Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 403South Africa
Tlhale v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2023/080241) [2025] ZAGPJHC 403 (28 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 March 2025
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## Tlhale v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2023/080241) [2025] ZAGPJHC 403 (28 March 2025)
Tlhale v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (2023/080241) [2025] ZAGPJHC 403 (28 March 2025)
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sino date 28 March 2025
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Customary marriage –
Deceased
party
–
Absence
of key rituals – Lobola negotiations had not been concluded
– Lobola not paid – No marriage rituals
or marriage
ceremony had taken place – Applicant most likely took up
relationship with someone else before end of process
– Never
cohabited as husband and wife and were never seen as such –
Lack of explanation for why it took fifteen
years to seek to
assert alleged customary marriage – Application dismissed –
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998
,
s 3(1).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
Number: 2023 / 080241
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/
NO
28
March 2025
In
the matter between:-
MPHO
BRIDGETTE TLHALE
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second Respondent
NOKUZOLA
SWEETNESS MGQUBA
N.O.
Third Respondent
NONTUTUZELO
CYNTHIA NANGU
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
SNYMAN,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
A conspectus of the case
law has left me quite surprised as to how many cases there exist
where a party to an alleged customary
marriage only seeks to assert
the marriage after the other party has become deceased. I find this
perplexing, as the Recognition
of Customary Marriages Act
[1]
(RCMA) specifically provides for such marriages to be registered, and
if this is done, it would render applications such the application
in
casu
mostly
unnecessary. I venture to say that what one has in these cases is not
really about asserting the marriage, but rather an
instance of laying
hands on some of the spoils emanating from a deceased estate.
[2]
Having said the above, I
must make it clear that I am not, by any stretch of the imagination,
seeking to detract from the importance
of recognising customary
marriages in our law. As authoritatively stated in
MM
v MN and Another
[2]
:
‘
The Recognition
Act represents 'a belated but welcome and ambitious legislative
effort to remedy the historical humiliation and
exclusion meted out
to spouses in marriages which were entered into in accordance with
the law and culture of the indigenous African
people of this
country'. Past law accorded marriages under customary
law recognition only as customary 'unions' and this
'grudging
recognition of customary marriages prejudiced immeasurably the
evolution of rules governing these marriages'. The
Recognition
Act is legislation 'specifically deal[ing] with customary law', as
envisaged in terms of s 211(3) of the Constitution.
Its enactment was
inspired by the dignity and equality rights and the normative value
system of the Constitution. It is an adaptation
of
customary law which 'salvage[s] and free[s] customary law from its
stunted and deprived past'.’
[3]
What I am saying is that
the importance of registering such marriages cannot be countenanced,
lest disputes like these
in
casu
prevail,
in circumstances where one of the parties to the relationship is no
longer there to offer a version. This is a rather undesirable
state
of affairs in highly personal relationships, which is what marriages
are. In illustration, reference is made to the following
dictum
in
TM
v NM and Others
[3]
:
‘
... the
registration certificate issued to the appellant in 1991 constitutes,
at the very least, prima facie proof of the existence
of the
appellant's marriage. Thus, in the absence of countervailing
evidence impugning its authenticity, it establishes the
truth of the
fact stated therein
.’
[4]
The above being said, the current matter concerns an application
brought by the applicant on 14 August 2023, in terms
of which the
applicant seeks an order that the first respondent, being the
Minister of Home Affairs, be directed to register a
customary
marriage between the applicant and one Sonwabo Nangu (Nangu) in terms
of the RCMA. The application has been opposed by
the third
respondent, who describes herself as ‘
the legal widow
’’
of Nangu. It was common cause that Nangu became deceased on 12
January 2023.
[5]
The application came before me for argument on 18 February 2025.
After hearing argument from the applicant and the third respondent,
I
reserved judgment. I will now hand down judgment, by first setting
out the relevant background facts.
The
relevant background facts
[6]
I will commence with
those facts that were at least common cause between the parties.
First and foremost, both the applicant and
Nangu were major
persons
[4]
and had consented to
be married to one another. As a result, and on 19 November 2006,
delegates from Nangu’s family met with
delegates from the
applicant’s family, to ask for her hand in marriage, and lobola
(dowry) negotiations then ensued. The
applicant herself, and Nangu,
were not present in these negotiations. In the negotiations, the
applicant was represented by G Mabulatse,
F Tlhale and Mrs Mtlala,
whilst Nangu’s family was represented by M Nangu, N Mofokeng, M
Xelozo and L Nangu. In the course
of these negotiations, a sum of
R4 000.00 was handed over by Nangu’s family to the
applicant’s family.
[5]
A
written note was prepared of such meeting, listing the names of the
parties representing the two families, recording that R4 000.00
was handed over by Nangu’s family to the applicant’s
family, and reflecting the words ‘
Balance
R10 000.00’
.
It
was also common cause that no customary marriage was registered
between the applicant and Nangu in terms of the RCMA.
[7]
In the founding affidavit, the applicant stated that she met Nangu in
2004 whilst they were working together at Edgars
in Randfontein. They
embarked upon a relationship, and as a result, the applicant gave
birth to a daughter on 29 November 2006.
Nangu had earlier proposed
to her, and the customary marriage process commenced, by way of a
lobola letter sent by Nangu’s
family to the applicant’s
family, proposing a meeting date on 19 November 2006. This gave rise
to the meeting on 19 November
2006, referred to above.
[8]
According to the applicant, and in the meeting of 19 November 2006,
lobola in the sum of R14 000.00 was actually
agreed upon between
the parties. Following the meeting on 19 November 2006, the balance
of her lobola of R10 000.00 was paid
on 24 November 2007. In
this regard, she relies on a letter, which was dated 24 November
2007, which letter recoded that an amount
of R10 000.00 was
received from the Nangu family as the balance of lobola which was
R14 000.00. The letter contains the
signatures of two
unidentified persons.
