Chapter 13 Flashcards
(38 cards)
Children and Family Law
- Deals with custody and access to children, support obligations of parents, abuse, etc.
- Can also involve grandparents and step-parents
Custody
- who the child will live with
- court must decide what’s in the best interest of child (home environment, parent-child relationships, health of parent, support options/relatives, schedules, siblings, child’s wishes…above 14: seriously considered)
- custody typically awarded to primary caregiver
Tender Years Principle
- most women get custody of their child because they’re the primary caregivers of children between 6-7 years old
- doesn’t work anymore as gender roles are changing
Joint Physical Custody
child spends equal amount of time with each parent (lives with both)
Joint Legal Custody
Children live with one parent, but have unlimited visitation with other parent
Reasonable Access
Flexible & regular visitation rights
Specified Access
Visitation at specific times only
Supervised Access
Specified visitation times, but with a supervisor as well (ie. relative, social worker) to ensure child’s safety
Level of child support deemed by…
- non-custodial parent’s income
- number of children to be supported
- provincial guidelines for support
- *if non-custodial parents’ living conditions are lowered, they can ask court to reduce payments**
Property Division
Family Relations Act sets out how matrimonial property will be divided in BC
Family Assets
Property owned by one or both spouses used for family purposes (ie. home, cars, money in joint bank account, pension plans, RRSP’s, etc.)
Non-family Assets
- Business assets
- aren’t divided equally
- ie. business owned exclusively by 1 partner
Family Assets divided equally unless…
- marriage very short
- assets purchased just before separation
- it’s a gift or inheritance
Spousal Support Obligations
- often very short-term
- only if there’s economic hardship
- goal is self-sufficency
Common Law Relationships
- if you live together for over 2 years, it’s now legally the same as being married
- after 2 years, a partner has the right to spousal support and child support
- old rules: no automatic rights to division of property…generally belongs to whoever paid for it
Conditions of Marriage
- legally binding contract*
- each person expected to contribute equally
- each person has right to live in matrimonial home
- in divorce, both have a right to portion of home & other assets - alimony & child support may be necessary
- surviving spouse has legal right to property
Essential Requirements of Valid Marriage
- mental capacity
- no prior marriage (bigamy)
- genuine consent (no mistake/duress)
- minimum age (19 w/o parental consent in BC, 16 with it)
- sexual capacity (consummation, otherwise can be annulled)
- not closely related (through affinity/marriage or contingency/blood)
- 1 male & 1 female (until 2004)
Formal Requirements of Marriage
- marriage licence
- performing ceremony (minister, priest, rabbi, justice of peace) + 2 witnesses
- age
- blood tests (not in BC)
Annulment
court order stating marriage never happened
Separation
- intermediate step between marriage and divorce
- couple lives “seperate & apart”…is possible to do this in same house
Divorce
- process begins with petition for divorce
- petitioner: seeking divorce
- respondent: being issued divorce
Grounds for divorce
- the Divorce Act of 1985’s only condition was marital breakdown
- separated for 1 year
- adultery
- physical or mental cruelty
Uncontested divorce
No issues disputed… 90% of divorces happen this way
Exector
person named in the will that handles the affairs of the deceased