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Summary Family Law Notes - Divorce and Dissolution of Civil Partnerships

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Full notes on Divorce and Dissolution of Civil Partnerships including: Causes of Divorce Grounds for Divorce – A historical overview The current law – the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 The Facts – Adultery, Unreasonable behaviour, Desertion, 2-year separation and consent & 5-year Separation Dis...

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  • 24 de septiembre de 2020
  • 6
  • 2020/2021
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Family: L3 – Divorce and Dissolution of Civil Partnerships


Aims of divorce law:
 Support the institution of marriage – if the procedure for divorce was more relaxed,
then people wouldn’t take marriage seriously or allow people to act on impulse
instead of thinking their decision through.
 Avoid exacerbating the bitterness between the parties
 Enable remarriage, to reduce number of children born out of wedlock

Grounds for Divorce – A historical overview:
 Prior to 1857:
- divorce was not available through the courts – extremely expensive
- only divorce procedure available: private Act of Parliament
 Matrimonial Causes Act 1857:
- introduced judicial divorce - (divorce procedures through the courts)
- adultery - sole ground
- women also needed to prove adultery plus aggravated circumstances – EG:
incest, bigamy, cruelty, desertion.
- Men only had to prove adultery
 Matrimonial Causes Act 1923:
- abolished the aggravated adultery requirement for women,
- equalizing their position with men
 Matrimonial Causes Act 1937:
- Introduced additional grounds:
a. Cruelty
b. Desertion for at least three years
c. Incurable insanity
 Divorce Reform Act 1969:
- Liberalisation of divorce law – as a result of a change in society’s attitude in
favour of liberalising divorce
- It was no longer seen as marriage having to be for life
- 1966 Law Commission Report (Reform of the Grounds of Divorce: The Field of
Choice), recommended that the law should “enable the empty legal shell to be
destroyed” when marriage has broken down
- In order to demonstrate that the marriage had broken down they had to prove:
matrimonial offence or period of separation
- Abolished the old grounds for divorce
- Sole ground: irretrievable breakdown of marriage
- Five facts proving irretrievable breakdown:
- 3 similar to the old matrimonial offences:
1. adultery,
2. cruelty,
3. desertion
- + 2 non-fault facts:
4. two-years’ separation with consent to divorce,
5. five-years’ separation
 Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 Part I (current law)
- Consolidates the Divorce Reform Act 1969
- s.1(1) – the one ground for divorce: irretrievable breakdown of marriage

, - s.1(2) – the five facts for divorce: 1 needs to be proved
1. adultery
2. unreasonable behaviour
3. two-years’ separation with consent to divorce
4. desertion
5. five-years’ separation
- the fact and the ground must be proven simultaneously

Cases:
 Richards [1972] 3 All ER 695: Court satisfied marriage irretrievably broken down,
but not that he behaved in such a way that she could not be expected to live with
him
 Buffery [1988] FCR 465: If none of the facts is proved divorce cannot be granted,
even if the court is convinced the marriage has irretrievably broken down
 Owens v Owens [2018] UKSC 41: The trial judge had applied the law correctly as it
stood, although there was a strong argument that the law no longer reflected modern
day realities and that no fault divorce was called for.

The Facts:

Adultery:
 s1(2)(a) MCA 1973 - adultery and intolerability
- “the respondent has committed adultery and the petitioner finds it intolerable to
live with the respondent”
- The adulterer cannot rely on his own behaviour – always the arty that has
suffered the wrong that seeks the decree of divorce.
 ‘Adultery’= voluntary act of sexual intercourse with a third party of the opposite sex
- Has to be an act of sexual intercourse – flirting will not be sufficient
- If the party cheats with the same gender – not adultery under this section.
 Dennis [1955] 2 All ER 51: W could have sex with the person she wanted to cheat
with because the man suffered a nervous condition – adultery is not proved unless
there is some penetration
 Homosexual intercourse/ sexual activity not involving intercourse do not constitute
adultery, but may constitute unreasonable behaviour
- s1(6) “Only conduct between the respondent and a person of the opposite sex
may constitute adultery for the purposes of this section.” – amendment under the
Marriage (Same-Sex Couples) Act 2013 Sch3 s4
 s2(1) - if parties live together for more than 6 months after an act of adultery, the
petition cannot be based on that act

Unreasonable behaviour:
 s1(2)(b) MCA 1973 – unreasonable behaviour
- “the respondent has behaved in such a way that the petitioner cannot reasonably
be expected to live with the respondent”
- What is unreasonable is not the behaviour itself but rather it is unreasonable for
the spouse to continuing living with them.
 Objective test: ‘any right-thinking person’ – is this type of behaviour that a right-
thinking person would deem acceptable? – Livingstone-Stallard [1974] 2 All ER
766

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