Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 902South Africa
Seleme v Department of Home Affairs and Others (2020/28304) [2022] ZAGPJHC 902 (18 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Seleme v Department of Home Affairs and Others (2020/28304) [2022] ZAGPJHC 902 (18 November 2022)
Seleme v Department of Home Affairs and Others (2020/28304) [2022] ZAGPJHC 902 (18 November 2022)
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sino date 18 November 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2020/28304
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
18/11/2022
In
the matter between:
MAKHOSINE
QUINTIN SELEME
(Identity
Number: [....])
APPLICANT
and
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
1
st
RESPONDENT
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
2
nd
RESPONDENT
LESIBA
FRANS MAKGAKGA
3
rd
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
[1]
This is an application for the first respondent to register a
customary marriage between
the applicant and the late Makgaka Bella
Sebethi (“the deceased”).
[2]
Customary marriages are regulated by the Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act 120
of 1998 (“the Act”). The legal basis
for this application is to be found in section 4(7) of the Act which
states that
a court may upon application order the registration of
any customary marriage.
[3]
The applicant alleges that he married the deceased in 2009 according
to customary
tradition. The marriage was never registered. The
deceased died in a motor car accident on 26 October 2018. Ever since
that date
there has been a dispute between the applicant and her
family about the legality of the ceremony.
[4]
The third respondent is the only respondent who opposes the relief
sought. The third
respondent is the father of the deceased. He
alleges there was no ceremony that accorded with tradition and that
he has never regarded
the appellant as his daughter’s husband
and consequently he opposes the relief sought by the applicant.
[5]
Although I am not called to decide this issue in the present
litigation what really
is at stake is who is appointed as the
executor of the deceased Bella Sebethi’s estate. By all
accounts the deceased had
more income and assets than either her
putative spouse or her father who is a pensioner. Initially the
second respondent the Master
the High Court had appointed an attorney
nominated by the appellant to be the executor. After overtures from
the father this appointment
was rescinded by the Master who appointed
the third respondent as the executor.
[6]
These proceedings were brought by way of motion. There are numerous
disputes of facts
on the record. Ordinarily that would lead to either
a dismissal of the application or a referral to oral evidence.
Neither party
was in favour of any via media by way of referral to
trial or oral evidence. Mr Manaka who appeared for the third
respondent urged
me to dismiss the application because he argued the
applicant should have anticipated these disputes and not instituted
motion
proceedings. But Ms Moyo who appeared for the applicant argued
that I could still decide the matter on the undisputed facts as they
would suffice to demonstrate that a marriage in terms of customary
law had indeed taken place.
Factual history
[7]
According to the applicant he and the deceased began a relationship
in 2003. She already
had a child, a boy called Lesego, with another
man who was born in 2003. The applicant states he and the deceased
commenced living
together but the date of this co-habitation is not
clear from the record. In November 2009, he, together with a
delegation from
his family, went to the home of her father, the third
respondent, to discuss a marriage proposal from the applicant.
According
to tradition his family first had to pay a door fee or the
equivalent of an engagement fee to the deceased’s’
family.
This it is common cause they paid in the amount of R 1000.
Thereafter on the applicant’s version negotiations commenced on
the same day and culminated in a document recorded the same day as
follows.
“
The
Makgakga family and the Seleme family:
The
Seleme family requests for a wife from the Makgakga family. They are
paying R1000 introduction fee. (This fee is paid to ward
off any
interest from anyone else wanting the same woman). They request the
amount for the bride price. The Makgakga family sets
the fee at R20
000. A live cow, a coat for the father-in-law, a blanket for the
mother-in-law and a blanket for the bride. The
Seleme family pays
R2000. Jane Makgakga. The Makgakga family: Lesiba Makgakga. The
Seleme family: Moshikoane. Seleme The family
of Edward Malesa
(Translated
by assumption as the beginning of the phrase is cut off and the name
as it appears to me
).
[1]
[8]
The document is in manuscript and is written on the torn out pages of
a diary on the
date the meeting took place, 28 November 2009.The
content of the document, and its translation from Sepedi into English
are common
cause.
[2]
It is also not disputed that the applicant (or his family) paid the R
3000 mentioned. It is also common cause that the balance
of R 18 000
(assuming that the R 1000 was not part of the bride price but an
engagement fee) was never paid. The applicant says
he was unable to
afford it.
[9]
Thereafter on the applicant’s version he and the deceased
resumed co-habitation.
They had a child together a girl called
Lesedi. Strangely the founding papers say nothing about this child,
when she was born and
whether she lived together with applicant and
the deceased. It is only through the answering papers that I became
aware of this
child.
[10]
In 2018 the deceased, Lesedi, and the deceased’s mother were
involved in a fatal motor
collision. The deceased died intestate.
