Family violence is a concept which is known by many names: abuse, intimate partner violence, etc. It is also one that, unfortunately, does appear in family law litigation, and can have an impact on claims for parenting time. With the recent amendments to the Divorce Act and the Parenting and Support Act, we now have more expansive definitions to identify situations, or circumstances, which may be found to be “family violence.”
Under The Divorce Act, Family Violence Is Now Defined At S. 2(1) As:
family violence means any conduct, whether or not the conduct constitutes a criminal offence, by a family member towards another family member, that is violent or threatening or that constitutes a pattern of coercive and controlling behaviour or that causes that other family member to fear for their own safety or for that of another person — and in the case of a child, the direct or indirect exposure to such conduct — and includes
(a) physical abuse, including forced confinement but excluding the use of reasonable force to protect themselves or another person;
(b) sexual abuse;
(c) threats to kill or cause bodily harm to any person;
(d) harassment, including stalking;
(e) the failure to provide the necessaries of life;
(f) psychological abuse;
(g) financial abuse;
(h) threats to kill or harm an animal or damage property; and
(i) the killing or harming of an animal or the damaging of property; (violence familiale)
Under The Parenting And Support Act, Family Violence Is Defined At S. 2(Da) As:
“family violence, abuse or intimidation” means deliberate and purposeful violence, abuse or intimidation perpetrated by a person against another member of that person’s family in a single act or a series of acts forming a pattern of abuse, and includes
(i) causing or attempting to cause physical or sexual abuse, including forced confinement or deprivation of the necessities of life, or
(ii) causing or attempting to cause psychological or emotional abuse that constitutes a pattern of coercive or controlling behaviour including, but not limited to,
(A) engaging in intimidation, harassment or threats, including threats to harm a family member, other persons, pets or property,
(B) placing unreasonable restrictions on, or preventing the exercise of, a family member’s financial or personal autonomy,
(C) stalking, or
(D) intentionally damaging property, but does not include acts of self-protection or protection of another person;
Both the Divorce Act, and the Parenting and Support Act ask the Court to consider whether there has been any family violence, and if there has been, what impact that may have had. This is one of the factors to consider, as noted, in determining what is in the children’s best interests. As a child’s best interests are determinative of what parenting arrangements should be ordered by the Court, the issue of family violence can have a significant impact on this determination. Such an analysis can be highly contextual, and fact driven. An experienced family law lawyer can help you navigate how to best approach these kinds of circumstances.
Most recently, in February of 2022, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, in the decision of Ahluwalia v Ahluwalia, 2022 ONSC 1303, made a groundbreaking finding of the “tort of domestic violence” in the context of a family law proceeding. This allowed the mother to receive a monetary remedy from the father for the abuse she had endured over the years. While this concept does not yet have any reported decisions in Nova Scotia, it is an interesting new development that may warrant consideration in certain circumstances.
Our team of family lawyers in Nova Scotia are here to discuss your family law litigation case. Contact us for a consultation today.