• Court says widow had no right to act alone in business ownership on tribal land. 
  • Tribal Authority should have been joined in court action, says judge. 
  • Dispute highlights the intersection of inheritance law, customary rights, and family tensions. 

Boitumelo Tsholofelo Pebe believed she was protecting her late husband’s legacy when she took steps to claim full control of Rearabile Liquor Restaurant, a business operating from land allocated by a tribal authority in Kraaipan, North West.  

But in a strongly worded judgment, the North West High Court in Mafikeng found she acted prematurely, and without the necessary authority, to assert sole ownership of assets that legally and customarily belonged to a broader family structure. 

Judge A Reddy ruled that Pebe, though the appointed executrix of her late husband’s estate, had failed to include the Barolong Boo Ratlou Boo Setshiro Tribal Authority, the recognised custodian of the land, in her legal proceedings. The court described this as a “fatal flaw” in her case and dismissed her urgent application with costs. 

Land held in trust, not personal property 

At the heart of the case was land ownership. The liquor business, known as Rearabile Liquor Restaurant (RLR), operates from tribal land formally held by the tribal authority for the benefit of the Barolong community. According to the court, while the land had been allocated to Boitumelo’s late father-in-law, Kgaelebale Pebe, it did not amount to ownership in the private, commercial sense. 

The land falls under the Interim Protection of Informal Land Rights Act, which protects informal rights to land held by communities, not individuals. The court held that any decision regarding continued use of the land after Kgaelebale’s death must be made collectively by the community and the Tribal Authority, not by one family member acting alone. 

“Any order by this court granting final relief,” Judge A Reddy said, “would unlawfully usurp the role of the tribal authority, which holds a direct and substantial interest in this matter.” 

Not just a widow, but not the sole owner 

Boitumelo, who lost her husband Phukumusi James Pebe in 2020, was appointed to manage his estate. She then transferred the liquor licence and a Toyota Hilux used by the business into her own name. She claimed this made her the rightful owner of the business. 

Her in-laws, including her mother-in-law and several siblings of her late husband, disagreed. They argued that RLR had always been a family-run operation, founded in 2012 by the elder Kgaelebale, funded collectively, and maintained through pooled resources. 

They said Boitumelo’s actions to assume exclusive control, including locking them out, closing accounts, and demanding the return of the business vehicle, ignored their legal and customary rights as co-beneficiaries and descendants. 

The court agreed, finding that Boitumelo could not unilaterally claim the business and its assets, especially since James died intestate (without a will), and the estate had not yet been formally distributed. 

A family divided, a legacy in question 

The judgment paints a picture of a family once united by a shared business, now fractured by legal wrangling and loss. While Boitumelo said she was acting to protect the business for her children, the respondents accused her of sidelining the very people who built it alongside James. 

Her relationship with the family soured further after she attempted to shut them out of the business and remove the vehicle they had used to transport learners. Police were twice called to mediate. Eventually, a deadlock led Boitumelo to court, where she ultimately lost. 

Though the judge acknowledged her legal standing as executrix, he found that Boitumelo failed to meet the basic requirements for a final interdict: a clear legal right, unlawful interference, and the absence of another remedy. 

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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