Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 924South Africa
P.N and Others v P.N (104659/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 924 (18 September 2024)
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 924
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## P.N and Others v P.N (104659/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 924 (18 September 2024)
P.N and Others v P.N (104659/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 924 (18 September 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_924.html
sino date 18 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 –
Choice
to cremate
–
Surviving
spouse choosing to have deceased cremated according to his wishes
– Mother and minor children wishing for
burial –
Contending that burial method accords with Zulu customs and
culture – Not having legally enforceable
rights – No
basis to rely on Constitutional rights relating to children and
cultural rights – Surviving spouse
takes over responsibility
for body of deceased – Application by mother and on behalf
of children dismissed.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 104659/2022
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
N[…];
P[…]
First
Applicant
S[…];
K[…] obo
S[…]:
O[…] AND
S[…];
L[…]
Second
Applicant
and
N[…];
P[…]
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
10: 00 am on 16 September 2024.
Summary:
An urgent interdict seeking to
restraint the holder of burial rights to exercise the preferred
method of disposing of the body of
her deceased husband following the
wish of the deceased. It was alleged by the surviving spouse that the
deceased had expressed
the wish to have his dead body be cremated as
opposed to being buried. The mother and the minor children of the
deceased are opposed
to that wish as relayed by the surviving spouse.
Where the burial rights are not
contested, the possessor of those rights has the right to decide what
form the disposition of the
corpse should take. Flowing from the
rested intestate legal principles, the surviving spouse enjoys
stronger rights than that of
children and parents of the deceased.
Since the legal position is clear, it is unnecessary to issue any
declaration of rights.
In seeking to dispose of the body through
cremation method, the surviving spouse is not acting unlawfully and
an interdict as a
special remedy is unavailable. Held: (1) The
application is dismissed. Held: (2) The first and the second
applicants are ordered
to pay the costs of the respondent, jointly
and severally, the one paying absolving the other, to be taxed or
settled on a party
and party scale B.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
Aptly identified, the present contestation
involves the method of exercising what is now known as burial rights.
Up to now, there
are three known methods to dispose of the corpse.
Those are (a) burial; (b) cremation; (c) aquamation. The most popular
method
amongst the Africans is the burial method. This method entails
placing the deceased’s body six-feet underground in a coffin
and covering it over with soil. The other method which is also
gaining traction amongst the Africans is the cremation. This method
entails the burning of a body to ashes. The fairly new method is one
of aquamation. This method entails the use of alkaline water
solution
to slowly and gently break down the body into a powder-like substance
similar to cremated ashes.
[2]
In the present motion, the applicants, Ms P[...]
N[…], the mother of the deceased and Ms K[…] on behalf
of the two
minor children (O[…] and L[…]) prefer and or
insist on the burial method. They contend that the burial method
accords
with the Zulu customs and culture. The deceased was allegedly
a staunch supporter of Zulu customs and traditions. The respondent,
Ms P[…] N[…], the surviving spouse, allegedly following
the wishes of the deceased, prefers and insists on the cremation
method.
[3]
Over and above the competing rights issue, this
motion pits methods of burial against cremation. From a biblical
point of view,
the Holy scripture states:
“
By the sweat
of your brow you will eat food until
you
return to the ground
since
from it you were taken; for dust you are and
to
dust you will return
.”
[1]
[4]
Proponents of both methods use Genesis 3:19 to
support the burial and the cremation method. Seemingly, the phrase
return to the
ground supports the burial and to dust you will return
supports the cremation method. Having said that, this judgment will
not
seek to elevate one method over another. It is not concerned with
the question of which of the methods is morally acceptable and
defensible. This judgment will concern itself with who has the right
to choose a method. The peripheral issues of rights guaranteed
in
section 28 and 30 of the Constitution may be touched on since the
applicant attempted to bring those rights into the fold.
