The late Albert Selby

The right of the survivor of a non-marital union to benefit from the estate of the deceased partner does not depend on the status of marriage, but on the duration of cohabitation with the deceased immediately preceding death. –per Byron P in Smith v Selby [2017]CCJ 13

The courts of law have through the years been called upon to make some surprising determinations. One English case involved the intriguing issue of whether ice cream could be considered meat for the purposes of the Sunday Trading Act 1994; another the more tendentious matter of whether a bicycle was a carriage under the 1835 Highway Act. We have seemingly now added our own quirky issue to this list. The Caribbean Court of Justice [CCJ] was recently called upon to determine when is a man to be treated as single for the purposes of the Succession Act.

The critical issue in the decision of the CCJ last Friday was not, as some aspects of the media would have it, whether a “common law” spouse generally may inherit or succeed to the property of her cohabiting partner on his or her death intestate. That issue had been settled as early as 1979 with the passage of the Succession Act. According to section 2 (3)(a) of that Act:

“For the purposes of this Act, reference to a “spouse” includes:

(a) a single woman who was living together with a single man as his wife for a period of not less than 5 years immediately preceding the date of his death…” [Emphasis added]

There, the local legislature had given effect to the prevailing cultural norm locally, whereby a large number of relationships existed without “benefit of clergy”, as that expression is popularly understood. As I recall, there was not a lot of religious objection to this then and, if there was any, I must have missed it because I was abroad at that time.

This initiative further consolidated the earlier enactment of the Status of Children Reform Act whose section 3 provides as follows-

For the purposes of the laws of Barbados, the distinction of at common law between the status of children born within or outside marriage is abolished, and all children shall, after 1st January, 1980, be of equal status; and a person is the child of his or her natural parents and his or her status as their child is independent of whether the child is born within or outside of marriage-

and of the Family Law Act 1981 that recognized the concept of the union other than marriage in the following manner-

“union other than marriage” or “union” means the relationship that is established when a man and a woman who, not being married to each other, have cohabited continuously for a period of 5 years or more and have so cohabited within the year immediately preceding the institution of the proceedings.”

The critical issue in the recent case between Ms Katrina Smith, the appellant and Mr Albert Selby, the respondent, was rather whether Ms Smith satisfied the statutory definition of “spouse”, given that her cohabitant, who had died intestate in April 2008 and was the brother of the respondent, had been separated but not divorced from his wife for the first two years of the claimed cohabitation. He was eventually divorced in 2004.

Naturally, therefore, the argument of the respondent (who stood to benefit under the applicable law of succession on intestacy, since his brother would have had no spouse, no issue nor mother nor father) was that Ms Smith did not satisfy the statutory definition of spouse, not because of the failure to contract a marriage with the deceased at all, but rather because the deceased was not “a single man” within the meaning of the Act for the five years of cohabitation immediately preceding the date of his death. The basis of this was that since he was still legally married, even though separated from his wife, he could not be considered a single man.

This argument was rejected by the trial judge who, according to the judgment of the CCJ “influenced by his perception that the purpose of the statute was to correct the problem faced by the survivor of a non-marital relationship where there was no will, concluded that the word “single” included a married man who was separated from his wife.” Alternately, the judge was of the view that the word ‘single’ referred only to the status of the deceased at his death.

The Court of Appeal found the first holding to be a distortion of the natural and ordinary meaning of the word “single”, and rejected the alternative on the ground that “the word “single” reflected the status of the parties throughout the five-year period of statutory cohabitation” and not merely at death. The CCJ on Friday reversed the Court of Appeal’s decision and restored the order of the trial judge.

The ultimate resolution of the matter turned on the appropriately applicable rules of statutory interpretation and should arguably repay reading for keen students of this subject. I consider the minutiae of this, however, to be too esoteric for a Sunday newspaper column so I will not elaborate further.

It should be borne in mind nevertheless that the principal aim of the court engaged in an exercise of statutory interpretation is to ascertain the meaning intended by Parliament, as the CCJ makes clear-

“The court’s task, within the permissible bounds of interpretation, is to give effect to Parliament’s purpose. So, the controversial provisions should be read in the context of the entire statute, and the statute should be read in the historical context of the situation which led to its enactment.”

As the varying decisions in this case demonstrate, this is an exercise in which highly learned men may reasonably differ as to the result. And while this may appear befuddling to the uninitiated who yearn for exactitude and predictability in the meaning of statutory provisions; as long as there remains the co-existence of the separation of powers whereby Parliament legislates and the courts interpret, and so long as the English language with all of its vagaries remains the primary means of legal communication, these will remain an unlikelihood.

There is one more point worthy of note. The notion of the “single man” has not been expressly enacted in the provision for the union other than marriage referred to above where a period of cohabitation also plays a significant role. It seems beyond doubt that at his death therefore, Albert Michael Selby was part of a union other than marriage with Ms Smith. Should this not also hold true for other married men whether separated or not?

262 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – When is a Man Single?”

  1. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    …as they were entitled to a 1/3 of their father`s estate, whether their parents were married or not….in whichever part of the world.