[9]
Next, the applicant states that on 29 March 2008, there as a
celebration at the Nangu family where she was handed over
by her
family to the Nangu family, she was named ‘Nobantu’, and
a sheep was slaughter as per custom. The applicant
however never
stated that she and Nangu cohabitated at any time, after the ceremony
was concluded.
[10]
Also in the founding affidavit, the applicant relies on confirmatory
affidavits by persons identified as Margaret Motoung,
Buti Elias
Mlangeni, Ntswakeleng Paula Tlhale, Johannes Ratau Tlhale and
Mongameli Nangu. It is significant that none of these
persons were
party to the negotiations. Nonetheless, a consideration of what is
set out in these affidavits is important. First,
Buti Elias Mlangeni,
who is the father of Nangu, baldly stated that Nangu was married to
the applicant on 29 March 2008 at 382
Protea North. Johannees Ratua
Tlhale and Ntswakeleng Pauls Tlhale made similar statements. No
further particularity as to any customary
marriage rites are
provided. Margaret Motoung stated that she was one of the elders
performing the customary marriage for the applicant,
that the
celebration was held at Protea North on 28 March 2008, and the new
name of ‘
Nobantu
’ was given to the applicant.
Again, no specificity of other customary marriage rites is given.
[11]
Turning next to the answering affidavit and supplementary answering
affidavit filed by the third respondent, it was contended
that the
lobola (referring to the sum of R4 000.00) that had been paid
was returned to Nangu’s family before any celebrations
were
concluded, which indicated that no marriage ultimately took place.
The third respondent further pointed out that lists were
already
‘out’ to family members that were supposed be given
gifts, but this exchange never happened. The third respondent
took
issue with the fact that none of the deponents to the confirmatory
affidavits relied on by the applicant were party to the
negotiation
delegation or had knowledge of what transpired there.
[12]
According to the third respondent, the lobola negotiations were not
completed, and any ‘
balance
’ reflected in the
meeting note of 19 November 2006 was never agreed nor paid. The third
respondent further contended that
there were no celebrations or any
rituals conducted to celebrate the marriage because, before any of
this could happen, the relationship
between the applicant and Nangu
irretrievably soured as a result of an affair the applicant had with
a third party, with whom she
later conceived a child, which was born
in 2016, called ‘’Amahle’. According to the third
respondent, there as
an absence of ’
customary rites and
ceremonies
’.
[13]
As to the letter relied on by the applicant dated 24 November 2007 to
establish that a second meeting was held between
the two families in
which the balance of R10 000.00 as lobola was paid, the third
respondent disputed the veracity of this
letter. According to the
third respondent the two main delegates presenting Nangu in the
negotiations, being L Nangu and N E Mokokeng,
have no knowledge of
any such a meeting and never attended the same. Their signatures are
also not attached to the letter. The
third respondent did rely on
confirmatory affidavits by these two persons. The third respondent
further states that it is not even
clear where the date of 24
November 2007 came from, as the date for a second meeting would have
been stipulated in the first meeting
and would have been recorded in
the meeting note. And finally, the third respondent complains that
this letter does not even identify
the delegates that attended, but
simply contains two unknown and unverified signatures.
[14]
The third respondent also dealt with contention of the applicant that
the marriage with Nangu was celebrated on 29 March
2008. The third
respondent disputed this ever happened. In addition, the third
respondent states that there were no customary marriage
celebrations
conducted at the applicant’s home, as would ordinary be the
case. In this context, the third respondent explains
that such a
celebration has an ‘
esteemed connotation
’ and the
taking of photographs of the occurrence throughout the day would be
common practice. The third respondent emphasises
the fact that the
applicant has not produced a single photograph of such alleged
celebration. It is also suggested that the applicant
was not handed
over to Nangu as part of concluding the marriage ceremony, as is the
custom. The third respondent adds that no sheep
was slaughtered, and
no gifts were exchanged. And finally, it was stated that the
applicant and Nangu never cohabitated, as the
relationship broke down
before this could even happen.
[15]
The third respondent also refers to the fact that at the funeral of
Nangu, whilst the applicant did attend, she in fact
distanced herself
from all the Nangu family members and acted in a manner showing she
was not part of the family. And finally,
the third respondent
complains that it took the applicant fifteen years to come forward to
assert the marriage. In this context,
the applicant’s motives
were questioned, it was said she was acting
mala fide
, and it
was pertinently suggested that she only now sought to assert the
marriage so she could lay her hands on Nangu’s estate,
once he
passed away on 12 January 2023.
[16]
The applicant did file a replying affidavit, however this affidavit
did not add anything to the factual exposition set
out above. In
particular, the applicant never even addressed several of the
pertinent statements made by the third respondent,
as referred to
above.
Analysis
[17]
Inexplicably, the
applicant has chosen to bring the current dispute before Court by way
of motion proceedings. I find this perplexing,
because surely the
applicant must have anticipated material factual disputes. This is
the kind of case that is very difficult to
resolve in motion
proceedings. But once bought, and the answering affidavit had been
filed, it must have been apparent to the applicant
that there existed
the kind of material factual dispute that could jeopardise her case
in continued motion proceedings. Yet the
applicant pushed on and
never sought a referral to oral evidence. In the end, therefore, the
applicant must stand or fall on the
basis of how these kinds of
factual disputes are ordinarily resolved in motion proceedings, as
enunciated in
Plascon
Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
[6]
,
where the Court held:
‘
...
These principles are, in sum, that the facts as stated by the
respondent party together with the admitted or facts that are
not
denied in the applicant party’s founding affidavit constitute
the factual basis for making a determination, unless the
dispute of
fact is not real or genuine or the denials in the respondent's
version are bald or not creditworthy, or the respondent's
version
raises such obviously fictitious disputes of fact, or is palpably
implausible, or far-fetched or so clearly untenable,
that the court
is justified in rejecting that version on the basis that it obviously
stands to be rejected ...’
