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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 337
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## M.B.M v M.G (2023/126365)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 337 (27 March 2025)
M.B.M v M.G (2023/126365)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 337 (27 March 2025)
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sino date 27 March 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2023/126365
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 27 March 2025
In
the matter between:
M[…]
B[…]
M[…]
Plaintiff
And
M[…]
G[…]
Defendant
Summary
:
Application for divorce. Parties married according to customary law
in terms of the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120
of 1998
(RCMA). Marriage is not registered with the Department of Home
Affairs (DHA) and is now irretrievable broken down and there
are no
prospects to reconcile. Section 8(1) of RCMA empowers Court to
dissolve the marriage, thus, section 7(3) requires the Court
to apply
the provisions of
section 9
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of
1984
and
section 9(1)
of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
in regulating the
proprietary consequences of the customary marriage. Difficulty raised
herein in drawing lessons from a different
setting of law in
addressing the proprietary consequences that arose from another
distinct system. Notwithstanding the difficulty,
the Court considered
the blend of these systems in granting the appropriate remedy in the
dispute. The parties submitted a settlement
agreement which is tagged
as “Original” that is made an order of this Court. The
contentious issue was the division
of pension interests wherein the
Plaintiff rejected it as it would unduly benefit the Defendant. The
Court considered the nature
of the marriage in community of property
within the framework of the RCMA and the fact that the Plaintiff is a
member of the Momentum
Corporate Funds At Work Umbrella Provident
Fund (Provident Fund). This Court put emphasis on the overall purpose
of the RCMA with
supplementation of the jurisprudence in giving
context to the relief sought. It then ordered the division of the
pension interest
and for the Defendant to receive 50% of the share as
regulated by the nature of their marriage in community of property.
ORDER
(i)
The application for the dissolution of
marriage between the parties is granted.
(ii)
The Deed of Settlement attached as
“ORIGINAL” is made an order of Court.
(iii)
The Defendant is to receive 50% of the
Plaintiff’s total pension interests in the Momentum Corporate
Funds At Work Umbrella
Provident Fund (Provident Fund), calculated at
the date of the decree of divorce as defined in
section 7
subsections
7 and 8 of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979.
(iv)
The Provident Fund is, effectively from the
date of this order, required to endorse its records and pay the
Defendant the calculated
amount as per the order in (iii) above.
(v)
The parties are ordered to pay their own
costs relating to this application and the costs of one Counsel where
so employed on Scale
B in terms of Rule 67 of the Uniform Rules of
the Court.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA AJ
Introduction
Background
[1] This matter involves an
application for a divorce wherein the parties were married in terms
of customary law as envisaged
in the
Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act of 120
of 1998 (RCMA). The marriage was celebrated on
17 June 2017. Thus, the marriage has since irretrievable broken down
and both parties
sought an order for divorce. The parties appeared
before me and were legally represented. I reserved the orders for the
sought
prayers. I am presenting the reasons for the reservation of
such orders.
[2] In this matter, the issues
were settled between the parties and prayed for this Court to confirm
and make such settlements
an order of this Court. The parties sought
an order for confirmation that:
[2.1]
the
bonds of marriage subsisting between the Plaintiff and the Defendant
be and hereby dissolved.
[2.2]
the
Deed of Settlement attached hereto marked "
ORIGINAL
"
be made an order of Court.
[3] However, the contentious
issue of the forfeiture of the pension payout interests remained
contested and was left for argument.
After hearing the argument, the
judgment was reserved by this Court.
[4] For argument, Counsel for
the Plaintiff invited Ms M[…] (Plaintiff) to testify and give
a background on the status
of the marriage. The summary of her
evidence is as follows. As noted above, the parties were married
according to customary law
and two children were born out of the
marriage. Ms M[…], as led by her Counsel, traced the existence
of the marriage on
17 June 2017 and indicated that it was not
registered with the Department of Home Affairs (DHA). The marriage
has since irretrievable
broken down and is in a state of
disintegration to an extent of the non-existence of any possibility
that the parties may reconcile.
