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Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court

As children we are introduced to the story of the 'Emperor and his clothes' where the Emperor is duped by some scoundrels, much assisted by his vanity and pride, into believing that they have created for him a suit of the finest and most magnificent cloth. It takes a small innocent child to point ou...

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Main Author: Young, Warren F
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Public Law 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Young, Warren F
author_browse Young, Warren F
author_facet Young, Warren F
author_sort Young, Warren F
collection Thesis
description As children we are introduced to the story of the 'Emperor and his clothes' where the Emperor is duped by some scoundrels, much assisted by his vanity and pride, into believing that they have created for him a suit of the finest and most magnificent cloth. It takes a small innocent child to point out during the procession attended by the Emperor that in fact he is not wearing a suit of finely tailored clothes but nothing at all. The question arises is to whether a Magistrate's Court which claims admiralty jurisdiction is in the same position as that of the Emperor in the story. Does a Magistrate's Court have jurisdiction to hear maritime claims by consent or otherwise or is it a case of a Magistrate's Court attempting to exercise or clothe itself with jurisdiction of this nature merely duped into believing that it has jurisdiction when in fact more exists. In other words, it is jurisdictionally naked. Is it enough, however, merely to accept the assertion that maritime claims are the exclusive domain of the High Courts exercising their admiralty jurisdiction. Is there no scope for simple matters small in quantum to be heard in a jurisdiction other than the High Court exercising its admiralty jurisdiction. The costs threshold of the High Court is prohibitive and may in certain circumstances result in the anomaly that the legal costs are greater than the quantum being claimed.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:31.121Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Department of Public Law
publisherStr Department of Public Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42865 Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court Young, Warren F Admiralty jurisdiction As children we are introduced to the story of the 'Emperor and his clothes' where the Emperor is duped by some scoundrels, much assisted by his vanity and pride, into believing that they have created for him a suit of the finest and most magnificent cloth. It takes a small innocent child to point out during the procession attended by the Emperor that in fact he is not wearing a suit of finely tailored clothes but nothing at all. The question arises is to whether a Magistrate's Court which claims admiralty jurisdiction is in the same position as that of the Emperor in the story. Does a Magistrate's Court have jurisdiction to hear maritime claims by consent or otherwise or is it a case of a Magistrate's Court attempting to exercise or clothe itself with jurisdiction of this nature merely duped into believing that it has jurisdiction when in fact more exists. In other words, it is jurisdictionally naked. Is it enough, however, merely to accept the assertion that maritime claims are the exclusive domain of the High Courts exercising their admiralty jurisdiction. Is there no scope for simple matters small in quantum to be heard in a jurisdiction other than the High Court exercising its admiralty jurisdiction. The costs threshold of the High Court is prohibitive and may in certain circumstances result in the anomaly that the legal costs are greater than the quantum being claimed. 2026-02-19T10:27:15Z 2026-02-19T10:27:15Z 1999 2026-02-19T09:50:54Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42865 en eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Admiralty jurisdiction
Young, Warren F
Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
title_full Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
title_fullStr Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
title_full_unstemmed Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
title_short Admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate's court
title_sort admiralty jurisdiction in the magistrate s court
topic Admiralty jurisdiction
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42865
work_keys_str_mv AT youngwarrenf admiraltyjurisdictioninthemagistratescourt