[18]
In
Rail
Commuters Action Group and Others v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail and
Others
[7]
,
the Court added another dimension to the enquiry in applying the
Plascon
Evans
principle,
where the Court said
:
‘
Ordinarily, the
Court will consider those facts alleged by the applicant and admitted
by the respondent together with the facts
as stated by the respondent
to consider whether relief should be granted. Where, however, a
denial by a respondent is not real,
genuine or in good faith, the
respondent has not sought that the dispute be referred to evidence,
and the Court is persuaded of
the inherent credibility of the facts
asserted by an applicant, the Court may adjudicate the matter on the
basis of the facts asserted
by the applicant.
'
[19]
As to when a denial
(factual dispute) by the respondent party may not be considered to be
real or genuine, the Court in
Thebe
Ya Bophelo Healthcare Administrators (Pty) Ltd and Others v National
Bargaining Council for the Road Freight Industry and
Another
[8]
provided the following guidance:
‘…
the
dispute is not real or genuine or the denials in the respondent's
version are bald or uncreditworthy, or the respondent's version
raises such obviously fictitious disputes of fact, or is palpably
implausible, or far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the
court is
justified in rejecting that version on the basis that it obviously
stands to be rejected …’
And
in
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[9]
the Court explained:
‘
A real, genuine
and bona fide dispute of fact can exist only where the court is
satisfied that the party who purports to raise the
dispute has in
his affidavit seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said to
be disputed. There will of course be instances
where a bare denial
meets the requirement because there is no other way open to the
disputing party and nothing more can therefore
be expected of him.
But even that may not be sufficient if the fact averred lies purely
within the knowledge of the averring party
and no basis is laid for
disputing the veracity or accuracy of the averment. When the facts
averred are such that the disputing
party must necessarily possess
knowledge of them and be able to provide an answer (or countervailing
evidence) if they be not true
or accurate but, instead of doing so,
rests his case on a bare or ambiguous denial the court will generally
have difficulty in
finding that the test is satisfied. ...’
[20]
What makes it worse is
that there are judgments in which the Court made it clear that
disputes relating to the validity of customary
marriages being
brought by way of motion proceedings, would attract the application
of the
Plascon
Evans
principles.
[10]
In
Mawandu
v Manwadu and Others
[11]
the Court was critical of a case concerning the validity of a
customary marriage being brought by way of motion proceedings where
there were several material factual disputes. The Court had the
following to say
:
[12]
‘
Bearing in mind
that there are a vast number of disputes of fact in this case, and
that there are two mutually exclusive versions,
this Court must weigh
the probabilities to determine which version is most probable. This
case falls squarely within the ambit
of the
Plascon-Evans
rule. The
respondent, being the original applicant, had the onus to prove her
case that she and the deceased were married
by customary law. ...
If the appellant’s
version was not clearly untenable (which it was not), the application
must be determined on her version.
Not only did the appellant raise
genuine and bona fide disputes of fact, but her version was more
probable. It was corroborated
by numerous members of both her and the
deceased’s family, whereas the respondent’s version is
filled with inaccuracies
and patent nondisclosures and failures to
provide admissible evidence and/ or corroboration. ...’
[21]
Nonethless, the applicant
chose her course of action, and must live with the consequences
thereof. When considering the answering
affidavit filed by the third
respondent, I do not believe it can be said that the factual disputes
raised are not real or not genuine.
The factual averments made were
also supported by confirmatory affidavits by persons directly
involved in the negotiation and in
the know, as part of the Nangu
family delegation. There is nothing obviously fictitious, palpably
implausible, far-fetched or untenable
in what the third respondent
had to say in the answering affidavit. Considering all the warnings
already dispensed, as discussed
above, I do not believe there is any
reason why this matter should not be decided on the basis of the
admitted facts, together
with the version as contained in the
answering and supplementary affidavits of the third respondent. In
the end, as held in
TIBMS
(Pty) Ltd t/a Halo Underground Lighting Systems v Knight and
Another
[13]
:
‘…
Credibility
is only capable of being addressed on paper when the assertions are
palpably absurd or demonstrably false. The threshold
that had to be
cleared is ‘wholly fanciful and untenable’. Moreover, the
appetite to resolve paper contests by reference
to the probabilities,
though ever present, is not appropriate. …’
[22]
The above being said, the determination of this matter starts with
setting out the relevant statutory framework. The
recognition of
customary marriages is regulated by the RCMA. Section 3(1) sets out
the requirements for a valid customary marriage
as follows:
'For a customary marriage
entered into after the commencement of this Act to be valid –
(a) the prospective
spouses –
(i) must both be
above the age of 18 years; and
(ii) must both consent to
be married to each other under customary law; and
(b) the marriage must be
negotiated and entered into or celebrated in accordance with
customary law.’
[23]
It is clear that section
3(1) sets three requirements that must all be met, before a customary
marriage can be considered valid.
The first two requirements are
statutorily circumscribed, being that both parties must be adults
(over 18 years of age), and they
must both consent to a customary
marriage. If these two requirements are not first met, then it simply
does not matter what may
have happened in terms of customary law
between the parties in the context of a possible marriage
relationship. But once these
two initial requirements are met, then
the third requirement, in section 3(1)(b), is not statutorily
circumscribed. Instead, it
must be shown the marriage was negotiated
and entered into or celebrated, as determined by customary law. The
RCMA does not stipulate
was qualifies under section 3(1)(b) as basis
for determination, for the very reason that customary law is
determined by way of
what is practiced in particular communities on a
day to day basis, and is therefore live, flexible and constantly
changing and
evolving.
[14]
The
Court in
Mbungela and
Another v Mkabi and Others
[15]
described it as thus
:
‘
...