Background facts pertinent to the
present application
[5]
The deceased, identified only in the notice of
motion as Mr M[…] N[…], was married to the respondent
Ms P[…]
N[…] (surviving spouse) by civil rights on or
about 11 February 2017. The deceased and the surviving spouse lived
together
as husband and wife at 6 Vlak street; Meerdale; Johannesburg
(the matrimonial home). Although for reason that appear flimsy, the
applicants, conveniently labelled the surviving spouse as the
estranged wife. I interpose to mention that a person is estranged
if
as a wife or husband is no longer living with their spouse. In
casu
,
it is undisputed that the deceased and the surviving spouse lived
under the same roof as husband and wife until the demise of
the
deceased.
[6]
In
a weak attempt to bolster the alleged estrangement, the applicants
conveniently alleged that before his death, the deceased had
expressed to his mother, uncle and attorney of record his intention
to divorce the surviving spouse. The applicants were so brazen
to
even suggest that divorce summons were issued but the surviving
spouse refused to accept service thereof, yet a copy of the
issued
summons was not availed to this Court.
[7]
Nevertheless, on 8 September 2024, the deceased
left the matrimonial home to visit a place identified in the papers
as
Mai-Mai
.
In due course, the surviving spouse received a call from the friend
of the deceased to come to
Mai-Mai
because the deceased has been shot. Indeed, the
deceased was shot and he died because of the bullet wound. Later, the
family gathered
to arrange the funeral of the deceased. In the family
meeting, the surviving spouse mentioned to all present that the
deceased
had expressed to him, and at some stage in the presence of
the minor children not born between the deceased and the surviving
spouse,
that upon his death he wished to have his body cremated
instead of being buried.
[8]
The family did not expressly object to the wish
but sought an undertaking from the surviving spouse to have the ashes
released to
them for burial. The surviving spouse did not provide
such an undertaking there and then. As a result, a cremation process
was
scheduled to take place on 13 September 2024. Owing to the
request to perform certain rituals before the cremation could take
place,
the cremation was rescheduled to 17 September 2024. Unbeknown
to the surviving spouse, on 14 September 2024, the applicants
launched
the present application and enrolled it for hearing on 15
September 2024. Indeed, the application was argued before me from
19H00
hours on that evening. Judgment on the matter was reserved.
Analysis
[9]
In motion proceedings, an applicant stands and
fall by its case made out in the founding papers. It being the case
the other party
is called upon to meet. Such that a party is not
permitted to make out a case in reply. In
casu
,
only two sets of affidavits were delivered. A belated attempt was
made, when the shoe was really pinching, by the applicants to
be
indulged to deliver a replying affidavit. Correctly, this
opportunistic belated attempt was resisted by the surviving spouse.
In an
ex-tempore
,
this Court dispensed with a ruling dismissing the request to deliver
the replying affidavit.
[10]
Other than seeking urgent audience in terms of
Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules, the applicants sought the following
prayers:
a.
It
is declared that the First and/or Second Applicant is entitled to
arrange the burial of the body of the late M[…] N[…]
(“
the deceased
”
);
b.
Alternatively (to paragraph a above), it is
declared that the First and/or Second Applicants are entitled to
determine whether the
body of the deceased will be buried or
cremated;
c.
The
Respondent is interdicted and restrained from arranging the funeral
or burial of the deceased;
d.
Alternatively (to paragraph c above), the
Respondent is interdicted and restrained from disposing the body of
the deceased by way
of cremation and that the Respondent is ordered
to bury the body of the deceased at the recognised public cemetery;
e.
Any
funeral undertaker or any person in possession of the body of the
deceased is authorised to release the body to the First Applicant;
f.
It
is declared that the First Applicant is entitled to take possession
of the body of the deceased for purposes of arranging its
burial.
[11]
Regard being had to
the notice of motion, the applicants are essentially seeking
declaratory and interdictory reliefs as well as
concomitant orders.
With regard to declaratory relief, the law is settled.
