Case No: 531/2015 in The Matter Between
Case No: 531/2015 in The Matter Between
Case No: 531/2015 in The Matter Between
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 531/2015
In the matter between:
THE MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES FIRST APPELLANT
THE MINISTER OF HEALTH SECOND APPELLANT
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS THIRD APPELLANT
THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS COUNCIL
OF SOUTH AFRICA FOURTH APPELLANT
and
ESTATE LATE ROBERT JAMES
STRANSHAM-FORD RESPONDENT
and
DOCTORS FOR LIFE
INTERNATIONAL NPC FIRST AMICUS CURIAE
DONRICH WILLEM JORDAAN SECOND AMICUS CURIAE
CAUSE FOR JUSTICE THIRD AMICUS CURIAE
CENTRE FOR APPLIED
LEGAL STUDIES FOURTH AMICUS CURIAE
JUSTICE ALLIANCE OF
SOUTH AFRICA FIFTH AMICUS CURIAE
2
ORDER
JUDGMENT
1
The quotation is frequently attributed to Aeschylus Agamemnon but it does not appear there. More
prosaically Benjamin Franklin wrote to Jean Baptiste Le Roy in 1789 and said: „But in this world
nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.‟ There are similar earlier statements.
4
correct to say that „death may be the greatest of all human blessings‟,2 or
that Dylan Thomas was right to urge us, when faced with death, to „rage,
rage against the dying of the light‟,3 is a matter of personal philosophy
and morality on which views diverge and always will. The law injects
itself into this debate largely as a result of the enormous strides modern
medicine has made in its ability to prolong life and postpone death. This
has changed our understanding of death itself. It can no longer be viewed
as simply the cessation of the heart beating and the lungs breathing,
because these can be maintained artificially, so the medical profession
now asks whether the brainstem is dead in the sense of showing no
activity.4 Welcome though these advances of medical science are in most
circumstances, in some they can lead to the process of dying being
protracted, painful and burdensome.
2
As quoted in Plato‟s Apology 29a.
3
Dylan Thomas 1914 – 1953 Do not go gentle into that good night.
4
This is of course the language of the layman. In S v Williams 1986 (4) SA 1188 (A) at 1194D-H this
court expressly refrained from deciding whether the traditional view that cessation of heart beat and
breathing or the medical view of brain death was the correct position in law.
5
5
They are reported as Stransham-Ford v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
[2015] ZAGPPHC 230; 2015 (4) SA 50 (GP).
7
[5] The appeal must succeed and the order granted by Fabricius J must
be set aside for three inter-related reasons. Firstly, Mr Stransham-Ford
had died on the morning of 30 April 2015 two hours before an order was
made.6 As a result his cause of action ceased to exist and no order should
have been made thereon. His death did not result in a claim passing to his
estate and the estate had no interest in further pursuing this litigation or
any locus standi to do so. Secondly, there was no full and proper
examination of the present state of our law in this difficult area, in the
light of authority, both local and international, and the constitutional
injunctions in relation to the interpretation of the Bill of Rights and the
development of the common law.7 Thirdly, the order was made on an
incorrect and restricted factual basis, without complying with the
Uniform Rules of Court and without affording all interested parties a
proper opportunity to be heard. Viewed overall, the circumstances of the
case were such that it was inappropriate for the court below to engage in a
reconsideration of the common law in relation to the crimes of murder
and culpable homicide.
6
In para 3 of his reasons Fabricius J recorded, slightly inaccurately, that Mr Stransham-Ford died on
the day that he made his order. A more accurate statement would have been that he died before any
order was given.
7
Mighty Solutions t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd and Another [2015] ZACC 34;
2016 (1) SA 621 (CC) (Mighty Solutions) para 39.
8
8
This summary of Mr Stransham-Ford‟s condition is taken from the founding affidavit read in the light
of Dr Bruce‟s clinical notes and explanations of those notes.
9
The practice in the High Court in Pretoria is that urgent applications are dealt with in a separate court
on a separate roll commencing on Tuesday in each week.
9
10
Junior counsel, Mr van Nieuwenhuizen, was a member of the executive committee of this
organisation.
10
11
Rules 16A (1)(a) and (b) provide that:
„(1)(a) Any person raising a constitutional issue in an application or action shall give notice thereof to
the registrar at the time of filing the relevant affidavit or pleading.
(b) Such notice shall contain a clear and succinct description of the constitutional issue concerned.‟
11
[17] Be that as it may, we were informed from the bar that none of Mr
Stransham-Ford‟s legal team was aware of the fact of his death until after
the order was granted. Had they been aware, they would have been under
a professional duty to bring that fact to the attention of the judge. In turn,
he would have been obliged to call for submissions from the parties as to
the proper course to follow. Instead, on the following Tuesday, before he
delivered his reasons, his attention was drawn to what had occurred and
he was requested by the HPCSA to recall his order. Junior counsel who
had appeared on behalf of Mr Stransham-Ford opposed this. Although
this is not mentioned in the written reasons, Fabricius J refused to recall
the order on the grounds that his judgment had broader societal
implications. 12 It would have been preferable had he heeded the warning
of Learned Hand J when he said:
12
We were informed of this from the bar by counsel who had made the application and counsel for the
Estate did not challenge his statement.
15
13
Learned Hand J in Spectator Motor Service Inc v Walsh 139 F 2d 809 at 823 (1944).
14
The authorities show that there is a close correlation between the non-transmissibility of those claims
on death and an inability to cede them during life.
16
15
Executors of Meyer v Gericke (1880) Foord 14; Hoffa NO v S A Mutual Fire & General Insurance
Co Ltd 1965 (2) SA 944 (C) at 952F; Government of the Republic of South Africa v Ngubane 1972 (2)
SA 601 (A) (Ngubane) at 606G-H.
16
Pienaar and Marais v Pretoria Printing Works Ltd and Others 1906 TS 654 at 656, followed in
Jankowiak and Another v Parity Insurance Co Ltd 1963 (2) SA 286 (W) at 289E-H and Ngubane at
607H. The appeals against orders dismissing exceptions in South African Associated Newspapers Ltd
and Another v Estate Pelser 1975 (4) SA 797 (A) and Argus Printing and Publishing Co Ltd and
Others v Esselen’s Estate 1994 (2) SA 1 (A) were presumably brought to free the appellants of the
burden of costs orders made against them that would have been transmitted to the estates.
17
Willenburg v Willenburg and Another (1908) 25 SC 775 at 777.
18
Any questions of costs would, if necessary, be dealt with separately.
17
and no claim to pass to his estate. As there was no longer a claim before
it, there was nothing left on which the court could pronounce.
[21] I have given consideration to whether the fact that the arguments
advanced on behalf of Mr Stransham-Ford engaged constitutional issues
detracts from these principles. In my view they do not. Constitutional
issues, as much as issues in any other litigation, only arise for decision
where, on the facts of a particular case, it is necessary to decide the
constitutional issue. Dealing with the situation where events subsequent
to the commencement of litigation resulted in there no longer being an
issue for determination, Ackermann J said in National Coalition for Gay
and Lesbian Equality & others v Minister of Home Affairs & others:19
„A case is moot and therefore not justiciable if it no longer presents an existing or live
controversy which should exist if the Court is to avoid giving advisory opinions on
abstract propositions of law.‟
At the time that Fabricius J delivered his judgment there was no longer an
existing controversy for him to pronounce upon. The case was no longer
justiciable.
[22] Since the advent of an enforceable Bill of Rights, many test cases
have been brought with a view to establishing some broader principle.
But none have been brought in circumstances where the cause of action
advanced had been extinguished before judgment at first instance. There
have been cases in which, after judgment at first instance, circumstances
have altered so that the judgment has become moot. There the
Constitutional Court has reserved to itself a discretion, if it is in the
interests of justice to do so, to consider and determine matters even
19
National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
2000 (2) SA 1 (CC) at footnote 18.