But s 3(1)
(b)
does
not stipulate the requirements of customary law which must be met to
validate a customary marriage. The reason for this is
not far to
seek. It is established that customary law is a dynamic, flexible
system, which continuously evolves within the context
of its values
and norms, consistently with the Constitution, so as to meet the
changing needs of the people who live by its norms. The
system,
therefore, requires its content to be determined with reference to
both the history and the present practice of the community
concerned. As this court has pointed out, although the various
African cultures generally observe the same customs and rituals,
it
is not unusual to find variations and even ambiguities in their local
practice because of the pluralistic nature of African
society. Thus,
the legislature left it open for the various communities to give
content to s 3(1)
(b)
in
accordance with their lived experiences.’
[24]
Whilst the flexible,
dynamic and constantly evolving nature of customary law is one of its
strengths, it could also be one of its
weaknesses, in particular
where there exists a dispute as to whether a customary marriage was
negotiated and entered into or celebrated.
So, and for example, what
would need to be negotiated and then entered into, in order to
establish a valid customary marriage,
may not only change from time
to time, but may well be different from community to community.
[16]
This makes it highly problematic for a Court to determine exactly
what the particular customary law requirements in each particular
case of a contested customary marriage would be, so as to ascertain
whether, on the facts, they have been met. In
MM
v MN supra
the
Court held
:
[17]
‘
Paradoxically, the
strength of customary law — its adaptive inherent flexibility
– is also a potential difficulty
when it comes to its
application and enforcement in a court of law. As stated by Langa DCJ
in
Bhe
,
'(t)hedifficulty lies not so much in the acceptance of the notion of
living customary law . . . but in determining its content
and testing
it, as the court should, against the provisions of the Bill of
Rights.
'’
[25]
The aforesaid difficulty
is aptly illustrated by the following
dictum
in
MM
v ES
[18]
:
‘
The requirement in
s 3(1)
(b)
that
'the marriage must be negotiated and entered into or celebrated
in accordance with customary law' is clear and unambiguous.
Even the
Legislature did not consider it necessary to define it. This is
understandable as customary law is as diverse as the number
of
different ethnic groups we have in this beautiful country. Although
Africans in general share the majority of customs, rituals
and
cultures, there are some subtle differences which, for example,
pertain exclusively to the Ngunis, Basotho, Bapedi, VhaVenda
and the
Vatsonga. This is due to the pluralistic nature of African societies.
Furthermore, African law
and its customs are not static but dynamic. They develop and change
along with the society in which they
are practised. This capacity to
change requires the court to investigate the customs, cultures,
rituals and usages of a particular
ethnic group to determine whether
their marriage was negotiated and concluded in terms of their
customary law at the particular
time of their evolution. This is so
particularly as the Act defines 'customary law' as the customs and
usages traditionally observed
among the indigenous African peoples of
South Africa and which form part of the cultures of those people.
It follows that it would
be well-nigh impossible and undesirable to attempt an exhaustive and
all-inclusive definition of a phrase
which is susceptible to
variations depending on which particular ethnic group it relates to.
The most salutary approach to ascertaining
the real meaning of this
requirement is by examining the current cultural practices and
customary law of that particular ethnic
group …’
[26]
So, and considering that
the Court would be duty bound to establish the tenets of customary
law on each occasion the validity of
a customary marriage under
section 3(1)(b) of RCMA is in question, what would be the source of
such establishment. An answer is
found in
Bhe
and Others v Magistrate, Khayelitsha, and Others (Commission for
Gender Equality as Amicus Curiae);Shibi v Sithole and Others;
South
African Human Rights Commission and Another v President of the
Republic of South Africa and Another
[19]
where the Court had the following to say:
‘
There are at least
three ways in which indigenous law may be established. In the first
place, a court may take judicial notice of
it. This can only happen
where it can readily be ascertained with sufficient certainty.
Section 1(1) of the Law Evidence Amendment
Act 45 of 1988 says so.
Where it cannot be readily ascertained, expert evidence may be
adduced to establish it. Finally, a court
may consult text books and
case law.
Caution,
however, must be exercised in relying on case law and text books …’
[27]
And finally, even where
the requirements of a customary marriage in a particular case have
been determined, those requirements must
always be measured and
tested against the values of the Constitution.
[20]
[28]
Once concluded, and in
terms of section 4(2) of the RCMA, either spouse may apply for the
registration of the customary marriage.
However, and in terms of
section 4(3)(b), a customary marriage must be registered within a
period of three months after the conclusion
of the marriage. The
benefit of registration, as touched on earlier in this judgment, is
that a certificate of registration is
issued, which certificate
constitutes
prima
facie
proof
of the existence of the customary marriage and of the particulars
contained in the certificate.
[21]
In
Mawandu
supra
[22]
the Court held:
‘
The question is
whether the person alleging that a customary marriage took place and
that it was registered possesses a certificate
which was issued in
terms of the law providing for the registration of customary
marriages. If a person does have such a certificate,
then such a
person is relieved of the duty to prove the existence of the
customary marriage by way of the normal rules of evidence
...’
[29]
Nonetheless, the failure
to register a customary marriage does not affect the validity of that
marriage.
[23]
However, and all
considered, these administrative processes under the RCMA cannot be
just ignored, as they serve a particular purpose,
described in
Khashane v
Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[24]
as follows:
‘
This subsection
imposes a duty on both spouses of a customary marriage to ensure that
their marriage is registered. It signifies
the importance placed on
formalising customary marriages through the official registration
process.’
[30]
The applicant would bear
the onus to prove the requirements of a customary marriage have been
satisfied in this case.
[25]
How would this onus then be discharged? In my view, two
considerations are paramount. First, the applicant would need to
establish
the tenets of the customary law that regulate her
particular customary marriage. It is important to establish this
first, because
of the very nature of customary law as discussed
earlier in this judgment. Second, the applicant would need to provide
proper and
acceptable evidence that what had transpired between the
parties is consistent with these customary law tenets.
