CHIEF JUSTICE PIUS LANGA
Pius Nkonzo Langa died yesterday in a Johannesburg hospital after a long illness. He was 74.
Langa was South Africa's fourth post-democratic chief justice (after Michael Corbett, Ismail Mahomed and Arthur Chaskalson). Born at Bushbuckbridge on 5 March 1939, he matriculated in 1960 by private study. He had worked in a shirt factory to make this possible. He obtained his law degrees the hard way, by external study through UNISA, in 1973 and 1976, while supporting his family, to whom he was devoted.
Langa's experience of the legal system was unrivalled. He served successively as court interpreter, public prosecutor, and magistrate (1960-1977); advocate (1977-1994); judge and deputy president of the Constitutional Court (1994-2001), deputy chief justice (2001-2005), and chief justice (2005-2009). When he took silk shortly before his elevation in 1994, he was one of only four African practitioners at the Natal Bar at the time.
To the office of chief justice Pius Langa brought his self-effacing personal dignity. In mien and in the authority he so lightly wore, he was a legal pachyderm. He presided and spoke with quiet calm and palpable stature. He said little in court. He believed that the case should come: that the litigants must have the sense that what they had to say was indeed heard, assessed and addressed. His interventions were few and to the point. They sought to clarify, to expose fallacies, and to test the proposition - no more.
Like Zimbabwe's outstanding chief justice, Enoch Dumbutshena, Langa was universally respected, too, for his obvious wisdom and sense of justice. His human and professional experience came together to make him a careful, measured assayer in the most fraught matters. He managed to be detached, without being indifferent. He personified the principled judge, concerned about realising for all people what the Constitution intended. He was its scrupulously independent gatekeeper.