The Plaintiff mentioned that during
the subsistence of the marriage, they acquired both movable and
immovable properties. The said
properties included a house; three (3)
motor-vehicles (cars): Mercedes Benz; Corsa and a VW Polo. The two
(2) motor-vehicles: Mercedes
Benz and Corsa, have been sold by the
Defendant and she is now left with the VW Polo. She once lost
employment and regained it
in June 2021 at SOS Protection. The
Defendant also moved out of the marital home on 29 December 2020.
[5] She also highlighted that
they tried to reconcile which was initiated by the Defendant through
mediation by family involvement
and such an attempt was in vain. She
further stated that she was unemployed at the time of separation and
only got re-employed
in June 2021. Following the enquiry from this
Court she indicated that she is currently a member of the Momentum
Corporate under
Funds At Work Umbrella Provident Fund. She also
indicated that the Defendant never contributed to the said Fund and
there is a
standing Protection Order against him dated 02 February
2022 granted by the Magistrate in the District of Ekurhuleni. She is
also
not claiming any share from the Defendant and on the other hand,
the division of the pension interests will be of prejudice to her
and
unduly benefit the Defendant.
[5] On the other hand, the
Defendant, in his quest for the sharing of the pension benefits
stated that he paid the bond when
the Plaintiff was unemployed. He
only stopped contributing to the marital home when the house was
rented out by the Plaintiff and
the tenants started paying rent. He,
therefore, by virtue of the status of their marriage in community of
property entitled to
the share of the divided pension interests. He
prayed for this Court to consider the division of the interests as he
will be prejudiced
by the non-division.
[6] This background is of
importance in that it forms the basis upon which the Plaintiff
applies for the forfeiture of pension
payout interests against the
Defendant. I will then incorporate the legal principles in the
analysis of this matter because the
parties have settled and only
argued for the forfeiture of patrimonial benefits relating to the
payment of pension interests to
the Defendant. Thus, I am also not
going to deal with the settled issues of the application wherein the
parties merely seek an
order for confirmation by this Court. It then
begs a question on the extent to which customary law practices fall
within the broader
framework in the regulation of the proprietary
consequences of a customary marriage.
Analysis
[7] The subject of contention in
this matter is the forfeiture of the pension payout interests to the
Defendant. The Plaintiff
is strongly opposed to the sharing of
pension interests with the Defendant. Of interest in this matter is
that the parties are
married according to customary law. The status
of the marriage is automatically in community of property and there
is no prior
exclusion in terms of an antenuptial contract. Let me
reiterate, it then raises the question about the fitting of customary
law
in the entire scheme of regulating the proprietary consequences
of the marital benefits on dissolution of a customary marriage.
Simply put, how does customary law, as an independent
constitutionalised legal system, regulates the proprietary
consequences
of marriage on divorce?
[8] It is common cause between
parties that they are married according to customary law which is
defined in section 1 of the
RCMA as the ‘customs and usages
traditionally observed amongst Indigenous people of South Africa
which forms the culture
of those people’. Customary marriage
falls within this definition as it relates to the conclusion of
marriage in terms of
the customary law practices.
[9] It is also worth mentioning
that the marriage was not registered with the Department of Home
Affairs (DHA). However, I
will not comment on non-registration
because section 4(9) of the RCMA does not render the marriage invalid
because of its non-registration.
Further, its existence and validity
were not challenged as the parties have settled in terms of the
settlement agreement tagged
“Original” which is to be
made an order of this Court. Of further importance is that the
Constitutional Court in
Mayelane v Ngwenyama
2013 (8) BCLR 918
(CC) at para 32 held:
“
Importantly,
however, the Recognition Act does not purport to be – and
should not be seen as – directly dealing with
all necessary
aspects of customary marriage. The Recognition Act expressly left
certain rules and requirements to be determined
by customary law,
such as the validity requirements referred to in section 3(1)(b).
This ensures that customary law will be able
to retain its living
nature and that communities will be able to develop their rules and
norms in the light of changing circumstances
and the overarching
values of the Constitution.”
