The majority judgment in
Volks remains controversial. In 2019, Judge Davis – the High Court judge whose judgment was overturned by the Constitutional Court – criticised the majority judgment for claiming to recognise the vulnerability experienced by unmarried women in cohabitation relationships while also demonstrating "a general refusal to attribute legal consequences to this social reality". Davis wrote:The manner in which the majority attributes innate legal consequences to marriage, refusing to interrogate the manner in which law is itself a
social construct, is illustrative of a legal culture that eschews the challenge of legal transformation posed by the introduction of the Constitution in terms of which all legal rules need to be interrogated to test whether they pass constitutional muster. The result of the majority judgment is to entrench the concept of marriage above all other forms of relationship. These commentators argued that for many women in heterosexual life partnerships, as for many homosexual individuals before the
Civil Union Act, "the choice of formalisation [of the partnership] exists merely in theory". In 2016, the Constitutional Court heard
Laubscher NO v Duplan and Another, in which it unanimously upheld the
intestate succession rights of "unmarried same-sex partners in a permanent same-sex partnership, in which the partners have undertaken reciprocal duties of support". In that case, Justice
Johan Froneman wrote a minority opinion attempting to "meet
Volks head-on" and concluding that "
Volks cannot stand". Justice
Mbuyiseli Madlanga, who wrote for the
Bwanya majority, professed that "much as I am convinced that the
Volks decision was wrong, I am unable to make the jump and conclude that it was clearly wrong"; yet he found that the departure from the
Volks precedent was nonetheless appropriate because of intervening legal developments. == References ==