JUDGMENT
MRS. J. BAMFORD-ADDO J.S.C.:
This is an appeal from the
judgment of the Court of Appeal
dated 25th March, 1993 in
respect of a divorce petition
which was filed by the husband
(Appellant) for
1. The dissolution of his
marriage to wife Respondent.
2. Custody of the children of
the marriage and
3. That the Appellant be
declared the owner of House No.
M9 South Effiakuma Estate
Takoradi.
The Respondent wife cross
petitioned for dissolution of
the marriage, custody of the
children and a declaration that
she is the owner of House No. M9
South Effiakuma Estate Takoradi
among other reliefs.
On the 22nd December 1986 Isaac
Amuah J (as he then was) who
heard the case found that the
marriage had broken down beyond
repair he, dissolved the
marriage and adjourned the case
for the hearing of the ancillary
reliefs.
Essilfie-Bonzi J. as he then was
tried the ancillary relief
issues and after hearing
evidence gave judgment on 18th
June 1990 for Respondent holding
that she was the sole owner of
House No. M9 South Effiakuma
Estates Takoradi and declared,
“ I therefore make a declaration
of ownership of the said house
in her favour. The Petitioner’s
claim is dismissed and judgment
is given in favour of the
Respondent on her counter-claim
in the cross-Petition.”
Dissatisfied with this decision
the Appellant appealed to the
Court of Appeal which court
heard the appeal and gave
judgment on the 25th March 1993,
allowing the appeal in part and
setting aside that part of the
judgment of the court below. The
Court of Appeal having found
that “this house belonged
jointly to the petitioner and
the respondent”, went on to
decide how the house was to be
shared and held that the
extension was funded solely by
the Respondent and declared her
the sole owner of the
extensions.:
The Petitioner appealed against
this particular decision of the
Court of Appeal on the following
grounds namely:
1. The Court of Appeal having
rightly held that the “
intention to own the house
jointly, coupled with whatever
contributions the Petitioner had
made towards the acquisition of
the house made the parties joint
owners of the property” erred
when it held that the extensions
are separable and identifiable
from the main house.
2. That the Court of Appeal
similarly erred when it held
that “it would be in the
circumstances be inequitable to
vest these extensions jointly in
the petitioner and respondent”
because according to Appellant:
a. there was evidence admitted
by both parties that the
extensions were not completed at
the time of the hearing of the
case.
b. there was evidence that the
Petitioner had also expended
large sums of money on building
materials for the completion of
the extensions but these were
ignored by both the trial High
Court and the Court of Appeal.
c. since the Court of Appeal did
not evaluate the contributions
made by each party in relation
to the total value of the entire
property it erred in separating
and vesting the extensions in
the Respondent.
d. equity is equality.
One of the reliefs sought by the
Appellant herein is in his
petition was a declaration that
he be declared the owner of
house No. M.9 South Effiakuma
Estate, Takoradi. The
Respondent in her cross petition
also claimed as a relief that
she be declared owner of the
House No.9 South Effiakuma
Estate, Takoradi. That was the
issue to be decided.
The Court of Appeal which had
rightly earlier made a finding
that:
“ I am of the view therefore
that even though the couple had
acquired this house with the
interest of their children in
view, this house belonged
jointly only to the Petitioner
and the Respondent”
however went on to say:
“ In what manner should this
house be shared. The evidence
shows that all expenses on the
extensions were borne by the
respondent. These extensions are
separate and identifiable from
the main house. It should in the
circumstance be inequitable to
rest these extensions jointly in
the petitioner and the
Respondent I would accordingly
declare the respondent as the
sole owner of the extensions and
declare the house No. M9 South
Effiakuma Estate Takoradi to be
jointly owned by the Petitioner
and respondent.” Underscoring
mine.
The highlighted part is what the
Appellant is complaining about
as per his grounds of appeal.
In the first place the dispute
is about the ownership of one
house i.e. House No. M.9
Effiakuma Estate Takoradi
comprising the main house plus
the attached extensions, which
together made up the said house
not a separable part thereof.
This is the same house which
both the Petitioner and
Respondent in their Petition and
cross-petition respectively
asked the Court to declare as
their individual property.
For this reason I find no basis
for the finding by the Court of
Appeal that “These extensions
are separate and identifiable
from the main house” especially
so when as I said this is not
the relief being sought by the
parties themselves.
The evidence is that the house
was acquired in 1973 and the
extension works started in 1978
to 1979 when the parties were
still married and cohabiting
together, and also that up till
the time of giving evidence in
court i.e. between 1989 and 1990
the extension works had not been
completed. There is also
evidence that it is the
Petitioner who applied to the
State Housing Corporation for
permission to build the
extensions to the estate house
and that, it was Appellant who
also procured someone to make
the drawings of the proposed
extension. These pieces of
evidence in my view support the
Petitioner’s claim that he
contributed to the extension
works, while the parties were
still married and living in the
house together. The evidence
further shows that the
Petitioner provided a room
divider in 1983 and paid for the
ceiling panelling, and that
during the period of the
construction of the extension
works he was contributing as
well to the house hold expenses,
e.g. ¢10,000 of his money was
taken away from his brief case
by the wife and children to pay
for the children’s fees and
feeding costs etc. Whatever
that money was used for it
should be counted as
contribution he made towards the
family expenses in the house
including expenses towards the
purchase of building materials
for the extension. Such
evidence can be found on the
record, and if the Appeal Court
had properly considered them it
would not have come to the
conclusion it did, namely that
the Respondent alone bore the
cost of the extensions.
