At the time of South Africa's democratisation in the early 1990s, the position of chief justice was held by
University of Cambridge graduate and
Second World War veteran
Michael Corbett. Corbett took office in 1989, succeeding Chief Justice
P.J. Rabie, who had been scheduled to retire in 1986 at the statutory retirement age of 70, but had had his tenure in office extended on an
ad hoc basis by
state president P.W. Botha. However, with the fall of
Apartheid imminent, the progressively-minded Corbett was eventually handed the job of chief justice in 1989. Although appointed by the
National Party government, Corbett was generally well liked by those in South Africa's new
African National Congress (ANC)-led government, and upon his retirement in 1996 was given a formal state banquet where President Mandela paid tribute to the chief justice's "passion for justice", "sensitivity to racial discrimination", "intellectual rigour" and "clarity of thought". The first chief justice to be appointed in
post-apartheid South Africa was
Ismail Mahomed, a leading South African jurist of
Indian descent, who was selected to succeed Corbett in 1997 and eventually took office in 1998. Mahomed held the position until his death in 2000. Under South Africa's
Interim Constitution of 1993 and later the
Final Constitution, the importance of the position of chief justice as the position of final judicial authority was temporarily relegated beneath that of the president of the newly created Constitutional Court. Ismail Mohammed had been tipped widely for the job of Constitutional Court president but in 1994, President
Nelson Mandela appointed leading human rights lawyer and director of the Legal Resources Centre
Arthur Chaskalson to the position. In 2001, after Mohammed's death and, consequently, with the position of chief justice vacant, the
Sixth Amendment of the Constitution of South Africa fused the positions of chief justice and president of the Constitutional Court into one single job of chief justice. Chaskalson was subsequently appointed to the new post, although his tasks remained effectively the same. ==Chief justices of Cape Colony==