Re-examining the Constitutional Court's Approach to the Property Question Since First National Bank of SA Ltd T/A Wesbank v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service; First National Bank of SA Ltd T/A Wesbank v Minister of Finance 2002 4 SA 768 (CC)
Abstract
The First National Bank of SA Ltd t/a Wesbank v Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service; First National Bank of SA Ltd t/a
Wesbank v Minister of Finance 2002 4 SA 768 (CC) (FNB)
decision led to the development of several questions that need to
be answered when deciding whether there had been a deprivation
of property for the purposes of section 25(1) of the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the Constitution). The first
question that needs to be asked when deciding whether there has
been deprivation is whether that which was taken away from the
property holder qualified as property for the purposes of section
25(1).
It appears that the Court in post-FNB case law fails to decide the
first question in a principled manner. In some cases the Court
simply assumed that the interests at issue were property for the
purposes of section 25 without a thorough investigation or clear
guidelines regarding whether such interests were indeed property.
Analysis of post-FNB case law also indicates that there are
seemingly two approaches that may need to be followed to decide
complicated categories of property interest. The Court has not
made it clear which approach should be followed.
In this article, I examine the Constitutional Court's approach to
deciding what property is for section 25(1) purposes. The
purpose is to determine how and to what extent the Court has
decided what constitutes property for constitutional purposes.
After an examination of the FNB decision and post-FNB case law,
as well as analysing academic criticism, I suggest guidelines that
the Court may follow to decide what constitutes property for
section 25(1) purposes in future cases.
Collections
- PER: 2022 Volume 25 [68]