PORTFOLIO Semester 22025
2 2025
Unique Number:
Due date: 17 October 2025
QUESTION 1
1.1
The legal system that applies to the material validity of Patrick and Ruth’s marriage is the
law of the place where the marriage was celebrated, the lex loci celebrationis. In this case,
the marriage took place in Zanzibar, Tanzania, meaning that Tanzanian law governs the
essential or material validity of the marriage. This rule is supported by the decision in
Friedman v Friedman’s Executors and Others (1922) 43 NLR 259, which established that
the lex loci celebrationis determines the material validity of a marriage in South African
private international law.1
1.2
If it is shown that Patrick and Ruth married in Zanzibar to avoid the mandatory provisions of
Zambian law, such as the requirement for parental consent for minors, the situation would
fall under the doctrine of fraus legis. According to this doctrine, if parties domiciled in one
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QUESTION 1
1.1
The legal system that applies to the material validity of Patrick and Ruth’s marriage
is the law of the place where the marriage was celebrated, the lex loci celebrationis.
In this case, the marriage took place in Zanzibar, Tanzania, meaning that Tanzanian
law governs the essential or material validity of the marriage. This rule is supported
by the decision in Friedman v Friedman’s Executors and Others (1922) 43 NLR 259,
which established that the lex loci celebrationis determines the material validity of a
marriage in South African private international law.1
1.2
If it is shown that Patrick and Ruth married in Zanzibar to avoid the mandatory
provisions of Zambian law, such as the requirement for parental consent for minors,
the situation would fall under the doctrine of fraus legis. According to this doctrine, if
parties domiciled in one country marry elsewhere with the intention of evading an
essential legal requirement of their domicile, the marriage is tested against the lex
domicilii (law of domicile) rather than the lex loci celebrationis.2
In this case, both Patrick and Ruth were domiciled in Zambia at the time of marriage.
If it is proved that they travelled to Zanzibar deliberately to evade Zambian laws
requiring parental consent for minors, the marriage would be regarded as invalid
under Zambian law. The court would apply the lex domicilii of Zambia to assess its
material validity, following the principle set out in Pretorius v Pretorius 1948 (4) SA
144 (O) and illustrated in Kassim v Ghumran.3
Therefore, if evasive intent is proven, the marriage would not be valid under Zambian
law despite being celebrated in Zanzibar.
1
M.M. Wethmar-Lemmer, Private International Law: Only Study Guide for LJU4804 (University of
South Africa 2019) 68.
2
ibid 69.
3
Kassim v Ghumran and Another [Zimbabwe case cited in Wethmar-Lemmer, Private International
Law (n 1) 69].