“Living in Adultery” as a Ground for Losing the Opportunity to Claim Maintenance: A Critical Appraisal of the Sri Lankan Judicial Standpoint
Abstract
The common law reciprocal duty of maintaining the spouses has been part of the Sri
Lankan legal regime with the incorporation of the maintenance law directions, with the
enforcement of Maintenance Ordinance, No. 19 of 1889, which was subsequently repealed
by the Maintenance Act, No. 37 of 1999. “Living in adultery” has been recognized as
an exemption to qualify to claim maintenance from the spouse as per the provisions of
both statutes. Nevertheless, the scope of the term, “living in adultery” has been developed
by the domestic judiciary following numerous approaches of construction. This research
aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the domestic judiciary in dealing with the concept
of “living in adultery”. It also analyses different approaches used by the judiciary in
interpreting the term and determining whether the burden of proof required to establish
“living in adultery” has been consistently applied in accordance with Sections 3, 4, and
5 of the Maintenance Ordinance (1889) and Section 2(i) proviso of the Maintenance Act
(1999). The black letter approach and comparative legal research methodologies have
been employed in order to achieve the objective of the study. Finally, the study reveals
that the judicial determination under both statutes has attempted to construct the phrase
“living in adultery” based on the circumstantial evidence provided by each case, yet
the level of burden of proof expected to establish the “living in adultery” shall remain
unclarified.
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