MATRIMONIAL PROPERTY ACT
NO. 88 OF 1984
NO. 88 OF 1984
[ASSENTED TO 3 JULY, 1984 ]
[DATE OF COMMENCEMENT:1
NOVEMBER, 1984 ]
[DATE OF COMMENCEMENT:
(Afrikaans text signed by the
State President)
as amended by
Matrimonial Property
Amendment Act, No. 91 of 1986
Intestate Succession Act, No.
81 of 1987
[with effect from 18 March, 1988 ]
Marriage and Matrimonial
Property Law Amendment Act, No. 3 of 1988
Insolvency Amendment Act, No.
122 of 1993
[with effect from 1 September, 1993 ]
General Law Fourth
Amendment Act, No. 132 of 1993
[with effect from 1 December, 1993 ]
Guardianship Act, No. 192 of 1993
[with effect from 1 March, 1994 ]
Justice Laws Rationalisation
Act, No. 18 of 1996
[with effect from 1 April 1997 ]
National Credit Act, No.
34 of 2005
[with effect from 1 June, 2006 , unless
otherwise indicated]
ACT
To amend the matrimonial property law and to provide for
matters connected therewith.
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
1.
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Definitions
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CHAPTER
I ACCRUAL SYSTEM
2.
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Marriages subject to
accrual system
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3.
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Accrual system
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4.
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Accrual of estate
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5.
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Inheritances, legacies and
donations excluded from accrual
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6.
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Proof of commencement
value of estate
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7.
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Obligation to furnish
particulars of value of estate
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8.
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Power of court to order
division of accrual
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9.
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Forfeiture of right to
accrual sharing
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10.
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Deferment of satisfaction
of accrual claim
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CHAPTER II
ABOLITION OF MARITAL POWER
ABOLITION OF MARITAL POWER
11.
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Abolition of marital power
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12.
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Effect of abolition of
marital power
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13.
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. . . . . .
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CHAPTER III
MARRIAGES IN COMMUNITY OF PROPERTY
MARRIAGES IN COMMUNITY OF PROPERTY
14.
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Equal powers of spouses
married in community
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15.
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Powers of spouses
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16.
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Want of consent, and
suspension of powers of spouse
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17.
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Litigation by or against
spouses
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CHAPTER IV
GENERAL PROVISIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
18.
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Certain damages excluded
from community and recoverable from other spouse
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19.
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Liability for delicts
committed by spouses
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20.
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Power of court to order
division of joint estate
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21.
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Change of matrimonial
property system
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22.
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Donations between spouses
permissible
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23.
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Liability of spouses for
household necessaries
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24.
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Distribution of
matrimonial property upon dissolution of marriage for want of consent of
parents or guardian
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25.
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Application of Chapters II
and III
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26.
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. . . . . .
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27.
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. . . . . .
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28.
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29.
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30.
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31.
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32.
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33.
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34.
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35.
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36.
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37.
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Repeal of laws
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38.
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Short title and
commencement
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Schedule
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1. Definitions.—In this Act, unless
the context indicates otherwise—
“banking institution” means a banking
institution as defined in section 1 of the
Banks Act, 1965 (Act No. 23 of 1965);
“building society” means a building
society as defined in section 1 of the
Building Societies Act, 1965 (Act No. 24 of 1965);
*“court” means a provincial or local
division of the Supreme Court of South Africa or a divorce court instituted
under section 10 of the Black Administration Act, 1927, Amendment Act, 1929 (Act
No. 9 of 1929), and includes, for the purposes of section 16, a judge in
chambers, and, for the purposes of section 16 (1), a magistrate’s court which
has jurisdiction in the matter concerned;
“financial institution” means a
financial institution as defined in section 1
of the Financial Institutions (Investment of Funds) Act, 1984 (Act No. 39 of 1984);
“joint estate” means the joint estate
of a husband and a wife married in community of property;
“listed securities” means securities
as defined in section 1 of the Stock
Exchanges Control Act, 1985 (Act No. 1 of 1985);
[Definition of “listed
securities” amended by s. 4 of Act No. 18 of 1996.]
“separate property” means property
which does not form part of a joint estate.
