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Johannesburg - The Constitutional Court handed down judgment on Tuesday that sees Emolument Landmark judgment on garnishee orders

13 September 2016

Attachment Orders (EOAs) requiring judicial oversight to determine if such an order is just and equitable and that the amount is appropriate.

An Emolument Attachment Order is commonly known as a garnishee order, a court order that compels a debtor's employer to pay his/her debt from their salary.


The judgment confirmed an order made by the Western Cape division of the High Court, that certain words in section 65J(2) of the Magistrates' Court Act was inconsistent with the Constitution. The act failed to provide judicial oversight over the issuing of EOAs or garnishee orders.

This judgment follows a ruling in the Western Cape by High Court by Judge Siraj Desai last year that employers in the Western Cape are exempt from enforcing garnishee orders against their employees which were obtained in another jurisdiction, or outside the province.

The University of Stellenbosch Legal Aid Clinic had first brought the case forward to the Cape Town High Court, to fight EOAs issued to applicants by clerks of the court. Fin24 reported that the individuals who brought the application forward were impoverished and employed as farmworkers, cleaners and general workers at the university and the Stellenbosch area.

READ: Garnishee order relief for W Cape workers

The garnishee orders led to an "overwhelming majority or portion" of workers' salaries being taken to pay off debts, saidOsmond Mngomezulu, senior legal officer at the SAHRC.

"The judgment is a victory for the poor, who previously did not have access to justice," said Gail Smith, spokesperson of the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC). The judgment, although prospective, sets a precedence going forward, she added. An order cannot be made without a presiding officer such as a magistrate or judge, explained Mngomezulu.

"Everyone has a constitutional right to have access to the courts," he said.

News24

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