Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 15South Africa
P.M.M v D.S.M N.O and Others (5858/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 15 (10 January 2022)
Headnotes
with the 2nd Respondent. The deceased also held an annuity with Metropolitan of which the Applicant is the only beneficiary.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## P.M.M v D.S.M N.O and Others (5858/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 15 (10 January 2022)
P.M.M v D.S.M N.O and Others (5858/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 15 (10 January 2022)
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sino date 10 January 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 5858/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
10 January 2022
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
P[...]
M[...] M[...]
APPLICANT
and
D[...]
S[...] M[...] N.O
(in
her capacity as duly appointed Executrix of the estate
of
the late V[...] W[...] M[...]
1
ST
RESPONDENT
CAPITEC
BANK LIMITED
2
ND
RESPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
3
RD
RESPONDENT
MMI
GROUP HOLDINGS T/A METROPOLITAN
4
TH
RESPONDENT
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to
be 10 January 2022.
JUDGMENT
KHUMALO
J
Introduction
[1]
In this Application the Applicant, Mr P[...] M[...] M[...],
previously known as K[...]
T[...] P[...] M[...], seeks an order
removing the 1
st
Respondent, Ms D[...] S[...]
M[...], as an executrix of the deceased estate of the late V[...]
W[...] M[...] (“the late
estate”), directing the Master
to appoint an executor within 30 days of the order and declaring the
Applicant to be the descendant
of the deceased as in terms of the
Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987
and the Reform of the Customary
Law of Succession and Regulation of Related Matters Act 11 of 2009.
[2]
The 1
st
Respondent is the mother of the late V[...] W[...]
M[...] (“the deceased”) who passed away on 6 November
2018. On 14
December 2018 she was appointed and furnished with
letters of executorship. She is assisted by her attorneys of record
Kutumela
Attorneys, who as her duly appointed agents, reported the
estate to the Master.
[3]
The 2
nd
Respondent is the Capitec Bank Limited, a
registered Commercial Bank. It is the holder of the deceased’s
main account in
which all the monies in it has by order of Collis J
in Part A of this matter been frozen until finalisation of this
Application.
[4]
The Master of the High Court, the 3
rd
Respondent, is cited
in his official capacity as the office that is responsible for the
administration of the deceased estate.
[5]
The Metropolitan, a financial service provider and the administrator
of the deceased’s
pension Fund and the retirement annuity, is
the 4
th
Respondent.
Factual
background
[6]
The deceased was employed by the National Defence Force
since 1996 until
he retired in May 2018 due to ill health. He died
intestate, six months later on 6 November 2018, predeceased by his
late wife
C[...] S[...] K[...] (“the late K[...]” or
“K[...]”) who died on 29 June 2016. The deceased and the
late
K[...] were married on 24 December 1997 and no children were
born from the marriage.
[7]
The Applicant is the late K[...]’s only child born to her on 17
May 1993, prior
to her marriage to the deceased. The latter died
without issue.
[8]
The Applicant alleges in his Founding Affidavit that the deceased and
K[...] were
in a romantic relationship whilst his mother was pregnant
with him. He was therefore born whilst K[...] and the deceased were
in
a permanent relationship, with the deceased accepting him as his
own son. The deceased was registered as his father in terms of
the
Births and Deaths Registration Act 51 of 1992 (“
Births and
Deaths Registration Act&rdquo
;). He as a result carries the surname
of the deceased and has attached his birth certificate,
registered/issued on 24 January 2019,
which he says is the date when
he applied for an unabridged one. He grew up knowing the deceased to
be his father and was only
informed of the true status by his mother
and the deceased shortly prior to his mother passing away in 2016.
The deceased has during
his lifetime accepted and raised him as his
own child in accordance with the customary law. He is the deceased’s
only son.
[9]
According to the Applicant he has been living with the deceased since
2001, prior
thereto he lived with his mother’s sister, however
the deceased supported and provided for him since birth. He was
always
financially dependent on the deceased. On the year of the
deceased’s death he was enrolled at Tshwane Technology doing
his
final year. He attached a statement of balance, in proof of his
enrolment which also confirmed his residential address. He was
staying with the deceased at the time of the deceased’s demise.
In 2018, when the deceased resigned from work, he cut or abandoned
his studies midway in order to look after the deceased. It is his
desire to complete his studies.
[10]
Furthermore the deceased had registered him as a dependant on his
medical aid as well as a beneficiary
to his pension fund benefit. He
therefore argued that he is entitled to be declared a descendant of
the deceased in terms of the
Reform of Customary Law of Succession
Act and Regulation of Related Matters Act 11 of 2009 (“Reform
of Customary Succession
Act”) and the Intestate Succession Act
81 of 1987 (“the Act”), and in that case he is the only
surviving heir
of the deceased. He alleges to have never met his
biological father.
Removal
of 1
st
Respondent as executrix
[11]
On the 1
st
Respondent as the executrix, the Applicant
alleges that the 1
st
Respondent’s letters of
executorship should be cancelled for the reason that the 1
st
Respondent does not regard or acknowledge him as the son or
descendant of the deceased. As, the 1
st
Respondent:
[11.1] tried to
evict him from his home after the deceased’s death by locking
him out of the house after the funeral.
He had to sleep in his car.
[11.2] She also tried to
claim the deceased’s pension benefit money from the Government
Pension Fund as well as the Funds
in the deceased bank account held
with the 2
nd
Respondent. The deceased also held an annuity
with Metropolitan of which the Applicant is the only beneficiary.
[11.3] She holds
herself to be the sole heir hence has failed to furnish security and
has no intention to distribute the assets
in terms of the
Intestate
Succession Act 81 of 1987
.
