Violet Phatshoane | |
---|---|
Deputy Judge President of the Northern Cape High Court | |
Assumed office 1 July 2021 | |
Appointed by | Cyril Ramaphosa |
Judge President | Pule Tlaletsi |
Judge of the High Court | |
Assumed office 10 May 2011 | |
Appointed by | Jacob Zuma |
Division | Northern Cape |
Personal details | |
Born | Phokeng,Transvaal South Africa | 28 September 1972
Alma mater | University of the North (BProc) University of the Free State (LLB,LLM) |
Mmathebe Violet Phatshoane (born 20 November 1972) is a South African judge who is currently serving as Deputy Judge President of the Northern Cape High Court. She joined the court as a puisne judge in May 2011 and was appointed to the deputy judge presidency in July 2021. Before entering the judiciary,she practised as an attorney in Bloemfontein,specialising in commercial law and labour law.
Born in the North West Province,Phatshoane was admitted as an attorney in Bloemfontein in 1999 and she co-founded her own firm,PHI,in 2002. During her first decade in the High Court,she was thrice shortlisted unsuccessfully for the Deputy Judge President position,twice in 2017 and once in 2019;on each occasion,her nomination was overshadowed by allegations that former Judge President Frans Kgomo had intervened in the appointment process in her favour. After a fourth nomination,she secured the deputy judge presidency in July 2021,appointed by President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Phatshoane was born on 20 November 1972 in Phokeng outside Rustenburg in present-day North West Province. [1] She completed a BProc at the University of the North in 1995 and went on to the University of the Free State,graduating with an LLB in 1997 and an LLM in 1999. [1] In 1996,while studying towards her LLB,Phatshoane was a legal researcher to Justice Pierre J. J. Olivier,a judge of appeal in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa. [1]
Between 1997 and 1999,while her LLM was in progress,Phatshoane served her articles of clerkship at Naudes Attorneys in Bloemfontein;she was admitted as an attorney of the High Court of South Africa in 1999. [1] Thereafter she remained at the firm as an attorney,becoming a director in 2000. In 2002,she and Douglas Henney founded their own firm,Phatshoane Henny Inc. (PHI),in Bloemfontein. [1] The PHI Group grew to an exceptional size,and Phatshoane was its chairperson until her appointment to the bench in May 2011. [2]
She specialised in commercial law and labour law,and she was a part-time commissioner at the Commission for Conciliation,Mediation and Arbitration from 1999 to 2004. [2] She was additionally enrolled as a notary and conveyancer in 2009. [1] She lectured part-time in advanced labour law at the University of the Free State between 2006 and 2009, [2] and she was an acting judge in the High Court's Northern Cape Division in 2010. [1]
On 10 May 2011,President Jacob Zuma announced that,on the advice of the Judicial Service Commission,Phatshoane would join the Northern Cape High Court bench permanently,with immediate effect. [3]
In the Kimberley High Court,Phatshoane presided in the highly publicised corruption trial of three prominent Northern Cape politicians –John Block,Alvin Botes,and (until her death) Yolanda Botha –who pled not guilty at the outset of the trial in February 2014. [4] [5] At an early stage of the trial,Phatshoane dismissed the defendants' application for her recusal,finding no merit to their argument that she had demonstrated herself to be biased in her ruling against their acquittal. [6] After a lengthy trial,Phatshoane convicted Block of corruption,fraud,and money laundering in October 2015,though Botes was acquitted; [7] he was sentenced to a lengthy prison sentence in December 2016. [8]
The sentencing was delayed after Block lodged a complaint against Phatshoane with the Judicial Service Commission,alleging that her judgement had been improperly influenced by Frans Kgomo,the Judge President of the Northern Cape Division. [9] In particular,an eyewitness had apparently told Block's lawyer that,during a phone call about Block,Kgomo had urged Phatshoane to "Convict the bastard". [10] Phatshoane and Kgomo both denied having had any such conversation,as did the alleged eyewitness (attorney Nano Matlata),and the Judicial Service Commission dismissed the complaint against Phatshoane. In subsequent years,Kgomo sued Block,alleging that his allegation had been defamatory. [10] [11]
During her service in the High Court,Phatshoane has served lengthy stints as an acting judge in the labour courts. She acted in the Labour Court in 2013 and 2015 and in the Labour Appeal Court between August 2016 and May 2017, [1] writing several reported judgements. [2] She was the acting Deputy Judge President of the Labour Courts from January to December 2018 and then from May to December 2020; [1] in that capacity,serving under Cape Town-based Judge President Basheer Waglay,she ran the Labour Courts' Johannesburg circuit. [2]
In April 2017,as Kgomo's retirement approached,Phatshoane was one of two candidates whom the Judicial Service Commission shortlisted and interviewed for potential appointment as Deputy Judge President of the Northern Cape Division. During her interview,the politicians on the panel –including Faith Muthambi and Dikgang Stock –also questioned Phatshoane at length about her conduct in the Block corruption trial,including her dismissal of the application for recusal. [2] Among other things,she told the panel that her judgement in that matter had contributed to jurisprudence by addressing a "lacuna" in the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act. [2] She was also asked about her relative youth,but she said that she was confident that she could "command authority" and did not "foresee any resistance from my colleagues". [12]