Corbett
CJ in
Shoba
v OC Temporary Police Camp, Wagendrift Dam
[2]
laid the following
principle with regard to declaratory reliefs:
“
An existing
or concrete dispute between persons is not a prerequisite for the
exercise by the Court of its jurisdiction under this
subsection,
though the absence of such may, depending on the circumstances cause
the Court to refuse to exercise its jurisdiction
in a particular case
… But because it is not the
function
of the Court to act as an advisor, it is a requirement of the
exercise of jurisdiction under this subsection that there
should be
interested parties upon whom the declaratory order would be binding
…”
[12]
In
Proxi
Smart Services (Pty) Ltd v The Law Society of SA and Others
[3]
,
the Court, correctly, in my view, held that a Court will not grant a
declaratory order where the issue raised before it is hypothetical,
abstract and academic, or where the legal position is clearly defined
by statute.
[13]
With regard to
burial rights and/or rights to dispose of a body of a deceased person
the law was settled by this Court in
Sengadi
v Tsambo (Tsambo High Court)
[4]
which was confirmed by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Tsambo
v Sengadi
[5]
.
In
Tsambo
High Court
,
the following was laid down:
“
The
applicant as the customary law wife of the deceased … is
entitled to bury her customary law marriage husband, the deceased”
[6]
[14]
More recently, this
Court per Phooko AJ in
Simakuhle
v Simakuhle
and
Another
(
Simakuhle
)
[7]
aptly restated the
law thus:
“
In my view,
the First Respondent, as the wife to the deceased, has burial rights
and
may
decide
where
her late husband should be buried.”
[15]
This Court is in
full agreement with
Simakuhle
and do add that
possession of burial rights extend to the right to decide on the
method through which the body of the deceased may
be disposed of.
Differently put, regard being had to the law of intestate succession,
the surviving spouse is first in line to
decide what to do with the
body of the deceased
[8]
.
The children and the parents of the deceased are second and third in
line. The concept of burial rights is not limited to one
disposal
method but it applies to all known disposal methods. Thus, for the
present purposes, the surviving spouse has cremation
rights. In order
to cement this trite common law position, Professor G.H.I Friedman in
his work
Restitution
[9]
stated the
following:
“
The
primary responsibility for insuring the burial of a deceased person
falls on the personal representative of the deceased
,
who will in turn be entitled to an indemnity for expenses in this
regard out of the estate as a first charge…
Thus,
the surviving spouse will be responsible for the burial of a spouse,
and the parent for the burial of a child in the absence
of a
surviving spouse.
[16]
Accordingly, the surviving spouse takes over the
overall responsibility for the body of the deceased. If the surviving
spouse decides,
as in this case, to dispose of the body of the
deceased, through the cremation method, there is no basis in law to
prevent the
surviving spouse from doing so. Therefore, since the
legal position is clear with regards to burial rights, it is
unnecessary to
grant a declaratory relief. This right was actually
recognised by the applicants. In the founding affidavit the following
evidence
is laid bare:
“
31.I pray
that this honourable Court take into account that
despite
her right to bury the deceased by virtue of their marriage
,
she does not have the
right
to cremate of the body of the deceased against the culture,
traditions and believe of his family and children, as entrenched
in
the Constitution.
[17]
Apropos
, the
above allegation, the applicants contends that cremation as a method
of disposing the deceased’s body clashes with two
fundamental
rights, thus unlawful. This Court does not agree. As a departure
point, the applicants have no right to exercise any
burial rights. In
exercising her rights, the surviving spouse is not acting unlawfully.
[18]
Since the decision
of
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
[10]
,
the discretionary remedy of interdict existed to prevent any
continuation of unlawfulness. More recently, the Constitutional Court
in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[11]
,
felicitously stated the law as follows:
“
An interdict
is an order by a court prohibiting or compelling the doing of a
particular act for the purposes of
protecting
legally enforceable right
,
which is threatened by continuing or anticipated harm…
In
granting an interdict, the court
must exercise its discretion
judicially upon consideration of all
the facts and circumstances. An interdict is “not a remedy for
the past invasion of
rights: it is concerned with the present and the
future”. The past invasion should be addressed by an action of
damages.
An interdict is appropriate only when future injury is
feared.”
