He demanded that her refund 76,000 dirhams of tuition fees for her son

A man sues his wife and cites her ex-wife

"Abu Dhabi Appeal" upheld the ruling of the first instance to reject the case.

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The Abu Dhabi Court of Appeal upheld a ruling of the Court of First Instance, which rejected a lawsuit brought by a man against his wife, who demanded that she return 76,670 dirhams of tuition fees he had paid to her son from her ex-husband. Judgment of the first degree, where the husband requested the testimony of the divorced wife in the case.

The details of the case refer to a man filing a lawsuit against his wife, before the Abu Dhabi Family Court and for Civil and Administrative Claims, demanding that she be obligated to return 73 thousand and 670 dirhams, which he had previously loaned to her to pay the tuition fees for her son from her ex-husband. The papers proving the indebtedness, or the respondent asked him to pay those fees, or his pledge to return them, and the plaintiff did not provide evidence for this, except for a receipt for the payment of school fees, and the papers were devoid of any evidence to support him in his claims.

The plaintiff did not accept the ruling, and appealed it, demanding that his appeal be accepted in form, and that the papers be referred for investigation to hear the testimony of the father of his wife’s son, having previously transferred to her an amount equivalent to 50 thousand dirhams to complete the payment of the amount she owed in exchange for the fees he paid to her son, and seizing those funds for herself.

The Court of Appeal stated that the case papers were devoid of the validity of his claim that it was preoccupied with the amount of his claim for debt, which coincided with the court of the first degree to reject the true reality and the law, so that his appeals and other aspects of his defense became frustrating, did not obtain the appealed judgment, or put forward a new one that requires Reconsidering the judgment it concluded in accordance with what was stated by that judgment with its valid and valid reasons, which the current court shares.

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