[11.4] On 29
January 2019 he sent a letter to the Master challenging the
appointment of the 1
st
Respondent due to her wrongful and
mala fide conduct. However, the letter attached refers to application
for an appointment of
his attorney as the executor of the deceased
estate.
[12]
The 1
st
Respondent’s in her Opposing affidavit
disputed the allegations in the Applicant’s Founding Affidavit,
mainly that
the deceased and K[...] were in a permanent relationship
when the Applicant was born with the deceased accepting or regarding
the
Applicant as his own son. As a result Applicant’s birth was
subsequently registered with the deceased named as the father.
The
1
st
Respondent points out that during that period the
deceased was in prison since 1991 and released only in May 1997. He
therefore
could not have accepted the Applicant as his own son at the
time of Applicant’s birth. The deceased married K[...] on 24
December 1997, at the time the Applicant was staying with K[...]’s
sister until 2001. The registration of Applicant’s
birth
subsequent to the marriage was only in the name of K[...]. The
Applicant’s allegations are therefore not true. The
Applicant
as indicated did not dispute 1
st
Respondent’s
allegations. Instead he, in his Replying Affidavit persisted with the
allegations that K[...] was in a permanent
romantic relationship with
the deceased when he was born. They married shortly after his birth
and the deceased provided his consent
to be identified as the father
on registration of the Applicant’s birth.
[13]
In addition the 1
st
Respondent denies that there was a
customary adoption that ever took place and as a result the Applicant
has neither a blood or
legal relation with the deceased. The
Applicant was also neither dependant or supported by the deceased
since birth for the reasons
that the deceased was incarcerated until
May 1997 and when he got married to K[...] on 24 December 1997, the
Applicant was staying
with his aunt until 2001. Even though they
agree as the family that the Applicant was treated as a son by the
deceased there was
however no adoption by customary law.
[14]
In respect of the documents attached by the Applicant, including the
unabridged birth certificate,
in proof of his allegations on the
registration of his birth in the name of the deceased, the 1
st
Respondent pointed out that they have all been altered, and recently
issued. She therefore challenges the authenticity of the documents.
[15]
It is further pointed out by the 1
st
Respondent that the
Applicant gives no further details regarding his biological father,
if he also consented to the adoption and
when the adoption took
place.
[16]
She disputed that Applicant is registered as a beneficiary on the
deceased’s pension fund
as indicated in the documents he has
attached.
[17]
The 1
st
Respondent also pointed out that from the
documents attached it indicates that the deceased never paid the
Applicant’s study
fees as alleged. The fees were already owing
prior to 2017 until 2018. No proof of payment ever made by the
deceased or liability
is attached. In addition there is no proof of
the Applicant’s registration for 2018.
[18]
On those grounds the 1
st
Respondent dispute that the
Applicant can be declared a descendant or an heir of the deceased and
therefore lacks the
locus standi
to bring the Application
challenging her appointment.
[19]
The 1
st
Respondent admits that she approached Capitec on
the Pension Fund and enquired on the deceased’s bank account
for the purpose
of the administration of the estate.
Applicant’s
Supplementary Affidavit
[20]
The Applicant was, as per order in the urgent court allowed to
supplement his Founding Affidavit
where necessary. He made the
following allegations in his Supplementary Affidavit;
[20.1] that the
deceased and K[...] had a relationship prior to deceased being
incarcerated. On deceased’s arrest in
1991 and sentence to
death, the deceased advised K[...] to move on with her life.
The Applicant was conceived and born when
the deceased was in prison.
His birth subsequently registered and a certificate issued on 16
March 1998 carrying only K[...]’s
surname. (thus confirming
that at the time of K[...]’s pregnancy and Applicant’s
birth there was no relationship between
deceased and K[...]).
[20.2] He shortly
after his birth stayed with the aunt, S[...] M[...], in Katlehong,
Johannesburg, who offered to take care
of him as K[...] was still in
matric. He was raised by his aunt who had no children of her own.
After being released from prison,
the deceased married K[...] on 24
December 1997. The deceased paid lobola and in the lobola letter it
was confirmed that the deceased
was marrying K[...] and the
Applicant. The deceased, had according to the Xhosa customary law
proclaimed, signifying to the world
that he adopted the Applicant and
formally accepted parental responsibility for him. The lobola letter
was confiscated and destroyed
by the 1
st
Respondent who
removed the red file.
[20.3] On 15
September 1998 the deceased and K[...] then reregistered his birth
amending the surname to that of the deceased
as if they were legally
married when he was born. He recently on January 2019 obtained an
unabridged certificate indicating the
deceased to be his father
however was not sure if he was registered at the Department as the
deceased’s biological or adopted
son in terms of the
Births and
Deaths Registration Act 51 of 1992
, Child Care Act 74 of 1983 or
Childrens Act 38 0f 2005.
[20.4] The deceased
and K[...] wanted the Applicant to stay with them in 1998 already but
his aunt refused as she had no children
of her own. He only came to
live with them when his aunt passed away in 2001. He never knew that
the deceased was not his father
until he was informed by the late
K[...] in 2016 before her passing. Most of the deceased’s
family members were not aware
that he is not the deceased’s
son, a fact that is confirmed by K[...]’s sister in law, E[...]
E[...] K[...] (sister
in law) who is married to K[...]’s
brother. When K[...] asked her sister in law to look after him when
she passes on, the
sister in law undertook to do so.
[20.5] Both the
sister in law and the deceased financially supported him (the
Applicant). The sister in law accepted responsibility
to look after
him on the passing of his late mother and the deceased and has
financially taken care of him since the deceased’s
death.
