Bobani v Benge and Others (428/2018) [2022] ZAECBHC 8 (14 April 2022)

82 Reportability

Brief Summary

Marriage — Bigamous marriage — Declaration of nullity — Applicant sought to declare the marriage between the first respondent and the deceased null and void on the grounds of bigamy, as the deceased was still married to another woman at the time of the purported marriage. — The court found that the marriage was invalid ab initio due to the subsistence of the prior marriage, and the first respondent's appointment as estate representative was declared unlawful and set aside.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application in the High Court (Eastern Cape Division, Bhisho) for declaratory and review-type relief arising from an alleged bigamous civil marriage and the consequent administration of a deceased estate.


The applicant, Zolani Bobani, approached the court as the grandson of the deceased, Mhlophe Simon Bobani. The first respondent, Ms Nontobeko Sylvia Benge, opposed the application in person and asserted that she had married the deceased. The second respondent was the Master of the High Court, Bhisho, cited because the Master had issued a Letter of Authority appointing the first respondent as estate representative. The third respondent was the Registrar of Deeds, King William’s Town, cited in connection with property-related consequences in the estate.


Procedurally, the matter came before the court on motion. The application sought, among other relief, a declaration that the marriage between the deceased and the first respondent was null and void ab initio, the setting aside of the first respondent’s appointment under section 18(3) of the Administration of Estates Act, and related consequences for estate administration and occupation of a house in Mdantsane.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the first respondent could be treated as the deceased’s surviving spouse and estate representative where the deceased had previously contracted a civil marriage that had not been dissolved by divorce at the time of the later purported marriage.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the deceased, Mhlophe Simon Bobani, had concluded a civil marriage in community of property with Ntombizakhe Maudlena Bobani on 7 June 1980 at Mdantsane. It was also common cause that Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani died in 2006, and that the deceased died on 28 April 2017.


It was further common cause that, during the subsistence of the 1980 marriage, the deceased instituted divorce proceedings against Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani in 1984 (case no. 621/1984, Supreme Court of Ciskei). Those divorce proceedings were contested and, on the papers before the court, had not been finalised by the time of Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani’s death in 2006.


Also largely common cause was that the deceased and the first respondent purportedly entered into a civil marriage at Mdantsane on 9 March 1986, at a time when Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani was still alive and still legally married to the deceased (the divorce having not been concluded).


In relation to the first respondent’s state of knowledge, the first respondent admitted in her answering affidavit that she knew the deceased was married when the relationship began (December 1983), and that she married him in 1986 on the belief—based on what the deceased told her—that the deceased had already divorced Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani. In a later affidavit, she placed before the court the 1984 divorce papers, which indicated the divorce had been instituted but not concluded.


After the deceased’s death, the applicant went to the Master’s office to report the death. On returning after being told to come back later, he was informed that the deceased was recorded as married to the first respondent and that the first respondent had been issued Letters of Authority under section 18(3). The applicant’s complaint included that he had not been afforded a hearing despite being a close surviving relative and despite the Master’s office having been aware of him.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the purported civil marriage between the deceased and the first respondent, concluded in 1986 while the deceased remained married to Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani, was valid or was void ab initio as a bigamous marriage.


A consequential legal question was whether the Master’s appointment of the first respondent as estate representative (and the associated Letter of Authority) was lawful where that appointment proceeded on the basis that the first respondent was the deceased’s surviving spouse.


A further issue, arising from the applicant’s prayers, concerned the extent to which the High Court should itself determine who ought to be appointed as estate representative/executor and determine entitlement to estate assets, or whether those are matters for the Master’s statutory powers and processes.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal rules to largely common-cause facts (particularly the existence and non-dissolution of the first marriage at the time of the second). To a more limited extent, it also engaged evaluative factual considerations concerning the circumstances in which the 1986 marriage was concluded, although the court treated those details as not determinative of the legal outcome.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter from the premise that, on the common-cause chronology, the deceased’s 1980 civil marriage to Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani remained in existence when he purported to marry the first respondent in 1986. The court treated the existence of an undissolved prior civil marriage as rendering a later purported civil marriage invalid from the outset.


In addressing the legal character of such a marriage, the court referred to prior authority dealing with a purported marriage entered into while one party was already married. The judgment cited Snyman v Snyman 1984 (4) SA 262 (WLD) as an instance where a court declared a purported marriage a nullity where the defendant had an existing marriage, illustrating that the problem is not novel and that courts have treated such marriages as null and void.


