Case Law[2025] ZACC 19South Africa
Jordaan and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 296/24) [2025] ZACC 19; 2025 (11) BCLR 1249 (CC); 2025 (6) SA 323 (CC) (11 September 2025)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
11 September 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional invalidity — Section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the Births and Deaths Registration Act — confirmation in terms of section 167(5) of the Constitution
Judgment
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## Jordaan and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 296/24) [2025] ZACC 19; 2025 (11) BCLR 1249 (CC); 2025 (6) SA 323 (CC) (11 September 2025)
Jordaan and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (CCT 296/24) [2025] ZACC 19; 2025 (11) BCLR 1249 (CC); 2025 (6) SA 323 (CC) (11 September 2025)
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sino date 11 September 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONSTITUTION – Equality –
Surname
changes after marriage
–
Provisions
differentiated between persons on basis of gender – Granted
automatic surname change rights to women in specified
marital
circumstances – Required men to seek authorisation for any
surname change – Served no legitimate government
purpose –
Constituted unfair discrimination – Perpetuated harmful
gender stereotypes – Impaired dignity
of men and women –
Constitutional invalidity confirmed –
Births and Deaths
Registration Act 51 of 1992
,
ss 26(1)(a)
-(c) – Constitution,
s 9.
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 296/24
In
the matter between:
JANA
JORDAAN
First Applicant
HENRY
VAN DER
MERWE
Second Applicant
JESS
DONNELLY-BORNMAN
Third Applicant
ANDREAS
NICOLAAS
BORNMAN
Fourth Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First Respondent
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Second Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Jordaan
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[
2025]
ZACC 19
Coram:
Madlanga ADCJ,
Dambuza AJ, Kollapen J, Majiedt J,
Mhlantla J, Opperman AJ, Rogers J, Theron J and
Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Theron J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
4 March 2025
Decided
on:
11 September 2025
Summary:
Constitutional invalidity —
Section 26(1)(a)
-(c) of the
Births and Deaths Registration Act — confirmation
in terms of
section 167(5) of the Constitution
Differentiation
between men and women — unfair discrimination on listed ground
— infringement of right to equality —
infringement of
right to dignity
Section
9(1) and section 9(3) infringements — Section 36 inquiry —
limitation not justifiable
ORDER
On
application for confirmation of an order of constitutional invalidity
granted by the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division,
Bloemfontein:
1.
The order of constitutional invalidity issued by the High Court of
South Africa,
Free State Division, Bloemfontein is confirmed.
2.
Section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the Births and Deaths Registration Act 51
of 1992
(Act) is declared unconstitutional to the extent that, in
violation of section 9(1) of the Constitution, it differentiates
irrationally on the ground of gender, and to the extent that, in
violation of section 9(3) of the Constitution, it unfairly
discriminates
on the ground of gender, by:
(a)
failing to afford a woman the right to have her spouse assume her
surname;
(b)
failing to afford a man the right to assume the surname of the woman
after marriage;
(c)
failing to allow for a married or divorced man or widower to resume a
surname which he bore
at any time; and
(d)
failing to allow for a man, whether married or divorced or a widower,
to add to the surname
which he assumed after the marriage, any
surname which he bore at any prior time.
3.
The declaration of invalidity is suspended for a period of 24 months
to enable
Parliament to remedy the defects by either amending
existing legislation or passing new legislation within 24 months, in
order
to ensure that all persons are afforded the right of assumption
of another surname.
4.
Pending the coming into force of new legislation or amendments to
existing legislation,
designed to afford the right of assumption of
another surname as set out in section 26(1) of the Act, it is
declared that
the provisions of section 26(1) shall not apply
when:
(a)
a person after their marriage assumes the surname of the spouse with
whom such person concluded
a marriage or after having assumed such
surname, resumes a surname which they bore at any prior time;
(b)
a married or divorced person or a widow or widower resumes a surname
which they bore at
any time; and
(c)
a person, whether married or divorced, or a widow or widower, adds to
the surname which
they assumed after the marriage, any surname which
they bore at any prior time.
5.
Should Parliament fail to correct the defects in the 24 month
period, paragraph
4 above shall continue to operate until remedial
legislation, if any, is brought into operation.
6.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the applicants’ costs in
this Court,
including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
JUDGMENT
THERON J
(Madlanga ADCJ, Dambuza AJ, Kollapen J, Majiedt J,
Mhlantla J, Opperman AJ, Rogers J
and Tshiqi J
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This application concerns
the constitutionality of section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the Births and
Deaths Registration Act
[1]
(the
Act). This section regulates the amendment of the forenames and
surnames of South African citizens, and is linked to
regulation 18(2)(a) of the Regulations on the Registration of
Births and Deaths, 2014
[2]
(Regulations), which provides the legal framework for individuals to
change their names. The High Court of South Africa,
Free State
Division, Bloemfontein, declared section 26(1)(a)-(c)
unconstitutional on the ground that it discriminates on the
basis of
gender.
[2]
In this Court, the
applicants seek confirmation of the declaration of invalidity.
In terms of section 167(5) of the Constitution,
a declaration of
constitutional invalidity only takes effect once confirmed by this
Court.
[3]
Legislative scheme
[3]
Section 26(1)(a)-(c) provides:
“
Assumption
of another surname—
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act or any other law, no person
shall assume or
describe himself or herself by or pass under any
surname other than that under which he or she has been included in
the population
register, unless the Director-General has authorized
him or her to assume that other surname: Provided that this
subsection shall
not apply when—
(a)
a woman after her marriage assumes the surname of the man with whom
she concluded
such marriage or after having assumed his or her
surname, resumes a surname which she bore at any prior time;
(b)
a married or divorced woman or a widow resumes a surname which she
bore at any prior
time; and
(c)
a woman, whether married or divorced, or a widow adds to the surname
which she assumed
after the marriage, any surname which she bore at
any prior time.”
[4]
Section 26(2) provides as follows:
“
At
the request of any person, in the prescribed manner, the
Director-General may, if he or she is satisfied that there is a good
and sufficient reason as may be prescribed for that person’s
assumption of another surname, authorize the person to assume
a
surname other than his or her surname as included in the population
register, and the Director General shall include the
substitutive surname in the population register in the prescribed
manner.”
[5]
In turn, regulation 18(2), which regulates
the assumption of
another surname provides:
“
Assumption
of another surname
—
(2)
The reasons referred to in section 26(2) of the Act
must
relate to—
(a)
a change in the marital status of a woman;
(b)
assumption by a person of his or her biological father’s
surname, where the
father has recently acknowledged paternity in
terms of regulation 13 or 14; or
(c)
protection of a person in terms of the Witness Protection Act, 1998
(Act No. 112 of
1998).” (Emphasis added.)
[6]
Section 26(1)(a)-(c)
of the Act deals with
the assumption of another surname and purports to give legislative
approval for the assumption of a common
surname after marriage.
In essence, in terms of these provisions no person may assume or
describe themselves by another surname
other than that under which
they have been registered in the population register, unless the
Director-General authorises the person
to do so. However, this
does not apply to married
women
in the following circumstances: when (i) a woman
assumes the surname of the man she married after such marriage, or
after assuming
his surname resumes a surname that she bore at any
prior time; (ii) a married, divorced or widowed woman resumes a
surname which
she bore at any previous time; and (iii) a married,
divorced or widowed woman adds to the surname which she assumed after
the marriage,
any surname which she bore at any time.
[7]
In terms of section 26(2) of the Act, when a
person applies to the Director General to assume another
surname, the latter
must be satisfied that there is “good and
sufficient reason” for that person’s assumption of
another surname.
In terms of regulation 18(2)(a) of the
Regulations, “good and sufficient reason” must relate to
one of three circumstances
and only provides for a change of surname
when there is a change in the marital status of a woman. The
Act does not provide
for men in heterosexual marriages who want to
assume their wife’s surname to do so, nor does it provide for
parties in a
same-sex marriage or civil union to do so.
[8]
As addressed, the Act
uses gendered language in its construction, referring to a man and a
woman in a marriage. However, this
is not consistent with other
similar legislation. The Civil Union Act
[4]
uses gender-neutral language to refer to partnerships, such as
person, partner or spouse. Thus, there is no distinction in
the
Civil Union Act based on a partner’s gender, whereas the
application of the provisions of the Act vary based on one’s
gender.
