Netshituka v Netshituka and Others (426/10) [2011] ZASCA 120; 2011 (5) SA 453 (SCA); [2011] 4 All SA 63 (SCA) (20 July 2011)

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Brief Summary

Customary Law — Validity of marriage — Appellant sought to declare the marriage between the first respondent and the deceased null and void, arguing it was invalid due to the deceased's existing customary marriages — The court found that the civil marriage contracted during the subsistence of the customary unions was invalid under section 22(1) of the Black Administration Act 38 of 1927 — The appeal was upheld in part, declaring the marriage null and void and setting aside the costs order of the court below.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal from the Limpopo High Court (Thohoyandou), in proceedings initially brought by members of the deceased’s family seeking declaratory relief affecting marital status and succession.


The appellant, Rudzani Netshituka, had been the third applicant in the court of first instance. The first respondent, Joyce Munyadizwa Netshituka, opposed the relief and asserted rights flowing from a civil marriage to the deceased. The third respondent was cited as the Estate of Masewa Joseph Netshituka (the deceased estate), and the application in the court below was opposed by the first and third respondents. Other respondents included the Master of the High Court and additional family members, as well as the Minister of Home Affairs, but they did not play a determinative role in the outcome on appeal.


In the Limpopo High Court the application was dismissed with costs. Leave to appeal was granted, and the appeal proceeded on two principal fronts. First, the validity of a civil marriage concluded in 1997 between the deceased and the first respondent was challenged. Second, the validity of the deceased’s last will and testament executed in 2007 was attacked on the basis of alleged incapacity and internal defects.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was therefore the interaction between customary unions and civil marriages under the statutory regime then applicable, and, separately, the requirements for the valid execution of a will, including testamentary capacity and whether alleged errors in dispositions affect validity.


2. Material Facts


It was placed before the court that the deceased, Masewa Joseph Netshituka, died on 4 January 2008. A will executed by him on 20 November 2007 appointed the first respondent as executrix, which prompted the appellant and other family members to challenge both the will and the first respondent’s asserted marital status.


On the applicants’ version in the court below, Tshinakaho Netshituka (the first applicant in the court a quo, who died before the appeal) stated that she had married the deceased by customary rites on 1 December 1956, and that the customary marriage had not been registered with the Department of Home Affairs. It was further alleged that the deceased was also married by customary rites to three other women, namely Masindi, Martha, and Diana Netshituka, and that these customary marriages were likewise not registered. The appellant was said to be a child born of the union between the deceased and Masindi.


It was common cause that the first respondent concluded a civil marriage with the deceased on 17 January 1997, which was described as being in community of property.


A point of dispute concerned whether, at the time of the 1997 civil marriage, there existed any subsisting customary union(s) that would have legally barred the deceased from contracting a civil marriage with the first respondent. The first respondent denied the existence of the asserted customary marriage(s), and more specifically denied that any such customary marriage existed at the time she married the deceased. She alleged instead that the deceased had been married to Martha Mosele Netshituka (born Lebona) by civil rites and had been divorced from her on 5 July 1984, and contended that any customary union(s) were terminated “by force of law” when the deceased entered that earlier civil marriage.


A further factual matter treated as significant by the SCA was that it appeared to have been common cause in the court below that, after the deceased concluded the earlier civil marriage with Martha, the customary-law wives did not leave him and continued in their roles as his customary-law wives. The deceased’s continued cohabitation with them after his divorce from Martha, and his later reference in the will to Tshinakaho, Diana, and the first respondent as his first, second, and third wives respectively, were treated as conduct relevant to the status of the relationships.


Regarding the will challenge, the applicants relied on the deceased’s chronic ill-health and alleged incapacity to manage his affairs, supported by a medical report and a hospital memorandum. However, the medical report expressly recorded that the deceased was mentally normal, fully conscious, aware of his surroundings, and oriented in time, place, and person during the relevant period of examination shortly before the will was executed. The report contemplated only a conditional future possibility that recurring hypoglycaemia episodes could lead to deterioration in mental function, and the hospital memorandum covering the later period contained no reference to mental incapacity.


