Although it had been widely used since the 1880s, detention without trial in the continent of Africa did not generate the kind of debates in the metropolis about the rule of law and the constitution which had been engendered by the use of martial law after the Morant Bay revolt.Footnote 1 This was to change at the end of the nineteenth century, when the outbreak of war in South Africa in 1899 led to the proclamation of martial law both in the Cape Colony and in Natal, which would be followed (among other things) by widescale detention without trial.Footnote 2 In contrast to Jamaica, where it was used against an insurgent black population, in the Cape martial law was used to control white British subjects, thousands of whom had joined in rebellion when the Boers invaded the borderlands. In this colony with responsible government and a liberal legal tradition, the legal and political elites were generally loath to regard martial law simply as the rule of the military commander, but sought to subject it to the rule of law in ways which had been recommended by Eyre’s critics on the Jamaica committee.Footnote 3 This in turn raised questions for officials in London, about how to reconcile a commitment to the rule of law with the wartime demands of the imperial military, in the context of a war which divided public opinion.Footnote 4 Furthermore, cases from this war would require the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council to be more explicit than any imperial court had hitherto been on the exact nature of martial law.
In the aftermath of the Jamaica rebellion, a Diceyan view of martial law – which subjected all actions taken under it to the scrutiny of the common law – became widely accepted. At the same time, many questions about its nature remained unsettled. One question was whether civilian courts could hold the military to account during the crisis, or whether they could exercise their jurisdiction only after it had passed.Footnote 5 Another question concerned the nature of the indemnity which would be granted to those who had violated legal rights under martial law. Did an indemnity act simply substitute ‘the despotism of Parliament for the prerogative of the Crown’Footnote 6 – thereby satisfying a formalistic vision of the rule of law – or was parliament to apply the kind of tests of necessity and good faith which common law courts were expected to apply when judging particular acts, acting as a kind of court for the nation ensuring fidelity to a broader culture of the rule of law?Footnote 7
These questions were widely debated during the Anglo-Boer war. As the example of the Cape in this era shows, the degree to which a ‘substantive’ view of the rule of law could shape political and legal policy depended on how committed particular actors were to its culture, and how influential their voices could be. In a colony with a strong liberal political and legal tradition, and where the targets of martial law were white British subjects forming part of the political community, a broad, substantive vision of the rule of law was championed both by ministers and by members of the judiciary. They had many opportunities to explore the relationship between martial law and civilian law, given that the civilian courts remained open. At the same time, imperial military commanders and their civilian masters at the metropolis wanted their ability to defeat the enemy to remain unfettered, and often argued for a much broader vision of martial law than was espoused by the liberal politicians at the Cape. Questions about the nature of martial law would also receive the attention of metropolitan judges sitting in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, who had their own understanding of the legal basis of imperial rule. In this context, the language of a ‘substantive’ rule of law constantly interrupted imperial military efforts to assume plenary powers, though how far it would prevail remained a matter of negotiation. As shall be seen, martial law was not treated as a legal void, a state of siege in which the military’s command held full sway, but rather as a space whose boundaries were defined by a process of careful negotiation between imperial, local and military authorities. Equally, when it came to legislating for indemnity, the matter was not treated simply as a formal legislative fiat, but as the product of a process in which judgments were to be made about the conduct being indemnified.
In what follows, attention will be focused on the use of martial law in the British colonies of the Cape of Good Hope and Natal. Martial law was also imposed by the British in the former republics, which were formally annexed to the crown in 1900, just as the first phase of the war was coming to an end and peace seemed likely.Footnote 8 However, the former republics continued to be treated as territories under military occupation outside the imperial constitutional system. Despite General Roberts’s early proclamation that anyone found in arms would be ‘dealt with as rebels’,Footnote 9 combatants in the former republics continued to be regarded as enemy ‘Boers’ and treated as prisoners of war when captured. The advice of the Law Officers was that as long as the war continued, and ‘the resistance of those who were formerly subjects of the South African Republic and Orange Free State’ had not in fact been suppressed, enemy belligerents could not be treated as rebels.Footnote 10 The British military response to the enemy Boer commandoes was to adopt a scorched earth policy, which entailed the resettlement of large populations in concentration camps which they were not permitted to leave without permission.Footnote 11 Over 26,000 Boer women and children and over 18,000 Africans were to die from malnutrition and disease in these camps. Although this policy was widely debated, not least because of the publicity generated by humanitarian critics such as Emily Hobhouse,Footnote 12 there was little discussion of the legalities of martial law in these areas, which remained under military administration until the end of the war, with no local civilian authority to question their powers.
The First Invasion, October 1899–October 1900
Launching a pre-emptive strike in response to British threats to their independence, the two Boer republics declared war on 11 October 1899, and sent commandoes into Natal and the Cape Colony. In the border areas which were invaded, up to 10,000 of the Dutch-speaking population supported the invasion.Footnote 13 Within four days, martial law was proclaimed in a number of border districts in Natal and the Cape, and by the middle of November, all of Natal and all the Cape districts bordering the Orange Free State and the South African Republic were under martial law. After the initial invasion, the Boer troops did not seek to penetrate deeper into the Cape Colony, but besieged the towns of Kimberley, Ladysmith and Mafeking. The tide of the campaign turned with the arrival of an overwhelming amount of imperial military manpower, and by the middle of May each of the besieged towns had been relieved, Bloemfontein had been captured and Pretoria was soon to fall. With the Boers in retreat, and their republics annexed, it appeared to many that the war was largely over. Martial law was gradually withdrawn from a number of areas in the Cape between July and October, but plans for winding down martial law in all areas were arrested when a second invasion of the Cape began in December. In this phase of the war, the authorities were faced with the problem of how to deal with a large number of captured rebels, at a time when there was an expectation that the war would soon end.
It soon became apparent that the debates which had followed Governor Eyre’s proclamation of martial law in 1865 had not fully clarified the legal position regarding martial law. Although the dominant view among common lawyers was that ‘martial law’ was nothing more than the crown’s common law right to suppress insurrection, and that its justification came from necessity and not from any proclamation,Footnote 14 the Colonial Office had made it clear through Lord Carnarvon’s 1867 Circular Despatch that Governors were expected to make proclamations of martial law in times of crisis and to set out procedures on how to implement it. Discussing the matter in January 1900, the High Commissioner for South Africa, Sir Alfred Milner, observed that ‘the exact nature of the powers conferred by such a proclamation of Martial Law’ is ‘extremely difficult to decide.’Footnote 15 Considering martial law to be ‘the temporary suspension of law – a purely arbitrary and singularly ill-defined condition’, he regretted that the law had not made better provision for emergencies, as had been done in Europe through legal definitions of the state of siege,Footnote 16 and thought that ‘the arbitrary power of the military should be exercised in accordance with some clearly defined principles.’Footnote 17 On the vexed question of whether martial law entirely suspended the civilian courts, or whether ‘the ordinary law still exercises an unimpaired ascendancy’, Milner felt that a hybrid system could be used, under which ordinary crime could be left to ordinary courts, while treason would be dealt with by martial law courts, which themselves could include ‘a civilian element, in the person of a magistrate or judge’.Footnote 18
Milner was not the only one who regretted that the law had not been placed on firmer foundations. Sir John Ardagh, Director of Military Intelligence at the War Office, also thought that a ‘State of Siege’ should be ‘legalised and regularised under the most careful safeguards and restrictions’, both to protect Governors and Officers from later legal action, and to show soldiers that they had no ‘legal license to hang, shoot, flog and destroy as they please’.Footnote 19 Ardagh’s understanding of the current law was that a proclamation of martial law was ‘exercised by the prerogative of the king’ and suspended the ordinary law. It permitted ‘summary methods of arrest, trial and punishment to be carried out, usually by military forces’, since it reversed the normal presumption that the ordinary process of law was sufficient to maintain peace. In his view, however, martial law did not entirely oust the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts: though they would not exercise it ‘flagrante bello’, they could subsequently hold crown officers responsible for the use of unjustifiable force.Footnote 20
Others in the military had a more extensive view of the prerogative powers of the crown, which was closer to that articulated by W. F. Finlason during the Jamaica debates. For instance, the Deputy Judge Advocate-General J. Scott argued in May 1901 that sentences imposed by martial law courts would not expire at the end of the war, since (he argued) the crown had a prerogative power to resort to martial law.Footnote 21 His view seemed to be supported by no less a figure than the Lord Chancellor, Halsbury, who privately told Chamberlain that penal servitude sentences passed by a martial law court would be legally valid after the war ended.Footnote 22 This opinion raised eyebrows, not least because it was inconsistent with the view he had expressed as a Law Officer in 1878,Footnote 23 as well as being inconsistent with the rules set out in 1867. This question was referred to the Law Officers, Finlay and Carson, who reiterated the common law orthodoxy that martial law was only ‘the temporary application of force by the Executive under a condition of affairs which renders necessary the abrogation of civil rights as established by law’ and that, when it ended, prisoners would be entitled to their freedom, and the civil courts would have jurisdiction over them.Footnote 24
In this context of contested understandings, the parameters and operation of martial law became the object of negotiations between various civil and military parties. Rather than seeing martial law as a state of exception where all law was silent and the executive stepped in to defend the salus populi, or as a state where the rules of common law necessity simply applied, they saw it as a legal order whose parameters had to be defined. Matters were complicated by the fact that the war was an imperial one, but the rebellion a colonial one. Although the military who would exercise the martial law powers were under the command of officers – Lords Roberts and Kitchener – who were responsible to the War Office in London, martial law was proclaimed at the Cape by the Governor under the seal of the colony. As the Governor of a colony with responsible government, he was expected to act on the advice of ministers who were answerable to a colonial parliament. At the same time, as an appointee of the imperial government dealing with an imperial matter, he also had to take heed of the demands of the Colonial Office. Furthermore, the military and civilian parties had often divergent interests. The military wanted to have as free a hand as possible, to enable them to conduct the war as efficiently as possible. By contrast, the Cape ministry, which at the outbreak of the war was led by W. P. Schreiner and depended on the support of the Afrikaner Bond, had no desire for a regime which would unduly antagonise the majority Dutch-speaking white community. Sitting between these two, the Colonial Office favoured a policy which would not hamper the war effort, but which would be defensible not only at the Cape, but also before British public opinion.
