Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 997South Africa
Nefale v Nkosi and Others (2021/41524) [2022] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nefale v Nkosi and Others (2021/41524) [2022] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 December 2022)
Nefale v Nkosi and Others (2021/41524) [2022] ZAGPJHC 997 (7 December 2022)
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sino date 7 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2021/41524
Date
of hearing:23/11/2022
Date
delivered: 07/12/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
07/12/2022
In
the matter between:
ELIZABETH
SIMANGELE NEFALE
Applicant
And
EUNICE
SONTO
NKOSI
1
st
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL: HOME AFFAIRS
2
nd
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME
AFFAIRS
3
rd
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KEMACK
AJ:
1.
The applicant is the sister and executor of
the late July Hlabangwane. The purpose of the applicant’s
application is the reviewing
and setting aside of the alleged
registration of a customary union between the first respondent and
the deceased.
2.
As the Department of Home Affairs is
responsible for registering customer reunions, the Director General:
Home Affairs and Minister
of Home Affairs have been cited as the
second and third respondents.
3.
As the first respondent’s entitlement
to a share of the estate of the deceased underlies the bringing of
this application,
the Master of the South Gauteng High Court has been
cited as the fourth respondent.
4.
The second, third and fourth respondents
have not entered appearance to defend.
5.
The applicant’s prayers seek no
direct relief against the first respondent, other than costs of suit
in the event of opposition.
Rather, the applicant’s prayers are
directed at the second and third respondents, whose alleged
registration of the customary
union the applicant seeks to have
reviewed and set aside.
6.
Although the application expressly and
clearly seeks the review and setting aside of the administrative
action of registering the
alleged customary union, the applicant
elected to bring this application as a normal application under
Uniform Rule 6, rather than
as a Uniform Rule 53 review. This was an
unfortunate decision, because it has led to no documentary evidence
being placed before
the court in the form of a record of the
administrative decision.
7.
Indeed, the affidavits and their annexures
before the court do not even include the marriage certificate that
should have been prepared
by the Department of Home Affairs, had the
customary union been registered. While annexure “TSM4” to
the applicant’s
founding affidavit is a letter from the first
respondent’s attorney referring to an attached copy of the
marriage certificate,
no marriage certificate is attached to the
letter. Neither party has placed the marriage certificate before the
court.
8.
The recognition and registration of
customary marriages is regulated by the Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act No. 120 of 1998
(“the Act”) and the
regulations promulgated under that act.
9.
Section 4(4)(a) of the Act states that “
A
registering office must, if satisfied that the spouses concluded a
valid customary marriage, register the marriage by recording
the
identity of the spouses, the date of the marriage, any lobolo agreed
to and any other particulars prescribed
”.
10.
Section 4(4)(b) states that “
The
registering officer must issue to the spouses a certificate of
registration, bearing the prescribed particulars
”.
11.
Section 4(5)(a) states that “
If
for any reason a customary marriage is not registered, any person who
satisfies a registering officer that he or she has a sufficient
interest in the matter may apply to the registering officer in the
prescribed manner to inquire into the existence of the marriage
”.
12.
Section 4(5)(b) states that “
If
the registering officer is satisfied that a valid customary marriage
exists or existed between the spouses, he or she must register
the
marriage and issue a certificate of registration as contemplated in
subsection (4)
”.
13.
Section 4(9) states that “
Failure
to register a customary marriage does not affect the validity of that
marriage
”.
14.
Section 7(2) states that “
A
customary marriage in which a spouse is not a partner in any other
existing customary marriage, is a marriage in community of
property
and of profit and loss between the spouses
”.
There appears to be no dispute that neither the deceased nor the
first respondent was a partner in any other existing customary
marriage.
15.
Regulation 2(1) requires an application for
the registration of a customary marriage to substantially correspond
with Form A of
the Annexure to the regulations.
16.
Regulation 2(2) requires a registering
officer to issue the applicant with an acknowledgment of receipt
substantially corresponding
with Form B of the Annexure.
17.
Regulation 2(5) requires the resulting
certificate of registration to substantially correspond with Form C
of the Annexure to the
regulations.
18.
Although one would expect all three of
these documents to be available if the customary marriage had been
registered, these documents
were not obtained from the second and
third respondents as would presumably have happened had Uniform Rule
53 been used, and were
not placed before the court by either the
applicant or the first respondent.
19.
Regulation 2(4) obliges the registering
officer to include or cause to be included the particulars of the
customary marriage in
the population register, while regulation
2(5)(b) provides for the director-general of Home Affairs on
application to issue a duplicate
of the customary marriage
certificate, issue an extract from the customary marriage register,
and furnish a reproduction of the
customary marriage register or of
any supporting documentation in relation to the register. The
applicant did not make a regulation
2(5)(b) application before
instituting this application, and none of these documents were placed
before the court.
20.
In the absence of any of the appropriate
documents serving as evidence that there was an administrative
application resulting in
registration of a customary union, in the 23
November 2022 hearing the court was not in a position to set aside
such registration
or even consider whether it was reviewable.
21.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that it
would suffice if the court found that there was no valid customary
marriage between
the first respondent and the deceased, and asked the
court to make an order on that basis. This could not be done, first
because
such an order was not covered by the relief sought in the
notice of motion, and second because the court’s view was that
the allegations in the first respondent’s answering affidavit
could not be rejected and were sufficient to materially dispute
the
applicant’s allegations that no valid customary marriage had
occurred.
22.
On this basis, the parties agreed that the
application should be postponed
sine die
with no order as to costs to enable the parties to obtain or attempt
to obtain the required record of the impugned administrative
decision
to register the customary union.
23.
The court’s order is that:
23.1.
This application is postponed
sine
die
by agreement;
23.2.
There is no order as to costs.
KEMACK
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT: ADVOCATE BOTOMANE
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT: MATHIBE THABANG ATTORNEYS
ATTORNEY
FOR 1
ST
RESPONDENT: F M MOLOI ATTORNEYS
DATE
HEARD:
23 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
7 December 2022
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