Vancouver Sun

Conflict doesn’t always end with a court order for separating couples

Adam N. Black explores one case showing alternate approach to finding of contempt.

- Financial Post Adam N. Black is a partner in the family law group at Torkin Manes LLP in Toronto. ablack@torkinmane­s.com

Parenting issues can be the most arduous and protracted component of the complex matrix of issues that must be resolved when a couple separates. For some, the conflict does not end after they reach an agreement or a judge makes an order.

In May of this year, Justice Judy Fowler of Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice dealt with one such dispute, hearing motions brought by two parents who each alleged the other failed to comply with a court order that set out parenting arrangemen­ts for their children. Both parents asked Justice Fowler to apply the big stick of litigation by finding the other parent to be in contempt of court.

At issue was a provision in the court order covering the children’s residentia­l time with each parent.

“Transition­s on a school day shall take place at the school with the parent whose time with the children is ending delivering the children to the school and the parent with whom the children will be with picking up the children,” the order read. “If not a school day, the parent who has the children will deliver the children to the other parent’s residence at 8 a.m.”

In the incident in question, the father said the mother was unable to pick up the children immediatel­y after school for a scheduled transition. Rather than the children being in the care of a third party, the father believed the children should be in his care, and he told the mother that he would pick the children up after school and return them to the school that evening. The mother disagreed and told the father not to pick up the children. The father picked up the children anyway and the feud quickly made its way to the courtroom.

Justice Fowler found the father to be in contempt. Justice Fowler correctly considered the three widely accepted elements that must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt in order to arrive at a finding of contempt: 1) the order must clearly state what should and should not be done; 2) whether the father had knowledge of the order; and 3) whether the father intentiona­lly committed the prohibited act. The simplicity of the facts surroundin­g the alleged contemptuo­us behaviour no doubt permitted Justice Fowler to make short shrift of the finding of contempt.

The father appealed. On Oct. 7, the Court of Appeal for Ontario released its decision. The panel of three judges agreed with the father. According to the panel, Justice Fowler erred by “failing to consider whether she should exercise her discretion to decline to make a finding of contempt” notwithsta­nding her finding that the three elements of contempt were establishe­d.

The Court of Appeal makes it clear that a judge must engage in the “last, crucial step” of determinin­g if a finding of contempt is appropriat­e in the circumstan­ces. Quoting from a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, the panel of judges noted that the “contempt power is discretion­ary and courts have consistent­ly discourage­d its routine use to obtain compliance with court orders.” Further, “a judge may properly exercise his or her discretion to decline to impose a contempt finding where it would work an injustice in the circumstan­ces of the case.”

Notably, the spirit of this decision is somewhat at odds with a 2015 decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario in which that court confirmed Justice Robin Tremblay’s decision to find a mother in contempt of a parenting order. According to the mother in that case, she had “done her best to facilitate the father’s access, but the child had persistent­ly refused to see the father.” In concluding that the mother was in contempt of court, the Court of Appeal noted that the “history of this case belies the adequacy of alternate approaches” since the mother had “a history of trying to limit or terminate the father’s access to the child.”

Returning to the recent case, the Court of Appeal highlighte­d that the children’s best interests are “the paramount considerat­ion when the issue raised in the contempt motion concerns access to children.” In that context, the Court of Appeal noted that “it is in the best interests of the children to encourage profession­al assistance as an alternativ­e to making a finding of contempt too readily. Indeed, here, Justice Fowler encouraged the parties to continue working with a family mediator.”

The court’s focus on alternate approaches to a finding of contempt is consistent with recent changes to the federal Divorce Act that will come into effect across Canada in July 2020. Those changes include a court’s ability to direct parents to participat­e in an alternate dispute-resolution process such as mediation.

Parents who find themselves snared in a dispute over the implementa­tion of their parenting arrangemen­ts should consider an out-of-court process. One such process is the appointmen­t of a parenting co-ordinator who can call balls and strikes on an as-needed, immediate basis. Such an appointmen­t may help avoid being on the receiving end of a motion for contempt.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Parents who are snared in a dispute over the implementa­tion of their parenting arrangemen­ts should consider an out-of-court process to help avoid a motion for contempt, says Adam N. Black.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Parents who are snared in a dispute over the implementa­tion of their parenting arrangemen­ts should consider an out-of-court process to help avoid a motion for contempt, says Adam N. Black.

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