However,the major topic of the interview was the last-minute withdrawal of the other candidate,Northern Cape Judge Cecile Williams. [12] In regard to this,Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng asked Phatshoane about rumours –repeated by Williams in a letter to the commission –that Judge President Kgomo had been "grooming" Phatshoane for the deputy judge presidency and as his preferred successor. [13] Phatshoane denied that the Northern Cape Division had been "factionalised",but she said that Williams had upset one of their mutual colleagues by refusing to help with an Afrikaans translation. [14] [15] After the Judicial Service Commission hearings,although Williams's withdrawal left Phatshoane as the only candidate for that vacancy,the Judicial Service Commission declined to recommend her as suitable for appointment. [16]
Nonetheless,during the transition period occasioned by Kgomo's retirement,Phatshoane served as acting Judge President from June to July 2017 and then as acting Deputy Judge President from July to December 2017. [1] During that period,the Judicial Service Commission re-ran its appointment process for the deputy judge presidency,this time with Phatshoane and Judge Bulelwa Pakati as the two shortlisted candidates. However,those interviews,held in October 2017,were also disrupted by allegations of interference by former Judge President Kgomo,who had written to the Judicial Service Commission to outline Pakati's shortcomings of intellect and temperament. [17] In response,Pakati told the interview panel that there were severe divisions in the Northern Cape Division,partly caused by Kgomo's ambitions for Phatshoane;asked whether Phatshoane was perceived as the Northern Cape's "anointed one",Pakati replied in the affirmative. [17] Although Kgomo's intervention was not discussed during Phatshoane's own interview, [17] the interviews ended with the Judicial Service Commission again declining to recommend a candidate for appointment.
A year and a half later,in April 2019,both Phatshoane and Pakati were shortlisted again for the position,which remained vacant,and,again,neither candidate was recommended for appointment. [2] Over the next two years,Phatshoane was acting Deputy Judge President from July to October 2019 and from August to December 2020,and she also stood in for Judge President Pule Tlaletsi as acting Judge President from September to October 2019 and from February to March 2021. [1]
In February 2021,the Judicial Service Commission announced that it would embark on a fourth attempt to fill the Deputy Judge President position and,on that occasion,Phatshoane was the only shortlisted candidate. [18] She was interviewed in April and was asked about the Block trial,her approach to politically sensitive matters,and her leadership experience. [19] [20] The Judicial Service Commission recommended her for appointment, [20] and President Cyril Ramaphosa confirmed her appointment as Deputy Judge President with effect from 1 July 2021. [21]
Phatshoane was an acting judge in the Supreme Court of Appeal between April and September 2021 and later between April and May 2022. [1] Three of her judgements in the Supreme Court were reported, [2] and they included the court's majority decision in Eskom v Letsemeng Local Municipality,which concerned Letsemeng Local Municipality's debt to the electricity utility Eskom. [22]
In October 2023,she was shortlisted and interviewed for possible permanent appointment to one of four judicial vacancies at the Supreme Court of Appeal. During the interview,members of the Judicial Service Commission raised concerns about Phatshoane's level of experience. [23] Justice Minister Ronald Lamola also suggested that it would be a "setback" for gender equality in the judiciary if Phatshoane left her leadership position in the High Court. [23] On the latter point,Phatshoane argued –with the support of commissioner Tembeka Ngcukaitobi –that it was not fair for women to be "locked up" in their positions and that her elevation would in fact promote gender equality. [24] [25] However,Chief Justice Raymond Zondo responded that his main concern was the stability of the Northern Cape Division,not gender equality. [24] At the conclusion of the interviews,the Judicial Service Commission announced that it would recommend filling only two of the vacancies,endorsing Shane Kgoele and Fayeeza Kathree-Setiloane for elevation. Some commentators objected to this decision,arguing that some of the other candidates,including Phatshoane,were no less qualified than Kgoele was. [26] [27]
Phatshoane is a member of the South African chapter of the International Association of Women Judges,and she was its vice-president of programmes from August 2012 to August 2014. [1] She joined the council of Sol Plaatje University in Kimberley in June 2014,and in July 2021 she was appointed to succeed Yvonne Mokgoro as the university's chairperson; [28] she will serve a four-year term,ending in April 2025. [29]
Zukisa Laura Lumka Tshiqi is a South African judge of the Constitutional Court of South Africa. She formerly served in the Supreme Court of Appeal from December 2009 until October 2019,when President Cyril Ramaphosa elevated her to the Constitutional Court. She was a practising attorney until she was first appointed to the bench in the Gauteng High Court in 2005.
Steven Arnold Majiedt is a South African judge of the Constitutional Court of South Africa. He joined the Constitutional Court in October 2019 as an appointee of President Cyril Ramaphosa. Formerly a practicing advocate,he served in the Supreme Court of Appeal from 2010 to 2019 and in the Northern Cape High Court from 2000 to 2010.