3. Legal Issues


The first central issue was whether the civil marriage of 17 January 1997 between the deceased and the first respondent was valid, given the asserted existence of subsisting customary unions and the statutory competence to marry under section 22 of the Black Administration Act 38 of 1927, as amended by the Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act 3 of 1988, and taking into account the later statutory recognition of customary marriages under the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998.


This issue involved a combination of law (the meaning and effect of section 22 as amended, and the consequences for competence to contract a civil marriage) and application of law to fact (whether, on the accepted facts and inferences, there were subsisting customary unions at the relevant time, and what the legal consequences were).


The second central issue was whether the deceased’s last will and testament executed on 20 November 2007 was invalid due to a lack of testamentary capacity or because of alleged defects such as purported disposition of property not owned, alleged vagueness, or internal inconsistencies. This issue primarily concerned application of legal standards to the evidence relied upon by the challengers, including the allocation of the onus and whether it was discharged.


A further issue concerned costs, particularly the appropriate incidence of costs given partial success and the nature of the litigation, including whether costs should be borne by a party or by the deceased estate.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the validity of the 1997 civil marriage, the SCA’s reasoning turned on the statutory regime governing marriages involving parties to customary unions. The court noted that at an earlier time, section 22(1) of the Black Administration Act allowed a man, during the subsistence of a customary union, to contract a civil marriage with another woman provided that specified disclosures were made under oath. The respondents relied on Nkambula v Linda 1951 (1) SA 377 (A) for the proposition that the legislation did not contemplate the coexistence of a civil marriage and a customary union, and for the further implication that entering into a civil marriage could terminate the customary union.


The SCA examined the position under customary law as to desertion and the stability of the customary union. Relying on customary-law authority, including Bobotyane v Jack 1944 NAC (C&O) 9, the court treated customary law as not recognising dissolution of a customary union by mere desertion, abandonment, or repudiation, and acknowledged that a husband could “phuthuma” his wife after absence and restore the former status. The court considered the effect of Nkambula in circumstances where a customary-law wife leaves because the husband contracted a civil marriage with another woman, and accepted that such a wife would be entitled to refuse to return and could assert that the husband had terminated the union. At the same time, the court reasoned that nothing would prevent a wife from returning if she was prepared to do so, and that fresh lobola negotiations would not necessarily be required because customary law did not treat mere desertion as dissolving the union.


Applying these principles to the facts as they were treated in the appeal, the court emphasised the importance of the intention of the parties as inferred from their conduct. Since it was accepted that the customary-law wives did not leave and continued cohabiting with the deceased, the court treated the deceased’s post-divorce continued relationships as clear evidence of reconciliation. It held that, to the extent that the earlier civil marriage to Martha could have terminated customary unions, the parties’ conduct after the divorce indicated that the customary unions were revived.


The SCA then addressed the decisive statutory bar as it existed at the time of the 1997 marriage. It highlighted that section 22 had been amended by Act 3 of 1988, with the amended provisions (in force in 1997) materially restricting competence to contract a civil marriage while a customary union subsisted. The amended section 22(1) permitted marriage between the partners to a customary union only if the man was not also a partner in another subsisting customary union, and section 22(2) provided that, subject to subsection (1), no person who is a partner in a customary union was competent to contract a marriage during the subsistence of that union. The court also noted that amended provisions placed obligations on marriage officers and criminalised false declarations, reflecting a legislative intention to prevent a person from contracting a civil marriage with someone other than the partner in an existing customary union.


The court accepted as consistent with authority that a civil marriage contracted in breach of the amended section 22 regime was a nullity, and referred in this connection to Thembisile & another v Thembisile & another 2002 (2) SA 209 (T), where a civil marriage contracted while the man was a partner in an existing customary union with another woman was held to be void. As it was not contended that Thembisile was wrongly decided, the SCA applied that approach. On the facts as assessed, the deceased was a partner in subsisting customary unions with at least Tshinakaho and Diana at the time he married the first respondent in 1997, with the consequence that the 1997 civil marriage was null and void.


On the will, the SCA approached the matter through the lens of the onus resting on those challenging the will to prove, on a balance of probabilities, that the deceased was not in a sound mental state when he executed it. The medical and hospital documents relied upon established chronic physical illness but did not support mental incapacity at the time of execution. The specialist report expressly affirmed mental normality and orientation, and the speculation about possible future deterioration if hypoglycaemia recurred did not constitute evidence of incapacity on 20 November 2007. The court therefore found that there was no evidential basis for the contention that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity.