[19]
The applicants do not have the legally enforceable
rights. In a feeble attempt to generate such rights, the applicants
seek to rely
on two constitutional rights. There is no legal basis to
rely on these peripheral rights. This Court says so for the reasons
that
follow.
The rights of the minor children
[20]
None of the rights of the minor children as
protected in section 28 of the Constitution are implicated by the
choice of the disposal
method. During oral argument, Mr Pheto, who
appeared on behalf of the applicants, submitted that section
28(1)(f)(ii) of the Constitution
is contravened by using the disposal
method. Far from it. The section primarily deals with work and
provision of services. A child
is protected from performing work or
provide services that will place at risk the child’s
well-being, education, physical
or mental health or spiritual, moral
or social development. In this case, there is no work or provision of
services involved. On
this simple basis, this peripheral and not so
well orchestrated argument, stands to fail.
Cultural rights
[21]
Section 30 of the
Constitution deals with denial of cultural rights. As indicated
earlier, the applicants do not possess any burial
rights. There is no
clear cultural rights demonstrated in this Court that the Zulu nation
does not cremate. On the contrary, the
surviving spouse presented
uncontested evidence that in the immediate family of the deceased,
three deceased bodies were cremated.
The onus rested on the
applicants to establish the alleged culture against cremation. That
notwithstanding, it remains undisputed
that the surviving spouse in
no unclear terms expressed the wishes of the deceased to the family.
This is what Mr Khanyile
[12]
refers to as
Intando
KaMufi
–
loosely
translated as the likes of the deceased.
[22]
On application of the
Plascon-Evans
principle, this Court must accept that in the Zulu
culture, the likes of the deceased are accommodated. On the balance
of probabilities,
although there might be negative attitude towards
cremation as a disposal method, based on the
Intando
KaMufi
practice, the culture does
accommodate cremation. Howbeit, in exercising her burial rights, the
surviving spouse is not denying
any person to enjoy their culture.
Thus, the provision of section 30, peripheral as it may be, has not
been breached in any manner
whatsoever.
The issue of estrangement
[23]
Counsel for the
applicants placed reliance on authorities
[13]
which suggest that
where the surviving spouse is estranged to the deceased, the burial
rights are lost. Although this Court does
not share similar
sentiments with regard to the loss of burial rights as a result of
estrangement, this Court takes a view that
those cases relied upon
are distinguishable. In
casu
the deceased and
the surviving spouse shared a matrimonial home. Their marriage
relationship did not exist on paper only. Until
the last day, the
deceased and the surviving spouse lived as a husband and wife. The
uncontested evidence of the surviving spouse
is that on the fateful
day, the deceased left from the matrimonial home. This alleged and
disputed divorce intention is not predicated
on anything. If indeed
there were divorce summons issued but not served, a copy thereof
ought to have been availed by the attorney
of record to the Court.
[24]
With regard to the authorities relied on, this
Court takes a view that what generates the burial rights as they are
commonly known,
is the existence of the marriage. In law a marriage
is terminated by either a decree of divorce or death. As at the time
of death,
the deceased and the surviving spouse were still married.
Thus, to my mind, the burial rights remain intact even if
estrangement
enters the fray. One of the grounds for divorce is the
irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. Warring married parties do
sometimes
reach a reconciliation, even at the doorsteps of a divorce
Court.
[25]
Those cases that
accommodated the loss of burial rights did so under the banner of
fairness and reasonableness principle. Supposedly
obtaining
fortification from Flemming DJP in
Finlay
and Another v Kutoane
[14]
.
To my mind,
although in this particular instance, given the undisputed facts of
this case, there is no basis for this Court to attempt
the fairness
and reasonableness approach, where a Court develops the common law, a
Court must seek guidance from section 39(2)
of the Constitution. The
rule that the surviving spouse retains the burial rights, is a common
law rule. What is apparent to this
Court is that the role
contemplated in section 39(2) is to develop and not to reject or
refuse to apply the common law. What section
39(2) contemplates is
that the first step a Court must take is to decide whether the common
law requires development. Development
entails growth or advancement.
Once that decision is made, then a Court must do so by promoting the
spirit, purport and objects
of the Bill of Rights.
