As legal technology in South Africa advances, courts and law firms are grappling with the consequences of AI misuse in legal research and documentation. Recent incidents have raised serious questions about ethics in law practices and the growing legal risks with AI — especially following the controversial Mavundla v MEC: Department of Co-Operative Government and Traditional Affairs KwaZulu-Natal and Others case in early 2025.
AI Missteps Shake Legal Credibility
The Mavundla case exposed how reliance on generative AI tools like ChatGPT can backfire. The legal team submitted fabricated case authorities—AI-generated “hallucinations”—that did not exist. Only two of the nine citations were genuine. The High Court condemned the conduct as “irresponsible and unprofessional,” referring the matter to the Legal Practice Council for investigation.
This was not South Africa’s first encounter with AI misuse in court. A similar issue arose in Parker v Forsyth (2023), where fake case citations appeared, though the judge ruled there was no intent to deceive. But the Mavundla decision signaled a turning point: courts are running out of patience with lawyers using AI irresponsibly.
The Need for Ethical AI Integration in Legal Practice
Experts argue that while legal technology in South Africa offers significant efficiency benefits, law schools and firms must ensure responsible use. Without ethical frameworks, legal risks with AI can lead to professional misconduct, reputational damage, and even financial penalties.
“Technology must support—not replace—human judgment and integrity,” said legal researchers from the University of the Free State.
Currently, few South African universities have established AI education policies, leaving aspiring lawyers to navigate this new terrain without proper guidance. This educational gap makes it crucial to teach “AI literacy” — verifying and contextualizing AI outputs before using them in legal proceedings.
From Classroom to Courtroom: Teaching Responsible AI Use
AI tools can summarize, draft, and analyze legal materials instantly. However, their tendency to “hallucinate” false information means that accuracy cannot be taken for granted. For future lawyers, overreliance on AI can erode research skills and ethical awareness.
Legal educators recommend embedding AI literacy into courses on ethics, legal writing, and research methodology. Students should learn to use AI as an assistant, not as an authority. Proper supervision of junior legal staff is also essential to prevent misuse in real-world practice.
Protecting Justice Through Ethical Technology
The Mavundla case is a wake-up call for the profession. Integrity, accuracy, and accountability remain the pillars of law — and must not be compromised for speed or convenience. Law schools and bar councils must lead efforts to balance innovation with ethical responsibility.
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This story was first reported by The Conversation. Read the full article here.
