The court further reasoned that even if the deceased had purported to bequeath property he did not own, that fact would not, without more, render the will invalid, and the concession made on behalf of the appellant reflected this. Allegations of vagueness were not substantiated by reference to provisions that could properly be described as vague. The will challenge therefore failed.


On costs, the SCA declined to impose costs on the first respondent despite the appellant’s partial success. It accepted that it was fair and equitable for costs to be borne by the deceased estate, emphasising that the appellant succeeded only in part and that the respondents’ opposition was not unreasonable or frivolous. This evaluative judgment informed the court’s costs order both in the appeal and in the court below.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the appeal in part. It set aside that part of the High Court order which had dismissed the application to declare invalid the marriage between the deceased and the first respondent, and substituted it with an order declaring that the marriage contracted on 17 January 1997 was null and void.


The SCA otherwise dismissed the appeal, which meant that the challenge to the validity of the deceased’s will executed on 20 November 2007 did not succeed.


The High Court’s costs order was set aside. The SCA ordered that the costs of the appeal and the costs of the proceedings in the court below were to be paid by the third respondent, being the deceased estate.


Cases Cited


Nkambula v Linda 1951 (1) SA 377 (A).


Bobotyane v Jack 1944 NAC (C&O) 9.


Thembisile & another v Thembisile & another 2002 (2) SA 209 (T).


Legislation Cited


Black Administration Act 38 of 1927, section 22(1) and section 22(2), as amended.


Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act 3 of 1988, section 1(a).


Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998, sections 2(1) and 2(3), and its repeal of section 22(1) to (5) of the Black Administration Act (operative from 15 November 2000).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, under section 22 of the Black Administration Act 38 of 1927 as amended by the Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act 3 of 1988, a person who is a partner in a subsisting customary union is not competent to contract a civil marriage during the subsistence of that union except as permitted by the statutory scheme. On the facts accepted and inferred, the deceased was a partner in subsisting customary unions at the time he concluded a civil marriage with the first respondent in 1997, and that civil marriage was therefore null and void.


The court further held that the challengers to the will failed to discharge the onus of proving that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity when executing the will on 20 November 2007. The evidence relied upon showed physical illness but did not establish mental incapacity, and asserted defects in the will’s dispositions did not, on the approach accepted, invalidate the will.


The court held that costs should be borne by the deceased estate, given the appellant’s partial success and the absence of unreasonable or frivolous conduct by the opposing parties.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A civil marriage contracted while a party is a partner in a subsisting customary union may be void where the governing statutory framework renders that party not competent to marry during the subsistence of the customary union. Under the amended section 22 regime (post-2 December 1988), the legislative scheme was construed as preventing a marriage officer from lawfully solemnising a marriage where the man intended to marry a woman other than the one with whom he was a partner in an existing customary union, and a marriage concluded contrary to that regime is treated as a nullity.


In assessing whether customary unions subsisted (or were revived) after intervening events such as a civil marriage and subsequent divorce, the court treated the intention of the parties, inferred from their conduct (including continued cohabitation and continuation of customary-law roles), as central to determining the practical status of relationships for purposes of applying the statutory prohibition.


A party challenging the validity of a will on the basis of lack of testamentary capacity bears the onus to establish incapacity on a balance of probabilities. Evidence of chronic physical illness, without proof of mental impairment at the time of execution, is insufficient to invalidate a will on grounds of incapacity, and alleged mistakes in bequeathing property not owned do not, without more, render the will invalid.

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[2011] ZASCA 120
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Netshituka v Netshituka and Others (426/10) [2011] ZASCA 120; 2011 (5) SA 453 (SCA); [2011] 4 All SA 63 (SCA) (20 July 2011)

Links to summary

THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case No: 426/10
In the matter between:
RUDZANI NETSHITUKA
…...........................................................
Appellant
and
JOYCE MUNYADIZWA NETSHITUKA
…......................
First
Respondent
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
….............................
Second
Respondent
ESTATE OF MASEWA JOSEPH
NETSHITUKA
….....
Third Respondent
MUTHUFELA NETSHITUKA
…....................................
Fourth
Respondent
DIANA NETSHITUKA
…....................................................
Fifth
Respondent
MINISTER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
HOME AFFAIRS
…..............................................................
Sixth
Respondent
Neutral citation:
Netshituka
v Netshituka
(426/10)
[2011] ZASCA 120
(20 July 2011)
Coram:
MPATI P, BOSIELO,
TSHIQI, SERITI JJA and PETSE AJA
Heard: 10 May 2011
Delivered: 20 July 2011
Summary:
Customary Law ─
whether a civil marriage contracted between a partner to a customary
union and another man or woman during
the subsistence of that union
is valid. Succession ─ validity of will ─ whether last
will and testament of testator
valid.
_____________________________________________________________________
ORDER
On appeal from:
Limpopo
High Court (Thohoyandou) (Hetisani J sitting as court of first
instance.):
1. The appeal is upheld in part.
2. That part of the order of the
court below dismissing the application to declare invalid the
marriage between the deceased and
the first respondent is set aside
and substituted with the following:

The
marriage contracted between the first respondent and the deceased on
17 January 1997 is declared null and void.’
3. The costs order made by the
court below is set aside.
4. The costs of the appeal and
the costs of the proceedings in the court below are to be paid by the
third respondent.
5. The appeal is otherwise
dismissed.
___________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
PETSE AJA (MPATI P, BOSIELO,
TSHIQI and SERITI JJA concurring)
[1] The appellant (as third
applicant in the court a quo), together with two other persons who do
not feature in this appeal, instituted
proceedings against the
respondents in which they sought, in the main, an order declaring:
(a) the marriage between the first respondent
and the late Mr Masewa
Joseph Netshituka, contracted on 17 January 1997, null and void ab
initio, and (b) the last will and testament
of the late Masewa Joseph
Netshituka, executed on 20 November 2007, invalid. The late Masewa
Netshituka (the deceased) died on
4 January 2008.
[2] The proceedings were opposed
by the first and third respondents only. The court a quo (Hetisani J)
dismissed the application
with costs. This appeal is with its leave.
I shall, for the sake of convenience, refer to the first and third
respondents simply
as the respondents.
[3] A brief factual background
giving rise to the proceedings in the court a quo is necessary.
Tshinakaho Netshituka, who was the
first applicant before the court a
quo but has since died, averred in her founding affidavit that she
was married to the deceased
by customary rites on 1 December 1956.
This marriage was not registered with the Department of Home Affairs.
I shall, for convenience,
refer to her as ‘Tshinakaho’.
[4] According to Tshinakaho the
deceased was also married by customary rites to three other women,
namely Masindi, Martha and Diana
Netshituka, whose marriages were
likewise not registered. A number of children were born of these
customary marriages, the appellant
being one of them. She was born of
the union between the deceased and Masindi. The first respondent was
also married to the deceased
by civil rites, the marriage having been
contracted on 17 January 1997.
[5] Following the death of the
deceased the appellant and her erstwhile co-applicants learnt from
the first respondent that the
deceased had executed a will and that
the first respondent had been appointed executrix of his estate. Upon
obtaining a copy of
the will they took a decision, on legal advice,
to contest the validity of both the will and the deceased’s
marriage to the
first respondent.
[6] The validity of the marriage
was contested on the grounds that it fell foul of the provisions of s
22(1) of the Black Administration
Act 38 of 1927 (the Act), read with
s 1(a) of the Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act 3
of 1988 regard being had
to the fact that Tshinakaho’s
customary marriage and those of the other three customary law wives
to the deceased, respectively,
were recognised in terms of
ss 2(1)
and (3) of the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998
.
The validity of the will was contested on account of the deceased’s
chronic state of ill-health and alleged incapacity to
manage his own
affairs at the time the will was executed. It was contended that this
state of affairs was borne out by the fact
that the deceased had (i)
purported to bequeath property of which he was not the owner; (ii)
purported to dispose of only a half-share
of what he believed was his
and the first respondent’s joint estate; and (iii) the alleged
vagueness of some of the provisions
of the will.
The validity of the marriage
[7] The first respondent averred,
in her answering affidavit, that she married the deceased by civil
rites on 17 January 1997 in
community of property, at a time when
there was no impediment to her contracting a lawful marriage with
him. She responded as follows
to the allegation that Tshinakaho and
three other women were married to the deceased by custom:

I deny
the existence of the customary marriage and more specifically that it
existed at the time when the deceased and I got married.
The deceased
was married to Martha Mosele Netshituka (born Lebona) and got
divorced from her on 5 July 1984.’
1
It was accordingly contended, on
her behalf, that when she married the deceased on 17 January 1997 the
latter was not a partner
‘to a valid existing customary union’
in that any customary union to which the deceased may previously have
been a
partner ‘was terminated by force of law in accordance
with section 22 of the Act when he married Martha by civil rites’.

It was submitted further that s22(2) of the Act, which provided that
no person who was a partner in a customary union ‘shall
be
competent to contract a marriage [with another woman] during the
subsistence of that union’, had no application to the
first
respondent’s marriage to the deceased. This was because
whatever customary union may have subsisted was rendered invalid
when
the deceased married Martha Mosele Netshituka (Martha) by civil
rites.
[8] For these submissions counsel
for the respondents relied on the decision of this court in
Nkambula
v Linda
2
where it was held that:

[a] man
who is a partner to a customary union and subsequently contracts a
civil marriage with another woman during the subsistence
of the
customary union must be regarded by this act as having deserted his
wife, and under these circumstances the woman to the
customary union
is justified in leaving her husband without rendering her guardian
liable for a refund of the lobola [dowry].’
3
Earlier in the judgment this
court held that the Act ‘does not contemplate the existence
side by side of a civil marriage
and a customary union’.
4
[9] At the time the deceased
would have married Martha by civil rites s 22(1) of the Act read
thus:

No male
[African] shall, during the subsistence of any customary union
between him and any woman, contract a marriage with any other
woman
unless he has first declared upon oath, before the magistrate or
native commissioner of the district in which he is domiciled,
the
name of every such first-mentioned woman; the name of every child of
any such customary union; the nature and amount of the
movable
property (if any) allotted by him to each such woman or house under
native custom; and such other information relating
to any such union
as the said official may require.’
The subsection thus permitted a
man who was a partner in a customary union to contract a civil
marriage with another woman provided
he complied with its provisions.
[10] A number of academic writers
and commentators hold the view that the effect of
Nkambula
was that where one partner in a
customary union contracted a civil marriage with someone other than
his or her partner in the union
the civil marriage automatically
terminated the customary union.
5
In
Nkambula
the respondent’s customary
law wife, Lena, left him after he had entered into a civil marriage
with another woman. The respondent
claimed that Lena had, by leaving
him, dissolved the customary union, thereby entitling him to a refund
of the lobola he had paid
for her. The Commissioner’s Court
upheld his claim and ordered Lena to return to him, failing which her
father (the appellant)
was to return the lobola as prayed, with
costs. On appeal to it the Native Appeal Court dismissed the appeal
and ordered further
that upon failure of Lena to return to her
husband within one month ‘the customary union is dissolved’.
The President
of the appeal court, however, viewing the matter as one
of importance, referred the following question for this court’s
consideration:

Whether
or not a man who is a partner to a customary union and subsequently
contracts a civil marriage with another woman during
the subsistence
of the customary union can be regarded as having deserted his
customary union wife, and whether under these circumstances
the woman
to the customary union is justified in leaving her husband without
her guardian becoming liable for a refund of the lobola.
The question
was answered in the affirmative (see the excerpt from this court’s
judgment in paragraph 8 above).
[11] It appears to have been
common cause before the court below that in the instant matter the
customary law wives of the deceased
never left him after he had
married Martha by civil rites, but continued with their roles as his
customary law wives. The question
to be answered in these
circumstances is: What was the status of the relationship between the
deceased and his ‘deserted’
customary law wives after his
civil marriage to Martha was terminated by divorce?
[12] In customary law, where a
husband has deserted his wife his offence is not irreparable and does
not give her the right to refuse
to return to him when he comes to
phuthuma
6
her. It was held in
Bobotyane
v
Jack
1944 NAC (C & O) 9
7
that customary law ‘does
not recognise a dissolution of the union by mere desertion of the
wife or husband, by abandonment,
or even by bare repudiation, for
these are all eventualities provided for by the lobola cattle; the
husband can always “
putuma

