Private Wealth & Family Law Practice Group
Adultery Liability Recognized for Conduct Continuing After Reconciliat…
2026-05-12
1. Facts and Background
While Client A (the plaintiff) was temporarily separated from the spouse, A
came to learn that the spouse had been engaged in an extramarital relationship
with a workplace colleague, B (the defendant). Although Client A reconciled
with the spouse to restore the family, A subsequently identified circumstances
showing that the relationship between the spouse and B continued thereafter;
the marriage was ultimately not restored and ended in divorce. Client A
retained LKP to bring a damages claim against B.
2. Key Legal Issues
The main issues were: (i) how to construct, on a lawful basis, supplementary evidence
(such as vehicle dashcam audio recordings) where the materials originally held
by Client A were not sufficient to establish the conduct objectively; (ii) how
to rebut B's likely defense that the marriage had already broken down at the
relevant time, using objective facts such as the parties' actual reconciliation
efforts and the withdrawal of an earlier application for divorce by mutual
agreement; and (iii) how to combine the conduct during separation and the
conduct continuing after reconciliation into a single coherent set of facts.
3. Implementation and Outcome
LKP (i) reviewed the evidentiary weight of the materials Client A originally
held and assessed both the lawful availability and the probative usefulness of
supplementary materials such as vehicle dashcam audio recordings; (ii)
organized objective facts indicating the continuation of the marital
relationship — including the parties' reconciliation efforts and the withdrawal
of the earlier application for divorce by mutual agreement — and designed a
doctrinal response to the anticipated "already broken down" defense;
and (iii) reconstructed the conduct occurring during separation and the conduct
continuing after reconciliation into a single chronological narrative for use
at the hearing. The court accepted parts of Client A's arguments, recognized
that B had infringed Client A's marital relationship, and ordered B to pay
consolation money. The case shows how, in matters involving separations,
reconciliations, and other transitions in the marital relationship, strategies
for proving extramarital conduct and rebutting a "already broken
down" defense can be designed.






