Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 863South Africa
Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo and Another v G.Z (A2023/027196) [2024] ZAGPJHC 863; [2025] 1 All SA 388 (GJ) (10 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 September 2024
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo and Another v G.Z (A2023/027196) [2024] ZAGPJHC 863; [2025] 1 All SA 388 (GJ) (10 September 2024)
Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo and Another v G.Z (A2023/027196) [2024] ZAGPJHC 863; [2025] 1 All SA 388 (GJ) (10 September 2024)
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sino date 10 September 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Burial –
Rights
to gravesite
–
Family
refused widow right to participate in burial – City having
details of deceased’s sister on record –
Widow refused
permission to erect tombstone – Cemetery manager’s
reasoning based on incorrect and unfounded interpretation
of
By-laws – Common law right of wife could never be taken away
from her by virtue of municipal By-law – Furthermore,
she
paid prescribed burial fees and in terms of By-law acquired
private rights over grave.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: A2023/027196
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED.
In the matter between:
JOHANNESBURG CITY
PARKS & ZOO
1
st
Appellant
CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
and
2
nd
Appellant
G[...]
M[...] Z[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME, J (Senyatsi J and
Manoim J)
Introduction
[1] This is an
appeal against a judgement by Adams J dated August 2022 in which
judgement the appellants were ordered to recognise
the respondent as
the holder of rights to a grave site situated at Westpark Cemetery in
which the remains of her late husband remain
interred.
[2] The respondent
approached the Urgent Court and was successful after the official in
charge of the cemetery had refused
her the right to erect a tombstone
on the grave site in memory of her late husband.
Background Facts
[3] The right to
bury a loved one or a close member of one’s family has always
been a contested territory in our communities
especially where a
deceased person has not directed otherwise in a written will or had
openly expressed a wish. This right is further
exacerbated when
married parties are living separately and contemplating a divorce or
in the event where there is just no communication
between family
members when such an estranged party passes away and is at that time
not living with his or her married partner.
This was exactly the
position between the respondent and her late husband.
[4] It is common
cause and not in dispute that the respondent and her late husband
S[...] M[...] Z[...] (the deceased) were
married in community of
property on the 11
th
November 1993. There were no children
born out of that marriage.
[5] The marriage
relationship floundered, as a result during November 2011 the
respondent vacated the matrimonial home. Two
years later in the year
2013 the deceased obtained by default a divorce decree without having
informed the respondent. The decree
of divorce was later set aside by
this Court on the 10
th
November 2014.
[6] The deceased
took no further steps to pursue the divorce action. On the 21
st
January 2019, he was killed in a shooting incident. The marriage
between the deceased and the respondent still subsisted at the
time
of his death. Despite that, the family of the deceased, including his
sister T[...] J[...] M[...], refused the respondent
the right to
participate in the burial of her husband as they were still under the
wrong impression that the parties were divorced.
[7] Notwithstanding
the attitude of some of the family member of the deceased, the
respondent made available funds to enable
the family to bury the
deceased at Westpark cemetery as they did not have sufficient money.
The respondent submitted a claim against
her funeral policy and paid
R4 500.00 for the grave site at Westpark.
[8] Annexed to her
founding papers is an affidavit by Bennet Mandla Z[...] who confirms
that, in the following words:
“
I went with my
daughter in law G[...] M[...] Z[...] to Shandu funeral parlour
to pay for the gravesite. G[...] Z[...]
paid for the grave site
which initially was supposed to be at Slovo gravesite. She suggested
that it was better for his husband
to be buried at Westpark cemetery
of which a sum of R4 500.00 was needed and she paid the amount hence
the deceased was buried
at Westpark cemetery. I was one of the
delegates who was sent to request her to bury the deceased as there
was no money she complied
and even bought the cow and paid all the
finances for the funeral as his family had no money to bury him.”
[9] It is clear
from the papers that it was the respondent who chose that the
deceased be buried at Westpark and not at Slovo
Cemetery. The burial
was conducted by Shandu Funeral Undertakers and the respondent made
payment for the gravesite to the undertaker
who in turn paid the
appellants.
[10] It was because
T[...] M[...] had been arranging with the undertakers, this is how
the gravesite was booked in the name
of T[...] M[...] as a result it
is her details which appear on the records of the appellants. The
deceased was buried on the 2
nd
February 2019 at Westpark.
[11] In the year
2020, the respondent approached officials of the appellants at
Westpark Cemetery to seek permission to erect
a tombstone on the
gravesite of her late husband. She was told that the only person
allowed to do that is TJ Mokoto who happens
to be T[...] M[...], her
sister-in-law whom the deceased lived with at the time of his death.
[12] The
respondent’s attorney addressed a letter to the appellant’s
manager at the cemetery, one Reggie Moloi,
to seek clarity as to why
she could not erect a tombstone. It is significant to note that at
that time the respondent had already
been appointed executrix in the
estate of her late husband.
[13] On the 12
th
October 2020, Reggie Moloi the cemetery manager responded as follows
to the attorney:
“
Good afternoon
please take note that if your client is not the owner of rights to
the grave then she has to consult with the owner
of the right.”
