Common Legal Questions
for Women Leaving
Abusive Relationships
December 2000
For an introduction to the law as it relates to woman abuse,
see the fact sheet
What is Assault?
(in PDF format)
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The following information is from the Ontario Women's
Justice Network website |
Table of Contents:
1 • If I Leave, am I Giving Up All of My
Property?
2 • If I Leave, will I be Charged with
Abandonment?
3 • If I Leave, will the Court Automatically
Give Him the Children?
4 • The Property is in His Name Only -- Does
this Mean He Gets It All?
5 • If He Gets Charged and They Arrest Him,
How Long Will He Stay in Jail?
6 • If I Have No Money to Get a Lawyer, What
Can I Do?
7 • Can My Partner Get Access to Children of
Mine, even if He is Not the Biological Father? Will
He have to Pay Support for These Children?
8 • If My Partner Assaults Me in Front of the
Children, Will This Have an Impact on Who Gets Custody?
What about Access?
9 • Why Should I Have to Leave the Home if I
Have Not Done Anything Wrong?
10 • What is Legal Separation?
11 • Do I Have to Tell Him Where the
Children and I Are?
12 • What can I Take with Me When I Leave?
13 • Do I have to Testify Against Him even
if I Don't Want To?
14 • What Could Happen to Me if I Fight Back
in Self-Defense?
15 • If I Decide to Disappear so He'll Never
Find Me, Will I be Charged?
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1 •
IF I LEAVE, AM I GIVING UP
ALL OF MY PROPERTY?
A.
No. The issue of dividing up the property can be
complicated, but neither person gives up their right to
their property simply by leaving.
Here
is some brief information about the division of property:
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Division of property is dealt with in Ontario under the
Family Law Act,
which is a provincial law.
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The family home (also known as the "matrimonial home")
is dealt with separately from other property by the law.
The family home is defined to mean anywhere the family
has lived -- a house owned by the family, a rented
apartment or house, a mobile home, even a tent if that
is where the family has lived are all considered
"matrimonial homes." Particularly where there has been
violence in the relationship, the victim of that abuse
(almost always the woman) is likely to be allowed to
remain in the home, regardless of whose name is on the
deed or lease. The issue of dividing up its value will
be dealt with separately.
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The written law about division of property refers
specifically to married couples. However, case law now
"imputes" (or assigns) the same rights of property
division to couples, both heterosexual or same sex, who
have an established common law relationship.
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At its most basic, the law says couples who cohabit have
entered into a partnership and all property accumulated
by the couple over the years of cohabitation is to be
divided equally between them, regardless of who paid for
it or whose name it is registered in (as in the case of
a home, cottage, boat, car, etc.). The intent of this
approach is to respect the contributions made by both
members of the couple, even if one of those
contributions has been largely non-financial. This has
benefited women enormously, who have traditionally been
the ones to leave work or reduce their hours of work in
order to raise the children.
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Property brought into the relationship by either party
continues to belong to that person unless they turn it
into joint property. An example of this might be where
one person has some money saved up that is used to buy
the family home.
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There are certain exceptions to the automatic equal
sharing of property accumulated during the marriage that
we will not deal with here.
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Where the couple are also in business together (for
example, running a family farm) there are other
considerations that must be taken into account when
dividing up property.
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Property includes pensions, jewellery, art, antiques,
investments and savings, real estate and all of the
everyday possessions that most families have.
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If the couple is able to agree upon a division of
property between themselves, this is perfectly
acceptable.
-
If they are not, and they turn to lawyers, mediators or
the courts to assist them, they will have to prepare a
financial statement that includes detailed information
about all the property that each of them owns. What
usually happens is that the person whose property is
worth more than the other pays money to her (the woman
most often has less property than the man) so that the
value of the property is "equalized."
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There are some time limits to when a person can begin a
claim for a division of property, but a considerable
amount of time is allowed for the two people to separate
and sort out any immediate issues such as custody and
support before they must deal with the issue of
property.
For
more information, see our fact sheet
Division of Property.
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2 • IF I LEAVE, WILL
I BE CHARGED WITH ABANDONMENT?
A.
No. First of all, there is no criminal charge of
abandonment in this sense. Of course, if you were to leave
your children without proper care, you could face criminal
charges but if, for instance, you flee to a shelter
because of concern for your safety and you do not take
your children because you know they are safe for the time
being, you will not be "charged" for doing this.
However, there are other risks to leaving children behind.
