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(CORALEE
ELRINGTON
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PETITIONER |
BETWEEN |
(AND
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(HUBERT
ELRINGTON |
RESPONDENT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 61 of 1979
21st March, 1980.
Barrington-Jones, J.
Mr. Denys
Barrow for the Petitioner.
The Respondent not appearing.
Divorce - Grounds constituting cruelty - Respondent leaving
matrimonial home and later returning - Whether Petitioner
condoned Respondent's evidence - Evidence necessary to rebut
presumption of condonation.
J
U D G M E N T
The parties
were married on the 6th July, 1966 and there are three children
of the family. The parties have lived at diverse addresses
in Belize City, concluding with a matrimonial home at 102
Neal's Pen Road.
A Petition
was filed on the 31st December, 1979 alleging that since the
celebration of the marriage the Respondent had treated the
Petitioner with cruelty in that on two occasions he had assaulted
the Petitioner. The first occasion was in February, 1979 when
the Petitioner says that the parties had a fight and that
the Respondent hit her in the face and around the body. The
second incident was on the 22nd November, 1979 when the Petitioner
says that the parties had a fight on Central American Boulevard
and she avers that the Respondent hit her in the face, and
that she fell down, and that the Respondent kicked her and
threw her in a drain, and also caused a cut on one of her
fingers.
The Petitioner
told the Court that when she presented her Petition the Respondent
was not living in the matrimonial home and yet in the next
breath, she said that the Respondent returned and took up
residence there in December, 1979, but that his return there
was not with her consent; and it seems that he has continued
living in the matrimonial home since that time. It therefore
appears that either paragraph (4) of the Petition is incorrect
or the Petitioner is mistaken in her evidence.
The Petitioner
said that since his return the Respondent has occupied a separate
bedroom in the matrimonial home and that there has been no
cohabitation, but she admitted that she washes his clothes
and cooks for him, and that the Respondent assists the children
with their homework. She said that the Respondent had told
her that the main reason he was living there was to help the
children. She said that the Respondent pays the rent for the
matrimonial home. Finally, she said that the Respondent was
a bossy type and said that if she did not provide the services
she did, the Respondent "would want to hit her".
No evidence
was led concerning the state of the marriage leading to the
presentation of the Petition, nor was the Court told of their
bedroom arrangements prior to the Respondent leaving the matrimonial
home; nor was there any evidence from the Petitioner as to
why the Respondent had first left the matrimonial home. There
was also no evidence as to the circumstances in which the
Respondent returned to the matrimonial home in December, 1979.
At the
end of the hearing this Court cannot find that it is satisfied
that there has been no condonation on the part of the Petitioner.
The evidence is unsatisfactory and insufficient in this respect
and the Petition must therefore be dismissed.
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