CHAPTER 1
Introduction
Module Master
1.1 THE LAW OF SUCCESSION
CONCEPT EXPLANATION
Definition Legal rules determining what happens to a person's estate after death —
identifying beneficiaries, the extent of their benefits, and their rights and
duties in the estate
Three methods (1) Testate succession — in terms of a valid will (successio ex testamento).
(2) Intestate succession — by operation of law where no valid will exists
(successio ab intestato). (3) Succession by contract — in terms of a pactum
successorium (successio ex contractu)
Material rules Determine who inherits and what they receive
Formal rules Describe the process by which the deceased estate is administered — dealt
with in Chapter 16
Legal system Forms part of private law — the administration process also operates in the
private sphere even though the Master of the High Court is involved
SUMMARY
Law of succession rules identify who succeeds the deceased and the extent of their benefits. There are three
methods of succession: by will, by operation of law (intestate), and by contract. The formal rules governing
administration of estates are covered in Chapter 16.
EXAM WATCH
The three methods of succession (TWC: Testate / Without a will / Contract) are a frequent starting point for
essay questions. Know that administration of estates forms part of the law of succession even though it is
dealt with separately.
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1.3 DUAL CHARACTER OF THE LAW OF SUCCESSION
CONCEPT EXPLANATION
Two branches (1) Common law of succession — comprises both testate and intestate
succession rules. (2) Customary law of succession — comprises intestate
succession rules only. Both branches have equal status in South African law
Mixed legal system South African law is a mixture of Roman-Dutch law influenced by English
common law AND various indigenous customary laws. Customary law =
customs and usages traditionally observed among the indigenous African
people
Equal status Common law and customary law have equal status — neither is subordinate
to the other. Both are subject to the Constitution and may be amended by
legislation
Key difference Common law rules focus on transferring wealth — the deceased has wide
freedom to dispose of property as they wish. Customary law focuses on
preserving the family unit — the heir steps into the shoes of the deceased and
acquires all rights AND obligations
SUMMARY
South African law of succession has a dual character — the common law branch (testate and intestate) and
the customary law branch (intestate only). Both have equal constitutional status. The key difference is that
common law focuses on transferring wealth while customary law focuses on preserving the family unit and
community.
EXAM WATCH
Know the two branches and their content — common law covers both testate and intestate while customary
law covers intestate only. This distinction comes up in problem questions asking which rules apply. Also know
the equal status of both branches.
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1.4 CHOICE OF LAW RULES
CONCEPT EXPLANATION
Why needed Duality creates situations where persons are subject to overlapping or
conflicting rights. Courts apply choice of law rules to determine which legal
system applies
Testate succession — s 1.4.2 Where there is a valid will — common law applies, especially regarding
capacity and validity. The testator may stipulate which law should apply using
their freedom of testation
Intestate succession — s 1.4.3 Before 15 Oct 2004: separate rules applied to black persons under s 23 of the
Black Administration Act. After Bhe v Magistrate, Khayelitsha: the Intestate
Succession Act applies to ALL intestate estates regardless of cultural
affiliation. The RCLSA (from 20 Sept 2010) confirms this but adds customary
law modifications
Administration — s 1.4.4 After Moseneke v The Master (2001) and Bhe (2004): one unified
administration system for ALL South Africans under the Administration of
Estates Act, supervised by the Master of the High Court
KEY CASE
Bhe v Magistrate, Khayelitsha 2005 (1) SA 580 (CC)
Declared s 23 of the Black Administration Act and the male primogeniture rule unconstitutional. Ordered that
the Intestate Succession Act applies to ALL intestate estates from 15 October 2004 — irrespective of the
cultural affiliation of the deceased. Also ordered a unified estate administration system for all South Africans.
SUMMARY
Choice of law rules determine whether common law or customary law applies to a particular estate. For
testate succession the common law applies unless the testator stipulates otherwise. For intestate succession
the Intestate Succession Act now applies to all estates — confirmed by Bhe and the RCLSA. For
administration there is one unified system under the Master since 2004.
EXAM WATCH
The Bhe case and its effect on choice of law rules is frequently tested. Know the key dates: 15 October 2004
(unified intestate succession) and 20 September 2010 (RCLSA commenced). For administration know the
Moseneke and Bhe cases established the current unified system.
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1.5 KEY SUCCESSION TERMINOLOGY
Property and Persons
TERM MEANING
Deceased estate All assets AND liabilities of the deceased at time of death. The residue is
what remains after funeral expenses, debts, taxes, admin costs, maintenance
claims and legacies are paid
Beneficiary Person to whom assets are transferred. Called an heir when receiving an
inheritance (whole estate / portion / residue). Called a legatee when receiving
a specific asset or amount (a legacy)
Executor Person authorised by letters of executorship from the Master to administer
the deceased estate
Master Master of the High Court — supervises all deceased estate administration
Descendants Common law: lineal descendants in the downward line. Customary law
(RCLSA): wider — includes persons accepted as the deceased's child under
customary law and women in substitute or woman-to-woman marriages
Ascendants Ancestors of the deceased — anyone in the upward line of relationship
Collateral Person related through a common ancestor — full/half brothers, sisters,
nieces, nephews, cousins, uncles, aunts
Vesting and Rights
TERM MEANING
Vest / Vesting When legal ownership or rights settle on a beneficiary
Dies cedit The moment a beneficiary obtains a vested right to claim delivery of a benefit
unconditionally — vesting takes place
Dies venit The moment the beneficiary's right to claim delivery actually becomes
enforceable — delivery must take place
Adiation Acceptance of a benefit from the estate
Repudiation Rejection of a benefit from the estate
Animus testandi The testator's intention to make a will
Succession Mechanisms
TERM MEANING
Freedom of testation A person's freedom to dispose of their estate as they please — subject to
limitations
Pactum successorium A contract by which parties attempt to regulate the devolution of one or both
parties' estate — generally invalid in South African law with limited exceptions
Fideicommissum A testamentary arrangement where one person (the fiduciary) receives
property and must later transfer it to another (the fideicommissary)
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