National Post (National Edition)

Damages for spousal abuse on dramatic rise

- Financial Post

during the relationsh­ip.

For many years when claims for damages were added to the usual family law claims, the damages awarded were modest. In Belanger vs. Belanger, a 1995 Ontario case, the husband stabbed the wife five times, resulting in the wife’s hospitaliz­ation for three days. The husband received a seven-year prison sentence for his actions, but the wife received only $5,000 in damages: $4,000 in general damages, and $1,000 in punitive damages.

In Wandich vs. Viele, a 2002 Ontario case, over the course of seven to nine incidents, the husband threatened his common-law wife with a knife, choked her, punched her, caused a bloody nose, and poked her in the eye. The husband was criminally convicted, but there was no award of punitive damages made: the judge found that the stigma of a guilty verdict in criminal court was an adequate penalty and deterrent.

In Marchese vs. Marchese, a 1999 case in which the wife alleged repeated assaults throughout their more than 50-year marriage, as the wife had not received medical treatment for any of the assaults and the assaults were minor, the wife was awarded general damages of $7,500. The judge held that all assaults before 1975 had been barred because the previous family law legislatio­n, the Married Woman’s Property Act, precluded spouses from suing each other in tort.

However, at long last, the winds of change have begun to blow.

In Montgomery vs. Kenwell, a 2017 Ontario case, the wife and mother of the parties’ two children provided detailed evidence at trial about her husband’s alcohol-fuelled rages. He would push or slap the wife, pull her hair, and if he felt he was being ignored, he would kick the family’s dogs with steel-toed boots to get attention. He sexually abused her repeatedly. He threatened to “hunt her down” if she ever left him and called her derogatory names in front of the children. He was criminally convicted four times. One conviction arose from an incident when the wife was holding their baby daughter. The husband pushed the wife to the ground so hard he broke her eardrum, resulting in permanent hearing loss.

The children also felt bullied and intimidate­d by their father. During an argument with his daughter over cleaning her room, he allegedly threw her on the floor by her neck after destroying her stereo. While riding on an ATV with his son, the husband’s conduct resulted in the son being in a coma. The son was permanentl­y injured.

In Montgomery, the trial judge recognized that the abuse of a spouse is a flagrant breach of trust, as trust is central to a marital relationsh­ip. Justice Healey went on to say that, “the trust inherent in a domestic relationsh­ip, when breached by one partner deliberate­ly harming the other, should be … recognized in tort law through an elevated aggravated damage award.” Other factors which he found should increase an aggravated award included humiliatio­n, degradatio­n, violence, oppression, inability to complain, reckless conduct displaying a disregard of the victim and post-incident conduct which aggravates the victim’s harm.

Justice Healey found that in addition to the wife’s permanent hearing loss, the wife had low self-esteem, social withdrawal, sleep deprivatio­n and symptoms of depression and anxiety. His Honour also took into account the son’s near-death accident and continuing impairment, which continued to contribute to the wife’s ongoing symptoms.

Justice Healey then decided that, “an award of $75,000 (was) well warranted in order to provide a reasonable amount of (general) damages to the (wife).”

Higher damage awards for spousal assault are long overdue.

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