CHAPTER I
ACCRUAL SYSTEM
ACCRUAL SYSTEM
2. Marriages subject to accrual system.—Every
marriage out of community of property in terms of an antenuptial contract by
which community of property and community of profit and loss are excluded,
which is entered into after the commencement of this Act, is subject to the
accrual system specified in this Chapter, except in so far as that system is
expressly excluded by the antenuptial contract.
3. Accrual system.—(1) At
the dissolution of a marriage subject to the accrual system, by divorce or by
the death of one or both of the spouses, the spouse whose estate shows no accrual
or a smaller accrual than the estate of the other spouse, or his estate if he
is deceased, acquires a claim against the other spouse or his estate for an
amount equal to half of the difference between the accrual of the respective
estates of the spouses.
(2) Subject to the provisions of section 8 (1), a
claim in terms of subsection (1) arises at the dissolution of the marriage and
the right of a spouse to share in terms of this Act in the accrual of the
estate of the other spouse is during the subsistence of the marriage not
transferable or liable to attachment, and does not form part of the insolvent
estate of a spouse.
4. Accrual of estate.—(1) (a) The
accrual of the estate of a spouse is the amount by which the net value of his
estate at the dissolution of his marriage exceeds the net value of his estate
at the commencement of that marriage.
(b) In the determination of the accrual of
the estate of a spouse—
(i)
any amount which accrued
to that estate by way of damages, other than damages for patrimonial loss, is
left out of account;
(ii)
an asset which has been
excluded from the accrual system in terms of the antenuptial contract of the
spouses, as well as any other asset which he acquired by virtue of his
possession or former possession of the first-mentioned asset, is not taken into
account as part of that estate at the commencement or the dissolution of his
marriage;
(iii)
the net value of that
estate at the commencement of his marriage is calculated with due allowance for
any difference which may exist in the value of money at the commencement and
dissolution of his marriage, and for that purpose the weighted average of the
consumer price index as published from time to time in the Gazette serves
as prima facie proof of any change in the value of money.
(2) The accrual of the estate of a deceased spouse
is determined before effect is given to any testamentary disposition, donation mortis
causa or succession out of that estate in terms of the law of intestate
succession.
5. Inheritances, legacies and donations
excluded from accrual.—(1) An inheritance, a legacy or a
donation which accrues to a spouse during the subsistence of his marriage, as
well as any other asset which he acquired by virtue of his possession or former
possession of such inheritance, legacy or donation, does not form part of the
accrual of his estate, except in so far as the spouses may agree otherwise in
their antenuptial contract or in so far as the testator or donor may stipulate
otherwise.
(2) In the determination of the accrual of the
estate of a spouse a donation between spouses, other than a donation mortis
causa, is not taken into account either as part of the estate of the donor
or as part of the estate of the donee.
6. Proof of commencement value of
estate.—(1) Where a party to an intended marriage does not for
the purpose of proof of the net value of his estate at the commencement of his
marriage declare that value in the antenuptial contract concerned, he may for
such purpose declare that value before the marriage is entered into or within
six months thereafter in a statement, which shall be signed by the other party,
and cause the statement to be attested by a notary and filed with the copy of
the antenuptial contract of the parties in the protocol of the notary before
whom the antenuptial contract was executed.
(2) A notary attesting such a statement shall
furnish the parties with a certified copy thereof on which he shall certify
that the original is kept in his protocol together with the copy of the
antenuptial contract of the parties or, if he is not the notary before whom the
antenuptial contract was executed, he shall send the original statement by
registered post to the notary in whose protocol the antenuptial contract is
kept, or to the custodian of his protocol, as the case may be, and the
last-mentioned notary or that custodian shall keep the original statement
together with the copy of the antenuptial contract of the parties in his
protocol.
(3) An antenuptial contract contemplated in subsection
(1) or a certified copy thereof, or a statement signed and attested in terms of
subsection (1) or a certified copy thereof contemplated in subsection (2),
serves as prima facie proof of the net value of the estate of the spouse
concerned at the commencement of his marriage.
(4) The net value of the estate of a spouse at the
commencement of his marriage is deemed to be nil if—
(a)
the liabilities of that
spouse exceed his assets at such commencement;
(b)
that value was not
declared in his antenuptial contract or in a statement in terms of subsection
(1) and the contrary is not proved.
7. Obligation to furnish particulars of
value of estate.—When it is necessary to determine the accrual of the
estate of a spouse or a deceased spouse, that spouse or the executor of the
estate of the deceased spouse, as the case may be, shall within a reasonable
time at the request of the other spouse or the executor of the estate of the
other spouse, as the case may be, furnish full particulars of the value of that
estate.