18
[23] The common feature of the cases, where the Constitutional Court
has heard matters notwithstanding the fact that the case no longer
presented a live issue, was that the order had a practical impact on the
future conduct of one or both of the parties to the litigation. In IEC v
Langeberg Municipality, while the relevant election had been held, the
judgment would affect the manner in which the IEC conducted elections
in the future. In Pillay the court granted a narrow declaratory order that
significantly reduced the impact on the school of the order made in the
court below. In Pheko, while the interdictory relief that had been sought
had become academic, a decision on the merits would affect its claim for
restitutionary relief.
[24] This case presents an entirely different picture. Relief was sought
specifically tailored to Mr Stransham-Ford‟s circumstances. The order
expressly applied only to any doctor who provided him with assistance to
terminate his life. The caveat in para 4 of the order left the common law
crimes of murder and culpable homicide unaltered. No public purpose
was served by the grant of the order. In any event, I do not accept that it
20
See Independent Electoral Commission v Langeberg Municipality 2001 (3) SA 925 (CC) (IEC v
Langeberg) para 11; MEC for Education, KwaZulu Natal & others v Pillay 2008 (1) SA 474 (CC)
(Pillay) para 32; Pheko & others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality [2011] ZACC 34; 2012 (2)
SA 598 (CC) (Pheko) para 32. This court has a similar jurisdiction in terms of s 16(2)(a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.
21
IEC v Langeberg Municipality ibid.
19
[25] The situation before Fabricius J was not comparable to the position
where this court or the Constitutional Court decides to hear a case
notwithstanding that it has become moot. When a court of appeal
addresses issues that were properly determined by a first instance court,
and determines them afresh because they raise issues of public
importance, it is always mindful that otherwise under our system of
precedent the judgment at first instance will affect the conduct of officials
and influence other courts when confronting similar issues. A feature of
all the cases referred to in the footnotes to para 22 above is that the appeal
court either overruled the judgment in the court below or substantially
modified it. The appeal court‟s jurisdiction was exercised because „a
discrete legal issue of public importance arose that would affect matters
22
United States v Samuels 808 F. 2d. 1298, 1301 (8th Cir. 1987) cited by the Supreme Court in
Greenlaw v United States 128 S Ct 2559 (2008). See Fischer and Another v Ramahlele and Another
[2014] ZASCA 88; 2014 (4) SA 614 (SCA) paras 13 and 14.
20
in the future and on which the adjudication of this court was required‟. 23
The High Court is not vested with similar powers. Its function is to
determine cases that present live issues for determination.
[27] For those reasons alone therefore the order made by Fabricius J
must be set aside. But that leaves the dilemma that it is a reasoned and
reported judgment by the high court and if this court does not at least to
some extent, address the merits it may be taken as having some
precedential effect. That is of particular concern in the present case, as it
has already been treated as reflecting the South African legal position by
a court in New Zealand.24 This compels us to deal with the merits insofar
23
Qoboshiyane NO and Others v Avusa Publishing Eastern Cape (Pty) Ltd and Others [2012] ZASCA
166; 2013 (3) SA 315 (SCA) para 5.
24
Seales v Attorney-General [2015] NZHC 1239 para 66.
21
25
Director of Public Prosecutions, Transvaal v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and
Others [2009] ZACC 8; 2009 (4) SA 222 (CC) paras 63-66.
22
analysis of the relevant law in this area. Two of the cited cases did not
deal with either voluntary euthanasia or assisted suicide and the third,
which dealt with encouraging and facilitating suicide, was concerned with
a domestic situation far removed from the matters with which we are
concerned. A brief exposition of the current state of our law in this area is
called for.
[31] A person may refuse treatment that would otherwise prolong life.
This is an aspect of personal autonomy that is constitutionally protected
and would not ordinarily be regarded as suicide. Medical treatment
without the patient‟s consent is regarded as an assault so that the patient
is always entitled to refuse medical treatment. 27 In refusing treatment the
26
R v Peverett 1940 AD 213 (Peverett).
27
Stoffberg v Elliott 1923 CPD 148 at 149-150. For a clear instance from a foreign jurisdiction see
Nancy B v Hôtel-Dieu de Québec (1992) 86 DLR (4th) 385, where a 25 year old young woman
suffering from Guillain-Barré syndrome and only able to breathe with a respirator instructed the
hospital where she was being treated to remove the ventilator. For a damages award, where a patient‟s
refusal of treatment (a blood transfusion on the grounds of her religious beliefs) was overridden by a
doctor, see Malette v Shulman (1990) 72 O.R. (2d) 417; 67 DLR (4th) 321 (CA). In Schloendorff v
Society of the New York Hospital (1914) 105 NE 92 at 93, Cardozo J said:
„Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his
own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without his patient‟s consent commits an assault
…‟
23
See generally A Hockton The Law of Consent to Medical Treatment (1999) Chapters 2 and 3.
28
Re Conroy 486 A.2d 1209 (N.J.S.C. 1985) at 1224. The distinction is possibly a fine one, but it is
hard to see why the refusal of continued treatment is distinguishable from the refusal of treatment in the
first place. It is a different matter whether the disconnection of the ventilator is a cause of death. From
the perspective of the criminal law it will be so, but the question then will be whether it was unlawful.
Auckland Area Health Board v Attorney-General [1993] 1 NZLR 235 (HC) (Auckland Area Health
Board) at 248 line 23 – 249 line 38. This court in S v Williams supra fn 4 held that the act of switching
off a ventilator did not interrupt the chain of causation between the criminal act of shooting the
deceased and her death.
29
This is what Mr Nicklinson, the initial claimant in R (on the application of Nicklinson and others) v
Ministry of Justice (Nicklinson) [2014] UKSC 38; [2014] 3 All ER 843 (SC), did. See para 6 of the
judgment of Lord Neuberger P. Refusing artificial food and hydration comes closer to suicide than the
refusal of treatment.
30
I leave aside for consideration when it arises the case of a patient who expresses their wishes while
competent to do so and perhaps in advance of any need therefor by way of a living will or similar
document or expression of wishes, but is incapable at the time the need to consider treatment arises to
express their decision. There is however much to be said for the position that any such prior
24
these that courts may be called upon, usually by family members or the
medical authorities, to make decisions as to the legitimacy of the
withdrawal of medical treatment or artificial nutrition and hydration. That
is what occurred in South Africa in Clarke v Hurst NO,31 in the United
Kingdom in Bland,32 and in the United States in Cruzan33 and Quinlan.34
In each of these cases the patient was in a persistent vegetative state and
the court authorised the cessation of artificial means of keeping them
alive, including the removal of artificial nutrition and hydration. In New
Zealand, in Auckland Area Health Board,35 the patient, Mr L, suffered
from an extreme form of Guillain-Barré syndrome that left him with
some brain function, but no connection between his brain and the rest of
his body, so that he was wholly dependent on an artificial respirator to
breathe and unaware of his surroundings, although not clinically brain
dead. The court issued a declaratory order that the removal of artificial
ventilatory support would not contravene the relevant provisions of the
Crimes Act and would not constitute culpable homicide. The
justifications advanced by different courts for making such orders vary
from jurisdiction to jurisdiction and range from a concept of substituted
consent to the best interests of the patient, but it is unnecessary to
examine that in greater detail now.
instructions clearly expressed should be heeded. It appears to be accepted in the United Kingdom.
Airedale NHS Trust v Bland 1993 AC 789 (HL) (Bland) at 857D-E per Lord Keith; at 864F per Lord
Goff of Chieveley and in a number of other jurisdictions, especially in the United States of America.
See the discussion in the South African Law Commission Report (Project 86) „Euthanasia and the
Artificial Preservation of Life‟ Chapter 5, paras 5.4 to 5.96.
31
Clarke v Hurst NO and Others 1992 (4) SA 630 (D).
32
Bland supra fn 29.
33
Cruzan v Director, Missouri Department of Health 497 U.S 261; (1990) 110 S Ct 2841.