Background
[9]
The first applicant is Ms Jana Jordaan, who is
married to the second
applicant, Mr Henry van der Merwe. The third applicant is
Ms Jess Donnelly-Bornman, who is married
to the fourth applicant, Mr
Andreas Nicolaas Bornman. The first and second respondents are
the Minister of Home Affairs and
the Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development respectively, each cited in their
representative capacities. The Department
of Home Affairs
(Department) is responsible, among other duties, for maintaining the
national population register and the birth,
marriage and death
records.
[10]
The first and second applicants were married in Bloemfontein in
2021.
They had agreed, prior to their marriage, that the second
applicant would assume the surname of the first applicant in order to
preserve her familial ties to her deceased biological parents.
Upon registration of the marriage, the first and second applicants
were advised by the Department that it was not possible for the
second applicant to assume the first applicant’s surname.
The first and second applicants have a child who they would like to
bear the surname “Jordaan”.
[11]
The third applicant too wished to retain her surname to preserve
familial
ties with her biological parents as an only child. The
third and fourth applicants opted for their surname to be reflected
as “Donnelly-Bornman”. They were advised by the
Department that only a female spouse may amend her surname, not
a
male spouse.
[12]
The applicants instituted proceedings in the High Court in which
they sought, among others, an order declaring section 26(1)(a)-(c)
of the Act and regulation 18(2)(a) to be unconstitutional
to the
extent that they discriminate on the grounds of gender. They
also sought ancillary relief regarding the assumption
of their
preferred surnames.
[13]
The respondents did not oppose the matter in the High Court.
At the request of the High Court, the Free State Society of
Advocates was admitted as amicus curiae (friend of the court).
The amicus curiae supported the argument advanced by the applicants
that the impugned provisions perpetuated patriarchal gender
norms in
violation of section 9 – the right to equality – of
the Constitution and unfairly discriminated on the
basis of gender.
[14]
The applicants argued
that the Act and Regulations perpetuate patriarchal gender norms and
differentiate on the basis of sex and
gender in violation of
section 9(2) and 9(3) of the Constitution. They contended
that the impugned provisions violate
the Constitution by arbitrarily
differentiating between people’s ability to change their
surnames upon marriage or of their
own accord, on the basis of their
sex or gender. Relying on
Hugo
,
[5]
the applicants contended that the Act and Regulations are in
contravention of the goal of promoting equality and prohibiting
unfair
discrimination under the Constitution.
[15]
The applicants further
relied on the statement in
Wile
,
[6]
where Bozalek J held that to the extent that regulation 18 seeks
to create a closed list of reasons for changing one’s
surname,
it was
ultra
vires
(beyond
the powers of the Minister). Finally, the applicants submitted
that section 26(2) and regulation 18 must
meet the equality
test articulated in
Harksen
[7]
to pass constitutional muster.
[16]
The High Court made an order in the following terms:
“
1.
Section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the [Act] [is declared] to be
unconstitutional to the extent
that it discriminates on the ground of
gender, by failing to:
1.1
Afford a female person the right to have her spouse assume her
surname;
1.2
Afford a male person the right to assume the surname of the woman
with whom they conclude
a marriage or after having assumed her
surname, resume a surname which he bore at any prior time;
1.3
Allow for a married or divorced man or widower to resume a surname
which he bore at any
time;
1.4
Allow for a man, whether married or divorced or a widower, to add to
the surname which he
assumed after the marriage, any surname which he
bore at any prior time;
1.5
Thereby subjecting any change to the surname of a male person after
marriage to the authorisation
of the Director-General in terms of
section 26(2) of the [Act].
2.
Regulation 18(2)(a) of the [Regulations] [is declared] to be
unconstitutional
to the [extent] that it discriminates against male
person[s] by failing to provide for the change in the marital status
of a man.
3.
The declaration of invalidity in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall be
suspended for a
period of 24 months to enable the President and
Cabinet, together with Parliament to remedy the foregoing defects by
either amending
existing legislation, or passing new legislation
within 24 months, in order to ensure that male persons are afforded
the right
of assumption of another surname.
4.
Pending the coming into force of legislation or amendments to
existing legislation,
designed to afford the right of assumption of
another surname as set out in section 26(1) of the [Act]:
4.1
It is declared that the provisions of subsection 26(1) of the
[Act] shall not apply
when:
4.1.1 A
person after his or her marriage assumes the surname of the man or
wife with whom such person concluded
such marriage or after having
assumed such surname, resumes a surname which such person bore at any
prior time;
4.1.2 A
married or divorced woman or man or a widow or widower resumes a
surname which he or she bore at any time;
and
4.1.3 A
person, whether married or divorced, or a widow or widower adds to
the surname which he or she assumed
after the marriage, any surname
which he or she bore at any prior time.
4.2
The First Respondent is ordered to within 20 days after the granting
of this order/immediately
effect the following changes in terms of
the aforesaid prayer 4.1:
4.2.1
To amend the surname of the First Applicant to ‘Jordaan’;
4.2.2
To amend the surname of the Second Applicant to ‘Jordaan’;
4.2.3
To amend the surname of the First and Second Applicants’ child
to ‘Jordaan’;
4.2.4
To amend the surname of the Fourth Applicant to ‘Donnelly-Bornman’.
5.
Pending the coming into force of regulations, or amendments to
existing regulations,
designed to afford the right of assumption of
another surname as set out in section 26(1) of the [Act] it is
declared that
the reasons referred to in section 26(2) of the
[Act] must relate to, inter alia, a change in the marital status of a
person.
6.
The order [granted] in favour of the applicants shall be referred to
the Constitutional
Court in terms of section 172(2)(a) of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa for confirmation of
constitutional
[in]validity.
7.
Costs to be paid on an unopposed basis, including the costs of two
counsel on
scale C to the extent of their employment.”
In
this Court
[17]
The applicants maintain the position they had adopted in the
High Court
that the impugned provisions are patriarchal,
discriminate on a prohibited ground and cannot be justified in an
open and democratic
society. The
applicants
allege that
section 26(1)(a) (c)
of
the Act and regulation 18(2)(a) of the Regulations are
inconsistent with the provisions of section 9 (the equality
provisions) and section 10 (the provisions relating to the right
to dignity) of the Constitution. They further contend
that in
terms of section 7(3) read with section 36 of the
Constitution, the limitation of these rights is not justifiable.
[18]
The first and second respondents filed notices of intention to abide
in this
Court. On 6 February 2025, the Chief Justice
issued directions calling upon the
first and
second respondents to file written submissions, specifically
addressing the relief sought by the applicants.
[19]
In their submissions the respondents do not oppose the confirmation
of
the declaration of unconstitutionality. They agree with the
applicants that the impugned provisions in the Act are rooted
in
colonialism and patriarchal norms. The respondents concede that
the Act should be amended to reflect constitutional values
and agree
with the proposal made by the applicants that the order of
constitutional invalidity be suspended and Parliament be granted
a
two-year period within which to remedy any such defect.
Issues
[20]
This matter raises the following issues:
(a)
the constitutionality of section 26(1)(a)-(c)
of the Act;
(b)
the constitutionality of regulation 18(2)(a)
of the Regulations;
and
(c)
the appropriate remedy.
Analysis
Is section 26(1)(a)-(c)
of the Act unconstitutional?
Historical context
[21]
Historically, gender
discrimination, not only in our society but worldwide, is
well-established and entrenched.
[8]
In
Sithole
,
Tshiqi J held:
“
Patriarchy
has resulted in different forms of discrimination against women with
dire consequences. It is therefore one of
the main drivers of
the oppression of women through gender stereotyping and the abuse of
cultural practices. These dire consequences
have rendered women
vulnerable and this vulnerability is an aspect of social reality.”
[9]
[22]
In
Rahube
, Goliath AJ held:
“
It
is important to recognise that the pervasive effects of patriarchy
meant that women were often excluded even from seemingly
genderneutral spaces. The perception of women as the
lesser gender was, and may still be, a widely held societal view
that
meant that even where legislation did not demand the subjugation of
women, the practices of officials and family members were
still
tainted by a bias towards women. The prioritisation of men is
particularly prevalent in spheres of life that are seen
as
stereotypically masculine, such as labour, property and legal
affairs.”
