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MICHAEL PEASAH YEBOAH VRS DANIELETTE PAGE

Case

by HER LADYSHIP JUSTICE MAVIS AKUA ANDOH (MRS).

Jurisdiction

HIGH COURT

Judge

HER LADYSHIP JUSTICE MAVIS AKUA ANDOH (MRS).

Catalog Type

Case

Judgement Date

Oct 16, 2023

Summary

Matrimonial Causes – Dissolution of Marriage – Breakdown of Marriage beyond reconciliation – Separation – Burden of Proof – Unchallenged Evidence. The case concerns a petition for divorce initiated by the Petitioner following leave granted by the court to serve the Respondent outside the jurisdiction. The parties were married under the Marriage Ordinance on 2nd June 2012 at the Accra Metropolitan Assembly. After their marriage, they cohabited briefly in Ghana before relocating to the United States, where they lived together from 2014 until 2020. Upon the Petitioner’s retirement in 2020, he returned to Ghana permanently while the Respondent remained in the United States. The marriage did not produce any children. The Petitioner contended that the marriage had broken down beyond reconciliation, citing the Respondent’s refusal to relocate to Ghana as previously agreed, the breakdown in communication, and the absence of marital relations since 2020. Consequently, he sought a single relief: the dissolution of the marriage. Despite being duly served with the petition and all subsequent court processes via courier in accordance with the court’s order, the Respondent failed to enter appearance or file any answer to the petition and did not participate in the proceedings. The court, satisfied that the Respondent had been given adequate notice and opportunity to be heard, proceeded to hear the Petitioner’s evidence. The central issue for determination was whether the marriage between the parties had broken down beyond reconciliation within the meaning of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1971 (Act 367) so as to warrant its dissolution. This required the court to assess whether the Petitioner had discharged the burden of proof by establishing facts sufficient to demonstrate the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage under the statutory framework. In its analysis, the court reiterated the well-established principle that a party who asserts a claim bears the burden of proving it, as reflected in both case law and the provisions of the Evidence Act. The court emphasized that the standard of proof in civil matters is on a balance of probabilities, requiring the Petitioner to present credible evidence that tilts the scale in his favour. The Petitioner’s unchallenged testimony was that the Respondent had refused to relocate to Ghana after his retirement, thereby frustrating the continuation of the marriage. He further testified that communication between them had broken down completely and that they had not lived together as husband and wife, nor engaged in any form of marital intimacy, since 2020. The court considered these factors cumulatively and found that they were not trivial but constituted serious circumstances indicative of marital breakdown. Relying on principles articulated in Knudsen v Knudsen [1976] 1 GLR 204, the court noted that a course of conduct or a combination of factors, even if individually insufficient, may together establish that a party cannot reasonably be expected to continue living with the other. In this case, the Respondent’s decision to remain abroad, coupled with the absence of communication and marital relations, amounted to a form of desertion and denial of consortium. Furthermore, the court observed that the Respondent’s failure to contest the petition or adduce any evidence left the Petitioner’s claims uncontroverted. In such circumstances, the court was entitled to rely on the Petitioner’s evidence in determining the matter. Upon evaluating the totality of the evidence, the court concluded that the parties had not lived together as husband and wife for a continuous period of approximately three years and that there was no realistic prospect of reconciliation. Accordingly, the court held that the Petitioner had successfully established that the marriage had broken down beyond reconciliation as required under sections 1(2) and 2(1) of Act 367. The court therefore granted the petition and ordered that the marriage be dissolved.

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