34
In the Matter of Karen Quinlan 355 A 2d 647 70 N.J. 10 (1976)
35
Auckland Area Health Board v Attorney-General supra, fn 27. Although the judge described the
patient as suffering from „locked in‟ syndrome his situation appears to have been significantly different
from that of Mr Nicklinson, who was aware of his surroundings.
25
[35] It is apparent from this necessarily brief summary that, within the
current relatively certain framework of the law, there are many steps
available to both individuals facing the type of intolerable situation
described above and to the medical practitioners responsible for their care
36
Supra at 656H-I.
37
R v Adams 1957 Crim LR 365. See also Nicklinson supra fn 28, para 255(4) per Lord Sumption.
26
38
S v Hartman 1975 (3) SA 532 (C).
39
S v De Bellocq 1975 (3) SA 538 (T) at 539D.
27
[37] Mrs de Bellocq‟s situation was equally tragic. She and her husband
were in South Africa temporarily, had been but recently married and she
was expecting their first child. The baby was born prematurely and after a
short period was found to have toxoplasmosis, which had left it severely
disabled, unable to receive nourishment, other than through a naso-gastric
tube, and grievously mentally handicapped. Its prognosis was poor. A
few weeks after she took the child home, whilst herself suffering from
post-natal depression, she decided on the spur of the moment to drown
her child while bathing it. As was the case in Hartmann the contention
that this was culpable homicide was rejected and she was convicted of
murder. She was discharged on her own recognizance that she would
come up for sentence six months later, at which time it was anticipated
that she and her husband would be about to return home.
[38] Neither of these cases, nor Marengo,40 which was also cited by
Fabricius J, had anything to do with either assisted suicide (PAS) or
active voluntary euthanasia (PAE). They were all cases of euthanasia of
the kind usually referred to as „mercy killing‟.41 They did not involve
suicide and in none of them had the person who died asked to have their
life ended. They are only relevant in identifying the issue arising from
PAE, which is whether the consent of the patient makes any difference to
40
S v Marengo 1991 (2) SACR 43 (W) at 47A-B, where the accused shot her father who was dying of
cancer and declining mentally. As with the other cases she was convicted of murder, but no custodial
sentence was imposed. See also S v Smorenburg 1992 (2) SACR 389 (C), which involved the attempt
by a nursing sister on compassionate grounds to end the lives of two patients by the injection of insulin.
41
Poignantly depicted in the recent film ‘Amour’.
28
42
S v Robinson and Others 1968 (1) SA 666 (A) at 674F-G. See also S v Nkwanyana 2003 (1) SA 303
(W).
43
Peverett supra fn 25.
29
crime, but nonetheless the conviction would stand. 44 While I have dealt
with the problem as if the only person who could be in this situation
would be a medical practitioner administering the lethal dose, I can see
no reason for distinguishing their situation from that of a family member
or friend who did the same.
[41] The critical question posed by this aspect of the relief sought by Mr
Stransham-Ford, was therefore whether the law in regard to consent as a
defence to a charge of murder should be changed. It involved a challenge
to the principle laid down in Peverett, and repeated in Robinson, but
neither the principle, nor these cases, was addressed by the high court. If
the common law were to be developed, a topic to which I turn below, this
needed to be confronted squarely and the scope and ambit of the requisite
exception to, or departure from, existing principle had to be defined.
Regard needed to be had to the fact that there are only four countries in
the world that permit PAE. All I would say at this stage is that, as there
was no attempt by either the parties or the court below to identify this as
an issue calling for consideration, it was not given full and proper
consideration by the court below. An order making such a profound
change to our law of murder, without any consideration of applicable
principles, should not have been made and it must now be set aside.
Furthermore, on the facts of the matter, the question did not arise. No
doctors came forward to say that they were willing to administer a lethal
substance to Mr Stransham-Ford or to say that they thought that
44
The fact that the act was one of compassion by the medical practitioner undertaken at the specific
request of the patient with a view to putting an end to a situation the patient regarded as intolerable,
would undoubtedly amount to substantial and compelling circumstances warranting a departure from
the minimum sentence for murder prescribed by law. See s 51(2)(a)(i) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997. In Robinson supra fn 41 the fact that the deceased had arranged and
consented to his own death was held to constitute extenuating circumstances justifying the imposition
of a sentence other than death. Where a medical practitioner acted at the patient‟s request by
administering a lethal agent the circumstances justifying a far lesser sentence would be substantial.
30
45
Ex parte Die Minister van Justisie: In re S v Grotjohn 1970 (2) SA 355 (A) (Grotjohn).
31
[45] Mr Grotjohn was acquitted of his wife‟s murder on the ground that
her death had been occasioned by her own independent act in committing
suicide and that this broke the chain of causation between any action on
his part and her death. In reaching that conclusion the trial court relied on
an earlier, somewhat different case, involving a failed suicide pact.47
There, the wife of a married man engaged in an affair confronted him
over the affair. After he broke the news to his girlfriend, they discussed
the impossibility of their situation and decided to commit suicide
46
The original words were spoken in Afrikaans and were „Skiet jouself dan as jy wil want jy is „n las.‟.
(At 359A.)
47
S v Gordon 1962 (4) SA 727 (N).
32
[47] The judgment dealt at length with the question whether suicide or
attempted suicide was a crime and concluded that they were not. It then
said that this did not mean that the first question posed to the court had to
be answered in the negative. A person who encouraged, provided the
means for or assisted a suicide to commit suicide was concerned with the
life of that person and their criminal liability had to be determined in
accordance with the ordinary principles of our criminal law. In both
Grotjohn and Gordon the actions of the accused had formed part of the
factual complex leading up to the death of the deceased. The trial courts
had proceeded on the footing that the independent actions of the deceased
had interrupted the causal chain between the accused‟s actions and the
48
In Grotjohn at 359D. He had been urged to do so in a note by J H Hugo „To Kill a Mocking Bird –
Murder or Suicide?’ (1969) 86 SALJ at 148.
33
[48] Steyn CJ went on to explain that the fact that the immediate cause
of the suicide‟s death is the act of suicide, does not necessarily interrupt
the chain of causation between the conduct of the accused person and that
person‟s death, so as to free the accused from criminal liability. In other
words, not every subsequent event that leads to a particular consequence
is to be viewed as a novus actus interveniens (an intervening cause). To
have that effect the intervening cause must be a completely independent
action („n volkome onafhanklike handeling‟) in the sense of being
separate from and unconnected to the earlier conduct.
49
Grotjohn at 363H. The original passage reads:
„Ek sou egter nie 'n algemene stelling dat die laaste “vrywillige en selfstandige” handeling van die
selfmoordenaar altyd op vryspraak van die beskuldigde moet uitloop, sonder voorbehoud ten aansien
van die selfstandigheid van die handeling wil onderskryf nie.‟
50
Grotjohn at 364B-H. The original passage reads:
„Waar die ander se handeling … „n berekende deel is van die oorsaaklikheidsreeks wat die dader aan
die gang gesit het, 'n gebeurlikheid wat hy voorsien as 'n moontlikheid en wil aanwend om sy doel te
bereik, of as iets waarop hy staat kan maak om die beoogde gevolg teweeg te bring, sou opset ook nie
ontbreek nie, en sou dit strydig met erkende regsbeginsels en met alle regsgevoel wees om hom agter
die ander se handeling as later toetredende oorsaak te laat skuil. Dat dit nie 'n misdadige handeling is
nie, kan hieraan geen verskil maak nie. So ook, meen ek, lê dit by selfmoord voor die hand dat die
oorledene se laaste handeling, hoewel dit 'n eie, selfstandige handeling mag wees en die onmiddellike
oorsaak van die dood, nie noodwendig 'n volkome onafhanklike handeling in bogenoemde sin hoef te
wees nie, en dat die nie-misdadigheid daarvan weinig ter sake is by die vraag na die oorsaaklikheid van
die optrede of gedrag van die persoon wat die selfmoordenaar aanmoedig, help of in staat stel om
selfmoord te pleeg. Dit is geredelik denkbaar dat bedoelde optrede of gedrag 'n onmiddellik
34
„Where the [deceased‟s] act formed a calculated part of the chain of events that the
[accused] set in train, an event that he foresaw as a possibility and desired to bring
about in order to achieve his goal, or was something on which he could rely to bring
about the desired result, intention would also not be lacking, and it would be contrary
to accepted legal principles and every sense of justice to permit [the accused] to
shelter behind the [deceased‟s] act as a subsequent intervening act. That it [suicide] is
not a crime does not make a difference. So too, I consider that it is obvious that the
suicide‟s final act, although it may be his own independent act and the immediate
cause of his death, is not necessarily a completely independent act in the
abovementioned sense, and that its non-criminality is rarely relevant to the causative
impact of the actions or conduct of the person who encouraged, helped or enabled the
deceased to commit suicide. It is reasonably conceivable that the intended action or
conduct [by the accused] may be an immediate contributory cause of the final deed.