[10]
[23]
In
many African cultures, women retained their birth names after
marriage, and children often took their mother’s clan name.
There are several historical and cultural authorities that suggest
this as evidenced by traditional African cultures, customary
law in
many African countries, colonial records and accounts from the 18th
and 19th centuries, missionary records from the same
period and oral
tradition.
[11]
[24]
In parts of Africa,
the
tradition of a woman assuming her husband’s surname is rooted
in colonialism, religion and patriarchal cultural norms.
With
the arrival of the European colonisers and Christian missionaries,
and the imposition of Western values, the tradition of women
taking
their husband’s surname was introduced. This practice
reinforced patriarchal norms, where women were seen as
subordinate or
legally inferior (akin to a minor) to their husbands and expected to
assume their identity.
[12]
[25]
The
custom
that a wife takes the husband’s surname existed in Roman-Dutch
law, and in this way was introduced into South African
common law.
This custom also came into existence as a result of legislation that
was introduced by countries that colonised
African countries south of
the Sahara.
[13]
[26]
An
example,
under Roman law, is the marriage
cum
manu
(with
the hand)
[14]
which is
discussed in “Marriage in Roman Law”.
[15]
The authors discuss two kinds of conjugal unions which coexisted for
several centuries in the early Roman Empire and which
gave rise to
two different kinds of wives, namely, the
materfamilias
(mother
of the family) and the
matrona
(matron).
The
materfamilias
became
a member of the new family, but only if she broke all ties with her
former family. The
matrona
remained
a member of her original family, merely leaving her father or her
agnates
(relatives
through the father’s side) but retaining her own goods and
property. The wife (
matrona
)
remained under the power of her father.
[16]
[27]
In a
marriage
cum
manu
the
woman became part of the family of the husband and submitted (was
subject) to the power that existed under the name of the
manus
(hands).
This power attached exclusively to the father of the husband.
It would only pass to the husband when he became
the head of the
family. The wife became a daughter to her husband with a
juridical status of that similar to her children.
[17]
The Roman-Dutch influence of this tradition held that a husband was
entitled to the “full right to the person of his
wife with whom
he has consummated a marriage.”
[18]
[28]
In
modern times, in South Africa, the marital power regime, which was
similar to the doctrine of coverture which existed in the
English
common law,
[19]
perpetuated
the historical philosophy that women are not equal to men and become
akin to a minor upon marriage. In a speech
by Lord Wilson at
the High Sheriff of Oxfordshire’s Annual Law Lecture, he
explained:
“
The
change following the Norman conquest reflected the hierarchical
nature of the feudal system which was then introduced.
Just as
you went from the King at the top, down to the Lord, then down to the
master, and ultimately down to the peasant, so you
went from the
husband down to the wife. Norman society was also much more
pre occupied with land tenure and its passage
down from father
to son. The heart of the new order was reflected in the
principle of coverture. In the words of law-French,
the wife
was a ‘feme covert’ instead of a ‘feme sole’.
In law she was ‘covered up’ by
her husband. Hence
my title this afternoon:
the
wife was legally in the shadow of the husband and she was
substantially invisible to the law
.
Coverture subsisted throughout a marriage and since . . .
there was until 1857 no practical ability for a husband
or wife to
get a divorce, it therefore subsisted while both of them remained
alive.”
[20]
(Emphasis added.)
[29]
The
marital power regime has since been abolished.
[21]
The steadfast progression
of
women’s
rights in South Africa has allowed for the significant
advancement of gender
equality and the self determination of women, however, there are
still many practices and laws that continue
to perpetuate harmful
stereotypes regarding the role and autonomy of women.
Infringement on the
right to equality
[30]
The right to equality is
enshrined in section 9 of the Constitution.
[22]
Section 9(1) provides that everyone is equal before the law and
has the right to equal protection and benefit of the
law.
Section 9(2) provides for the achievement of full and equal
enjoyment of all rights and freedoms and authorises
legislative and
other measures designed to protect or advance persons or categories
of persons disadvantaged by unfair discrimination.
Section 9(2)
envisages substantive equality. Subsections 9(1) and (2)
are complementary and they both contribute to
the constitutional goal
of achieving equality to ensure “full and equal enjoyment of
all rights”.
[23]
On the other hand,
section 9(3) proscribes unfair discrimination by the state
against anyone on any ground including those
specified.
Section 9(5) renders discrimination on one or more of the listed
grounds unfair unless its fairness is established.
[24]
[31]
In
Harksen,
[25]
this Court laid down a
two-stage test to determine unfair discrimination: first, the court
must determine whether the provision
differentiates between people or
categories of people, and if so, whether this differentiation serves
a legitimate government purpose.
[26]
If the provision fails this test, it violates section 9(1), the
guarantee of equality before the law. If the provision
passes
this test, the court must still enquire, secondly, whether the
differentiation amounts to discrimination and whether such
discrimination is unfair.
[27]
[32]
Where discrimination is
on a ground specified in section 9(3), it is presumed, in terms
of section 9(5), that the differentiation
constitutes unfair
discrimination “unless it is established that the
discrimination is fair”. The burden to show
that a
provision is fair rests on the state.
[28]
[33]
Constitutional rights
violations must be examined with reference to the purpose of the
right and the constitutional values which
underpin it.
[29]
The constitutional vision
is to achieve a “non-racial and non-sexist egalitarian society
underpinned by human dignity, the
rule of law, a democratic ethos and
human rights”.
[30]
Is there
differentiation?
[34]
The inability of men to assume their wives’ surnames squarely
fits
the definition of differentiation. Under the current
marital scheme, spouses are not granted the same freedoms, and this
is based on gender alone. I am therefore satisfied that the
impugned provisions differentiate between persons on the basis
of
gender.
Does the
differentiation serve a legitimate government purpose?
[35]
The provision is
extensive as it applies to all married heterosexual couples.
The Act
repealed
the Birth, Marriages and Deaths Registration Act
[31]
(the 1963 Act) in its entirety. The 1963 Act had provided for
the alteration of a name (including a surname) on application
to the
Director-General and payment of a prescribed fee. The
Director General had to be satisfied that the person was
competent to change their name. The 1963 Act and
subsequent amendments thereto did not deal with the assumption of
another surname, as is provided for in the current Act.
[36]
In 1992, the current Act introduced provisions to
regulate the assumption of a surname from the time that a birth is
registered.
In general, the objective of regulating a surname
is to ensure that new surnames are not created which bear no
connection to the
family. The Legislature decided, that in
keeping with practice in South Africa, and to regulate the situation
where a person
reaches an age to
apply
for a
change
of surname, there should be limitations
as to the circumstances under which a person may assume another
surname. The circumstances
which were then added to the
legislation related to marriage and applied specifically to women.
[37]
The state, in seeking to
regulate any situation, must do so in a rational manner.
[32]
In
Prinsloo
,
this Court cautioned:
“
[The
state] should not regulate in an arbitrary manner or manifest ‘naked
preferences’ that serve no legitimate governmental
purpose, for
that would be inconsistent with the rule of law and the fundamental
premises of the constitutional state. The
purpose of this
aspect of equality is, therefore, to ensure that the state is bound
to function in a rational manner.”
[33]
[38]
The respondents, in their written submissions, acknowledge that the
Act
is an outdated piece of legislation promulgated before the advent
of our constitutional democracy, and has not come before the South
African Law Reform Commission for the development and modernisation
thereof.
[39]
The legitimate government purpose in this case, namely seeking to
regulate
surnames to ensure that new surnames are not created which
bear no connection to the family surname, is not served by the
differentiation.
This is because the restriction imposed on
assuming another surname is not removed if the differentiation is
remedied; persons
wishing to change their surnames may only assume an
existing surname, that of their spouse. Thus, the
differentiation serves
no legitimate government purpose.
[40]
It follows that section
26(1) violates the equality guarantee in section 9(1) of the
Bill of Rights.
[34]
I
now turn to consider the question whether it also violates the
prohibition against unfair discrimination.
Does the
differentiation constitute unfair discrimination?
[41]
The differentiation is on the listed ground of gender, under
section 9(3).
In terms of section 9(5), “[d]iscrimination
on one or more of the grounds listed in subsection (3) is unfair
unless
it is established that the discrimination is fair”.