[20.6] He does not
have a good relationship with the deceased’s family as a result
of this dispute. The 1
st
Respondent never accepted him to
be a family member. He was advised that the 1
st
Respondent
is not the biological mother of the deceased. The deceased’s
mother passed on and the deceased’s father
married the 1
st
Respondent. Therefore, the 1
st
Respondent is not a
descendant/heir of the deceased.
[20.7] He removed his two
abridged certificates from the red file which had all the documents
prior to his father’s death.
He received a payment from the
Metropolitan Policy of an amount of R49 000 which he has used to
pay the arrears on the utility
bill.
[21]
K[...]’s sister in law in her Confirmatory Affidavit alleged
that she has known the Applicant,
the deceased and K[...] from 1995.
According to her most of the deceased’s family members did not
know that the deceased
was not the biological father of the
Applicant. She was told by the deceased and K[...] whom she regularly
visited in Pretoria
even before the Applicant knew, that the deceased
was not Applicant’s biological father. Applicant stayed with
the deceased
and K[...] from 2001. The deceased always referred to
the Applicant as his son, whom he had adopted and accepted as his
child.
She always accepted that the deceased legally adopted the
Applicant
.
The Applicant also
called deceased ‘father’ and was fully maintained by the
deceased. She also confirmed that K[...]
who had a long sick bed
before she passed away asked her to take care of the Applicant and
look out for him should she pass away.
1
st
Respondent’s Answer to Applicant’s Supplementary
Affidavit
[22]
The 1
st
Respondent persisted to deny that whilst the
deceased was in prison there was any contact between the deceased and
K[...] or that
the deceased was tortured. However, alleged to have
been advised by the deceased that he was diagnosed with cancer and
operated
upon to prevent it from spreading to the rest of his
genitals. He denied the allegations of miscarriages.
[23]
She further pointed out that the Applicant knew long before the
passing of K[...] that the deceased
was not his father. The deceased
had however accepted parental responsibility because he was married
to the Applicant’s mother
(as a stepfather). The Applicant’s
change of surname to that of the deceased was solely so that the
deceased can include
him as a dependant in his medical aid. She
confirmed the payment of lobola but disputed Applicant’s
allegations regarding
the contents of the lobola letter or that she
destroyed or was ever in possession of the letter. Further denied
that the concept
of a “Customary Adoption” exists in the
South African Law. She also denied that an adoption took place either
in terms
of the Children’s Act or The Child Care Act or as
alleged by K[...]’s sister in law, who is not part of or
related
to the M[...] family, pointing out that the latter’s
allegations are
contradictory as the Applicant had stated that he
was not sure if the deceased legally adopted him or not.
[24]
The 1
st
Respondent acknowledged that: The Applicant was
raised by his aunt. K[...]’s sister in law, on being asked by
K[...] to look
after the Applicant on K[...]’s passing,
undertook to do so and that both K[...]’s sister in law and the
deceased financially
supported the Applicant. K[...]’s sister
in law accepted responsibility to look after the Applicant on the
passing of K[...]
as well as of the deceased.
[25]
The 1
st
Respondent alleges to appear only on one picture
which was taken on the day of the marriage of the deceased and
K[...]. She denies
any knowledge of the other pictures and ever
calling the Applicant grandchild. According to her, her husband was
never married
before but single, when she and her husband decided to
get married. She attached the deceased birth certificate indicating
that
deceased is her son born to her and the deceased in 1972 at
Bethlehem, being one of their six children, four of whom are
deceased.
She as a result is the sole heir in the deceased’s
estate.
[26]
Lastly she denies that the Applicant is registered as a dependant on
the Pension Fund. Furthermore,
that the Applicant is the only one
residing in the house, alleging that he is also renting out the house
to tenants. The 1
st
Respondent further denied that she
complained about not having access to any money when some of her
children died and expressed
her intention to change that.
Legal
framework
[27]
In terms of s 1 (b) of the Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987 (‘the
Act’) i
f
a person (hereinafter referred to as the “deceased”) dies
intestate, either wholly or in part, and
is
survived by a descendant, but not by a spouse, such descendant shall
inherit the intestate estate. In terms of s 1 (d) (i) and
(ii) of the
Act, if the deceased is not survived by a spouse or descendant, but
by both his parents, his parents shall inherit
the intestate estate
in equal shares; or if survived by one of his parents, the surviving
parent shall inherit one half of the
intestate estate and the
descendants of the deceased parent the other half, and if there are
no such descendants who have survived
the deceased, the surviving
parent shall inherit the intestate estate.
[28]
In terms of s 1 (4) (e) (i) of the Act,
an
adopted child shall be deemed to be a descendant
of his adoptive parent or parents and in terms of s 1 (4) (eA) as
inserted by s 8 of the
Reform of
Customary Law of Succession and Regulation of Related Matters Act 11
of 2009 (“Reform of Customary Law of Succession
Act”)
,
a person referred to in paragraph (a) of the definition of
‘descendant’ contained in section 1 of the Reform of
Customary
Law of Succession Act, shall be deemed (i) to be a
descendant of the deceased person referred to in that paragraph.
[29]
As already indicated above, s 1 (4) (e) of the Act provides for the
adopted child of the deceased
to be regarded and recognised as the
descendant of the deceased. Whilst a descendant as defined in terms
of s 1 of the Reform of
Customary Law of Succession Act also includes
a person who is not a descendant in terms of s 4 (1) (e) of the Act,
but who, during
the lifetime of the deceased person, was accepted by
the deceased person in accordance with customary law as his or her
own child.