Hence, recently, Ntlama-Makhanya AJ in
T.S.N. v J.K.M
(2023/120095) [2025] ZAGPJHC at para 15 put an
emphasis and held that the marriage is not rendered invalid due to
non-registration
as envisaged in section 4(9) of the RCMA. Such
contention is borne by the constitutional space which customary law
has since attained
in the new dispensation.
[10] This matter is one that
subjects the constitutional status of customary law and its practices
to unnecessary criticisms.
The RCMA, as envisaged in section 7(2)
regulates the proprietary consequences of customary marriage that is
in community of property
which is also of profit and loss between the
spouses unless such is specifically excluded by the antenuptial
contract. The latter
provision is specific and is not on a
‘goose-chase’ exercise about the status of the marriage
and its intended benefits.
This then raises an issue regarding the
interdependence of the relationship that exists between the living
and official customary
law and the Constitution. The RCMA was
designed to deal specifically with customary law. Particularly in the
division of assets,
which in this instance, the pension payout
interests. At face value, it appears easy, but a deeper reflection
evidences the complexities
relating to the effect of customary law in
regulating its own proprietary marital consequences as they emanate
from its own context.
[11] This case is also
evidence of the imposition of the different settings of law in
addressing matters that emanate
from a distinct legal system. I must
express that the imposition is the creation of the RCMA itself in
that section 7(3) imports
the principles of
section 9
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
wherein the ‘right to share
in the accrual or estate of a spouse may on divorce be declared
forfeited, either wholly or in
part.’ The imposition of such
principles is not in accord with the constitutionalised status of
customary law endorsed by
Langa DCJ in
Bhe v Khayelitsha
Magistrate
[2004] ZACC 17
;
2005 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) at para 41 who stated:
“
Quite
clearly the Constitution itself envisages a place for customary law
in our legal system. Certain provisions of the Constitution
put it
beyond doubt that our basic law specifically requires that customary
law should be accommodated, not merely tolerated, as
part of South
African law, provided the particular rules or provisions are not in
conflict with the Constitution.”
Langa DCJ extended the affirmation of
the status of customary law to the obligatory role of the courts as
he held:
“…
customary
law must be interpreted by the courts, as first and foremost
answering to the contents of the Constitution. It is protected
by and
subject to the Constitution in its own right.”
[12] I am not going to recycle
the produced jurisprudence about the status of customary law but in
the context of this case,
the parties have settled all other issues
relating to the dissolution of their marriage. The only contentious
issue was Plaintiff’s
opposition to sharing the patrimonial
benefits relating to the payment of pension interests to the
Defendant. During the subsistence
of the marriage as adduced in
evidence, both parties were members of the pension fund schemes or
provident funds until their retrenchment
wherein they spent their
respective payouts apart. The Plaintiff was re-employed in June 2021
and began to contribute to the provident
or pension fund and the
Defendant never contributed towards it or the household. The
Plaintiff argued that the Defendant would
unduly benefit from the
sharing of the payout interests.
[13] Counsel for the Plaintiff
heavily relied on section 9(1) of the Divorce Act 9 of 1970 relating
to the forfeiture of patrimonial
benefits of marriage. The latter
section provides:
"When a
decree of divorce is granted on the grounds of irretrievable break
down of a marriage, the Court can make an order
that the patrimonial
benefits of the marriage be forfeited by one party in favour of the
other, either in wholly or in part, if
the court having regard to the
duration of the marriage, the circumstances giving rise to the break
down thereof and any substantial
misconduct on the part of either of
the parties, is satisfied that, if the order for forfeiture is not
made, the one party will
in relation the other be unduly benefited."
However, section 8(1) of the RCMA
states:
“
a customary
marriage may only be dissolved by a court by a decree of divorce on
the grounds of the irretrievable breakdown of the
marriage.”
In this case, the court is empowered
to dissolve a customary marriage in terms of the RCMA whilst on the
other hand, it must draw
from the provision of the Divorce Act to
order the forfeiture of benefits on divorce. There is a misnomer in
the regulation of
the proprietary consequences of the customary
marriage system. It is striking that the same Court is authorised to
import principles
from a different setting of law to address the
proprietary consequences that emanate from another area of the legal
system. This
is an indirect infusion of the common law principles in
the regulation of the marital regime of customary law rendering it a
‘poor
cousin’ of the amalgam of South Africa’s
legal system.
