The Mercury

Judge makes cheating lover pay jilted ‘wife’

- Zelda Venter

CHEATING lover Mtshengu Zimu, who booted out his fiancée after he started a relationsh­ip with another woman, will have to cough up R123 149 for the pain he caused his former prospectiv­e wife.

Noncebo Nhlapo claimed more than R2 million in damages from Zimu after he had asked for her hand in marriage, but later found greener pastures.

While allowing certain expenses, Nhlapo proved she incurred in preparatio­n for their “long and happy life together” and some damages for her injured feelings, the court refused the bulk of her claim.

Judge Leicester Adams, sitting in the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, found some of the principles on which these claims were determined in the past, were now outdated.

He said the laws relating to a breach of promise to marry were based on a pre-constituti­onal heterosexu­al definition of marriage which traditiona­lly placed women on an unequal footing to men.

Damages

He turned down her R2m claim for the “prospectiv­e losses” she might have suffered as a result of Zimu’s breach of promise.

The judge said to hold a party liable for contractua­l damages for breach of promise to marry could lead to parties entering into marriages they did not, in good conscience, want to enter into, purely due to the fear of being faced with a claim.

“This is an untenable situation,” the judge said.

He also found that the fact that the feelings of the “innocent” party were hurt or that she or he felt jilted, was also not enough to warrant compensati­on.

He did, however, award her R25 000 in damages for her “hurt feelings”. She also received R98 149 – half of the expenses the former couple incurred for receiving in vitro treatment.

Nhlapo told the court that Zimu, in September 2012, proposed to her and they got engaged, although there was no ceremony. She was in her 30s at the time and he was 48. As they wanted children, they went to a fertility clinic for treatment.

She moved from Pretoria to eMa-lahleni to live with him. Three years later he became involved with another woman and dumped her. He at first, he removed her from his medical aid and replaced her with his new girlfriend.

He later took her back to her mother’s home.

Zimu said in his written plea he never promised to marry her: “Any engagement agreement existed only in her mind.”

But Nhlapo’s mother testified he asked her for her daughter’s hand in marriage. The judge found there was, indeed, a promise to marry.

Nhlapo also claimed damages for money she had spent improving her “new home” in preparatio­n for their life together.

This included R6 000 for the new marital bed she had bought. But the judge turned down this claim.

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