Wong Phui Lun Joseph v Yeoh Loon Goit

JudgeChua F A J
Judgment Date03 February 1978
Neutral Citation[1978] SGHC 7
Citation[1978] SGHC 7
Defendant CounselJD Grimberg (Drew & Napier)
Subject MatterDivorce,ss 80(1)(c), 82(1)(e), 82(2)(g) Women's Charter,Whether desire of respondent to continue with marriage material,Whether fault of petitioner material,Family Law,Domicile,Conflict of Laws,Facts indicating such acquisition,Separation,Grounds of divorce,Acquisition of domicile of choice
Published date19 September 2003
Plaintiff CounselTan Kok Quan (Lee & Lee)
CourtHigh Court (Singapore)

The petitioner, Joseph Wong Phui Lun, presented a petition for divorce to this court praying that his marriage to the respondent, Yeoh Loon Goit alias Yoa Hsiao Yu, may be dissolved under s 82(1)(e) of the Women`s Charter (Cap 47, 1970 Ed) on the ground that his wife has lived separately from him for a period of not less than seven years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition and is unlikely to be reconciled with him.

The parties were married on 24 December 1952, at the Registry of Marriages, Selangor, according to the provisions of the Civil Marriage Ordinance 1952, a law providing that or in contemplation of which this marriage is monogamous. At the date of the marriage the petitioner was a bachelor and the respondent a widow. Both the parties were born in Kuala Lumpur. There are six children of the marriage.

After the marriage the parties lived in Kuala Lumpur. About nine months after the marriage the petitioner left for England where he studied at Leeds University. Nine months later, after the birth of the first child, his wife joined him at Leeds. When he finished his university course in 1956 they moved and lived in London where he took his articleship and studied for the examination of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales. He successfully completed his examination in May 1959, and the parties returned to Kuala Lumpur sometime in December 1959. During the period they were in England three other children were born.

When they returned to Kuala Lumpur they first went to live with his sister for nine months. After that they moved and lived at No 2, 12/6 Petaling Jaya, Selangor, and later they moved to No 4, 12/6 Petaling Jaya. Both these houses were then owned by the wife. Between 1959 and 1963 two more children were born.

The petitioner first worked for Peat, Marwick & Mitchell in Kuala Lumpur, a firm of accountants. He worked there until 30 April 1964 when he left to set up his own practice Azman, Wong, Salleh & Co. The firm extended its business and on 1 July 1967 the firm started a joint partnership with Arthur Young & Co of New York and the petitioner became the managing partner of the joint company, Arthur Young, Azman, Wong, Salleh & Co with its office at the American International Assurance Building in Robinson Road, Singapore.

As managing partner of the joint partnership the petitioner said he had to build up an audit practice of international standard in Singapore and that it was necessary for him to live in Singapore. He continued to be a partner in Azman, Wong & Salleh until 30 September 1970 and until he sold his shares he continued his business in Kuala Lumpur.

He came to live in Singapore alone around June 1967, but he had go back to Kuala Lumpur once or twice a week. When he returned to Kuala Lumpur he stayed at the matrimonial home.

In 1964 or 1965 Poon Ah Moi (now the mistress of the petitioner) was employed by the petitioner to work in his Kuala Lumpur office. Poon Ah Moi is an accountant and a Singapore citizen. In 1967 she could not get an extension of her work permit and in November 1967, she was transferred to Singapore to work in the petitioner`s Singapore office. According to the petitioner, he and Poon Ah Moi decided to live together sometime in the first half of 1969 and to settle down in Singapore. He raised a bank loan to enable her to buy No 8 Jalan Harun, Singapore, where they went to live and are still living. According to the respondent she heard for the first time that her husband was having some sort of association with Poon Ah Moi in December 1966.

I have no doubt that the petitioner was having an affair with Poon Ah Moi before she was transferred to Singapore in November 1967.

The petitioner went to New York in late January 1968, to visit Arthur Young & Co. He was away for five weeks. When he came back to Singapore he stayed there for one week and then went back to Kuala Lumpur around 2 March 1968. According to the petitioner his wife was extremely angry and there was a quarrel and he was locked out of the bedroom and...

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