[14] Later on the
16
th
May 2021, Mr Reggie Moloi addressed another letter to
the respondent’s attorneys and said the following:
“
The G[...]
Z[...] matter of Westpark Cemetery is simply not a refusal by the
cemetery to allow her to erect a tombstone but
rather a procedural
matter based on the City of Johannesburg Cemetery & Crematoria
By-Laws on Chapter 2 Section 8 in its entirety.”
[15] The respondent
subsequently launched an urgent application in which she sought the
following relief:
a) That the first
and second respondents are ordered to grant permission to the
applicant to erect a tombstone (Also known
as Memorial work) for her
deceased husband S[...] M[...] Z[...] at grave number ECM 9710
Westpark Cemetery, Johannesburg.
b) The permission
referred to in paragraphs 2 above shall be issued to the applicant
within 7 days from the date of this Court
order.
c) The first and
second respondents are ordered to amend their records and register
the applicant as the person who also has
rights to the deceased’s
grave.
[16] The third
respondent in the application being the sister-in-law was served with
the notice of motion and did not oppose.
It is only the City of
Johannesburg which has opposed the application and based its refusal
to grant permission on two reasons.
Firstly, that the respondent is
not the owner of the grave rights, secondly, that the respondent
should seek permission from T[...]
M[...] to enable her to erect the
tombstone. They cited the City’s By-Laws.
BURIAL
RIGHTS
[17] Before dealing
with the defence raised, I deem it appropriate to make reference to a
few decisions of our Courts dealing
with burial rights.
[18]
In
Human
v Human
,
[1]
Cloete AJP held that a surviving spouse is in preference to any other
relation entitled to claim the body of the deceased. In
Noordien
v Moslem Cemetery Board
[2]
a dispute arose about the issuing of a permit by the respondent to
enable the applicant to bury his son at the Muslim controlled
cemetery. The court in criticising the respondent’s refusal
concluded as follows:
“
What it in my view
on the papers before me has sought to do is to take unto itself the
power to deprive a person of the right of
burial already conferred in
the guise of adopting rules of regulations relating to burial
procedure. This in my view it is not
competent for the Board to do.”
[19]
In
Gonsalves
and Another v Gonsalves and Another
,
[3]
the Court held that, if the deceased did not choose or designate a
person to carry out his burial, then and only then does the
right
fall upon his heirs. The respondent is the only interstate heir in
the estate of her late husband.
[20]
In
Serole
and Another v Pienaar
,
[4]
a matter that concerned the rights to bury held by the occupier of
land under the Extension of Security of Tenure Act.
[5]
In that matter it was held that a court will not interpret a statute
in a manner which will permit rights granted to a person under
that
statute to intrude upon the common law right of another unless it is
clear that such intrusion was intended.
[21] This case law
serves to confirm that the right to bury falls on the heirs of the
deceased in the absence of a specific
instructions from the deceased
whilst alive. That right extends, in my view, to the right to erect
memorial tombstone in remembrance
of the deceased.
[22] In this matter
the respondent is not only the interstate heir, she is also the
executrix of the estate. She chose the
gravesite and paid for it.
[23] In the
answering affidavit opposing the relief sought by the respondent, the
appellant sets out three defences namely,
that the application was
not urgent, secondly, that the third respondent is the only one who
has the rights over the gravesite
and lastly, that the respondent
should have first asked permission to erect the tombstone and not
rush to court. The court
a quo
adjudicated the application on
the evidence placed before it.
The By-Laws
[24] It is
significant to note that in Chapter 2 of the By-laws, section 8 reads
as follows:
“
8. (1) The
holder of private rights includes: -
a) A person who
purchases a grave or who received a grave as a gift from the
purchaser and whose name appears in the register
of the council.
b) A person who
paid the prescribed burial fees in respect of the first burial in the
grave.
8. (3) If
there is a dispute about the holder of private rights, the dispute
must be referred to the officer in charge
for determination.”
[25] In the
definition clause the word “officer in charge” means the
registrar of a crematorium appointed by Regulation
21 of the
Regulations relating to crematoria and cremation made in terms of
Ordinance no. 18 of 1965 and includes a person authorised
by the
Council to be in control of any cemetery.
[26] It is so that
Mr Reggie Moloi was the officer in charge. He did not make a
determination whether there was a dispute
or not, he simply told the
respondent to get the permission of the third respondent. A reading
of the By-Law means that he should
have convened a meeting of the
respondent and the third respondent, T[...] M[...], to first
determine if indeed there was a dispute
or not. He failed to perform
his duty as envisaged in clause 8(3) of the By-Laws.
[27] Clause 24 of
the By-Laws reads as follows:
“
24(1) A
person intending to erect a memorial work must make and complete an
application on the prescribed application form
to the officer in
charge.
24(4) No
person may: -
a) erect memorial
work or bring material into a cemetery for the purpose of erecting
memorial work without the written consent
of the officer in charge.
b) remove memorial
work for additional inscription or other alternations without the
consent of the officer in charge.”