On the first respondent’s explanation that she believed the deceased had already divorced, the court accepted that she may have been misled by the deceased. However, the court reasoned that being misled (or acting under a mistaken belief about the existence of a divorce) could not confer validity on a marriage concluded during the subsistence of the earlier marriage. The court noted that confirmation of divorce status could have been sought before marriage, such as by requesting a decree of divorce or verifying the status at court.


The court also expressed scepticism about the suggestion that the Department of Interior officials would have proceeded if the deceased had disclosed he was divorced, observing that officials would ordinarily require proof. The court indicated it was more likely that officials were misled. Nonetheless, the court treated the precise mechanics of how the marriage was officiated as not central to the legal question; the determinative fact was that the deceased was still married and divorce proceedings were pending.


Turning to the Master’s appointment, the court reasoned that because the purported marriage was invalid, the basis upon which the first respondent was appointed as estate representative (namely that she was the surviving spouse) fell away. The appointment and Letter of Authority were therefore set aside as unlawful/invalid in the circumstances.


However, the court drew a clear boundary regarding the separation of functions between the judiciary and the Master. It held that, while it could declare the purported marriage invalid and set aside the appointment flowing from that premise, it should not itself appoint the executor/estate representative or determine inheritance and entitlement to specific assets. The court viewed those steps as falling within the Master’s statutory powers and functions, and considered judicial substitution in that respect to be an impermissible intrusion into the Master’s domain. Accordingly, the court directed that the Master recommence the appointment process de novo and finalise the winding-up in accordance with the applicable legislative framework.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court declared that the purported marriage concluded on 9 March 1986 between the deceased and the first respondent was null and void ab initio and set it aside.


It set aside the first respondent’s appointment by the Master as estate representative and declared the Letter of Authority issued to her invalid. The first respondent was directed to return the Letters of Authority, and the Master was directed to cancel them.


The Master was directed to commence the process of appointing an estate representative/executor de novo and to finalise the winding up of the deceased estate.


The court did not grant the additional relief sought by the applicant that would have entailed the court itself authorising the Master to appoint the applicant as executor, determining that the first respondent was not entitled to claim a particular house as an estate asset, or granting an interdict relating to harassment and occupation. The court’s order was confined to the nullity of the marriage, the invalidity of the appointment/Letters of Authority, the administrative steps for cancellation and recommencement by the Master, and costs.


The first respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the application.


Cases Cited


Snyman v Snyman 1984 (4) SA 262 (WLD).


Legislation Cited


Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 (section 18(3)).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the purported civil marriage between the deceased and the first respondent, concluded while the deceased’s earlier civil marriage subsisted and without a completed divorce, was bigamous and therefore void ab initio.


It further held that the Master’s appointment of the first respondent as estate representative, premised on her status as surviving spouse, was unlawful/invalid once the marriage was declared void, and that the Letters of Authority had to be returned and cancelled.


The court held that it was not for the court to determine the correct executor/estate representative or inheritance issues on these papers, and that the Master must restart the appointment process and proceed with the administration of the estate within the Master’s statutory framework.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A civil marriage purportedly entered into while one party remains legally married to another person is void ab initio; a mistaken belief by the other party that a divorce has been finalised does not render the later marriage valid.


Where an administrative act (such as the issuance of Letters of Authority under the Administration of Estates Act) is based on an assumed legal status (such as being a surviving spouse) that is later shown to be legally invalid, the appointment and the Letters issued on that basis are liable to be set aside.


The court recognised and applied the principle of institutional competence in estate administration: decisions concerning the appointment of an estate representative/executor and the winding up of the estate fall within the Master’s statutory functions, and the court should avoid usurping those functions by making the appointment itself where the legislation entrusts that power to the Master.

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[2022] ZAECBHC 8
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Bobani v Benge and Others (428/2018) [2022] ZAECBHC 8 (14 April 2022)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION: BHISHO]
CASE
NO. 428/2018
In
the matter between:
ZOLANI
BOBANI

Applicant
and
MS
NONTOBEKO SYLVIA BENGE

1
st
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, BHISHO

2
nd
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, KING WILLIAM’S TOWN

3
rd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
JOLWANA
J:
[1]
In this matter the applicant approached the court seeking the
following relief:

(a) That the
purported marriage entered into between the first respondent and the
late Mhlophe Simon Bobani (the deceased) in August
1986 and at
Mdantsane be and is hereby declared null and void ab initio on the
grounds that it is a bigamous marriage.
(b) That the appointment of the first
respondent as the estate representative of the estate of the late
Mhlophe Simon Bobani (the
deceased estate) by the second respondent
is declared unlawful and is hereby set aside.
(c) That the second applicant be and
is hereby authorized to appoint the applicant as the executor of the
deceased estate as set
out in paragraph “b” above
forthwith.
(d) An order that the first respondent
is not entitled to claim any asset, more in particular house no.[…]
N.U. [….],
Mdantsane in the deceased estate.
(e) That the first respondent or any
other person(s) acting at her instance or on her instructions is/are
hereby interdicted and
restrained from harassing and/or intimidating
the applicant and/or interfering with the applicant’s right to
occupy his grandfather’s
(referred to above as the deceased)
house at no.[….] N.U. [….], Mdantsane.
(f) That the first respondent be
ordered to pay the costs of this application.”
[2]
The applicant is the grandson of the late Mhlophe Simon Bobani (the
deceased) and the late Ntombizakhe Maudlena Bobani (Mrs
Ntombizakhe
Bobani).  He is the son of their only child Nomangesi Notshe.
It appears from the abridged marriage certificate
that the deceased
and Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani got married in community of property on 7
June 1980.  The applicant is the only
child/surviving child of
Nomangesi who predeceased her parents and died in 2001.  The
deceased died in 2017 and his wife Mrs
Ntombizakhe Bobani predeceased
him in 2006.
[3]
On the 9 March 1986 and during the subsistence of his marriage to Mrs
Ntombizakhe Bobani, the deceased purportedly entered into
another
civil marriage with Sylvia Nontobeko Mbenge, the first respondent
herein.  In her answering affidavit the first respondent
avers
that she started a relationship with the deceased in December 1983
and that at that time the deceased was married to Mrs
Ntombizakhe
Bobani.  She was however informed by the deceased that he was in
the process of divorcing Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani
in 1984.  She
further says that in 1986 she was told by the deceased that he was
divorced from Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani and
asked her to marry him.
They got married on 9 March 1986 as she believed the deceased when he
told her that he was divorced
from Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani.
[4]
The first respondent has filed another affidavit in which she
indicates that certain information came to her knowledge after
she
had deposed to her answering affidavit.  In what appears to have
been intended to be a supplementary affidavit the first
respondent
has annexed court papers which were issued out of the then Supreme
Court of Ciskei under case no.621/1984.  It
appears from those
papers that the deceased had in fact instituted divorce proceedings
against Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani on 4 September
1984 in which he,
inter
alia
, sought a decree of divorce.  It also appears that Mrs
Ntombizakhe Bobani was contesting the said divorce proceedings.

Those divorce proceedings were never concluded at the time of her
death in 2006.
[5]
Most of these facts are common cause.  Briefly it is common
cause that the deceased and Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani were married
to
each other, such marriage having been solemnized in Mdantsane on 7
June 1980.  On the 9 March 1986 the deceased and the
first
respondent purportedly entered into a marriage in Mdantsane.  On
that date Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani was still alive and
legally married
to the deceased and she died much later in 2006.  Divorce
proceedings which the deceased had instituted in
1984 were contested
and were still pending when he purportedly entered into a marriage
with the first respondent in 1986.
[6]
The deceased died on 28 April 2017.  After his death the
applicant proceeded to the Master’s office in Mdantsane
to
report the death of his grandfather, the deceased.  He alleges
that he was told to come back to the Master’s office
after
seven days as it was still too soon after the death of the deceased.
When he went back the estate clerk who assisted
him told him that the
deceased was married to the first respondent and he was shown a
marriage certificate.  He was also told
that the first
respondent had been issued with Letters of Authority in terms of
section 18
(3) of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
.
[7]
The applicant seeks an order that the said appointment of the first
respondent as the Master’s representative in the estate
of the
late Mhlophe Simon Bobani, the deceased be declared unlawful and set
aside.  This order is sought on the basis that
when the Master
appointed the first respondent as the estate representative it was on
the basis that the first respondent was legally
married to the
deceased and was therefore his surviving spouse.  It also
appears that the applicant was never even given a
hearing as the
close surviving relative of the deceased.  This is despite the
fact that the Master’s office was aware
of him and had told him
to come back later when he went to report the deceased’s
demise.
[8]
There can be doubt that the deceased might have lured the first
respondent into a marriage pretending to her that divorce proceedings

between himself and Mrs Ntombizakhe Bobani had been finalized when in
fact that was not the case.  The question therefore
is whether
during the subsistence of the marriage between the deceased and Mrs
Ntombizakhe Bobani the first respondent could have
entered into a
valid marriage with the deceased.  The first respondent’s
case is not that the deceased’s marriage
to Mrs Ntombizakhe
Bobani had been terminated by divorce when she got married to the
deceased.  In fact she admits that she
was acting on the
mistaken belief that the divorce which the deceased had told her
about had been finalized and that the deceased
and Mrs Ntombizakhe
Bobani were divorced.
[9]
The problem of two people purportedly entering into a marriage is not
a new phenomenon.  It has in fact received the attention
of our
courts before.  In
Snyman v Snyman
1984 (4) SA 262
at 263
(WLD) at para D-F a matter similar to this one came before Goldstone
J in which he wrote as follows:

