constitutional Court, to receive 2020 Bolch Prize for the Rule of Law", Bolch Judicial Institute press release, 16 Jan 2020.

dikgang, moseneke, dikgang, ernest, moseneke, born, december, 1947, south, african, judge, former, deputy, chief, justice, south, africa, honourableacting, chief, justice, south, africain, office, november, 2013, march, 2014deputythembile, skweyiya, acting, pr. Dikgang Ernest Moseneke born 20 December 1947 is a South African judge and former Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa 1 The HonourableDikgang MosenekeActing Chief Justice of South AfricaIn office 4 November 2013 31 March 2014DeputyThembile Skweyiya Acting Preceded byMogoeng Mogoeng Chief Justice 3rd Deputy Chief Justice of South AfricaIn office 1 June 2005 20 May 2016Appointed byThabo MbekiChief JusticePius LangaSandile NgcoboMogoeng MogoengPreceded byPius LangaSucceeded byBess Nkabinde Acting Justice of the Constitutional Court of South AfricaIn office 29 November 2002 20 May 2016Appointed byThabo Mbeki8th Chancellor of the University of the WitwatersrandIn office 7 September 2006 1 December 2018Vice ChancellorAdam HabibPreceded byRichard GoldstoneSucceeded byJudy DlaminiPersonal detailsBorn 1947 12 20 20 December 1947 age 75 Pretoria South AfricaSpouseKhabo MosenekeChildren3Alma materUniversity of South Africa Contents 1 Biography 2 Judicial career 3 Other positions and awards 4 ReferencesBiography EditMoseneke was born in Pretoria and went to school there 1 He joined the Pan Africanist Congress PAC at the age of 14 2 The following year he was arrested detained and convicted of participating in anti apartheid activity He spent ten years as a prisoner on Robben Island where he met and befriended Nelson Mandela and other leading activists 3 While imprisoned he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science and a B Iuris degree and would later complete a Bachelor of Laws all from the University of South Africa He also served on the disciplinary committee of the prisoners self governed association football body Makana F A 4 Moseneke started his professional career as an attorney s articled clerk at Klagbruns Inc in Pretoria in 1973 1 He was admitted as an attorney in 1976 and practised for five years at Maluleke Seriti and Moseneke mainly before the Company Court in liquidation matters and in criminal trials In 1983 he was called to the Pretoria Bar His application had sparked a dispute within the Bar which culminated in its abolishing its whites only membership rule 2 Moseneke practised as an advocate in Johannesburg and Pretoria and was noted for his Company Law Bankruptcy and Indirect Tax practice and was briefed extensively by black and Asian businessmen He was awarded senior counsel status ten years later Moseneke worked underground for the PAC during the 1980s and became its Deputy President when it was unbanned in 1990 2 Moseneke also served on the technical committee that drafted the interim constitution of 1993 1 In 1994 he was appointed Deputy Chairperson of the Independent Electoral Commission which conducted the first democratic elections in South Africa Judicial career EditIn September 1994 while practising as a silk Moseneke accepted an acting appointment to the Transvaal Provincial Division 1 Between 1995 and 2001 however Moseneke left the Bar to pursue a full time corporate career most famously as the chair of Telkom In November 2001 Moseneke was appointed to the High Court in Pretoria his hometown by then President Thabo Mbeki A year later he was made a judge in the Constitutional Court and in June 2005 became Deputy Chief Justice On 4 November 2013 Moseneke was appointed Acting Chief Justice during the long term leave of Mogoeng Mogoeng 5 Moseneke was regarded as one of the strongest judges on South Africa s Constitutional Court For example he was praised for his towering legal mind and commitment to fairness and justice 6 and described as a most independent minded and imaginative jurist 7 Moseneke s judgments include S v Thebus 8 which upheld the constitutional validity of the doctrine of common purpose Steenkamp NO v Provincial Tender Board 9 which details the relationship between public and private law remedies Masetlha v President 10 which held National Intelligence Agency head Billy Masetlha was not entitled to procedural fairness when he was dismissed by then President Thabo Mbeki National Treasury v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance 11 where the Court refused to grant an interim injunction to stop Gauteng s controversial e tolls Mazibuko v Sisulu 12 in which then leader of the opposition Lindiwe Mazibuko succeeded in obtaining an order declaring unconstitutional the parliamentary rules that allowed the National Assembly to stall rather than proceed with the motion of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma that she had tabled and Minister of Police v Premier of the Western Cape 13 in which the Court found in favour of Premier of the Western Cape Helen Zille when the African National Congress sought to invalidate her creation of the Khayelitsha Commission Also well known are his two leading judgments on affirmative action Minister of Finance v Van Heerden 14 and SAPS v Barnard 15 Moseneke made a significant contribution to South African property law He penned the Constitutional Court s last three majority judgments on the Restitution of Land Rights Act 16 and decided a leading case on expropriation in 2014 17 The following year in Shoprite v MEC Eastern Cape which dealt comprehensively with the meaning of the constitutional right to property Moseneke s judgment attracted the most concurrences 18 The courtroom of the Constitutional Court of South Africa Most celebrated is Moseneke s judgment in Glenister v President co authored with Justice Edwin Cameron which struck down amendments to the National Prosecuting Act and South African Police Service Act on the basis that they failed to create an adequately independent anti corruption unit 19 This was hailed as an imaginative 20 and brilliant 21 judgment by commentators and means South Africa must have an independent corruption fighting agency notwithstanding the ruling ANC s controversial disbanding of the Scorpions Before his judicial appointment Moseneke had succeeded as a litigant