Military and Civilian Trials
The kind of arrangement which Milner envisaged began to be put in place at the start of the war. An Army Order issued On 7 December 1899 set out the offences to be dealt with under martial law (including treason, sedition and aiding and abetting the enemy) and the procedure to be used.Footnote 25 The military agreed that ordinary offences should be left as far as possible to be dealt with in civilian courts, and that trials for martial law offences should ‘follow the rules of military law’.Footnote 26 While Milner was happy with this arrangement, the Cape ministry insisted that high treason cases at least should be presided over by a Justice of the Supreme Court.Footnote 27 The Colonial Office was content to concede the point, considering that the presence of a judge would increase public confidence in the tribunal, and oblige the ministry both to assume responsibility for punishing the rebels and to pass an indemnity act.Footnote 28 The military reluctantly agreed, and on 3 February, Kitchener issued a Circular Memorandum stating that (save in cases of urgency), high treason cases would be heard by a mixed commission of four officers and a presiding judge.Footnote 29
The Cape ministry nominated Justice W. H. Solomon to sit in these cases.Footnote 30 Having accepted the position, Solomon told Chief Justice Sir Henry de Villiers that he did not ‘quite like the work’ he had undertaken, given the anomalous status of the court and the need for indemnity legislation to legalise anything it did. However, he felt ‘it is most desirable in the interests of justice that a judge should preside at the trial’: if martial law courts were bodies unknown to the ordinary law, Solomon was at least keen to make them follow civilian precedents as far as possible.Footnote 31 In the event, by the time that the War Office had agreed to Solomon’s appointment at the end of March, Milner had come to the view that the question needed reconsideration.Footnote 32 In his view, the procedure set out by the military circulars was ‘an odd mixture of military and civil jurisdiction, without the prompt effectiveness of the former or the unquestionable legality of the latter’. With the war by now looking as if it might soon be over, the proposal was overtaken by events, as political attention turned to creating structures to deal with the large number of rebels to be tried after the anticipated end of hostilities.Footnote 33
Rather than being tried in mixed tribunals, rebels were tried during the first phase of the war in both civilian and military tribunals. The first to be tried – in a civil court – were thirty-six rebel prisoners captured after the engagement at Sunnyside (near Kimberley). Since it was the policy of the Boer republics to give nationality to those British subjects who joined them, Presidents Kruger and Steyn of the Boer republics sent a telegram after their capture to the Foreign Secretary requesting that they be treated as prisoners of war.Footnote 34 Faced with the threat of reprisals if this were not done – and the alternative risk of having the men acquitted by a sympathetic jury – officials considered postponing any trial until the war was over, and in the meantime removing them (along with the Boer prisoners of war) to St Helena, beyond the reach of any habeas corpus application. However, they were advised by the Law Officers that a choice had to be made between holding them as prisoners of war or putting them on trial as traitors.Footnote 35 The decision was taken to try them, since Milner thought that treating them as prisoners of war would only encourage more to rebel.Footnote 36 The Presidents of the republics were accordingly informed that those owing allegiance to the crown would be tried, and that they would be held personally responsible for any treatment of British prisoners inconsistent with the usages of war.Footnote 37 The Sunnyside rebels were tried for treason before Buchanan J towards the end of April, and were convicted after they refused to plead, perhaps realising that since they were captured in battle, they had no real defence. The heaviest sentences – of five years’ penal servitude – were imposed on three ringleaders, while twenty-two others were given three-year prison sentences.Footnote 38 In all, forty men were convicted of treason in cases tried before the Supreme Court during the course of 1900, with twenty-three more convicted for treason in trials held before circuit judges.Footnote 39
Eighteen trials for treason or assisting the enemy were also conducted by the military, before the decision was taken in the middle of April to conduct no more martial law trials for treason.Footnote 40 The fact that such trials were being held when the civil courts were open was questioned in parliament by Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman,Footnote 41 who drew particular attention to the cases of J. Booysens and N. A. van der Walt, who were tried by the military at Naauwpoort on 12 March.Footnote 42 The fact that such trials had taken place did not trouble officials at the Colonial Office. Sensing that this was a political attempt by the Liberal leader to drive a wedge between the civil and military authorities which should be ‘nipped in the bud’, assistant undersecretary of state Fred Graham minuted that
Martial law having been proclaimed, with the assent of the Civil Govt of the Colony, the civil power ceases to have any responsibility. The military can if they choose hang every inhabitant without trial, they only run the risk of not being indemnified & therefore of being criminally prosecuted later on. A fortiori they can administer the criminal law of the colony.
Chamberlain’s telling private reaction was, ‘I know nothing of & am not responsible for the administration of martial law.’ His diplomatic reply to Campbell-Bannerman confirmed the men’s sentences, but added that ‘military tribunals are not now taking cognisance of offences against the criminal law of the colony.’Footnote 43
The Creation of the Special Treason Court
The number of British subjects who had joined the rebels in the frontier areas when the Boers invaded – whether as combatants or collaborators – ran into the thousands. As the rebellion faded, it became evident that it was neither possible nor desirable to try them all, either in civil or in military courts.Footnote 44 By February 1900, there was general agreement that all but the ringleaders should be allowed to return to their farms on surrendering their arms, though they would remain liable to be called to account for their actions later.Footnote 45 Meanwhile, the military was instructed to keep those regarded as ringleaders under arrest and to hold full preliminary investigations into their cases. Most of the rebels south of the Orange River took advantage of this offer: by May, over 5,000 Cape rebels had surrendered.Footnote 46
This did not resolve the problem of what to do with the rebels. As Chamberlain realised, there were difficulties both in the use of martial law courts (whose sentences would expire) and in the use of civilian ones (whose juries might be partial and unreliable). Although he considered – as a last resort – the possibility of prolonging martial law until the longest sentence had expired, his preferred option (which he proposed to Milner on 10 March) was to create a special statutory commission to try rebel cases.Footnote 47 While the Cape ministry also favoured a statutory court to deal with charges of high treason,Footnote 48 there was less agreement between the Colonial Office and the ministry over what to do with rank and file rebels. The ministry argued that they should be given an amnesty, as had been done after the more violent Canadian rebellions of 1837–1838.Footnote 49 Chamberlain rejected the analogy, and argued that such an amnesty would be equivalent to ‘offering a premium to rebellion’.Footnote 50 He wanted to see the ‘political disarmament of persons who have shown that they would use the vote as they have used the rifle to destroy the Empire’.Footnote 51 A way out of the impasse was proposed by Attorney General Richard Solomon in a minute drafted on 17 May. Under his plan, rebels should be divided into two classes: those in the first class – the ringleaders – would be tried for high treason before a statutory commission with the powers of the Supreme Court. Those in the second class would be investigated by a quasi-judicial commission, and be liable to disfranchisement for a five-year period.Footnote 52
Milner realised that passing the legislation necessary for this tribunal would not be straightforward, since politicians at the Cape did not themselves agree over how to deal with rank and file rebels. Although the Progressive party strongly supported Solomon’s policy of disfranchisement, Bond members wanted a complete amnesty. The division of opinion both in the Cape cabinet and in parliament generated an impasse, which created its own problems. As Milner realised, if elections had to be called to break the deadlock, the shape of the next parliament might well be determined by rebel votes.Footnote 53 He considered imperial legislation to be the only way out of the dilemma, but Chamberlain was averse to this idea, both because colonists would resent the constitutional interference and because they would ‘throw all the blame upon us if its proceedings did not satisfy them’. Chamberlain also worried about the difficulty of passing such a measure at Westminster, in the face of obstruction from those who opposed the war.Footnote 54
At the same time that he sent his suggestion for a special commission to Milner, Chamberlain also sent it to the Governor of Natal, Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson.Footnote 55 Unlike ministers at the Cape, those in Natal wanted no clemency to be shown to the relatively small number of Dutch-speaking rebels who had attacked the property of their ‘English friends and neighbours’. Rather than allowing the rank and file to return home, they intended to prosecute them in the ordinary courts.Footnote 56 Hely-Hutchinson consequently told Chamberlain that his ministers considered their civil courts to be adequate, and thought that the appointment of a judicial commission would be seen as a slight on their impartiality.Footnote 57 Chamberlain, however, had other political reasons for wanting Natal to agree to his proposals: as he well understood, it would be much more difficult to pass the legislation needed for a special commission at the Cape if Natal did not also agree to it. Once this delicate matter had been explained to Natal’s ministers in late April, they agreed to appoint a special commission, if the Cape undertook to do the same.Footnote 58
Given the concern that a special court made up only of the colony’s own judges might be seen as a mere device to get rid of juries, Natal’s Justice A. Weir Mason suggested creating a single commission for both colonies, to be staffed by six judges taken equally from the Cape, Natal and England.Footnote 59 Although this proposal was approved by the Colonial Office,Footnote 60 there were practical problems in the way of making the necessary arrangements with the Cape government. With a large number of treason cases ready for trial, Natal wanted the legislation passed by the end of May.Footnote 61 However, the Cape was far from ready to pass its bill, given that ministers there were ‘hopelessly divided’. Milner therefore pressed Natal to go ahead, to help ‘make things march here’.Footnote 62 Under these circumstances, Chamberlain abandoned the idea of a joint commission,Footnote 63 and Natal ended by passing a bill it had not wanted in order to nudge the reluctant Cape legislature into passing its bill. By the time Natal’s Act passed at the end of June, treason trials had already commenced in its Supreme Court, since Attorney General Bale did not feel it was fair to continue to keep prisoners in gaol waiting for the legislation to pass.Footnote 64 Under the Act, all cases of treason committed before or after its passing were to be tried by a Special Court, composed of three commissioners, all of whom had to be qualified for judicial office, and at least one of whom had to be a Judge of the Supreme Court.Footnote 65 After this Act passed, the principal clerk at the Colonial Office, H. W. Just, anticipated that between 400 and 500 treason trials would follow:Footnote 66 ‘the difference will be that in Natal all or almost all rebels will be brought up for trial, whilst at the Cape it will only be a proportion of the whole number. ’Footnote 67 Given the shortage of judicial personnel in Natal, the ministry asked for an English judge to be appointed. None could be spared, but eventually the Chief Justice of British Guiana, Sir William Smith, was selected.Footnote 68
Meanwhile, in the Cape, Milner suspected ministers of ‘trying to bluff me into letting off nine tenths of the rebels by threatening not to pass the act of indemnity for acts committed under martial law’. He had no intention of backing down, even if this entailed a ministerial crisis and a dissolution.Footnote 69 With Prime Minister Schreiner unable to persuade his caucus to accept the policy of disfranchisement, his ministry was replaced in the middle of June, with Sir J. Gordon Sprigg as Prime Minister and Sir James Rose-Innes as Attorney General.Footnote 70 The new ministry had enough support to pass an Indemnity and Special Tribunals Act through the Assembly. The measure was opposed in the legislative council by Sir Henry de Villiers, who argued that rebels should be tried in ordinary courts. He was answered by Rose-Innes, who insisted that the rebels would get a fairer trial before this tribunal than they would before a jury in the ordinary courts.Footnote 71 The bill finally obtained Milner’s assent as Governor on 11 October.
It empowered the Governor to appoint a Special Court of three, to try all cases of high treason and ‘all cases of crimes of a political character’ committed before or within six months after the passing of the Act. A ‘political’ act was defined to be any act which in the Attorney General’s opinion was ‘incidental to, and forming part of, political disturbances’. The court would be made up of at least two Cape Supreme Court judges and a barrister of ten years’ standing. It was to have the powers of the Supreme Court, but cases were to be heard without a jury, and indictments could be brought on the basis of preliminary investigations undertaken by the military. Only those considered to be ringleaders were to be prosecuted before the Special Court, and criteria were included for determining whether a person was a ringleader. The rank and file were to be brought before commissioners appointed by the Attorney General, with those found guilty of treason or crimes of a political character being disfranchised for five years. Those who had surrendered in response to certain proclamations, and whose names had been entered on a list by a resident magistrate, were to be presumed to have committed the offence charged, unless the contrary was proved.Footnote 72 The act also provided for a system of appeals: there was an appeal from the commissioners to the Special Court, and, where the Special Court was not unanimous, there could be an appeal to the Supreme Court. In order to head off a proposal in the Assembly for a select committee to inquire into the administration of martial law, powers were also given to any commissioners the Governor might appoint for such an inquiry.Footnote 73
Both Natal and the Cape also legislated for indemnity. Natal’s Act indemnified the Governor and officer commanding the military and those acting under them for bona fide acts done under martial law. It also confirmed martial law sentences, deeming them to be sentences passed by legally constituted courts. The immunity conferred was for acts done ‘before, during or after the existence of Martial Law’.Footnote 74 Such a broad and prospective immunity was out of line with precedent legislation, and contrasted with the provision in the Cape Act, where the indemnity ran only to 12 October 1900.Footnote 75 The Cape legislation also indemnified the Governor and the officer commanding the Queen’s forces and those acting under them for anything done in good faith as necessary for the suppression of hostilities; but, unlike the Natal Act, it included a presumption of good faith. It also confirmed the sentences imposed by military courts, and deemed all arrests for treason to have been lawful. Furthermore, it confirmed that prisoners could be kept in legal places of confinement in the colony, or elsewhere, as the Governor directed. While the validation of martial law sentences by legislation was hardly consistent with the rule of law, it had been done previously both in the Cape and in Natal. On this occasion, it was not a matter of controversy, since only a handful of rebels had been tried for treason by martial law courts, and fewer still remained in custody. Of those convicted for treason by martial law courts in the Cape, only three had unexpired sentences by the time the act came into force in October.Footnote 76 Since their sentences were shorter than those of the Sunnyside rebels who had been tried by civil courts, they were hardly likely to demand a retrial.