On
8 May 1982, the plaintiff and the defendant purported to enter into a
contract of marriage.  Thereafter they lived together
as husband
and wife and a child was born in consequence thereof.  However,
unbeknown to the plaintiff at the time of the “marriage”

the defendant was married.  His prior marriage had been entered
into on 6 January 1966.  He had also entered into a previous

bigamous marriage on 12 November 1981.  According to the
evidence of the plaintiff, the defendant was convicted and sentenced

in the magistrate’s court on two courts of bigamy.  In
this Court the plaintiff sought an order declaring her purported

marriage to the defendant to be a nullity; an order for the payment
of maintenance of the minor child; damages for injuria suffered
by
her and an order for costs.”
[10]
The learned Judge declared the said marriage null and void and also
dealt with the other issues that were before court.
It seems to
me that a proper case has been made for some of the relief sought and
that the purported marriage between the deceased
and the first
respondent is in fact invalid.
[11]
I however do not think that in declaring the purported marriage
between the deceased and the first respondent null and void
and
declaring the first respondent’s appointment as the estate
representative invalid this Court is entitled to enter into
the realm
of determining the correct estate representative or executor or even
determine the inheritance in respect of the estate
of the deceased as
the applicant wants this Court to do.  I am of the view that
doing so would be to usurp the powers and
functions of the second
respondent to whom the power to appoint an estate representative, to
issue Letters of Authority or Letters
of Executorship, is by law, a
power and function which the Legislative gave to the second
respondent.  For this reason I must
respectfully defer to the
Master of the High Court to exercise her or his statutory powers in
accordance with the relevant legislative
framework.
[12]
While the first respondent might very well have been misled by the
deceased and lured into a marriage, that does not clothe
the
purported marriage with validity.  In fact, had she taken the
same steps that she took after the death of the deceased
to obtain
confirmation of the status of the divorce that the deceased had told
her about before agreeing to the marriage she would
have discovered
that the divorce proceedings between the deceased and Mrs Ntombizakhe
Bobani were still pending.  At that
time all it would have taken
her would have been for instance for her to ask the deceased to
produce a decree of divorce or ask
him to go to the relevant court
with her to verify the status of the divorce proceedings.  I
also find it difficult to believe
the first respondent’s
allegation that when she and the deceased went to the then Ciskei
Department of Interior to get married
the deceased told the officials
there that she was divorced.  Clearly those officials would have
asked the deceased for a
decree of divorce before proceeding to
officiate the marriage.  It is more likely that the first
respondent and the deceased
misled the officials at the Ciskei
Department of Interior by telling them that they were both not
married.  In any event how
the marriage between the deceased and
the first respondent was officiated in circumstances in which the
deceased was still married
is neither here nor there.  Therefore
this Court need not concern itself with that.  I therefore find
that the purported
marriage between Mhlophe Simon Bobani and the
first respondent, Nontobeko Sylvia Benge was invalid
ab initio
and is therefore liable to be set aside.  The applicant’s
application must therefore succeed subject to the order that
I intend
to make herein.
[13]
In the result the following order shall issue:
1. The purported marriage
entered into between the first respondent and the late Mhlophe Simon
Bobani (the deceased) on 9 March
1986 at Mdantsane be and is hereby
declared null and void
ab initio
and is accordingly set aside.
2. The appointment of the
first respondent as the estate representative of the estate of the
late Mhlophe Simon Bobani (the deceased
estate) by the second
respondent is declared unlawful and is hereby set aside and the
Letter of Authority issued to the first respondent
is declared
invalid and set aside.
3. The first respondent
is directed to return the Letters of Authority issued to her by the
second respondent to the second respondent.
4. The Master of the High
Court – Bhisho is directed to cancel the Letters of Authority
issued to the first respondent.
5. The second respondent
is directed to start the process of appointing the estate
representative/executor of the estate of the
late Mhlophe Simon
Bobani de novo and finalise the winding up of the estate of the
deceased Mhlophe Simon Bobani.
6.
The first respondent is ordered to pay costs of this application.
________________________
M.S.
JOLWANA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearance
Counsel
for the Applicant:
C.T.S. COSSIE
Instructed
by:

NOMJANA ATTORNEYS
KING WILLIAMSTOWN
In
person for the Respondent:      NONTOBEKO
SYLVIA BENGE
Date
heard:

14 April 2022
Delivered
on:

14 April 2022