[30]
The purpose of the enactment of the Reform of Customary Law of
Succession Act as pronounced in
the preamble is to modify the
customary law of succession so as to provide for the devolution of
certain property in terms of the
law of intestate succession, clarify
certain matters relating to the law of succession and the law of
property in relation to persons
subject to customary law, and to
amend certain laws in this regard, and to provide for matters
connected therewith. It in actual
sense modifies the
Intestate
Succession Act to
accommodate customary law intestate succession.
[31]
The Applicant, not being the biological son of the deceased, is
therefore required to have made
a case that he is entitled to be
declared a descendent of the deceased by virtue of being an adopted
child of the deceased
ex lege
or facto being accepted by the
deceased person during his lifetime in accordance with the Xhosa
customary law as his own child.
[32]
There are disputes of facts arising from the parties’
Affidavits especially on the ,factual
averments made by Applicant in
his Founding Affidavit and Replying Affidavit in relation to how and
when the Applicant’s
alleged adoption by the deceased allegedly
took place either
ex lege
or in terms of the Xhosa Customary
Law, which are material facts from which it is to be determined if
Applicant entitled to the
relief sought. The issue being whether or
not he has proven an adoption as alleged, which will entitle him to
inherit from the
deceased as a descendant of the deceased, either in
terms of the Act or the Reform of Customary Law of Succession Act.
The second
question which is the cancellation of the 1
st
Respondent’s letters of executorship, can only be dealt with
after the first question is resolved.
[33]
In that case, there being factual disputes, the Plascon Evans Rule is
applicable. The factual
disputes are to be resolved on the basis of
the principles enunciated in the Plascon Evans Rule that prescribes
that in motion
proceedings
,
if
disputes
of
fact
arise
on the affidavits, a final order may be granted if those facts
averred in the Applicant's affidavits, which have been
admitted by
the Respondent, together with the facts as stated by the Respondent,
justify the granting of such relief; see
Plascon
– Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
ZASCA
1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) the court emphatically said the following on
the principle:
“
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities.
It
is well established under the Plascon –Evans rule that where in
motion proceedings disputes of fact arise on the affidavits,
a final
order can be granted only if the facts averred in the Applicant’s
(Mr Zuma’s) affidavits, which have been admitted
by the
Respondent (the NDPP) together with the facts alleged by the latter,
justify such order. It may be different if the Respondent’s
version consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, is palpably implausible, far-fetched or
so clearly
untenable that the court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.’ (para 26) The
Plascon –Evans
rule has
been emphatically endorsed by the Constitutional Court. See for
example
President of the Republic of South Africa & Others v M
& G Media Ltd
2012 (2) SA 50
(CC):
[2011] ZACC 32
para
34.”
Analysis
on the facts (dispute of fact)
[34]
The Applicant has alleged in its Founding Affidavit that when he was
born in 1993 the deceased
and K[...] were in a permanent romantic
relationship with the deceased accepting the Applicant at birth as
his own son. As a result,
even though the deceased was not his
biological father he was registered as his father. He, as a result
carries the deceased’s
surname, who has continued to support
him and taken responsibility for him since his birth.
He
grew up knowing the deceased to be his father and was only informed
of the true status by his mother and the deceased shortly
prior to
his mother’s passing away
in
2016
. The deceased has during his
lifetime accepted him and raised him as the deceased’s own
child as in terms of the customary
law. He is the deceased’s
only son.
That
was mainly the material facts upon which the Applicant’s case
was founded being his cause of action for seeking the stated
remedies.
[35]
The allegations were however proven to be fanciful by the 1
st
Respondent who indicated that the deceased could not have been in a
permanent relationship with K[...] at the time or be responsible
or
have looked after the Applicant from birth upon which he could have
then regarded him as his son since the deceased was in prison
since
1991 and only released in May 1997. The Applicant’s birth in
1993, even though registered in March 1998 following the
deceased and
K[...]’s marriage in December 1997 recorded only the surname of
K[...] on the birth certificate. Furthermore,
the Applicant had been
staying with his aunt, even after K[...]’s marriage to the
deceased until 2001. These facts were subsequently
reiterated in his
Replying Affidavit alleging that a romantic relationship existed
during K[...]’s pregnancy and Applicant’s
birth. The
birth of the Applicant to have been subsequently registered, with
deceased’s consent, naming the deceased to be
the father, who
allegedly looked after the Applicant since birth. The allegations
were thus confirmed to be the facts (cause of
action) upon which the
Applicant relies for his relief
[36]
The Applicant then, without explaining the proven misrepresentation
of facts in his Founding
Affidavit, just proceeded in his
Supplementary Affidavit to now state the facts as stated by the 1
st
Respondent, contradicting the averments in his Founding and Replying
Affidavit, and added new allegations in an attempt to make
a likely
case for
locus standi.
He, confirmed 1
st
Respondent’s disputation that a relationship between K[...] and
the deceased existed when the Applicant was born, alleging
that the
romantic relationship between the deceased and K[...] actually
happened prior to the deceased being incarcerated and when
the
deceased went to prison he told K[...] that each one was to go his or
her own way. Consequently, agreeing that when the Applicant
was
conceived in 1992 and born in 1993, when the deceased is said to have
regarded the Applicant as his own son and to have consented
to
Applicant’s birth to be registered in the deceased’s
name, K[...] and the deceased were in fact not in a relationship
and
the latter incarcerated.
[37]
The Applicant further alleged that, with the consent of the deceased,
following the deceased
and K[...]’s marriage in December 1997,
the Applicant’s surname was amended to that of the deceased.