Legal Challenges in the Supreme Court
In February 1900, with the British press already taking a keen interest in South African events, H. C. M. Lambert – first class clerk in the South African department at the Colonial Office – noted that ‘[i]t will be a difficult campaign to meet because martial law is essentially illegal.’ In his view, ‘the essential thing’ was to ‘avoid collision with the Supreme Court’.Footnote 77 It did not take long for detainees at the Cape to seek writs de homine libero exhibendo. A number of cases were brought to the court early in the war by rebels who had been arrested in martial law areas on suspicion of aiding the enemy, before being moved to Cape Town with other (Boer) prisoners of war, and then (when writs were issued) returned to the places where they had been arrested.Footnote 78 In these cases, the Cape Supreme Court was willing to issue writs to military officers in martial law areas – thereby asserting its jurisdiction – though without determining whether the detainees would ultimately be released.Footnote 79 No final decision was made in these initial cases, for the military released the men in question.Footnote 80
Caution was required for, as Lambert noted, the Chief Justice of the Cape, Sir Henry de Villiers, ‘is certainly not prejudiced in our favour’,Footnote 81 and ‘does not doubt the power of the Court to call on the military to justify the detention of Br. Subjects’.Footnote 82 Milner was even more frank in his assessment:
Sir Henry is deeply distrusted by the English here & has often been suspected as a traitor. I think this is quite unjust. … But he is, of course thoroughly out of sympathy with the policy of H M Government & intensely Afrikander. When he, and men like him, talk of loyalty, what they mean is acquiescence in the nominal tie of the Crown between Great Britain and a country in which, under constitutional Government Afrikanders will rule the roost.Footnote 83
However, by the middle of 1900, de Villiers was in London on sick leave, and, in his absence, John Buchanan stepped in as Acting Chief Justice.
In May 1900, the court was asked for the first time squarely to address the nature of its jurisdiction in martial law, when Jan Fourie challenged his imprisonment by a martial law court for assisting the enemy. Taking a Diceyan position, his advocate, Henry Burton, argued that the law did not recognise ‘a tribunal of officers’ and that the military’s right to punish rebels was limited to acts necessary for suppressing rebellion. The fact that the Sunnyside rebels, who were captured in the same area, had been handed over to the civilian authorities showed that there was no necessity for military punishment in this case. The application failed, after Buchanan held that the proclamation of martial law was prima facie evidence of its necessity. Quoting extensively from Chief Justice Wylde’s decision in Standen v. Godfrey,Footnote 84 he added that ‘in the existing state of war and consequent necessity for martial law, the proclamation must be taken to interrupt and suspend the function of the civil Courts in these proclaimed districts.’Footnote 85 The court again refused to interfere when an application was brought on behalf of D. P. L. Gildenhuys, who was detained after having been arrested for disloyal conduct and given a preliminary examination by a resident magistrate. Rather than seeking a writ de homine libero exhibendo, Burton applied for the detainee to be admitted to bail, presumably with a view to having him tried or having the charges dropped. This, however, was to ask the court to recognise and control the jurisdiction of the martial law court, which it was not prepared to do.Footnote 86
Buchanan reiterated his views on martial law in the case of J. H. N. Bekker and J. J. Naudé. They were arrested and charged with treason early in the war, but were kept in prison without a trial, since the authorities were awaiting the creation of the Special Court. When their application was made on 13 July, counsel for the crown simply stated that the applicants were detained under martial law, without answering their contention that there was no necessity for martial law in the areas where they were arrested, since the enemy had been expelled and those who had joined them had been allowed to return to their farms. When Burton argued that the crown could not simply rely on the proclamation of martial law as conclusive of its necessity, Buchanan adjourned the case, treating it as an ex parte application and holding that notice had to be sent to the gaoler to provide a proper return to justify the detention.Footnote 87 Three days later, he wrote to the Attorney General, Rose-Innes, pointing out that the crown’s failure explicitly to reply to the allegations regarding necessity meant that there was ‘no return made which would justify the court in following its previous decisions’.Footnote 88 The crown took the hint. When the case returned to court, it argued that war continued to rage over the border, and (following Finlason) that martial law existed not only to put down rebellions but to prevent their recurrence. Buchanan now took the opportunity to expand on his view that martial law might still be necessary even in areas where the courts remained open and actual fighting had ceased. In his view, the fact that the proclamation of martial law had not been withdrawn in this area (though it had been elsewhere) was strong evidence of its necessity, particularly ‘when it appears that the Executive is not acting arbitrarily’. Again following Standen v. Godfrey, he said that the process of the court was neutralised by martial law. Martial law had to be regarded as a state of affairs outside the law, with responsibility for all acts under it being taken by the authorities administering it. Any attempt by the court to intervene would lead to it justifying some acts ‘which the civil law cannot tolerate’.Footnote 89
Buchanan’s was not, however, the only view of the matter on the Cape Supreme Court. In a lengthy judgment in the case of Bekker and Naudé, Solomon J outlined the rival views of Dicey and Finlason on the nature of martial law, and concluded that the latter’s position was now ‘practically exploded’.Footnote 90 Following the Diceyan position, he held that whether or not any acts done under martial law were justifiable depended on the particular circumstances in each case; and the determination of that question could not be reserved to the military commander. Only a statute – suspending habeas corpus – could remove the court’s power. Invoking the United States Supreme Court’s decision in ex parte Milligan,Footnote 91 he argued that martial rule could be properly applied in ‘the theatre of active military operations’, but he did not consider that it was applicable in the case of these men. Despite this view of the law, however, Solomon agreed in refusing the application, though in his case it was for a strategic reason: a decision to release these men from military custody now and deal with them through ordinary criminal procedures would have required the civil authorities to put all the detained rebels through those procedures. Like everyone else, Solomon was aware that a new Special Court was about to be created which would deal with the rebels in a faster and more lenient way. It was hence in the best interests both of Bekker and Naudé and of ‘the country generally’ that they should remain for the time being in military custody.Footnote 92
Some members of the Natal bench also took a liberal position on martial law. When Advocate W. B. Morcom of Pietermaritzburg applied unsuccessfully in April for an interdict to prevent his mail being opened under martial law, Mason J expressed the view that, while the military could take any action necessary to suppress a rebellion, the subject was entitled to demand that the powers should not be used ‘recklessly, needlessly, cruelly or immoderately’, and to ask the courts to ‘require any persons infringing his rights to justify their action’.Footnote 93 Although in Morcom’s case, Chief Justice Gallwey described martial law as the rule of the General in times of emergency when civil law was set aside, by June he had come round to Mason’s view. In Umbilini and Bantomo v. General Officer Commanding, in which a challenge was made to a martial law conviction, he cited the 1838 opinion of the English Law Officers that martial law did not supersede the ordinary tribunals,Footnote 94 and added that the ‘first and most sacred duty’ of the court was to administer justice, ‘not to preserve the peace of the country’.Footnote 95 Alluding to Du Preez’s case, he confirmed that the court had power to inquire into a case decided by a court martial, though it would not interfere if it were to be convinced that the military’s actions were necessary for public safety.Footnote 96 This opinion alarmed officials in London. The assistant undersecretary of state, Bertram Cox, who considered Buchanan’s view ‘the more convenient for Government’,Footnote 97 referred the question to the Law Officers, pointing out that, if the view stated in Umbilini was correct, great difficulty would be experienced in administering martial law ‘unless the extreme step were taken of forcibly suspending the sittings of the Civil Courts’. The opinion he got back was that Umbilini was ‘substantially correct’: a proclamation of martial law could not prevent courts from hearing habeas corpus applications. The exercise of their jurisdiction could only be ‘prevented by force, as by suspension of such tribunals’.Footnote 98
The Second Invasion, October 1900–March 1902
Once the Cape Act had been passed, the authorities began to prepare for trials in the new court. Records of preliminary proceedings were handed over by the military authorities to the Law Department in Cape Town, which decided which class the offender fell into and what the exact charges would be.Footnote 99 Suspects were allowed private consultation with lawyers, and the military was instructed not to seek confessions from suspects.Footnote 100 The court, made up of Justice Solomon, Justice Lange and Mr A. F. S. Maasdorp, began its work in Cape Town at the end of October.Footnote 101 The first case it tried was not that of a rebel but of a colonial policeman charged with the murder of a Basotho farm hand. The defendant, Peter William Smith, had been part of patrol searching near Naauwpoort for farmers suspected of co-operating with the enemy. The farm hand had been sullen and unco-operative when asked to produce a bridle; and when Smith reported this to his superior officer, he was instructed to shoot him if it was not produced. This was a significant case to begin with: not only did Rose-Innes classify it as a political case within the terms of the act, but he clearly did not regard the killing as covered by the indemnity provisions. Smith was acquitted, since the court found that he had honestly believed it was his duty to obey the order given.Footnote 102
Negotiating Martial Law
By the time the court came to deal with cases of rebels – with its first sitting at Colesberg on 5 DecemberFootnote 103 – the second invasion had commenced. The invasion interrupted the court’s proceedings, and it was not until March that it resumed its sittings at Dordrecht. The Special Court would continue to sit throughout the war, convicting 361 Class 1 rebels by August 1902, and acquitting 68.Footnote 104 However, the renewed outbreak and the accompanying extension of martial law raised the question of what was to be done with those who joined the second rebellion.Footnote 105 Although, in theory, the military could now impose such penalties as it liked, Lambert reminded his masters at the Colonial Office that the aim of martial law ‘is not punishment but the suppression of rebellion’ and that any martial law sentences would expire at the end of the war. At the same time, he thought it highly unsatisfactory that ‘rebellion can take place twice over with so slight penalties’ as those imposed under the act, and wanted all the rebels to be treated as ringleaders.Footnote 106 Attorney-General Rose-Innes, who considered ‘the case of a man rebelling now to be much graver than that of the man who rebelled originally’, regretted the limits on prosecution put in place by the Act, and now sought wherever possible to treat rebels as falling under the first class.Footnote 107 However, there were limits to the applicability of the Act, since it gave the court no jurisdiction over offences committed after 12 April 1901. Just before this date, Rose-Innes therefore issued a general notice on 6 April stating that any act of treason or rebellion would henceforth be tried in the ordinary courts, which would impose the usual common law penalties.Footnote 108
The idea that this would deter rebels was not shared by the military. General Henry Settle pointed out that in districts under martial law, ‘rebels well know that they are safe on hands of Dutch juries’. His view – shared by Kitchener – was that ‘[p]rompt punishment is necessary for serious crimes and this can only be met in present state of affairs by Military Courts.’Footnote 109 Ministers referred the matter to Rose-Innes, whose view of martial law (expressed to Milner at the beginning of the year) was ‘I hate the thing; it is abhorrent to me.’ While he was prepared to accept martial law insofar as it was necessary for military operations, ‘I cannot without violating my own idea of what is constitutionally right & wrong agree to its being applied where there is no disturbance & where it is not required for Military operation.’Footnote 110 However, in the memorandum drawn up for ministers on 16 April, Rose-Innes agreed that in areas where civil courts, though nominally open, were in practice unable to deal with cases of treason and rebellion, the graver cases – involving only offences directly endangering the armed forces – could be tried in military courts, provided certain conditions were laid down to ensure a fair trial. Rose-Innes also insisted that Kitchener should give notice that only offences committed thereafter would be tried by military courts, to avoid a clash with the policy of trying rebels before the special court.Footnote 111 A notice, drawn up by Richard Solomon (now legal adviser to the Transvaal administration), was accordingly issued on 22 April, stating that those who took up arms or actively assisted the enemy or committed any act which endangered the safety of the King’s army or subjects after this date would be tried by courts martial.Footnote 112
Although Kitchener initially claimed the right to try any rebel in martial law courts – considering the Cape Act to be ‘a local arrangement’ which had not ‘in any way’ abrogated military jurisdiction in proclaimed districts – he agreed by the end of August not to allow martial law trials for offences committed before 12 April.Footnote 113 For his part, Prime Minister Sprigg confirmed ‘that necessary steps will be taken to ensure continuance of sentences of imprisonment passed by Courts Martial until such time as confirmation of the same has been obtained by an Act of the Legislature’.Footnote 114 As a result of these developments, rebels could now be dealt with in one of three ways. Those who committed offences before 12 April would be tried before the Special Court, which had given no sentences in excess of five years. Those who committed an ‘aggravated form of treason’ in martial law areas would be tried by courts martial, which might inflict the death penalty. For those who did not fall into either category, there could be a trial before the civil courts.Footnote 115 A political compromise thus generated a hybrid system of martial law, where the court before which a rebel was tried might be determined by the date of his offence. Instead of this martial law regime being one of sheer lawlessness or executive will, it was the product of negotiations which had to satisfy the constitutional expectations of a responsible government’s ministers.
