The presumption of innocence – illustrated. Navigating through complex layers of legal data to provide legal answers

27th January 2021

The presumption of innocence – illustrated. Navigating through complex layers of legal data to provide legal answers

Any discussion about presumptions in law would be incomplete without mentioning the presumption of innocence.  It is a provision which enshrines rights inherent in the common law, and lies, as O’Regan J remarked in S v Coetzee and Others 1997 (4) BCLR 437 (CC), at the very “heart” of “our law relating to crime and punishment”.

It is provided for in Section 35(3) of the Constitution which states that every accused person has the right to a fair trial and, in subsection (3)(h), the right “to be presumed innocent, to remain silent, and not to testify during the proceedings”.  What it means is that in common-law crimes the prosecution must prove all the elements of the alleged offence and that it must do so beyond a reasonable doubt.

As regards statutory offences, “It is now axiomatic”, said Ncobo J, giving the unanimous judgment of the Constitutional Court in S v Singo, “that a provision in a statute that imposes a legal burden on the accused limits the rights to be presumed innocent and to remain silent.”  To investigate the concept further and to understand and explore its practical application, watch the instructive video by Louis Podbielski, Case Law Product Manager at LexisNexis on YouTube.

Here, Podbielski, uses the LexisNexis Library Advanced Search feature to interrogate the topic based on reported cases in the All South African Law Reports and the Butterworths Constitutional Law Reports.  He demonstrates how the Legal Citator works as an efficient tool for legal research allowing users to navigate through what are many complex layers of structured legal data, to find appropriate legal answers.

When viewing the clip, note the following points:

Need access to a tool that gives you accurate and structured data that will help you take your law practice to the next level? Click here http://ow.ly/k2d450DkJS0

Written by John de Villiers, Editor Lexis Digest