[14] The importation of common
law principles in the regulation of the proprietary consequences of a
customary marriage is
a cause for great discomfort for this Court.
This Court is empowered by section 8(1) of the RCMA to dissolve the
marriage. It is
also on the other hand obligatory to import the
provisions of the Divorce Act and the
Matrimonial Property Act to
address the consequences of the dissolved marriage. It is my
considered view that the obligation to dissolve a customary marriage
whilst on the other hand there is direct authority to resolve the
matter through the lens of another system is a condemnation of
the
framework of the RCMA. The condemnation ‘waters down’ the
contextualised purpose of the RCMA as endorsed by Moseneke
DCJ in
Gumede v President of the Republic of South Africa
2009 (3)
BCLR 243
(CC) at para 24 who gave effect to the purpose and
constitutionalised context of the statute (RCMA) as he held:
“
Without a
doubt, the chief purpose of the legislation is to reform customary
law in several important ways. The facial extent of
the reform is
apparent from the extended title of the Recognition Act. The
legislation makes provision for recognition of customary
marriages.
Most importantly, it seeks to jettison gendered inequality within
marriage and the marital power of the husband by providing
for the
equal status and capacity of spouses. It specifies the essential
requirements for a valid customary marriage and regulates
the
registration of marriages. In this way, it introduces certainty and
uniformity to the legal validity of customary marriages
throughout
the country. The Recognition Act regulates proprietary consequences
and the capacity of spouses and governs the dissolution
of marriages,
which now must occur under judicial supervision. An additional and
significant benefit of this legislative reform
is that it seeks to
salvage the indigenous law of marriage from the stagnation of
official codes and the inscrutable jurisprudence
of colonial ‘native’
divorce and appeal courts.”
Majiedt JA in
Cool Ideas 1186 CC v
Hubbard
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) at para 28 narrowed the focus and
contextualised the very purpose of the statute as is the case with
the RCMA as he held it
is imperative to put emphasis on the:
(i)
purposive interpretation of a statute;
(ii) proper
construction of the context; and
(iii) construction
to be consisted with the Constitution … to preserve the
constitutional validity of a
statute.”
The above factors are of direct
relevance in the context of the RCMA regarding the dispute of pension
interests in this matter.
They resonate with the discomfort expressed
herein of RCMA empowering the courts to dissolve customary marriages
but the final
determinant for the remedies to be imposed are to be
imported from a different setting of law. If the RCMA is designed to
regulate
its own proprietary consequences but effective remedies are
to be drawn from principles of another legal system constitutes an
uncertainty on the evolution of customary law practices. This Court
is put in an ‘awkward’ position by the very same
statute
it is meant to interpret and apply in giving meaning to its overall
purpose. I am of the view that this is the continued
manifestation of
the past that is couched under the constitutionalised space and
misses the constitutional construction for the
determination of the
context where the dispute emanates from, which is customary law.
[15] I now turn to the crux of
the dispute regarding the non-sharing of the pension interests. The
Plaintiff contended that
the Defendant did not contribute to the
upkeep of the family household and therefore was not entitled to the
share of pension interests.
She also does not claim any benefit that
may arise from the nature of marriage from the Defendant. There is
also a standing Protection
Order issued against the Defendant in
terms of
section 6
of the
Domestic Violence Act 116 of 1998
which was
also issued by the Magistrate in the District of Ekurhuleni dated 02
February 2022. On the other hand, the Defendant
argued that he
contributed to the household whilst the Plaintiff was unemployed. It
was only in 2023 when the house was rented
out by the Plaintiff and
the tenants started paying rent when he also stopped contributing to
the family upkeep. He therefore states
that he will be prejudiced as
he is also entitled to the interests because of the nature of their
marriage and prays for the Court
to divide them.
[16] The question that emanates
from the parties’ contentions is for this Court to balance what
is prescribed by RCMA
relating to the nature of the marriage and its
intended benefits
vis-à-vis
the remedies to be drawn
from the provisions of the Divorce Act and the
Matrimonial Property
Act on
dissolution of their marriage?