Since then, the applicant and third respondent have been in dispute
over several issues
they are.; an RAF claim for both the applicant
and Lesego, the executorship of the estate, and the occupation of a
home registered
in the deceased’s name. Central to the
applicant’s claims in respect of all of these is whether he was
married to the
deceased in terms of customary law.
Legal
provisions
.
[11]
It is not necessary for a customary marriage to be registered to have
legal validity. However,
if it is not, then in terms of section 3(1)
of the Act, the following requirements must be met.
“
3
Requirements for validity of customary marriages
(1)
For a customary marriage entered
into after the commencement of this to be valid
(a) the prospective
spouses
(i) must both be above
the age of 18 years, and
(
ii)
must both consent to be married to each other under customary law,
and
(b) the marriage
must be negotiated and entered into or celebrated in accordance with
Customary Law".
[12]
There is no dispute that the applicant has made out a case on the
first two requirements set
out in section 3(1)(a). The question is
whether the third, in terms of section 3(1)(b), has been met. For
this reason, I have underlined
it.
[13]
Initially Ms Moyo, who appeared for the applicant, had argued that
the applicant in these circumstances
needed to prove a ceremony as
well as co-habitation. However, given the factual disputes over
co-habitation she now argues that
the case can be decided on the
letter alone. For this reason, I first consider the facts concerning
the ceremony.
The document as
sufficient proof of a customary marriage
[14]
I now turn to the issue of whether the document on its own
constitutes sufficient proof the customary
marriage.
[15]
The following facts about the letter are common cause. It was written
by the deceased’s
parents and signed by them as well as a
member of the applicants’ family. The letter sets out the bride
price (R 20 000)
plus certain gifts to be bestowed on family members
of the deceased (a blanket for the mother-in-law, a coat for third
respondent
and a cow. It is also not disputed that as recorded by the
document that the applicant had paid R 30000. Also not disputed is
that
the applicant never paid the balance of the bride price.
[16]
The third respondent argues that the document does not suffice to
constitute proof of a customary
marriage. First it is argued that the
balance of the bride price was never paid. Next is that there were
deficiencies in following
proper custom. The third respondent states
that the delegation from the applicant had arrived “
uninvited”
and “
without
prior arrangement
”
. As he put it:
“
I informed them
that I had no capacity to welcome and negotiate with them, except to
explain the process and requirements. I explained
that my custom and
culture dictates that a specific uncle and aunt of the deceased must
head the delegation, whilst my wife and
I join other elders for the
final decision.”
[17]
The second deficiency which pointed to non-compliance with the
cultural practice was that there
was no celebration afterwards. This
was impossible to have happened, the third applicant contends,
because not only were the required
relatives not there, but also
given the surprise nature of the event, no arrangements could have
been made for the celebration,
which would have included a ritual
slaughter and the handing over of the bride. None of this he contends
happened.
[18]
The applicant does not dispute that these steps were not taken,
although he says a celebration
followed at the home of one of his
relatives. Nevertheless, he concedes the third applicant was not in
attendance.
[19]
But the main argument advanced by Ms Moyo for the applicant is based
on the terms of the agreement
reached between the two families. Since
that is the case, I must first consider the reasons the third
respondent offers for agreeing
to the terms of the document. On his
version despite the apparent finality of the language in the
document, negotiations remained
inconclusive, and it was contemplated
that the families would meet again to finalise issues. The reason he
offers for setting out
the terms in the document was to
“…
avoid
any possible duplication on the return date for the lobola
negotiations.”
[20]
No such reservation or suggestion that there would be a
“
return
date
”
are contained in the text.
Ex facie
this
document, an agreement had been reached if this was a mere matter of
an interpretation of a contract. However, it is not. This
is a matter
of determining the legal status of the applicant and the deceased.
The Act requires,
inter alia
,
a determination of whether the marriage was “(…)
negotiated and entered into or
celebrated in accordance with Customary Law
".
This means the enquiry cannot end after a mere perusal of the text of
the arrangement.
[21]
Ms Moyo has argued that the failure to pay the full bridal price does
not invalidate the marriage
in terms of customary law. In
Fanti
v Boto & others
[2008] JOL 21238
(C) Dlodlo J (as she was then) dealt with the opposite contention.
Here the issue was whether payment of lobola sufficed to prove
a
customary marriage. She held:
“
Regard
being had to the above requirements for the validity of a customary
marriage, payment of lobolo remains merely as one of
the essential
requirements. In other words, even if payment of lobolo is properly
alleged and proved that alone would not render
a relationship a valid
customary marriage in the absence of the other essential requirements
(see Gidya v Yingwana 1944 NAC (N&T)
4; R v Mane 1947 (2) PH H328
(GW); Ziwande v Sibeko 1948 NAC (C) 21; Ngcongolo v Parkies
1953 NAC
(S) 103).
