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JUMANNE JINGI v NJOKA KIDUDA 1984 TLR 51 (HC)



JUMANNE JINGI v NJOKA KIDUDA 1984 TLR 51 (HC)

Court High Court of Tanzania - Singida

Judge Lugakingira J

November 26, 1985

CIVIL APPEAL 29 OF 1984

Flynote

D Family Law - Adultery - Damages for - Where party not validly married -

Whether suit for damages for adultery can be sustained - Law of Marriage Act, 1971,

s. 72(2).

-Headnote

The appellant lost in the Primary Court and the District Court in an action for

damages for adultery E and therefore appealed to the High Court.

Held: A suit brought under section 72 of the Law of Marriage Act, 1971 shall be

dismissed if the F defendant satisfies the court that he did not know and could not

by exercise of reasonable diligence have known that the person with whom he or she

committed the act of adultery was married;

Case Information

G Appeal dismissed.

No case referred to.

[zJDz]Judgment

Lugakingira, J.: The appellant lost in the Primary Court and the District Court in an

action for H damages for adultery and therefore appealed here.

This appeal ought similarly to fail. There was overwhelming evidence that the

respondent's cohabitation with Mwai Amina Maghuna - the lady the appellant calls

his wife - was preceded by the I usual and necessary betrothal preliminaries,

including the payment of brideprice. The respondent therefore genuinely believed

that he

1984 TLR p52

LUGAKINGIRA J

was taking a free woman. Section 72(2) of the Law of Marriage Act, 1971 provides: A

(2) A suit brought under this section shall be dismissed if the defendant

satisfies the court that he or she did not know and could not, by the exercise of

reasonable diligence, have known that the person with whom he B or she

committed the act of adultery was married.

It is evident that by the betrothal and payment of brideprice the respondent

reasonably believed that Mwai was unmarried. The suit and the first appeal were

therefore rightly dismissed in the light of the C above provision.

I think the appeal ought to fail on yet another ground. It is in fact doubtful whether

the appellant was ever validly married to Mwai or was himself an adulterer. The

evidence further shows the D following. Mwai was first married to one Karai Kiseke.

She then left this man (we do not know how) and "married" the appellant. In 1978

she abandoned the appellant and returned to Karai. In 1982 she was formally

divorced from Karai in Matrimonial Cause No. 23/82 of the Primary Court at Ngimu.

It E was following this event that she married the respondent in 1983. The fact that

Mwai had to be formally divorced from Karai suggests that their marriage was

subsisting during her cohabitation with the appellant. At any rate, the burden was on

the appellant to prove that he had been validly married to this woman before he

could be heard to complain of adultery. This burden was not F discharged as the

appellant adduced no evidence of the circumstances in which he came to cohabit

with her other than that she had left Karai. Therefore the suit did not disclose a cause

of action. For these reasons the appeal is dismissed with costs. G

Appeal dismissed. H

1984 TLR p53

A

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