However, the Applicant’s
birth was registered a few months
thereafter in March 1998 with only the details of K[...]. It was only
later in September 1998,
that the changes to the deceased’s
surname were effected without any details furnished explaining how
that came about. It
is also factual that since the deceased was in
prison, Applicant’s allegation that the deceased also looked
after him since
birth is also not true.
[38]
The Applicant was by order of Collin J allowed to depose to a
Supplementary Affidavit if necessary.
As the matter should be decided
on the facts as pleaded in his Founding Affidavit, it only becomes
necessary to supplement if new
matters arose in the Answering
Affidavit that were not dealt with by the Applicant. But that does
not relate to new allegations
which were always in the knowledge of
the Applicant.
[39]
It is a general rule of pleadings that an Applicant must stand or
fall by the allegations made
in the Founding Affidavit. A case cannot
be made in the Replying or subsequent Affidavit. The court will not
allow new matter/s
in reply when no case was made in the original
application or if the reply or a subsequent affidavit reveals a new
cause of action.
In casu
, the Applicant has contradicted and
changed facts relating to his cause of action that he pled in the
Founding and Replying Affidavit
and also proven to be false.
[40]
The discrepancies on the factual allegations relating to Applicant’s
cause of action as
in his Founding and Supplementary Affidavits and
Applicant’s failure to make a case in that regard were pointed
out to the
Applicant’s Counsel. Counsel however insisted that
the allegations of the registration of Applicant’s birth in the
surname of the deceased with deceased’s consent, and of the
deceased’s acceptance and raising of the Applicant as his
own
son, albeit not from birth, in accordance with the Xhosa customary
law made in the Founding Affidavit, remain true. The Applicant’s
birth registration in the name of the deceased subsequently did take
place, also not immediately after marriage, which registration
the
Applicant is not sure if it was due to a legal adoption which his
Counsel then argued was in terms of s 11 of the Births and
Deaths
Registration Act 51 of 1952 (“Births and Deaths Registration
Act”). Counsel further argued that the admitted
fact by the 1
st
Respondent that the deceased indeed accepted and always treated the
Applicant as his own son and had subsequently looked after
him as
such, as expanded in the Supplementary Affidavit warrants
consideration for the purpose of establishing if the Applicant
entitled to the relief sought.
[41]
As a result, with Applicant afterwards yielding in his Supplementary
Affidavit to the facts as
stated by the 1
st
Respondent that contradicts the allegations in his Founding and
Replying Affidavit, the court, not satisfied as to the inherent
credibility of the actual averments in Applicant’s Founding
Affidavit,
could
not proceed on the basis thereof, as such facts cannot be included
among those upon which the court determines whether the
Applicant is
entitled to the relief sought; see
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) at 1163 and 1165.
The
matter proceeded with the exclusion of the controverted allegations
in the Founding Affidavit.
Legal
framework on adoption ex lege
[42]
An adopted child as in
s 1
(4) (e) of the
Intestate Succession Act
is
, according to
Flynn v Farr NO & Others
2009 (1) SA 584
(C) to be interpreted to exclude children who have been adopted
informally. As in terms of
section 228
of the Children’s Act 38
of 2005 (‘Children’s Act”) a child is adopted when
the child is placed in the
permanent care of a person in terms of a
court order that has the consequences contemplated in
s 242.
The
adoption should therefore have been processed through the children’s
court (with notice to each parent and or person
whose consent to the
adoption is required; see
s 233
(1) (a) and
238
(1) of the Children’s
Act. One of the effects of the adoption order as contemplated in
s
242
is the conferring of the surname of the adoptive parent on the
adopted child except when otherwise provided in the adoptive order.
[43]
The entering of the details of any person who has allegedly taken
responsibility for the welfare
of the child other than those of the
biological/natural parents of the child, as the parent of the child
when registering a child
in the Register of Births and Deaths without
an order of court sanctioning such, does not amount to the child’s
adoption
by that person or prove thereof. Since such registration can
only follow and becomes mandatory after an Adoption Order has been
made which automatically confers the surname of the adoptive parent
on the child. The relevant adoption order, the child’s
birth
certificate, the prescribed birth registration form and the
prescribed fee will accompany the Application for the recording
of
the adoption and any change of surname in the births register.
[44]
Furthermore, the adoptive parent/s must, in terms of the applicable
law apply to the Director
General Home Affairs to record the adoption
and any change of surname of the child in the birth register. The
Application is to
be accompanied by, inter alia, the relevant
adoption order. It is also a requirement for the person designated by
the Director
General as the adoption registrar to record information
pertaining to the child’s adoption and to keep a register of
the
personal details of the adopted children, their biological
parents and adoptive parents; see s 245 (1) and 247 of the Children’s
Act. The information in the register is available to adult adoptees.
[45]
There
is no allegation of a legal process of adoption ever been formally
initiated or pursued in any other way by the deceased.
There was also
no indication of the situation with his biological father. Even if
consideration is had to the Supplementary Affidavit,
no credible
information can lend truthfulness to the allegation. The Applicant’s
Counsel conceded that legal adoption as
in accordance with the
Children’s Act did not take place.
The
Applicant was therefore not an adopted child of the deceased as per
intestate Succession Act as he was not legally adopted by
the
deceased.
He therefore cannot be a
descendent as per the provisions of s 4 (1) (e) of the Intestate
Succession.