Mandisa Muriel Lindelwa Maya is the Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa. She was formerly the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal from 2017 to 2022. She joined the bench in May 2000 as a judge of the Transkei Division of the High Court of South Africa and was elevated to the Supreme Court of Appeal in 2006.
Patricia Lynette Goliath is a South African judge of the High Court of South Africa. She has been the acting Judge President of the Western Cape Division since December 2022,when John Hlophe was suspended and then impeached.
Xola Mlungisi Petse is a South African judge who has been the Deputy President of the Supreme Court of Appeal since 2019. A former attorney,he joined the Supreme Court as a puisne judge in June 2012. Before that,he was a judge of the Eastern Cape High Court from July 2005 to May 2012.
Mahube Betty Molemela is a South African judge who has been the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal since 1 June 2023. Before her appointment to the Supreme Court in June 2018,she was the first woman Judge President of the Free State High Court from 2015 to 2018. A former attorney,she was appointed to the bench in the Free State in July 2008.
Fikile Eunice Mokgohloa is a South African judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal. Before her elevation to that court in June 2019,she was a judge of the High Court of South Africa between November 2008 and May 2019. She joined the bench as a judge of the KwaZulu-Natal Division and moved to the Limpopo Division in January 2016,becoming Deputy Judge President in Limpopo in July 2016. Born in Pretoria,she began her career as an attorney in the former Transvaal.
Anna Maleshane Kgoele,also spelled Annah Malefsane Kgoele,is a South African judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal. She joined the appellate court in December 2023 after 14 years in the High Court of South Africa. From 2014 to 2018,she was the president of the South African chapter of the International Association of Women Judges.
Segopotje Sheila Mphahlele is a South African judge who is currently serving as the Judge President of the Mpumalanga High Court. Formerly an attorney and insolvency practitioner,she has been a judge of the High Court of South Africa since December 2013.
Thoba Portia Poyo-Dlwati is a South African judge who is currently serving as the Judge President of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court. She joined the court as a puisne judge in June 2014 and was elevated to the judge presidency in January 2023,appointed by President Cyril Ramaphosa as the division's first female judge president.
Cagney John Musi is a South African judge who is currently serving as Judge President of the Free State High Court. He was appointed to the court as a puisne judge in June 2005 and was elevated to the judge presidency in December 2018 after two years' service as Deputy Judge President. Before joining the bench,he was a public prosecutor from 1986 to 1992 and a magistrate from 1992 to 2004.
Mokgere Busisiwe Shareen Masipa is a South African judge of the High Court of South Africa. She was appointed to the KwaZulu-Natal Division in July 2016 after 14 years as a practising attorney in Durban. She is an expert on labour law.
Mandela Makaula is a South African judge who is currently serving in the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court of South Africa. He joined the bench in 2010 after two decades in practice as an attorney and magistrate in the Eastern Cape. He was an acting judge in the Supreme Court of Appeal in 2022.
Ephraim Mampuru Makgoba is a South African retired judge of the High Court of South Africa. He was the inaugural Judge President of the Limpopo Division from 2015 to 2022,though he joined the bench in 2008 as a puisne judge of the Gauteng Division. Before he joined the bench,he was an attorney in Nelspruit and Polokwane.
Nobulawo Martha Mbhele is a South African judge who is currently serving as Deputy Judge President of the Free State High Court. She was appointed to the court as a puisne judge in January 2016 and was elevated to the deputy judge presidency in July 2021. Before she joined the bench,she was an attorney in the Free State,both in private practice and for a decade at Legal Aid South Africa.
Lazarus Pule Tlaletsi is a South African judge who is currently serving as Judge President of the Northern Cape High Court since September 2017. He was formerly the Deputy Judge President of the Labour Court and Labour Appeal Court from 2013 to 2017. He joined the bench in November 2004 as a puisne judge of the Northern Cape High Court. Before that,he was a practising attorney in the North West Province.
Frans Diale Kgomo is a South African retired judge who was the Judge President of the Northern Cape High Court between November 2001 and September 2017. He joined the bench in November 1998 as the first black judge of that court. Before that,he was a lawyer in the North West Province,working as a magistrate from 1974 to 1986 and then as an advocate from 1986 to 1998.
Nare Frans Kgomo is a South African judge of the High Court of South Africa. He currently serves in the Limpopo Division of the High Court,but he joined the bench on 1 May 2008 as a judge of the Gauteng Division,following his shortlisting for that position in February 2008. Sitting in the Johannesburg High Court in 2010,Kgomo heard the Brett Kebble murder trial and dismissed the murder charges against Glenn Agliotti.
Moletje George Phatudi is a South African judge who has been Judge President of the Limpopo High Court since 1 December 2023. He joined that court in July 2016 as a puisne judge. Before that,he was an advocate,attorney,and lecturer at the University of the North.
Matsaro Violet Semenya is a South African judge who has been Deputy Judge President of the Limpopo High Court since July 2021. She was appointed that court as a puisne judge in January 2017. Before joining the judiciary,she was a magistrate in Limpopo between 1991 and 2017.