Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 4South Africa
Malatjie v Sekgobela and Others (053314/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 4 (7 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Malatjie v Sekgobela and Others (053314/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 4 (7 January 2025)
Malatjie v Sekgobela and Others (053314/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 4 (7 January 2025)
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sino date 7 January 2025
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
053314/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
7 January 2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PERTUNIA
PHINA
MALATJIE
Applicant
and
ZANALE
UNICE
SEKGOBELA
1
st
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
2
nd
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL: HOME AFFAIRS
3
rd
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
4
th
Respondent
THE
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
5
th
Respondent
EMPLOYEE
OF SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE
SERVICES
PUBLIC ORDER POLICE UNIT (POPU)
6
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
Introduction
[1]
This application concerns the validity of two marriages concluded by
Hlakong Jacob Malatjie (“the
deceased”). The applicant
maintains that she entered into a civil marriage with the deceased on
19 October 2011 and requests
an order declaring the marriage to be
valid.
[2]
In support of the relief claimed by the applicant, the applicant
attached a marriage certificate
issued by the Department of Home
Affairs confirming the aforesaid civil marriage. As a result, the
fact that a civil marriage was
concluded between the applicant and
the deceased is not in dispute.
[3]
The validity of the marriage is, however, challenged by the first
respondent, who claims that
she and the deceased concluded a
customary marriage on 6 December 2004. Should the first respondent be
correct, it follows that
the civil marriage concluded between the
deceased and the applicant is invalid.
Background
[4]
The applicant provided a detailed account of her customary and civil
marriage to the deceased.
The applicant stated that she met the
deceased during late 2009 and that their relationship blossomed into
a romantic affair. On
30 July 2011 the deceased sent his family to
negotiate lobola and the parties agreed on an amount of R 28 000,
00, of which
R 15 000,00 was paid.
[5]
The applicant mentions the names of the persons who respectively
represented the deceased and
herself during the negotiations. A copy
of the lobola agreement confirming the agreed amount and the gifts to
be handed over is
attached to the applicant’s affidavit.
[6]
Their civil marriage was concluded on 18 October 2011 and on 3
December 2011 the families of the
deceased and the applicant met to
finalise the lobola negotiations and to conclude the marriage in
terms of customs. In terms of
the negotiations, the deceased’s
family had to pay the outstanding R 13 000,00 and had to hand
over the following items:
6.1
a coat and a walking stick to the father of the applicant;
6.2
three blankets to be given to the applicant, her mother and her aunt;
6.3
four head wraps to be given to the applicant, her mother and two of
her aunts;
6.4
a tub of snuff, a knife and an axe.
[7]
The applicant was handed over to the deceased’s family as part
of the custom of the Bapedi
culture and the applicant’s family
slaughtered a sheep for the deceased’s family as a symbol of
becoming one family
and as a sign that the applicant had been handed
over to the deceased’s family. As part of the handover of their
daughter,
the applicant’s family handed a case of beer, a
bottle of whisky, tea bags, sugar and powered milk to the deceased’s
family.
[8]
On 4 December 2011, the marriage was celebrated at the family house
of the deceased and community
members were invited to celebrate the
welcoming of the new bride. A goat was slaughtered, and half of the
goat was given to the
applicant’s family as a token of
accepting the bride. The applicant received new bridal traditional
clothes to signify the
fact that she was accepted as the daughter of
the deceased’s family. The applicant attached photographs of
the ceremony to
her affidavit and mentioned the names of the persons
that formed part of the respective delegations of the two families.
[9]
In completion of the welcoming of the new bride, the applicant was
taken by her family members
to the house of her mother-in-law.
Thereafter the applicant and the deceased celebrated the ceremony in
Eenzaam Village in Limpopo
province.
[10]
The applicant explained that the deceased passed away on 15 March
2014 and that she was called to the police
station to complete the
Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) forms. On her arrival at the
police station, she was met by a
certain captain Thobakgale and the
first respondent. Captain Thobakgale informed the applicant that the
first respondent will also
complete the pension forms as she had a
lobola letter evidencing a customary marriage between herself and the
deceased.
[11]
Subsequent to the payment of the lumpsum of the pension fund, the
applicant approached the offices of the
GEPF regarding spousal
maintenance. The applicant was informed that the GEPF has decided
that she is not eligible to receive spousal
maintenance because the
marriage between the deceased and the first respondent was still
valid.
[12]
The applicant stated that she was never made aware by the deceased
that he was in a valid marriage with the
first respondent and
challenged the first respondent to provide proof of the marriage.
[13] In
response to the aforesaid challenge, the first respondent stated that
she met the deceased during 2003
and that they got romantically
involved. On 7 May 2004 a child, M[...] H[...], was born from their
relationship.
[14]
The first respondent avers that she and the deceased entered into a
customary marriage on 6 December 2004.
The first respondent’s
version of the manner in which the marriage was concluded is
contentious and for the sake of completeness,
I paraphrase her
version:
“
2.2
On or about the 6
th
of December 2004, the
deceased sent his family to my home to pay Lobola and the Marriage
was celebrated at my parental home and
then it proceeded to Eenzaam
the home of the deceased as is self-explanatory on the Lobola Letter
and even the first sentence on
the Lobola letter written in isiSepedi
alluding to the Witnessing of the marriage between myself and the
Deceased, for easy reference
I refer the Honourable Court to the
Lobola Letter attached hereto marked as
Annexure S1
.
