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On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa

The law of extinctive prescription regulates the impact that the passage of time has on claims, or ‘debts', to use the language of the South African Prescription Act 68 of 1969. In broad terms, if a person fails to institute legal proceedings for the enforcement of their claim before the lapse of th...

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Main Author: Le Roith, Caitlin
Other Authors: Fagan, Anton
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Private Law 2024
Subjects:
Law
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access_status_str Open Access
author Le Roith, Caitlin
author2 Fagan, Anton
author_browse Fagan, Anton
Le Roith, Caitlin
author_facet Fagan, Anton
Le Roith, Caitlin
author_sort Le Roith, Caitlin
collection Thesis
description The law of extinctive prescription regulates the impact that the passage of time has on claims, or ‘debts', to use the language of the South African Prescription Act 68 of 1969. In broad terms, if a person fails to institute legal proceedings for the enforcement of their claim before the lapse of the period that applies to that claim, which could be between three and thirty years, extinctive prescription operates to thwart that process. In South African law, it does so by empowering the person against whom the claim is brought to, by way of special plea, effectively relieve the court of its adjudicative duties in respect of that claim and, ultimately, release themselves from liability, terminating any obligation that person once had to perform. The person seeking to enforce their claim, then, is essentially deprived of their power to do so. Despite its long history and its reputation as a legal regime of enormous practical importance, laws of prescription are generally considered to be theoretically and intellectually unrewarding areas of statute law. As such, it does not receive nearly as much attention from our legal scholars as some of the other areas of law. In the South African context, this is particularly surprising given the frequency with which our courts engage with pleas of prescription, which are often the source of protracted litigation, in cases that make their way to our highest courts. A significant portion of these cases involved claims that arose from personal injury, which are subjected to the shortest prescription period of three years. In addition to a three-year prescription period, the prevailing interpretation of section 12(3) by our courts means that the prescription period will begin to run before the person with the right to claim is even aware of it. In this dissertation, I take a closer look at the rules governing the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South African law and the justifications for the manner in which these claims are regulated.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40326 On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa Le Roith, Caitlin Fagan, Anton Law The law of extinctive prescription regulates the impact that the passage of time has on claims, or ‘debts', to use the language of the South African Prescription Act 68 of 1969. In broad terms, if a person fails to institute legal proceedings for the enforcement of their claim before the lapse of the period that applies to that claim, which could be between three and thirty years, extinctive prescription operates to thwart that process. In South African law, it does so by empowering the person against whom the claim is brought to, by way of special plea, effectively relieve the court of its adjudicative duties in respect of that claim and, ultimately, release themselves from liability, terminating any obligation that person once had to perform. The person seeking to enforce their claim, then, is essentially deprived of their power to do so. Despite its long history and its reputation as a legal regime of enormous practical importance, laws of prescription are generally considered to be theoretically and intellectually unrewarding areas of statute law. As such, it does not receive nearly as much attention from our legal scholars as some of the other areas of law. In the South African context, this is particularly surprising given the frequency with which our courts engage with pleas of prescription, which are often the source of protracted litigation, in cases that make their way to our highest courts. A significant portion of these cases involved claims that arose from personal injury, which are subjected to the shortest prescription period of three years. In addition to a three-year prescription period, the prevailing interpretation of section 12(3) by our courts means that the prescription period will begin to run before the person with the right to claim is even aware of it. In this dissertation, I take a closer look at the rules governing the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South African law and the justifications for the manner in which these claims are regulated. 2024-07-04T14:00:43Z 2024-07-04T14:00:43Z 2024 2024-07-04T13:05:13Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40326 Eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Law
Le Roith, Caitlin
On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
title_full On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
title_fullStr On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
title_short On the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in South Africa
title_sort on the extinctive prescription of personal injury claims in south africa
topic Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40326
work_keys_str_mv AT leroithcaitlin ontheextinctiveprescriptionofpersonalinjuryclaimsinsouthafrica