Consequently the finding of the
Court of Appeal on the extension
work was clearly erroneous as
not supported by the evidence on
record. However, the other
finding that there was evidence
of clear intention on the part
of the parties to purchase the
main house jointly for their use
is a correct, and it supported
by the evidence on record.
There was no evidence that the
intention of the parties in
acquiring the main house was any
different from that in respect
of the extension to the house,
nor was there any evidence of a
prior agreement between the
parties that the extension was
to belong solely to one party
alone. In such circumstances
the principle that property
jointly acquired during marriage
becomes joint property of the
parties applies and such
property, should be shared
equally on divorce, as the
ordinary incidents of commerce
has no application in marital
relations between husband and
wife who jointly acquire
property during marriage.
Furthermore the holding that the
extension was the sole effort of
the Respondent was not only
contrary to the evidence but
also contrary to the intention
of the parties themselves being
to provide more space in the
house for the joint benefit of
the parties and their children,
which intention was no different
from that for which the main
house was acquired. On the
facts and the law both parties
become joint and equal
beneficial owners of the main
house and extensions.
In the case of Rimmer v. Rimmer
(1952) 1 QB 63 at 73. Denning
L.J. in considering the sharing
of property jointly acquired by
husband and wife during marriage
explained the rationale for the
principle of equitable sharing
of such property as follows:
“In cases when it is clear that
the beneficial interest in the
matrimonial home, or in
furniture, belongs to one or
other, absolutely, or it in
clear that they intended to hold
it in definite shares the count
will give effect to their
intention. But where it is not
clear to whom the beneficial
interest belongs, or in what
proportion then, in this matter,
as in others equality is equity.
In Newqrosh Vs. Newqrosh
(unreported) some furniture was
bought by the husband’s father
with his own money for the use
of the couple but receipt new
taken in two wife’s name,
Willmer J. Held that the
furniture belonged to them
jointly and his decision was
affirmed by this Court. In
Jones v. Mayhard (1951) Ch. 572,
a banking account was in the
husband’s name but was fed by
the moneys of both and treated
as a joint account. Vaisey J.
Held, that although the
husband’s contributions were
much larger than the wife’s it
belonged to both of them
jointly”
Lord Denning then proceeded to
examine the evidence in the case
before him and continued:
“In this case, I look on the
money which was paid by the wife
to the building society as money
saved by their joint efforts and
applied for their common
benefit. I do not regard the sum
of £280 as wholly the wife’s
money. She, no doubt, regarded
it as her money because it come
out of her own earnings but, it
must be remembered that she was
keeping herself all the time on
her husbands money. The wife
here, like many wives, managed
the family, income. She in fact
used the husbands money to pay
the housekeeping expenses and
saved her own money. But she
might equally well, and with
some justice have paid some of
the housekeeping expense out of
her own money and saved a
corresponding amount of her
husband’s money. If he has done
that some of her husband’s money
would presumably have gone to
make up the £280 to repay the
building society. The important
thing was to pay of the mortgage
and it did not matter out of
whose money it was paid. When
they separate years afterwards,
the husband must be given some
credit for the £280, seeing that
it was only by using his money
for housekeeping that she was
enabled to save so much for her
own. It was really saved by
their joint efforts, and not by
hers alone, and it was applied
for their common benefit. The
proceeds of it should therefore
belong to them jointly.”
It was held in that case that
the house belonged jointly to
the parties and the beneficial
interest should be divided
equally between them.
In Fribance v. Fribance (No.2)
(1957) 1 W.L.R. p.384 the Court
of Appeal applying Rimmer v.
Rimmer (1953) 1 QB 63 also
"Held that the conduct of the
parties over the years indicated
that the spending or saving were
regarded as having been made for
the common benefit so that the
wife was entitled to half share
interest in the house.”
According to the Dicta of
Denning L.J. at p.387
“In the present case it so
happened that the wife went out
to work and used her earning to
help the household and buy the
children’s clothes whilst the
husband saved. It might very
well have been the other way
round. The husband might have
allotted to the wife enough
money to cover all the
housekeeping and the children’s
clothes, and the wife might have
saved her earnings. The title
to the family assets does not
depend on the mere chance of
which way round it was. It does
not depend on how they happened
to allocate their earnings and
their expenditure. The whole of
their resources were expended
for their joint benefit—either
in food or clothes and living
expenses for which there was
nothing to see on in the house,
and furniture which are family
assets—and the product should
belong to them jointly. It
belongs to them in equal
shares.”
