Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 800South Africa
Lindeni v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2022/23635) [2023] ZAGPJHC 800 (30 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 June 2023
Headnotes
at the applicant's family home. Her mother wrote to the deceased’s family, acknowledging the lobolo and expressing the family’s gratitude for the lobolo.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lindeni v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2022/23635) [2023] ZAGPJHC 800 (30 June 2023)
Lindeni v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2022/23635) [2023] ZAGPJHC 800 (30 June 2023)
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sino date 30 June 2023
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Permanent life partner –
Entitlement
to deceased estate
–
Avers
at the time of his demise, they were in a permanent life
partnership and had undertaken reciprocal duties of support
–
Whether winding up of deceased’s estate should be
interdicted – Parties lived together for three years
until
deceased’s demise – Deceased paid lobolo and a
celebration were attended by family and friends –
Partnership began whilst the valid marriage between deceased and
his erstwhile wife still subsisted – Deceased was
not
competent to conclude any marriage or permanent life partnership,
as he was still married to his erstwhile wife –
Applicant is
not a surviving permanent life partner of deceased – She has
not established any
prima facie
right
to deceased’s estate – Application dismissed –
Customary Marriages Act 25 of 1961, s 10(1).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO.:2022/23635
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT
REVISED
In the matter between:
SISTER
SISKASI LINDENI
Applicant
and
THE MASTER OF THE
HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
First
Respondent
LETHABO NTOKOZO
KEKANA
(In her capacity as
the appointed executrix in the
Deceased Estate
Refilwe Garven Kekana-
Estate
number:003855/2021)
Second
Respondent
LETHABO NTOKOZO
KEKANA
(In her capacity)
Third
Respondent
KEABETSWE
LETLHOGONO MOSUWE
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAZIBUKO AJ
1. The applicant seeks an
order declaring that she and the late Refilwe Garven Kekana (“the
deceased”) were partners
in a
permanent
life partnership in which they had undertaken reciprocal duties of
support and that the winding up of the deceased estate
number
003855/2021 be interdicted pending the lapsing of the suspension of
the orders made by the Constitutional Court in Bwanya
v Master of the
High Court, Cape Town and Others
[1]
,
which orders were suspended for a period not exceeding 18 months from
31 December 2021.
2.
The first respondent appointed the second respondent as an executrix.
The third respondent is the first daughter of the deceased.
The
fourth respondent is the deceased's second daughter, per the
applicant’s affidavit. The first and the fourth respondents
have not participated in the litigation.
Litigation history
3.
In February 2021, two applications were instituted under case numbers
2021/8494 and 2021/9136. Under case numbers 2021/8494,
it was an
urgent application by the second respondent seeking the following
relief: the applicant to disclose whether the deceased
had left a
will; be interdicted from damaging, disposing of, selling, using or
concealing any property situated at the immovable
property at
Midstream Estate, the property the applicant and the deceased shared
and that she be evicted from the immovable property.
4.
The applicant approached the court on an urgent basis, under case
number 2021/9136, seeking an order interdicting the respondent
from
executing the deceased’s estate, she be declared the deceased’s
surviving spouse, and the respondent be removed
as the executor and
that a marriage between her and the deceased be registered in terms
of the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998
and that
she be appointed executor. The court removed the application from the
urgent roll. Subsequently, the applicant withdrew
the application.
Applicant’s
case
5.
The applicant deposed to an affidavit. She stated that she and the
deceased met in November 2017, and they got involved in a
love
relationship. They agreed that they wanted a committed relationship
to grow old together and be separated by death. In March
2018, they
started living together. The deceased initiated the lobolo process by
his family sending a letter to the applicant’s
home. In May
2018, the deceased and his sister travelled to East London to meet
her family and paid lobolo in the amount of R19 000,
with an
outstanding amount of
R11 000
.
A celebration was held at the applicant's family home. Her mother
wrote to the deceased’s family, acknowledging the lobolo
and
expressing the family’s gratitude for the lobolo.
6.
In September 2018, there was a welcoming ceremony at the deceased’s
family home in Soshanguve and her mother and her friend
travelled
from East London to attend the celebration. Most of the deceased’s
family attended except for the respondent and
the fourth respondent,
who were not accepting of their relationship. After the lobolo
payment, they regarded themselves as husband
and wife. In December
2018, they went on a ship cruise to celebrate their love.
7.
In January 2019, they attended a marriage preparation class conducted
by Reverend Waqu of the Methodist Church, who had blessed
their
relationship in 2018. In May 2019, they acquired a family home in
Midstream Meadows, financed by the deceased. The applicant
contributed towards the upkeeping thereof. In the estate access
application, the applicant was listed as a resident. They brought
into the property furniture from their previous homes.
8.
Between July 2019 and August 2020, they bought items. They
transferred monies into each other’s accounts to purchase
household
items. In August 2020, the deceased performed a small
ritual in the house to introduce the new home to their respective
ancestors.