[17] I have already made the
reservation that this Court has in this balancing act as I am now
placed in a position to follow
Langa DCJ in
Bhe
who drew
lessons from the
Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987
to fill the
void
in a matter involving the centrality of the principle of male
primogeniture in customary law of succession. Although this matter
involved the administration of the deceased estate through the lens
of non-discrimination against women and children in the context
of
customary law, it is of significance and finds relevance in the
sharing of the pension interests in this matter. The importance
is
borne by the nature of marriage in community of property within the
broader framework envisaged in the RCMA.
[18] The Plaintiff’s
reliance on section 9(1) of the Divorce Act relating to the
forfeiture of benefits which should
be considered in the context of
the ill-behaviour of the Defendant is without merit. The latter
section places emphasis first,
on the duration of marriage; secondly,
the circumstances that gave rise to the breakdown and thirdly, any
substantial misconduct
on either of the parties. I must express that
there is no further or alternative relief to be considered by this
Court except the
three factors in determining the forfeiture of the
patrimonial benefits. It is common cause that the parties were
married according
to customary law for a period of less than five
years (2017-2020) as the Defendant moved out of the marital home and
two children
were born in the relationship.
[19] In this case, I am
persuaded by Chesiwe J in
P[…]…I[…]…L[…]
v P[…] E[…] L[…]
Case number: 5345/2017,
Free State, at para 34 who held ‘… the fact that the
parties are married in community of property
cannot be ignored, and
has to be taken into consideration’. This is the point of
departure as a firm basis for the consideration
of the eligibility of
the Defendant to the pension interests. At the risk of repetition,
marriage between the parties is in community
of property. The status
of this marriage should therefore not be overshadowed by what I would
refer to as the ‘guilty party’
on divorce. This means
that this Court is required to uphold the law as it applies to the
dispute and not be motivated by the other
party’s misconduct.
It is not for this Court to make a moral judgment except for the
foundational principles of the law.
It is alleged on papers and
during oral argument that the Defendant has since moved out of the
marital home on 29 December 2020
and is involved in a relationship
with another woman. There is also an existing Protection Order
against the Defendant that is
indicative of the toxic relationship
between the parties. However, there is also no evidence placed before
this Court that the
Defendant broke the terms of the Order that would
warrant this Court to consider as a bar to the non-sharing of the
pension interests.
It is my view that the settlement agreement on all
other issues relating to this application is indicative of what I may
consider
as the Defendant’s ‘remorse’ and does not
show any ‘punitive’ tendencies he may have or labouring
against the Plaintiff. This Court acknowledges without digressing to
the substance of this judgment, about the levels of gender-based
violence against women and children which remain of great concern.
This Court is vehemently opposed to any form of aggressive behaviour
against women. Vast literature and jurisprudence is in the public
domain and I need not further elaborate on it.
[20] The Plaintiff brought to
the attention of this Court the judgment in
Swart v Swart
2011
(1) SA 545
(GNP) as the Judge held ‘adultery and desertion in
certain instances merely be the symptoms and not the cause of the
marriage
break down and
that conduct
cannot be considered blame worthy’,
(emphasis added and all footnotes omitted). As is the case in this
matter, the Defendant’s unwarranted conduct of moving
out of
the marital home should not be the basis for the determination of his
potential not to receive the share of the pension
interests. Simply
put, section 8(1) of the RCMA is clear in that it is only the Courts
that are empowered to dissolve the marriage
and not the Defendant’s
mere desertion of the marital home that may have to be considered as
the basis for non-eligibility
for pension interests. This Court
acknowledges that each case is judged according to its own merits and
voluminous jurisprudence
has since been produced relating to the
forfeiture of pension interests. Amongst, others, Chesiwe J in
P[…]
I[…] L[…]
at para 34
citing
with approval
Wijker v Wijker
,
1993 (4) SA 720
(A) at
727D – F which was also the source and point of legal argument
for the Plaintiff, where the court held in respect
of forfeiture:
“
It is
obvious from the wording of section 9(1) that the first step is to
determine whether or not the party against whom the order
is sought
will in fact be benefitted. That will be purely a factual issue. Once
that has been established the trial court must
determine, having
regard to the factors mentioned in the section, whether or not that
party will in relation to the other be unduly
benefitted if a
forfeiture order is not made. Although the second determination is a
value judgment, it is made by the trial court
after having considered
the facts falling within the compass of the three factors mentioned
in the section.”