[42]
Both in the High Court
and this Court, the respondents did not contend that the
discrimination was fair. However, this
Court must still be
satisfied, on a consideration of all the circumstances, that the
discrimination is unfair.
[35]
[43]
The
Act
and Regulations perpetuate gender norms set by a patriarchal society
that entrenches gender inequality.
[36]
The fact that the husband’s surname is used after marriage is
probably one of the best examples of this.
[44]
Whilst there have been major developments in
marital law in South Africa over the last 70 years, most notably the
limitation and
eventual removal of marital power applicable to women
of different cultures and backgrounds, the impugned provisions of the
Act
and Regulations that form the subject matter of this application
unfortunately
still entrench and perpetuate gender inequality.
[45]
The discrimination
negatively affects both men and women. In the case of men, they
are deprived of the ability to take their
wives’ surnames if
they so wish. In the case of women, the effects of this scheme
are far more insidious. It
is not merely so that they are
deprived of the right to have their surnames serve as the family
surname where their husbands wish
to take that surname. It also
reinforces patriarchal gender norms, which prescribe how women may
express their identity,
and it makes this expression relational to
their husband, as a governmental and cultural default.
Furthermore, it is clear
that there is not a “worthy or
important societal goal”
[37]
that is realised through the prohibition of a man assuming his wife’s
surname upon marriage. The prohibition, thus,
infringes upon
the right to equality.
[46]
In
Harksen
,
this Court posited a number of considerations to which regard must be
had in order to determine the extent and impact of the discrimination
and whether the discrimination is unfair. These include (i) the
position of the complainants and whether they have suffered
from
patterns of disadvantage in the past; (ii) the nature of the
provision or power and the purpose sought to be achieved by it;
and
(iii) the extent to which the discrimination has affected the
complainants’ rights or interests and whether it has led
to an
impairment of their dignity.
[38]
[47]
In this matter, the applicants have placed a particular emphasis on
men.
Patriarchy has exalted the position of men in society and
insulated them from the harsh effects of sexism and gender-based
discrimination.
However, this does not mean that men cannot and
do not suffer from the effects of patriarchy. The inability of
husbands to
assume their wives’ surnames removes their right to
make choices pertaining to their own identity. Further, it
prevents
them from determining how to structure their familial unit.
However, the provision is at the same time demeaning to women,
since
it conveys that only the man’s surname deserves to serve as the
family surname. The man’s surname is thereby
given a
superior status to that of the woman’s. The ability of
women, with the cooperation of their husbands, to give
their surname
to the family is prohibited.
[48]
The Constitution promotes
and requires a substantive approach to equality. This has been
affirmed in the jurisprudence of
this Court.
[39]
In
National Coalition I
,
this Court held that section 9 of the Constitution encapsulates
the notion of “substantive as opposed to formal equality”.
[40]
It reasoned:
“
It
is insufficient for the Constitution merely to ensure, through its
Bill of Rights, that statutory provisions which
have caused
such unfair discrimination in the past are eliminated. Past
unfair discrimination frequently has ongoing negative
consequences,
the continuation of which is not halted immediately when the initial
causes thereof are eliminated, and unless remedied,
may continue for
a substantial time and even indefinitely. Like justice,
equality delayed is equality denied.”
[41]
[49]
As mentioned, the
tradition of women taking their husband’s surname was a
colonial import. This practice reinforced
patriarchal norms
where women were seen as subordinate to their husbands and expected
to assume their identity. There are
many consequences of this
practice. The symbolic consequence is that women’s
identities are subsumed into their husbands’
families after
marriage.
[42]
This has
the inevitable upshot of entrenching the notion that the husband is
the head of the household.
[43]
This practice further reinforces an arbitrary distinction between men
and women, by implying that a man’s identity
is fixed and
unchangeable while a woman’s identity is adaptable. This
practice also perpetuates the historical philosophy
that women are
not equal to men and become akin to minors upon marriage.
[50]
Through the lens of substantive equality, it is clear that the
impugned
provisions rest on patriarchal assumptions about how
families should be structured and removes the ability for spouses in
heterosexual
relationships to make personal and consequential choices
for their family. The underlying hierarchy of power between men
and women in marriages is exacerbated when the default culture is for
women to assume their husband’s surname without any
scope for
the reverse position. The impugned provisions therefore
entrench underlying patterns of gender discrimination and
patriarchy. The Constitution’s vision of non-sexism
requires a concerted effort to eliminate these norms to give life
to
the constitutional values of freedom, dignity and equality for all.
[51]
The extent to which the
discrimination has affected the rights and interests of complainants
and impacts on their dignity is a further
consideration. This
Court has on several occasions emphasised the importance of human
dignity to our constitutional scheme.
[44]
In
Dawood
,
the Court held that “[h]uman dignity therefore informs
constitutional adjudication and interpretation at a range of levels.
It is a value that informs the interpretation of many, possibly all,
other rights”.
[45]
This Court has also
acknowledged the importance of the constitutional value of dignity in
interpreting rights such as the right
to equality.
[46]
The decision to take the
surname of one’s partner is a matter of defining significance
for many, if not most, people and to
prohibit the possibility of such
a choice impairs the ability of the individual to achieve personal
fulfilment in an aspect of
life that is of central significance.
[47]
The impugned provisions
clearly constitute an infringement of the right to dignity.
[52]
The discrimination is
against both men and women and this was correctly conceded by the
respondents. The assumption that husbands’
surnames will
be the default surname of the family violates the right to equality
of both men and women by reinforcing power dynamics
and gender
hierarchies within relationships. As pointed out above, the
impugned provisions have its roots in the colonial
custom for wives
to assume their husband’s surname upon marriage, inherited from
Roman-Dutch law. In my view, this
discrimination, as in
National
Coalition II
,
“occurs at a deeply intimate level of human existence and
relationality”; the unequal treatment of spouses, and the
underlying assumptions justifying such treatment, serve only to
further entrench the position of women as the “inferior”
spouse in the relationship.
[48]
[53]
It has been suggested
that, in determining unfair discrimination, courts should assess
historical patterns of disadvantage, prejudice,
stereotyping and
stigmatisation, emphasising a dignity-centric approach that seeks to
eliminate systemic discrimination.
[49]
It would be difficult to achieve the constitutional goal of a society
free of discrimination when
all
spouses are not afforded
the choice of assuming the surname of their spouse, but instead this
choice is only available to those
of a certain gender.
[54]
The ineluctable conclusion is that the impugned provisions constitute
differentiation without a supportive legitimate government purpose
and further constitute unfair discrimination. It therefore
directly violates the right to equality.
Section 36
analysis
[55]
Section 36
of the Constitution provides that rights “may be limited only
in terms of law of general application to the
extent that the
limitation is reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic
society based on human dignity, equality and
freedom”.
Section 36 mandates an enquiry into relevant factors, including:
“
(a)
the nature of the right;
(b)
the importance of the purpose of the limitation;
(c)
the nature and extent of the limitation;
(d)
the relation between the limitation and its purpose; and
(e)
less restrictive means to achieve the purpose.”
[50]
[56]
The nature of the rights
to equality and dignity are of fundamental importance to our
constitutional democracy, and any limitation
thereto must be
“appropriately tailored and narrowly focused”.
[51]
Even though the respondents did not advance any justification for the
limitation created by the impugned provisions, this
is an exercise
that must be undertaken by this Court.
[52]
As mentioned, the purpose of the Act is to regulate the assumption of
a surname from the point that a birth is registered.
The
objective was to ensure that no surnames could be assumed without a
connection to the family lineage, thus, the Legislature
sought to
regulate and limit the circumstances under which people could change
their surnames.
[57]
Previously, a woman automatically assumed the surname of her husband
upon marriage. This was later amended to afford a woman the
choice to assume her husband’s surname or to retain her
surname
or to assume a double-barrelled surname of her own surname and her
husband’s surname.
[58]
The respondents have no objection to a man assuming another surname
after
marriage, provided that the new surname is linked to an already
existing surname.
[59]
It is therefore clear
that the prohibition on a man assuming his wife’s surname is
not linked to a “worthy or important
societal goal”.
