Woman smashed windows of estranged husband's tractor over debt row
The woman admitted to smashing windows of her husbandâs tractor with a golf club when the man hadnât paid up âŹ200,000 arising from a 2019 family law agreement.
A 63-year-old mother-of-six who broke the windows of her estranged husbandâs tractor with a golf club in a row over an unpaid âŹ200,000 marital debt has escaped a conviction.
This follows Judge Mary Larkin at Gort District Court today imposing a 12-month Probation Bond on the south Galway woman.
The woman has admitted to smashing windows of her husbandâs tractor in August 2020 with a Sand Wedge golf club at a time when the man hadnât paid up âŹ200,000 arising from a 2019 family law court separation agreement.
In court today, Judge Larkin imposed the Probation Bond on the woman after being told that the womanâs ex-husband didnât wish to make a victim impact statement.
Judge Larkin said that she had received a Probation Report on the accused.
Judge Larkin said: âI have read the Probation Report in detail and I remember the case quite clearly.
âUnfortunately, this matter is a family matter and I am going to impose a Probation Bond for 12 months.âÂ
In the incident, a daughter of the estranged couple videoed her motherâs golf club assault on the tractor on her phone and the footage was played to the court last year when evidence was heard.
Judge Larkin found the woman guilty of criminal damage of the tractor and the possession of an article during a dispute and told her âyou took the law into your own hands wielding the golf club. You canât go around wielding a golf club at anyoneâ.
Solicitor for the woman, Charles Foley told the court that there was âa huge residue of bittinessâ over the then unpaid âŹ200,000.
The couple reached a court agreement at the Family Law Court in February 2019 that the man would pay âŹ200,000 by July 2019 and the woman would surrender her interest in the family home.
Mr Foley said that the âŹ200,000 was not paid over by the man until April 2021 â however, this was only after his estranged wife forcibly moved back into the family home and the farmer moved out of the home to live in Gort.
The woman told Judge Larkin: âI had nowhere to live. He owns three houses.âÂ
Judge Larkin commented: âI kind of half admire her for moving back into the house. Many is the person who was left waiting for their money in family law cases and they have to make do in the meantime.âÂ
âShe is a woman who has her wits about her. She moved back into the house and put the maximum pressure on her estranged spouse to pay the money.â
 The man said that the damage done to the tractor was put at âŹ908.
However, Judge Larkin said that she wouldnât be asking the ex-wife to pay the cost of the tractor damage as the husband had not paid interest on the delayed âŹ200,000 payment.
In evidence concerning the incident, the husband told the court that only a bar on the tractor door âis all that saved her from hitting meâ during the August 10, 2020 incident.
The man said that he had gone with his daughter to check on cattle on a field beside the family home which is near Gort.
He said: âOnly for the bar ... that is all that stopped her.
 âI had blood on my hands and I had blood up here from glass coming on to on top of me and if the golf club had hit me it would have been a different case altogetherâ.
The man described as a âlieâ an allegation made by the defence that he had called his ex-wife and her parents âtinkersâ.
Mr Foley put it to the man that the incident âarose from a bitter family law dispute and you are as culpable as she isâ.
In response, the man said that was untrue.
The man said that there was a delay in paying the âŹ200,000 as âI was trying to sell, it was slow to sell the landâ.
The manâs adult daughter told the court that she went to check on the livestock with her father "because it was coming to a stage where it wasnât safe to let him out by himself. If something happened, it would be one personâs word against anotherâ.
The woman said that there was bitterness around her parentsâ break up.
She said: âThere was â but the way things were handled was very wrong. My mother breaking back into the family home because she hadnât received her money was very wrong. She should have gone to court.â She added: âIf he hadnât the money paid by a particular date, there was no need to cause conflict between parents and siblings. All it has done has driven more of a wedge between any of us.
âThere are ways and means of doing things and this was done in a wrong way.â
 The woman said that her father was never bitter toward her mother.
She told the court: âHe always said 'she was a very good mother to ye'. He would say âShe raised yeâ.â
 In a cautioned statement given to Garda Anthony Davoren at her door after the incident, the ex-wife told Garda Davoren that she used the golf cliub when her ex-husband drove at her with the tractor.
The woman told the court that her ex-husband told her âyou will get nothing from me. This is my house. You are a tinker and all belonged to you are tinkersâ.
The woman said that after she struck the tractor with the golf club she told her ex-husband: âGet out or next time you will get itâ.
Mr Foley told Judge Larkin that his client was under a huge amount of stress at the time and in response, Judge Larkin said: âShe might have been under stress but she was able to create stress.â
 Judge Larkin told the court: âA day will come when their parents will die and I would like to think that all the children would go to the funeral of their mother and their father.â