Negotiations between the civilian and military authorities over the nature of martial law can also be seen in other areas. Under the Martial Law Regulations which were issued in May 1901, magistrates were recognised as having a dual jurisdiction, with powers to deal with ordinary crimes, as well as powers to deal summarily with breaches of martial law regulations as agents of the military.Footnote 116 The Regulations also allowed officers to arrest without warrant any persons suspected of assisting the enemy, exciting disaffection or disturbing the peace. In such cases, evidence against the suspect was to be collected as expeditiously as possible, with preliminary examinations taken either before the officer administering martial law or before a magistrate, with a view to a trial. These Regulations – which ‘which met with the concurrence of the Attorney-General’s office’Footnote 117 – sought to map out a quasi-judicial procedure for martial law trials, and provided for co-operation between civilian and military officers. In practice, there were numerous complaints from the civilian authorities about the heavy-handed application of martial law,Footnote 118 as a result of which the arrangement was modified in December 1901, when twelve military Administrators of Martial Law were appointed in specified areas, each of whom would use the local resident magistrates as a Deputy Administrator, to deal with minor matters (such as the regulation of food supplies).Footnote 119
The fact that the extent and operation of martial law could be a matter of negotiation between the civilian and military authorities became particularly evident in August 1901, when the military sought to extend martial law to the Cape ports. The desire to do so was driven by intelligence reports that ‘undesirables’ were returning to the Cape in private ships, and that a political network existed there which aimed to foster a rebellion in the Western Cape.Footnote 120 Ministers reacted unenthusiastically to this proposal, unconvinced that there was any threat which the local police force could not deal with, and afraid that martial law would bring business to a standstill.Footnote 121 Faced with these rival pressures, Hely-Hutchinson (who had replaced Milner as Governor of the Cape in March) began to negotiate, asking Kitchener to agree to use martial law powers for specified limited purposes only, and proposing to give ministers a written undertaking that, if they were used for any other purposes, he would repeal the proclamation on their request.Footnote 122 While Kitchener was prepared to agree to ‘having martial law for certain definite purposes only’, ministers unanimously rejected the proposal.Footnote 123 ‘We cannot work Martial Law on even terms with the Military’, Rose-Innes told the Governor: ‘Either they or we must be in front. I am not going to ride behind.’Footnote 124 Ministers felt that a modified martial law was an impossibility: once it was proclaimed, it would override civil law in any case of conflict.Footnote 125 They also insisted that the responsibility for proclaiming martial law rested with them, and that they would not do so until satisfied of its necessity.Footnote 126
At this point, civil–military relations were plunged to a new low when Kitchener sought to force the ministry’s hand by threatening to impose a cordon around the Cape ports, and to divert all non-military vessels to Durban. Facing a ministerial crisis, Hely-Hutchinson protested to Chamberlain, who responded with reassurances that no action would be taken without first consulting the Cape government.Footnote 127 He realised that, without a government in the Cape, indemnity legislation would have to be passed in London, where its opponents would argue that ‘ministers were driven from office in defending their constitutional rights from the lawless invasions of the military & of the Imperial Govt.’Footnote 128 Great efforts were now made to put an innocent gloss on what Chamberlain called Kitchener’s ‘stupid blunder’, and to persuade Sprigg to consider the ‘position in which Cape Colony would be placed as a member of Empire in case of request refused’.Footnote 129 As a sweetener, the army proposed setting up a Board of Administration of Martial Law in the Cape, composed of both civilian and military elements, which would investigate any complaints against martial law.Footnote 130
The matter was finally resolved when Sprigg met Kitchener and Milner at the beginning of October in Pretoria and agreed the terms on which martial law would be extended to the Cape. Under the agreement, the military were given the right of censorship – to be exercised with as little inconvenience to the public as possible – and were authorised to impose restrictions on undesirables. Control of all works at the ports was to remain in civilian hands, though the military were empowered to appoint officers to supervise the examination of cargoes. The agreement also stipulated that there should be no martial law courts for British subjects at the Cape ports. No subject was to be arrested by the military without an affidavit charging him with a crime, for which he would be tried before the Resident Magistrate by ordinary law, unless the Attorney General directed otherwise.Footnote 131 Following this agreement, on 9 October, martial law was extended to the ports, and Regulations were issued for its administration in these areas.Footnote 132 Once more, the parameters of martial law had been sketched out through a process of constitutional negotiation between the civil government, the imperial authorities and the military.
At the same time, there remained tensions between the civilian and military authorities. By September, Rose-Innes had come to the view that one effect of Kitchener’s April proclamation had been ‘to diffuse throughout all the ranks of those engaged in the administration of Martial Law an idea that they can go much further and be much more rigorous than they were before’. He now regretted that the government had ‘consented to allow the more serious political offences to be tried by Military Courts’.Footnote 133 Sentences imposed by martial law courts were much more severe than those imposed by the treason court: by the end of the first week in September, fourteen rebels had been executed.Footnote 134 Protests were made both in Britain and at the Cape, after three rebels were hanged in their home towns, with locals being made to watch the executions.Footnote 135 In response, Lord Stanley explained that this had been simply a ‘single instance’, to show that the sentences imposed by martial law courts would really be carried out.Footnote 136 Further executions followed, albeit not in public.
More protests followed over the heavy-handed way in which martial law was being implemented. Rose-Innes felt that commandants were taking action quite outside the printed instructions contained in the Regulations. He raised a particular concern in early September that a number of influential citizens from Paarl and Ceres were being detained by the military in civilian prisons for long periods with no investigation of their cases.Footnote 137 The matter led to a bad-tempered clash with the Chief of Staff, Colonel Arthur Wynne.Footnote 138 In Rose-Innes’s view, it was ‘one of the essentials of the most ordinary justice that a man should know on what ground he is detained’.Footnote 139 He also pointed out that the government would have to secure an indemnity for the military, and that to do this they would have to be ‘in a position to assure the House that justice has been done in each case’.Footnote 140 Although Wynne conceded that it was wrong to commit people to prison with no charges being made, he defended the detentions, arguing that Paarl and Ceres were hotbeds of disaffection, ‘ripe for active rebellion’.Footnote 141 He also considered it necessary ‘to check any tendency to control the administration of martial law, not according to the discretion of responsible military officers, but according to the views of the Attorney General’.Footnote 142 In Wynne’s view, commandants were solely responsible for the execution of martial law, and it was the duty of magistrates to assist them, and not ‘to pry upon their actions’.Footnote 143
Clearly resentful of being taken to task by the lawyer, Wynne responded with a lengthy memorandum explaining the difference between martial law and civil law. In times of war, he argued, the welfare of the community had to take priority over the rights of individuals. At such times, arrests had to be made on the basis of suspicion, drawing on a system of intelligence which would be exposed and undermined if any case came to court.Footnote 144 Reading over the exchanges, Fred Graham thought Wynne’s memorandum to be ‘excellent’ and minuted that Rose-Innes had ‘adopted an unreasonable position … which would defeat the very object of martial law’. He also mused that the correspondence revealed how ministers in a self-governing colony might obstruct operations against an enemy, if they chose to stand on their legal rights.Footnote 145
Legal Challenges
The cases which had attracted Rose-Innes’s attention soon found their way into the Supreme Court. The first case was brought by D. F. Marais, a Notary Public and attorney at Paarl. Marais was arrested on 15 August by the Chief Constable, who had no warrant and did not know the cause of the arrest. Two days after his arrest, a report in the Cape Times alerted Rose-Innes to the matter, leading him to telegraph the magistrate at Paarl asking for full particulars of the charges. In reply, he was informed that the arrests were made on military authority and that there were no affidavits against them.Footnote 146 Two days later, Marais and four others arrested at the same time were moved to Beaufort West, 250 miles away. After nine days’ incarceration in a ‘badly ventilated, small, unbearably hot’ prison, Marais asked to see the local commandant, but was refused.Footnote 147 Meanwhile, a firm of attorneys in Cape Town took up the case of the detainees. However, General Wynne was not prepared to allow the men to communicate with their lawyers or family, or even to answer their inquiries himself; but sharply told the Law Department at the Cape that he was ‘responsible to his Military Superiors only for the action he takes under Martial Law’.Footnote 148
Although Marais was not told of any charges against him, he was visited in prison on 27 August by an intelligence officer named Burton. After producing a flask of whisky, he showed Marais a letter which alleged that the attorney knew of stocks of ammunition hidden in the Swartberg mountains, and that, if he would locate them, he would be ‘alright’. Marais flatly denied having any such knowledge: ‘I now decided to petition the Court, as I feared that the strain of gaol life would prove too much for me.’Footnote 149 Notice of the petition to release him was served on Wynne on 2 September, who submitted an affidavit on the first day of the hearing, which stated that he had ascertained that there was a prima facie case against Marais and the other detainees, and that there were military reasons for his removal and detention. Although he was not prepared to disclose any charges, he confirmed that they would be formally charged ‘as soon as possible’ and would either be acquitted or be detained in custody following the verdict of a military court.Footnote 150 When his petition was brought, Marais’s advocate distinguished his case from Fourie and Bekker on the ground that (unlike them) Marais had neither been charged nor convicted by the military. Although Buchanan ACJ again declined to take notice of any acts of the military,Footnote 151 he ordered a return to be made on 12 September: for while it was common knowledge that the men had been arrested under martial law, they were being detained in a civil prison by a civilian officer, who needed to answer by what authority he held the detainee. It was the conduct of the civilians, not the military, which was of concern here.