[26]
The critical
question will always be whether the common law rule requires
development or not. Should that key question be answered
in the
negative, in my view, then the default position that, it is the duty
of a Court to apply the law as opposed to make the
law, must
apply
[15]
.
When two legally enforceable rights compete, fairness and
reasonableness may be drawn in to see which right must be upheld and
which one must suffer
[16]
.
Where a family member and a surviving spouse compete over burial
rights, there are no competing rights
per
se
but
competing stakes over the exercise of one right; namely; the burial
right. In my view, the family members when compared with
a surviving
spouse do not enjoy burial rights of the deceased spouse. Only a
surviving spouse enjoys the burial rights. Resultantly,
in my view,
there are no two competing rights, which require application of the
fairness and reasonableness principle, which itself
is a common law
principle. What obtains is the stake to exercise one legal right.
Often the question is who must exercise the right
and not which right
is superior. For all the above reasons this attempted
estrangement basis stands to fail.
Criminal investigations
[27]
Lastly, a fanciful argument suggesting that the
cremation will interfere with criminal investigations was attempted.
This argument
is not only fanciful but it is also too speculative. It
speculates vagaries in the murder investigation. On the applicant’s
own version, the deceased was shot and he died as a result of the
bullet wound. There cannot be speculations as to how the deceased
passed. The argument that the criminal investigations may require
exhumation is not only fanciful but it is also preposterous given
the
undisputed manner in which the deceased died. He was shot and he died
as a result of the bullet wound. Why would there be a
need to exhume?
This basis to oppose the exercise of the accrued burial rights must
also fail.
Conclusion
[35]
For all the above reasons, the application must
fail. With regard to costs, this Court has a wide discretion.
Punitive costs are
not warranted. However, party and party costs
order on a scale B is warranted in this matter.
Order
1
The
application is dismissed.
2
The
applicants are ordered to jointly and severally, the one paying
absolving the other, pay the costs of this application on a
party and
party scale to be taxed or settled at scale B.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicants:
Mr A M Pheto
Instructed
by:
Lumbiwa Leotlela & Assoc Inc
For
Respondent:
Mr Bobison-Opoku
Date of the
hearing:
15 September 2024
Date of
judgment:
18 September 2024
[1]
Genesis 3:19 New
International Version Bible
[2]
1995 (4) SA 1
(A) at
14F-I
[3]
Case 74313/16 dated 16
May 2018.
[4]
2019 (4) SA 50 (GJ)
[5]
(244/19)
[2020] ZASCA 46
(30 April 2020)
[6]
Tsambo
High Court
at
para 41
[7]
[2024] ZAGPPHC 33 at
para 36
[8]
See
Mahala
v Nkombombini and Another
2006
(5) SA 524
(SE) at para 14
[9]
Carswell 2
nd
ed
,
1992 at 279-80
[10]
1914 AD 221.
[11]
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC) at
para 47-48
[12]
A dissertation by
Khayelihle Mnguni for an LLM degree:
A
Study to explore the impact cremation against the Zulu people’s
cultural belief system
2021
University of Kwa-Zulu Natal.
[13]
Dumisa and Another v
Dumisa and Another
(3763/2021)
[2021] ZAGPJHC 21 (9 February 2021) and the authorities cited
therein.
[14]
1993 (4) 675 (W)
[15]
Section 165(2) of the
Constitution provides that the Courts are independent and subject
only to the Constitution and the law,
which
they
must apply
impartially
and without fear, favour or prejudice.
[16]
See for an example
Magna
Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
[1984] ZASCA 116
;
1984
(4) SA 874
(A)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
P. v Housing Development Agency (21/50612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 234 (4 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 234High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
N.M v P.M and Others (22/1716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 644 (9 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 644High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
P.M and Others v S (A59/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 875 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 875High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Louw (2023/068293) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1114; [2025] 1 All SA 744 (GJ) (1 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1114High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South Africa Municipal Workers Union v Mahlomoyane and Other (2023/014975) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1175 (12 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1175High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar