The KwaZulu-Natal High Court in Durban has dismissed an application seeking the separation of issues in a rare divorce case where the husband, AK, argued that the marriage had irretrievably broken down. His wife, RN, opposed this claim, contending that the marriage could still be salvaged.  

Presided over by Judge R Mossop, the court deliberated on AK’s motion to address the termination of the marriage separately from financial and proprietary matters. He asserted that he had moved on, had begun a new relationship, and no longer wished to remain in the marriage.  

However, RN contested his request, maintaining that the marriage had not suffered an irretrievable breakdown. She argued that reconciliation remained possible and dismissed AK’s plea for separation of issues, insisting that a trial was necessary to determine the fate of their union.  

Judge Mossop’s ruling on irretrievable breakdown of marriage 

In rejecting AK’s application, Judge Mossop highlighted that RN’s primary defense raised significant factual disputes that the trial court needed to resolve before considering procedural separations. “The respondent is not intent on divorce, for she declined in her plea to accept that her marriage has irretrievably broken down. Divorce, and the further relief to be claimed in terms of the legislation, is simply her plan B in the event of her failing to establish her primary defence.”  

The judge noted that while AK insisted he had moved forward in his life, he could not speak on behalf of his wife. His personal circumstances and new relationship did not override RN’s right to argue that their marriage remained intact.  

Judge Mossop emphasised that the interests of justice must outweigh procedural expediency and ruled against a piecemeal approach to the divorce proceedings. The applicant failed to establish that separating the issues would serve the court’s or the parties' convenience, he said. 

As a result, the court dismissed AK’s application, ruling that he must cover RN’s legal costs. The judgment reaffirmed that an irretrievable breakdown must be determined during the trial before any decisions regarding financial consequences can be made.  

#Conviction

Get your news on the go. Click here to follow the Conviction WhatsApp channel

Share.

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

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Prove your humanity: 3   +   8   =  

Exit mobile version