If you leave them with your partner, he may attempt to get
custody of them on the basis that you left them behind.
You may have a really good reason for not taking them with
you (you may need a bit of time to figure out what you are
going to do, you may not want to disrupt their lives by
moving them to a shelter or other temporary housing, etc.)
and there is nothing wrong with leaving them, as long as
you know they are safe and well cared for.
You
should make arrangements to see them regularly and
frequently and you should remain involved in their day to
day lives if this is at all possible. You should also
speak with someone (a counsellor or lawyer) and tell that
person why you left the children and discuss what short
and long term plans you want to make for them. You may be
advised to begin custody proceedings quickly so as to
assure that you do not lose your legal rights and
responsibilities to parent your children. If you feel that
you need a break from the responsibilities of parenting
for awhile, you should still speak with a professional so
that you understand what risks are involved and what you
can do to minimize them.
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3 • IF I LEAVE, WILL THE COURT
AUTOMATICALLY GIVE HIM THE CHILDREN?
A.
No. See the previous question for a detailed answer to
this. Especially if you leave because of fear for your own
safety and if you maintain contact with the children and
make arrangements to have them with you as soon as
possible, this will not be a major factor in deciding who
should have custody of the children. The court will
consider what is best for the children by looking at who
has been their main caregiver before the date of
separation, who is best able to offer them stability and
security and, if the children are old enough, what it is
that the children want. If you do leave without your
children, it is very important that you ensure that they
are being appropriately cared for, whether that is by
their father, another family member or a friend, and that
they know how to get in touch with you.
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4 • THE PROPERTY IS IN HIS NAME ONLY --
DOES THIS MEAN HE GETS IT ALL?
A.
No. Please refer to the first question for the answer to
this one.
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5 • IF HE GETS CHARGED AND THEY ARREST
HIM, HOW LONG WILL HE STAY IN JAIL?
A.
There is no simple answer to this question. If your
partner is arrested and charged with an assault against
you, he will have to attend a bail hearing. This will
probably happen within 24 hours of his arrest, although he
can choose to delay the hearing if he needs more time to
hire a lawyer. In all likelihood, he will be released from
jail at that bail hearing, but on the condition that he
stay away from you and not attempt to contact you in any
way. Only if he is a repeat offender or if he has breached
bail conditions before is he likely to be kept in jail.
The
bail conditions will last until his trial is over (it can
take months before this happens). If he breaches them by
contacting you or coming to your home, you should call the
police, who should arrest him and charge him with
breaching his conditions. This may be difficult for you,
as you may need to have contact with him to do with the
children, money or because you are attempting to work
things out. However, if you allow him to have contact with
you (even though the court has said he cannot) and then
after a few successful meetings, he assaults or threatens
you and you call the police, they may be less likely to
assist you because of your behaviour.
If at
all possible, you should speak with a counsellor who can
help you figure out ways to keep yourself and your
children safe if your partner breaches his bail conditions
and contacts you.
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6 • IF I HAVE NO MONEY TO GET A LAWYER,
WHAT CAN I DO?
A.
In family court, you may be eligible for a legal aid
certificate. You need to contact your local Legal Aid
Office (listed in the white pages of your telephone book)
and arrange for an appointment to apply for a certificate.
You will have to provide a great deal of financial
information and tell the worker what issues you need the
certificate to cover (for example, custody, access,
support, restraining order, division of property). If you
are successful in obtaining a certificate (there is
usually a wait of a few weeks to find out), you may then
hire a lawyer of your choice. Be warned: there are many
lawyers who will not accept legal aid certificates, so you
should do some checking out on your own.
If
there is a women's centre or shelter in your community,
the counsellors there may have information about
appropriate lawyers. As well, shelters have available
"advice certificates" which allow you to have two hours of
time with a lawyer at no cost to you. There are some
shelters with additional kinds of assistance for women who
cannot afford to hire their own lawyers. In the Unified
Family Court, there are seminars for separating parents
that explain the basic process that is used in the court.
There are also "Family Law Information Centres" where you
can obtain some basic legal information. All family courts
have duty counsel (lawyers) available to provide basic
legal information to unrepresented people. In some urban
centres, community legal clinics offer legal
representation to people who meet their eligibility
criteria. Check with your local legal aid office to find
out what options are available in your community.
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7 • CAN MY PARTNER GET ACCESS TO CHILDREN
OF MINE, EVEN IF HE IS NOT THE BIOLOGICAL FATHER? WILL HE
HAVE TO PAY SUPPORT FOR THESE CHILDREN?
