Harry Bath and Juanita Bath signed an antenuptial contract the day before their marriage on 22 October 2005. The couple had originally not intended to marry out of community of property, but shortly before the wedding Mr Bath was advised it would be preferable to protect assets from creditors' claims. They consulted with a notary, Mrs Nunes, who drafted the contract. Mr Bath later instituted divorce proceedings (for the third time on 29 March 2007), asserting the marriage was out of community of property subject to the accrual system, and claiming his share of the accrual. Mrs Bath counterclaimed and denied the marriage was out of community, alleging duress, undue influence, or alternatively that the contract was void for vagueness or should be rectified. The parties agreed that the validity of the antenuptial contract would be determined first as a separate issue. The antenuptial contract contained contradictory provisions: it excluded community of property and profit/loss and stated the marriage would be subject to the accrual system, but then listed assets to be excluded without values, and stated these assets would not be taken into account at either the beginning or dissolution of the marriage. Clause 6 stated the parties would execute a statement under s 6(1) of the Matrimonial Property Act reflecting net values, but this was never done.
The appeal was dismissed with costs. The high court's finding that the antenuptial contract was void for vagueness was upheld, meaning the parties were married in community of property.
An antenuptial contract that contains contradictory and incoherent terms regarding the exclusion of assets from the accrual system is void for vagueness where neither the wording of the contract nor the factual matrix/context can clarify with sufficient certainty what the parties intended to achieve. A court cannot make a contract for parties or resolve fundamental uncertainties about their intentions. Where terms are incapable of sensible construction due to internal contradictions - such as referring to "net values" without providing values, listing assets to be excluded without proper identification or valuation, and stating assets will not be taken into account at both the beginning and dissolution of marriage (which is contradictory to the operation of the accrual system) - the contract as a whole is vitiated for vagueness. In such circumstances, the default matrimonial property regime (marriage in community of property) applies.
The court made several obiter observations: (1) Even if the contract were valid, since no statement under s 6(1) of the Matrimonial Property Act was executed and no evidence of asset values was led, it would effectively have been a marriage in community of property since nothing was excluded from the accrual (paragraph 18). (2) The subjective understandings or intentions of the individual parties as to what the contract meant are not relevant to its interpretation - the objective facts and wording control (paragraph 15). (3) Evidence of duress or undue influence, while abandoned on appeal, was found not to have been proved in any event. (4) The court noted that the advice that marrying out of community would protect joint estate assets from creditors' claims was given, though its correctness was not in issue (paragraph 14). (5) The court implicitly approved the use of Rule 33(4) to separate the issue of the validity of the antenuptial contract from other divorce-related claims for determination as a preliminary matter.
This case is important in South African family law and contract law for establishing the limits of contractual interpretation in the context of antenuptial contracts. It demonstrates that even where parties clearly intend to marry out of community of property, if the antenuptial contract contains contradictory and incoherent terms that cannot be resolved through contextual interpretation, the contract will be void for vagueness. The judgment emphasizes that courts cannot make contracts for parties or resolve fundamental uncertainties about what parties intended to achieve. It serves as a cautionary tale about the importance of clear, coherent drafting in antenuptial contracts, particularly regarding the exclusion of assets under the accrual system and compliance with the Matrimonial Property Act's requirements for valuation statements. The case also illustrates the application of modern contractual interpretation principles (considering both text and context) in the matrimonial property context, and the consequences when neither text nor context can resolve fundamental ambiguities.
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