The ritual involved slaughtering chickens, lighting
candles and pouring liquor for the ancestors, burning incense,
speaking over
it and inviting both their ancestors to join and
protect their new home. They transferred monies into each other’s
accounts
to mutually support each other. They took a funeral cover
with Metropolitan Life Limited, in which the applicant was listed as
a plan owner and the deceased as a life partner.
In
March 2020
, the
respondent’s mother was granted a divorce from the deceased, to
whom she had been married since 1 July 1994. In January
2021, the
deceased died intestate.
9.
The applicant’s brother and Mr Pota Siquntu deposed to an
affidavit confirming the lobolo negotiations and celebration.
The
deceased’s sister confirms the existence of the customary
marriage between the applicant and the deceased. The deceased’s
mother stated in her affidavit that they see the applicant as their
daughter-in-law. Reverend Waqu also confirmed the pre-marital
classes
attended by the applicant and the deceased.
Respondent’s case
10. The respondent
refuted that the applicant was a partner in a lifetime partnership
with the deceased. She stated that the deceased
never made mention of
their lifetime partnership to her. The applicant was the deceased’s
girlfriend. Her mother was still
married to the deceased when the
lobolo negotiations were concluded. Therefore she cannot claim to be
the deceased’s surviving
spouse.
Issue
11. Were the applicant
and the deceased in a permanent life partnership at his demise?
Whether the facts establish a legally enforceable
duty of support
arising from a relationship akin to marriage. Whether the winding up
of the deceased’s estate should be interdicted
pending lapsing
of the suspension orders on the Bwanya decision.
Discussion
Permanent
life partnership
12. In the Bwanya case,
the Constitutional court extended the definition of a survivor in
section 1 of the Maintenance of Surviving
Spouses Act 27 of 1990 to
include the surviving partner of a permanent life partnership. That
of a spouse in section 1 of the Intestate
Succession Act, to include
a partner of a permanent life partnership as a spouse. Further,
marriage includes a permanent life partnership
in which the partners
undertake reciprocal support duties.
13. In Bwanya
[2]
,
the Constitutional court confirmed that the permanent life
partnership is akin to marriage. It further held:
“
The
factors developed by this Court towards establishing the existence of
permanent life partnerships in National Coalition for
Gay and Lesbian
Equality are—
“
the
respective ages of the partners; the duration of the partnership;
whether the partners took part in a ceremony manifesting their
intention to enter into a permanent partnership, what the nature of
that ceremony was and who attended it; how the partnership
is viewed
by the relations and friends of the partners; whether the partners
share a common abode; whether the partners own or
lease the common
abode jointly; whether and to what extent the partners share
responsibility for living expenses and the upkeep
for the joint home;
whether and to what extent one partner provides financial support for
the other; whether and to what extent
the partners have made
provision for one another in relation to medical, pension and related
benefits; whether there is a partnership
agreement and what its
contents are; and whether and to what extent the partners have made
provision in their wills for one another.”
14. The applicant placed
its reliance upon Bwanya and other relevant cases in that she was
entitled to the deceased’s estate
as, at the time of his
demise, they were in a permanent life partnership and had undertaken
the reciprocal duties of support. The
factors presented to the court
by the applicant in demonstrating the existence of the permanent life
partnership can be summarised
as follows; when the applicant and the
deceased got involved in a love relationship in November 2017, they
were 49 and 50 years
of age, respectively. At the time of the
deceased's demise, they had been together for about three years. They
lived together
from March 2018 until his demise in 2021 in the
property they bought together financed by the deceased.
15. They shared
responsibility for their financial support, living expenses and the
upkeep of their shared home. In May 2018, the
deceased paid lobolo
and a celebration were attended by family and friends. In September
2018, the deceased’s family held
a celebration ceremony at the
deceased’s home, welcoming the applicant to the deceased’s
family, attended by family
and friends. The deceased’s mother,
in her affidavit, averred that they accepted the applicant as their
daughter-in-law.
The applicant and the deceased presented themselves
as husband and wife and were regarded as such. They shared a funeral
cover
wherein the deceased was listed as a life partner. However, the
inquiry does not end here. The next question is whether the applicant
and the deceased were competent to enter a marriage or a permanent
life partnership.
16. All marriages,
including permanent life partnerships, are now equal in the eyes of
the law and enjoy recognition and acceptance
by the public.
Section
10(1) of the Customary Marriages Act provides that spouses to a
customary marriage “
are
competent to contract a marriage with each other under the Marriage
Act, 1961 (Act 25 of 1961) if neither of them is a spouse
in a
subsisting customary marriage with any other person”.
17.
In the case of Monyepao v Ledwaba and Others,
the appellant
(second wife) was married to the deceased in terms of customary law.
During the subsistence of the marriage, the deceased
was, however,
still married to his first wife in terms of customary law. On
marrying the second wife, the deceased and his first
wife never got
divorced but merely separated. The court found that the deceased’s
first marriage was still valid, and the
first wife can enjoy
patrimonial benefits.”
18. The evidence is that
in July 1994, the deceased married his erstwhile wife. In 2019 his
wife instituted divorce proceedings,
and they divorced in March 2020.
