IOS2601
ASSIGNMENT 1 SEMESTER 2 2025
UNIQUE NO.
DUE DATE: AUGUST 2025
, (a) Facts of the Jaga case (6 marks)
The appellant, Jaga, was an Indian citizen who entered the Union of South Africa
illegally and was arrested under the Asiatic Land Tenure and Indian Representation
Act 28 of 1946. He was convicted in a magistrate’s court and sentenced to
imprisonment. After serving his sentence, he was detained for deportation in terms of
section 21 of the Act, which allowed the Minister of the Interior to order the deportation
of prohibited persons.
Jaga challenged his detention and deportation order on the basis that it was unlawful.
He argued that section 21 of the Act only applied to persons who were in South Africa
illegally at the time of the commencement of the Act, and not to people who entered the
country illegally after the Act came into operation. The legal issue therefore concerned
the interpretation of section 21 of the statute and whether it applied retrospectively or
prospectively.
(b) The dominant interpretive approach before 1994 as followed by the majority in
Jaga v Dönges 1950 (4) SA 653 (A) (14 marks)
Before 1994, South African courts largely applied the literal (or text-based) approach
to statutory interpretation.
1. Literal approach defined
The literal approach required judges to stick to the ordinary, grammatical
meaning of the words in a statute.
Courts would not look beyond the text unless there was an ambiguity.
This method was based on the assumption that Parliament’s intention is fully
captured in the words it uses.
ASSIGNMENT 1 SEMESTER 2 2025
UNIQUE NO.
DUE DATE: AUGUST 2025
, (a) Facts of the Jaga case (6 marks)
The appellant, Jaga, was an Indian citizen who entered the Union of South Africa
illegally and was arrested under the Asiatic Land Tenure and Indian Representation
Act 28 of 1946. He was convicted in a magistrate’s court and sentenced to
imprisonment. After serving his sentence, he was detained for deportation in terms of
section 21 of the Act, which allowed the Minister of the Interior to order the deportation
of prohibited persons.
Jaga challenged his detention and deportation order on the basis that it was unlawful.
He argued that section 21 of the Act only applied to persons who were in South Africa
illegally at the time of the commencement of the Act, and not to people who entered the
country illegally after the Act came into operation. The legal issue therefore concerned
the interpretation of section 21 of the statute and whether it applied retrospectively or
prospectively.
(b) The dominant interpretive approach before 1994 as followed by the majority in
Jaga v Dönges 1950 (4) SA 653 (A) (14 marks)
Before 1994, South African courts largely applied the literal (or text-based) approach
to statutory interpretation.
1. Literal approach defined
The literal approach required judges to stick to the ordinary, grammatical
meaning of the words in a statute.
Courts would not look beyond the text unless there was an ambiguity.
This method was based on the assumption that Parliament’s intention is fully
captured in the words it uses.