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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. โ€“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 โ€œcommon lawโ€ 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:

โ€œFor the purposes of this Act, reference to a โ€œspouseโ€ 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 deathโ€ฆโ€ [Emphasis added]

There, the local legislature had given effect to the prevailing cultural norm locally, whereby a large number of relationships existed without โ€œbenefit of clergyโ€, 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.โ€

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 โ€œspouseโ€, 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 โ€œa single manโ€ 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 โ€œinfluenced 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 โ€œsingleโ€ included a married man who was separated from his wife.โ€ Alternately, the judge was of the view that the word โ€˜singleโ€™ 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 โ€œsingleโ€, and rejected the alternative on the ground that โ€œthe word โ€œsingleโ€ reflected the status of the parties throughout the five-year period of statutory cohabitationโ€ and not merely at death. The CCJ on Friday reversed the Court of Appealโ€™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-

โ€œThe courtโ€™s task, within the permissible bounds of interpretation, is to give effect to Parliamentโ€™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.โ€

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 โ€œsingle manโ€ 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?


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


  1. David, not to beat the point of a will to death but surely you accept that tho the theoretical model of creating a will is solid that individual cases like this one can blow that asunder.

    This gentleman was clearly a ‘free spirit’ in mind and soul. As others have said he operated quite differently to perceived norms in his profession (to the benefit of the disadvataged); and that definitely extended to his social and other business dealings.

    And, although I have no knowledge that this applies here, one can also accept, as Chad Provocateur said, that some people firmly believe that life is for those still breathing to worry about… they can give ‘two wuck-ups’ – if I may channel @Pieces- when their life force ebbs away.

    To reinforce that point here we are some decade later talking about this man … his wives have long moved on one presumes and now so too can the appellant.

    And he we can be sure is absolutely still totally disinterested about all this.

    Yes the case surely reminds us of the value of a will but doesn’t change the fact that many 50 plus men & women die without them.


  2. The same goes for men that waste away their lives and then look to befriend a widow and gain access to her or her dead husband’s money.


  3. Dont understand where there is illegitimacy in the ruling given that the deceased from the time of seeking a divorce had made his intentions known if non- reconciliation betwen himself and wife
    The willfulness of that intent to bring finality to his marriage would have been sufficient to apply “single” during such the period and time shared with the then person of choice


  4. Lawson,
    If the dead person was legally married to the dude, then the dude will g the benefits of a married partner. That is the law in Canada, the UK and most other developed nations.
    @Lawson, it is called the rule of law.


  5. Just throwing a wrinkle into the bajan mix Hal for fun, I am pretty up on the law even have a will although like most men I think I will live forever. Just to counter alien’s remark yes the early years can be more of a struggle but when the divorce happened and the woman received all she was entitled to at that time why would that have any effect on this new woman’s deal . The man upon divorce knows the resultant pay out it is the phucking you get for the phucking you got. That is why they are a little leery to jump back into the fire. but that should not negate the fact that they have built a new life together and deserves what is due this does not sound like a anna nicole smith case

  6. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    The authorities should warn every mother who tries to register a birth without the fatherโ€™s name on the birth certificate that she thereby loses all right to claim paternity support in future.

    Hal is so disconnected from reality.

    last time i heard…the LAW in Barbados states unequivocally that fathers cannot be forced, by law, to put their names on children`s birth certificates…..it must be voluntary, they must be present, that is an old slave law to divide and destroy families…….RULE OF LAW.

    in the US mothers are encouraged to put the child`s fathers names on their birth certificates so the state can go after the father if he turns deadbeat, so the child does not become a burden to the state.

    the lousy, lazy, slave minded lawmakers in Barbados may want to become thus enlighened and copy that positive law from US…give the mothers the power to register the father`s name on birth certificates….the father can dispute with DNA testing, but cant get away otherwise.