## [46]
InFlynn
v Farr NO and Others(13967/2007)
[2008] ZAWCHC 196 (12 May 2008)2009
(JOL) 23900 (C)[2009
(1) SA 584 (C) par 1–2]referred
to by both parties a matter which is on four with the matterin
casu,
Flynn was also not legally adopted by Farr his stepfather. Although
in Flynn’s instance the primary relief sought by the
Applicant
was either for an order declaring that the words "adopted child"
insection
1(4) (e)of
theIntestateSuccession
Act 81 of 1987be
interpreted to include bothde
legeadopted
children as well asde
factoadopted
children; alternatively, that a definition of adopted child which
reads as follows be inserted insection
1(4) (e)of
the Act which should read as follows:
[46]
In
Flynn
v Farr NO and Others
(
13967/2007)
[2008] ZAWCHC 196 (12 May 2008)
2009
(JOL) 23900 (C)
[2009
(1) SA 584 (C) par 1–2]
referred
to by both parties a matter which is on four with the matter
in
casu
,
Flynn was also not legally adopted by Farr his stepfather. Although
in Flynn’s instance the primary relief sought by the
Applicant
was either for an order declaring that the words "adopted child"
in
section
1(4) (e)
of
the
Intestate
Succession
Act 81 of 1987
be
interpreted to include both
de
lege
adopted
children as well as
de
facto
adopted
children; alternatively, that a definition of adopted child which
reads as follows be inserted in
section
1(4) (e)
of
the Act which should read as follows:
"Adopted
child shall include both
de facto
and
de
lege
adopted children".
declaring
the definition in the said Act unconstitutional and to amend the
definition to include both forms of “adoption”
and a
specific order declaring Flynn a descendant of Farr with a
declaration that Flynn inherits the intestate estate of Farr.
[47]
T
he court however refused to
recognise Flynn, the stepson, as a descendant of Farr his stepfather,
for purposes of the law of intestate
succession, despite the fact
that the stepfather had acted in loco parentis, treating Flynn for
all purposes as his own son during
his lifetime.
[48]
The provisions of 1 (4) were subsequently amended
to include s 1 (4) (eA) or extend the provision in recognition
of
adoptions that take place
de
facto
in
the context of Customary Law. Significantly, in the
recently
enacted Children’s Act 38 of 2005, an adopted child and an
adoptive parent, are described respectively, as a child
who has been
adopted, or a person who has adopted a child, in terms of “any”
law.
The
inconsistency that was created between the Children’s Act and
the provisions of the
Intestate Succession Act seems
to have been
accommodated by the insertion of
s 1(4)
eA in the latter Act.
Adoption
in accordance with Customary Law
(“A
cceptance
by the deceased person during his lifetime of the Applicant as his
own child in accordance with customary law”)
[49]
In that framework, the court has to determine whether the facts as
alleged by the Applicant do
prove at least an adoption in accordance
with the Xhosa Customary Law to have taken place so as to be
recognised as the descendent
of the deceased.
[50]
Section
8
of the
Reform of Customary Law Act’
is said to furthermore provide for the
recognition of other people related to the deceased as descendants.
Section 1 thereof recognises
a minor child that during the lifetime
of the deceased was accepted by the deceased as his own child in
accordance with the customary
law. Customary Law means customs and
practices observed amongst indigenous African people of South Africa
which forms part of their
culture.
This
was intended to legitimise customary law adoptions concluded
regardless of the absence of a court order: See South African
Law
Commission Discussion Paper 103 on the Review of the Child Care Act
Project 110 (23 December 2001) par 18.3.12. Also to ease
the
controversy created by the uncertainty that surrounds such practices
in relation to intestate succession, as evident in cases
like
Metiso
v Padongelukkefonds
2001
(3) SA 1142
(T) and
Maswanganye
v Baloyi
[2015]
ZAGPPHC 917
whereupon the court
was called upon to decide whether a customary law adoption was valid
thus creating a legally recognisable duty
of support for purposes of
a claim against the Road Accident Fund. The court held that the
customary law adoption should in the
interest of the children be
considered valid despite its possible lack of publication as
prescribed by custom. The court concluded
that the deceased’s
promise to care for the children, even if not a completed adoption in
terms of customary law, was sufficient
to create a legally
recognisable duty of support towards the children – if not in
terms of the common law then a logical
extension thereof. In
Metiso
Bertelsmann J argued that to deny
the legality of such an undertaking would be contrary to – “the
new ethos of tolerance,
pluralism and religious freedom which had
consolidated itself in the community even before the formal adoption
of the interim Constitution
on 22 December 1993”.
[51]
It is important to note that this was, in the interest of the child
recognised only for the purpose
of creating a duty to support, as in
many other instances but not considered for the purpose of intestate
succession. As indicated
above, adoption was introduced via
legislation and has thus always been regulated by statutory law.
[52]
The matter of
Maneli
v Maneli
,
2010 (7) BCLR 703
(GSJ) 19 April 2010, is also a matter of special
interest, decided a few months before the coming into operation on 20
September
2010 of the Reform of Customary Law of Succession Act. The
matter was a special review referred to the South Gauteng High Court
by a magistrate. Despite the fact that the issue that had to be
determined was whether the magistrate was correct in her conclusion
that the Respondent had a legal duty to maintain a minor child he
adopted with his wife in terms of customary law
subsequent
to the performance of Xhosa traditional rites and rituals,
Mokgoatleng J went further to make pronouncement on the validity of
the
de
facto
adoption in accordance with customary law, declaring t
he
minor child lawfully adopted by the parties by ordering that t
he
Director General of the Department of Home Affairs register, in terms
of s
ection
2
of The
Births
and Deaths Registration Act
51 of 1992
,
the
minor child as the adopted child of Applicant and the Respondent.
[53]
The minor child who was taken into the parties’ home at the age
of eight (8) months was
then twelve years old. A fully developed
parent/child relationship existed, the child
in
all respects regarded and treated as the child of the parties
.
