How safe should a sidewalk be? The evergreen question of a municipality's liability for negligent omissions : Butise v City of Johannesburg 2011 6 SA 196 (GSJ)
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Date
Authors
Scott, Johan (T. Johan)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Juta Law
Abstract
One can safely postulate that the issue of determining the wrongfulness of an omission on the part of a municipality in respect of damage suffered by a member of the public as a result of a dangerous situation which arose due to the fact that roads and sidewalks under its control have fallen into a state of disrepair, finally stabilised slightly more than ten years ago when the supreme court of appeal handed down its seminal judgment in Cape Town Municipality v Bakkerud (2000 3 SA 1049 (SCA)). Before that time, the pendulum had swung from a position of strong immunity for municipalities (see eg Halliwell v Johannesburg Municipal Council 1912 AD 659; Moulang v Port Elizabeth Municipality 1958 2 SA 518 (A)) to a high-water mark of an almost blanket liability for omissions (eg in the judgment of Brand J in the court a quo in the Bakkerud case: Cape Town Municipality v Bakkerud 1997 4 SA 356 (C)).
Description
Keywords
Municipality's liability, Roads and sidewalks, Negligent omissions
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Scott, J 2013, 'How safe should a sidewalk be? The evergreen question of a municipality's liability for negligent omissions : Butise v City of Johannesburg 2011 6 SA 196 (GSJ)', Tydskrif vir die Suid-Afrikaanse Reg, no. 1, pp. 164-177.