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IND2601 Assignment 1 (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED

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IND2601 Assignment 1 (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED Answers, guidelines, workings and references .. Sello married Mapule by customary law on January 1999. He later married Mpume also by customary law rites on 10 December 2006. Three girls were born from the marriage with Mapule and two boys were born from the marriage with Mpume. At the time when he married Mpume, Sello used the property allotted to the house of Mapule to provide lobolo for Mpume. The lobolo received from the customary marriage for one of his daughters of Mapule was also used to settle lobolo for one of the sons of Mpume. Sello, Mapule and Mpume approach you for advice regarding the following issues: 1.1 The proprietary consequences of the customary marriage between Sello and Mapule. (5) 1.2 The question whether the customary marriage between Sello and Mpume is valid despite failure by Sello to obtain a court order, in terms of section7(6) of the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998, for the approval of a contract which regulates the future matrimonial property system of his marriages. (5) 1.3 The question whether any debt was created when property allotted to Mapule’s house was used to provide lobolo for the customary marriage with Mpume and when the said property was also used to provide lobolo for the wife of one of the sons of Mpume. (5) Question 2 Elaborate on the Legislation, namely the Reform of Customary Law of Succession and Regulation of related matters Act 11 of 2009 on how it defined 2.1 the concept of a descendant (5) 2.2 a spouse (5) 2.3 woman to woman marriages (5)

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IND2601
Assignment 1 Semester 2 2025
Unique #:

Due Date: August 2025

Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.

+27 81 278 3372

, QUESTION 1

1.1.

Sello and Mapule were married by customary law in January 1999, which is after the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998 (RCMA) came into effect on 15
November 2000. However, even though the marriage occurred before the cut-off
date, the legal position has evolved due to constitutional challenges.

Initially, in terms of section 7(1) of the RCMA, customary marriages entered into
before the Act came into operation were governed by the rules of customary law.
This meant that a husband had control over all the family property, and separate
houses (in cases of polygyny) had their own property managed by the husband as
head of the family. Women had no independent property rights under this traditional
system.1

However, in the case of Gumede v President of the Republic of South Africa, the
Constitutional Court declared section 7(1) of the RCMA unconstitutional because it
discriminated against women in pre-Act marriages. The Court held that all customary
marriages, whether entered into before or after the RCMA came into effect, must be
treated equally in terms of constitutional principles of equality and dignity.2 This
ruling gave women equal ownership and rights over marital property.

Therefore, the marriage between Sello and Mapule is now regarded as a marriage in
community of property, unless they had entered into an antenuptial contract. This
means that both spouses jointly own all the property acquired during the marriage
and must manage it together.3



1.2.

The customary marriage between Sello and Mpume is valid, despite Sello’s failure
to obtain a court order in terms of section 7(6) of the Recognition of Customary
Marriages Act 120 of 1998 (RCMA). Section 3 of the RCMA clearly states the
requirements for a valid customary marriage: both parties must be 18 or older, must

1
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act 120 of 1998, s 7(1).
2
Gumede v President of the Republic of South Africa 2009 (3) SA 152 (CC).
3
RCMA 120 of 1998, s 6; see also MM v MN and Another 2013 (4) SA 415 (CC).


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