29/06/2025 Bertus Preller Costs, Customary Law, Customary Marriages, Motion Proceedings, Plascon Evans Rule, Punitive Cost Orders, Recognition of Customary Marriages Act affidavit conflict, ancestral law, Black Administration Act, civil marriage, customary marriage, customary rites, Deane AJ, estate administration, executor appointment, family law litigation, Germiston, High Court Free State, inheritance law, KwaZulu Natal, legal burden of proof, legal recognition, lobolo, Marital Disputes, marital status dispute, marriage registration, Master of the High Court, matrimonial property, Moloi v Nkosi, motion proceedings, Plascon-Evans rule, QwaQwa, RCMA 120 of 1998, South African Family Law, Zulu marriage customs Moloi v Nkosi and Others (1713/2025) [2025] ZAFSHC 153 (15 May 2025): Customary Marriage Claims Undone by Motion Proceedings and the Plascon-Evans Rule. The Factual Matrix: Competing Marital Claims and the Legacy of Customary Law At the heart of Moloi v Nkosi and Others (1713/2025) ZAFSHC 153 (15 May 2025) lies a bitter… READ MORE
29/06/2025 Bertus Preller Cohabitation, Customary Marriages, Inheritance rights, Interdict, Intestate Succession, Procedure, South African succession law Administration of Estates Act, African customary law, attorney and client scale, cohabitation, customary law marriage, customary marriage, estate administration, estate dispute, estate litigation, estate preservation, executor appointment, High Court Pretoria, inheritance dispute, interim interdict, intestate succession, joint estate, Legal Costs, legal remedy, lobola, matrimonial property, patrimonial rights, Peteke v Khumalo, recognition of marriage, Rule 6(12), section 13, South African Family Law, testamentary rights, Urgent Application, urgent interdict, ZAGPPHC 447 Customary Marriage Dispute Halts Estate Administration: Peteke v Khumalo and Others (2025-009348) [2025] ZAGPPHC 447 (6 May 2025). The Factual Matrix: Disputed Customary Marriage and Control Over the Deceased’s Estate In Peteke v Khumalo and Others (2025-009348) ZAGPPHC 447 (6 May 2025), the applicant approached the High Court… READ MORE