  7. I beseech you, do not be to critical of Hal. Sometimes, he has lucid
    days. Today is just not one of them.
    Sent from my iPad


  8. Lawson,
    If the parties are divorced that is different, even though the English courts have ruled to the contrary recently. That decision too is flawed. If the married couple, however, are still married even if separated, then the ‘woman’ should get nought. Make the relationship legal or pay the price. The real victims in this relationship, especially in Barbados, are the children.
    On another matter, something that gives me a private laugh is the failure of the law bodies to organise even a will campaign. I know superstitious people believe to write a will is to temp death, but if the lawyers’ union cannot organise this what can they organise.
    The other failing is legal insurance. |In a litigious society you need legal insurance. Enterprising lawyers should offer the product, and include will writing as part of the deal, if not the Society of Trust and Estate Planning will take away the business.

  9. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    lol…i swear whenHal is off his meds he can be just as bad or worse than Chadster when he too is off his.


  10. Caswell,
    Make your point. Hope you are not seeking cheap thrills. I have said that if mothers refuse to put fathers’ names on birth certificates they run the risk of not being able to claim child maintenance in future. If the man alleged to be the father refuses, then he can be compelled to take a DNA test. Simple. The child comes first.
    Because people have extra-marital affairs does not mean the law should support them. We need morality in public life.
    How many married women turn a blind eye to their husbands’ affairs, part from the fact of their meal ticket?


  11. My mum died everything was done the funeral the banking everything we didnt have really do anything, but she had a will and didnt want to leave a mess for us. Another parent died had not done anything and left total chaos. If you want to be remembered do nothing about your eventual passing and when ever your name is mentioned it will usually be followed by ….that phucker…

  12. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    in other words, because there is no law in place to force them, i understand that its a trend for men in Barbados to disappear when it comes time to put their names on their childrens birth certificates….there is no law available in Barbados to force them to put their names on birth certificates to prove paternity…

    there is no law empowering mothers on the island to put the child`s name on the birth certificate, unless the father is physically present and volunteers….and the mother is refused the right to do so herself in Barbados.

    what is so hard to understand that both black governments still maintain a slave society on the island in 2017.

  13. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    lol…Lawson, two different jurisdications, ya can leave 10 wills, ask Violet, ya will go to ya grave and still get nothing.


  14. Hal the ruling did not condone immorality.
    It simply gave a legitimate myright of concern to the other partner involved borne on the fact that the married couple had filed for divorce a first step in breaken the legitimacy of their marriage which by all intents and purposes both would have agreed to become single

  15. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    there is no law empowering mothers on the island to put the MANS NAME on the childs birth certificate, unless the father is physically present and volunteersโ€ฆ.by LAW, the mother is refused the right to do so herself in Barbados.

    Caswell…ya right not to answer the clown.


  16. Hal

    I am not seeking cheap thrills. I honestly did not think that you were in your right mind when you posted that comment.

    It appears that you want society to conform to what you believe to be moral. They are silly people who do not believe in God, and that is their god given right. Do you expect them to conform to the same moral code as those of us who believe in God?

    Also, for your information, if a married couple is separated for five or more years preceding the death of one of them, the surviving spouse is precluded from inheriting if the deceased died intestate.
    Sent from my iPad


  17. WW date the wills not the women


  18. There is a difference between a decree nisi and a decree absolute. The CCJ’s decision is flawed. It rubber stamps so-called common law wives.
    Further, as adults we must set examples to young people, not encourage them in having children from an army of baby mothers. What tests is the court going to apply to prove that although married, that two unmarried partners are living together as man and wife?
    For the simple minded, I am not saying it is the law that fathers’ names must be on birth certificates; I am saying they SHOULD be, and if the mothers refuse to name the fathers they should be warned that they cannot later claim child maintenance; if it is the man who refuses, then the courts would be empowered to order a DNA test. The child’s welfare comes first.
    As a society, our aim should be to reduce some pf the 70 per cent of children born out of wedlock. Where is the church in all this?

  19. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    It appears that you want society to conform to what you believe to be moral.

    it`s because white people created those laws, even when they themselves change or amend the same laws they created, brainwashed black men like Hal, still dont want to change with the times….that is why so many blacks remain mentally enslaved, the brainwash is total.