A.
In some cases. If your partner has been like a father to
your children, whether or not he is the biological father,
he has similar rights and responsibilities to the
biological father. For example, if you began living with
him when your child was 6 months old and you have lived
together for several years, during which time he supported
your child and treated her just like the children the two
of you had together, then he will have an obligation to
assist with her support and the right to have access to
her if the two of you separate. On the other hand, if you
lived together for a very short period of time, he did not
contribute to your child's support and you had sole
responsibility for raising your child, he probably will
not have these rights and responsibilities.
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8 • IF MY PARTNER ASSAULTS ME IN
FRONT OF THE CHILDREN, WILL THIS HAVE AN IMPACT ON WHO
GETS CUSTODY? WHAT ABOUT ACCESS?
A.
Yes. The courts increasingly understand that children are
very damaged by witnessing the abuse of their mothers by
their fathers, even if the children are not physically
harmed themselves. If you go to court to get custody of
your children, you will need to make sure the judge is
aware of the ways in which your children have witnessed
your abuse. This includes hearing you being yelled at,
being sent to their rooms just before a fight breaks out
and all the other ways in which children are affected by
living in a home that is contaminated by the violence of
the father, as well as actually watching you get hit.
Your
partner will probably get access to the children even if
they have witnessed his abuse of you. However, if they
have also been abused, you may be able to prohibit or
limit access. For instance, he may be required to visit
with the children with someone else present (this is
called supervised access) or he may have to meet certain
conditions in order to see them (he may have to take a
parenting course, or he may have to agree not to drink
alcohol or take drugs when he is with them).
If his
abuse of you is serious and has continued after the date
of separation, you may be able to get a restraining order
from the court to protect you from him. You may also be
able to get an order for "supervised access exchanges."
This means that when you are exchanging the children for
their visits with him, there has to be another person
present to ensure that you are not harmed in any way. If
you have concerns about your partner's ability to care
properly for your children, you should monitor his visits.
If it appears that he is neglecting them or mistreating
them, you can return to court with this evidence and
attempt to change the access arrangements.
Many
mothers face a difficult situation when the children do
not want to go on a visit with their father. This may be
because he is being abusive or neglectful, but it may also
be just that they do not like the disruption to their
routine. As long as you are satisfied that nothing
inappropriate is happening during the visits, you should
encourage the children to develop a relationship with
their father and to find ways to enjoy the visits. If you
have concerns for their wellbeing, talk to a lawyer about
making changes to the access arrangement.
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9 • WHY SHOULD I HAVE TO LEAVE THE HOME IF
HAVE NOT DONE ANYTHING WRONG?
A.
You may not have to leave the home. At the present time,
if you fear for your safety, the most important thing is
to get yourself and your children to a safe place: a
shelter, or to the home of a friend or family member.
Once
your immediate safety has been taken care of, you can
proceed directly to court if that is your wish, and one of
the things you can ask the court for is what is called
"exclusive possession of the matrimonial home." This
simply means that you are asking for an order that you be
permitted to live in the home without your partner. The
issues of whether or not to sell the home, and how much of
its value each of you gets will be dealt with later. If
you are successful in obtaining this order, you and the
children will be able to return to the home and continue
with some of the stability of your old life.
In
Ontario, the government has just introduced
new legislation to make this process quicker and more
effective for women who have been abused by their
partners.
If
safety is not an issue, and you want to remain in the
home, you should make this one of the things you negotiate
when you are preparing a separation agreement. In this
case, neither person has an automatic right to remain in
the home, and so you will have to have good reasons why it
should be you. For example, if you are seeking custody of
the children, a good argument is that it is better for
them to remain in the home they are used to living in.
Some
couples manage to remain living under the same roof, but
separately, when they cannot agree on who should leave the
home. This is usually only a short term solution, and is
not appropriate where the woman has been abused by her
partner.
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10 • WHAT IS A LEGAL SEPARATION?
A.
People are legally separated once they begin living
separate and apart.
You do
not need a piece of paper or a court order to make you
legally separated. However, most couples have matters they
need to resolve, and it is wise to do so formally so that
there can be no disagreement later. If your separation is
reasonably friendly, you and your ex may be able to work
things out yourselves. Even so, it is a good idea to have
a lawyer prepare a formal, written separation agreement
that you both review with your own lawyers and then sign.