[31]
My difficulty with the
case of the applicant is that it was simply not established or proven
what the principles of the customary
law would be that would need to
me met, in order for this Court to find that there existed a valid
customary marriage between her
and Nangu. Whilst it is true, as said
in
Bhe
supra
,
that the Court could take judicial notice of it, this is a very
slippery slope. To be honest, whilst one would hope that Judges
are
all-knowing where it comes to all issues of law that they are called
on to decide, this is expectation is not realistic where
it comes to
customary law. It would be impossible for Judges to be familiar with
all the principles of customary law in all communities
at all times,
when called upon to decide whether a customary marriage is valid.
[26]
That is why the Court in
Bhe
warned that judicial
notice requires sufficient certainty that is readily ascertainable.
In my view, the very nature of customary
law principles applicable to
customary marriages, in particular, would make judicial notice on the
basis of sufficient certainty
a dubious prospect. And as the case law
illustrates, as I will discuss below, it is hardly readily
ascertainable.
[32]
In my view, what is
needed in a case such as one
in
casu
is
that the tenets of customary law applicable to deciding whether a
particular customary marriage is valid needs to be ascertained
by
presenting evidence of an expert nature that establishes this. That
is the only way a Court can be sure that what it decides
is correct,
and in line with the prevailing customary law in a particular
circumstance at a particular time. This kind of evidence
can be
presented by an elder, headman, community leader or similar person
that is the custodian of the customary law in a particular
community.
For example, and in
MM
v MN supra
,
the Court considered the evidence of an elder and advisor to
traditional leader, a number of traditional leaders, and
an expert anthropologist with extensive research experience customary
law to decide a particular requirement for a valid customary
marriage
under customary law.
[27]
Of
course, the Court would have to satisfy itself of the expertise of
that person. Without that evidence which conveys to the Court
what
would satisfy the provisions in section 3(1)(b) that the marriage
must be negotiated and entered into or celebrated, the doing
of
justice will be at risk, especially in a close personal relationship
such as a marriage. It not difficult to appreciate the
injustice that
may result in for example forcing two parties into a marriage
relationship that is not valid or for that matter
terminating a
relationship by a declaration of invalidity when there is in reality
no proper foundation for doing so, based on
principles that are not
certain.
[33]
And this is what is absent from the applicant’s case from the
outset. The applicant does not establish what the
principles of
customary law are that would apply to her particular customary
marriage in her particular community. She simply sets
out rituals and
formalities she contends have been met, but she does not establish
whether these rituals and formalities are what
is required and is all
that is required. In my view, it was imperative for the applicant to
have provided evidence from an independent
person in the know, so to
speak, as custodian of customary law for her community, of what was
necessary to have been fulfilled
to make her customary marriage a
valid one. One can hardly take her word for it, being a party to the
dispute, not being an expert,
and having a direct interest in a
particular outcome. Absent the aforesaid evidence, there are no
principles proven to which the
evidence can be applied. That, I
believe, is a material obstacle to the success of the applicant’s
case.
[34]
But accepting that I may be criticised for being overly cautious, and
because there is no expert evidence in this case,
that leaves
judicial notice as the source of establishing the principles of
customary law applicable to the applicant’s alleged
customary
marriage. I have not been enlightened with what community the
applicant is from, so a broad conspectus of customary law
principles
applicable to customary marriages in general would be appropriate.
There is fortunately some depth of case law to draw
this from. All
considered, and in general, I believe the principles that I summarize
below would serve to inform as to whether
a valid customary marriage
has been concluded.
[35]
First, it must be
appreciated that a customary marriage is not just a transaction, for
the want of a better description, between
the two spouses. It is
effectively a transaction between two families.
[28]
Accordingly, it needs to be established, in the context of
‘
negotiated
’
under section 3(1)(b),
that there is a transaction between two families, where the marriage
is negotiated. In these negotiations,
which are conducted by
emissaries / delegates of both families, an agreement must be reached
between the two families as to the
payment and quantum of the lobola
(dowry) for the prospective wife. There are differing views as to
whether the lobola must actually
be paid in full for the marriage to
be valid, or whether part payment or only an agreement is
necessary.
[29]
Be that as it
may, it is in my view clear that at the very least, there must be
consensus on the quantum of the lobola to be paid.
As succinctly held
in
MB v
TM
:
[30]
‘
A customary
marriage is not concluded by two parties only. In its conclusion
there is participation by the couple themselves, their
respective
families and this participation extends to their blood relations. The
nature of its participatory model, the family
as well as blood
relations orientation, has the result that it is not constituted by a
single event. A series of negotiations,
festivities and rituals
officiate it into a marriage.’
[36]
Next, and what follows
the conclusion of the negotiations is best described as a number of
essential rituals. This includes the
exchanging of gifts to specific
family members, a marriage ceremony (celebration), the slaughtering
of livestock, and the handing
over of the bride to the family of the
groom.
[31]
Whilst it is true
that in
LS
v RL
[32]
the
Court had definitively decided that the failure to hand over the
bride to the family of the groom cannot serve to invalidate
a
customary marriage
per
se
,
it remains one factor to be considered when deciding whether a
customary marriage has been concluded.
[33]
As
explained in
Mbungela
supra
:
[34]
‘
It is important to
bear in mind that the ritual of handing-over of a bride is simply a
means of introducing a bride to her new family
and signifies the
start of the marital consortium. …’
[37]
Further, there is the
issue of cohabitation and what results (flows) from it. As suggested
in
Tsambo
v Sengadi
[35]
:
‘...
long
cohabitation raises a strong suspicion of marriage ...’.