[28] There is
no-where in this clause where it is said that it is compulsory that
the respondent should have first sought
the consent of the third
respondent, it was a decision of Reggie Moloi which was based on
incorrect and unfounded interpretation
of the By-Laws.
What is in Issue for
Determination in this Appeal
[29] There are two
issues to be determined in this appeal the first being whether the
respondent should have first sought
a review of the decision by way
of PAJA on the basis that the decision by Reggie Moloi was an
administrative action, secondly,
it is the question of who is the
owner of the gravesite.
[30] Firstly, I
deal with the question whether Reggie Moloi’s decision amounted
to administrative action capable of
review in terms of PAJA. In their
notice of appeal as well as in the heads of argument, the appellants
say that, the relief sought
by the respondent could only be granted
if the administrative decision already made by the appellants were
reviewed and set aside.
[31] At paragraph 7
of the heads, the appellants make a strange submission to the effect
that Adams J did not deal with the
issue of administrative review and
granted the relief sought on the papers. This cannot be correct a
reading of the judgement especially
in paragraph 7 thereof, Adams J
deals with the PAJA review and concluded as follows:
“
The city takes
their argument based on the rigid and inflexible approach a step
further and contends that in bringing this application
the Applicant
was ill advised. She should have applied for a review and setting
aside of the previous administrative decisions
that being the
registration of the third respondent as the “holder of private
rights”, so the city argues in terms
of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). The Applicant would
not be able to do so, in any event as
the PAJA review grounds do not
exist. It cannot, for instance, be said that decision of the public
official is wrong or irrational
so the city submits and therefore the
decision must stand.”
[32] In my view,
reliance on the
Oudekraal
decision is misplaced taking into
consideration the issues involved therein. In
Oudekraal
, the
invalid or impugned decision was taken by the Administrator of the
Province in terms of the then legislation applicable to
Provincial
Government. In this matter the decision was taken by an employee of
the city in his capacity as officer in charge. His
decision to
decline permission cannot amount to administrative action. It was an
action taken on an incorrect interpretation of
the By-Law.
[33] Mr Reggie
Moloi failed to determine if there was a dispute in terms of clause
8(3) of the By-Laws and could accordingly
not be said to have taken
an administrative decision. To cap it all in his last letter he in a
clear language says that he has
not refused to grant permission and
says that it is all about procedure. This once more cannot be said to
amount to administrative
action.
[34] The last
question to answer is who is the owner of the private rights over the
gravesite. As a starting point the respondent
in her application in
prayer 3 asked that the Appellants be ordered to amend their records
and register the respondents as the
person who also has rights to the
deceased grave.
[35] Two issues
arise out of the wording of that prayer, the first being that the
respondent did not ask that her sister in
law T[...] M[...] be
removed as “private owner” but that she also be
recognised as having rights over the gravesite.
In short, she is
prepared to co-own the private rights with the third respondent.
Secondly, the third respondent having received
the notice of motion
did not object to the prayer, this in my view should have signified
to the appellants that the third respondent
is prepared to co-own
private rights therefore no dispute existed calling for a
determination by the officer in charge.
[36] Clause 8(b) of
the By-Laws is clear and unambiguous, it says that a person who paid
the prescribed burial fees acquires
private rights over the grave. It
is uncontested that the respondent is the one who paid the prescribed
burial fees. If that was
not the case, why has contrary evidence not
been produce either by the appellants or T[...] M[...], their silence
means consent.
[37] In paragraphs
14,15 and 16 of her founding affidavit, the respondent set out how it
came about that she paid for the burial
fees. In response to that,
the appellant via Reggie Moloi say nothing about the payment of
burial fees. The deponent Moloi avoid
this by relying on the issue of
consent by T[...] M[...] which I have found not to be the
requirement.
[38] It is also
common cause that the respondent automatically became owner of the
contents of the grave by virtue of her
marriage in community of
property to the deceased that common law right could never be taken
away from her by virtue of a municipal
By-Law.
[39] In conclusion,
it is my view that the City’s argument was correctly summarised
by Adams J as being based on rigid
and inflexible approach and it is
to be regretted that the City took it upon itself to appeal this
decision at great expenses.
The respondent did not oppose the appeal
that does not mean that the City was right to appeal. She is probably
saving money.
[40] As the result,
I propose the following order:
a) The Appeal is
dismissed;
b) The Appellant
attorneys are not entitled to charge any fees in relation to this
appeal.
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
I agree
SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
I agree
MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
DATE OF
HEARING :
14 August 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT :
10 September 2024
APPEARANCES
FOR THE APPELLANTS:
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Adv Christopher Gibson
Messrs Moodie &
Robertson Inc
FOR THE RESPONDENT :
INSTRUCTED
BY:
(No Appearance)
(None)
[1]
1975
(2) SA 251 (E).
[2]
1965
(4) SA 174 (C).
[3]
1985
(3) SA 507
(T).
[4]
2000
(1) SA 328 (LCC).
[5]
Act
62 of 1997.
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