8. Power of court to order division of
accrual.—(1) A court may on the application of a spouse whose
marriage is subject to the accrual system and who satisfies the court that his
right to share in the accrual of the estate of the other spouse at the
dissolution of the marriage is being or will probably be seriously prejudiced
by the conduct or proposed conduct of the other spouse, and that other persons
will not be prejudiced thereby, order the immediate division of the accrual
concerned in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter or on such other
basis as the court may deem just.
(2) A court making an order under subsection (1)
may order that the accrual system applicable to the marriage be replaced by a
matrimonial property system in terms of which accrual sharing as well as
community of property and community of profit and loss are excluded.
(3) When an order is made under subsection (2),
the registrar shall send a copy thereof to the registrar of deeds concerned,
who shall cause an appropriate reference to the new matrimonial property system
to be made on the registry duplicate of the antenuptial contract concerned and
on every copy thereof tendered to him for endorsement.
(4) A registrar of deeds who receives notice of a
new matrimonial property system in terms of subsection (3), shall notify all
other registrars of deeds accordingly and furnish each of them with a copy of
the court order, and every registrar of deeds so notified shall cause an
appropriate reference to the new matrimonial property system to be endorsed on
the copy, if any, of the antenuptial contract concerned filed in his registry
and on every copy thereof tendered to him for endorsement.
9. Forfeiture of right to accrual
sharing.—The right to share in the accrual of the estate of a spouse in
terms of this Chapter is a patrimonial benefit which may on divorce be declared
forfeit, either wholly or in part.
10. Deferment of satisfaction of
accrual claim.—A court may on the application of a person against whom an
accrual claim lies, order that satisfaction of the claim be deferred on such
conditions, including conditions relating to the furnishing of security, the
payment of interest, the payment of instalments, and the delivery or transfer
of specified assets, as the court may deem just.
CHAPTER II
ABOLITION OF MARITAL POWER
ABOLITION OF MARITAL POWER
11. Abolition of marital power.—(1) The
common law rule in terms of which a husband obtains the marital power over the
person and property of his wife is hereby repealed.
(2) Any marital power which a husband has over the
person and property of his wife immediately prior to the date of coming into
operation of this subsection, is hereby abolished.
(3) The provisions of Chapter III shall apply to
every marriage in community of property irrespective of the date on which such
marriage was entered into.
(4) The abolition of the marital power by subsection
(2) shall not affect the legal consequences of any act done or omission or fact
existing before such abolition.
[S. 11 substituted by s. 29
of Act No. 132 of 1993.]
12. Effect of abolition of marital
power.—Subject to the provisions of this Act, the effect of the abolition
of the marital power is to do away with the restrictions which the marital
power places on the capacity of a wife to contract and to litigate.
13. . . . . . .
[S. 13 substituted by s. 30
of Act No. 132 of 1993 and repealed by s. 4
of Act No. 192 of 1993.]
CHAPTER III
MARRIAGES IN COMMUNITY OF PROPERTY
MARRIAGES IN COMMUNITY OF PROPERTY
14. Equal powers of spouses married in
community.—Subject to the provisions of this Chapter, a wife in a marriage
in community of property has the same powers with regard to the disposal of the
assets of the joint estate, the contracting of debts which lie against the
joint estate, and the management of the joint estate as those which a husband
in such a marriage had immediately before the commencement of this Act.
15. Powers of spouses.—(1) Subject
to the provisions of subsections (2), (3) and (7), a spouse in a marriage in
community of property may perform any juristic act with regard to the joint
estate without the consent of the other spouse.
(2) Such a spouse shall not without the written
consent of the other spouse—
(a)
alienate, mortgage,
burden with a servitude or confer any other real right in any immovable
property forming part of the joint estate;
(b)
enter into any contract
for the alienation, mortgaging, burdening with a servitude or conferring of any
other real right in immovable property forming part of the joint estate;
(c)
alienate, cede or pledge
any shares, stock, debentures, debenture bonds, insurance policies, mortgage
bonds, fixed deposits or any similar assets, or any investment by or on behalf
of the other spouse in a financial institution, forming part of the joint
estate;
(d)
alienate or pledge any
jewellery, coins, stamps, paintings or any other assets forming part of the
joint estate and held mainly as investments;
(e)
withdraw money held in
the name of the other spouse in any account in a banking institution, a
building society or the Post Office Savings Bank of the Republic of South Africa ;
( f )
enter, as a consumer,
into a credit agreement to which the provisions of the National Credit Act,
2005 apply, as “consumer” and “credit agreement” are respectively defined in
that Act, but this paragraph does not require the written consent of a spouse
before incurring each successive charge under a credit facility, as defined in
that Act;
[Para. ( f )
substituted by s. 172 (2) of Act No. 34 of 2005.]