Someone, for example, who provides another with the means whereby he wishes to
commit an act, contributes to the act and its outcome, and the employment of the
means and its consequences would justifiably be seen as the direct result of the
provision of the means. The conclusion can hardly be avoided that he who provides
the desired or necessary means for an intended suicide, has a causative role therein if
suicide is committed; and if he does that willingly and knowingly, with the requisite
intention of putting an end to the life of the person who wishes to commit suicide, he is
guilty of murder even though the final act is performed by the non-criminal hand of
the deceased, because he [the accused] has then unlawfully and intentionally
complicit in ending the life of another. If the act is not completed then he is likewise
guilty of attempted murder.‟ (My translation and emphasis. The insertions are made
for the sake of clarity.)
aanleidende oorsaak vir die laaste daad kan wees. Iemand, bv. wat 'n ander die middel in die hand gee
waarmee hy „n daad wil pleeg, dra by tot die daad en sy gevolg, en die aanwending van die middels
met die gevolg daarvan sou tereg as die direkte uitvloeisel van die oorhandiging beskou kan word. Die
gevolgtrekking kan kwalik vermy word dat hy wat die gesogte of nodige middel vir ‘n voorgenome
selfmoord verskaf, 'n oorsaaklike deel daaraan het as dit uitgevoer word; en as hy dit willens en wetens
doen met die vereiste opset dat 'n end gemaak word aan die lewe van die persoon wat selfmoord wil
pleeg, dan is hy skuldig aan moord, al geskied die laaste daad deur die nie-misdadige hand van die
selfmoordenaar, want dan is hy wederregtelik en opsetlik aandadig daaraan dat ń ander se lewe
beëindig is. Word die daad nie voltooi nie, kan hy insgelyks skuldig wees aan poging tot moord.‟ (My
translation and emphasis.)
35
[50] Steyn CJ found support for this in Peverett. This was another case
of a failed suicide pact, but in that instance neither party died. They sat in
a car and the accused led a pipe into the interior and tried to seal it so that
exhaust gases would fill the car and kill them both. For reasons that are
unexplained, while they both lost consciousness and the woman nearly
died, they were rescued and survived. He was convicted of her attempted
murder and sentenced to pay a fine of £30. The conviction was upheld on
appeal. In that case, unlike Gordon where each participant consumed
their own pills, there was no intervening action by his lover. She simply
acquiesced in his actions and made no attempt to get out of the car. So it
was his actions that constituted the actus reus, there was no intervening
cause or event, and a clear intention to bring about her death. Some
commentators regard that as providing a distinction, while others regard
the distinction as spurious.51 However, both are different cases from that
of a person who provides the means to commit suicide, but neither
encourages nor performs any direct role in the act of suicide, and may
seek to discourage it.
51
J R L Milton South African Criminal Law and Procedure Vol 2, 3ed (1996) at 355. For the contrary
view see the passage from In Re Joseph G, 667 P. 2d 1176 (SC California 1983) at 1183 cited by J M T
Labuschagne „Strafregtelike Aanspreeklikheid van die Oorlewende van „n Selfdodingspakt‟ (1995) 112
SALJ 16 at 20.
52
The original passage at 365F-G reads:
36
[53] This court was extremely careful in Grotjohn to say no more than
that it was not an automatic conclusion from the fact that the final act in
the chain of events was that of the suicide, that a person who encouraged,
provided the means or assisted the suicide in that act, would commit no
crime. It recognised the possibility that they might be guilty of murder if
their actions were performed with criminal intent and there was no break
in the chain of causation between their actions and the ultimate death of
the suicide, or culpable homicide if their actions were merely negligent.
Every case was to be decided in accordance with basic principles and on
its own peculiar facts. That much is apparent from the final answers given
to the questions posed to this court, which were: 54
„Met betrekking tot aanmoediging en hulp, geld ooreenstemmende oorwegings. Ook die aanmoediger
of helper sou, na gelang van die omstandighede van die besondere geval, aan moord of poging tot
moord skuldig kan wees.
By die gevalle onder oorweging kan ook die moontlikheid van strafbare manslag nie uitgesluit word
nie. Ook dit sal natuurlik volgens die toepaslike regsbeginsels beoordeel moet word.‟ (Emphasis mine.)
53
S v Hibbert 1979 (4) SA 717 (D). The sentence was four years imprisonment suspended for five
years.
54
Grotjohn p 365G-H. The original passage reads as follows:
37
„As will appear from the aforegoing the answer to the questions posed is to be found
in the applicable principles of our criminal law. The first question cannot be answered
with a simple “yes” or “no”. Whether a person who encourages, assists or enables
another to commit suicide commits an offence will depend on the facts of the
particular case. With an eye on the cases that gave rise to these questions it is
necessary to place in the foreground that the mere fact that the final act was the
suicide‟s own, independent, non-criminal act, will not without more result in that
person not being guilty of a crime. The answer to the second question depends
entirely on the factual circumstances. After consideration thereof the crime may be
murder, attempted murder or culpable homicide.‟
[54] Steyn CJ was not dealing with the kind of case that is before us. He
said that the correctness of the findings in Gordon and Grotjohn were not
questions that he would enter upon. It is true that certain academic
commentators have viewed the judgment as incompatible with the results
of those cases and suggested that they must be taken to have been
overruled. But that is not a reason for assuming how the judgment is to be
applied in relation to circumstances that not only were not before the
court, but so far as can be discerned from the judgment were not within
its contemplation. The first question posed to the court was not answered
with a simple yes or no. That demonstrates that the court did not decide
that a criminal offence is committed whenever a person encourages, helps
or enables someone to commit suicide or to attempt to do so. Whether
they will depends on the facts of the case and issues of intention (mens
rea), unlawfulness and causation. It follows that it cannot be said that in
„Soos sal blyk uit die voorgaande, is die antwoorde op die gestelde vrae in die toepaslike beginsels van
ons strafreg te vind. Die eerste vraag kan nie met „n eenvoudige “ja” of “nee” beantwoord word nie. Of
„n persoon wat „n ander aanmoedig, help of in staat stel om selfmoord te pleeg, „n misdaad begaan, sal
afhang van die feite van die besondere geval. Met die oog op die gewysdes wat aanleiding tot die vrae
gegee het, is dit egter nodig om op die voorgrond te stel dat die blote feit dat die laaste handeling die
selfmoordenaar se eie, vrywillige, nie-misdadige handeling is, nie sonder meer meebring dat bedoelde
persoon aan geen misdaad skuldig kan wees nie. Die antwoord op die tweede vraag hang eweseer van
die feitlike omstandighede af. Na gelang daarvan kan die misdaad moord, poging tot moord of strafbare
manslag wees.‟
38
the current state of our law PAS is in all circumstances unlawful. The
judge‟s statement to that effect went too far.