It was not the case of the applicant that she relied on the events
after the deceased’s
divorce in March 2020. What she, through
her counsel, Mr Phambuka, argued is that their relationship had been
in existence since
November 2017. All the celebrations of the lobolo
and the welcoming celebrations were between May 2018 and November
2018, not after
March 2020, during which the divorce order was
granted.
19. The divorce
proceedings only commenced in 2019, whereas the applicant and the
deceased were already attending pre-marital classes
between 2018 and
January 2019.
Since their
partnership began whilst, the valid marriage between the deceased and
his erstwhile wife still subsisted.
The fact that the
public, friends and family regarded and accepted them as married or
permanent life partners. Also, as partners
in the love relationship,
they regarded and conducted themselves as permanent life partners.
However, that does not make their
relationship equal to a
marriage
or a permanent life partnership to be considered partners
who
had undertaken reciprocal duties of support.
20.
The regard the deceased’s mother had towards the applicant, as
she averred that they accepted her as their daughter-in-law,
cannot
assist the applicant either. The deceased’s mother could not
have two daughters-in-law under the circumstances unless
the deceased
had chosen to involve the two women (the erstwhile wife and the
applicant) in a polygamous marriage and followed the
appropriate
steps and procedures as provided by the law.
21.
The divorce decree in March 2020 also did not assist the partners in
automatically validating their relationship, nor for the
applicant in
relying on that.
In
a period of ten months after the divorce, the deceased passed away
intestate.
What
the deceased’s divorce did was make him eligible and competent
for any form of marriage.
I
find no reason why the provisions of Section 10(1) of the Customary
Marriages Act and what the Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Monyepao v
Ledwaba
[3]
and others should not
find applicability to the partners in a
permanent
life partnership as same is akin to marriage. Accordingly, in
November 2017, the deceased was not competent to conclude
any
marriage or familial relationship, including the permanent life
partnership, as he was still married to his erstwhile wife,
which
marriage was only dissolved in March 2020.
The interdict
22.
The applicant also seeks an interim order interdicting the winding up
of the deceased’s estate pending the lapsing of
the suspension
of the orders made in Bwanya. Her counsel correctly laid down the
general grounds upon which the court may grant
an interim interdict
order. It is trite that one of the requirements for the interim
interdict is that the applicant must establish
a
prima
facie
right
even if same is open to some doubt. See
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo.
[4]
23. I
have already found that the applicant is not a surviving permanent
life partner in a permanent life partnership in which she
and the
deceased undertook reciprocal support duties for the abovementioned
reasons. I agree with counsel on behalf of the respondent,
Mr Mudau,
that the applicant would lose nothing in terms of the Maintenance of
Surviving Spouses Act and the Intestate Succession
Spouses Act, as
she has not been able to establish any
prima
facie
right in relation to the
deceased’s estate emanating from the familial relationship
between herself and the deceased. The
evidence is that when the
applicant moved out of the residence she shared with the deceased,
she removed some household goods.
I, accordingly, find that the
applicant has no claim against the estate of the deceased, nor has
she any right to inherit.
Costs
24. Regarding the costs
of the application, the applicant, as well as the respondent, asked
that the application be granted or dismissed
with costs.
In
matters of costs, the general rule is that the successful party
should be given
their costs, and this rule
should not be departed from except where there are
reasonable
grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful
party or other
exceptional circumstances.
25. The applicant
initially brought an application for the court to declare that her
relationship with the respondent was a customary
marriage. The same
was withdrawn on legal advice. She then brought the present
application. The court did not get the impression
that she was
vindictive or malicious in bringing the same. No fault or misconduct
on the applicant's part in bringing the application
could be
established. This court’s respectful view is that there is no
justification to award costs in favour of the respondent
against the
applicant.
26. Accordingly, I intend
to grant an order for costs against the estates of the deceased.
27. Consequently, the
following order is granted.
Order:
1.
The applicant’s
application
declaring that she and the late Refilwe
Garven Kekana (“the deceased”) were partners in a
permanent life
partnership in which they had undertaken reciprocal support duties is
hereby dismissed.
2.
The
applicant’s
application
for an interim order interdicting
the
winding up of the deceased estate number 003855/2021 pending the
lapsing of the suspension of the orders made by the Constitutional
Court in Bwanya v Master of the High Court, Cape Town and Others,
which orders were suspended for a period not exceeding 18 months
from
31 December 2021, is hereby dismissed.
3.
The
estate number 003855/2021 of the late
Refilwe Garven
Kekana
is to bear the
application costs.
N. MAZIBUKO
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa
Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg
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 14:00 on 30 June 2023.
Date of hearing: 20
April 2023
Date of Judgment:
30 June 2023
Appearances:
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv
N. Phambuka
Attorneys
for the applicant:
Mketsu
Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Mr
RV Mudau
Attorneys
for the Respondent:
Nkosi
Nkosana Attorneys
[1]
(CCT
241/20)
[2021] ZACC 51
; 2022(4) BCLR 410 (CC); 2022(3) SA 250 (CC)
(31 December 2021)
[2]
Bwanya,
para 76
[3]
(SCA) (unreported case no 1368/18, 27-5-2020)
[4]
1914 AD 221
, para 227
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