(g)
as a purchaser enter
into a contract as defined in the Alienation of Land Act, 1981 (Act No. 68 of
1981), and to which the provisions of that Act apply;
(h)
bind himself as surety.
(3) A spouse shall not without the consent of the
other spouse—
(a)
alienate, pledge or
otherwise burden any furniture or other effects of the common household forming
part of the joint estate;
(b)
receive any money due or
accruing to that other spouse or the joint estate by way of—
(i)
remuneration,
earnings, bonus, allowance, royalty, pension or gratuity, by virtue of his
profession, trade, business, or services rendered by him;
(ii)
damages for loss of
income contemplated in subparagraph (i);
(iii)
inheritance, legacy,
donation, bursary or prize left, bequeathed, made or awarded to the other
spouse;
(iv)
income derived from
the separate property of the other spouse;
(v)
dividends or interest
on or the proceeds of shares or investments in the name of the other spouse;
(vi)
the proceeds of any
insurance policy or annuity in favour of the other spouse;
(c)
donate to another person
any asset of the joint estate or alienate such an asset without value,
excluding an asset of which the donation or alienation does not and probably
will not unreasonably prejudice the interest of the other spouse in the joint
estate, and which is not contrary to the provisions of subsection (2) or paragraph
(a) of this subsection.
(4) The consent required for the purposes of paragraphs
(b) to (g) of subsection (2), and subsection (3) may, except
where it is required for the registration of a deed in a deeds registry, also
be given by way of ratification within a reasonable time after the act
concerned.
(5) The consent required for the performance of
the acts contemplated in paragraphs (a), (b), ( f ),
(g) and (h) of subsection (2) shall be given separately in
respect of each act and shall be attested by two competent witnesses.
(6) The provisions of paragraphs (b), (c),
( f ), (g) and (h) of subsection (2) do not
apply where an act contemplated in those paragraphs is performed by a spouse in
the ordinary course of his profession, trade or business.
(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection
(2) (c), a spouse may without the consent of the other spouse—
(a)
sell listed securities
on the stock exchange and cede or pledge listed securities in order to buy
listed securities;
(b)
alienate, cede or
pledge—
(i)
a deposit held in his
name at a building society or banking institution;
(ii)
building society
shares registered in his name.
(8) In determining whether a donation or
alienation contemplated in subsection (3) (c) does not or probably will
not unreasonably prejudice the interest of the other spouse in the joint
estate, the court shall have regard to the value of the property donated or
alienated, the reason for the donation or alienation, the financial and social
standing of the spouses, their standard of living and any other factor which in
the opinion of the court should be taken into account.
(9) When a spouse enters into a transaction with a
person contrary to the provisions of subsection (2) or (3) of this section, or
an order under section 16 (2), and—
(a)
that person does not
know and cannot reasonably know that the transaction is being entered into
contrary to those provisions or that order, it is deemed that the transaction
concerned has been entered into with the consent required in terms of the said subsection
(2) or (3), or while the power concerned of the spouse has not been suspended,
as the case may be;
(b)
that spouse knows or
ought reasonably to know that he will probably not obtain the consent required
in terms of the said subsection (2) or (3), or that the power concerned has
been suspended, as the case may be, and the joint estate suffers a loss as a
result of that transaction, an adjustment shall be effected in favour of the
other spouse upon the division of the joint estate.
16. Want of consent, and suspension of
powers of spouse.—(1) When a spouse withholds the consent
required in terms of subsection (2) or (3) of section 15, or section 17, or
when that consent can for any other reason not be obtained, a court may on the
application of the other spouse give him leave to enter into the transaction
without the required consent if it is satisfied, in the case where the consent
is withheld, that such withholding is unreasonable or, in any other case, that
there is good reason to dispense with the consent.