”
[22]
However, the case Ms Moyo relies on was also decided in the same year
and takes a different approach
to the lobola payment issue.
[23]
In
Maloba v Dube
2008
ZAGPPHC 434 (23 June 2008) the court explained that:
“
It
is trite in African Customary Law that there is no rigid custom
governing the time stipulation within which lobolo has to be
fully
paid. What is sacrosanct is the undertaking to pay the agreed lobolo.
Consequently, the non-payment of the lobolo balance
as alleged by the
applicant is not decisive of the ultimate question, which is whether,
was a valid customary marriage negotiated
or concluded and that in
pursuance of such negotiations lobolo was fixed. In my view whether
lobolo was fixed at R6 000.00 or R4
000.00 is not decisive, the fact
of the matter is that lobolo was fixed and agreed upon. The
outstanding question is whether or
not the marriage was entered into
or celebrated in accordance with customary law.”
[24]
For the purpose of this case, I will follow the approach suggested in
Maloba v Dube
.
I will accept that payment of the lobola agreed upon or in this case
the balance of the lobola, is not an essential requirement
for
validity. However, this does not mean that it cannot be weighed up in
the considerations together with other evidence. Failure
to pay the
balance of the lobola without an explanation for why this was the
case, could lead to an inference that the applicant
was
insufficiently committed to the relationship. For this reason, I go
on to consider whether the non-observance of the other
cultural
practices, namely the presence of the elders, and the celebration
would lead me to a different conclusion.
[25]
Here Ms Moyo argued that customary law is not static. It evolves with
the times. This approach
in principle find support in a decision of
the Supreme Court of Appeal where Maya JA in
Mbungela and
Another v Mkabi and Others
2020 (1) SA 41
(SCA)
held
that:
“
no hard and
fast rules can be laid down, this is because ‘customary law is
a flexible, dynamic system, which continuously
evolves within the
context of its values and norms, consistently with the Constitution,
so as to meet the changing needs of the
people who live by its norms’
… because of variations in the practice of rituals and customs
in African society, the
legislature left it open for the various
communities to give content to section 3(1)(b) in accordance with
their lived experiences”
[3]
[26]
I accept that I must follow a flexible approach. The problem judges
face is that they have to
decide on an ad hoc basis which practices
can be said to have evolved, and which remain sacrosanct. In this
matter I do not have
the benefit of this evidence. I accept that on
certain issues courts can take notice of changing norms without
evidence. A customary
practice that might suppress a right a party
has otherwise in terms of the constitution, for instance a practice
that might subjugate
women. I accept as well that modernisation may
also come into play. Ms Moyo gave as an example of lobola payments
being made by
electronic transfer. But the two customary practice
here do not slot easily into either of these categories so I cannot
conclude
that their non-adherence represents some changing norm or
denial of another constitutional right. Both practices that were not
adhered to have in common the recognition that the involvement of
both families and extended families in sanctioning a couple’s
relationship is essential. But even if it is not considered an
essential it is further symptomatic of the non-adherence to tradition
when considered against the casual way the deceased’s family
were treated and the failure to pay the balance of the lobola
without
explanation.
[27]
There are thus deficiencies in both elements required in terms of
section 3(1)(b). The absence
of the deceased’s senior relatives
suggests that the ‘negotiation’ was not done in
accordance with tradition.
The absence of joint celebration suggests
that it was not ‘celebrated’ in accordance with
tradition.
[28]
I find therefore that notwithstanding the text of the document
customary practice has not been
adhered to. Since these customary
practices are important and still adhered to, I cannot adopt a
‘flexible approach’
and ignore them.
Co-habitation
[29]
I will still nevertheless consider the issue of co-habitation because
co-habitation has been
recognised in the case law as a factor that
might serve to confirm the existence of a customary marriage. In
Tsambo v Sengadi
[2020] JOL 47138
(SCA)
the
court quoted the work of Professor Benett who had stated:
“
long
cohabitation raises a strong suspicion of marriage, especially when
the woman’s father has taken no steps indicating
that he does
not so regard it”.
[30]
The applicant states that he became acquainted with the deceased in
2003 when they started what
he terms a “
romantic
relationship
.” At the time he
says he was living with her in Tembisa. Her father he says had chased
her from the parental home in 2007.
The applicant and the deceased
then moved in together in her grandparents’ home elsewhere in
Tembisa. The applicant says
he built a home for them both at the
grandparents. Thus, the applicant’s case is that he and the
deceased cohabited prior
to the customary ceremony (28 November 2009)
and continued to do so thereafter until her death. Subsequent to her
death he continues
to reside at the premises where they had
co-habited prior to her death.