[21] I am moving from a premise
of the new democratic dispensation as it equates both men and women
in marital relationships
which is endorsed in the RCMA and various
other adopted legislation. For example, even the Divorce Act is
designed to be of equal
application to both parties on divorce and
not necessarily to favour one party over the other, (Chesiwe J in
P[…] I[…] L[…]
at para 35). I am
influenced by the lessons drawn from Moseneke DCJ in
Gumede
where a husband’s retention of exclusive ownership of the
family property at the prejudice of the wife was declared invalid.
That principle is of equal application herein in that the wife
(Plaintiff) does not have the sole retention of the joint estate,
particularly in the context of the community of property marriage and
of profit and loss. I am not to argue for a discrimination
principle
as in
Gumede
, thus, of great concern in this Court is the
nature and status of the marriage that is regulated by customary law
which is automatically
in community of property. The sharing of
pension interests is a fundamental principle of law and not designed
to be at the ‘whim’
of the unhappy person (Plaintiff) in
the marriage to turn around and seek retention of the pension
interests against what is prescribed
by law. The Plaintiff, as of 05
March 2025, her anticipated benefit statement until the age of
retirement at 65 years is situated
at R133 743.41, having joined the
Scheme on 01 July 2021. In this case, the Plaintiff regresses to the
‘fault’ system
and not open to the key content of the
prescription of the laws that regulate their marital regime system.
[22] Having considered the
above, I am not satisfied that there is sufficient evidence that
would permit this Court declaring
the forfeiture of the pension
interests whether wholly or partially. The Defendant is eligible to
have a divided share of the pension
interests due to the nature of
their marriage. The proprietary consequences of marriage are today,
further influenced by the principles
of the new dispensation, which
are of fundamental importance in the context of customary law that is
progressively, taking its
rightful place in post-apartheid South
Africa. I must revert and state that the crux of this matter involved
a blend of different
legal systems in the resolving of the pension
interests payout. It limits the potential of customary law in
addressing its own
proprietary consequences that emanate from its own
legal system. It conflates the customary law principles as
independent and amalgam
of South Africa’s legal system.
COSTS
[23] It is a standing principle
of law that the costs should follow the results. In this case, due to
the nature of the dispute
the costs are to be indicated as reflected
below.
ORDER
[24] In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
[24.1] The application for the
dissolution of marriage between the parties is granted.
[24.2] The Deed of Settlement
attached as “ORIGINAL” is made an order of Court.
[24.3] The Defendant is to
receive 50% of the Plaintiff’s total pension interests in the
Provident Fund, calculated
at the date of the decree of divorce as
defined in section 7 subsection 7 and 8 of the Divorce Act.
[24.4] The Momentum Corporate
Funds At Work Umbrella Provident Fund is, effectively from the date
of this order, required
to endorse its records and pay the Defendant
the calculated amount as per the order in 24.3 above.
[24.5] The parties are ordered
to pay their own costs relating to this application and costs on one
Counsel where so employed
on Scale B in terms of Rule 67 of the
Uniform Rules of the Court.
N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Delivery:
This judgment is issued by the Judge whose name
appears herein and is submitted electronically to the parties /legal
representatives
by email. It is also uploaded on CaseLines and its
date of delivery is deemed 27 March 2025
.
Date
of Hearing:
13 March 2025
Date
Delivered
:
27
March 2025
Appearances:
Plaintiff
:
Advocate CM Maswanganyi
Instructing Attorneys: Motjopi
Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancer INC
Defendant
:
Thabiso Mashita
Instructing Attorneys: Nhlapho Moloto
and Associates Incorporateda
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