The warrants to commit Marais and the others were issued only on 8 September, two days after the first hearing. In his draft affidavit of the next day, the civilian gaoler at Beaufort West, Henry Risk, stated
The reason I allowed these prisoners to be placed in gaol without any warrant is because in a previous case, viz that of Gert Visagie & others, the men were placed in Gaol against my wishes and by force and an armed guard placed over the Awaiting Trial yard with orders to take no orders either from the Resident Magistrate or myself.Footnote 152
The warrant stated that the men were committed under Martial Law Regulation 14(2), for inciting others to take up arms against the king, but no substantive details of the charges were provided. When the case returned to court, it was Rose-Innes himself who opposed Marais’s release on behalf of the crown, arguing that the detainees were in the custody of the civilian gaoler at the request of the military. Although he had strongly condemned this practice in his correspondence with military officials, Rose-Innes defended it in public. Buchanan ACJ rejected the application, holding as sufficient the formal return that the gaoler held Marais as an officer under the control of the military, acting on military instructions in a martial law area. He added that it had been established in previous cases that the proclamation of martial law at Beaufort West was justified by its necessity, which meant that the onus was on the applicants to establish that this necessity no longer existed. As for Adv. Currey’s argument that there was no necessity for martial law at Paarl, where Marais had been arrested, Buchanan took the view that this would be relevant only if he were still being held there. Refusing to look into the charges on which Marais was being held, he also repeated his earlier view that ‘while martial law was paramount the civil authority would stay its hand.’Footnote 153
Shortly after this decision was handed down, the court heard the very similar case of Dr R. J. Reinecke. One of only two medical doctors in Ceres, he was removed by the military to Malmesbury (fifty miles away) on 28 August. One month later, his wife lodged an application for his release, pointing out that the ordinary courts exercised undisturbed jurisdiction in both towns. This time, Rose-Innes did not appear for the government, but sent his deputy, Dr Ward KC, to argue the case. Although the case looked identical to Marais’s, on this occasion Buchanan ACJ ordered the detainee’s release, on the ground that he was being held by civilian gaolers, rather than being in military custody. ‘The gaoler, as a Civil servant of the law, has no right to hold a prisoner on the order of anybody except a duly constituted Civil officer of the Crown’, he ruled, ‘and as he had no warrant from any such officer, he is not entitled to keep custody of this person.’Footnote 154 Officials at the Cape and in London were both shocked and puzzled by this decision, the real grounds for which Buchanan later explained to Hely-Hutchinson. In Reinecke’s case, it had not been stated in the affidavits for the crown that the detainee was being held in military custody. Although in Marais’s case, Buchanan was prepared – at a stretch – to accept a verbal statement from the Attorney General that the detainee was being held in military custody, he was not prepared to accept such a statement from his deputy.Footnote 155 If Buchanan was hereby asserting the need to comply with legal formalities, officials in London were unimpressed with his alighting on a ‘technical & foolish point’. ‘The point of substance is that the Court interfered with the exercise of martial law which it is unwise of a Court to do’, Bertram Cox minuted, ‘If the soldiers had declined to permit the release the Court would have been helpless & in an undignified position.’Footnote 156 In fact, Reinecke was not released: the military authorities responded by taking over the prison in Malmesbury and appointing the civil gaoler to act in a military capacity. A circular was sent to all Resident Magistrates to inform them that all gaols were to be considered as under the orders of the commandant.Footnote 157
‘[A]ggrieved by the decision of the Supreme Court’, Marais decided to appeal to the Privy Council.Footnote 158 The court which heard his application for leave to appeal on 5 November was made up of seven judges: Lord Chancellor Halsbury, Lords Macnaghten, Shand, Davey, Robertson and Lindley, and Sir Henry de Villiers. It was clear from the exchanges that the different judges on the panel did not view martial law in the same way. Lord Davey – who had a number of liberal South Africans friends including de VilliersFootnote 159 – seemed particularly sympathetic to Sir Richard Haldane KC’s arguments for Marais, and argued that the Petition of Right forbad the use of martial law courts when the civil courts were open.Footnote 160 By contrast, Lords Halsbury and Shand inclined to the view that, in wartime, it was for the military to judge the necessity for martial law, and that, once it had been proclaimed, they could determine the area over which it applied. In Halsbury’s view, ‘[i]f the public safety and that of the realm render it necessary to supersede the ordinary law you are not bound in every individual case to prove the necessity or even to state the charge.’ Furthermore, ‘[t]he courts are not open when resort to them would be unsafe to the King’s authority.’Footnote 161
The petition was rejected, with three members of the court reported to be in the minority. The customary single judgment of the judicial committee was delivered by Halsbury on 18 December. The Lord Chancellor dismissed the argument that martial law courts had no jurisdiction if the civil courts were open: the fact that they were open for some purposes did not mean that war was not raging. Indeed, Halsbury stated – incorrectly – that Marais’s own affidavits had made it clear that war was raging.Footnote 162 ‘[N]o doubt has ever existed that where war actually prevails the ordinary Courts have no jurisdiction over the action of the military authorities.’Footnote 163 The division of opinion on the bench became public in March 1902, in a debate in the House of Lords, during which Halsbury did not shy away from defending his position: ‘The real English of the matter is that if you are at war there is and there can be no constitutional liberty at all.’Footnote 164 By contrast, Lord Davey insisted that it did not follow that because there was a state of war, ‘persons are to be deprived of their constitutional rights … and the whole jurisdiction of the courts handed over to military tribunals set up for the purpose’.Footnote 165 He regarded Halsbury’s view as unconstitutional since it seemed to recognise a prerogative power to suspend the ordinary courts, which was equivalent to the French state of siege.Footnote 166
The decision received mixed reviews in the Cape press.Footnote 167 It was also debated by a number of jurists in the Law Quarterly Review. They included Frederick Pollock, who defended a Diceyan position, but felt that the judicial committee had come to the correct decision, since the effective radius of warfare was much broader in the modern age, and that ‘the absence of visible disorder and the continued sitting of the courts are not conclusive evidence of a state of peace.’Footnote 168 By contrast, ‘A Jurisconsult’ writing in The Speaker lambasted ‘the Liberty of the Subject according to Lord Halsbury’, arguing that the court had ignored the central point that Marais – like George Gordon before him in 1865 – had been moved to a distant place where the civil courts were closed, something which violated Lord Carnarvon’s rules.Footnote 169 Two months after the decision had been made, it was also discussed judicially in Ireland, in a civil suit brought by the District Commissioner of Kintampo in the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast against a senior military officer who had detained him during a time of rebellion. Addressing the jury, Chief Baron Palles said that, while he respected the Privy Council’s decision, he was not prepared to accept ‘that the law now is that in a country in which a state of war or rebellion exists, any act done by any officer serving in the forces of the Crown, whether it is or not one of military necessity, is not cognizable by the ordinary courts of justice’. Nor was he prepared to ‘[lay] down as law that if a rebellion exists in any part of a country, then the entire country is to be subjected to the license of all the officers and forces of the Crown’.Footnote 170
The decision to detain men like Marais was motivated by a desire to control potential political intrigue in the Western Cape, rather than being driven by the kind of military necessity which (as has been seen) men like Rose-Innes were prepared to accept as a justification for martial law. Colonial officials had long been suspicious of the loyalty of towns such as Paarl, whose educated inhabitants ‘cherish the dreams of an African Dutch state’.Footnote 171 By the middle of 1901 there was a perception that it would take very little for local Bond politicians to rebel.Footnote 172 Indeed, in July, the military’s unreliable secret agent, Capt. C. Ross, reported a claim that ‘every Bond member was ready to rise’.Footnote 173 It was in this context that men like Marais – whose father had been a Bond Member of the Cape Legislature for Paarl until 1900 – came under suspicion. In upholding his detention, both the Privy Council and Pollock accepted the military’s general suspicions as demonstrating the necessity for his detention, rather than Rose-Innes’s more rigorous test.
Sir Henry de Villiers returned to resume his duties on the Cape bench after the judgment in Marais had been handed down. It soon became clear that he would take a narrow view of its meaning. He was given the first chance to express his view in April 1902, when he heard the cases of J. W. Malan and J. D. Bruyns. Both men had been detained in Calvinia on charges of treason, for offences committed before 12 April 1901. In both cases, the Attorney General had instructed the magistrates that they were to be dealt with as Class 2 rebels, who were entitled to be released. However, both men were moved by the military in November 1901 to Clanwilliam prison. They subsequently escaped from prison and were sentenced after being recaptured to six months’ imprisonment with hard labour by the Resident Magistrate of Clanwilliam. In his decision, de Villiers acknowledged the Privy Council’s ruling that, during wartime, the military could not be held liable for any illegal acts committed. However, he regarded the case before him as a civilian rather than a military one, for the magistrate had sentenced the men under provisions of an ordinary statute, and not under military regulations. Furthermore, de Villiers held that the decision to classify them as Class 2 rebels entitled them to be released from prison in Calvinia, so that the removal of the men to Clanwilliam without a proper warrant was unlawful. In passing, the Chief Justice criticised the use of magistrates as Deputy Administrators of Martial Law, which he saw as ‘fatal to the due administration of justice’.Footnote 174
De Villiers’s decision irritated the Cape’s Attorney General T. L. Graham. The Chief Justice’s view on the rights of Class 2 rebels to an immediate release did not reflect the understanding which had hitherto been acted on by the Law Department, and he worried that those who had not been released might commence civil actions. He therefore wrote to all Resident Magistrates instructing them to release any remaining Class 2 rebels; and advised the military to re-arrest under martial law powers any of them they considered necessary to keep in detention. In London, Bertram Cox noted that ‘the attitude of the Cape Courts shows that we must take action as to the prisoners under martial law as soon as possible by removing them or by legislation.’Footnote 175
De Villiers had another opportunity to express his views on martial law in July, when Bailly van Reenen and Daniel van Reenen challenged their convictions for breaching martial law regulations by two magistrates, one in Durbanville and the other in Malmesbury. The men were tried for breaching a regulation which forbade people from entering or leaving the district of Malmesbury without a permit, which they had contravened by moving two mules in the early hours of the morning from one district to the other. Applying the rule in Marais, de Villiers held that the court could not interfere in the decision of the Durbanville court, since the Resident Magistrate there had purported to act in his capacity as Deputy Administrator of Martial Law. At the same time, he took the occasion to observe that ‘it cannot be assumed that Martial law will be maintained any longer, in view of the Privy Council’s decision [in Marais] that Martial Law can only be justified by the existence of actual hostilities.’Footnote 176
Turning to the decision of the Malmesbury court, he observed that the record of that case stated that it had taken place in the ‘Court of the Resident Magistrate and Deputy Administrator of Martial Law’. Insofar as it purported to be the decision of a civilian court, de Villiers held that it was amenable to review; and, as its proceedings were irregular (and a sentence imposed for an offence unknown to civilian law), its proceedings were quashed.Footnote 177 As this case revealed, officials in Malmesbury had used the ordinary forms of the courts when drawing charges for breaches of martial law regulations, without deleting the words ‘In the Court of the Resident Magistrate’, and only sometimes adding in the initials of the Deputy Administrator of Martial Law. In response to this decision, the Administrator of Martial Law instructed them to alter the books containing the records of martial law cases, to make it appear that they had been treated only as martial law cases. The legal effect of this was considered by de Villiers in August, when a number of those sentenced at Malmesbury for breaches of martial law regulations challenged their convictions.Footnote 178 De Villiers held that these cases had to be treated in the same way as Bailly van Reenen’s, since he could not sanction the alteration of the record, even if authorised by a military officer.
