Assignment 1
Unique No: 689451
Semester 2 2025
Due 28 August 2025
,LPL4802
Assignment 1
Semester 2 2025
Unique No: 689451
DUE 28 August 2025
EXCEPTIONALLY CRAFTED
Survey Note: A Critical Doctrinal and Normative Analysis of Wrongfulness and
Negligence in Mahlangu v Ngubane
Introduction
South African delictual law is premised on the principle that individuals must be held
accountable for harm resulting from conduct that fails to conform to legally sanctioned
standards of care. Two pivotal concepts—wrongfulness and negligence—function as
gatekeepers in determining delictual liability for patrimonial and non-patrimonial loss.
Though analytically distinct, they often intersect, particularly in the context of
omissions, where the legal system is confronted with the question of whether a failure
to act constitutes unlawful conduct.
This survey note undertakes a critical analysis of these twin concepts through the lens
of the hypothetical case Mahlangu v Ngubane, which implicates an omission in the
management of fire hazards. Using the case as a doctrinal springboard, the note
evaluates the existence and breach of a legal duty, the foreseeability of harm, and the
standard of reasonable precautions. It also interrogates the interplay between legal
theory, constitutional imperatives, and policy-driven adjudication in South African delict
law.
, 1. Wrongfulness: The Normative Gatekeeper in Omission Liability
1.1 Conceptual Foundations of Wrongfulness
Wrongfulness, or unlawfulness, refers to conduct that violates a legally protected
interest in a manner that is considered unacceptable by the legal convictions of society
(boni mores). This assessment is normative rather than descriptive, and focuses on
whether the legal system considers it fair and just to impose liability in the
circumstances. In omission cases, this assessment becomes more complex because
liability is not presumed; it arises only where a legal duty to act exists.
Wrongfulness is therefore a threshold requirement in omission-based claims. As
articulated in Minister van Polisie v Ewels 1975 (3) SA 590 (A), an omission is wrongful
when the circumstances are such that the legal convictions of the community—now
interpreted through the prism of constitutional values—dictate that the actor had a duty
to prevent harm.
1.2 Sources of the Legal Duty to Act
The existence of a legal duty to act in omission cases may derive from several
interrelated sources:
• Statute or regulation, including municipal by-laws governing fire safety,
environmental management, and land use.
• Common law duties based on special relationships, such as landowners toward
neighbors or employers toward employees.
• Creation or control of risk, where an actor initiates a dangerous condition or
has the capacity to avert harm.
• Public policy, especially where failure to act jeopardizes public safety or
constitutional rights.