[53]
The limitation rests on presumptions of superiority and removes
individuals’ ability to make their own determinations
regarding
a personal choice. The prohibition results in serious
impediments to the rights of equality and dignity which cannot
be
sustained under an “
open
and democratic society based on human dignity, equality and
freedom
”
.
[54]
Thus, section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the Act is unconstitutional to the
extent that it violates section 9(1)-(3) and section
10 of the
Constitution.
Is regulation 18(2)(a)
unconstitutional?
[60]
The Minister of Home Affairs is empowered by section 32 of the
Act
to promulgate regulations. Regulation 18 governs the
assumption of another surname subject to the provisions of section 26
of the Act.
[61]
This Court in
Liebenberg
[55]
held that the Constitution does not prescribe how regulations are to
be made or enacted. All it does is to provide in section 92(1)
that “Ministers are responsible for the powers and functions of
the executive assigned to them by the President”.
[56]
Ministers exercise no more than subordinate, delegated authority when
they make regulations in terms of Acts of Parliament
or perform other
ministerial duties. Accordingly, regulations are not Acts of
Parliament
[57]
and their
invalidity is not subject to confirmation by this Court.
[58]
[62]
In
Satchwell
,
[59]
this Court dealt
with the confirmation of constitutional invalidity of sections 8
and 9 of the Judges’ Remuneration and
Conditions of Employment
Act
[60]
and
regulations 9(2)(b) and 9(3)(a) of the regulations thereunder.
Relying on
Liebenberg
,
this Court held that it was directly concerned only with those parts
of the order which related to the enabling provisions.
This was
because parts of the order dealt with the Act, whereas other parts
dealt with the regulations, and confirmation of the
declaration of
invalidity in relation to regulations was not required.
[61]
In
Scalabrini
,
this Court also affirmed that it was not required to confirm the
order striking down regulations.
[62]
Scalabrini
explained:
“
The
impugned subsections were implemented in terms of regulation 9
of the Regulations. As already stated, the High Court
made
an order declaring regulation 9 unconstitutional. The
respondents did not apply for leave to appeal that order.
This
Court is not required to confirm the order striking down
regulation 9. Since the impugned subsections were struck
down, regulation 9 could hardly stand.”
[63]
[63]
Accordingly, the High Court’s declaration with regard to the
regulations
stands, and need not separately be pronounced on by this
Court.
International
and foreign law
[64]
When interpreting the
Bill of Rights, a court is required, in terms of
section 39(1) of the Constitution,
[64]
to consider international
law and it may have regard to foreign law. Under international
law and in foreign jurisdictions,
jurisprudence supports a spouse’s
ability to adopt their spouse’s surname regardless of gender or
sex.
[65]
Under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),
[65]
there are several provisions that support one’s ability to
assume a surname change without regard to gender. Article 3
protects the equal enjoyment of civil and political rights by men and
women.
[66]
General
Comment No 28 adds that spouses should have an equal opportunity
to choose whether to retain a family name or
choose a new family
name.
[67]
Such language
supports the proposition that the ability of spouses to choose their
family name should apply regardless of
their gender.
[66]
Article 17 of the
ICCPR states that there shall be no unlawful interference with one’s
family or home.
[68]
It
is complemented by General Comment No 16, which provides that
there must not be “arbitrary interference”
with family
and home life under the ICCPR.
[69]
[67]
Article 23(4)
further provides that States Parties must take steps to protect the
equality of rights and responsibilities in
a marriage, and during its
dissolution.
[70]
General
Comment No 19 adds that such equality includes the right to
retain an original family name or equally participate
in choosing a
new family name.
[71]
[68]
Finally, Article 26
protects against sex-based discrimination and requires protection
thereof by law.
[72]
General Comment No 18 adds that legislation adopted by a State
party must be consistent with Article 26 and must
not be
discriminatory.
[73]
[69]
In the United Nations’
Human Rights Committee
[74]
case of Müller,
[75]
Mr Müller
had moved from Germany to Namibia and sought to adopt the surname of
his wife, Ms Engelhard. The Namibian
Aliens Act,
[76]
however, did not provide for a man to change his surname.
[77]
The
couple approached the Human Rights Committee, arguing that the
inability of Mr Müller to assume his wife’s surname
without a lengthy administrative process – which women under
similar circumstances are not subjected to – violates
the right
to equality as to marriage under Article 23(4), constitutes an
arbitrary and unlawful interference with one’s
privacy under
Article 17(1) and discriminates based on sex under Article 26
of the ICCPR.
[78]
[70]
The Human Rights
Committee pronounced that the Act was inconsistent with Article 26
because it differentiated on the basis
of sex
[79]
and thus, found it unnecessary to address the arguments raised under
Articles 17(1) and 23(4).
[80]
A decision of the Human Rights Committee is not binding, but it does
provide a persuasive analysis on the interpretation
of the ICCPR.
There are similarities in the grounds upon which the Act in the
Müller
decision was found
inconsistent with Article 26 and the grounds on which I find
that the impugned provisions in the Act in
the present matter are
inconsistent with our Constitution.
[71]
Namibia has recently
recognised and sought to remedy this defect. On 30 December
2024, the Legislature published in the
Namibian Government Gazette
the Civil Registration and Identification Act.
[81]
Although it has not yet entered into force, the Act allows a spouse
to assume their spouse’s surname without regard
to gender.
In the explanatory memorandum to the Act, Parliament referred to the
Müller
decision and identified
the reason for the adoption of the Act so as to comply with Namibia’s
obligations under international
law.
[82]
[72]
The European Commission
of Human Rights (Commission) considered this very issue before the
turn of the millennium. In
Burghartz
,
[83]
the applicants were dual Swiss and German nationals who were married
in Germany, under German law. The applicants had elected
to
adopt the wife’s surname, Burghartz, as the family name.
Despite this, the Swiss registry office recorded the husband’s
surname, Schnyder, as the family surname. The applicants
applied to the Commission on the basis that certain articles in
the
Swiss Civil Code infringed on the applicants’ rights as
contained in Articles 8
[84]
and 14
[85]
of the European
Convention on Human Rights.
[73]
The Commission found that
there had been a violation of the applicants’ right of
protection against the prohibition of discrimination
under Article 14
as well as their right to privacy under Article 8. The
Commission found that there was plain discrimination
on the ground of
sex
[86]
and held that the
government of Switzerland was not able to provide any compelling
reasons for the discrimination.
[87]
This decision was confirmed by the European Court of Human
Rights.
[88]
[74]
Zimbabwe does not
differentiate name changes based on gender. In Zimbabwe, name
changes are governed by that country’s
Births and Deaths
Registration Act
.
[89]
Under the legislation, an application may be made by spouses to
change their surname by filing an application, paying a registration
fee, filing a notarial deed and registering the change in the
Government Gazette.
[90]
An application may be denied if the proposed name change is for an
unlawful purpose.
[91]
There is no qualifier with regard to marriage nor are there different
options available depending on gender.
[75]
In sum, a combination of international and foreign law supports the
view
that there should be no gendered qualifier on the ability of
spouses to amend their surnames after marriage. South African
law, by allowing only women to amend their surname, commits unfair
gender discrimination in contravention of international law
principles.
Remedy
[76]
Once a law or provision
of a law has been declared invalid, the Court has a range of options
at its disposal to remedy the invalidity.
[92]
Section 172(1)(b)(ii) affords this Court the power to
temporarily suspend the effect of a declaration of invalidity.
The purpose of this power is to honour the separation of powers
doctrine and mandate Parliament to correct the constitutional
defect.
[93]
If
Parliament fails to cure the defect within the time stipulated in the
order, the declaration of invalidity comes into
effect.
[94]
[77]
Suspension orders are
usually necessary when the striking down of a statute may create a
lacuna in the law;
[95]
if the
striking down would abrogate an important regulatory framework;
[96]
or if it would result in undue budgetary strain.
[97]
In this case, the second category is applicable. The striking
down of section 26(1)(a)-(c) would require a suspension
in order
for Parliament to make the provisions constitutionally compliant and
to preserve, in the meanwhile, the regulatory framework
that permits
(albeit deficiently) spouses upon marriage to change their surnames.
[78]
The applicants request an
interim reading-in remedy during the period of suspension.
Reading-in is generally employed when
there is an omission in the
current wording of the statute and the insertion of words would be
sufficient to cure its constitutional
defects.