Pursuant to the customary law
adoption, the parties approached the Department of Home Affairs where
they registered the minor child
“as their own child.” T
he
Respondent maintained and paid for educational and medical needs of
the minor child. The minor child having bonded with the parties
whom
it regarded as parents, was emotionally and psychologically attached
to the Respondent, to such an extent that even after
the parties had
separated, the minor child still regarded the Respondent as its
parent. At an enquiry held at the Magistrate’s
Court on a
maintenance complaint lodged against the Respondent in terms
of
section 10
of The
Maintenance Act No 99 of 1998
,
the
Respondent was found to have a legal duty to maintain the customary
law adopted minor child, notwithstanding
not
having adopted the child formally in terms of the Child Care Act or
the Children’s Act.
[54]
In its deliberations, the high
court focused mainly on the constitutional imperative to develop
customary law and the common law
to recognise a duty of support
between a parent and a child adopted in terms of customary law to
improve the effectiveness of the
application of the maintenance
system.
The court
pointed out that the rationale of Xhosa customary law adoption
ceremony is to proclaim and signify to the world that the
adoptive
parents have formally accepted parental responsibility for the minor
child. The adopted minor child is thereafter accepted
and regarded by
society as a child of the adoptive parents. Customary law adoption is
widely practiced by Xhosas in the Eastern
and Western Cape Provinces
of the Republic of South Africa.
[55]
K[...] and the deceased are from Bloemfontein. It is important to
differentiate between parental
responsibility that gives obligation
to child support or maintenance and does not result in a right to
(inherit) intestate succession.
[56]
For purposes of this discussion, the additional order issued by the
High Court directing the
Director-General of the Department of Home
Affairs to register the child as the adopted child of the parties in
terms of the
Births and Deaths Registration Act is
edifying. The
order effectively equated the status of a child adopted in
terms of Xhosa customary law with a child adopted
in terms of the
Children’s Act, which gives rise to certain rights including
the right of succession which was not possible
at the time unless
done in terms of the applicable statute.
[57]
The order is significant because it was wholly unprecedented in our
law at the time. As while
customary law adoptions have been
recognised for purposes of creating a legally enforceable duty of
support in the past, such adoptions
have never been recognised in
express terms as having the same legal effect as formal adoptions.
The Reform of the Customary Law
of Succession Act was already enacted
at the time of the decision, but not yet applicable, as it came into
effect on 20 September
2010. The basis of the court’s finding
was however wrong in that it canvassed for the reading and
interpretation of the words
“
for
the adoption of children
”
enunciated in the preamble
of
the Child Care Act
purposively
not to exclude adoption by customary law as not being contrary to the
law of general application. Consequently, that
a minor child adopted
in terms of Xhosa customary law should be deemed to be legally
adopted in terms of the common law and the
Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa.
[58]
However, that is incorrect, the customary law adoptions cannot be
regarded as legal in terms
of common law as legal adoption can only
be achieved in terms of statute. The matter of
Alexkor
Ltd and Another v The Richtersveld Community and Others
[2003]
ZACC 18
;
2004
(5) SA 460
(CC)
on page 478 paragraph 51
case
quoted under paragraph 26 is illustrative of the point, stating that:
“
While
in the past indigenous law was seen through the common law lens, it
must now be seen as an integral part of our law. Like
all law it
depends for its ultimate force and validity on the Constitution. Its
validity must now be determined by reference not
to common law, but
to the Constitution. The courts are obliged by section 211 (3)
of the Constitution to apply customary
law when it is
applicable, subject to the Constitution and any legislation that
deals with customary law…;
In
the result, indigenous law feeds into, nourishes, fuses with and
becomes part of the amalgam of South African law.”
[59]
The Reform of the Customary Succession Act has now codified the
adoption by customary law to
be legal, therefore proof by the
Applicant of (customary law adoption having taken place) having been
accepted by the deceased
during his lifetime as his own child in
accordance with the Xhosa customary law will entitle him to be
regarded as a descendent
of the deceased, eligible to inherit in
terms of
Intestate Succession Act.
[60
]
The Applicant has alleged that as K[...] was married to the deceased
on 24 December 1997, during
the lobola payment it was confirmed in
the lobola letter that the deceased was marrying K[...] together with
the Applicant, thus
proclaiming and signifying or announcing to the
whole world the deceased’s adoption (being the deceased’s
acceptance
of the Applicant as his own son) and formal acceptance of
parental responsibility for him; see
Maneli
par [5]. He was as
a result referred to by the 1
st
Respondent as N[...] and
the deceased’s father being very fond of him. The Applicant
alleges to have got this information
from the lobola letter that was
in a red file in the house, which he believes to have been removed
and destroyed by the 1
st
Respondent. The 1
st
Respondent disputes all these allegations, that such announcement
took place, or that she knows about or had removed a lobola letter.
[61]
In proof of the allegation the Applicant has attached a confirmatory
Affidavit by K[...]’s
sister in law who rather confirms that
the Applicant was actually legally adopted by the deceased, an issue
that the Applicant
and the M[...]s, who are the deceased’s
family were not aware of. They had thought the deceased was the
biological father
as the deceased had treated the Applicant as his
own child, which treatment the sister in law had observed since she
started knowing
K[...], the Applicant and the deceased in 1995. She
visited them in Pretoria, till K[...] predeceased the deceased.
K[...] asked
her to look after the Applicant after her passing, which
she together with deceased did and has continued to do even after the
passing of the deceased.
