Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 5South Africa
Lijane v Kekana and Others (21/43942) [2023] ZAGPJHC 5 (3 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 January 2023
Headnotes
HEADNOTE: LABOUR –INTERRACIAL CUSTOMARY MARRIAGE
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lijane v Kekana and Others (21/43942) [2023] ZAGPJHC 5 (3 January 2023)
Lijane v Kekana and Others (21/43942) [2023] ZAGPJHC 5 (3 January 2023)
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sino date 3 January 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
HEADNOTE: LABOUR
–INTERRACIAL CUSTOMARY MARRIAGE
Family
– Marriage – Customary – Interracial marriages
under customary law – Between Black man and
Coloured woman –
Application of customary law not confined to one racial group
–
Recognition
of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998
.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### CASE
NUMBER: 21/43942
CASE
NUMBER: 21/43942
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
3
January 2023
In
the matter between:
GEORGE
MONAMODI LIJANE
Applicant
and
SOLOMON
KEKANA
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
BRONWIN
CEALIN SAULS
Third
Respondent
MBALENHLE
LUZERENE SAULS
Fourth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant, Mr. Lijane, seeks a declaration that he entered
into a valid customary marriage with Gracious Katrinah Sauls
on 27
and 28 August 2016.
Gracious
Sauls died on 26 June 2021,
but
the first respondent, Mr. Kekana, together with the third respondent,
Bronwin Sauls, and the fourth respondent, Mbalenhle Sauls,
oppose the
application. Mr. Kekana was the Sauls family’s principal
representative in the negotiations that led to
the marriage Mr.
Lijane alleges. Bronwin and Mbalenhle Sauls are Gracious Sauls’
two children from a previous relationship.
2
The second respondent, the Minister of Home Affairs, is joined
because an order is sought directing him to register the
putative
marriage. The Minister has given notice that he abides the relief
sought, and has not otherwise participated in this application.
3
Section 1
, read with
section 2
(2), of the
Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act 120 of 1998
says that any marriage “concluded in
accordance with customary law” after the Act’s
commencement (on 15 November
2000) is a marriage “for all
purposes”. Under
section 3
(1) of the Act, a customary marriage
is “valid” if the prospective spouses are both over 18
years old; if they have
both consented “to be married to each
other under customary law”; and if the marriage is “negotiated
and entered
into or celebrated in accordance with customary law”.
4 There
is no dispute between the parties that Mr. Lijane and Gracious Sauls
were in a long-term, loving and committed relationship.
Nor is there
any dispute that they were both over the age of 18 on 27 August 2016,
and that they intended to marry each other according
to customary law
on that date.
5
The dispute between the parties concerns whether the marriage they
contracted was in fact “
negotiated
and entered into or celebrated in accordance with customary law”.
The respondents contend not. I address each of
their arguments in
support of that contention below.
The
alleged absence of a “handing-over” ceremony
6
First, it is
contended that what is referred to in the respondents’ papers
as “the Basotho tradition of go-shobedisa”
was not
performed. The respondents deploy that term in the sense of a ritual
“handing-over” of the bride to the groom’s
family.
For reasons that are not entirely clear to me from their answering
papers, the respondents contend that this did not happen.
As a
result, so the respondents contend, the customary marriage Mr. Lijane
alleges could not have come into existence.
7
There is no dispute
that there was a meeting between Mr. Lijane’s and Gracious
Saul’s respective families on 27 and
28 August 2016 during
which at least some customary marriage rites were performed. It is
less clear whether there was a “handing-over”
of the
nature the respondents suggest is necessary, but I need not make a
finding on that issue. In
LS
v RL
2019
(4) SA 50
(GJ), my brother Mokgoathleng J held that the practice of
“handing-over” the bride to the groom’s family can
no longer be considered a prerequisite for the validity of a
customary marriage. I am bound to follow his decision unless I think
that it is clearly wrong. The decision in
LS
in fact strikes me as
entirely correct, and I agree with it for substantially the reasons
Mokgoathleng J gives.
8
In any event, in
Mbungela v
Mkabi
2020
(1) SA 41
(SCA), the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the
handing-over of a bride “cannot be placed above the couple's
clear volition
and intent where . . . their families . . . were
involved in, and acknowledged, the formalisation of their marital
partnership
and did not specify that the marriage would be validated
only upon bridal transfer” (at paragraph 30). Accordingly,
whatever
its status in the customary law of marriage, the absence of
a “handing-over” ceremony does not invalidate a customary
marriage which the spouses and their families have otherwise
recognised as a marriage.
9
It follows that the
respondent’s first objection to the validity of the customary
marriage alleged must fail.
The
adornment of the bride in traditional costume
10
The respondents’
second contention relates to whether Gracious Sauls was dressed in
Basotho traditional clothing by Mr. Lijane’s
family, or whether
Ms. Sauls dressed herself. Although the papers are, again, somewhat
obscure on this point, the respondents appear
to suggest that the
marriage was not valid because Gracious Sauls dressed herself in
Basotho costume rather than being dressed
by Mr. Lijane’s
family. I was not referred to any evidence or authority for the
proposition that it makes any difference
to the validity of a
marriage by Basotho custom who dresses the bride in traditional
clothing. It seems to me that the critical
and uncontested fact is
that Gracious Sauls was dressed in traditional costume on the day of
the wedding alleged. Whether that
is itself a requirement for the
validity of the marriage is also a matter on which no evidence was
presented. However, it would
require the strongest evidence to
persuade me that the integrity of an otherwise valid customary
marriage could turn on such a
minor detail as who dresses the bride
in traditional garb.
