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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2025] ZAGPPHC 75
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## Mahlangu v Ndlovu and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023-032349)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 75 (8 January 2025)
Mahlangu v Ndlovu and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023-032349)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 75 (8 January 2025)
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sino date 8 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-032349
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
08/01/2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
SESI
IDAH MAHLANGU
Applicant/ Appellant
and
PETER
XESWAYO NDLOVU
First Respondent
WINNIE
PRINCESS LUSENGA
Second Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
- APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
LINGENFELDER,
AJ
The
appellant brought an application for a declaratory order that the
civil marriage entered into between the first and second respondents
is unlawful, null and void; and that the customary union between the
applicant and the first respondent is valid and compelling
the third
respondent to register same and issue a marriage certificate to the
appellant. The application was dismissed with costs,
and the
appellant has filed an application for leave to appeal against the
order made.
Numerous
attempts were made to arrange a date for the hearing of the
application for leave to appeal, without any success. Counsel
for the
appellant and first respondent then advised that they were in
agreement that the application can be heard on the papers,
without
the need of any further argument. I accordingly deal with the
application for leave to appeal on the papers filed.
The
appellant's version in the main application is that a valid customary
union was entered into between herself and the first respondent
on 1
October 2006. The first respondent undertook to do the necessary in
terms of their traditional practices to conclude a customary
union
after the appellant found out in June 2006 that she was pregnant. The
first respondent held a meeting with the appellant's
family
representatives, paid lobola and a celebration of the marriage was
held with the traditional practice of slaughtering a
sheep and
dividing the meat between the families. The slaughtering of the sheep
then completed the negotiations and the appellant
was officially
handed over to the first respondent's family. During 2009 the
appellant found out that the first respondent was
engaged to the
second respondent. She returned to her family with her son, and later
found out that the first respondent had entered
into a civil marriage
with the second respondent in May 2011. She requested the Department
of Home Affairs to register the customary
union and they then
investigated the situation. The first respondent denied when he was
contacted as part of the investigation
that the appellant was married
to him by customary union. The first respondent in his answering
affidavit denies that he entered
into a customary union with the
appellant. He admits to having paid lobola,
but denied that a celebration
or customary union took place
thereafter. His version is that the slaughtering of the sheep
referred to by the appellant
was to cater for meat for his son's
first birthday which fell on the same day. In terms of his Sepedi
culture, celebration of the
consummation of a marriage require both
families to each slaughter a sheep and then exchange it. The first
respondent and the second
respondent entered into a civil marriage on
25 June 2011 and have been living together as husband and wife ever
since this date.
The
appellant did not file a replying affidavit dealing with the
respondent's version, and the court was accordingly faced with
different versions by the appellant and the first respondent, and
various disputes of facts on the papers.
I
dismissed the application with costs, on the basis that there was a
factual dispute, and based on the matter of Plascon Evans-rule,
as
referred to in the matter of
National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at par 26
, as quoted in
the judgment.
The
test to be applied in deciding whether to grant leave to appeal has
been discussed and set out in detail with reference to all
relevant
judgments dealing with the requirements, in the matter of
Van Zyl
v Steyn (83856/15)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 723 (28 April 2022).
Sec
17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
("the
Act") states:
"17(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that-
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
... "
I
pause to say that it has not been made out in the application for
leave to appeal that there is some
"other compelling reason"
why leave should be granted as provided in Sec 17(1)(b) of the
Act, and accordingly the usual test as set out in sub paragraph
(a) is applicable.
As
is stated in
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016) Para 16-18
, leave to appeal
"[16] must not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable
prospect of success.
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
makes it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where
the judge concerned is of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success; or there is some other
compellingreason why it should be heard.
[17]
An applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic
chance of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case or
one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There
must be a sound,
rational
basis
to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of success on
appeal."
The
appellant does not meet the requirements of Sec 17(1)(a) of the Act.
There is no reasonable prospect of success on appeal, having
regard
to the factual disputes on the papers. The Constitutional Court has
stated in
Mayelane v Ngwenyama and another
2013 ZACC 14
;
2013 (4) SA 415
(CC);
2013 (8) BCLR 918
(CC)
that a court should
be slow to decide matters of customary law on evidence alone and that
expert evidence is required on the requirement
of a celebration and
the requirements for such a celebration.
In
the matter of Mashisane v Mhlauli 903/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 176
(14
December 2023), where the Supreme Court of Appeal approved the
principle that motion proceedings are inappropriate in Family
law and
where a declaratory order on whether parties were married according
to customary law, was sought. In its judgment on an
application for
leave to appeal against the court a quo's granting such relief, the
following is stated at [13]:
"Heeding
the Constitutional Court's warning, courts should be slow to decide
matters of this nature on affidavits alone. In
this case, expert
evidence on the concept of 'consent' in both the Tsonga and Xhosa
customary law should have been adduced by the
respondent to establish
her case that the parties had consented to, and were married under,
customary law. This would have given
the appellant the opportunity to
adduce his own expert evidence, and, if necessary, a referral to
trial or oral evidence to assist
the court in deciding the issue.
However, the manner in which the respondent elected to bring her case
to court deprived the appellant,
and the court, of the benefits of a
thorough examination of this important issue.
The
respondent in the present matter raised genuine disputes of fact,
namely the reason for the celebration which was held, and
that the
celebration did not meet the requirements of a customary union
celebration in terms of his traditions. As is stated in
the
Mayelane-matter above, a court should have the benefit of expert
evidence on the customary requirements for a valid customary
marriage
to be concluded.
The
appellant carries the duty to prove her version. She made her own
burden more difficult by not filing a replying affidavit,
and dealing
with the disputes of fact raised in relation to the celebration and
slaughtering of a sheep. The disputes of
fact go to the core of
the matter, namely whether the customary marriage was concluded as
required in the Act, and in choosing
not to file a replying affidavit
to deal with the respondent's version, made it even more difficult
for the court to make a proper
examination of the facts. The
appellant is a party who is interested in an existing, future or
contingent right and the relief
she sought was not academic or
abstract. The declaratory she sought was directly linked to her legal
status. She wanted the court
to determine that she was married.
Although the same question could have been determined in divorce
proceedings, I accept that
the appellant was entitled to seek
declaratory relief to determine her status, but this does not mean
that she was entitled to
the relief sought. However, her reasons for
bringing the application so that she will be able to file for divorce
proceedings after
the marriage was registered, are not valid.
Registration of a customary union is not a requirement for a valid
marriage and she
could have instituted divorce proceedings without
such registration.
The
disputes of facts should have been foreseeable to the appellant. She
states in her affidavit that the respondent denied that
they had
entered into a customary union when he was contacted as part of the
investigation., and in fact denied knowing her. It
was therefore
inappropriate to approach the court on motion proceedings, and she
did so with the knowledge that factual disputes
re the existence of
the customary marriage were present.
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
LINGENFELDER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
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