[98]
As held in
National
Coalition II,
reading-in
would be appropriate only if—
“
a
court can define with sufficient precision how the statute ought to
be extended in order to comply with the Constitution.
Moreover,
when reading in (as when severing) a Court should endeavour to be as
faithful as possible to the legislative scheme within
the constraints
of the Constitution. Even where the remedy of reading in is
otherwise justified, it ought not to be granted
where it would result
in an unsupportable budgetary intrusion.”
[99]
[79]
In this case, the applicants seek a reading-in of masculine terms to
section 26(1)(a)-(c) pending the coming into force of
constitutionally compliant legislation. The purpose of the
provision
is to provide for name changes in the event of marriage,
which would not be undermined with the interim reading-in measure.
Instead, the interim reading-in would allow for both spouses to
assume the surname of the other spouse upon their marriage.
[80]
This remedy has been
utilised in a long line of cases relating to gender and sexual
equality rights. Often, reading-in has
been used to widen the
meaning of “spouse” to include same-sex life
partners.
[100]
There
is no rational reason why the reading-in cannot be used in the same
manner in this case. To ensure that the reading-in
remedy does
not cause further discrimination on the basis of gender, I employ the
language of the Civil Union Act. The Civil
Union Act refers to
persons, partners, and spouses, rather than men and women or husbands
and wives.
[101]
This
language not only remedies the constitutional defect that exists by
unfairly discriminating on the basis of gender,
but accords more with
the Constitution because it is inclusive of all identities.
[102]
[81]
The applicants also seek
an order directing the first respondent to amend the surname of the
first and second applicants’
child to “Jordaan”.
[103]
This relief was granted
by the High Court. Where the High Court grants
consequential relief flowing from the order of
invalidity, such
relief will also be before this Court in confirmation
proceedings.
[104]
[82]
No case was made out in
the High Court, or in this Court, why this relief should be granted.
The High Court gave no reasons
for the grant of this relief.
The declaration of invalidity in this matter pertains to the
violation of the right to equality
on the ground of gender, in the
specific context of marriage. It cannot follow, as a matter of
course, from the declaration
of invalidity that a child whose surname
is determined under a different provision of the Act
[105]
may have their surname changed following such declaration.
[83]
The first and second applicants were entitled to register their
child’s
surname as the surname of the first applicant, the
second applicant, or as a double barrelled surname of both the
first and
second applicants’ surnames. In light of this
Court’s finding that section 26(1)(a)-(c) is
unconstitutional,
the first and second applicants will be entitled to
change their familial surname to “Jordaan”. The
first and
second applicants will be entitled to apply to the
Director-General to change their child’s surname, as provided
for under
section 25(2) of the Act, and there is no compelling reason
why this Court should intervene if that remedy is available to the
first and second applicants.
Costs
[84]
The applicants request
costs, including the costs of two counsel. In this case, the
respondents submitted that they will abide
the decision and order of
this Court, but consistent with
Biowatch
,
[106]
costs are inappropriate. In my view, it is appropriate for a
costs order to be awarded against the first respondent.
This is
because, but for the constitutionally offensive provisions, the
applicants would not have had to bring this litigation
to vindicate
their constitutional rights. There has been no appeal against
the costs order made by the High Court, so this
Court will only make
a costs order in respect of the confirmation proceedings.
Order
[85]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The order of constitutional invalidity issued by the High Court of
South Africa,
Free State Division, Bloemfontein is confirmed.
2.
Section 26(1)(a)-(c) of the Births and Deaths Registration
Act 51 of
1992 (Act) is declared unconstitutional to the extent
that, in violation of section 9(1) of the Constitution, it
differentiates
irrationally on the ground of gender, and to the
extent that, in violation of section 9(3) of the Constitution, it
unfairly discriminates
on the ground of gender, by:
(a)
failing to afford a woman the right to have her spouse assume her
surname;
(b)
failing to afford a man the right to assume the surname of the woman
after marriage;
(c)
failing to allow for a married or divorced man or widower to resume a
surname which he bore
at any time; and
(d)
failing to allow for a man, whether married or divorced or a widower,
to add to the surname
which he assumed after the marriage, any
surname which he bore at any prior time.
3.
The declaration of invalidity is suspended for a period of 24 months
to enable
Parliament to remedy the defects by either amending
existing legislation or passing new legislation within 24 months, in
order
to ensure that all persons are afforded the right of assumption
of another surname.
4.
Pending the coming into force of new legislation or amendments to
existing legislation,
designed to afford the right of assumption of
another surname as set out in section 26(1) of the Act, it is
declared that
the provisions of section 26(1) shall not apply
when:
(a)
a person after their marriage assumes the surname of the spouse with
whom such person concluded
a marriage or after having assumed such
surname, resumes a surname which they bore at any prior time;
(b)
a married or divorced person or a widow or widower resumes a surname
which they bore at
any time; and
(c)
a person, whether married or divorced, or a widow or widower, adds to
the surname which
they assumed after the marriage, any surname which
they bore at any prior time.
5.
Should Parliament fail to correct the defects in the 24 month
period, paragraph
4 above shall continue to operate until remedial
legislation, if any, is brought into operation.
6.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the applicants’ costs in
this Court,
including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
For the Applicants:
N Snellenburg SC
and I Macakati instructed by Stander and Associates.
For the First and
Second Respondents:
K D Moroka
instructed by Office of the State Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
51
of 1992.
[2]
Regulations on the Registration of Births and Deaths, GN 128
GG
37373, 26 February 2014.
[3]
Section 167(5)
reads as follows:
“
The
Constitutional Court makes the final decision whether an Act of
Parliament, a provincial Act or conduct of the President is
constitutional, and must confirm any order of invalidity made by the
Supreme Court of Appeal, the High Court
of South
Africa, or a court of similar status, before that order has any
force.”
Confirmation
proceedings in terms of section 167(5) of the
Constitution engage the supervisory jurisdiction of this Court and
it is not
necessary to enquire further into jurisdiction. See
Qwelane v South African Human Rights
Commission
[2021] ZACC 22
;
2021 (6) SA
579
(CC);
2022 (2) BCLR 129
(CC) at para 29.
[4]
17 of 2006.
[5]
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Hugo
[1997]
ZACC 4; 1997 (4) SA 1 (CC); 1997 (6) BCLR 708 (CC).
[6]
Wile v
MEC, Department of Home Affairs, Gauteng
[2016]
3 All SA 945
(WCC);
2017 (1) SA 125
(WCC) at paras 46-9.
[7]
Harksen
v Lane N.O.
[1997]
ZACC 12
;
1997 (11) BCLR 1489
(CC);
1998 (1) SA 300
(CC) at para 52.
The test says:
“
In
order to determine whether the discriminatory provision has impacted
on complainants unfairly, various factors must be considered.
These
would include:
(a)
the position of the complainants in society and whether they have
suffered in the past from patterns of disadvantage, whether the
discrimination in the case under consideration is on a specified
ground or not;
(b)
the nature of the provision or power and the purpose sought to be
achieved by it. If its purpose is manifestly not directed, in
the first instance, at impairing the complainants in the
manner
indicated above, but is aimed at achieving a worthy and important
societal goal, such as, for example, the furthering
of equality for
all, this purpose may, depending on the facts of the particular
case, have a significant bearing on the question
whether
complainants have in fact suffered the impairment in question. In
Hugo
, for example, the purpose of the Presidential Act was to
benefit three groups of prisoners, namely, disabled prisoners, young
people and mothers of young children, as an act of mercy. The
fact that all these groups were regarded as being particularly
vulnerable in our society, and that in the case of the disabled and
the young mothers, they belonged to groups who had been victims
of
discrimination in the past, weighed with the Court in concluding
that the discrimination was not unfair;
(c)
with due regard to (a) and (b) above, and any other relevant
factors,
the extent to which the discrimination has affected the
rights or interests of complainants and whether it has led to an
impairment
of their fundamental human dignity or constitutes an
impairment of a comparably serious nature.”
[8]
See
Rahube
v Rahube
[2018]
ZACC 42
;
2019 (1) BCLR 125
(CC);
2019 (2) SA 54
(CC) at para 23;
Sithole
v Sithole
[2021]
ZACC 7
;
2021 (5) SA 34
(CC);
2021 (6) BCLR 597
(CC) at para 31;
and
Mudau
v S
[2014]
ZASCA 43
at para 6.