[55] A court confronted with a case of PAS would have to consider how
the principles articulated in Grotjohn should be applied and adapted to
the present day. The facts of the particular case of PAS would have to be
considered. The background would be markedly different, given changes
in medical circumstances in the nearly fifty years that have passed since
that judgment was delivered. The court would also have to pay particular
heed to the requirements of s 39(2) of the Constitution, which requires
that in the development of the common law the court must strive to give
effect to the nature purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. Assistance
could profitably be sought from the approach to causation in this type of
situation in other jurisdictions. 55 Whether and to what extent it would
determine that PAS was unlawful is unforeseeable. Only at that stage
would the question arise whether the criminal law involved an
infringement of a right in the Bill of Rights.
[56] Assuming that a matter reached the stage where the court thought
that a development of the common law was required in relation to PAS, it
would then have to decide whether that should take the form of a
different view of causation, or of intention (mens rea), or of unlawfulness.
The possibility of a special defence for medical practitioners or carers
would arise and have to be explored. All of this is absent from the
judgment in the court below and generally speaking from the arguments
presented in this court. There is also a complete absence of evidence on
these issues.
55
R v Kennedy [2007] UKHL 38; [2008] 1 AC 269; [2007] 4 All ER 1083 (HL).
39
Summary
[57] The discussion in paras 36 to 56 above demonstrates that the
authorities did not support the simple proposition on which the court
below based its judgment and on which the arguments before it and in
this court were based.56 Instead the matter was dealt with and has been
argued before us on a hypothesis as to the existing state of the law that is
unjustifiable. It is on that basis that it was argued that the inability of
persons such as Mr Stransham-Ford to have access to PAS infringed their
constitutional rights. On the law that question was not reached in this
case. On the facts the erroneous approach to the law rendered it
impossible to consider whether any limitation of a constitutional right
was reasonable and justifiable in terms of s 36 of the Constitution. The
approach adopted was unsuited to the consideration of the complex legal
issues that arise in the context of these debates about the manner and
means of dying.
Foreign law
The evolution of permissive jurisdictions
[58] Whether PAE and PAS are, or should be, lawful has confronted
courts and legislatures in a number of jurisdictions. An overview of their
responses, more fully set out in the appendix to this judgment, further
highlights the difficulties that this complex situation poses. One thing can
be said immediately and that is that the responses have differed widely
56
Nor does it have the unequivocal support of academic writers. C R Snyman Criminal Law 5ed
(2008) at 125 fn 122 says that „somebody who assists another in committing suicide, or who brings it
about, may render herself guilty of murder.‟ J Burchell Principles of Criminal Law 5ed (2016) at 213
says in regard to Grotjohn that: „The Appellate Division did not decide that the conduct of the
facilitator in the suicide always be unlawful. It is still open for a court in South Africa to hold that, in
certain limited circumstances, the legal convictions of the community do not require that the conduct of
the person facilitating another‟s suicide be labeled “unlawful”.‟
40
from country to country and even within countries. While the expression
„permissive jurisdictions‟ is used to encompass all of those countries
where either PAE or PAS are permitted, that does not mean that they
share a common approach. In some jurisdictions one is dealing with
country-specific legislation, while in others one is concerned with
decisions by the courts. Those in turn are sometimes developments of the
common law or interpretations of local criminal codes, and sometimes
decisions under Bills of Rights or similar constitutional instruments. The
variety of answers they give to the problems under consideration is
instructive in considering how our courts, when faced with a proper case,
might address those problems within the context of our own society and
its needs. They also stand as a cautionary warning against any too ready
assumption that the approach in a foreign court can readily be
transplanted to South African soil. This is a warning that has already been
sounded by the Constitutional Court.57
57
Bernstein and Others v Bester NO and Others 1996 (2) SA 751 (CC) paras 132 and 133.
58
There is no information available to me about the position in African countries other than South
Africa. It is reasonably safe to assume that in the absence of information to the contrary they are
unlikely to be „permissive‟ jurisdictions in this area of the law.
41
[61] The states where court decisions played a role in PAS being
legitimised are the Netherlands, in the early days prior to legislation,
Colombia, the state of Montana and Canada. Jurisprudentially the
approach, seen from the perspective of a South African lawyer, was
different in each case. In the Netherlands it involved a development of the
defence of necessity. In Montana it required a development of the defence
59
It would not therefore accommodate people such as Mr Nicklinson, who was suffering from „locked
in‟ syndrome.
42
of consent on the basis that the absence of criminal intent on the part of
the physician meant that their actions were not contrary to public policy.
In Colombia it appears to involve a finding that the actions of the
physician are not unlawful. In Canada the decision in Carter was based
on the Charter and led directly to the legislation.
60
Pretty v Director of Public Prosecutions and Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001]
UKHL 61; [2002] 1 All ER 1 (HL) (Pretty-HL).
61
Paras 3-9 per Lord Bingham of Cornhill.
62
Pretty v United Kingdom [2002] 35 EHRR 1 (Pretty-EC) paras 37-42.
63
Recorded in Carter v Canada (Attorney General) 2015 SCC 5; [2015] 1 SCR 331 (Carter) para 57.
The first instance judgment is reported as Carter v Canada (Attorney General) 2012 BCSC 886
(CanLII).
43
64
Seales supra fn 23 para 166. There was an allegation in Ms Seales‟ affidavit that she might fall into
this category but the occasion did not arise because she died the day after the judgment was delivered.
65
Fleming v Ireland [2013] IESC 19 (Fleming) paras104-105.
66
Fleming supra paras 104-105.
67
Morris v Brandenburg Supreme Court of New Mexico, No S-1-SC-35478 dated 30 June 2016
(Morris v Brandenburg).
68
Pretty-EC supra fn 61, paras 61-67; Haas v Switzerland [2011] 53 EHRR 33 para 51. The statement
is repeated in Koch v Germany (2014) 58 EHRR 6 and Gross v Switzerland (2014) 58 EHRR 7.
69
Pretty-EC paras 23-26 (Lord Bingham), para 61 (Lord Steyn), para 100 (Lord Hope).
70
Rodriguez v Attorney-General of Canada [1993] SCR 519 at 587-8.
44
psychological well-being and basic human dignity. The court went further
in Carter71 where it was said that the decision to seek PAS „is rooted in
their control over their bodily integrity; it represents their deeply personal
response to serious pain and suffering. By denying them the opportunity
to make that choice, the prohibition impinges on their liberty and security
of the person‟. In effect that seems to construe the right to liberty and
security of the person to extend to a right to determine the manner and
timing of death.
71
Carter supra fn 62 para 68.
72
PrettyHL supra fn 59 paras 4-9.
73
Pretty-HL para 100.
45
thing to imply into theses words a positive obligation to give effect to her
wish to end her own life by means of an assisted suicide‟.
[67] Two other constitutional points bear mention. The first is that even
where courts have held that constitutional rights were engaged or
infringed, in only three cases, Carter and the lower courts in Baxter and
Morris v Brandenburg, have they held that this infringement was not
justified. The reason for this in Carter was that the criminal prohibition
on aiding and abetting suicide was held to be overbroad. 74 It was held not
to be justified, because the Supreme Court accepted a factual finding by
the trial court that, in the situation prevailing in Canada, it was practicable
to put in place measures that would have permitted PAD while
safeguarding vulnerable people against coercion or any form of
inducement to ask for PAD.75 Against that the European Court of Human
74
Carter supra fn 62, paras 85-88.
75
Carter supra fn 69, paras 102-121.
46
Rights has consistently held that this is a matter within the margin of
appreciation of member countries, and the Supreme Court in Nicklinson76
held that Parliament had considered the prohibition on assisted suicide on
a number of occasions and maintained the prohibition and that the matter
was more appropriately one for regulation by Parliament.
[69] Even were we to accept the notional possibility that the high court
retained some power in the present case, to grant an order
notwithstanding Mr Stransham-Ford‟s death, the question would remain
whether it was appropriate for it to do so. The focus of the case would
then have shifted from Mr Stransham-Ford‟s individual situation to the
general requirements of our law in relation to murder and culpable
homicide. That required a clear and accurate understanding of the
existing state of our law, the scope of the development being sought and
the terms upon which any development could have been sanctioned. All
76
Nicklinson supra fn 28.
