Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 856South Africa
D.M v B2P Funeral Services and Others (2023/071479) [2023] ZAGPJHC 856 (3 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## D.M v B2P Funeral Services and Others (2023/071479) [2023] ZAGPJHC 856 (3 August 2023)
D.M v B2P Funeral Services and Others (2023/071479) [2023] ZAGPJHC 856 (3 August 2023)
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sino date 3 August 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
2023/071479
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
03.08.23
In
the matter between:
D.M
Applicant
and
B2P
FUNERAL SERVICES
First
Respondent
N.N
Second
Respondent
S.N
Third
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, DM, says that he was the customary law husband
of ZN. ZN died of breast cancer on 15 July 2023. She was just forty
years old. No doubt numbed by grief, DM fell into a dispute with ZN’s
family about whether his committed and loving relationship
with ZN
was in fact a marriage, and about where ZN should be buried. These
are the issues that DM placed before me for determination
in my
urgent court during the week of 24 July 2023.
2
DM asked that I declare that he was married to ZN at customary
law. He also asked that I interdict and restrain the second and third
respondents, NN and SN, from removing ZN’s body from the
custody of the first respondent, B2P, and taking it to be buried
in
the Eastern Cape. It was DM’s wish that ZN be laid to rest in
Johannesburg, in a cemetery within what he said was easy
reach of the
five children he had with ZN. B2P abided my decision.
3
NN was ZN’s mother. SN was ZN’s sister. They
strongly disputed both that DM was married to ZN, and that ZN should
be
buried in Johannesburg. They wished to return ZN to the family
gravesite in the Eastern Cape. By the time the matter came before
me,
the parties were in the process of arranging two funerals – one
in the Eastern Cape and one in Johannesburg. Both funerals
were
scheduled to proceed on 29 July 2023. Counsel for both parties agreed
that, although DM claimed no more than an interdict
restraining the
transportation of ZN’s body to the Eastern Cape, and although
there was no counter-application for leave
to remove ZN’s body
there, what I was being asked to determine was which funeral should
go ahead, and where ZN’s final
resting place should be.
4
That the parties should have felt compelled to decide matters
in this way could only have compounded their pain and grief, and that
of those who knew and loved ZN. I am not one of those people, and it
is, in my view, profoundly sad that it should have fallen
to me to
issue the decision I was called upon to make.
5
Be that as it may, on 26 July 2023, I ordered that ZN’s
body be returned to the Eastern Cape and buried there. I also made
orders, to which NN and SN consented, directing NN and SN to take the
necessary steps to ensure that DM and his children with ZN
are given
full and unfettered access to the funeral and to ZN’s grave
site, for so long as they live. I directed that the
funeral in the
Eastern Cape be conducted as if DM was ZN’s customary law
husband. I postponed DM’s application for
an order declaring
him to be ZN’s husband
sine die
. Each party paid their
own costs. I indicated that my reasons would follow in due course.
These are my reasons.
The law
6
Sometimes, people make detailed provision for the manner and
location of their funeral in their wills. When they do not, and do
not otherwise make their wishes clear, the common law provides that
the right to bury accrues to their testate or intestate heirs,
or,
failing that, to what have been called “legitimate children or
blood relations” (see
Finlay v Kutoane
1993 (4) SA 675
(W) at 680D-I).
7
However, Judges of this Division have long been reluctant to
apply this set of priorities rigidly (see
Trollip v Du Plessis
2002 (2) SA 242
(W)). They have also, quite rightly, recognised that
the common law ought not to be applied in disputes concerning a
deceased individual
who has arranged their affairs according to
customary law, and who expects customary law to apply after their
death. In the context
of burial litigation, however, there are real
problems with ascertaining what customary law is in any particular
case, since the
content of that law will generally have to be proved,
sometimes by way of oral evidence. That sort of evidence is unlikely
to make
its way before a court in an urgent application, which is the
type of proceeding in which the right to bury is most often
contested.
8
It appears from some of the reported cases that litigants
seeking to assert burial rights often rush to court to obtain orders
dealing
with the deceased person’s marital status at the time
of their death (see, for example,
Thembisile v Thembisile
2002
(2) SA 209
(T)). They then argue that the right to bury accrues to
the customary law spouse if the marriage is proved, and to the
deceased
person’s family if it is not.
9
That seems to have been the approach in
LS v RL
2019
(4) SA 50
(GJ). However, in that matter, Mokgoathleng J declined to
tie the status of the applicant’s relationship with the
deceased
person to the right to bury them. Despite concluding that
the applicant had demonstrated the existence of a customary law
marriage,
Mokgoathleng J
found that, on the
facts of that particular case, the wishes of the deceased person’s
spouse had to yield to a broader public
and communal interest in
laying to rest an individual who was apparently an important public
figure. On the strength of that broader
communal interest, and on the
basis of a number of practical considerations he set out,
Mokgoathleng J refused the spouse’s
application to declare that they had the exclusive right to bury the
deceased.
10
It follows from all of this that, if there
ever was a strictly enforced common law approach to the question of
the right to bury
a deceased person, that approach has yielded to a
much suppler jurisdiction, which takes into account the wishes of the
deceased
person where these are known, the relationships between the
parties concerned, those parties’ relationships to the
deceased,
broader communal and familial expectations of the grieving
and funereal process, and such practical considerations as are
relevant
at the time the dispute about burial rights arises and is
adjudicated.
