Marriage and your estate: Navigating the legal implications


Understanding how your marital property regime impacts estate planning is crucial to ensuring your assets are distributed according to your wishes.
Eric Jordaan - Crue Invest (Pty) Ltd 
 
Your marital property system determines how your assets and debts are handled in the event of death, affecting estate administration and inheritance. Image: AdobeStock
The legal implications of your marital property regime directly influence the treatment of assets if your marriage ends due to death. Before drafting your will, it’s crucial to understand how your marital property system impacts your property rights and asset distribution. Your marital status, previous marriages, and property regime can significantly affect estate administration, as discussed below.
 
Marriage in community of property 
If you are married in community of property, you and your spouse share a single joint estate, meaning all assets are collectively owned, regardless of whose name they are registered under. It’s important to understand that there are not two separate estates, each containing 50% of the joint assets.
Upon the death of the first spouse, the entire estate must be administered. However, there are exceptions to joint ownership, such as inheritances specifically excluded or compensation received for personal injury claims, which remain the separate property of the recipient spouse. In this system, both spouses are jointly and severally liable for all debts within the estate, including those incurred before and during the marriage, regardless of whose name the debt is registered in.
If the first spouse dies, the executor will settle all debts, including estate duty, excluding funeral and burial expenses. The surviving spouse is entitled to 50% of the net value of the joint estate. The remaining 50% will be passed to the deceased spouse’s heirs, in accordance with the will or intestate succession laws. Understanding these provisions is essential for ensuring that your estate is managed and distributed according to your intentions.
 
Marriage out of community with the accrual 
The accrual system is generally considered the most equitable marital property regime, ensuring that both spouses share in the financial growth of their marriage. However, it is crucial for testators to account for the operation of the accrual when developing their estate plans.
The accrual system requires that, upon dissolution of the marriage, the profit made by each spouse during the marriage is calculated and divided equally. In their ante-nuptial contract, spouses can outline the financial aspects of their marriage, including what assets they bring into the marriage and whether any will be excluded from the accrual calculation.
 
Each spouse must declare the starting value of their estate in the contract, which serves as the baseline for calculating the accrual upon the first spouse’s death. During the marriage, both spouses retain full control of their estates. Upon the death of the first spouse, the net value of each estate is determined, and the spouse with the larger estate must transfer half of the difference to the spouse with the smaller estate.
Consequently, it is essential to understand how the accrual system impacts your estate to ensure your estate plan is effective and aligns with your intentions. For example, if your estate is larger, your surviving spouse will be entitled to their share of the accrual.
 
Marriage out of community without the accrual
The out-of-community of property marital regime, when chosen, offers simplicity in estate administration but can be inequitable. To marry under this regime, spouses must expressly exclude the accrual system through their ante-nuptial contract, but they must be fully aware of the potential consequences.
In the event of death, the estates of the spouses remain entirely separate, much like unmarried individuals. Each spouse retains full control over their own assets, and there is no sharing of growth in wealth during the marriage. When the first spouse dies, their estate is settled separately from the surviving spouse’s, without any division of wealth between them. This can be particularly unfair when one spouse has accumulated wealth, while the other has foregone personal advancement to focus on child-rearing or managing the household. In such cases, the surviving spouse has no right to a claim on the deceased spouse’s estate, despite potentially contributing significantly to the marriage.
 
However, the surviving spouse is entitled to claim reasonable maintenance under the Maintenance of Surviving Spouse Act, which aims to ensure that the surviving spouse is not left destitute. This system should, therefore, be carefully considered when deciding on the structure of one’s estate plan.
 
Customary law marriages
Under the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act, couples are automatically married in community of property. To marry out of community of property, they must enter into an ante-nuptial contract before the wedding and specify whether the accrual system will apply. In polygamous marriages, the husband must apply to the High Court for approval of a written contract detailing the chosen marital property regime. This process ensures that the legal structure of the marriage is properly documented and enforced in line with the parties’ wishes.
 
Unmarried
If you are unmarried and have never been married, as the sole owner of your assets and the only person responsible for your debt, your estate administration would be relatively simple. Complications could, however, arise where you are co-owner of property with another person or persons.
Regardless of your marital status, it is always advisable to have a valid will in place to ensure that your loved ones know your intentions in the event of death. Note that if you are unmarried but in a life partnership, dying without a valid will in place could inadvertently leave them financially prejudiced.
 
Divorced
If you are divorced, it is crucial to consider the provisions of your divorce order, especially regarding asset division or maintenance obligations in the event of your death. The terms of the divorce order are legally binding and will be taken into account by your executor when administering your estate. According to Section 2B of the Wills Act, you have a three-month window after your divorce to update your will. If you do not update it within this period and your ex-spouse remains a beneficiary, it will be assumed that you intended for them to benefit under your will.
 
Religious marriages
A religious marriage is one entered into in terms of a religion, such as Islamic or Hindu, and such partners are not considered to be spouses when it comes to marital property. There is no community of property in a religious marriage, meaning that such a union is treated as an out-of-community marriage with no accrual system. That said, note that in terms of the Income Tax Tact, partners to a religious marriage fall within the definition of ‘spouse’. This is because the Act determines that the spouse of a taxpayer includes anyone in a union recognised in accordance with the tenets of any religion.
 
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