47
[70] At the outset the high court misstated the present situation in South
African law. It then failed to consider precisely what development was
being sought. It treated PAE and PAS as clear and simple concepts
capable of easy application, when they are nothing of the sort. It did not
recognise the distinction between the two. It paid little regard to
international jurisprudence or to the answers to the constitutional
questions posed in the previous paragraph. It claimed that the relief it was
granting was „case dependent and certainly not a precedent for a general
“free for all”‟, without any indication of how its effects could be so
limited.
[71] The next question that was not considered by the high court was
the issue of justification in terms of s 36 of the Constitution. All the
foreign jurisprudence to which I have referred makes it clear that the state
48
[72] In considering that last issue, it should be borne in mind that it was
only on the question of overbreadth that the Supreme Court of Canada
held in Carter that the criminalisation of aiding and abetting suicide
unjustifiably infringed a protected right. Whether a South African court
faced with the same issue would arrive at the same conclusion would
need to be determined in the light of the very different circumstances in
this country; the availability of medical care and especially palliative
care; the wide diversity of our society in its cultures and belief systems;
our sense of the need to protect the poor, the weak and the vulnerable and
the value attached to providing such protection. The high court‟s too
ready adoption of the reasoning in Carter ignored the very different
context in which that case was decided.
[74] None of these issues were fully canvassed in the high court. Nor
could they be, given the circumstances in which the litigation was
conducted. They all point away from the court engaging in a significant
and substantial development of the law when there was no longer a
justiciable issue before it. I may add that, even had Mr Stransham-Ford
survived, the fact that the issues had not been adequately canvassed
should have given the judge pause for thought. While litigation is
sometimes urgent it should not become a race against time to defeat the
grim reaper of death. When a court is dealing with litigation brought to
test the existing law against constitutional norms and values, it is vitally
important that the court has the advantage of a full exposition of the facts
and the law so that an appropriately considered judgment may result. 78 A
77
Carmichele v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (Centre for Applied Legal Studies
intervening) 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC) para 36.
78
Bruce and Another v Fleecytex Johannesburg CC and Others 1998 (2) SA 1143 (CC) para 8;
Minister of Safety and Security and Another v Carmichele 2004 (3) SA 305 (SCA); Everfresh Market
Virginia (Pty) Ltd v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd [2011] ZACC 30; 2012 (1) SA 256 (CC) paras 51 and
50
balance must always be struck between the desire for haste of the litigant
and the requirement resting on all judges that they do justice in
accordance with the law of South Africa and the Constitution. In this case
I am satisfied that the result of the judge‟s desire to deal urgently with the
matter was that insufficient opportunity was available for a fair public
hearing and determination of the issues in the case.
52; Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe v Fick and Others [2013] ZACC 22; 2013 (5) SA 325
(CC) para 104.
51
[77] Among all the cases that have been considered by this court in the
course of preparing this judgment, the only one that was brought with
anything like a similar sense of urgency was the New Zealand case of
Seales. But that case was launched on 20 March 2015, when Ms Seales
was expected to survive for between three and eighteen months. Even
though her condition deteriorated rapidly it was heard two months later
from 25 to 27 May 2015 and the judgment was delivered on 4 June 2015.
Ms Seales died the following day, having been informed on 2 June 2015
of the judge‟s conclusion. Notwithstanding its urgency, five parties were
fully represented at the hearing, which lasted three days, and the court
had the benefit of evidence from 36 witnesses, embodied in 51 affidavits,
as well as a comprehensive exposition of the law from a number of
79
In Nicklinson the Supreme Court took six months to prepare the judgment. The Supreme Court of
Canada took five months to prepare the judgment in Carter.
52
80
In Fleming supra fn 64, the proceedings were commenced on 23 October 2012 and a hearing held
over six days before the Divisional Court which delivered judgment on 10 January 2013. The judgment
in the appeal was delivered on 29 April 2013. The medical evidence was agreed. In Canada the trial
court in Carter heard evidence and argument over 23 days before delivering judgment.
53
illness, the „clinical, ethical and legal aspects of assisted suicide‟ and the
possible adverse effects of the procedure. Accordingly it concluded that
he was competent to participate in the application. There were no details
of how Mr Stransham-Ford came to consult with Ms Melnick, where the
consultation took place, how long it lasted or whether Ms Melnick sought
to probe the true depths of his desire to participate in PAE or PAS. As she
and he were living in the same street in Cape Town there may have been
some prior connection. We do not know.
the toilet. He spent a good deal of the initial consultation explaining the
application he intended to bring to the high court. On 26 March Dr Bruce
installed a syringe driver to provide medication and a saline infusion.
Whilst this was unusual, he did it at Mr Stransham-Ford‟s request
because he wished to maintain mental clarity for as long as possible. On
8 April Mr Stransham-Ford saw Dr Bruce and reported that he had good
and bad days. On that day he had got up and had a shower as well as
using the toilet. On 10 April he was able to hold a normal conversation
and on 16 April he signed his founding affidavit.
this stage is something of a mystery. The estate has no legal interest in the
matter and as the affidavits in all the motions to secure access to evidence
and to be admitted as amici were deposed to by Ms Buitendag, the
attorney who has been handling the matter at all times, we cannot
penetrate behind the ostensible litigant to identify the real party pursuing
the case.
[90] The deficiencies in the evidence in this case are highlighted by the
numerous attempts in this court to place fresh evidence before us. I have
already dealt with the evidence of Dr Cameron, which is most valuable
and which the estate sought to prevent him obtaining from Dr Bruce. But
in addition to that, the Minister presented an application to provide us
with further evidence running to some 500 pages and providing expert
evidence on legislative consideration of PAE and PAS in the United
Kingdom, as well as extensive expert evidence on palliative care. This
evidence dealt with the experience in certain jurisdictions of the ability to
maintain proper oversight of, and compliance with, the statutory
requirements for PAE and PAS. It was directed at showing that the
legislative provisions were difficult to enforce and that there were at the
least doubts whether the requirements for PAE and PAS were being
strictly complied with.
[91] The HPCSA also sought to tender evidence in the form of over 600
pages of affidavits and annexed material. Apart from addressing some of
the same issues as the evidence of the Minister it tendered specific
evidence concerning the impact in South Africa of PAE and PSA. This
highlighted the disparities among different communities in regard to the
availability of palliative care. It also drew attention to the fact that
poverty and economic pressures could cause families to put pressure on
58
[93] This court adopted the expedient of admitting all of the material on
a provisional basis so as to expedite the conduct of the appeal. A careful
perusal of it reveals that it does not satisfy any of the ordinary
requirements for admitting fresh evidence on appeal. In particular it is not
incontrovertible. This was also the experience of Collins J in Seales. He
commented (para 15) that:
„For every proponent of Ms Seales‟ case, there is an equally forceful opponent.‟
the issue, its complexity and the fullness or otherwise of the argument‟.81
I would add that a material factor should be whether the record is
appropriately complete to enable the court to arrive at a properly reasoned
conclusion. This court made a similar point in a case where the parties
sought to argue fundamental constitutional issues on a stated case that
failed adequately to state the facts relevant to the point in issue. 82
[95] I have little doubt that much of the material in the further evidence
tendered to us on appeal would be relevant to the constitutional issue of
the lawfulness of PAE and PAS in South Africa, but we are simply not in
a position to assess its weight and to sift the wheat of relevant facts from
the chaff of opinion, argument, hearsay and sensationalism that form part
of it, as well as part of the material that is already in the record. Its
primary relevance is to show that it was and would be wholly
inappropriate to make a determination of the constitutional issues on this
record. Matters this important require the careful presentation of evidence
that we have noted occurred in Carter and Seales. That is the proper
approach to constitutional litigation in this country as laid down by the
Constitutional Court in Prince.83
81
IEC v Langeberg supra fn 19 at 926.
82
Minister of Police v Mboweni and Another [2014] ZASCA 107; 2014 (6) SA 256 (SCA); [2014] 4
All SA 452 (SCA).