[9]
Sithole
id at para 31.
[10]
Rahube
above
n 8 at para 23.
[11]
See
Saidi
“Women in Precolonial Africa”
Oxford
Research Encyclopedia of African History
(2020)
,
available
at:
https://oxfordre.com/africanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.001.0001/acrefore 9780190277734-e-259
.
[12]
See
Kubayi “
On
Double-barrel Surnames: Perceptions from Young Unmarried Women in
Rural Limpopo Province, South Africa” (2022) 36
Nomina
Africana
33
and Bonthuys “Equal choices for Women and Other Disadvantaged
Groups”
(2001)
Acta
Juridica
39.
See also
Sithole
above n 8 at para 31.
[13]
See
Spiro “The Name of a Married Woman” (1949) 66
SALJ
189.
[14]
In a
cum
manu
marriage,
the wife became part of her husband’s family and was under his
guardianship. See Stocquart “Marriage
in
Roman Law”
(1907) 16
Yale
Law Journal
303
Trans: by Bierkan.
[15]
Id.
[16]
Id at 310-12.
[17]
Id at 310.
[18]
Swartz et al “Is a Husband Criminally Liable for Raping his
Wife? A Comparative Analysis” (2015) 3
International
Journal of Academic Research and Reflection
8,
citing J de Damhouder,
Practycke
in Crimineele Saken
(1650).
[19]
Lord
Wilson “Changes over the Centuries in the Financial
Consequences of Divorce” (address to the University of Bristol
Law Club, 20 March 2017), available at
https://www.bailii.org/uk/other/speeches/2017/170320.pdf
at
para 7:
“
The
obligation to support a wife during the marriage is easy to
understand. It arises out of the doctrine of coverture,
which
operated from medieval times and under which a wife’s legal
identity was substantially covered up by her husband.
On
marriage he became owner of her property. She could not enter
into a contract. If she committed a tort (delict),
it was the
husband whom the victim sued and who was required to pay the
damages. Conversely, if she was the victim of a
tort (delict),
it was the husband who sued the offender and pocketed the damages.
Any money earned by the wife also went
to the husband. So the
husband’s further promise to her in church – ‘with
all my worldly goods I thee
endow’ – rang rather hollow.
In return, however, for taking all the wife’s money, the
husband had –
in theory – an obligation to support her.”
[20]
Lord
Wilson “Out of His Shadow: The Long Struggle of Wives under
English Law” (The High Sheriff of Oxfordshire’s
Annual
Law Lecture, 9 October 2012), available at
https://www.bailii.org/uk/other/speeches/2012/121009.pdf
at 3.
[21]
In terms of
section 11
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
.
[22]
Section 9 of the Constitution reads:
“
(1)
Everyone is equal before the law and has the right to equal
protection and
benefit of the law.
(2)
Equality includes the full and equal enjoyment of all rights and
freedoms. To promote the achievement of equality, legislative
and other measures designed to protect or advance persons,
or
categories of persons, disadvantaged by unfair discrimination may be
taken.
(3)
The state may not unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly
against anyone on one or more grounds, including race, gender, sex,
pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social origin, colour,
sexual
orientation, age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture,
language and birth.
(4)
No person may unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly against
anyone on one or more grounds in terms of subsection (3).
National legislation must be enacted to prevent or prohibit unfair
discrimination.
(5)
Discrimination on one or more of the grounds listed in subsection
(3) is unfair unless it is established that the discrimination is
fair.”
[23]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Justice
[1998]
ZACC 15
;
1999 (1) SA 6
(CC);
1998 (12) BCLR 1517
(CC) (
National
Coalition I
)
at para 62.
[24]
Minister
of Finance v Van Heerden
[2004]
ZACC 3
;
2004 (6) SA 121
(CC);
2004 (11) BCLR 1125
(CC) (
Van
Heerden
)
at para 28.
[25]
Harksen
above
n 7.
[26]
Id at para 43.
[27]
Id
at para 53.
[28]
Van
Heerden
above
n 24 at para 36.
[29]
See
Albertyn “Substantive Equality and Transformation in South
Africa” (2007) 23
SAJHR
253.
[30]
Van
Heerden
above
n 24
at
para 26.
[31]
81 of 1963.
[32]
Prinsloo
v Van der Linde
[1997]
ZACC 5
;
1997 (3) SA 1012
(CC);
1997 (6) BCLR 759
(CC) at para 25.
[33]
Id.
[34]
Harksen
above
n 7 at para 43.
[35]
National
Coalition I
above
n 23at para 18.
[36]
De
Vos “Unconstitutional Law Assumes Married Women Will Take
Their Husband’s Surnames But Never Other Way Around”
Constitutionally
Speaking
(5
August 2019), available at
https://constitutionallyspeaking.co.za/unconstitutional-law-assumes-married-women-will-take-their-husbands-surnames-but-never-other-way-around/
.
[37]
VJV
v Minister of Social Development
[2023]
ZACC 21
;
2023 (6) SA 87
(CC);
2023 (10) BCLR 1250
(CC) (
VJV
)
at para 18.
[38]
Harksen
above
n 7 at para 52.
[39]
See
National
Coalition I
above
n 23;
Du
Toit v Minister of Welfare and Population Development
[2002]
ZACC 20
;
2002 (10) BCLR 1006
(CC);
2003 (2) SA 198
(CC) (
Du
Toit
);
and
MEC
for Education, KwaZulu-Natal v Pillay
[2007]
ZACC 21
;
2008 (1) SA 474
(CC);
2008 (2) BCLR 99
(CC)
.
[40]
National
Coalition I
id
at para 61.
[41]
Id
at para 60.
[42]
Bonthuys “Deny Thy Father and Refuse Thy Name: Namibian
Equality Jurisprudence and Married Women’s Surnames”
(2000) 117
SALJ
464 at 469.
[43]
Id.
This, historically and presently, has justified various kinds of
abuse and subjugation within heterosexual marriages.
For
instance, by virtue of this notion, husbands were able to commit
rape without attracting criminal liability for rape (see
R
v Miller
[1954]
2 All ER 529).
[44]
See, for example,
S
v Makwanyane
[1995]
ZACC 3
;
1995 (2) SACR 1
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC);
1995 (6) BCLR 665
(CC) at para 144. See also
Ferreira
v Levin N.O.
;
Vryenhoek
v Powell N.O.
[1995]
ZACC 13
;
1996 (1) SA 984
(CC);
1996 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) at paras 47-9;
Hugo
above
n 5 at para 41;
Prinsloo
above
n 32 at paras 31-3;
Harksen
above
n 7 at paras 50 and 51;
National
Coalition 1
above
n 23 at para 28; and
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Home Affairs
[1999]
ZACC 17
;
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC);
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC) (
National
Coalition II
)
at paras 41-2 and 48.
[45]
Dawood
v Minister of Home Affairs
;
Shalabi
v Minister of Home Affairs; Thomas v Minister of Home Affairs
[2000]
ZACC 8
;
2000 (3) SA 936
(CC);
2000 (8) BCLR 837
(CC) at para 35.
[46]
Id.
[47]
Id
at para 37.
[48]
National
Coalition
II
above
n 44 at para 42.
[49]
See, for example,
Kruger
“Equality and Unfair Discrimination: Refining the Harksen
Test” (2011) 128
SALJ
479.
[50]
Section
36(1) of the Constitution.
[51]
Teddy
Bear Clinic for Abused Children v Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development
[2013]
ZACC 35
;
2013 (12) BCLR 1429
(CC);
2014 (2) SA 168
(CC); at para 95.
[52]
Du
Toit
above
n 39 at para 31 and
VJV
above
n 37 at para 64.
[53]
VJV
id
at para 18.
[54]
Section 36(1)
of the Constitution.
[55]
Minister
of Home Affairs v Liebenberg
[2001]
ZACC 3; 2001 (11) BCLR 1168 (CC); 2002 (1) SA 33 (CC).
[56]
Id at para 13.
[57]
See
section 43(a) read with section 44 of the Constitution.
[58]
Liebenberg
above n 55 at para 13.
[59]
Satchwell
v President of Republic of South Africa
[2002]
ZACC 18
;
2002 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2002 (9) BCLR 986
(CC).