(2) If a court is satisfied that it is essential
for the protection of the interest of a spouse in the joint estate, it may on
the application of that spouse suspend for a definite or an indefinite period
any power which the other spouse may exercise under this Chapter.
17. Litigation by or against spouses.—(1) A
spouse married in community of property shall not without the written consent
of the other spouse institute legal proceedings against another person or
defend legal proceedings instituted by another person, except legal
proceedings—
(a)
in respect of his
separate property;
(b)
for the recovery of
damages, other than damages for patrimonial loss, by reason of the commission
of a delict against him;
(c)
in respect of a matter
relating to his profession, trade or business.
(2) A party to legal proceedings instituted or
defended by a spouse may not challenge the validity of the proceedings on the
ground of want of the consent required in terms of subsection (1).
(3) If costs are awarded against a spouse in legal
proceedings instituted or defended by him without the consent required in terms
of subsection (1), the court may, with due regard to the interest of the other
spouse in the joint estate and the reason for the want of consent, order that
those costs be recovered from the separate property, if any, of the
first-mentioned spouse and, in so far as those costs cannot be so recovered,
that they be recovered from the joint estate, in which case the court may order
that upon the division of the joint estate an adjustment shall be effected in
favour of the other spouse.
(4) (a) An application for the
surrender of a joint estate shall be made by both spouses.
(b) An application for the sequestration of
a joint estate shall be made against both spouses: Provided that no application
for the sequestration of the estate of a debtor shall be dismissed on the
ground that such debtor’s estate is a joint estate if the applicant satisfies
the court that despite reasonable steps taken by him he was unable to establish
whether the debtor is married in community of property or the name and address
of the spouse of the debtor.
[Sub-s. (4) substituted by s.
11 of Act No. 122 of 1993.]
(5) Where a debt is recoverable from a joint
estate, the spouse who incurred the debt or both spouses jointly may be sued
therefor, and where a debt has been incurred for necessaries for the joint
household, the spouses may be sued jointly or severally therefor.
CHAPTER IV
GENERAL PROVISIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
18. Certain damages excluded from
community and recoverable from other spouse.—Notwithstanding the fact that
a spouse is married in community of property—
(a)
any amount recovered by
him by way of damages, other than damages for patrimonial loss, by reason of a
delict committed against him, does not fall into the joint estate but becomes
his separate property;
(b)
he may recover from the
other spouse damages, other than damages for patrimonial loss, in respect of
bodily injuries suffered by him and attributable either wholly or in part to
the fault of that spouse.
19. Liability for delicts committed by
spouses.—When a spouse is liable for the payment of damages, including
damages for non-patrimonial loss, by reason of a delict committed by him or
when a contribution is recoverable from a spouse under the Apportionment of
Damages Act, 1956 (Act No. 34 of 1956), such damages or contribution and any
costs awarded against him are recoverable from the separate property, if any,
of that spouse, and only in so far as he has no separate property, from the
joint estate: Provided that in so far as such damages, contribution or costs
have been recovered from the joint estate, an adjustment shall, upon the
division of the joint estate, be effected in favour of the other spouse or his
estate, as the case may be.
20. Power of court to order division of
joint estate.—(1) A court may on the application of a spouse, if
it is satisfied that the interest of that spouse in the joint estate is being
or will probably be seriously prejudiced by the conduct or proposed conduct of
the other spouse, and that other persons will not be prejudiced thereby, order
the immediate division of the joint estate in equal shares or on such other
basis as the court may deem just.
(2) A court making an order under subsection (1)
may order that the community of property be replaced by another matrimonial
property system, subject to such conditions as it may deem fit.
21. Change of matrimonial property
system.—(1) A husband and wife, whether married before or after
the commencement of this Act, may jointly apply to a court for leave to change
the matrimonial property system, including the marital power, which applies to
their marriage, and the court may, if satisfied that—
(a)
there are sound reasons
for the proposed change;
(b)
sufficient notice of the
proposed change has been given to all the creditors of the spouses; and
(c)
no other person will be
prejudiced by the proposed change,
order that such matrimonial property system shall no longer
apply to their marriage and authorize them to enter into a notarial contract by
which their future matrimonial property system is regulated on such conditions
as the court may think fit.