When Bertram Cox saw the decision in Bailly van Reenen’s case, he conceded that it was ‘within the law’ but commented that de Villiers’s ‘knowledge of the Marais decision was rudimentary and ridiculous.’Footnote 179 For his part, the Cape’s Attorney General thought the decision wrong, and decided to appeal to the Privy Council. The case was heard in London in December 1903. By this stage, with the war over and martial law at an end, the question was academic: but it gave the court another opportunity to clarify its view of the powers of civil courts over martial law decisions. None of the respondents was represented at the hearing, for which the Cape government secured Haldane’s services.Footnote 180 Once again it was Halsbury who delivered the judgment. Overturning the Cape court’s decision, he ruled that de Villiers had gone wrong in treating the documents in question as a ‘record’ of a court of justice, rather than simply a memorandum of the charges. The case, he concluded, was heard by Mr C. W. Broers in his capacity of deputy administrator of martial law, and not as a magistrate, so that the Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction.Footnote 181 This was a short, simple judgment, which omitted any mention of the alteration of the documents on the orders of the military. Where both the civilian and military authorities at the Cape assumed that the civil courts retained some measure of jurisdiction, the Lord Chancellor in England held to his blunt view that, so long as the proclamation of martial law was in force, all civil jurisdiction was gone. Once more, the view from London was much less Diceyan than the view from Cape Town.
The Martial Law Board
When martial law was extended to the Cape ports in October 1901, the military agreed to the creation of a Martial Law Board to deal with complaints about the administration of martial law, to be made up of three men chosen by the General Officer Commanding Cape Colony, the Prime Minister and the Governor. H. W. Just was pleased to see the Board set up to deal with complaints, since he realised that, although martial law rendered the will of the military paramount, neither the government in Cape Town nor the Colonial Office could escape ‘a very grave responsibility if there are scandals or mistakes’.Footnote 182 Chamberlain wanted the Board made up of practical legal men, but was insistent that Rose-Innes should not be on it, since he was ‘peculiarly unfitted by his habit of mind for a position […] where it is necessary to consider expediency and policy as well as his conscientious scruples’.Footnote 183 Lewis L. Michell, the general manager of the Standard Bank, was nominated as chairman by the Governor. He clearly had no intention of rocking the boat, telling Hely-Hutchinson that he saw his task as one of helping and not hindering the military authorities. Besides discouraging frivolous grievances, he noted that not too much was to be ‘made even of substantial hardships to the individual, if clearly necessary to be inflicted in the interests of the State, which must be paramount’.Footnote 184
The Board’s work continued until July 1902, by which point it had dealt with 542 complaints in 74 meetings.Footnote 185 The largest number of complaints related to deportations, primarily those to Port Alfred. Of 141 such cases which came before the Board, it declined to intervene in 76. Thirty were ‘satisfactorily adjusted’ without its intervention, and only five were redressed through its recommendation, while twenty-nine were resolved by the intervention of peace. Most officials thought the work had been done well. Reporting to Hely-Hutchinson in December 1901, Michell stated that in the majority of cases ‘complainants have suffered through some misconduct of their own, or were dealt with on reasonable grounds of suspicion’.Footnote 186 Looking over the first six months of its work, Sir Montagu Ommanney (who was usually sympathetic to the military) similarly observed that the report ‘does not lend much support to the allegations of hardship in the administration of martial law’.Footnote 187 Others were more sceptical: as Sir Henry de Villiers told F. A. Newdigate, ‘the Dutch have firmly got it into their minds that it is worse than useless.’Footnote 188
When dealing with deportees, the Board’s procedure was to ask the military to provide reasons why people had been deported, and to ask whether they might be allowed to return to their homes on bail. Military commanders did not react well to such requests. In January 1902, Major H. Shute, the Administrator responsible for Graaff-Reinet, explained to M. G. Apthorp, the secretary of the Board, that before anyone was sent to Port Alfred, their cases were investigated by a small committee of loyalists ‘specially selected by me on account of their judicial capacity and unprejudiced minds’ and by an intelligence officer; and full reports of the charges were sent to the commandant on the coast. In his view, it was very taxing to his over-worked subordinates to have to ‘furnish full reports upon fictitious accusations’.Footnote 189 So irritated was he by the process that he suggested that complainants should be charged fees to make any application, and should be prosecuted for libel for any false complaints.
In practice, large numbers were deported simply for being suspicious characters without much in the way of investigation. For instance, the brothers J. J. and P. A. Erasmus were deported because ‘they are the loudest talkers and the worst rebels in Graaff-Reinet, their shaving saloon being the meeting place of the disloyal section’. C. J. Olivier was described as a ‘dangerous character’ who could not be trusted, and who had been constantly warned for using seditious language and for jeering at those who joined the town guard. Many deportees were listed simply as being ‘notoriously disloyal’ or as ‘very bitter and dangerous’. In some cases, men were deported because there was not sufficient evidence to charge them with breaching martial law regulations.Footnote 190 In other cases, deportations were made pour décourager les autres. The Acting Resident Magistrate at Middelburg told Shute that, while nothing could be proved against a number of deportees from his area, the effect of their detention served as a ‘warning to all sympathisers with the enemy’ that the least assistance given by them to the rebels ‘will render them liable to be deported to Port Alfred for an indefinite period’.Footnote 191 Shute was not unsympathetic to this position, telling the Martial Law Board that ‘the deportation of certain persons is not intended so much as a punishment, but as a means of keeping away from a disturbed District those who are a danger to the community at large & also as a deterrent.’Footnote 192
The military remained reluctant to allow deportees to return home even as the war entered its later stages. The Board was powerless in the face of military opposition. Its sense of its own powerlessness can be seen in its response to a complaint from three men – J. J. Hayward of Graaff-Reinet, J. B. Rabie of Aberdeen and G. F. Smith of Jansenville – that they had been re-arrested while on parole in Port Elizabeth and returned to Port Alfred, even though martial law had not then been in operation at Port Elizabeth. The men claimed that the military had acted illegally, since they had no power to supersede the civil jurisdiction in Port Elizabeth at that time. Hayward wanted to challenge the military’s actions in court, but was unable to do so thanks to his removal to Port Alfred. After discussing the case, the Board decided not to take up the issue of the illegal action by the military: Apthorp noted that ‘[t]he case of Dr Reinecke who succeeded in obtaining an order from the Supreme Ct for his release from gaol but who was rearrested by the military an hour afterwards is sufficient indication that these men would gain nothing by bringing up the point now.’Footnote 193 Nor was the local commander prepared to allow Hayward to return to Graaff-Reinet when he considered all the cases at the end of January.
The Board also dealt with sixty-three cases of detention. Of these, only six were redressed through the Board’s intervention.Footnote 194 Among the cases which came before the Board was that of D. F. Marais. The case was referred to them on the advice of Rose-Innes, who received a letter on 19 October 1901 from Marais’s wife describing his detention as ‘a cruel mockery of justice’.Footnote 195 The Board took it up with the military, but found Wynne unwilling to submit any papers to them relating to the case – or indeed to take any action in the case – pending the decision of the Privy Council.Footnote 196 The Board did not consider this to be a reason to delay their investigation: indeed, in their view, the very reason given by the Supreme Court for not intervening – that this was a matter pertaining to martial law – demonstrated that it was essentially a case for them.Footnote 197 The Board felt that Marais should be put on trial at once (for the breach of the martial law regulations), or else that they should be given reasons why this was not done.Footnote 198 After the Privy Council’s decision was made, there seemed even less reason for not proceeding with the military trial of Marais and those detained with him. Attorney General Graham told Michell, ‘We shall make ourselves parties to what I am sure will be grave injustice if we stand by & consent to imprisonment of these men indefinitely, without option of bail.’Footnote 199
On 13 December, Marais and A. B. de Villiers (who had been detained with him) were told by the Administrator of Martial Law that the charge against them was that of ‘using language’; and that, since they were not ‘criminals’, they would be sent back to Paarl the following week.Footnote 200 Four days later, de Villiers was released on bail in Beaufort West. Marais himself remained in gaol, since Wynne intended to try him in January 1902, when the standing military court reached Beaufort West.Footnote 201 However, the trial was postponed for lack of reliable evidence against him,Footnote 202 and on 18 February, he was released on bail and ordered to proceed to Port Alfred. From here, Marais continued to press his case to be allowed to return home, arguing that the abandonment of the charges against him amounted to an acquittal, so that Wynne was bound by his earlier statement to release him. In his view, ‘my deportation to Port Alfred not as an undesirable in the first instance but following on a long term of imprisonment and the abandonment of a specific charge enhances the illegality of the action of the military authorities.’Footnote 203 Although the Board pressed the military on this case – asking ‘whether he has not been sufficiently punished more especially as he has incurred considerable expense in connection with his application to the Privy Council’Footnote 204 – it was to no effect, for in the middle of May, Settle responded that it was not advisable to allow him back to an area as disloyal as Paarl.Footnote 205 Marais would return home (along with the other deportees) only after the coming of peace. His experience showed that there were severe limitations to the promise of legalism implied in the publication of martial law regulations, which stated both that preliminary examinations had to be held and that ‘all persons who directly incite others to take up arms &c shall immediately on arrest be tried by military Court.’ At the same time, his case also showed that the Board was not entirely ineffective: the persistent pressure both from the Board and from his supporters may not have enabled him to return to his home and business, but it at least induced the military to release him from custody in Beaufort West.
