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HFL1501
Comprehensive Study Guide
Historical Foundations of South African Law

Module Master | UNISA LLB Distinction Series



FULL MODULE COVERAGE — ALL PARTS & ALL LEARNING UNITS
Section Coverage
Part 1 — Origins of South African Law Learning Units 1–7

Part 2 — Law of Property & Obligations Learning Units 1–4

Part 3 — The Constitution's Role Learning Units 1–4

Master Latin Glossary All Key Terms

, PART 1: THE ORIGINS OF SOUTH AFRICAN LAW
This section traces the external legal history of the three main components of South African law:
African, Western, and Universal. Understanding these origins is the bedrock of every exam
question, essay, and portfolio submission.



LEARNING UNIT 1: Setting the Scene
South Africa's legal system is multi-layered, uncodified, and hybrid — resting on a three-pillar
framework: the African Component (indigenous law), the Western Component (Roman-Dutch fused
with English law), and the Universal Component (natural-law theory and human-rights
constitutionalism). Because our law is found across fragmented sources — the Constitution,
legislation, judicial precedent, common law, and indigenous law — judges must 'mould' these
sources to serve justice and good sense.


Cornell Note Synthesis: Historical Methodology
Cues / Keywords Notes / Definitions
External History Traces political, economic, sociological and religious factors
contributing to a legal system's development.

Internal History Covers the origins and development of legal rules and
principles under the influence of external events.

Legal Pluralism A factual situation where two or more systems of law apply
within a single territory.

Hybrid/Mixed System A system built on different legal traditions; SA law combines
Civil Law (Roman), English Common Law, and African
traditions.

Reception The willing absorption of a legal system by a community that
already has an existing legal system.

Transplantation The introduction of a legal system into a territory that has no
existing legal system.

Imposition Forcing a legal system onto a territory with an existing system
against the wishes of the inhabitants.

Scientific Reception Reception of the structure, categories, or principles of a
system (e.g. the public/private law distinction).



💡 THE "SO WHAT?" LAYER: THE FALLACY OF TRANSPLANTATION
Roman-Dutch law was NOT transplanted in 1652 — the Cape was not a legal vacuum. The
Khoi and San had established legal systems. This makes it an IMPOSITION, not
transplantation. Recognising this is vital for understanding the historic marginalisation of
indigenous law and its current constitutional elevation.

The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers case confirms: there is only ONE system of law, shaped
by the Constitution. All law — common law and indigenous law — derives its force from the
Constitution.


🎯 EXAM TOOLKIT

, ⚠ EXAM TIP: Distinguish the TWO meanings of 'Common Law' — (1) the English tradition;
and (2) SA's Roman-Dutch/English hybrid. Also distinguish 'Customary Law' (long-standing
usages) from 'Indigenous Law' (the official African law recognised by the Constitution).
PREDICTION Q 1: The First British Occupation occurred in 1795. Which century? → (b) 18th
century.
PREDICTION Q 2: Explain the relationship between the Constitution and the Common Law
per Pharmaceutical Manufacturers. → All law derives its force from the Constitution.
PREDICTION Q 3: Why is 'transplantation' incorrect regarding Dutch arrival at the Cape? →
The Khoi and San already had legal systems, making it an imposition.


Connective Tissue: While Unit 1 defines the mechanisms of legal change, Unit 2 explores the
specific history of the African component.



LEARNING UNIT 2: The African Component and Islamic Law
This unit evaluates the strategic shift from colonial suppression of indigenous law to its
constitutional elevation under Section 211(3) as a primary source of law. Indigenous law is no
longer a footnote — it is a foundational pillar.


Cornell Note Synthesis: The African Perspective
Cues / Keywords Notes / Definitions
Pre-literate History History of societies without writing, preserved via oral traditions
(songs, legends, epic poems).

Interdisciplinary Approach Reconstructing history using ethnography and archaeology to
substantiate oral accounts.

Black Administration Act 1927 Created a separate, state-controlled court system for Black
South Africans, distorting indigenous law.

Repugnancy Clause Indigenous law only applied if not 'contrary to public policy' —
a colonial tool of suppression.

Traditional Courts Bill Modern attempts to regulate indigenous courts; the 2017 draft
faces controversy re: women's and children's rights.

Islamic Law A religious system dominant in Africa. Not an official SA source
of law, but protected via case law and the Constitution.

Section 211(3) Courts must apply customary law when applicable, subject to
the Constitution.



Case Law Focus: Muslim Marriages
Case Significance
Ismail v Ismail Historically labelled Muslim marriages 'immoral'
and 'against public policy' due to polygynous
nature.

Ryland v Edros Shifted focus to dignity, equality, and diversity
— a constitutional recalibration.

, Hassam v Jacobs Landmark: granted inheritance rights to widows
in polygynous Muslim marriages under the
Intestate Succession Act. Retrospective to 27
April 1994.

Daniels v Campbell Recognised monogamous Muslim spouses'
inheritance rights.

Bhe v Magistrate Khayelitsha (2005) Struck down male primogeniture as
discriminatory → resulted in Reform of
Customary Law of Succession Act 11 of 2009.



💡 THE "SO WHAT?" LAYER: THE DEATH OF THE REPUGNANCY CLAUSE
The 'Repugnancy Clause' (1927 Act, 1988 Amendment) allowed indigenous law to apply only
if not 'contrary to public policy.' This was a colonial 'civilising' tool. Section 211(3) of the
Constitution has fundamentally reversed this hierarchy: Indigenous law is now a PRIMARY
source of law, subject only to the Constitution.


🎯 EXAM TOOLKIT
⚠ EXAM TIP: KNOW YOUR DATES. The Hassam decision has retrospective effect to 27
April 1994 for estates not yet finally wound up.
PAST PAPER: Activity 2.2 (intestate succession in polygynous marriages): (1) Is the
marriage monogamous or polygynous? (2) Apply Daniels for monogamous; (3) Apply
Hassam for polygynous; (4) Check if estate was wound up before/after Hassam (2009).
PREDICTION Q (10 marks): Discuss the role of oral traditions in reconstructing the legal
history of Bantu speakers. → Define oral traditions → pre-literate nature → interdisciplinary
approach → critical analysis of multiple accounts → 'living' nature of oral law.


Connective Tissue: As the African component gained recognition, the Western component was also
evolving from its ancient Roman roots.



LEARNING UNIT 3: The Western Component – Roman Legal History until
the 11th Century
Roman law remains a 'virile living system.' In Hendricks v Hendricks and Paulsen v Slip Knot, courts
relied on 1,500-year-old principles from Justinian's Institutes, proving Roman law is not merely
museum history — it is active precedent.


Cornell Note Synthesis: The Roman Eras
Political Era Legal Era Key Features
Monarchy (753–509 BC) Early Roman Law Law and religion intertwined;
ius civile for citizens only.

Republic (509–27 BC) Pre-classical Expansion; Twelve Tables
(450 BC) created legal
certainty.

Principate (27 BC–AD 284) Classical Peak of legal science; the Five
Great Jurists emerge.

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