11
There being no
evidence – whether weak or strong – of the possibility
that Gracious Sauls dressing herself in traditional
clothes could
have been anything more serious than a minor ritual error, the
respondents’ second objection to the validity
of the marriage
must also fail.
Lobolo
12
The third point the
respondents raise is the non-payment of
lobolo
.
Mr. Lijane says that the Sauls family “refused to accept
lobolo
on the basis that
they were of Coloured origin and were not practicing the
lobolo
tradition”.
However, the papers do not bear that out. A written agreement between
the Lijane and the Sauls families is annexed
to the founding papers.
It is signed by Mpho Dijane, a representative of the Lijane family,
and by Mr. Kekana, in his capacity
as a representative of the Sauls
family. Neither its authenticity nor the truth of its contents have
been placed in dispute.
13
The note declares
that both families affirm the decision of Mr. Lijane and Gracious
Sauls to marry according to customary law, and
that Mr. Lijane will
compensate (“vergoed”) the Sauls family in the sum of
R10 000 for the marriage (“vir
die toekomende huwelik
tradiesioneel”). Read in the context of all the surrounding
circumstances, that seems to me to be
an offer and acceptance of
lobolo
.
There is no evidence before me relating to whether the amount was
actually paid, but that there was an agreement to pay can scarcely
be
disputed. It seems, at worst for Mr. Lijane, that a payment was
agreed, but that the Sauls family did not accept the money as
lobolo
,
but as some form of dowry or contribution to the costs of the
wedding.
14
Accordingly, the respondents’ third objection amounts to this:
lobolo
was offered, and a payment of R10 000 was agreed. If that amount
was ever actually transferred to the Sauls family, it was
not
accepted as
lobolo
,
but as something else. For that reason, the marriage Mr. Lijane
alleges cannot be a valid customary marriage.
15
I think this objection must fail for the same reasons as the
objection based on the alleged absence of a “handing-over”.
As the Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Mbungela
,
the absence of a “handing-over” ceremony could only
matter to the validity of a customary marriage if the families
of the
prospective spouses had thought that the marriage would not be valid
without one. So it is with
lobolo
– at least in this case, where, on the best analysis, the
Lijanes offered a
lobolo
payment, the Sauls accepted the payment as something else, but
neither family thought that they were conducting anything other
than
a “
huwelik
tradiesioneel”.
The
validity of interracial marriages under customary law
16
The respondents finally contended that interracial marriages cannot
be contracted under customary law. Mr. Lijane is an
African man.
Gracious Sauls was a Coloured woman. As a matter of law, this, it was
contended, rendered a customary marriage impossible.
17
In support of this far-reaching proposition, Ms. Joubert, who
appeared for the respondents, offered a creative argument
based on
statutory interpretation. The first step in that argument was to
point out that that the
Recognition of Customary Marriages 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 culture of those peoples”. It
was then contended that, because customary law must involve
customs
forming part of the culture of indigenous African people, Coloured
people, not being “indigenous Africans”
are not persons
to whom customary law applies.
18
The basic flaw in this argument is that the Act makes clear that
indigeneity and culture are attributes of customary laws
themselves,
not the people who choose to be governed by them. The Act has nothing
at all to say about whether a Coloured person
can contract a marriage
under customary law, so long as those laws have their origins in
indigenous African cultural practices.
Were that basic textual
observation not enough to reject Ms. Joubert’s argument (it
is), I would be bound to point out that
I must interpret the Act in
accordance with the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights
(section 39 (2) of the Constitution,
1996). There could be little
more destructive of that spirit than to confine the application of
customary law to one racial group.
19
These conclusions render it unnecessary for me to address the
startling assertion that Coloured people do not count as
either
“indigenous” or “African”. But perhaps the
less that is said about that proposition, the better.
20
Accordingly, I reject the argument that interracial marriages may not
be contracted under customary law.
Costs
21
Mr. Lijane is plainly entitled to the relief he seeks, and there is
no reason why costs should not follow the result. The
respondents
accepted throughout that Mr. Lijane and Gracious Sauls intended to
marry, that they were of the necessary age and legal
capacity to do
so, and that they and their families intended to conclude a union
according to Basotho tradition. That really should
have been the end
of the matter.
22
For all these reasons, I make the following order –
22.1
The customary marriage entered into between GEORGE MONAMODI LIJANE
(ID No: [....]) and GRACIOUS KATRINAH SAULS (ID No:
[....]) on 27 and
28 August 2016 is declared valid.
22.2
The second respondent is directed, in terms of
section 4
(7) (a) of
the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998
, to register
the marriage.
22.3
The first, third and fourth respondents are directed, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved,
to pay the costs
of this application.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 3
January 2023.
HEARD
ON:
23
November 2022
DECIDED
ON:
3
January 2023
For
the Applicant:
K
Ntsewa
Instructed
by
Moloko
Mokobi Attorneys
For
the First, Third and Fourth
M
Joubert
Respondents:
Instructed
by
Ndzondo
Kunene Mosia Inc
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