Ending Martial Law
After the signing of the peace of Vereeniging, the authorities had to consider how to manage the transition from martial law to peace. A policy was needed to deal both with those rebels who had been sentenced by martial law courts since April 1901Footnote 206 and with those who had not yet been tried. As part of the peace negotiations (which ensured that no legal proceedings were to be taken against burghers), the Boer General Jan Smuts secured terms which would protect the thousands of rebels who had joined his troops. The terms of this agreement were implemented in a proclamation issued on 11 June. Those rebels already in detention, as well as those who had surrendered before 10 July 1902, would be disfranchised, but would suffer no other punishment if they formally acknowledged themselves to be guilty of High Treason before a Resident Magistrate. The offer did not extend to those who held official positions in the colonial government or who had been commandants in the rebel forces, who were to be tried for treason, but were not to be sentenced to death.Footnote 207 The offer thus mirrored the bifurcated treatment of Class 1 and Class 2 rebels under the Act of 1900. By 1 July, 2,511 rebels had surrendered. As Lambert noted, the final surrender of the rebels would make the continuation of martial law difficult.Footnote 208 By the end of August, over 3,000 rebels had been convicted under the terms of the proclamation.Footnote 209 The rebels were convicted by a legal procedure, albeit an expedited one. Preliminary proceedings – in which they signed their confessions – took place before a magistrate or officer appointed to accept surrenders. Once the Attorney General had accepted the surrender, the rebel returned to court, where he was handed a document stating that he had been tried and convicted of High Treason.Footnote 210
The Continuation of Martial Law
As the war was drawing to an end, forty-two members of the legislative assembly petitioned Milner calling for a suspension of the Cape’s constitution, to avoid recalling a parliament which would include members who had been tried for treason in the war, and to avoid the turbulence which would follow contested elections on the old franchise. Milner, who had himself on various occasions urged Chamberlain to modify or suspend the constitution,Footnote 211 gave strong support to the petition. In a letter to the Governor, published (without the Colonial Office’s knowledge) in the Cape press, Milner suggested that, if the constitution were not suspended, ‘Martial Law may have to be maintained for a much longer time.’Footnote 212 Governor Hely-Hutchinson also told Chamberlain that, if the constitution were not suspended, martial law would have to remain in place for at least eight months.Footnote 213 Chamberlain disliked this idea and wanted the political parties at the Cape to come to a concordat. Moreover, the proposal to suspend the constitution provoked strong opposition at the Cape. Among the opponents of suspension was Sir Henry de Villiers, who was horrified by Milner’s letter. Fearing that the imperial parliament might act on it, he lobbied both the Liberal Imperialist Herbert Asquith and the Canadian prime minister Wilfrid Laurier ‘to assist in averting the calamity that is threatening us’.Footnote 214 In these letters, he pointed out that Milner’s comments were ‘peculiarly unfortunate’ in light of the decision in Marais ‘that Martial Law can only be justified by the existence of actual hostilities’.Footnote 215
However, with 200 martial law prisoners still in detention in the Cape, and thousands of rebels surrendering, Hely-Hutchinson was convinced that martial law had to remain in place until further security legislation and an indemnity act had been passed. At the same time, he realised the danger that applications would be made to the courts to release prisoners.Footnote 216 Once it was clear that peace had been restored, they were likely to succeed. Given the political difficulty of securing the necessary legislation to validate martial law proceedings at the Cape, the Law Officers suggested imperial legislation;Footnote 217 but Chamberlain perceived difficulties in the way of getting it through parliament. Both the minister and his officials therefore contemplated moving the detainees to the former republics, out of the reach of the Cape Supreme Court, but this suggestion was opposed on political grounds by the Attorney General.Footnote 218 This left the authorities with a dilemma. ‘Subject to appeal to the Privy Council, it is, in fact, at present, practically in the power of the Supreme Court to nullify the proclamations of Martial Law’, Hely-Hutchinson wrote, ‘even if the Government, which is responsible for the maintenance of order, does not consider it prudent as yet to rescind them.’Footnote 219
In the middle of June, ministers at the Cape began to press for a relaxation of martial law, including allowing those who had been removed to Port Alfred to return to their homes.Footnote 220 Responding to their request, Settle said he was willing to relax unnecessary restrictions, but did not feel that martial law could be abolished until a satisfactory system of civil policing had been established in every district.Footnote 221 By early July, when it was clear that a state of war no longer existed which would satisfy the Marais test, Settle – who had received a three-and-a-half-page commentary on the case from de VilliersFootnote 222 – became more conscious of the risk of a clash with the Supreme Court. He now proposed to issue orders that no further action should be taken in the Cape Colony by the Administrators under martial law and that there should be no more martial law trials, while making it clear that he was still prepared to put the machinery of martial law into action at any time at the request of ministers.Footnote 223 The proposal was that responsibility for martial law – which would remain in place until the necessary legislation was passed – would be transferred to the civilians. This was a proposal which ministers were happy to accept.Footnote 224
By early July, military–civilian negotiations had resulted in an arrangement whereby martial law remained in place, but under civilian control. If this was regarded as a more satisfactory political arrangement, it did not remove the risk that the courts might free those who had been detained or sentenced by martial law courts. It was evident that Chief Justice de Villiers’s position on the question would be crucial, and officials soon came to the view that his behaviour might be influenced by his politics. De Villiers had continued to voice his passionate opposition to the suspension of the Cape constitution. In late June, he wrote to Chamberlain to reassure him that, if the Cape parliament met, it would pass the legislation necessary for the peace of the colony. He also promised to resign his judicial office and use all his influence in favour of reconciliation if these assurances proved false.Footnote 225 Aware of these views, officials in London thought it politic for Hely-Hutchinson have a private word with the Chief Justice, to pass on Chamberlain’s opinion that any conflict between the Supreme Court and the Executive over detentions ‘might force the hand of H.M.G. and thus prevent the settlement by “concordat”’.Footnote 226 Having met de Villiers, Attorney General T. L. Graham expressed his confidence that, if a habeas corpus application were brought before the court, a rule nisi would be granted at a long enough date to allow an indemnity act to be passed.Footnote 227 This removed Chamberlain’s fear of a conflict between executive and judiciary, and it was soon followed by an official response turning down the petition to suspend the constitution.Footnote 228
De Villiers did not, however, remain silent. Just at the moment when officials felt confident that the threat of a clash with the courts had been removed, he made his provocative comments in van Reenen’s case. The immediate response of the Cape’s Attorney-General was to recommend that any sentences passed since 31 May – the date of the peace – should be postponed indefinitely or considered for remission, to avoid the risk of a clash with the court.Footnote 229 Settle accordingly issued an order that all people held in military custody for what were civil offences – including treason – should be handed over to the civil authorities, and that those held for breaches of martial law regulations should be dealt with summarily, but ‘should suffer no penalty except a severe reprimand’.Footnote 230 Officials in London agreed that the promulgation of sentences by martial law courts after the cessation of hostilities would not be defensible. At the same time, Bertram Cox was exasperated by the Chief Justice’s remarks, which he felt were ‘intended to have a political effect’. He pointed out that, whether or not sentences were postponed, it was now open to any martial law detainee to apply to the court for his release. In his view, the only way to avoid a clash with the Supreme Court – which would render the passing of an indemnity act politically impossible – would be to end martial law. Ommanney, however, feared that this would unleash a flood of actions against ‘all officers from Kitchener down’, and thought it better to wait for an indemnity act and trust de Villiers not to be ‘too actively mischievous’.Footnote 231
The Martial Law Commission
One of the main issues which had to be dealt with at the end of the war was what was to be done with those convicted by martial law courts. Although they had largely followed the procedure of military courts, under the Diceyan theory, they were simply committees putting into execution the discretionary powers assumed by the military and had nothing of ‘law’ about them. Any sentences would therefore expire at the end of the war, which would mean either that the convicted rebels would have to be freed, or that they would have to be retried in civilian courts. Chamberlain’s solution, which he put to Milner, Hely-Hutchinson and McCallum on 26 June, was to appoint a commission to examine all unexpired sentences, and report on them before they were confirmed and validated by indemnity legislation both in the Cape and in Natal.Footnote 232 A review of all outstanding sentences by a quasi-judicial body would be able to legitimise them. A particular attraction of announcing such a commission early was that it might forestall the possibility of the Cape Supreme Court hearing habeas corpus cases.Footnote 233
Ministers at the Cape supported this proposal, but argued for a wider commission, which would include a Supreme Court judge, and which would examine expired sentences as well as unexpired ones.Footnote 234 This idea was strongly resisted by the Colonial Office and the Governor. In view of the recent acquittal of Pony De Wet by a bench of Cape judges sitting on the special treason court, Hely-Hutchinson recommended ‘that the Commission should be appointed from home’, and Chamberlain agreed that it had to be ‘absolutely independent of local influence & feeling’.Footnote 235 It was also feared that an examination of expired sentences would put the spotlight on controversial executions. They included not only high-profile Boer commando leaders such as Gideon Scheepers,Footnote 236 but also the case of H. J. van Heerden, a farmer from Zevenfontein, who had been shot by the military authorities, apparently without any trial, on 2 March 1901.Footnote 237
It was settled by the middle of July that a royal commission would be appointed in London, consisting of Lord Alverstone CJ, Justice Bigham and Sir John Ardagh. Legislation would be passed at the Cape to validate all martial law sentences, but granting the Governor the power to amend any sentences in light of the recommendations of the commission.Footnote 238 Once the indemnity act was passed, the martial law proclamation would be cancelled and the Peace Preservation Act 13 of 1878 proclaimed throughout the Colony.Footnote 239 The proposals were not uncontroversial. As the Bond newspaper Ons Land pointed out, in contrast to the position in 1900, when Rose-Innes had reviewed the sentences before parliament confirmed them, on this occasion they were to be confirmed first, and revised later.Footnote 240 At Westminster, the Irish Nationalist MP Swift Macneill criticised the appointment of English judges to a commission which dealt with ‘a matter of purely domestic political concern’ in a self-governing colony. He also challenged the impartiality of the members: both Alverstone (as Attorney General in Salisbury’s government) and Bigham had sat on the South African Committee, appointed by the Colonial Office to investigate the Jameson Raid, and Ardagh had been director of military intelligence during the war.Footnote 241
Once in South Africa, the commissioners worked very quickly, beginning their sittings on 26 August and presenting their report on 28 October. They looked at 794 cases in all, of which 721 were from the Cape and 14 from Natal (the rest being from the former Republics). By 10 September, the Commission was ready to recommend the immediate release of 113 prisoners, who were freed by the Governor after the passage of the Cape’s Indemnity Act a few days later. The final report contained recommendations for the revision of sentences, in tabulated form: giving the original sentence, the recommendation of the commission, and the date of expiry. The recommendations of the commissioners were reported in the press. The Times noted that, in a ‘large preponderance’ of cases, the pattern was of a person originally sentenced to death for treason having his sentence confirmed by the military as penal servitude or life, and then reduced by the commission to two or three years.Footnote 242 The Manchester Guardian reported that the tendency of the commission had been to cap sentences at five years’ imprisonment, though the commissioners had left some severer sentences unaltered (such as the German Max Teinart’s seven-year penal servitude sentence). In all, 154 sentences were left unaltered. The commission also released men who had death sentences commuted to penal servitude for life in thirty-six cases.Footnote 243
As a judicial body, the commissioners did not feel it was for them to recommend a general amnesty, which in any case they thought would be regarded ‘as a sign of weakness, and as an adverse criticism on the action of Military Authorities’. In a memorandum drafted by Ardagh after their return to England, they praised the procedure used in the martial law courts which (in their view) had demonstrated a ‘pervading spirit of impartial justice’, and castigated the policy embodied in the 1900 Indemnity and Special Tribunals Act as ‘disastrous’, considering that the effect of its leniency was to induce a large number to join the second rebellion. They also condemned the promise held out in Proclamation 100 of 1902, and pointed out – ‘in the strongest possible way’ – that ‘any legislative proceedings which minimise or belittle the offence of high treason are, and must be most disastrous to the well being of Governments.’Footnote 244
Whereas the appointment of the commission was considered as essential to legitimise the martial law sentences of Cape rebels, the authorities in Natal wanted to be exempted from its operation. Governor McCallum told Chamberlain on 25 July that Natal’s parliament had already confirmed all martial law sentences imposed before 10 June by its Indemnity Act, and that the government wanted to deal with any later cases through the prerogative of mercy. Footnote 245 In April, with the war coming to an end, Natal’s Attorney General Henry Bale had expressed the view that the remaining 200 Natal rebels in the field ‘should be left to be dealt with according to law’.Footnote 246 However, in light of the promises made to the Boer leaders – that rebels outside Natal would not be returned to the colony to face trial – he and his ministers decided that the best policy would be to exercise the prerogative of mercy by allowing those who surrendered for trial to return to their homes with no greater punishment than disfranchisement, and by freeing anyone serving a sentence of up to two years.Footnote 247 In response, Chamberlain indicated that, while he was happy for the Natal government to remit sentences before the commission began its work, he felt that the commission had to consider any cases where prisoners were still undergoing sentence at the time of the report. The commission’s remit had been agreed with the Governor, and had been made public: it could not be altered now.Footnote 248 Natal’s response was to insist that the commission should not inquire into sentences validated by the Indemnity Act, but must deal only with court martial cases since the act. It was also insisted that any action taken on the report of the commissioners would be done by the Governor acting on the advice of the ministry.Footnote 249 In the event, the commission considered only fourteen Natal cases, making no alteration of sentences in eleven cases.
