Generosa V Muramira (Divorce Cause 183 of 2022) 2024 UGHCFD 15 (20 March 2024)

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THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF UGANDA AT KAMPALA

(FAMILY DIVISION)

DIVORCE CAUSE NO. 183 OF 2022

HARRIET GENEROSA ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: PETITIONER

VERSUS

NICK CHILES MURAMIRA ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: RESPONDENT

JUDGMENT BEFORE: HON. LADY JUSTICE CELIA NAGAWA

1.0 Introduction.
1.1 Harriet Generosa hereafter referred to as the Petitioner filed this
petition against Nick Chiles Muramira herein referred to as the
Respondent seeking, the following orders:
i) The marriage between the Petitioner and the Respondent be
dissolved.
ii) The Bukoto Property to be sold and the proceeds to be shared
between the Parties according to contribution.
iii) The Respondent be ordered to pay the Costs of this Petition.
iv) That the Petitioner may have such other reliefs in the premises
as the Honorable Court may deem fit.

1.2 The Petitioner was represented by Counsel Mark Kamanzi of M/S M


Kamanzi & Company Advocates, Ggaba Road, Kampala upon Change
of Advocates from Counsel Innocent Ndiko of M/S Ngobi Ndiko
Advocates, Kampala.

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1.3 The Respondent resides in Cairo Egypt and as a result, was served
through his WhatsApp Phone number on 12th October 2022. The
Respondent activated Disappearing Messages on the App and therefore
all communication with the Respondent disappears after a set time.
The Respondent has also failed to answer phone calls made to him
through WhatsApp. He was served via the same method again on the
19th day of October 2022.

1.4 On 22nd March, 2022, Counsel for the Petitioner prayed that this
electronic mode of Service be accepted by this Court. He relied on Hon.
Justice Musa Ssekaana’s ruling in Male Mabirizi Versus Attorney
General Misc. Application No. 918 of 2021. The court acknowledged
Service and further directed the Petitioner to advertise the hearing
notice in the Daily Monitor Newspaper and on the Court’s Noticeboard.
The Petitioner complied and an Affidavit of Service deponed by
Wasirwa Francis was filed at this court on the 13th July, 2023. The
court proceeded to hear the matter.

2.0 Background.
2.1 The Petitioner and the Respondent solemnized their marriage on the
28th day of December 2013 at St. Augustine Chapel, Makerere
University in Kampala. They did not have any children together.
2.2 The Petitioner and the Respondent lived and cohabited together in
Kampala Uganda, New Delhi India, United Arab Emirates and Cairo
Egypt. The Petitioner avers that during the subsistence of the
Marriage, she made an effort to visit the Respondent wherever he was
relocated or staying.

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2.3 The Petitioner lives and works in Dubai. She is employed by Emirates
and the Respondent works as a Foreign Service Officer with the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The Respondent has been stationed in
India, Uganda, and currently in Egypt in the time that the parties have
been married.
2.4 That during the subsistence of the Marriage, the Respondent
committed Adultery and fathered a child with an Ethiopian Lady who
currently resides in the United States of America. The Petitioner
further contends that the Respondent fell in with bad company while
living in Cairo. That he took to Substance Abuse and blatant Adultery
by signing up to dating sites like Tinder. She further states that when
she visited the Respondent in Cairo, she found feminine items like
make up and hygiene products that did not belong to her. She also
states that she contracted sexually transmitted infections after being
sexually intimate with the Respondent.
2.5 The Respondent abused drugs and during some of his episodes, he
demanded that the Petitioner be intimate with him. The Respondent
was withdrawn and often returned with red eyes. The Petitioner found
small bags of the said drugs in his key holder on one occasion and on
another in his shorts.
2.6 During the Petitioner’s stay in Dubai, she underwent spinal fusion
Surgery and although the Respondent was on leave in Uganda, he
never made any attempt to visit her. Despite efforts to rebuild the
relationship by the Petitioner, such as getaway in Egypt, there has
been a breakdown in the relationship between the parties. The
Respondent failed to visit the Petitioner in Dubai despite various
tickets purchased by her leading to the loss of a lot of money.

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2.7 The Petitioner visited the Respondent in Cairo only to be informed that
he had taken school fees loans for their non-existent children and on
another occasion, she found that he had a girlfriend that he was
cohabiting with in Cairo.
2.8 The Applicant contends that she was subjected to various forms of
torture including silent treatment, psychological abuse, rejection,
ridicule and lies contrary to the principles of sanctity of Marriage.
2.9 The Applicant further states that the Respondent owns land in
Mbarara where trees are planted to which she contributed UGX
4,000,000/= (Four Million Uganda Shillings), visited and supervised
the project.