  20. How can the CCJ ‘rubber stamp so-called common law’ relationships if it is the law?


  21. Caswell,
    I bow to your greater knowledge of the law in Barbados – even Caricom. But in England and Wales, no matter how long a couple have lived together, on the death of a partner, if they have no children, the surviving person gets zilch. Nothing. That is the law of intestacy.


  22. Oh David. Keep quiet.


  23. @ Caswell who said “The law requires that a single woman living with a single man for five years would be treated as spouse for the purposes of the Succession Act.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    If that ‘Law’ says clearly to you that “it did not matter if he was still married during part of the five years – as long as he was single at the date of his death.” …then CLEARLY Mrs Hinkson did not teach you English.

    In THAT case, The law would “requires that a single woman living with a man who was single after five years of cohabitation, would be treated as spouse for the purposes of the Succession Act.”

    Your position is almost as risible as Jeff’s suggestion that the need to DEFINE what they mean by ‘SINGLE’ for the purposes of that Law would have required special common sense….
    Clearly the man was not ‘single’ for the first few years – UNLESS ‘single’ is otherwise defined for the purposes of the act.

    Perhaps if it said ‘The law requires that a single woman living with a single man AFTER five years would be treated as spouse for the purposes of the Succession Act.” … wunna MAY have a case…

    The above having been said, Bushie agrees with Pacha that the whole albino-centric ‘marriage thing’ is just a lotta materialistic shiite, designed around material possessions.

    What a brass bowl world….
    Straining at gnats and swallowing camels
    …. and building mountains out of molehills.


  24. @Bushie

    Are you aware if such a scenario has been tested with unfavorable result at the CCJ?

  25. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    like everything else, black people believe life should be hard for each other.

    no matter what you think, shoulda, woulda, coulda be, if the slaveminded lawmakers dont amend the laws to protect children by giving mothers the power to put the fathers names on birth certificates, instead of leaving it as an act of volunteerism, there will always be a 70 percent rate of fatherless, unsupported, disadvantaged children on the island..

    fatherhood and it`s accompanying responsibilities never was and never should be an act of volunteerism, men in modern societies have their faces on billboards, are denied passports and their right to travel and have their wages garnished for not supporting their children, the states put laws in place for that so they are not burdened by suffering children, because of deadbeat, negligent fathers, the state had to intervene and create laws.

  26. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    Bushman….if he was separated prior to the divorce and not cohabiting with the wife, dude was single ya hear, that is how the courts will look at it.

    not forgetting Hal the short sighted, that modern societies give their women the powers that most Caribbean islands, particularly Barbados, still refuse to give their women….

    eg….all women should be able to freely put the names of fathers on children`s birth certificates….penalties are already in place at the registry for giving false information on certificates.


  27. But Bushie once “cohabiting” enters the fray, in my opinion, single becomes irrelevant and in Bdos especially after 5 years.


  28. @ Enuff
    Bushie agrees…
    The bushman’s point has nothing to do with the specific case – only the ineptitude of the joke ‘lawyers’ who would have drafted such loose laws.

    Seriously … how difficult would it have been to to say what you said above…(and what the CCJ seems to have agreed) in the law? … simply by defining the term ‘single’.

    If these people are not bright enough to identify such BASIC anomalies, then what the brass bowl are we paying them $750,000.00 to proof-read contracts for…?


  29. @Jeff Cumberbatch “the uninitiated who yearn for the uninitiated who yearn for exactitude and predictability .”

    Ahh!!! but where human emotion and human sexuality is involved there will NEVER EVER be the exactitude and predictability.

  30. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Actually….under common law relationships in England and Wales, if you are named in the partners will and it is nit enough fir you to live on, ya can challenge the estate….

    “Death and inheritance

    Living together

    If one partner dies without leaving a will, the surviving partner will not automatically inherit anything unless the couple owned property jointly. As an unmarried couple, you need to make wills if you wish to make sure that the other partner inherits.

    If one partner dies without leaving enough in their will for the other to live on, the surviving partner may be able to go to court to claim from the estate.