in having South Africa s racially discriminatory system of estate administration declared constitutionally invalid 22 Moseneke is also known for his independence At public events he has distanced himself from ANC interests criticised the government s flouting of court orders and decried the extensive powers afforded the President in each case triggering an angry response from the ruling party 6 23 24 Moseneke has twice been passed over for appointment as Chief Justice despite being the most senior judge on the Court On the second occasion when Mogoeng was appointed many prominent figures said Moseneke was the better candidate and questioned the ANC s motives in snubbing him 25 26 27 28 Mogoeng was one of the Constitutional Court s most junior members having been appointed to it less than two years earlier and having had a relatively short judicial career at one of the smallest High Court divisions prior to that 29 30 His nomination ahead of Moseneke reminded many of the notorious supersession by L C Steyn a National Party favourite of Oliver Schreiner 30 31 Finally whereas Moseneke had been active in the struggle against apartheid Mogoeng had been a prosecutor in a bantustan 32 33 Moseneke retired from the Constitutional Court in May 2016 34 Other positions and awards EditMoseneke has seven honorary doctorates from the University of the North University of Natal University of Pretoria Tshwane University of Technology University of South Africa University of Cape Town and CUNY 1 In 2006 he succeeded Justice Richard Goldstone as Chancellor of the University of the Witwatersrand 35 36 Moseneke was also named as an executor of the will of Nelson Mandela who died in late 2013 37 He is currently chairman of the Board of Directors of the Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra 38 Moseneke was the 2020 recipient of the Bolch Prize for the Rule of Law 39 awarded by the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law School References Edit a b c d e f Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke Constitutional Court of South Africa Retrieved 9 November 2008 a b c Honorary degree citation Dikgang Moseneke Wits University permanent dead link Dikgang Moseneke tries as a judge to live out Mandela s ideals News24 7 December 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Fifa gives Zuma his ref s certificate SouthAfrica info 30 June 2009 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2009 Moseneke to act as Chief Justice SABC 4 November 2013 Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 20 November 2013 a b de Vos Pierre 17 January 2008 ANC pulls back from the brink on Moseneke Constitutionally Speaking Retrieved 18 May 2015 Tolsi Niren 18 October 2013 Applause for Mogoeng s judicial cadenza Thebus and Another v S 2003 ZACC 12 Steenkamp NO v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape 2006 ZACC 16 Masetlha v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another 2007 ZACC 20 National Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others 2012 ZACC 18 Mazibuko v Sisulu and Another 2013 ZACC 28 Minister of Police and Others v Premier of the Western Cape and Others 2013 ZACC 33 Minister of Finance and Another v Van Heerden 2004 ZACC 3 South African Police Service v Solidarity obo Barnard 2014 ZACC 23 Department of Land Affairs and Others v Goedgelegen Tropical Fruits Pty Ltd 2007 ZACC 12 Kwalindile Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and Others Zimbane Community v King Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and Others 2013 ZACC 6 Florence v Government of the Republic of South Africa 2014 ZACC 22 Arun Property Development Pty Ltd v City of Cape Town 2014 ZACC 37 Shoprite Checkers Pty Limited v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development Environmental Affairs And Tourism Eastern Cape and Others 2015 ZACC 23 Glenister v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others 2011 ZACC 6 Boonzaier Leo 25 March 2015 A constitutional obligation to disclose political party funding African Legal Centre Retrieved 18 May 2015 permanent dead link De Vos Pierre 18 March 2011 Glenister A monumental judgment in defence of the poor Retrieved 18 May 2015 Moseneke and Others v Master of the High Court 2000 ZACC 27 Moseneke in new clash with Zuma Sunday Independent 14 May 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Meyer Walda 2 March 2015 SA judiciary independence questioned IOL Retrieved 18 May 2015 Calland Richard 2013 The Zuma Years Zebra Press Mbanjwa Xolani 17 August 2011 Outrage over new Chief Justice The New Age Archived from the original on 19 May 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2014 Nodoba Gaontebale 18 August 2011 What does Zuma have against Moseneke AZAPO Politicsweb Retrieved 25 July 2014 Moseneke for Chief Justice Democratic Alliance press release Oxtoby Chris 2013 New Appointments to the Constitutional Court 2009 2012 South African Law Journal 219 230 a b Pretoria Centre for Human Rights 17 August 2011 Press release on the nomination of the Chief Justice Retrieved 25 July 2014 Grootes Stephen 18 August 2011 Chief Justice controversy A historical digression The Daily Maverick SAPA 3 September 2011 Cosatu slams Mogoeng nomination News24 Retrieved 25 July 2014 Vegter Ivo 4 September 2011 Mogoeng Lock up your daughters The Daily Maverick Retrieved 25 July 2014 Six sets of wise words from Moseneke Mail and Guardian 20 May 2016 IOL News Dikgang Moseneke to be Wits chancellor retrieved 28 December 2011 Jo burg News Moseneke takes on chancellor s mantle retrieved 28 December 2011 Madiba s last will and testament is read today Nelson Mandela Foundation press release 3 Feb 2014 JPO and KZNPO in concert together to celebrate Justice Dikgang Moseneke The Next 48hOURS The Next 48hOURS 21 October 2016 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Dikgang Moseneke former deputy chief justice of the South African Constitutional Court to receive 2020 Bolch Prize for the Rule of Law Bolch Judicial Institute press release 16 Jan 2020 Wikisource has original works by or about Dikgang Moseneke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dikgang Moseneke amp oldid 1133546891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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