his wife after any length of
absence; the wife can always return to her husband’s kraal and
resume her former status’.
8
But on the authority of
Nkambula
a customary law wife who has left
her husband as a result of his having contracted a civil marriage
with another woman would be
entitled to refuse to return to him when
he goes to
phuthuma
her. She would be entitled to
assert that he had terminated the union between them. It seems to me,
however, that nothing would
prevent her from returning to him if she
was prepared to do so. No fresh lobola negotiations would have to be
undertaken because
customary law ‘does not recognize a
dissolution of the union by mere desertion’.
9
The husband might be called upon
by her guardian to pay a beast or more as a penalty for his
‘misdeed’.
10
[13] In the present matter the
deceased did not have to
phuthuma
his customary law wives because
they never left him after he had married Martha. His continued
cohabitation with them after the
divorce was clear evidence of a
husband who had reconciled with his ‘previously deserted’
wives. And in his last will
and testament, the validity of which I
shall consider presently, the deceased refers to Tshinakaho, Diana
and the first respondent
as his first, second and third wives
respectively. What is important, in my view, is the intention of the
parties, which can be
inferred from their conduct of simply
continuing with their relationships and roles as partners in
customary unions with the deceased
after the divorce. Their conduct
clearly indicated that to the extent that the deceased’s civil
marriage to Martha may have
terminated his unions with his customary
law wives, those unions were revived after the divorce.
[14] The next question is whether
it was competent for the deceased to contract a civil marriage with
the first respondent during
the subsistence of the customary unions
with Tshinakaho and Diana Netshituka. Section 22 of the Act was
amended by the Marriage
and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act
11
,
which came into operation on 2 December 1988. After the amendment
subsections (1) and (2) provided:

(1)
A man and a woman between whom a customary union subsists are
competent to contract a marriage with each other if the man is
not
also a partner in a subsisting customary union with another woman.
(2) Subject to
subsection (1), no person who is a partner in a customary union shall
be competent to contract a marriage during
the subsistence of that
union.’
Subsection (3) barred a marriage
officer from solemnizing the marriage of an African ‘unless he
has first taken from him a
declaration to the effect that he is not a
partner in a customary union with any woman other than the one he
intends marrying’.
And in terms of the amended subsection (5) a
man who made a false declaration with regard to the existence or
otherwise of a customary
union between him and any woman made himself
guilty of an offence. A marriage officer could thus not solemnize a
marriage where
a man intended to marry a woman other than the one
with whom he was a partner in an existing customary union. That, in
my view,
was the clear intention of the Legislature when it amended s
22 of the Act.
[15] Subsections (1) to (5) of s
22 of the Act, as amended, were in force as at the date on which the
civil marriage between the
deceased and the first respondent was
contracted. (The subsections were repealed by the Recognition of
Customary Marriages Act,
12
which came into operation on 15
November 2000). In
Thembisile
v Thembisile
13
Bertelsmann J held that a civil
marriage contracted while the man was a partner in an existing
customary union with another woman
was a nullity.
14
It was not argued in this court
that
Thembisile
was wrongly decided. It follows
that the civil marriage between the deceased and the first
respondent, having been contracted while
the deceased was a partner
in existing customary unions with Tshinakaho and Diana, was a
nullity.
The validity of the will
[16] I turn now to the question
whether the appellant and her erstwhile co-applicants discharged the
onus that rested on them to
establish on a balance of probabilities
that the deceased was not in a sound mental state when he attested to
his last will and
testament on 20 November 2007. In support of the
contention that the deceased was not in a sound mental state,
Tshinakaho attached
to her founding affidavit a copy of a medical
report from Dr Chitate, a specialist physician attached to the
Limpopo Mediclinic,
and a memorandum from the Siloam Hospital. It is
apparent from the medical report and memorandum that the deceased was
chronically
ill when he underwent treatment at the two institutions.
There is, however, no indication that his mental capacity was in any
way
impaired. On the contrary, Dr Chitate’s report states
explicitly that ‘despite being chronically physically ill’