(2) (a) Notwithstanding anything
to the contrary in any law or the common law contained, but subject to the
provisions of paragraphs (b) and (c), the spouses to a marriage
out of community of property—
(i)
entered into before the
commencement of this Act in terms of an antenuptial contract by which community
of property and community of profit and loss are excluded; or
(ii)
entered into before the
commencement of the Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act, 1988,
in terms of section 22 (6) of the Black Administration Act, 1927 (Act No.
38 of 1927), as it was in force immediately before its repeal by the said
Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment Act, 1988,
may cause the provisions of Chapter I of this Act to apply
in respect of their marriage by the execution and registration in a registry
within two years after the commencement of this Act or, in the case of a
marriage contemplated in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, within two years
after the commencement of the said Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law
Amendment Act, 1988, as the case may be, or such longer period, but not less
than six months, determined by the Minister by notice in the Gazette, of
a notarial contract to that effect.
[Para. (a) substituted
by s. 1 (a) of Act No. 91 of 1986 and by s. 3 of Act No. 3 of 1988.]
(b) The provisions of Chapter I apply in
such a case from the date of the conclusion of the marriage of the spouses or
from the date of the execution of the notarial contract concerned, as the
spouses may declare in that contract.
(c) For the purpose of proof of the net
value of the respective estates of the spouses on the date on which the
provisions of Chapter I so apply, they may declare that value either in the
notarial contract concerned or in a statement as contemplated in section 6, and
in the last-mentioned case the provisions of the said section 6 apply mutatis
mutandis in respect of that statement.
[Para. (c) substituted
by s. 1 (b) of Act No. 91 of 1986.]
(d) For the purposes of section 4 (1) the
commencement of the marriage concerned is deemed to be the date contemplated in
paragraph (b).
(e) The inclusion of an asset in a
statement contemplated in section 6 does not serve as proof of any right of any
person with regard to that asset or for the purpose of any release contemplated
in section 21 (1) of the Insolvency Act, 1936 (Act No. 24 of 1936).
22. Donations between spouses
permissible.—Subject to the provisions of the Insolvency Act, 1936 (Act No.
24 of 1936), no transaction effected before or after the commencement of this
Act is void or voidable merely because it amounts to a donation between
spouses.
23. Liability of spouses for household
necessaries.—(1) Any right of recourse which a spouse may have
against the other spouse in terms of the common law or any law which is in
force at the commencement of this Act or which was in force before that
commencement, in respect of contributions made for necessaries for the joint
household of the spouses, lapses, subject to the provisions of subsections (3)
and (4), at that commencement.
(2) A spouse married out of community of property
before or after the commencement of this Act is liable to contribute to
necessaries for the joint household pro rata according to his financial
means, and is deemed to have been so liable for the period from the beginning
of his marriage until that commencement.
(3) A spouse married out of community of property
before the commencement of this Act has a right of recourse against the other
spouse in so far as he has contributed more in respect of necessaries for the
joint household than that for which he was liable in terms of subsection (2).
(4) In the absence of any agreement to the
contrary between spouses, a spouse does not have a right of recourse against
the other spouse to whom he was married out of community of property after the
commencement of this Act with regard to any contribution which he made in
respect of necessaries for the joint household.
(5) Spouses married out of community of property
are jointly and severally liable to third parties for all debts incurred by
either of them in respect of necessaries for the joint household.
(6) Subsection (1) shall not be construed as
conferring on a spouse a right to reclaim anything that he has already paid at
the commencement of this Act in satisfaction of a right of recourse, and subsection
(3) shall not be construed as conferring on a spouse a right to exercise the
right of recourse referred to in that subsection in respect of any period with
regard to which he has already exercised a right of recourse on any other
ground.
24. Distribution of matrimonial
property upon dissolution of marriage for want of consent of parents or
guardian.—(1) If a court dissolves a marriage to which a minor
is a party on the ground of want of consent of the parents or guardian of that
minor, or a commissioner of child welfare whose consent is by law required for
the entering into of a marriage, it may make such order with regard to the
division of the matrimonial property of the spouses as it may deem just.
(2) If such a marriage is not dissolved, the
patrimonial consequences of the marriage are the same as if the minor were of
age when the marriage was entered into and any antenuptial contract in terms of
which the accrual system is included and which has been executed with a view to
such a marriage is deemed to have been validly executed.
25. Application of Chapters II and III.—(1) . . . . . .
[Sub-s. (1) deleted by s. 4 (a)
of Act No. 3 of 1988.]