In this context, it must
be considered, for example, whether the parties, immediately
following or shortly after the marriage ceremony,
cohabited together,
for how long, how the new bride is integrated into the family of the
groom, and whether any children were born
from the marriage. In
simple terms, it is considered whether the couple behaved as a
married couple would, and has been considered
by the families to be
married. As described in
Mathunyane
v Bapela
:
[36]
‘
The subsequent
living together of both parties, which was not disputed by the
applicant, demonstrate acceptance of the parties that
they are united
in wedlock. …’
[38]
There is a further consideration that I believe has not received
sufficient attention. This is the issue of the registration
of the
customary marriage. Even though the failure to register the marriage
does not affect its validity, it simply cannot be ignored
that the
RCMA prescribes that the marriage must be registered in three months.
It is not a choice. It is a legislative prescript.
The question must
then be asked, especially if registration is sought by one party long
after the fact, why this did not happen
earlier, and for that matter,
in time. In the whole equation of deciding the validity of a
customary marriage, this cannot be ignored
as if it does not exist.
Why would the legislature prescribe registration, in a specified
time, if it meant nothing. In my view,
and where one spouse seeks
registration or declaration of validity, no matter how one may call
it, long after the conclusion of
the alleged marriage ceremony, that
spouse must explain why registration did not happen as prescribed,
and this explanation would
weigh into the equation when deciding
whether a valid customary marriage exists. The case
in casu
actually illustrates the reason why I say this, which I will deal
with later.
[39]
But it has to be
emphasised that none of all the customary marriage principles I have
discussed above must be considered to be individually
decisive. It
must all be considered in the balance, all factors applying. So, and
for example, the failure to pay the lobola where
all the other
requirements are satisfied, could be seen not detract from the
validity of the customary marriage. The same would
for example apply
to the ritual of handing over of the bride.
[37]
As held in
Tsambo
supra
[38]
:
‘
It is evident from
the foregoing passage that strict compliance with rituals has, in the
past, been waived. The authorities cited
by the respondent, mentioned
earlier in the judgment, also attest to that. Clearly, customs have
never been static. They develop
and change along with the
society in which they are practised. Given the obligation
imposed on the courts to give effect to
the principle of living
customary law, it follows ineluctably that the failure to
strictly comply with all rituals and ceremonies
that were
historically observed cannot invalidate a marriage that has otherwise
been negotiated, concluded or celebrated in accordance
with customary
law.’
[40]
I venture to say that the
application of the principles of customary law paints the picture of
a marriage transaction negotiated,
agreed upon, and then perfected by
two families. Whilst a colour may be missing from the picture, the
picture may still present
as such a marriage, and overall considered,
must be treated as such. This was aptly illustrated in
Mbungela
supra
as
thus:
[39]
‘…
for
example, a woman could consent to a customary marriage, followed by
payment of lobola, after which she cohabited, built a home
with her
suitor, and bore him children, with the full knowledge of his family.
When the man died, she and those children could
be rejected and
disinherited by his family simply on the basis she was not handed
over or properly introduced to his family and
was therefore not his
lawful wife, and that the children were illegitimate. Needless to
say, that consequence would be incongruous
with customary law's
inherent flexibility and pragmatism, which allows even the
possibility of compromise settlements among affected
parties …’
[41]
Therefore, all the above said, and in terms of the evidence, properly
considered and determined, what do we have
in casu
? On the
common cause facts, there was indeed a negotiation between two
families about lobola to be paid for the applicant. But
it remained
in dispute as to whether consensus was achieved in this regard. There
is also a dispute as to whether lobola was actually
paid. When one
then gets to the rituals, there are irreconcilable factual disputes.
The applicant says that the rituals took place,
and there was a
ceremony, pursuant to which she was accepted into the family of
Nunga. The third respondent says the opposite,
and contends there
were no rituals, no exchange of gifts, and no marriage ceremony.
[42]
Then there is the issue
of cohabitation. There is no evidence that this ever happened. The
applicant has not even said in her founding
affidavit that after the
ceremony, she moved in or remained cohabiting with Nangu, and they
resided together as husband and wife
thereafter.
[40]
There is no indication of what came from this marriage, and how the
applicant was treated by or integrated into the family of Nangu.
It
is true that the applicant and Nangu had a child, but this child was
born prior to the negotiations even started. In addition,
in this
context, the third respondent has specifically said that the
relationship between the applicant and Nangu irretrievably
soured
before any negotiations concluded and rituals happened, as she
entered into a relationship with another party, pursuant
to which she
conceived and gave birth to a child in 2016. The third respondent
also said that at the funeral of Nangu, which the
applicant did
attend, she distanced herself from Nangu’s family. In her
replying affidavit, the applicant did not deal with
any of these
contentions by the third respondent.
[43]
And finally, there is no explanation by the applicant as to why she
took in excess of 15 years to seek to validate /
assert the alleged
customary marriage with Nangu. As opposed to this, the third
respondent did proffer an explanation. That explanation
brought into
question the applicant’s
bona fides
. The third
respondent contended that the applicant only became interested in
asserting her alleged customary marriage when Nangu
became deceased,
so she could lay her hands on part of his estate. The timing of the
bringing of the application does support this
view. The applicant, in
my view, needed to explain why it took her fifteen years to seek to
assert her marriage, and she certainly
needed to answer the concerns
raised by the third respondent about her motives, on reply. The point
is that this conduct of the
applicant is inconsistent with a couple
that was living together and conducting themselves as husband and
wife.
[44]
This only leaves the disputed facts about the conclusion of the
lobola negotiations, and the completion of the marriage
rituals.
Unfortunately for the applicant, and as I have discussed above, this
is where the application of the
Plascon Evans
principles
shipwrecks her case. Applying these principles, it is my view that
there is no reason why this matter should not be
decided based on the
version offered by the third respondent. I must say that the
applicant’s version in her founding is
affidavit is somewhat
bald and lacking in specificity. In response to this kind of lacking
version, the denials of the third respondent
cannot be paid to be
bald and uncreditworthy to the extent that it should not be accepted.
