Judge President Hlophe is deeply disappointed by the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal issued last week, March 31, 2009 (see here). He has carefully studied the judgment and is currently taking urgent steps to appeal the Judgment. We note with grave concern that the SCA has, in its zeal to assist the Constitutional Court judges, essentially thrown the notion of judicial independence and JSC's investigations of judicial misconduct into complete and utter chaos. The suspicious timing of the issuance of the decision and the JSC's scheduling of its hearings on the merits of the complaints and counter-complaints gives an appearance of a manipulation of the judicial process and is antithetical to the notion that justice must not only be done but must be seen to be done. We unequivocally state that the JSC has embarked on a course of action which casts a dark shadow on the integrity of the SCA's adjudicative process as follows:
All along, the defendant judges and the JSC had taken the position that they could not proceed with a hearing on the merits of the complaints and counter-complaints pending before the JSC. Their excuse was premised on the notion that the majority decision in the WLD granting declaratory relief and the subsidiary findings "would be binding upon the JSC." They argued that the majority "effectively usurped and pre-empted the exclusive jurisdiction of the JSC. That body alone is authorised to investigate allegations of gross misconduct. Not only is the exclusive jurisdiction of the JSC undermined, but its duty properly to investigate allegations of gross misconduct is substantially impeded. It may no longer embark upon an enquiry, the effect of which would be to contradict the findings of the Court. The capacity of the Judges to defend themselves against Hlophe JP's complaint (and to present the complaint against Hlophe JP) before the JSC is likewise substantially inhibited."
Accordingly, the JSC was hamstrung by the pending SCA appeal and could not perform its duty unless and until the appeal was resolved. Judge Mpathi who wears two hats as both the President of the SCA and the JSC appears to have conjured up a magical solution to that dilemma and demonstrated clairvoyance about both the substance and timing of the SCA ruling which cannot be matched by any Sangoma. Mpathi simply scheduled a JSC hearing on the merits for April 1, 2009 and the SCA obliged the JSC by issuing a decision against J.P. Hlophe on March 31, 2009 and thus clearing the way for the JSC to proceed with the most biased investigative techniques ever imagined. It stretches credulity to a breaking point and defies logic to suggest that there was no coordination between the two processes (SCA and JSC) and that Mpathi could confidently schedule a firm so close in time to the SCA decision without having had off the record discussions with his SCA colleagues as to when they intended to issue a ruling against Judge Hlophe.
The timing of the ruling and the JSC scheduling of a hearing all give the appearance that they were synchronized to deny the parties a fair and adequate opportunity to study the judgment or to pursue appeal options - it appear to be aimed at forcing the parties into a hearing before the JSC before they can pursue any avenues for appeals. Against this background the JSC firmly and confidently rejected JP Hlophe's request for a postponement of the hearing just three days before that. Certainly, both the SCA and the JSC owe the discerning South African public an explanation about these matters. Further, we note with deep concern the SCA's actions which preceded the issuing of the decision and which raised serious questions about the Court's impartiality. We note that the SCA on its own initiative invited members of the Pretoria Bar, well-known adversaries of JP Hlophe, to file papers as amicus curiae or "friend" of the Court. Inviting members of the Pretoria bar which has a well known record of vilifying Judge President Hlophe and of campaigning for his removal from the bench not only raises serious questions about this Court's impartiality but also gives the appearance of stacking the odds against Judge President Hlophe.
Substantively we note with utmost respect that the SCA decision is not just seriously flawed - it is completely wrong. The Court ruling that the defendants (Constitutional Court judges) in laying the complaint were not exercising a judicial function or acting as a Court of law and must have been acting in their private capacity is belied by the facts as they appear on the record. The thirteen (13) Concourt judges admitted that they used the Court's stationery and/or letterhead and issued press statements on the same to convey to the public that Judge President Hlophe had committed an offence against the Court and the judges. Their statement read in part, "a complaint that the Judge President of the Cape High Court, Judge John Hlophe, has approached some of the judges of the Constitutional Court in an improper attempt to influence this Court's pending judgment in one or more cases has been referred by the judges of this Court to the Judicial Service Commission, as the constitutionally appointed body to deal with complaints of judicial misconduct." It also stated "The Court has referred the complaint against Judge Hlophe to the Judicial Service Commission (JSC), the constitutionally appointed body responsible for addressing judicial misconduct."
They published their complaint that Judge President Hlophe sought to improperly influence Acting Judge Chris Jafta and Judge Bess Nkabinde (both judges of Constitutional Court) to decide the "search and seizure" case to the benefit of Jacob Zuma. They also claimed that the alleged attempt by Judge Hlophe to influence Judges Jafta and Nkabinde "was calculated to have an impact on... the capacity of the Court...to adjudicate in a manner that ensures its independence, impartiality, dignity, accessibility and effectiveness as required by Section 165(5) of the Constitution." According to the SCA's logic, a judge or any official who abuses power by taking advantage of the judicial office for personal gain or retaliation will be free of liability as long as he claims that he was not really performing his official function. That is not and can never be the law - a judge must avoid all activity that suggests that his/her decisions are affected by self-interest or favouritism, since such abuse of power profoundly violates the public's trust in the judiciary.