[62]
The sister in law’s Affidavit does not confirm the customary
law adoption but in contradiction
alleges the adoption to have been a
legal adoption. Nevertheless, the legal adoption is conceded to have
not taken place. She alleges
that the deceased’s family members
were not aware that the Applicant was not the deceased’s
biological son. However,
the lobola ceremony involves the two
families, as is the wedding as shown in the pictures to have been
attended by the M[...]s,
the deceased’s family, whereupon the
pronouncement would allegedly have been made to the whole world. It
is therefore inconsistent
that the M[...] family would not be aware
that the deceased was not the biological father of the Applicant and
also that he was
actually adopted by the deceased, especially in
accordance with the customary law, as, expectantly, the pronouncement
would have
been publicly made at the ceremony as is allegedly
confirmed in the lobola letter; see Metiso where it is stated in the
experts’
evidence that:
…
(
Even
in cases where adoption was not reported to the traditional leader,
the adoption would still be valid if due publicity was
given to the
process and there was agreement between the families of the adopted
child and the adoptive parent(s)’
Furthermore,
the sister in law also seemed to have missed the fact that the
deceased was in prison in 1995. She therefore could
not have visited
the couple during that time or known the deceased by then as she
alleges. Her Confirmatory Affidavit therefore
of no consequence to
the facts as alleged by the Applicant as it fails to confirm the
Applicant’s allegations.
[63]
In addition, the inference of such an adoption having taken place due
to the alleged pronouncement
at the lobola ceremony is contradicted
by the allegation that K[...] told the Applicant that the deceased is
not his biological
father prior to her passing and had asked her
sister in law to look after the Applicant on her passing,
indicating that notwithstanding
the deceased treating the Applicant
as his own son K[...] never believed it to be the total
responsibility of the deceased to take
care of the Applicant. The
Applicant and the sister in law confirm that the sister in law did
accept the responsibility to look
after him, and after K[...]’s
passing, the sister in law and the deceased financially supported the
Applicant when required.
The sister in law had continued doing so
even after the death of the deceased. Unlike in
Maneli
where
indeed the customary law adoption had taken place and was held to
have created an enforceable duty of support on the Respondent.
[64]
It also cannot be ignored that notwithstanding the alleged
declaration by the deceased during
lobola and the wedding, the
subsequent registration of the birth of the Applicant, was only in
his mother’s surname. The
registration in the deceased’s
name was done six months later with no such adoption being
registered, which the 1
st
Respondent alleges to have been
for the purpose of registering the Applicant as a dependant with the
deceased’s medical aid.
The Applicant had also continued to
stay with the aunt post the wedding until the aunt passed on in 2001.
He then moved in with
the deceased and K[...]. The aunt’s
position who did not have any children hence deciding to raise the
Applicant is the same
as that of K[...], the Applicant was her only
child and to the deceased who had no children, the only stepchild. In
essence they
also besides the Applicant, had no children.
[65]
The Applicant further alleges that the deceased was at the time of
his passing or illness paying
or responsible for his Technicon fees
and attached a statement issued by the Tshwane Technicon on 24
January 2019, which indicate
that the arrear fees were by 12 November
2017 more than 90 days overdue. The statement is issued to the
Applicant with no proof
that the deceased was liable or had taken any
responsibility for the fees. The fees stood owing even when the
deceased was still
alive. In addition, no further fees were charged
to the account to signify a registration with the Technicon in 2018,
despite the
Applicant’s allegations that he was registered with
the institution at the time of the deceased’s death. The
Applicant
has failed in his endevour to prove that the deceased
continued to be responsible for him even after the passing away of
his mother
and of being told that the deceased is not his father.
[66]
The Applicant has indicated that the deceased had also included the
Applicant as a beneficiary
to his pension Fund. The amount had
already been paid out to the deceased at the time of his death and
therefore falls within the
deceased’s estate and will be dealt
with accordingly. The annuity with Metropolitan accordingly
refers to him as a
beneficiary and a dependent child for which he
might have taken partial responsibility as a stepfather.
[67]
The Applicant has therefore failed to prove that the deceased had
during his lifetime accepted
him as his son in accordance with the
customary law. Having failed to prove that the rites and rituals
including the usual pronouncement
to the whole world that usually
takes place according to the Xhosa customary law, did take place.
The Applicant therefore
failed to make a case for the relief sought.
[68]
It is also disconcerting that the Applicant has failed to follow the
process as prescribed in
section 5
of the Reform of the Customary Law
of Succession Act in case of any uncertainty or disputes arising in
connection with the application
of the Act, in cases of estates that
are to devolve in terms of the
Intestate Succession Act. The
section
clearly outlines the steps that are to be taken that will assist the
Master to arrive at a proper decision in relation
to the dispute with
the necessary investigations and inquiry taking place.
[69]
In the urgent matter the question of costs was deferred to when
issues in this Application which
is Part B are decided upon. The
Applicant had insisted that both the costs in Part A and Part B of
this application to be paid
by the 1
st
Respondent
de
bonis propriis
, which costs may not be recovered from the
deceased estate. Having considered all the argument also on the
deferred issue.
It
is hereby ordered that:
1. The
Applicant’s Application is dismissed.
2. The
Applicant to pay the costs in Part B of this Application.
3. No
order as to costs in respect of Part A (which is each party to pay
its own costs)
N.V. Khumalo
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
For
the Applicant:
Adv K
Fitzroy
Instructed
by:
Lacante
Henn Inc
Ref:
MJ Lacante/mjvv/ST0062
E
mail: Willem@lhlaw.co.za
For
the Respondent :
Adv A
Roos/ Kutumela
Instructed
by:
MLM
Kutumela Inc Attorneys
Tel:
(012) 386 0717
Ref:
R Lebeya
lebeya@kutumela.co.za
Email:
lesego@kutumela.co.za
sino noindex
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