83
Prince v President, Cape Law Society, and Others 2001 (2) SA 388 (CC) paras 12-16 and 22.
84
Nicklinson supra fn 28 paras 175-177. See also per Lord Sumption paras 224 -229.
60
suicide and the psychological factors and risks bearing on its occurrence
that the United States Supreme Court had before it in Washington v
Glucksberg. He recorded that much of the material before them in
Nicklinson was second-hand adduced in other litigation or by other
enquiries. He recorded that before the Court of Appeal the approach had
been that it was necessary to consider „a vast array of detailed evidence,
including sociological, philosophical and medical material‟ while before
the Supreme Court it was suggested that a close study of the evidence on
the relative risks and advantages of relaxing the prohibition on assisted
suicide was no longer necessary because it had already been carried out
by a number of expert bodies.
[98] Finally under this head I mention one further concern. South Africa
is a very different country facing very different challenges from countries
such as Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg,
and states such as Oregon, Washington, California, Vermont and
Colorado in the United States. Those countries and states have
85
In this regard, see the careful approach of Thirion J in Clarke v Hurst NO fn 30.
61
[99] The different challenges facing this country emerge from the
affidavit of Ms Mayeza, tendered by the HPCSA. She is a palliative care
social worker employed at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital,
Soweto and has specialised in the treatment of people with HIV/AIDS
and TB. This constitutes about 40 to 45 per cent of her caseload, with a
similar proportion suffering from cancer and cancer-related conditions.
Ms Mayeza drew attention to the fact that, among the communities that
she serves, the life of aged and infirm members is valued and they are
usually cared for within the family and the broader community. The
attitude towards life is communitarian and it is treated as a gift to be
preserved. Suicide is alien to this culture. She suggested that in these
communities permitting PAE and PAS posed a real threat given their
socio-economic circumstances.
62
Conclusion
[101] I said in para 5 above that the appeal had to succeed for three inter-
related reasons. Each taken separately would in my view suffice to reach
that conclusion. When they are taken cumulatively they demonstrate
unequivocally in my view that the high court was wrong to make the
order that it did. It was wrong to hold that the common law crimes of
murder and culpable homicide needed to be or should be developed to
accommodate PAE and PAS. South African law in that regard is as set
out in paras 28 to 56 above. When an appropriate case comes before our
courts the common law will no doubt evolve in the light of the
considerations outlined there and the developments in other countries. It
is of course possible that Parliament will, as has occurred in other
countries, intervene and pass legislation on the topic. That would be
welcome if only because it would give effect to the proper role of
Parliament in a society where the doctrine of the separation of powers has
application. Lobby groups could then make their voices heard and a
proper debate and process of reflection could occur. In general, whilst
63
recognising the role that the Constitution confers upon the courts, it is
desirable in my opinion that issues engaging profound moral questions
beyond the remit of judges to determine, should be decided by the
representatives of the people of the country as a whole.
[102] In saying that, I agree with the views of Lord Sumption in para 233
of Nicklinson, where he said the following in regard to the proper role of
Parliament in issues of this type:
„In the course of argument, it was suggested that the case for the Respondents in the
Nicklinson appeal required the Appellants to suffer a painful and degrading death for
the sake of others. This is a forensic point, but up to a point it is a legitimate one. It
is fair to confront any judge, or indeed legislator, with the moral consequences of his
decision. The problem about this submission, however, is that there are many moral
consequences of this decision, not all of them pointing in the same direction. For my
part, I would accept a less tendentious formulation. In my view, if we were to hold
that the pain and degradation likely to be suffered by Mr Lamb and actually suffered
by Mr Nicklinson made section 2 of the Suicide Act incompatible with the
Convention, then we would have to accept the real possibility that might give
insufficient protection to the generality of vulnerable people approaching the end of
their lives. I conclude that those propositions should be rejected, and the question left
to the legislature. In my opinion, the legislature could rationally conclude that a
blanket ban on assisted suicide was “necessary” in Convention terms, i.e. that it
responded to a pressing social need. I express no final view of my own. I merely say
that the social and moral dimensions of the issue, its inherent difficulty, and the fact
that there is much to be said on both sides make Parliament the proper organ to
deciding it. If it were possible to say that Parliament had abdicated the task of
addressing the question at all, so that none of the constitutional organs of the state had
determined where the United Kingdom stood on the question, other considerations
might at least arguably arise. As matter stand, I think it clear that Parliament has
determined that for the time being the law should remain as it is.‟
64
[103] We were not asked to make any order as to costs save in regard to
the costs incurred by the HPCSA in having to make application to this
court in order to secure access to the medical records in respect of Mr
Stransham-Ford and to enable Dr Cameron to discuss those records and
Mr Stransham-Ford‟s condition and treatment with Dr Bruce. I agree with
counsel for the HPCSA that the attitude of the estate in refusing to
provide access to those records and for consultation purposes access to Dr
Bruce (who was himself willing to discuss the matter with Dr Cameron)
was obstructive in the extreme. It precipitated an entirely unnecessary
opposed application to this court. The request that the estate pay those
costs is justified. If, as one suspects, there is another organisation behind
the litigation no doubt it will have to deal with the estate over the
consequences of its actions.
M J D WALLIS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
65
66
Appearances
First to Third
Appellants: L Nkosi-Thomas SC (with her S Poswa-
Lerotholi and N Mgcina)
Instructed by: The State Attorney, Pretoria and
Bloemfontein
Fourth Appellant: C H van Bergen (with him A J D‟Oliviera)
Instructed by: Moduka Attorneys, Pretoria and
Matsepes Inc, Bloemfontein
Respondent: H B Marais SC (with him H P van
Nieuwenhuizen and C A Du Plessis)
Instructed by: Nkosi Rogers Scriven Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
First Amicus Curiae: R S Willis (with him T Mafukidze and A
Schluep)
Instructed by: Robin Twaddle Attorneys, Midrand and
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
Second Amicus Curiae: In person
Third Amicus Curiae: M J Engelbrecht (with her A Montzinger)
Instructed by: Smit and Viljoen Attorneys, Stellenbosch
McIntyre and Van der Post, Bloemfontein.
Fourth Amicus Curiae: Hamilton Maenetje SC (with him Gina
Snyman)
Instructed by: Centre for Applied Legal Studies,
Johannesburg
Blair Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
Fifth Amicus Curiae: Darryl Cooke
Instructed by: Norman Wink & Stephens, Cape Town
67
APPENDIX
[105] Articles 114 and 115 of the Swiss Criminal Code of 1937 provide
that:86
‘114 Homicide at the request of the victim
Any person who for commendable motives, and in particular out of compassion for
the victim, causes the death of a person at that person's own genuine and insistent
request is liable to a custodial sentence not exceeding three years or to a monetary
penalty.
86
The translation is taken from the Swiss Federal Council website where it is explained that, as English
is not an official language of the Swiss Confederation, the translation is provided for information
purposes only. See https://www.admin.ch/opc/en/classified-compilation/19370083/index.html.
87
This summary is derived from Samia A Hurst and Alex Mauron „Assisted suicide and euthanasia in
Switzerland: allowing a role for non-physicians’ 2003 BMJ 326 (7383) at 271-273. I have not found a
specific prohibition on foreigners invoking PAE or PAS in the legislation in the Netherlands, Belgium
or Luxembourg, but an exclusion may arise under the provisions governing the national health systems
of those countries. In the American state legislation there is always a requirement that the person be a
resident of the state in question.