3.0 Evidence of the Parties.


1. The Petitioner and the Respondent were married at St. Augustine
Chapel Makerere on the 28th December, 2013. The Marriage
Certificate is marked “PEX 1”.
2. The Petitioner is employed by Emirates and her Service Certificate
of Employment together with her Pay Slips are marked “PEX 2 &
3”.
3. The Petitioner and the Respondent had a matrimonial home in
Bukoto Kampala and pictures of it are marked “PEX 4”.
4. Proof of payment for the Bukoto land where the house was/is
being constructed marked “PEX 5”.
5. Statement of Account Dubai loan is also attached and marked
“PEX 6”.
6. Statement of Joint Account at Housing Finance Bank is marked
“PEX 7”.
7. Copies of the Petitioner’s flight schedules are marked “PEX 8”.

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8. Proof of purchase of the Namulanda Land is marked “PEX 9”.
9. A Valuation Report from Knight Frank is marked “PEX 10”.
10.The Statement of the Search on the land is marked “PEX 11”.
11.WhatsApp and Email correspondences between the parties have
also been availed to this court, marked “PEX 12 & 13”.

4.0 Issues to be determined by the Court.


1. Whether there are any grounds for Divorce?
2. What Remedies are available to the parties?
5.0 Burden of Proof.
5.1 In all civil matters like the present petition, he who alleges bears the
burden to prove his/her case on a balance of probabilities. The
Petitioner in this case by virtue of Section 101,102 and 103 of the
Evidence Act, Cap.6 has the burden to prove the facts alleged by him
in the Petition. Section 101 of the Evidence Act provides that; “Whoever
desires any Court to give judgment as to any legal right or liability,
dependent on the existence of the facts which he or she asserts must
prove that those facts exist”.

6.0 Submissions.
6.1 I perused and analyzed the Petitioner’s written submissions. I
appreciate counsel’s submissions and arguments in his endeavor to
resolve this petition in favor of his client. I evaluated and examined the
petition and the documentary evidence, as required by law. The written
submissions by Counsel have been taken into consideration in
determination of this Petition.

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7.0 Determination of Issues by the Court.

Whether there are any grounds for Divorce?

7.1 It has been determined that a Marriage exists between the Petitioner
and the Respondent. They got married on 28th December, 2013 at St
Augustine Chapel Makerere. It is important to establish the existence
of a valid Marriage between the parties because it is on that basis that
the Marriage is dissolved. This is as elucidated under Section 33 of
the Marriage Act, Cap. 251 which provides that, every certificate of
marriage which shall have been filed in the office of the Registrar of
any district, or a copy of it, purporting to be signed and certified as a
true copy by the Registrar of that district for the time being, and every
entry in a Marriage Register Book or a copy of it, certified as aforesaid,
shall be admissible as evidence of the marriage to which it relates, in
any court of justice or before any person now or hereafter having by
law or consent of parties authority to hear, receive and examine
evidence. Kintu Muwanga Versus Myllious G. Kintu Divorce Appeal
No. 135 of 1997.
7.2 Section 18 of the Law Revision (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act,
2023 that amended Section 4 of the Divorce Act Cap 249 following
the decision in Uganda Association of Women Lawyers (FIDA) & 5
Others Versus Attorney General Constitutional Petition No
2/2002, provides that;
(1) A husband or wife may apply by petition to the court for the
dissolution of the marriage on the ground that since the
solemnisation of the marriage, his wife or her husband—
a) Has been guilty of adultery.

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b) Has changed his or her profession of Christianity for the
profession of some other religion, and gone through a form
of marriage with another man or woman.
c) Has been guilty of bigamy
d) Has been guilty of rape, sodomy or bestiality.
e) has been guilty of cruelty; or
f) Has been guilty of desertion, without reasonable excuse, for
two years or upwards.
7.3 In this petition, the Petitioner relied on the grounds of Cruelty and
Adultery. The petition will be successful under Section 8 of the
Divorce Act Cap 249 if the court is satisfied that the Petitioner’s case
has been proved, and does not find that the Petitioner has been
accessory to or has connived at the going through of the form of
marriage or the adultery, or has connived at or condoned it, or that the
petition is presented or prosecuted in collusion, the court shall
pronounce a decree nisi for the dissolution of the marriage. This court
will examine the validity of both grounds presented by the Petitioner.

