Jackie de Villiers explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Jackie de Villiers
Honorific-Suffix:KC
Office2:Judge of the Cape Provincial Division of the Supreme Court
Term Start2:1939
Term End2:1949
Office1:Judge President of the Cape Provincial Division
Term Start1:1949
Term End1:1959
Predecessor1:Reginald Davis
Successor1:Andrew Beyers
Birthname:Jean Etienne de Villiers
Birth Date:28 June 1894
Birth Place:Somerset East, Cape Colony
Death Place:Durban, Union of South Africa
Alma Mater:University of Oxford
Profession:Advocate

Jean Etienne de Villiers KC (28 June 1894 – 7 June 1960) known as "Jackie", was a South African judge and Judge President of the Cape Provincial Division of the Supreme Court.

Early life

De Villiers was born in Somerset East, the son of Jan Stephanus de Villiers, the founder the Cape Town firm of attorneys, Jan S. de Villiers and Maria Isabella Hofmeyr. He attended the South African College Schools where in 1910, he was placed in the matriculation honours list. In 1914 he went as a Rhodes Scholar to Oxford.

During the First World War he took part in the South-West Africa and East African campaigns. After the war he acted as Judge A. W. Mason's registrar and then returned to Oxford in 1919, where he took an honours degree in jurisprudence and obtained the degrees of B.C.L. and M.A.[1]

Career

De Villiers joined the Cape Bar during August 1921 and he took silk in November 1935. He was appointed to the Cape Bench in 1939, appointed acting Judge President in 1947 and two years later became Judge President of the Cape Provincial Division. De Villiers presided over this court during the matter of Harris v Minister of the Interior, the constitutional struggle to place the Coloured voters on a separate voters' roll.[2] [3]

During his early years at the Bar he was a lecturer at the law school at the University of Cape Town and he co-authored with J. C. MacIntosh, the legal textbook, The law of agency in South Africa. In 1959, the University of Cape Town conferred an honorary LLD on him.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Beyers, C. J.. Dictionary of South African biography: Vol IV. Human Sciences Research Council. 1981. Pretoria. 123.
  2. Web site: Harris and Others v Minister of the Interior and Another 1952 (2) SA 428 (A). joasa.org.za.
  3. Book: Friedman. Gerald. Gauntlett. Jeremy. Bar, bench & bullshifters: Cape tales 1950-1990. 2013. Siber Ink. 978-1-920025-69-4. Cape Town, South Africa. 49. 846790131.
  4. Web site: All honorary graduates. University of Cape Town.