69
[106] The first jurisdiction to provide a statutory framework for PAS was
the state of Oregon in the United States of America by way of what is
referred to as the Death with Dignity Act. 89 The citizens of Oregon passed
this as ballot measure 16 of 1994, although the Act only came into effect
in 1997. It provides a complete framework for PAS, or as it is referred to
in Oregon, where the statute specifically provides that death through the
means provided in the statute is not suicide, PAD (physician assisted
dying). In summary the requirements of the statute are that the person be
over the age of 18 years; a resident of Oregon; capable of making and
communicating healthcare decisions and diagnosed with a terminal illness
that will lead to death in six months. There are a number of requirements
that must be satisfied before a prescription for lethal medication will be
issued for use by the patient. In addition the statute creates a new crime
and makes provision in relation to the existing crimes relating to mercy
killing and euthanasia. Under Liabilities s 127.890 s 4.02(2):
‘A person who coerces or exerts undue influence on a patient to request medication
for the purpose of ending the patient's life, or to destroy a rescission of such a request,
shall be guilty of a Class A felony.‟
88
Another organization called EXIT, established in 1982, is the largest provider of assisted suicide
services in Switzerland, but it apparently does not act on behalf of non-Swiss residents. The publicity
attached to the activities of DIGNITAS, which are sometimes described as constituting „suicide
tourism‟ is what has placed Switzerland in the forefront of public debates over PAS.
89
Chapter 127 of the Oregon Revised Statutes.
70
[107] Some other states in the USA have followed Oregon‟s lead. First
was Washington, which in 2008 passed a law virtually identical to that in
its neighbour Oregon. Vermont did the same in 2013, 90 California in
2015,91 and in the recent election in the USA voters in Colorado approved
Proposition 106, which will introduce similar legislation in that state. In
each of Washington, Vermont and California the legislation followed
upon a citizens‟ initiative and was supported in a ballot. The statutes are
broadly similar and in all five states provide for regulatory controls and
reporting requirements by the medical practitioners involved. There is no
obligation on medical practitioners to participate in PAS and actions not
in compliance with the statutory prescripts may, as was the position prior
to these statutes, attract criminal liability.
90
Patient Choice and Control at End of Life, Title 18: Health Chapter 113 of the Vermont Statutes
available at http://legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/chapter/18/113.
91
End of Life Option Act AB 15 available at
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520162AB15. See also Linda
Ganzini „Legalised Physician - Assisted Death in Oregon‟ QUT Law Review, Vol 16 (1), 76
92
Baxter v State of Montana 2009 Mt 449 (Baxter).
71
liability for criminal conduct. The criminal code provided that „consent of
the victim to conduct charged as an offence or to the result thereof is a
defense‟. That was subject to four exceptions of which the only one that
was relevant, where the consent had been given by someone competent to
consent, was whether it was against public policy to permit the conduct or
the resulting harm, even though consented to. The majority of the court
held that while it was against public policy to consent to arbitrary
violence, it was not against public policy to permit a physician in their
private interaction with their patient to accede to the request of a
terminally ill patient to provide a prescription for medicine that the
patient could take subsequently. The decision effectively cleared the path
for PAS in Montana, but without the statutory framework existing in
other states. The limits of the public policy exemption are not yet clearly
delineated but must evolve on a case by case basis. Issues such as the
nature of the consent required, the need for a confirmatory opinion from
another physician, the stage and nature of the terminal illness will be
dealt with in future.
[109] Although Baxter succeeded in the lower court on the basis that
criminalising the conduct of the physician breached the constitutional
right to dignity in Montana‟s Constitution, and one of the appellate judges
agreed with the lower court, in general it remains the case that claims for
PAS or aid in dying as a constitutional right have not been accepted in the
United States. The Supreme Court in Washington v Glucksberg93 held
that statutes criminalising assisted suicide are constitutional.94
93
Washington v Glucksberg 521 US 702 (1997).
94
This has been reaffirmed by the Supreme Court of New Mexico in Morris v Brandenburg supra, fn
66.
72
[110] In the Netherlands Article 294 of the Dutch Criminal Code made it
a criminal offence for a person to intentionally encourage another to
commit suicide or help them or provide the means to do so and suicide
followed.95 Article 293 made it an offence to take the life of another
person at that person‟s express and serious request. On its face both PAE
and PAS were unlawful. Nonetheless by 1992 it was possible for a
researcher to write96 that:
„Voluntary euthanasia has, since the early 1970s, become an established part of
medical practice in the Netherlands.‟
The way in which courts in the Netherlands circumvented these
apparently strict criminal provisions in relation to medical practitioners
was to recognise a defence of necessity in terms of which a medical
practitioner would escape liability if they acted according to responsible
medical opinion measured by the standards of medical ethics. Necessity
could be shown if the request came from the patient and was entirely free
and voluntary; the request was well considered and durable; the patient
was experiencing intolerable suffering, not necessarily physical, with no
prospect of improvement; euthanasia was a last resort; euthanasia was
performed by a physician and the physician had consulted with another
physician who was an expert in the relevant field. 97 The effect of the
requirement that the euthanasia be performed by a physician was to
legalise PAE.
95
The text of the section is in Labuschagne, supra, fn 50 at 19.
96
John Keown „The Law and Practice of Euthanasia in the Netherlands‟ (1992) 108 LQR 51.
97
Keown, supra, 52-56.
73
98
Article 2.1 of the Termination of Life on Request and Assisted Suicide (Review Procedures) Act 01
April 2002.
99
See https://www.government.nl/topics/euthanasia/news/2016/10/21/government-scope-for-assisted-
suicide-for-people-who-regard-their-life-as-completed. According to the Health Minister the proposal
is to address the needs of older people who do not have the opportunity continue life in a meaningful
way, who are struggling with the loss of independence and reduced mobility, and who have a sense of
loneliness, partly because of the loss of loved ones, and who are burdened by general fatigue,
deterioration and loss of personal dignity.
100
It seems however that the distinction is regarded as only of semantic relevance.
74
person concerned at the latter‟s request. Under the original statute the
patient had to be a major or an emancipated minor and be legally
competent and conscious when making the request; the request had to be
voluntary, well-considered and repeated and not the result of external
pressure; and the patient has to be in a medically futile condition of
constant and unbearable physical or mental suffering that cannot be
alleviated resulting from a serious and incurable illness or accident.
Where the patient is no longer able to express their will the physician can
proceed, if authorised to do so under an advance directive in writing
prepared by the patient at a time they were able to do so. In February
2014 the law was amended to permit children of any age to request
euthanasia, with the agreement of their parents, if they are terminally ill,
close to death and suffering beyond any medical help. In all instances the
medical practitioner must be present when the fatal dose is taken or
administered.
[113] The only other country in Europe that permits both PAE and PAS
is Luxembourg under the Law of 16 March 2009 on euthanasia and
assisted suicide. A patient may request either of these if suffering from a
grave and incurable condition and has asked repeatedly for the procedure.
The only country outside Europe that permits both PAE and PAS is
Canada under the amendments to the Criminal Code to permit medical
assistance in dying that came into force on 17 June 2016.101 These
amendments were passed in response to the judgment of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Carter102 holding that the provisions of s 241 of the
Criminal Code rendering it a criminal offence to aid and abet a person to
101
Bill C-14 (Royal Assent) 17 June 2016.
102
Carter supra fn 62.
75
commit suicide, and those of s 14 of the Code saying that no person may
consent to death being inflicted on them, unjustifiably infringed section 7
of the Charter103 insofar as they prohibited physician assisted death for a
competent adult person who (1) clearly consents to the termination of life
and (2) has a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an
illness, disease or disability) that cause enduring suffering that is
intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition.
The court issued a declaration to that effect but suspended its operation
for twelve months to enable the legislature to act, which it has now done.
103
Section 7 states that „Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right
not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.‟
76
104
In order to make sense of this requirement this must mean foreseeable in the immediate future albeit
that there is no prognosis as to the specific length of time they have remaining.
105
The precise terms of the law are not available to me.
106
Information on http://euthanasia.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000136 accessed on 24
November 2016.
107
Pretty-EC supra fn 61.
108
Fleming).
109
Nicklinson supra fn 28.
110
Seale supra fn 23.
77
111
Constitutional Court Sentence # C-239/97.
112
The only translation of this judgment available to me is imperfect, It is difficult therefore to be
certain as to the legal principles that the court applied, as opposed to its conclusion, so my comments in
that regard are necessarily tentative.