Facts of case
Mr.
Balfour and Mrs. Balfour were husband and wife from Ceylon ( Sri Lanka) and
once they went for a vacation to England in the year 1915
But
unfortunately during the course of vacation, Mrs. Balfour fell ill; she was in
urgent need of medical attention.Then they decided and made an agreement that
Mr. Balfour would return to Ceylon and his wife, that is Mrs. Balfour shall
stay back until she recovers from her illness.
They
had also decided that during that period of time Mr. Balfour shall pay Mrs.
Balfour 30 pounds as maintenance every month until everything falls into place,
unless she recovers and returns back to Ceylon.
Now
this understanding and interpretation was made when their relationship was fine
and there was not any sort of sourness in between them.
But
slowly and gradually their relationship deteriorated which resulted in non-
payment of the amount of maintenance by Mr. Balfour to Mrs. Balfour
But
Mrs. Balfour decided to sought to enforce the agreement and moved to the court.
Mr.
Balfour wrote the letter to his wife suggesting to make their separation
permanent.
And
at later point of time they separated legally, that means they were divorced.
Mrs.
Balfour had brought the action against Mr. Balfour for non-payment of the
amount he was supposed to pay in court of law in the year 1918.
Issues
Raised In The Case
Did
Mr. Balfour ever intended to enter into any sort of agreement with his wife,
Mrs. Balfour?
Is
the agreement between Mr. And Mrs. Balfour valid in nature at all?
Does
the contract between husband and wife enforceable in court of law?
Procedural
History Of The Case
Initially
when Mrs. Balfour had moved to the court in order to seek her maintenance, an additional
judge of Kings Bench division presided by Justice Sargant, held that the
husband is indeed liable and is under obligation to provide maintenance and
support to his wife. It had held that there existed a valid contract between
Mr. And Mrs. Balfour. Basically, the lower court ruled in favour of the
plaintiff (Mrs. Balfour) and against the defendant (Mr. Balfour).The defendants
promise to pay the maintenance was enforceable.
The consideration to the agreement of monthly transfer of the amount of money
was lawful and held binding obligations. So, in the month of July,1919 she
received the decree nisi and subsequently in the month of December, the order
for alimony. The lower court had observed and had held the contract binding but
Mr. Balfour appealed in higher court.
What
Was Held In Balfour Vs. Balfour (1919)
It
was held that the characteristics of the agreement was purely and completely
domestic in nature, Lord Justice Atkin held that when a husband and a wife
enter into an agreement they never intend to create a legal relationship. Both
the parties must have an intention to create a legal relationship while
entering into an agreement, then only it becomes enforceable in court of law.
Moreover, a court will never take into account the domestic agreements between
spouses made in daily course life.
The agreement was outside the realm of contractsaltogether.
Judgement
As mentioned above, the agreement was not legally binding, the agreements made
in personal family relationships are not counted in law of contract the
agreements made between spouses to provide capitals or monetary benefits does
not hold any legally binding authority. Generally, spouses or parties to
marriage do make arrangements for personal and household expenses, but there is
never a legal instinct in those things.
The court of Appeal had unanimously ruled that there was no such enforceable
agreement between Mr. Balfour and Mrs. Balfour. Subsequently, Mr Balfour was
allowed. Basically, the law revolves around the concept that there must be an
intention on the part of both the parties to create a legal relationship in
order to validate a contract. This was the ratio decidendi of the case. Whether
the parties intended to create a legal relationship or not is determined by
examining the circumstances that existed, under which the execution of the
contract was done.
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