    If you inherit money or property from an unmarried partner, you are not exempt from paying inheritance tax, as married couples are.”


  31. @Jeff Cumberbatch “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?”

    Professor you are being tongue and cheek right?

    We the people think that it is one thing for a man who has long been separated from his legal wife (I refer to them as paper wives) to be in a spousal union with another woman, we the people are ok with that…but for a man to have a legal wife in the house and another woman whom he “associates” from time to time to regard both women as wife???

    No, no, no.

    No please.

  32. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Everything Hal says has to be checked out….since laws are changed all the time and do nit remain in the 1950s…lol.

    “If one partner dies without leaving a will, the surviving partner will not automatically inherit anything unless the couple owned property jointly. ”

    The partner may not inherit automatically under common law in England and Wales.., but they can challenge the estate for a share and that is exactly what happened in Barbados with the Selby case..


  33. @David September 3, 2017 at 7:13 AM “It is an interesting ruling by the CCJ if only that it precluded the possibility of reconciliation between the two.

    I disagree with you David.

    Dr. Selby was divorced from his original wife.

    There was nothing stopping him from reconciling with her and remarrying her if he wished. Since he had years to effect a reconciliation and remarriage and did not do so we can only assume that he did not wish to do so.

  34. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Jeff Cumberbatch (BU’s resident C J):
    โ€œFor the purposes of this Act, reference to a โ€œspouseโ€ 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 deathโ€ฆโ€

    According to the above, it would appear, on the face of it, that a man cannot be considered a “spouse”.

    It would have been well-nigh impossible (had the shoe been on the other foot) for Mr. Selby to have raised a similar claim against the estate of Mrs. Smith who was separated from her โ€˜legalโ€™ husband and was cohabitating with the โ€˜unmarriedโ€™ Albert Selby and died during the period of cohabitating aka long-term shacking-up and which lasted more than 5 years.
    Hence a blatant case of sex discrimination and an โ€˜openโ€™ breach of the basic canon of modern law of gender neutrality.

    โ€œโ€ฆ.. Family Law Act 1981 that recognized the concept of the union other than marriage in the following mannerโ€ฆโ€
    โ€œunion other than marriageโ€ or โ€œunionโ€ 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.โ€

    Donโ€™t you think that these various pieces of legislation governing family matters are in need of an urgent upgrade in rationalization and a makeover in simplification given present day realities of family arrangements especially in regard to the burning issues of civil partnerships and same sex marriages and the status and rights of minors involved whether from one biologically capable partner or established through the process of adoption?


  35. @David September 3, 2017 at 8:17 AM “Almost a decade to resolve this matter. Brother Shelby is well off as one of our leading architects, why not let the matter go?”

    How can you know this David?

    Do you have his PIN number?

  36. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Lol…Milker…that’s a whole nother lawsuit…lol

    It is the lawmakers who need to upgrade the laws and give people the power they need to assert their rights…like the man spouse…ha haha.


  37. @Hal Austin September 3, 2017 at 8:24 AM “A society in decay will legitimise illegitimacy. There is nothing in law called a common law marriage. If couples live together without marriage then they should suffer the consequences. The same thing about adversarial occupation, which turns squatters in to land owners. There are moral hazards.”

    Please Hal. Don’t you ever become tired of being silly?

    Did the people in Buckingham Palace buy their land from somebody or are they squatters?

    Was our future King Charles married to Diana when he was enjoying himself with Camilla?

    Did the British buy Barbados from the indigenous people? Did they buy Jamaica or Trinidad,, or St. Lucia, or, or, or are their descendants in these parts still squatters?

    Were your parents married when they conceived their first child/

    Were you married the first time you had sexual intercourse?

    And so on and so forth.

  38. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    “upgrade in rationalization and a makeover in simplification given present day realities of family arrangements especially in regard to the burning issues of civil partnerships and same sex marriages and the status and rights of minors involved whether from one biologically capable partner or established through the process of adoption?”

