Abstract :
Competent courts in Malawi must, as courts have done in South Africa, undertake a
radical path in order to enhance the common law position of distinct categories of
persons. This article discusses judicial appreciation of the common law-changing
function of a bill of rights and its associated values, and judicial understanding as
to when such a function may be brought into play. The article examines approaches
taken by courts in South Africa in determining the circumstances in which the
South African Bill of Rights applies to private relationships, when private parties
owe each other duties arising out of the Bill of Rights and the scope of a court’s
authority to amend the common law in that regard. The article projects the
debate, analysis and critique of these approaches onto the Malawian legal landscape
through a discussion of the tenant worker contracted on the Malawi
private estate.