[31]
The third respondent disputes this version. The only fact about
co-habitation that is common
cause is that he agrees that the
applicant now resides in what was the deceased’s’ last
home. He makes no mention of
the deceased being forced to leave her
parental home in 2003 and this allegation is met with a bare denial.
However, he does put
up his own narrative of the events. He states
that in 2003 the deceased was in a relationship with another man. In
2003 she had
a child called Lesego from this relationship. The third
respondent then explains how the deceased came to be living with her
grandparents.
On his version she came to live with them in 2008
because she was then working for Shoprite Checkers in Kempton Park.
This required
her to work till late. For safety reason her parents
encouraged her to stay with her grandparents who lived in Tembisa
which was
closer to her work.
[32]
In 2014 the deceased purchased a home in Clayville in Midrand. This
home is close to where the
third respondent lives. The Deeds Office
records the deceased as the owner but describes her status as
“unmarried”.
The third respondent makes much of this
fact. Why he asks did the deceased describe herself as unmarried in
2014, if on the applicant’s
version they had entered into a
customary marriage in 2008. The third respondent denies that the
applicant lived with the deceased
either in Tembisa or at her new
home in Clayville. Rather he states the applicant lived in another
part of Tembisa in a home owned
by his employer. He also relies on
another document; a credit application the deceased had submitted to
purchase a motor vehicle.
In the section on the form where she was
required to give details of “
spouse
next of kin
”
she inserts the
third respondent’s name as next of kin. There is no mention
made of the applicant. The block on the form next
to ‘spouse’
is left blank.
[33]
He says the applicant frequently visited her when she moved to
Clayville but did not stay there.
The reason he visited her there was
that they had minor child together born in 2010. This child died in
the same accident as the
deceased.
[34]
The third respondent then says that in 2017 the deceased had
indicated to him that she wanted
to end her relationship with the
applicant because he had been abusive towards her. At that time
Lesego, the child of the deceased’s
first relationship, was
living with her. Because of the threats made by the applicant the
third respondent arranged to have Lesego
go with him to Limpopo where
they could “…
safely stay
without the risk of being harmed by the applicant.”
[35]
On 26 October 2018, the deceased, her minor child with the applicant,
Lesedi, her mother, and
other family members were killed in a motor
accident. After the funeral Lesego was sent to stay with an aunt. It
is unclear from
the record whether this was a different relative to
whom he had gone previously. What is common cause is that from
December 2018
Lesego went to stay with the applicant. From
correspondence attached to the founding affidavit it is apparent that
Lesego was having
personal problems adjusting to the death of his
mother. A letter from a social worker addressed “
To
whom it may concern
”
indicates
these problems and states that he is staying with his “
biological
father
”
at the Clayville home
although this is referred to as being in Tembisa. It is also
incorrect as the applicant was not Lesego’s
biological father.
For whatever reason the applicant had misrepresented this fact to the
social worker.
[36]
The third respondent denies that Lesego came to live with the
applicant in 2018. I cannot resolve
this dispute of fact between the
two of them. However, Lesego who is now over 18 years has provided an
affidavit confirming the
third respondents’ version. He goes on
in his affidavit to state:
“
I further
confirm that the Applicant, Makhosine Quintin Seleme, did not stay
with my mother Bella Sebethi Makgakga, nor is he my
guardian or
primary care giver
.”
[37]
According to the third respondent Lesego is now
residing in Daveyton with his other daughter. The third respondent
does concede
that the applicant now resides in the Clayville home but
contends this only happened after the deceased passed away.
[38]
The facts concerning co-habitation are
insufficient for me to consider them evidence that the applicant and
deceased had a customary
marriage. Whilst both versions have their
lacunae applying
Plascon Evans
I cannot find in favour of the applicant on this
issue. Moreover, to the extent that the third respondent might not
have direct
knowledge of the co-habitation, on the applicant’s
version Lesego would. But Lesego’s affidavit is entirely
destructive
of the applicants’ version on this point.
Conclusion.
[39]
I conclude that the applicant has failed to make
out a case that a customary was entered into that met the
requirements of section
3(1)(b) of the Act. The facts on
co-habitation do not favour his version either. The application is
dismissed. The applicant is
liable for the third respondent’s
costs.
ORDER:-
[40]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is liable for the third
respondent’s costs on a party and party scale.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
19 August 2022
Date of judgment:
18 November 2022
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant:
S Moyo
Instructed by.
Mashabela Attorneys Inc.
Counsel for the First
Respondent:
M G Manaka
Instructed by:
JM Cornelius Attorneys
[1]
The
comment in bold type parentheses is that of the translator.
[2]
At
my request, the applicant had the document translated from Sepedi
into English by a court interpreter who verified his translation.
[3]
At
paragraph 17.
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