[60]
88 of 1989.
[61]
Satchwell
above
n 59
at
para 2.
[62]
Scalabrini
Centre of Cape Town v Minister of Home Affairs
[2023]
ZACC 45
;
2024 (3) SA 330
(CC);
2024 (4) BCLR 592
(CC) at para 26.
[63]
Id.
[64]
Section 39(1) of the Constitution provides:
“
When
interpreting the Bill of Rights, a court, tribunal or forum—
(a)
must promote the values that underlie an open and democratic society
based on human dignity, equality and freedom;
(b)
must consider international law; and
(c)
may consider foreign law.”
[65]
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 16 December
1966 (ratified by South Africa on 10 December 1998).
[66]
Article 3 of the ICCPR states: “The States Parties to the
present Covenant undertake to ensure the equal right of
men and
women to the enjoyment of all civil and political rights set forth
in the present Covenant.”
[67]
CCPR
General Comment No 28: Article 3 (The Equality of Rights
Between Men and Women), 29 March 2000 states:
“
States parties
should ensure that no sex-based discrimination occurs in respect of
. . . the right of each spouse to
retain the use of his or
her original family name or to participate on an equal basis in the
choice of a new family name”.
[68]
Article 17 of the ICCPR states: “No one shall be
subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with [their]
privacy,
family, home or correspondence”.
[69]
CCPR General Comment No 16: Article 17 (Right to Privacy),
8 April 1988.
[70]
Article 23(4) of the ICCPR states at para 12: “States
Parties to the present Covenant shall take appropriate steps
to
ensure equality of rights and responsibilities of spouses as to
marriage, during marriage and at its dissolution.”
[71]
CCPR General Comment No. 19: Article 23 (The Family), 27
July 1990 states: “The right of each spouse to retain
the use
of his or her original family name or to participate on an equal
basis in the choice of a new family name should be safeguarded.”
[72]
Article 26 of the ICCPR states: “[T]he law shall prohibit
any discrimination and guarantee to all persons equal and
effective
protection against discrimination on any ground such as . . .
sex.”
[73]
CCPR General Comment No 18: Non-discrimination states: “[W]hen
legislation is adopted by a State party [even if such
legislation
does not pertain to a right under the Covenant], it must comply with
the requirement of [A]rticle 26 that its
content should not be
discriminatory.”
[74]
The Human Rights Committee is an instrument of the ICCPR that
monitors implementation of the ICCPR. It has the power to
consider inter-State complaints under Article 41 of the ICCPR
and the Optional Protocol to the ICCPR allows the Human Rights
Committee to examine individual complaints regarding alleged
violations of the Covenant by States parties to the Protocol.
[75]
Müller
and Engelhard v. Namibia
,
Comm. 919/2000, U.N. Doc. A/57/40, Vol. II, at 243 (HRC 2002) U.N.
Doc CCPR/C/74/D/919/2000 (2002).
[76]
1 of 1937.
[77]
Section 9 of the Namibian Aliens Act, as amended in 1989,
stated:
“
If
any person who at any time bore or was known by a particular
surname, assumes or describes himself by or passes under any other
surname which he had not assumed or by which he had not described
himself or under which he had not passed . . . he
shall be guilty of an offence unless the Administrator-General or an
officer in the Government Service authorized thereto by
him, has
authorized him to assume that other surname and such authority has
been published in the Official Gazette: Provided
that this
sub-section shall not apply when—
(a)
a woman on her marriage, assumes the surname of her husband”.
[78]
Müller
above n 75 at para 6.7.
[79]
Id. Of note, the Human Rights Committee appears to use the
terms “gender” and “sex” interchangeably.
[80]
Müller
id at para 6.9.
[81]
13 of 2024; available at
https://namiblii.org/akn/na/act/2024/13/eng@2024-12-30
.
[82]
Explanatory Memorandum to the Civil Registration and Identification
Bill, 2024, available at:
https://www.parliament.na/wp content/uploads/2024/08/Explanatory_Memorandum_Civil_Registration_and_Identification_Bill.pdf
.
[83]
Burghartz
v. Switzerland
,
no 16213/90, European Commission of Human Rights 1992.
[84]
Article
8 reads:
“
8.
Right to respect for private and family life
(1)
Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life,
his home and his correspondence.
(2)
There shall be no interference by a public authority with the
exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law
and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of
national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the
country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the
protection
of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others.”
[85]
Article
14 reads:
“
14.
Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the
rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured
without discrimination on any ground such
as sex, race, colour,
language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social
origin, association with a national
minority, property, birth or
other status.”
[86]
Burghartz
n 83
above at p
ara
58.
[87]
Id at p
ara
68.
[88]
Burghartz
v. Switzerland
,
no 16213/90, ECtHR1994.
[89]
Births and Deaths Registration Act, Chapter
5:02 of 1986.
[90]
Section 18(3)
of the
Births and Deaths Registration Act,
Chapter
5:02 of 1986.
[91]
Section 18(4)(a)
-(b) of the
Births and Deaths Registration Act,
Chapter
5:02 of 1986.
[92]
This
includes reading-in, severance, limiting the retrospective effect of
the declaration, and suspension of orders of invalidity.
[93]
See, for example, in relation to the Interim Constitution 1993,
Executive
Council, Western Cape Legislature v President of the Republic of
South Africa
[1995]
ZACC 8
;
1995 (4) SA 877
(CC);
1995 (10) BCLR 1289
(CC) (
Executive
Council
)
at para 106.
[94]
Id
at para 113.
[95]
J
v Director General, Department of Home Affairs
[2003]
ZACC 3
;
2003 (5) BCLR 463
(CC);
2003 (5) SA 621
(CC)
at
para 21; and
Executive
Council
above
n 93 at para 107.
[96]
South
African National Defence Union v Minister of Defence
[1999]
ZACC 7
;
1999 (4) SA 469
(CC);
1999 (6) BCLR 615
(CC)
at
para 42.
[97]
Mvumvu
v Minister of Transport
[2011]
ZACC 1
;
2011 (2) SA 473
(CC);
2011 (5) BCLR 488
(CC) at p
aras 49-53.
[98]
National
Coalition II
above
n 44 at para 64.
[99]
Id
at para 75.
[100]
See
Du
Toit
above
n 39
at
para 44
;
Satchwell
above
n 59
at
para 37
;
and
Gory
v Kolver N.O.
[2006]
ZACC 20
;
2007 (3) BCLR 249
(CC);
2007 (4) SA 97
(CC) at para 66
.
[101]
Section 1 of the Civil Union Act provides, in part:
“‘
[C]ivil
union’ means the voluntary union of two persons who are both
18 years of age or older, which is solemnised and registered
by way
of either marriage or a civil partnership, in accordance with the
procedures prescribed in this Act to the exclusion while
it lasts of
all others;
‘
civil
union partner’ means a spouse in a marriage or a partner in a
civil partnership, as the case may be, concluded in
terms of this
Act.”
[102]
See section 9(3) of the Constitution.
[103]
High
Court order at para 4.2.3.
[104]
Dawood
above
n 45 at para 18.
[105]
See section 9(1) read with section 9(2) of the Act:
“
9.
Notice of birth
(1)
In the case of any child born alive,
any one of his or her parents,
or if the parents are deceased, any of the prescribed persons,
shall, within 30 days after the
birth of such child, give notice
thereof in the prescribed manner, and in compliance with the
prescribed requirements, to any
person contemplated in section 4.
. . .
(2)
Subject to the provisions of section 10, the notice of birth
referred
to in subsection (1) of this section shall be given under
the surname of either the father or the mother of the child
concerned
or the surnames of both the father and mother joined
together as a double-barrelled surname.”
Section 25(2)
of the
Births and Deaths Registration Act reads
:
“
25.
Alteration of surname of minor
. . .
(2)
Any parent of a minor whose birth has been included under a specific
surname in the population register, may on the strength of a reason
not mentioned in subsection (1), apply in the prescribed
manner to
the Director-General for the alteration of the surname of the minor
under which his or her birth was registered, and
the
Director-General may, on submission of a good and sufficient reason
given for the contemplated alteration of the surname,
alter the said
original surname accordingly in the prescribed manner.”
[106]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources
[2009]
ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC);
2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC).
sino noindex
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