COURT WATCH 14-2014

COURT WATCH 14/2014

[18th August 2014]

Further Nominations Invited for Judicial Appointments
Six New High Court Judges Now Wanted

 

In March the Judicial Service Commission [JSC] published advertisements calling on the public to submit nominations to fill three vacancies on the High Court bench.  The closing date was 14th April.  Nominations were received from the President and members of the public but the public interviews of candidates have not yet taken place because the JSC has declared three further vacancies and said interviews for all six vacancies will be conducted at a later date. 

On Friday 15th August the JSC published press advertisements:

  • notifying three additional vacancies on the High Court bench, increasing to six the total number of vacancies to be filled;
  • issuing a fresh invitation to members of the public to nominate suitably qualified persons to fill the vacancies;
  • giving close of business on Monday 15th September as the deadline for submission of nominations. 

[Copy of advertisement available from the addresses given at the end of this bulletin]

There is no need to resubmit nominations previously submitted in response to the advertisement of 14th March.  

Procedure for Nominations from the Public

Deadline  The deadline for submission of nominations is close of business on Monday 15th September.

The nomination form  The nomination form provided by the JSC should be used.  It is obtainable from the office of the Secretary of the JSC, Old Supreme Court Building, corner Kwame Nkrumah Ave/Third St, Harare OR from the office of a Provincial Magistrate in charge of a province.  It is also available on the JSC website www.jsc.org.zw[Veritas can also email you a copy – see addresses at the end of this bulletin.]

Curriculum vitae  The candidate’s CV is also required.

Submission of completed nomination forms  Completed nomination forms [one form for each nominee], with the nominee’s curriculum vitae attached, must be submitted to the JSC at the address given above.

Qualifications Required for Appointment as a High Court Judge

The JSC advertisement sets out the qualifications for appointment to these positions, as laid down by section 179 of the Constitution.  The qualifications can be summed up as follows:

A High Court judge must:

  • be at least 40 years old, and
  • be “a fit and proper person to hold office as a judge”
  • be or have been a judge of a court of unlimited civil or criminal jurisdiction in a country in which English is an officially recognised language and the common law is Roman-Dutch [e.g. South Africa] or English [e.g. Zambia] and English is an officially recognised language: OR
  • be currently and have been for at least 7 years, whether continuously or not, qualified to practise as a legal practitioner:
    • whether or not he or she is a Zimbabwean citizen, in a country in which the common law is Roman-Dutch and English is an officially recognised language [e.g., South Africa] OR
    • if he or she is a Zimbabwean citizen, in a country in which the common law is English and English is an officially recognised language [England, Zambia]. 

Comment:  This means that a Zimbabwean citizen with at least 7 years’ standing as a legal practitioner in, say, England or Zambia can be appointed as a High Court judge without being qualified to practise law in Zimbabwe and without having any qualification in Roman-Dutch law, which is the common law of Zimbabwe.

After the Closing Date

After the 15th September deadline, and in accordance with the new procedure required by section 180(2) of the Constitution, the JSC must:

  • conduct public interviews of prospective candidates, and
  • prepare a list of three qualified candidates for each position – in other words, a list of eighteen candidates for the current six vacancies, and
  • submit the list to the President.

The President then makes appointments from the list, unless he considers that none of the persons on the list are “suitable for appointment”.  If he considers that none are suitable, he must communicate that to the JSC and require it to submit a further list of qualified persons, from which he must then make his appointments. 

Justice Makarau, Secretary to the JSC, has said that the interviews for all six positions will be conducted as soon as possible after the 15th September deadline for submission of further nominations.

Comment:  Both the submission of nominations by members of the public and the public interview process are innovations introduced by the present Constitution.

Another new aspect is that now the President cannot appoint someone whose name has not been submitted by the JSC.  Under the former Constitution the President merely had to consult the JSC before making judicial appointments, but was free to reject its advice and appoint someone it did not recommend. 

 

Veritas makes every effort to ensure reliable information, but cannot take legal responsibility for information supplied

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