In any event, as to the issue of the
failure to conclude the lobola
negotiations and the lobola not being paid, the exposition offered by
the third respondent is motivated,
and makes sense. It cannot be
rejected on the basis of being palpably false or completely lacking
in credibility. I must also mention
that the third respondent
explained that a marriage ceremony is of ‘
esteemed
’
importance, yet the applicant has not produced a single photograph of
the same as would be expected, a contention the applicant
never dealt
with in reply.
[45]
It is true that R4 000.00
was handed over by Nangu’s family to the applicant’s
family on 19 November 2006 at the
negotiation on that date. But it
remains questionable whether the amount in lobola was finally agreed
to. The third respondent
explained that the sum of R4 000.00 was
a deposit handed over pending final negotiation. The third
respondent’s version
is supported by two confirmatory
affidavits deposed to by two the Nangu family delegates that attended
and were directly involved
in the negotiation. As opposed to this,
the applicant has offered no similar confirmatory affidavits by
anyone involved in this
process. I must confess that I also find some
substance in the third respondent’s contention that the letter
dated 24 November
2007 which supposedly serves as proof that the
balance of R10 000.00 of the alleged agreed lobola of R14 000.00
was paid,
was a fabrication. I say this because I find it unlikely
that the payment of the balance of lobola, where on the applicant’s
own version part payment had already been made on 19 November 2006,
would take more than a year. It simply appears too long a period,
especially where there is pending marriage, and I believe this needed
an explanation from the applicant.
[41]
Ordinarily, there is a relatively close temporal nexus between even a
part payment of the lobola and the actual marriage ceremony,
which is
absent in this case. Then there are also the deficiencies in the
content of the letter, as explained by the third respondent,
whose
version, as I have also said, must prevail. In the end, and as said
in
Makhosine
v Department of Home Affairs and others
[42]
:
‘
...
Failure to pay the balance of the lobola without an explanation for
why this was the case, could lead to an inference that the
applicant
was insufficiently committed to the relationship. ...’
[46]
In the end, the applicant’s case must fail for several reasons.
First, she did not establish the tenets of the
customary law that
would regulate her customary marriage. Second, and even if the matter
is considered on the basis of general
tenets established by judicial
notice (as undesirable as this may be), the applicant has failed to
prove these requirements have
been met. This is because on the facts,
as must be accepted, the lobola negotiations had not been concluded,
lobola had not been
paid, and no marriage rituals, and in particular
a marriage ceremony, had taken place. Third, I am also convinced that
the applicant
took up a relationship with someone else before the end
of the process, and she and Nangu never cohabited as husband and wife
and
were never seen as such. And finally, the applicant’s lack
of explanation why it took her fifteen years to seek to assert
the
alleged customary marriage is telling, especially considering it
immediately followed the death of Nangu.
[47]
It is perhaps
appropriate, in the context of providing an illustration to the
contrary where it comes to the applicant’s case
in
casu
,
to refer to the following
dictum
in
Mbungela
supra
,
where the Court held as follows, in finding that a valid customary
marriage was concluded:
[43]
‘
There is, in my
view, sufficient evidence before us to resolve the issue with
relative ease. As indicated, the first appellant,
in his own words,
described the successful lobola negotiations, the payment of a
significant portion of the amount agreed upon
and a live cow, and the
exchange of gifts by both families as a combination of the two
families. It is, therefore, not surprising
and of great significance
that the couple's families subsequently sent representative
delegations to each other's burial ceremonies,
as in-laws.
Furthermore, it is striking that both the first appellant, who was
rightly found an evasive and unreliable witness,
and Ms Mkhonza
referred to the couple as husband and wife during unguarded moments
as they testified. These were patent Freudian
slips that truthfully
indicated that they accepted that the couple was indeed married. And
it is not insignificant too that the
deceased recorded Mr Mkabi as
her husband in a valuable document which informed the world of her
important next of kin. …’
[48]
And then, to provide a
comparable example that is more akin the applicant’s situation
in casu
,
I believe the following extract from the judgment in
Manwadu
supra
is
appropriate, where the Court decided that a valid customary marriage
was not proven:
[44]
‘
In summary, the
respondent failed to adduce any admissible evidence of the marriage
ceremony and traditional customs having been
observed. No
confirmatory affidavits were produced to confirm that the
requirements of the customary marriage were met. Her reference
to
many people who were involved in the proceedings necessary for a
customary marriage were not confirmed by those people. Confirmatory
affidavits were not attached to confirm her version of
the
ufhelekedza,
when
she went to stay at the deceased’s family’s house, or
the
dzipheletshedzi
when
the unnamed young girls attended to her, whilst she stayed at the
deceased’s family. None of the deceased’s
family members
confirmed any of her allegations relating to the admission by the
deceased that he had impregnated her, or that
a customary marriage or
lobola negotiations took place. They denied these allegations. It is
common cause that a customary union
is between two families, not only
the ‘bridal couple’. …’
[49]
Consequently, the applicant has failed to make out a case for the
relief sought in her notice of motion. The applicant
has failed to
establish a proper factual foundation for her case, which case in any
event has no legal basis to support it. The
applicant’s
application falls to be dismissed.
Costs
[50]
This only leaves the issue of costs. The applicant was not
successful. Accordingly, and as a general principle, the third
respondent should be entitled to costs. The fact remains that the
applicant pursued an ill-advised course of action where material
factual disputes were always a real risk, and even when this
manifested itself, the applicant pushed on, nonetheless. And as
discussed
above, the applicant, in my view, did not take the
necessary proper steps to substantiate her case, considering all the
different
nuances applicable to customary marriages. I thus consider
that a costs award against the applicant, on the party and party
scale
B, is justified
.
