(COMPLETE ANSWERS)
Semester 2 2025 (199151) -
DUE 15 September 2025
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, Question 1
1.1 Inherent Validity of the Marriage
The inherent (or essential) validity of a marriage is determined by the personal law of each party
at the time of the marriage. The personal law for South African private international law
purposes is the law of the domicile.
Mr. Paulus was domiciled in Sheffield, England at the time of the marriage (1982).
Mrs. Paulus was domiciled in Windhoek, Namibia at the time of the marriage (1982).
Therefore, the inherent validity of their marriage is determined by the simultaneous application
of English law and Namibian law.
1.2 Evasion of Namibian Law
No, the answer would not be the same. This scenario introduces the concept of evasion of the
law (fraus legis).
The general rule is that a marriage's essential validity is governed by the law of the
domicile of the parties.
However, if parties go to a different country (Botswana in this case) to get married with
the specific intention of evading the mandatory laws of their home domicile (Namibia),
the marriage will be deemed invalid in South Africa if the evaded law is a fundamental
public policy rule.
In this case, the Namibian law requiring parental consent for a minor to marry is
considered a mandatory rule of public policy.
Since Maria was domiciled in Namibia and went to Botswana specifically to evade this
rule, a South African court would likely consider the marriage invalid due to the evasion
of the law. This is because the court would apply the evaded Namibian law, which would
have required parental consent, and the absence of such consent would render the
marriage invalid.
1.3 Redistribution of Assets and Via Media Classification
Via media classification is a method used in private international law to classify a legal question
when the law of the forum and the foreign law classify it differently. It is a middle-ground
approach that considers the classifications of both legal systems.
Here is the classification table:
Legal System Classification of Redistribution of Assets
South African Law (Law of the Forum) Proprietary consequence of marriage.