• Blended families are among the most legally complex family structures now reaching South African courts.
  • Courts are increasingly recognising lived parenting roles when deciding interim maintenance and care.
  • Children carry the heaviest burden when adult relationships collapse without clear legal and emotional frameworks.

Blended families are often framed as a modern evolution of the traditional nuclear household, but in practice, they present some of the most intricate legal and emotional challenges before South African courts.

These family structures bring together children, histories and competing loyalties, creating dynamics that test both relationships and the limits of the law.

From a litigation perspective, the complexity lies in the collision between lived family realities and formal legal definitions. When two adults form a household after previous relationships, the resulting family must navigate far more than shared commitment. It must reconcile identity, continuity and deeply rooted expectations, particularly where children are involved and have already formed attachments and dependencies.

Courts are now increasingly required to intervene when these arrangements break down.

Stepparent roles and Rule 43 disputes

In BE v NT and Others, the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with a Rule 43 application arising from a blended family context. The stepfather had assumed an active parenting role during the marriage without formally adopting the children. Following the breakdown of the marriage, he withdrew all financial support, including contributions to schooling, medical aid and household expenses.

The judgment, while primarily procedural, carries meaningful implications for blended families. The appeal was struck from the roll on the basis that interim Rule 43 orders are generally not appealable. However, the court clarified an important principle that a stepparent does not automatically carry a permanent legal duty to maintain stepchildren, yet interim relief may be granted where that individual has assumed a de facto parental role.

The reasoning reflects a broader judicial willingness to prioritise the lived realities of family life over strict biological or formal legal ties. Rule 43 exists to stabilise children’s circumstances during divorce proceedings, and where a stepparent’s conduct has created a legitimate expectation of continuity, courts may intervene temporarily to prevent disruption.

These orders remain discretionary, fact-specific and inherently temporary. They are not designed to impose lifelong obligations, but rather to protect children’s immediate welfare during periods of instability.

High courts confronting lived family realities

The principles emerging from the Supreme Court of Appeal have increasingly been applied by High Courts dealing directly with the lived consequences of blended family breakdowns.

In NM v BM and Others, the Western Cape High Court ordered a stepfather to pay interim maintenance, retain the children on his medical aid and contribute toward housing and living expenses. The court accepted that he had held himself out as a parent and had sustained a particular standard of living for the children throughout the marriage.

Despite the absence of a biological link, the court found that the consistent assumption of a parental role justified temporary relief. The decision reflects a clear judicial concern with avoiding both material and emotional harm to children during divorce proceedings.

Where a stable and continuous parenting environment has been created, that role cannot simply be withdrawn overnight without consequence. Courts are increasingly prepared to require their temporary continuation where necessary to protect children from severe disruption.

At the centre of these decisions remains a consistent principle: the best interests of the child take precedence, even where this challenges traditional understandings of parenthood.

Conflict, uncertainty and harm to children

Legal strain within blended families does not end with maintenance disputes. In a recent matter before the Gauteng High Court, a prolonged divorce revealed how contested authority, poor communication and shifting parental roles escalated into allegations of defamation, contempt of court and breaches of the Children’s Act.

The court ultimately found that the sustained conflict itself caused emotional harm to the child. In response, it imposed a structured parenting plan, mandated engagement with the family advocate and introduced strict communication protocols between the adults involved.

Although the case did not arise directly from a blended family, it illustrates a broader and recurring pattern. Where parental roles are unclear, inconsistent or continuously disputed, children are placed at the centre of instability and conflict.

The law cannot carry the full burden

Blended families are becoming an increasingly common feature of South African society, formed through second marriages, co-parenting arrangements and extended family living. Yet the legal and emotional frameworks governing these households remain underdeveloped relative to their complexity.

The courts have begun to respond by focusing on how families actually function rather than how they are formally defined. This shift allows for more nuanced and child-centred outcomes, particularly in interim matters involving care and maintenance.

However, the law has limits. It cannot fully resolve the tensions created by past relationships, divided loyalties and the pressure to form new family identities under uncertain conditions.

As these cases demonstrate, clear communication, defined roles, and realistic expectations within households remain as critical as any court order in protecting the well-being of children.

Conviction.co.za

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Director and Head of Litigation at VDM Incorporated.

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