Adultery.

7.4 Legally defined, Adultery is a voluntary act of sexual intercourse


between someone who is married and a person of the opposite sex who
is not their spouse. It is difficult, burdensome and acrimonious to
establish or provide evidence of the “Physical Act” of Adultery. To this
end, Justice Ntagoba, (as he then was) in George Nyakairu Vs Rose
Nyakairu (1979) HCB 261 determined that in allegations of adultery,
it is not necessary to prove the direct act of adultery for the fact was
almost always to be inferred from the circumstances as a necessary

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conclusion. The Petitioner also relied on the case of Dr. Specioza
Wandera Kazibwe V Engineer Charles Nsubuga DC No. 3 of 2003,
to state that Adultery can be proved by the Petitioner adducing
circumstantial or direct evidence to prove it.
7.5 In this petition, the Respondent contended that during the subsistence
of the Marriage, the Respondent committed adultery and fathered a
child with an Ethiopian Lady, that he signed up to dating sites like
Tinder and when she visited the Respondent in Cairo, she found
feminine items like make up and hygiene products that did not belong
to her. She also stated that she contracted sexually transmitted
infections after being sexually intimate with the Respondent.
Furthermore, when the Petitioner visited the Respondent in Cairo, she
found that he had a girlfriend that he was cohabiting with and was
denied access to the house. This is detailed under Paragraphs, 7, 8,
10, 15, 16, 19, 22, 23 and 24 of her Evidence in Chief.
7.6 Furthermore, in the email correspondences marked “PEX 13” on the
trial bundle, the Respondent in his Reply to the Petitioner’s email
where she addresses his acts of Adultery, does not deny the assertion
that he committed Adultery but apologizes for his actions and
promises changed behavior.
7.7 All these actions coupled together with the fact that the Respondent
fathered a child out of Marriage, prove the ground of Adultery. (See
Rosette Tabitha Nakiryowa Mabikke Versus Michael Mabikke
Divorce Cause No. 68 of 2020 as held by Lady Justice Jeanne
Rwakakooko).

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Cruelty.

7.8 Cruelty was defined in the case of James Love Versus Unity Twesigye
Divorce Cause No.162 Of 2022 citing Habyarimana Versus
Habyarimana (1980) HCB 139, to mean any conduct that produces
actual or apprehended injury to mental health. Cruelty may be mental
and it may include injuries, reproaches, complaints, accusations,
taunts, denial of conjugal rights among others. Mental cruelty is a
state of mind, it is the feeling of deep anguish, disappointment, or
frustration in one spouse caused by the conduct of the other over a
long period of time.
7.9 In the cause, the court stated that to constitute cruelty, the conduct
complained of should be "grave and weighty" so as to come to the
conclusion that the Petitioner’s spouse cannot be reasonably expected
to live with the other spouse. It must be something more serious than
"ordinary wear and tear of married life". Mere coldness or lack of
affection cannot amount to cruelty however frequent rudeness of
language, petulance of manner, indifference, and neglect may reach
such a degree that it makes the married life for the other spouse
absolutely intolerable. The conduct must be much more than jealousy,
selfishness, and possessiveness, which causes unhappiness and
dissatisfaction. Being emotionally upset may not be a valid ground for
granting a divorce on the grounds of mental cruelty.
7.10 Matrimonial cruelty may be of unfounded variety, which can be subtle
or brutal. It may be in form of words, gestures or by mere silence,
violent or nonviolent. Acts amounting to cruelty vary as widely as the
reasons that cause unhappy, marriages. Therefore, there cannot be