    Miller…ya left out the last pest and even more important piece of legislation needed, recently there have been births, twins, I believe in South Africa and others elsewhere, who have the DNAs of 2 fathers and one mother……3 parents…the process has also been legalized in UK.

    …laws need to be legislated in the Caribbean also to accommodate these brand new present day realities…of three or four parents DNA in one child…or several children….or, well you know what I mean.

  39. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    ….ya left out the LASTEST and even more important piece of legislation needed,

  40. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar

    *We the people think that it is one thing for a man who has long been separated from his legal wife (I refer to them as paper wives) to be in a spousal union with another woman, we the people are ok with thatโ€ฆbut for a man to have a legal wife in the house and another woman whom he โ€œassociatesโ€ from time to time to regard both women as wife???

    No, no, no.

    No please.*

    @ Simple Simon, I understand your consternation, but this seems the logical result of not requiring the man to be “single”. If you now require him to be you would be reading into the provision words that are not there!

  41. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    This has not been happening from yesterday, some of these 3 parent kids are teenagers today.

    The ones I saw recently were twins from two married to each other males and a female donor.

    The newest realities…..

    “The girl with three biological parents
    By Charlotte Pritchard
    BBC Radio 4
    1 September 2014

    Alana Saarinen at a piano

    Alana Saarinen loves playing golf and the piano, listening to music and hanging out with friends. In those respects, she’s like many teenagers around the world. Except she’s not, because every cell in Alana’s body isn’t like mine and yours – Alana is one of a few people in the world who have DNA from three people.

    “A lot of people say I have facial features from my mum, my eyes look like my dadโ€ฆ I have some traits from them and my personality is the same too,” says Alana.

    “I also have DNA from a third lady. But I wouldn’t consider her a third parent, I just have some of her mitochondria.”

    Mitochondria are often called the cell’s factories. They are the bits that create the energy all of our cells need to work, and keep the body functioning. But they also contain a little bit of DNA.

    Alana Saarinen is one of only 30 to 50 people in the world who have some mitochondria, and therefore a bit of DNA, from a third person. She was conceived through a pioneering infertility treatment in the USA which was later banned.”

  42. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar

    @ Jeff Cumberbatch (BUโ€™s resident C J):
    โ€œFor the purposes of this Act, reference to a โ€œspouseโ€ 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 deathโ€ฆโ€According to the above, it would appear, on the face of it, that a man cannot be considered a โ€œspouseโ€.

    @Miller, I cited only that part of the Act that was relevant to there instant case. The section continues as follows-

    โ€œFor the purposes of this Act, reference to a โ€œspouseโ€ includes:
    (b) a single man who was living together with a single woman as her husband for a period of not less than 5 years immediately preceding the date of her death.โ€


  43. The is a useful extract from the decison.

    The social and historical context can be decisive in ensuring that the words are interpreted to give effect to the meaning and purpose of the Act. But that does not extend to distort ing the language us ed by Parliament. It must be remembered that the courtโ€™s responsibility is to give effect to the intention of Parliament not to correct legislation to ensure that it is just and expedient. If the court considers that there is a variance between the languag e used and its understanding of the special purpose of the Act it should be left to Parliament to amend the legislation 4 . Where the words of the statute are not ambiguous there could be no justification for interpreting them in a manner that would alter th eir meaning, unless it may be necessary to resolve an inconsistency within the statute itself


  44. Further :

    The Statutory Objective

    [13] No evidence was adduced about the historical context of the relevant provisions of the Act. But the matter has attracted comment from academics.10 Both the trial judge and the Court of Appeal were agreed that the Act was social legislation to address one of the realities of Caribbean society that had not been reflected in the common law or statute law inherited or adopted from England. Persons living together as man and wife but who were not married to each other and their children had not been recognized in the colonial legal and juridical regime, with unfair results


  45. The ball is now in the attorney general’s court (pun intended) to sort out this bit of judge-made law.
    For the simple minded, if a person dies intestate, it means there is no will. Inheritance goes to the next of kin, ie husband or wife (partner), then kids.


