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A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction

A salient defect of South African civil procedural law is its lack of a formally recognised fact-discovery mechanism for the purpose of complimenting the process of pre-trial litigation. This defect comes to the fore when the South African discovery model is compared with those of other Anglo-Americ...

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Main Author: Faris, John Andrew
Other Authors: Taitz, J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Private Law 2023
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Faris, John Andrew
author2 Taitz, J
author_browse Faris, John Andrew
Taitz, J
author_facet Taitz, J
Faris, John Andrew
author_sort Faris, John Andrew
collection Thesis
description A salient defect of South African civil procedural law is its lack of a formally recognised fact-discovery mechanism for the purpose of complimenting the process of pre-trial litigation. This defect comes to the fore when the South African discovery model is compared with those of other Anglo-American jurisdictions. In common with other Anglo-American civil procedural systems, South African civil procedural law has formally incorporated within its rules of court a system of discovery, but its discovery model is restricted to that of documentary discovery. 1 In contradistinction with the South African model, the scope of the discovery models of the United Kingdom,2 Austraiia3 and New Zealand4 is far wider in that they include not only documentary discovery but also fact-discovery in the form of interrogatories. The discovery models of the United States5 and Canada6 are even more liberal than the aforementioned because, apart from the practice of documentary discovery and the exchange of interrogatories, oral depositions as a mode of discovery are also permitted. Seen in this context, there is a notional difference between the South African model and the discovery models of other Anglo-American systems in that the latter recognise and apply fact-discovery as a procedure distinct from documentary discovery. Why is this so?
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Private Law
publisherStr Department of Private Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38819 A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction Faris, John Andrew Taitz, J Trial practice - South Africa A salient defect of South African civil procedural law is its lack of a formally recognised fact-discovery mechanism for the purpose of complimenting the process of pre-trial litigation. This defect comes to the fore when the South African discovery model is compared with those of other Anglo-American jurisdictions. In common with other Anglo-American civil procedural systems, South African civil procedural law has formally incorporated within its rules of court a system of discovery, but its discovery model is restricted to that of documentary discovery. 1 In contradistinction with the South African model, the scope of the discovery models of the United Kingdom,2 Austraiia3 and New Zealand4 is far wider in that they include not only documentary discovery but also fact-discovery in the form of interrogatories. The discovery models of the United States5 and Canada6 are even more liberal than the aforementioned because, apart from the practice of documentary discovery and the exchange of interrogatories, oral depositions as a mode of discovery are also permitted. Seen in this context, there is a notional difference between the South African model and the discovery models of other Anglo-American systems in that the latter recognise and apply fact-discovery as a procedure distinct from documentary discovery. Why is this so? 2023-09-22T08:04:12Z 2023-09-22T08:04:12Z 1989 2023-09-22T07:55:42Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38819 eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Trial practice - South Africa
Faris, John Andrew
A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
title_full A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
title_fullStr A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
title_full_unstemmed A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
title_short A consideration of certain aspects of South African civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
title_sort consideration of certain aspects of south african civil procedural law and civil jurisdiction
topic Trial practice - South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38819
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