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any comprehensive list of acts amounting to cruelty. “Politics of
putting Asunder by Dr. Maria Nasali (Ed) at page 116.
7.11 The Petitioner averred that during the subsistence of the Marriage, the
Respondent committed Adultery thereby exposing her to the
contraction of sexually transmitted infections after being sexually
intimate with him, the Respondent abused drugs and during some of
his episodes, he demanded that the Petitioner be intimate with him.
The Respondent was withdrawn on the Petitioners’ visit and often
returned with red eyes. The Petitioner found small bags of the said
drugs in his key holder on one occasion and on another in his shorts
when he visited her in Dubai, putting her employment in jeopardy.
7.12 The Petitioner underwent spinal fusion Surgery and although the
Respondent was on leave in Uganda, he never made any attempt to
visit her. The Respondent denied the Petitioner conjugal rights and
failed to visit the Petitioner in Dubai despite tickets purchased by her
leading to the loss of a lot of money. This is as evidenced in the
WhatsApp correspondences between the Parties in “PEX 12”.
7.13 The Petitioner further contended that she was subjected to various
forms of torture including silent treatment, psychological abuse,
rejection, ridicule and lies contrary to the principles of sanctity of
Marriage. This is detailed under Paragraphs 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16,
17, 18, and 19 of her evidence in Chief.
7.14 Denial of Conjugal rights amounts to Cruelty, Substance Abuse,
especially that which puts one’s spouse in danger extending to their
livelihood and source of income amounts to Cruelty. In this case, the
Respondent brought drugs to the Petitioner’s place of Employment.
Infecting the Petitioner with Sexually Transmitted Infections, Silent

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Treatment and financial irresponsibility and fathering a Child out of
the marriage amounts to Cruelty as they go beyond the ordinary wear
and tear of Married Life.
7.15 In consideration of all the above, I find that the marriage has broken
down irretrievably and there is no point of keeping together parties
that no longer want to be married. In this case, it might have been the
Petitioner that Petitioned for Divorce, but the Respondent’s conduct
extending to his failure to reply to this Petition shows that he was
already mentally checked out of the Marriage and that the marriage
has hit the end of the road. Despite marriage vows, marriage is a
voluntary endeavor, parties cannot and should not be bound in
Marriage when it is clear they no longer wish to be. This court therefore
allows the Petition and order the marriage between the Petitioner and
the Respondent dissolved.

8.0 What Remedies are available to the Parties?

Decree Nisi

8.1 The Petitioner prayed that her marriage to the Respondent be dissolved
as provided for under Section 4 of the Divorce Act. The petitioner has
proved cruelty and Adultery as the grounds for her divorce. The
Petitioner to the knowledge of this court has not condoned, connived
or colluded with the Respondent in seeking this court.
8.2 The Respondent was served and the evidence of service is on the Court
record, however he never filed a reply to this petition. The Petitioner
voluntarily entered into the marriage and she should be able to
voluntarily exist it. The petitioner is therefore entitled to a Decree Nisi

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as provided for under Section 4 of the Divorce Act, Cap. 249 as
amended by Section 18 of the Law Revision (Miscellaneous
Amendments) Act, 2023.

Matrimonial Property.

8.3 Matrimonial Property was defined in the case of Charman Vs.


Charman (No 4) [2007] EWCA Civil 503; [2007] 1 FLR 1246 to mean
“property of the parties generated during the marriage otherwise than
by external donation’.
8.4 In this case, the property referred to as Matrimonial property
containing their Matrimonial house comprised at Kyadondo, Block
216, Plot 4472 Bukoto is registered in a 3rd Party’s name Generosa
Muramira Harriet, who is the Respondent’s mother. This is as
evidenced by the Search Report marked “PEX 11” on the Petitioner’s
Trial Bundle. Under Section 59 Registration of Titles Act Cap 259
possession of a certificate of title by a registered person is conclusive
evidence of ownership of the land described therein. The 3rd party shall
not be condemned unheard and the court shall therefore leave the
determination of ownership in this property to the suit filed at the High
Court Land Division.
8.5 However, I realize that the counsel for the Petitioner did not submit on
the purchase of land at Namulanda “PEX 9” equally the land in
Mbarara were the Petitioner testified that she planted trees and built
and bought a gate plus contributing towards the maintenance of the
planted trees, she visited and supervised the tree project.

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8.6 I will allow the refund of UGX. 4,000,000/= as the Petitioner’s expense
towards the tree project in Mbarara and UGX. 1,500,000/= towards
her time of supervision.

Costs

8.7 Having successfully proven Adultery on the part of the Respondent,


Costs are hereby awarded to the Petitioner.

9.0 Conclusion.

9.1. Accordingly, this court makes the following orders;

1. This petition is allowed.


2. A decree Nisi is hereby pronounced in dissolution of the marriage
between the petitioner and the respondent.
3. The Petitioner is awarded UGX. 4,000,000/= as compensation
towards that trees planting project and UGX. 1,500,000/=
towards her supervision of the trees project.
4. Costs awarded to the Petitioner.

Dated, Signed and Delivered via Email this 20th day of March,
2024.

______________________________
CELIA NAGAWA
JUDGE

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