11
It seems to me that this sort of
flexibility is well-suited to decision-making in these types of
cases, the aim of which must be
to try to do the least harm. Ideally,
a Judge should not be making decisions about how a deceased person is
buried and memorialised.
That is primarily a decision for those who
knew and loved that person. But where a Judge must decide, it seems
to me that the law
ought to do no more than take into account the
right sorts of considerations, and come to a decision that is likely
to cause the
least aggravation of grief. This approach is, I think,
consistent with the constitutional requirement that the law promote
the
inherent dignity of all persons. In this context, that means the
dignity of the living and the dead (see section 10 of the
Constitution,
1996).
The facts of this case
12
The rules applicable to the ascertainment of relevant facts in
applications for final relief are, though, a good deal less
accommodating
than the flexible and dignity-sensitive approach I have
sketched out. This being an application for final relief, I am bound
to
decide the matter substantially on NN and SN’s version (see
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634I).
13
In this case, whether DM was ZN’s customary law husband
is hotly disputed both factually and legally. It was not disputed,
however, that DM and ZN were in a loving relationship for many years,
and that they had children together. That relationship ended
when ZN
died. There is also strong evidence on the papers that, whatever they
now say the legal situation is, ZN’s family
routinely referred
to themselves as DM’s “in-laws”, and conducted
themselves as if DM was ZN’s husband.
Against that factual
background, and for the purposes of this case, I do not think that it
matters whether their relationship can
be recognised as a customary
law marriage. DM was as close to ZN as any husband, and his wishes
about where ZN should be laid to
rest received as much weight in my
decision-making as they would have done had I been able to conclude
on the papers that he was
ZN’s customary law spouse.
14
There are two further facts that weighed with me, however. The
first was ZN’s wish, stated 8 days before she died, that she
wanted NN and SN to take her home with them to the Eastern Cape. Both
NN and SN understood that utterance, in the context, to mean
that she
wished to return to her familial home in the Eastern Cape to be
buried. ZN was so close to death she could not have thought
that
visiting the familial home while she was still alive was a realistic
prospect. ZN must have been referring to where she wanted
her final
resting place to be. In reply, DM relied on the hearsay allegation,
made under oath by an employee of B2P, that one of
DM and ZN’s
children had heard ZN say that she wanted to be buried in
Johannesburg. It is not clear where, when or in what
circumstances
this wish was apparently expressed.
Critically, DM
offered no evidence of his direct knowledge ZN’s wishes at
all.
15
The second fact is that NN and SN both alleged that, after
three meetings with DM to discuss the arrangements for the funeral,
DM
agreed that the funeral could take place in the Eastern Cape. In
reply, DM did not address that allegation, save to issue a bare
denial.
16
It follows that I must accept that ZN expressed a wish to be
taken home to the Eastern Cape, that this was understood to mean that
she wanted to be buried in the Eastern Cape, and that DM had agreed
that the funeral could take place in the Eastern Cape, after
engagement with ZN’s other immediate family.
17
The papers also disclose ZN’s strong connections to the
Eastern Cape, and her broader family’s expectation that she
would be buried there. There is a family plot which will accommodate
her. It stood to reason that ZN’s broader family would
more
easily be able to attend and participate in her funeral if it took
place in the Eastern Cape. For his part DM did not say
that he would
have any practical difficulty travelling to the Eastern Cape with his
and ZN’s children to attend the funeral.
His only concern was
that ZN’s family would try to exclude him. NN and SN denied
this. They tendered DM’s full participation
in the funeral, and
his full and unfettered access to ZN’s gravesite.
18
On a conspectus of all these facts, I found that the balance
of fairness tilted towards requiring the funeral to proceed in the
Eastern Cape. I appreciate that this may have caused DM further grief
and pain. However, in a case like this, my duty was to detect
where
the balance of fairness lay, applying the ordinary evidentiary tests.
It seemed to me that NN and SN had developed sincere
and keenly-held
expectations that ZN’s funeral would proceed in the Eastern
Cape, and that they genuinely believed that this
was her wish. DM
presented no real evidence to the contrary. I made orders requiring
that DM and his children with ZN be given
full access to that funeral
and to the gravesite afterwards. I required that the funeral be
conducted as if DM were ZN’s
customary law husband. This was,
in my view, the fairest outcome possible on these facts. But I accept
that “fair”
does not imply “perfect”.
19
For the reasons I have given, it was not ultimately necessary
to determine the validity of the customary law marriage that DM
alleged.
This is why DM’s application for relief declaring that
he was married to ZN at customary law was postponed
sine die
.
20
It was for these reasons that I made the orders relating to
ZN’s funeral that I handed down on 26 July 2023. May she rest
in peace.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was
prepared by Judge Wilson. It is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties or their legal representatives
by email,
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 3
August 2023.
HEARD ON: 26 July
2023
DECIDED ON: 26
July 2023
REASONS: 3 August 2023
For the Applicant:
M Shakung
Instructed by
Ndlovu Lebethe Attorneys
For the Second and
Third Respondents:
F
Ngqele
Instructed
by
Gardee
Godrich Attorneys
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