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Singer Paul Simon and his wife, singer Edie Brickell (L) leave the Norwalk Superior Court in Norwalk, Connecticut in this file photo taken May 16, 2014. Simon and Brickell, are due in court for a third time on Tuesday at a hearing on a fight the couple had in April at their Connecticut home to which police were called. Image Credit: REUTERS

Prosecutors are dropping a disorderly conduct case against Paul Simon and his wife, Edie Brickell, related to a fight at the couple’s home.

Simon, 72, and Brickell, 48, had been scheduled to be in a Connecticut court on Tuesday, but they did not appear. Prosecutors told a judge they were declining to pursue the case, meaning the charges will be dropped and eventually erased after 13 months.

The couple fought on April 26 inside a cottage on their property in Connecticut, police said.

Brickell told officers she confronted her husband after he did something to “break her heart,” according to police, but she did not provide any details. She told police Simon shoved her and she slapped him. The report says Simon suffered a superficial cut to his ear and Brickell, who smelled of alcohol, had a bruise on her wrist.

Both said in court on April 28 that they did not consider the other a threat, and no protective order was issued.

Prosecutors declined to comment outside court on Tuesday. A telephone message left for the couple’s attorney, Andrew Bowman, was not immediately returned.

Simon is a 12-time Grammy winner and member of The Songwriters Hall of Fame and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — as half of the duo of Simon and Garfunkel and as a solo artist.

Brickell is perhaps best known for the song What I Am, recorded with her band the New Bohemians and released in 1988. She collaborated last year with comedian Steve Martin, who has an acclaimed career as a folk musician, for the roots album Love Has Come For You.

The singers were married in 1992. They have three children.