LEGAL PRINCIPLE: CIVIL PROCEDURE – Jurisdiction of Court – Incidental vs. Fundamental Issues of Family Status
PRINCIPLE STATEMENT
The jurisdiction of the High Court was ousted by the proviso to Section 9(1) of the High Court Law only where the issue of family status was the fundamental issue before the court.
RATIO DECIDENDI (SOURCE)
"The jurisdiction of the High Court was ousted by the proviso to Section 9(1) of the High Court Law only where the issue of family status was the fundamental issue before the court."
EXPLANATION / SCOPE
Ouster provisions excluding High Court jurisdiction over family status matters apply only when family status is the fundamental (primary, central) issue, not when it’s merely incidental (subsidiary, collateral) to the main claim. “Fundamental issue” means the case’s core question—what the action primarily seeks to determine. “Incidental issue” means a subsidiary matter that arises during determination of the main claim. For example: an inheritance dispute where family status must be determined to resolve property rights—family status is incidental to the property claim; High Court has jurisdiction. But an action solely to declare family status—family status is fundamental; customary/area courts have jurisdiction. This distinction prevents ouster clauses from excluding High Court jurisdiction over substantive claims merely because family status issues arise incidentally. Courts examine: what relief is sought? what is the action’s primary purpose? Only if family status determination is the action’s main object does the ouster apply.