2.3
After the celebration of our Customary marriage, the deceased took
our Lobola Letter to the Tribal Chief
in Eenzaam Community Trust to
certify it or put a tribal stamp on it..”
[15]
The lobola letter loosely translated reads as follows:
“
Proof of
marriage between Mr Hlakong Jacob Malatjie and Mrs Zanale Sekgobela
The Malatjie family
paid lobola money to the Sekgobela family in the amount of four
thousand and five hundred rand (R 4 500,00).
The Sekgobela
family agreed and accepted it. The Malatjie family have an
outstanding balance of four thousand rand (R 4000, 00)
to settle
their debt as well as cattle for slaughtering. The Malatjie family
asked for a hand in the marriage and they were granted.
The wedding
celebration started at Middelburg (Mdluzi) on 6/12/2004 and proceeded
at Eenzaam Trust in the district of Nebo on 7/12/2004
and that is
where it ended.”
[16]
The letter is signed by four persons, two of which bears the surname
of Sekgobela and Malatjie. An endorsement
bearing the words “Headman”
and “Eenzaam Trust Community” is affixed to the
letter.
[17]
The first respondent stated that the deceased was unfaithful during
the subsistence of their marriage and
that he had various
extra-marital affairs. During 2008 the deceased and the first
respondent separated because the deceased had
impregnated another
woman. During March 2009 the deceased sent his uncles to the first
respondent’s parental home to ask
for forgiveness. Thereafter,
they got back together and a second child, Naledi Masechaba was born
on 11 March 2010.
[18]
During 2011 the deceased and the first respondent moved to a rented
place in Tokologo in Mhluzi. The deceased
informed the first
respondent that he did not like the rented place and they agreed that
the deceased will temporarily move to
Chromville Flats. The first
respondent stated that the deceased resumed his old ways of cheating
and visited the first respondent
and their children if and when it
pleased him.
[19]
The minor children visited the deceased at Chromville Flats and after
one of their visits they informed the
first respondent that there was
a lady who cleaned and cooked for them the whole weekend. When the
first respondent asked the deceased
about the lady, he stated that
she was a helper/cleaner.
[20] It
was only at the time of the deceased’s demise that the first
respondent became aware that the deceased
was also married to the
applicant.
[21]
The first respondent reiterated that she was the deceased’s
legal wife and referred the court to a
“
National Treasury:
Pensions Administration: NOMINATION OF BENEFICIARIES”
form
that was completed and signed by the deceased on the 3
rd
of May 2010. His signature is attested by the signatures of two
witnesses.
[22]
The first respondent is the first beneficiary nominated by the
deceased in her capacity as his wife.
[23] In
reply, the applicant denied that the first respondent entered into a
customary marriage with the deceased
on 6 December 2004. The
applicant maintained that the lobola letter in itself did not proof
the marriage. The applicant stated
that the lobola negotiations, the
marriage must be entered into and celebrated in accordance with
custom. Something that, according
to the applicant, did not happen.
[24]
The applicant baldly denied that the first respondent and deceased
ever lived together as husband and wife
and stated that they never
cohabited at any stage prior to the deceased’s passing.
[25] In
respect of the first respondent’s version pertaining to the
deceased’s unfaithfulness, his
impregnation of another woman
and that the uncles of the deceased begging forgiveness from the
first respondent’s family,
the applicant stated that she has no
knowledge of the evets described by the first respondent.
Legal Framework
[26]
The requirements for a valid customary marriage is contained in
section 3 (1) of the Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act, Act 120
of 1998 and reads as follows:
3. (1) For a customary
marriage entered into after the commencement of this Act to be valid-
(a) the prospective
spouses-
(i) must both be above
the age of I8 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.”
[27]
The applicant did not dispute that the first respondent and the
deceased were above 18 years of age at the
time, that they both
consented to be married to each other under customary law and that
the marriage was negotiated. The issue
in dispute is, therefore,
whether the first respondent and the deceased “
entered into
or celebrated their marriage in accordance with customary law”.
[28] In
the event that a factual dispute arises and there is no request by
any of the parties for the hearing
of oral evidence, the test
formulated in
Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery v Stellenvale
Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) at 235 E-G applies, to wit:
“…
..
where there is a dispute as to the facts a final interdict should
only be granted in notice of motion proceedings if the facts
as
stated by the respondents together with the admitted facts in the
applicant's affidavits justify such an order.”
[29] In
Plascon -Evans Paints (Pty) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 235C, the court confirmed the aforesaid
general rule, but added that there may be exceptions to the rule,
“
as, for example, where the allegations or denials of the
respondent are so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the Court is
justified
in rejecting them merely on the papers..”
[30]
Applying the aforesaid test to the facts in
casu,
the facts
stated by the first respondent should be accepted.
[31] In
the result, the applicant has failed to make out a case for the
relief contained in the Notice of Motion
and the application stands
to be dismissed.
Costs
[32]
The first respondent was successful in her opposition to the relief
claimed by the applicant and costs should
follow the cause.
,
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD:
13 November 2024
DATE
DELIVERED:
7
January 2025
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Ms S
Kamfer
Instructed
by:
Kamfer
Attorneys Incorporated
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
Advocate
L Mnqandi
Instructed
by:
Rapatla
Rue Attorneys
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