  2. “Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger September 10, 2017 at 8:12 AM #

    …as they were entitled to a 1/3 of their father`s estate, whether their parents were married or not….in whichever part of the world.”

    But the lady with whom the deceased lived for over twenty years and fathered five chidren got nothing because she was not married to the deceased.


  3. @Charles,
    There is nothing called UK law. More important is the effect of the law on social behaviour. People will refrain from acting anti-socially through symbolic gestures by conforming in dress, speech, and in other ways, and to show they are desirable partners and their commitment to social co-operation.
    If the wider society, including important institutions, show their disapproval of certain forms of behaviour, then most right-thinking people will avid such behaviours.
    These are the issues at the very root of socio-legal studies (see Richard Posner, Law and Social Norms).


  4. @HalAustin, you create a dissonance (almost said annoyance 😆) in your posts often.

    Accepting the validity that ” If the wider society, including important institutions, show their disapproval of certain forms of behaviour, then most right-thinking people will avid such behaviours”…

    … accordingly it is equally valid that when certain forms of behaviour are approved, then reasonable (right) thinking people will accept such behaviours.

    Ergo, Bajans considered common law unions acceptable within the historical and custom norms of the day.

    So of course socio-legal issues are always rooted in the shifting times …. not whimsically so but concrete long term shifts which essentially become foundational.

    This line of argumentation becomes bothersome with conservaratives. They would contend that the US Constitution, for example, must be taken literally as written 300 plus years ago…

    Thus the right to bear arms validates a right in their mind to own a weapon of war mongering like a sub machine gun firing 600 bullets per minute when clearly the original intent was not geared towards creating that level of mayhem.

    In that same vein can anyone question two people living and loving with each other for 20 years as being in a union that is not deserving of marital norms…

    Intellectual hopscotch, also a normative value that drives socio-legal issues!


  5. @ Dribbler
    Boss… do you REALLY expect Hal to follow such logic…??!!
    Can you not tell when a fellow is just plagerizing quotes and trying to sound intelligent enough to participate in these discussions..?

    LOL
    The man is so lost… that he THINKS that because HE finds Bushie to be ‘risible’, …then the bushman somehow lacks understanding….
    Normal everyday brass bowls NEVER understand bushmen….. because they tend to speak in parables …PRECISELY to ensure that outcome.

    Hal should note however, that any thoughts of crucifying this PARTICULAR bushman should be QUICKLY shelved… on account of the whacker….


  6. @Hal Austin September 4, 2017 at 6:50 AM “I have said that if on registering newly born children mothers fail to register the fathers’ names then they automatically lose the right to claim child maintenance later.”

    And here is what happens to young children when mothers “automatically lose the right to claim child maintenance later.” In the United Kingdom the shamed poverty stricken mothers put their children in to orphanages, and here is how those state funded, church run orphanages dealt with vulnerable children, especially those children who were younger than 5:

    http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-41200949
    The bodies of hundreds of children are believed to be buried in a mass grave in Lanarkshire, southern Scotland, according to an investigation by BBC News.


  7. And this

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-39192744
    The Tuam mother and baby home, where human remains have been discovered, was “a chamber of horrors”, the Irish PM has said. Taoiseach Enda Kenny said the discovery did not only concern a mass grave but [It was not me, but the Irish Prime Minister who called it] “a social and cultural sepulchre”.

    I believe that traditional Bajan practice where we looked out for each other’s children, where we broke a biscuit in half so that a hungry child could eat is a better practice. The people of the United Kingdom can learn a lot form us, and Hal should have spent the last 40 years teaching them, instead of imbibing their deadly social and cultural practices on us and suggesting that mothers of infants should “lose the right to claim child maintenance.”


  8. Mr. Kenny again

    “We buried our compassion, humanity and mercy…we gave them [our children] up because of our morbid and perverse pursuit for respectability.”

    Ya see this pursuit of respectability?

    I ent ’bout dat.


  9. @simple1
    The bona fides of Hal has been established
    The southern end of jackass heading North
    Was it Artaxes, Bushie or Miller who gave us that image


  10. *of a


  11. “The divorce becomes absolute or final at the expiration of one month
    from the date on which the court makes the order but you are not free
    to marry anyone else unless and until the document evidencing this is
    obtained from the Supreme Court Registry”

    According to the above then ,Mr Selby could not have been single during the two years he was married although living with Ms Smith because he was not free to marry Ms Smith or anyone else during those two years while married. That is why i will continue to conclude that the decision of the CCJ was flawed and they need to spend more time studying the laws of the jurisdiction they are called upon to adjudicate rather than swiping like blind willy.

  12. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Are-We, we disagree. The callous, spiteful Doc Rightwing Templar is no more a POS than any of us are.

    His displays here shines a light on any and all of us…he simply rose to higher heights than most here and with that persona sinks as equally to lower lows…a lot of us get testy just not as continuously mean and unnecessarily hateful.

    As the other blogger noted this man totally makes the concept of Christiany a mockery…Alas!

    @Dr Rightwing Echoer, reducing taxes and growing an economy is simple economic theory (supply side) the longterm downside with a grossly expanded debt in the economy is also simple economics.

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