(2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
any law or the common law contained, the spouses to a marriage entered into
before the commencement of this Act and in respect of which the matrimonial
property system was not governed by section 22 of the Black Administration Act,
1927 (Act No. 38 of 1927), may—
(a)
if they are married in
community of property, cause the provisions of Chapters II and III of this Act
to apply to their marriage; or
(b)
if they are married out
of community of property and the wife is subject to the marital power of the
husband, cause the provisions of Chapter II of this Act to apply to their
marriage,
by the execution and registration in a registry within two
years after the said commencement or such longer period, but not less than six
months, determined by the Minister by notice in the Gazette, of a notarial
contract to that effect, and in such a case those provisions apply from the
date on which the contract concerned was so registered.
[Sub-s. (2) substituted by s.
2 of Act No. 91 of 1986 and by s. 4 (b) of Act No. 3 of 1988.]
(3) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
any law or the common law contained, the spouses to a marriage entered into
before the commencement of the Marriage and Matrimonial Property Law Amendment
Act, 1988, and in respect of which the matrimonial property system was governed
by section 22 of the Black Administration Act, 1927 (Act No. 38 of 1927), may—
(a)
if they are married in
community of property, cause the provisions of Chapters II and III of this Act
to apply to their marriage; or
(b)
if they are married out
of community of property and the wife is subject to the marital power of the
husband, cause the provisions of Chapter II of this Act to apply to their
marriage,
by the execution and registration in a registry within two
years after the said commencement or such longer period, but not less than six
months, determined by the Minister by notice in the Gazette, of a
notarial contract to that effect, and in such a case those provisions apply
from the date on which the contract was so registered.
[Sub-s. (3) added by s. 4 (c)
of Act No. 3 of 1988.]
26. . . . . . .
[S. 26 substituted by s. 5
of Act No. 3 of 1988 and repealed by s. 31 of Act No. 132 of 1993.]
27. . . . . . .
[S. 27 repealed by s. 2
of Act No. 81 of 1987.]
28. Amends section 3 (1) of the
Deeds Registries Act, No. 47 of 1937, by substituting paragraph (k).
29. Substitutes section 17 of
the Deeds Registries Act, No. 47 of 1937.
30. Amends section 25 (3) of the
Deeds Registries Act, No. 47 of 1937, by substituting the expression “section
17 (1)” for the expression “subsection (3) of section seventeen”.
31. Amends section 45 of the
Deeds Registries Act, No. 47 of 1937, by substituting subsection (1).
32. Inserts section 89 in the
Deeds Registries Act, No. 47 of 1937.
33. Amends section 2 of the Apportionment
of Damages Act, No. 34 of 1956, as follows:—paragraph (a) substitutes
subsection (1A); and paragraph (b) deletes the first proviso to subsection (6)
(a).
34. Inserts section 24A in the
Marriage Act, No. 25 of 1961.
35. Amends section 29 (1)
of the Magistrates’ Courts Act, No. 32 of 1944, by inserting paragraph (eA).
36. Amends section 7 of the
Divorce Act, No. 70 of 1979, as follows:—paragraph (a) substitutes subsection
(2); and paragraph (b) adds subsections (3), (4), (5) and (6).
37. Repeal of laws.—The laws
mentioned in the Schedule are hereby repealed to the extent set out in the
third column of the Schedule.
38. Short title and commencement.—(1) This
Act shall be called the Matrimonial Property Act, 1984 and shall come into
operation on a date fixed by the State President by proclamation in the Gazette.
(2) Different dates may be fixed under subsection
(1) in respect of different provisions of this Act.
Schedule
No. and year of law
|
Title or subject
|
Extent of repeal
|
The Perpetual
Edict of 4 October 1540
|
The Perpetual Edict
|
Section 17
in so far as it is in force in the Republic
|
The
Political Ordinance of 1 April 1580
|
The Political Ordinance
|
Sections 3
and 13 in so far as they are in force in the Republic
|
Law No. 13
of 1883 (
|
To amend the Law of Divorce
|
Sections 10
and 11
|
Act No. 37
of 1953
|
Matrimonial Affairs Act, 1953
|
Section 3
|
Act No. 13 of 1976
|
Matrimonial Affairs Amendment
Act, 1976
|
The whole
|
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