the deceased was ‘mentally normal and fully conscious, aware of
his surroundings’ and ‘oriented in time, place
and
person’.
[17] In his report Dr Chitate
states, however, that ‘episodes of hypoglycaemia had occurred
and, if these recurred after discharge,
could have led to a
deterioration in [the deceased’s] mental function’.
According to the report Dr Chitate examined
and treated the deceased
from 12 to 16 November 2007. The memorandum from the Siloam Hospital
covers the period 30 November 2007,
the date of his admission, to 4
January 2008 when he passed away. No mention is made of the
deceased’s alleged mental incapacity
in the memorandum. There
is thus no evidence that when he attested to his last will and
testament on 20 November 2007 the deceased
was mentally
incapacitated. The contention that he was, therefore, has no basis.
[18] As to the allegation that
the deceased purported to bequeath property of which he was not the
owner and that therefore his
will was invalid, counsel for the
appellant conceded that even accepting this to be so it would not
render the will invalid. Nor
would it necessarily point to the
deceased being mentally incapacitated. The same applies to the
allegation of vagueness in respect
of certain of the provisions of
the will. We were in any event not referred to any provision which
could be said to be vague.
[19] There remains the issue of
costs. Counsel for the appellant submitted that if the appeal
succeeds the first respondent should
pay the costs. On the other hand
counsel for the respondents argued that it would be fair and
equitable that any costs incurred
in this matter be paid out of the
deceased estate. I am satisfied that the argument on behalf of the
respondents should prevail,
for two principal reasons. First, the
appellant has been partially successful. Second, the respondents were
to my mind neither
unreasonable nor frivolous in opposing the relief
sought.
[20] The following order is made:
1. The appeal is upheld in part.
2. That part of the order of the
court below dismissing the application to declare invalid the
marriage between the deceased and
the first respondent is set aside
and substituted with the following:

The
marriage contracted between the first respondent and the deceased on
17 January 1997 is declared null and void.’
3. The costs order made by the
court below is set aside.
4. The costs of the appeal and
the costs of the proceedings in the court below are to be paid by the
third respondent.
5. The appeal is otherwise
dismissed.
____________________
XM Petse
Acting Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES
APPELLANT: PM van Ryneveld
Instructed by De Buys Human
Attorneys, Thohoyandou;
Symington & De Kok,
Bloemfontein.
RESPONDENTS: GJ Scheepers
Instructed by Jones Attorneys,
Thohoyandou;
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
1
A
copy of the decree of divorce was annexed to the answering
affidavit. It is not clear from the papers whether Martha Mosele

Netshituka is the same person to whom Tshinakaho referred in the
founding affidavit as one of the deceased’s customary
law
wives.
2
Nkambula
v Linda
1951 (1) SA 377(A).
3
At
384 C-D.
4
At
382 G.
5
I
P Maithufi ‘the recognition of Customary Marriages Act of
1998: A Commentary’
(2000) 63
THRHR
509
; I P Maithufi & G B M Moloi ‘The
Need for the Protection of Rights of Partners to Invalid
Relationships: A Revisit
of the “Discarded Spouse”
Deba
t
e’
(2005) 38
De Jure
144;
R M Jansen ‘Multiple marriages, burial rights and the role of
lobola
at
the dissolution of the marriage’
(2003)
28(1)
Journal for Juridical Science
RG; A West ‘Black Marriages’: The
Past and the Present (2005) 7
South
African Deeds Journal
10.
6
The
husband is obliged to ‘phuthuma’ (fetch) his wife who
has left him, whether through his fault or hers, unless
he intends
to abandon her. (See Bekker
Seymour’s Customary Law in
Southern Africa
5 ed (1989) p181–195.)
7
Bobotyane
v Jack
1944 NAC (C&O) 9.
8
At
p11.
9
Bobotyane
v Jack
, supra.
10
Bekker
Seymour’s Customary Law in
Southern Africa
, fn 6 above, at p191.
See also T W Bennett
A Sourcebook of
African Customary Law for Southern Africa
(1991)
261–262. According to Bennett the term ‘phuthuma’
is used by the Southern Nguni people, but it was not
suggested in
this court that the convention is not practiced by the nation/s of
which the deceased and his customary law wives
were members.
11
3
of 1988.
12
120
of 1998.
13
Thembisile
& another v Thembisile & another
2002
(2) SA 209(T).
14
Para
32.