  46. The section gives a foundation and relevance to the decision delivered :

    14] Up to the passage of the Act in 1975, the law in Barbados did not provide inheritance or other rights for the surviving partner in such a relationship. Persons who were living together as man and wife but were not married to each other at the date of the death of one of them did not inherit anything in the absence of a will. Nor did they have any rights to obtain support for their continued existence from the estate of the deceased. At the date of the death of their partner, the survivor became a legal non-entity regarding the estate that was left. That person was vulnerable to relatives of the deceased and could be debarred from having anything to do with the estate. On the other hand, a person who was married to the deceased at the date of the death was entitled to inherit. Both the duration and the quality of the marriage were totally irrelevant. Marital partners who did not cohabit as man and wife, or who were in another committed but unmarried relationship, were entitled to move in on the estate and inherit

  47. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal Austin September 3, 2017 at 11:34 AM
    โ€œAs a society, our aim should be to reduce some pf the 70 per cent of children born out of wedlock. Where is the church in all this?โ€

    The “Church” is the same place in โ€œall of thisโ€ as it was during and after the legal abolition of slavery when the percentage of ‘black’ children born out of wedlock was virtually 100%.

    At least there has been some statistical โ€˜improvementโ€™; hence the existence of people like you today who believe that children born within a โ€œlegalโ€ marriage are superior to those born otherwise in โ€˜commonโ€™ circumstances.

    Your hypocrisy is spreading most promiscuously via the art of double standards and is creating a most unhealthy climate of debate on BU.

    Why donโ€™t you research the life of King Charles 11 who was also king of puritan Barbadoes in the mid 17th Century and see why promiscuity in the Bajan cultural DNA?

    Among the Sicilian-originated Mafiosi can be found some of the strongest family bonds in the world with marriage being the glue to family ties. Now what has that produced other than a lineage of crooks and killers?

    As far as your view that the statutory recognition of โ€œcommon law marriagesโ€ can lead to widespread promiscuity and is not a moral substitute for Christian-based marriage between one man and one woman, we can only conclude your reading and understanding of the book supporting the same Christian or Church-based marriage is highly suspect.

    How else can you explain the following extract from the same book of myths and legend concerning the openly promiscuous lifestyle of the wisest man ever created by your God Yahweh?

    โ€œNow King Solomon loved many foreign women along with the daughter of Pharaoh: Moabite, Ammonite, Edomite, Sidonian, and Hittite women, from the nations concerning which the LORD had said to the sons of Israel, “You shall not associate with them, nor shall they associate with you, for they will surely turn your heart away after their gods.” Solomon held fast to these in love.
    He had seven hundred wives, princesses, and three hundred concubines, and his wives turned his heart away.โ€ฆโ€


  48. To further enlighten:

    The purpose of the Act, the mischief it was int ending to remedy and the solution it prescribed seem clear. The right of the survivor of a non from the estate of the deceasedmarital union to benefit partner does not depend on the status of marriage, but on the duration of cohabitation with the deceased immediately preceding death. The statutory period is five years, immediately preceding death. This means that a period of cohabitation for five years immediately before the death of the deceased is determinative of the right to inherit as a spouse. That i s the period which the legislature, and therefore presumably society, determined is a credible indicator of a commitment to a true union comparable to formal marriage. Sections 57 and 58 establish the rights that would arise from cohabitation for a shorter period, or where one of the parties was married to someone else. That legislative intention is confirmed in section 102(4) which prescribes that noncohabitation between marital partners for the statutory period equally evidences the absence of such a com mitment to a true union and therefore excludes and disqualifies the marital partner from inheritance rights. Thus, inheritance as spouse is based on cohabitation for five years not the status of being married


  49. Very cogent and concise decision by the CCJ. Of additional interest is the comment on the Barbados Court staying the Application for Letters of Administration to the detriment of the management of the decedent’s estate while the question of the appropriate shares for beneficiares is resolved. CCJ says procedurally no need for stay in the circumstances, the Court can appoint an Administrator to look after the estate pending the outcome of the related matter. Very good.

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