Pressures for a Wider Inquiry
Many politicians at the Cape wanted to see a local commission appointed, which would have a wider remit than the Alverstone Commission. They had not forgotten Prime Minister Sprigg’s promise of a general commission of inquiry into martial law in September 1900, provision for which had been made in the Indemnity and Special Tribunals Act.Footnote 250 Although Chamberlain claimed that Sprigg had given him his ‘personal pledge’ that he would not appoint such a commission,Footnote 251 the Prime Minister changed his position when parliament met, in effect ‘simply offering a bribe to the Bond’ (as Ommanney saw it) in return for passing the indemnity bill.Footnote 252 In spite of stiff opposition from the Colonial Office and the Governor, Sprigg made it clear that he wanted a thorough investigation of martial law, and let London known that Justice Maasdorp had agreed to head it.Footnote 253
In the meantime, loyalists in the Cape parliament thought they might head off the prospect of a wide-reaching local commission by extending the Alverstone Commission’s remit to look into expired sentences.Footnote 254 However, Alverstone himself was opposed to this policy,Footnote 255 since he thought that the imperial government should keep control of the inquiry, and that ‘under no circumstances should the conduct of the military officers or their good faith be impugned.’Footnote 256 Nor did Chamberlain have any appetite for any wider inquiry. ‘I have no doubt many irregular things were done’, he noted, ‘but even so what is the good of raking them up unless full compensation is to be accorded to any aggrieved person?’ Lambert agreed: ‘I fear that a great deal of martial law [administration] will not bear investigation.’ Faced with the choice of an extended Alverstone commission (the loyalist proposal) and a local investigation (Sprigg’s proposal, backed by the Bond), Chamberlain preferred the latter, since London could ‘wash our hands of the whole business’ and let the Cape government fund any compensation claims.
In all these tortuous proceedings, London’s main concern was to get an indemnity bill passed, and it was prepared ‘to play Sprigg a little till this is done’.Footnote 257 At the same time, imperial officials were frightened that the Cape parliament would look closely at cases like van Heerden’s before passing the indemnity act. As Hely-Hutchinson told Chamberlain, there were members of the assembly who knew the facts of the case, and although (in his view) ‘Van Heerden probably deserved to be shot the proceedings of the Court Martial will not hold water’. More worryingly, the real facts did not justify the entry in the Blue Book of sentences which the Alverstone Commission was set to revise, which threatened to cast a shadow over its proceedings.Footnote 258 In the end, a promise by Sprigg to appoint a local commission of the sort anticipated in the 1900 Act – which leading Bond members saw as giving them a chance to expose the evils of military law – secured the passage of the bill without incident in the assembly.Footnote 259
Sprigg’s promise in turn generated concern among officials in London over how to deal with the recommendations of any local commission which might be appointed. One important question was whether the Governor would be bound to follow the advice of his ministers, if they instructed him to pardon those sentenced by martial law courts.Footnote 260 In October, Bertram Cox referred this question to the Law Officers, asking them whether the Governor could refuse on the grounds that imperial interests were at stake. The advice confirmed that the Governor did have the power to reject an amnesty, though officials were sensitive to the political risks of seeking to ignore the views of a ministry.Footnote 261 Officials also pondered the constitutionality of asking the Governor to refuse to appoint any local commission, and considered how its work might be frustrated, for instance by removing all relevant documents in the possession of the military out of the colony.Footnote 262
The problem remained hypothetical as long as no local commission was appointed. However, in the meantime, the Cape Legislative Council began to investigate of particular cases. In August, the petition of M. J. Pretorius, a member of the assembly, was referred to a select committee. He had been detained under martial law at Middelburg – where he had been ordered to attend the execution in July 1901 of F. A. Marais – and was later sent to Port Alfred as an undesirable. He had been told by the Martial Law Board that the reason for his expulsion was that he had not handed over horses which had been commandeered (a finding he disputed); but had not been allowed to return home until 29 July 1902. When the committee proceeded to deal with his complaint, its members were told by General Settle that the officers they wished to interview had left the country, while the Martial Law Board also refused to hand over its documents.Footnote 263 The committee reported that it could find no evidence that he had used any seditious language, but that he had been subjected to indignities and restrictions on his liberty. It also concluded that the Martial Law Board had failed in its duty of protecting British subjects from ‘injustice and wanton oppression’.Footnote 264
The Board’s chairman, Lewis L. Michell, lost little time in protesting about this finding, explaining to the Governor that the real charge against Pretorius had been that he was using his influence as a member of the legislature ‘in the wrong direction’. He also expressed his view that his deportation to the coast had a tranquillising effect on the district of Middelburg.Footnote 265 Hely-Hutchinson was also irked by the report, since he felt it was in the interest of those wanting a general inquiry to discredit the Martial Law Board. He also considered that in its criticism of the Board, the report, drafted by Sir Henry de Villiers, had violated a principle of justice, namely that no one should be condemned unheard. In London, Bertram Cox dismissed as worthless the ‘proceedings of a Bond committee taking evidence ex parte’, noting that ‘Pretorius seems to have been a typical Dutch Africander. He sends his sons to fight & sits & whines at home. Chief Justice De Villiers I believe did the same.’Footnote 266 Other cases were also investigated by select committee, without the benefit of military co-operation, revealing information which officials in London had to admit was ‘certainly not favourable to military justice’.Footnote 267 Try as they might to prevent scrutiny of wartime cases, political pressure at the Cape ensured that material embarrassing to the imperial authorities came into the public domain.
The appointment of a wide-reaching local commission of inquiry was avoided, however. By the time the session of the Cape parliament ended, in the middle of November, no local commission had yet been appointed, though the promise of one was still being held out.Footnote 268 When parliament reassembled in 1903, Bond members were keen to return to the issue, but by then, Sprigg had again changed his mind, now taking the view that his promise from 1900 to appoint a commission had been superseded by events. Consequently, when in August the lawyer Henry Burton called for a Supreme Court judge to be appointed to report on the sentences imposed under martial law in any cases where fines were imposed, and to constitute a court of appeal from any decisions of the War Losses Compensation Commission, Sprigg warned that, if the motion were passed, he would resign.Footnote 269 Having taken this position, it soon became clear that the Bond would not agree to the passage of Sprigg’s Supply Bill, since they were pledged to an amnesty and an inquiry into martial law. The Prime Minister consequently advised the Governor to dissolve the assembly and issue Treasury warrants, as had been done in the war, and trusting to an indemnity by a subsequent parliament. In brief, faced with Sprigg’s threat to resign, and having to call on a ministry whose supporters were ‘tainted with treason and rebellion’. Hely-Hutchinson agreed to the dissolution.Footnote 270 When elections to the assembly were next held in 1904, a Progressive majority was returned, and the question of a commission to investigate martial law fell off the agenda.
Conclusion
Questions about the nature of martial law, and how far it was subject to the rule of law, returned to the public agenda during the Anglo-Boer war in a way that had not been the case since the Morant Bay rebellion. This was not only because of the unprecedented scale on which martial law powers were exercised, or the numbers detained or imprisoned after martial law trials. It was also because, in this war, those who were being detained and imprisoned in this way were white subjects, with the full citizenship rights of British subjects, living in colonies with representative governments.
As R. W. Kostal has shown, the Jamaica controversy had revealed two rival conceptions of martial law, one of which (espoused by Governor Eyre’s critics) saw all actions taken in emergencies as being subject to common law review, and the other of which (championed by his defenders) defended a ‘jurisprudence of power’ which regarded martial law as a legitimate means of defending imperial interests.Footnote 271 As has been seen in earlier chapters, as the British extended their rule in other parts of Africa, a vision endorsing the ‘jurisprudence of power’ was often in the ascendancy, with arbitrary actions legitimated by formal legislative fiat, issued by legislators whose authority derived ultimately from the imperial parliament in Westminster, in whose name these new subject peoples were conquered. But such an approach was not so easy to adopt where the people whose rights were violated were white subjects, as opposed to subjected black Africans. In South Africa, it became evident that the rule of law was as much a matter of culture, or state of mind, as it was of doctrine or jurisdiction.
This war raised hitherto unanswered questions about the rule of law, which often needed to be settled by negotiation by parties who took different views of it. One question concerned the status of martial law. If the military inclined to Finlason’s view that the crown had a prerogative power to take all actions it considered necessary in times of emergency, and the civilians inclined to Dicey’s view that all military actions were subject to judicial review, in practice both came to accept that a proclamation of martial law initiated a particular kind of legal regime, whose parameters needed to be negotiated and defined. How far a culture of the rule of law could be maintained in this world depended on how influential political voices in its favour, backed by the threat not to indemnify the military, could be, in face of military demands to win the war by all means. It is notable that, in this context, the colonial courts – under Chief Justice de Villiers – became increasingly assertive in seeking to limit the military’s power to detain without trial. It is equally notable that the highest imperial court, the Privy Council, in the landmark decision of Marais confirmed the power of the military to take action unfettered by the court during the emergency. The approach of Halsbury – who had been Eyre’s lawyer – was to treat the military’s powers durante bello as equivalent to those conferred by a continental state of siege: a formal power conferred by the state of war. His views differed entirely from the Diceyan views of de Villiers, who found himself outvoted on the same court. Their views of the rule of law might have reflected their wider political sentiments: whereas the judge from the Cape felt a deep sympathy towards the detained fellow Dutch-speakers, the conservative Lord Chancellor’s views may have been more in line with those of men like Milner, for whom the Cape Dutch were at best potentially disloyal, at worst the enemy in a struggle to decide which of the two ‘white races’ would prevail.Footnote 272 As Halsbury had shown in 1890 in Cox v. Hakes, he was willing to give a liberal interpretation of the reach of the writ of habeas corpus when the rights of high church English clergymen were at stake; but he was not prepared to take such a liberal view when dealing with imperial enemies.Footnote 273
Halsbury’s view of martial law shielded the military only until the war ended, when an indemnity act would be needed. When it came to passing indemnity legislation, it became evident, particularly in the majority Dutch-speaking Cape, that the legislature would not be content simply with passing a formal statute to whitewash the military. Martial law sentences were confirmed, but only after a process of sentence revision, designed to assure legislators that the sentences were not unjust. In this context – where former white rebels needed to be re-integrated into a post-war political order – the same rule-of-law concerns which had animated de Villiers’s judgment were once more in evidence. As shall now be seen, such concerns were far less in the ascendant when martial law returned to South Africa in 1906, with the view of suppressing a Zulu rebellion.