This is the principle of the
equitable sharing of joint
property on divorce which was
applied by the Court of Appeal
in the case of Achiampong v.
Achiampong (1982-83) GLR 1017
where the court in deciding the
ownership of matrimonial home on
Divorce in holding (4) held
that:
“(4) Even if there were no
agreement, the circumstances
surrounding the acquisition of
those properties and the conduct
of both parties, were such that
equity and good conscience would
not have permitted either of
them to claim exclusive
beneficial interest in the
properties and leave the other
destitute. If the absence of
agreement were allowed to be
used by H as a weapon to defeat
W’s claim, it would mean that H
had been able to persuade W to
act to her detriment and
cleverly got away with it.
Quite apart from the agreement,
where during the marriage, one
spouse had induced the other to
apply his or her income or
resources for the joint benefit
of both of them and where the
said earnings or resources in
question could be regarded as
substantial contribution and
were so expended in the
reasonable belief that he or she
was acquiring a beneficial
interest in properties purchased
by the other spouse, as in the
instant case, the court must on
equitable principles hold that
the spouse who bought the
property held the beneficial
interest therein as a trustee
for himself or herself and the
other spouse. Consequently,
whichever way one might view the
fact and the circumstances of
the instant case. W was
entitled in law and in equity,
to some beneficial interest in
all the properties in dispute,
absence of agreement
notwithstanding. Having regard
to the extent of W’s
contribution that beneficial
interest should be nothing less
than a half-share as rightly
held by the trial judge. Dicta
of Lord Diplock in Gissing v.
Gissing (1971) A C 886 at pp.
904-905, H I and of Denning
M.R. In Falconer v. Falconer
(1970) I W.L.R. 1333 at p. 1336.
H.I. applied.”
Further in holding (6) the court
held:
“ (6) Although Act 367, s. 20(1)
was procedural, it at the same
time gave a discretion to the
court to alter the proprietary
rights of the spouses if in
doing so it would be “just and
equitable.” The section did not
lay down any principles as
guidelines along which the
discretion was to be exercised.
It left that to the good sense
and judgment of the court.
However, in exercising that
discretion, the court would have
to be guided by law; the
discretion meant sound
discretion guided by law, not
vague, arbitrary or fanciful.
Consequently, where the rights
of the spouses in respect of any
property were established or
agreed, as in the instant case,
the court should uphold those
rights. Again in exercising the
discretion under the section,
the court in the absence of
agreement, had to take into
consideration the financial
contribution which the applicant
made towards the acquisition of
the property or properties in
question. The contribution
might be direct or indirect; and
once it was regarded as
substantial, it could not be
ignored.”
Our matrimonial Courses Act 1971
(Act 367) section 20 empowers a
Court in a divorce case to
settle proprietary rights of the
parties on “just and equitable
basis” It provides:
“The Matrimonial Causes Act,
1971 (Act 367), s. 20 provides:
“20. (1) The court may order
either party to the marriage to
pay to the other party such sum
of money or convey to the other
party such movable or immovable
property as settlement of
property rights or in lieu
thereof or as part of financial
provision as the court thinks
just and equitable.”
Constitutional effect and force
has been given to the principle
of equitable sharing of joint
property on divorce in Article
22 (3) b of the Constitution.
Article 22(3) says
“ (3) with a view to achieving
the full realisation of the
rights referred to in clause (2)
of this article
(a) Spouses shall have equal
access to property jointly
acquired during marriage
(b) Assets which are jointly
acquired during marriage shall
be distributed equitably between
spouses upon dissolution of the
marriage.”
Having regard to the law and
evidence the Court of Appeal
correctly held that
“The intention to own the house
jointly coupled with whatever
contributions the petitioner had
made towards the acquisition of
the house made the parties joint
owners of the property.”
But it erred when it later made
a contradictory findings
regarding the extension to the
same house thus:
“The evidence shows that all
expenses on the extensions were
borne by the Respondent. These
extensions are separable and
identifiable from the main
house. It should in the
circumstances be inequitable to
vest these extensions jointly in
the petitioner and the
Respondent.”
The principle of equitable
sharing of joint property which
was applied by the Court of
Appeal in this case to the main
part of the house is applicable
also to the extension works and
therefore the parties are
entitled to equal share of the
whole house on the dissolution
of the marriage.
In the result the appeal
succeeds and is allowed. The
house No.M.9 Effiakuma Estate
Takoradi comprising the main
house and extension is declared
the joint property of the
Appellant and Respondent to be
shared equally. In place of the
order of the Court of Appeal
that the house should be valued
for the Respondent to buy out
the Appellant, it is ordered
that the house be valued and
sold and the proceeds shared
equally between the Appellant
and Respondent however the
Respondent is to be given the
first option to purchase the
property.
HAYFRON-BENJAMIN, J.S.C.:
I agree.
ACQUAH, J.S.C.:
I agree.
ATUGUBA, J.S.C.:
I agree.
MS. AKUFFO, J.S.C.:
I also agree.
COUNSEL:
Mr. Carson for the Appellant.
Respondent absent.
I.W.
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