This way, if your relationship becomes less friendly in
the future, you both have the signed agreement to rely on
in the case of any disputes.
If
your separation is less friendly, you may need to each
hire lawyers to assist you in negotiating a separation
agreement. You may also decide to use mediation as a way
to resolve some of your differences. This can take months,
depending on how many issues there are where the two of
you are in disagreement.
Where
there is real hostility or where there has been abuse, it
is likely that the only way to resolve the issues will be
through court proceedings. If this is how you proceed, you
will have a court order rather than a separation agreement
that spells out custody, access, support, property
division and other issues.
For
people who are living common law, a court order or
separation agreement will be the final document cementing
their separation. Divorce is available to married people.
This can be a way to work out all the issues, but more
commonly, separating married couples work out the details
of their separation through a separation agreement and
then apply to the court for a divorce simply to finalize
the separation and allow either of them to remarry.
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11 • DO I HAVE TO TELL HIM WHERE THE
CHILDREN AND I ARE?
A.
The general rule is that you do not have to tell your ex
partner where you are, but if the children live with you
and he has access to them he has a right to be able to
have contact with them.
In a
situation where there were no abuse issues, for example,
your partner would be entitled to know where the children
were living and going to school. He would have the right
to know their telephone number and to call them from time
to time, in addition to his visits with them.
If
your safety is an issue because of his abuse of you, you
may be able to get a restraining order preventing him from
having some of this information. His access order may
state that you will ensure that the children will call him
at specified times, so that he is not calling your home
and harassing you.
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12 • WHAT CAN I TAKE WITH ME WHEN I LEAVE?
A.
If you leave without having come to an agreement about who is
getting what, you should take only what belongs to you personally.
By this, we mean things like your clothes, jewelry, toiletries,
items you brought into the relationship, etc. If you are taking the
children with you, you can take their personal belongings, too.
If it is
possible, take items such as all your personal identification, bank
statements, copies of both of your most recent tax returns, the
children's identification and health cards, passports, a copy of the
deed or lease and other such documents.
If you
anticipate that you may have to leave in a hurry, it is very helpful
to have made copies of these documents and stored them somewhere
else, as well as to have a packed bag of emergency supplies such as
clothing.
If you are
planning a possible separation, it is a good idea to prepare a
complete inventory of everything in the home. Taking photographs of
the contents of your home is even better. This will make it more
difficult for your partner to destroy or "disappear" items after you
leave.
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13 • DO I HAVE TO TESTIFY AGAINST HIM
EVEN IF I DON'T WANT TO?
A.
Unfortunately, yes. If your partner has been charged with
a crime against you, you are the most important witness to
the case. If you do not testify about what happened, it
will be difficult for the court to find your partner
guilty. Witnesses to all crimes have an obligation to
testify and, although it does not happen often, can be
charged with contempt or with obstructing justice if they
refuse to do so.
If you
have concerns about testifying, particularly if those
concerns are about your safety, you should speak with the
Victim Witness Assistance Program at your local court. If
there is not such a program, arrange to speak directly
with the Crown Attorney directly, or call your local
women's shelter for support and assistance.
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14 • WHAT COULD HAPPEN TO ME IF I FIGHT
BACK IN SELF-DEFENSE?
A.
In Canada, people are allowed to fight back to defend
themselves. However, we can only use the minimum amount of
force (violence) that will protect us. For example, if you
are trying to defend yourself against your partner who has
hit you with his hand, you cannot pull out a gun and shoot
him. Unless the circumstances are unusual, you probably
cannot even use a knife. It is also important to know that
the action can only be taken to protect yourself against
something that is happening right now. If your partner has
hit you and is walking away, you cannot attack him from
the back. There are some exceptions to this if you can
establish that, based on his past behaviour, you had
reason to believe he was about to turn around again and
continue with his assault against you.
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15 • IF I DECIDE TO DISAPPEAR SO HE'LL
NEVER FIND ME, WILL I BE CHARGED?
A.
You are free to disappear on your own (unless, of course,
you have other outstanding issues like debts, criminal
charges, etc.). However, if you have children and are
planning to have them disappear with you, you may have
problems. If your ex has access rights to the children and
you make it impossible for him to exercise those rights,
he can go to family court and obtain an order that the
children be returned.
In
cases of extreme violence and danger, women and their
children can be relocated and provided with new identities
through a federal government program. For more information
about this program, you should contact your local women's
shelter or police department.
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the above information is from the Ontario Women's Justice
Network website

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