[51]
In the premises, I make the following order:
Order
1. The applicant’s
application is dismissed.
2. The applicant is
ordered to pay the third respondent’s costs, on the party and
party scale B.
SNYMAN
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Appearances
:
Heard
on:
18 February 2025
For
the Applicant:
Ms S Nxumalo of SN & Associates Attorneys
For
the Third Respondent:
Advocate V Masinga
Instructed
by:
Chimeramombe Attorneys
Judgment:
28 March 2025
[1]
Act
120 of 1998.
[2]
2013 (4) SA 415
(CC) at para 26. See also
Gumede
v President of Republic of South Africa and Others
2009 (3) SA 152
(CC) at
para 16.
[3]
2014 (4) SA 575
(SCA) at para 14.
[4]
The applicant was born on 10 April 1982, and Nangu was born on 14
June 1977.
[5]
It
is in dispute whether a final amount in lobola was agreed upon, and
this will be dealt with below.
[6]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E 635C.
[7]
2005
(2) SA 359 (CC)
at
para 53.
[8]
2009
(3) SA 187
(W) para 19.
[9]
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA) at para 13.
See
also
Minister
of Home Affairs and Others v Jose and Another
2021
(6) SA 369
(SCA) at para 20.
[10]
See
Malatjie
v Sekgobela and Others
2025
JDR 0295 (GP) at para 29;
Tsambo
v Sengadi
[2020]
JOL 47138
(SCA) at para 19;
Sikhosana
v Kabini and Others
2023
JDR 2964 (GJ) at paras 22 – 25.
[11]
2025 JDR 0586 (SCA) at para 56.
[12]
Id
at paras 61 – 62.
[13]
(2017) 38 ILJ 2721 (LAC) at para 29.
[14]
In
MM v
MN
(
supra
)
at para 24, the Court said: ‘
This
court has, in a number of decisions, explained what
this resurrection of customary law to its rightful place as one
of the primary sources of law under the Constitution means. This
includes that … (c) customary law is a system of
law that is
practised in the community, has its own values and norms, is
practised from generation to generation and evolves
and develops to
meet the changing needs of the community; (d) customary law is not a
fixed body of formally classified and easily
ascertainable rules. By
its very nature it evolves as the people who live by its norms
change their patterns of life; (e) customary
law will continue to
evolve within the context of its values and norms consistent with
the Constitution …
’
[15]
2020 (1) SA 41
(SCA) at para 17.
[16]
Compare
Sikhosana
v Kabini and Others
2023
JDR 2964 (GJ) at paras 36 – 40.
[17]
Id
at para 25.
[18]
2014
JDR 1085 (SCA) at paras 35 – 37.
[19]
[2004] ZACC 17
;
2005
(1) SA 580
(CC) at paras 150 – 151.
[20]
In
MM
v MN
(
supra
)
at para
83,
the Court held: ‘
The
Recognition Act is thus premised on a customary marriage that is in
accordance with the dignity and equality demands of the
Constitution
…
’
.
See also
paras
23 – 24 off the judgment. Also refer to
Bhe
(
supra
)
at paras 44 and 46;
MLZ
v STZ
2025
JDR 0555 (GJ) at para 21
.
[21]
Section
4(8).
[22]
Id at para 56. See also
Mgenge
v Mokoena
2021
JDR 1020 (GJ) at para 12.
[23]
Section
4(9).
[24]
2024
(5) SA 242
(GP)
at
para
12.
[25]
Manwadu
(
supra
)
at para 56;
Tlou
v Matlala
2025
JDR 0317 (GP) at para 55.
[26]
As said by the Court in
MM
v MN
(
supra
)
at para
48:
‘…
a
court is obliged to satisfy itself, as a matter of law, on the
content of customary law, and its task in this regard may be
more
onerous where the customary-law rule at stake is a matter of
controversy. With the constitutional recognition of customary
law, this has become a responsibility of the courts. It is
incumbent on our courts to take steps to satisfy themselves as
to
the content of customary law and, where necessary, to evaluate local
custom in order to ascertain the content of the relevant
legal rule
…
’
.
[27]
See
paras 57 – 59 of the judgment.
[28]
Motsoatsoa
v Roro
2010
JDR 1392 (GSJ) at para 17;
Mabaso
and Others v Manyathela
2021
JDR 2488 (GJ) at para 13.
[29]
See
Tlou
(
supra
)
at para 56;
Makhosine
v Department of Home Affairs and Others
2022
JDR 3317 (GJ) at para 24;
Mathunyane
v Bapela
2015
JDR 2489 (GP) at para 10.
[30]
2019 JDR 2316 (WCC) at para 28. See also
MM
v ES
2014
JDR 1085 (SCA) at para 39;
Fanti
v Boto and Others
2008
(5) SA 405
(C) at paras 19 – 20.
[31]
Motsoatsoa
(
supra
)
at para 17;
Mgenge
v Mokoena and Another
2023
JDR 0741 (GJ) at paras 48 – 49.
[32]
2019 (4) SA 50
(GJ) at para 35.
[33]
See
Mokoena
(
supra
)
at para 42.
[34]
Id
at para 25.
[35]
[2020] JOL 47138
(SCA) at para 27.
[36]
2015 JDR 2489 (GP) at para 11.
[37]
Compare
Tsambo
(supra
)
at paras 25 – 26.
[38]
Id at para 18.
[39]
Id
at para 28.
[40]
Compare
Makhosine
(
supra
)
at para 38;
Songo
v Minister of Home Affairs
2011
JDR 1386 (GNP) at para 23.
[41]
I mention that the third respondent stated that R4 000.00 was
refunded.
[42]
2022 JDR 3317 (GJ) at para 24.
[43]
Id
at para 23.
[44]
Id
at para 57.
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