The marriage between a 70-year-old Surveyor, Pa Owolabi Alowonle and his wife, Idia, will surely go down in history as one of the shortest after a Mapo Customary Court sitting in Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State, annulled the union owing to irreconcilable differences.
Vanguard reports that the marriage which lasted just 83 days, was nullified by the court presided over by Magistrate Hentic Agbaje, after efforts made by family members and the court to reconcile the couple, could not yield any result.
It was gathered that Pa Alowonle was a widower when he married Idia, equally a widow but they could not sustain the love that led them into deciding to stay as husband and wife.
In delivering his judgement, Agbaje held that both Alowonle and Idia based their rush into marriage on infatuation and the urge to satisfy their selfish ambitions and as such, they failed to find out if they were compatible.
“I don’t exactly understand why two elderly persons who are already widow and widower, should carelessly rush into a marriage without proper knowledge of one another.
Well, I only wish both of you good as you have both accepted dissolution of the union. Therefore, in the interest of peaceful coexistence, the 83-day-old union between Alowonle and Idia has ceased to be henceforth.”
Agbaje, however, directed Alowonle to provide a cash of N12,000 for Idia’s accommodation and another N2,000 for the movement of her belongings within seven days.
In his petition, Alowonle had told the court that his wife was causing disharmony in his house as well as being a threat to his life.
“My lord, ever since Idia got to my home on May 18 this year, she has been doing everything possible to put an end to my life by not giving me rest of mind.
She has been causing serious disharmony among my tenants who were peaceful before she married me. She and her daughter from time to time, fight and gossip around the house, giving unfounded information of one tenant to the other.
As if that is not enough, Idia incited her daughter against me to abuse and break the long existing regulations I imposed on the house for peaceful coexistence of the tenants and my family.
I barred any form of singing of religious songs which I know could cause problems among Muslim and Christian tenants. However, the daughter she brought from her late husband deliberately started singing in the house.
In fact, Idia and her daughter have no respect for me.”
In accepting the divorce, Idia said:
“It will be a big relief for me to exit his house, the house of trouble. My lord, when he met me as a widow, Alowonle promised to take good care of me, assuring that he had no wife since he lost his last wife.
However, just seven days after I moved into his home as a wife, he brought in another wife and started treating me like dustbin. Ever since then, he asked me to leave the shop he established for me with N25,000 and has even asked me to leave his house altogether. It is a thing of joy for me to be free again from his unfaithfulness."
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