Bjornson v. Creighton (2002)
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DATE: 20021119
DOCKET: C35031
COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO
WEILER, AUSTIN AND LASKIN JJ.A.
B E T W E E N :
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CHARLOTTE BJORNSON
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D. Smith,
for the appellant
Plaintiff
(Appellant)
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- and -
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EARL CAMERON CREIGHTON
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Anthony T. Keller,
for the respondent
Defendant
(Respondent)
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)
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)
Heard: August 27, 2002
On appeal from the judgment of Justice Ronald C. Sills of the Superior
Court of Justice dated August 21, 2000.
Austin J.A.:
[1] Charlotte Bjornson appeals and Earl Cameron Creighton
cross-appeals from the decision after trial of R. C. Sills J. dated
August 21, 2000. Sills J. awarded sole custody of Robert Justin Pride
Creighton, born August 23, 1996, to his mother (Bjornson) and granted
access to his father (Creighton). The reasons are available at [2000]
O.J. No. 5168.
[2] Bjornson appeals from the trial judge’s refusal to permit
her to return to Alberta with her child. Creighton cross-appeals from
an award of child support of $475 per month and payment of 70 per
cent of extraordinary expenses. Creighton seeks an award of “joint
parenting or joint custody” at a cost to him of 50 per cent
of child care costs including extraordinary expenses.
[3] For the reasons which follow, I would allow the appeal, and the
cross-appeal in part. I would permit Bjornson to return to the Calgary
area with her son, reduce to a minimum the child support payable by
Creighton and revise his terms of access.
[4] Bjornson, now 36, was born and raised in Alberta. She completed
high school and a year of college there. For twelve years, she had
a career as a senior registered nurse, specifically in cardiology
and intensive care, at Foothills Hospital in Calgary.
[5] Creighton was born in Walkerton, Ontario in 1960. He completed
high school there and then moved out west where he became a ski instructor.
He lived in various locations as he pursued various occupations. Creighton
and Bjornson met and began dating in Alberta. In the fall of 1994,
Creighton moved in with Bjornson. While they were attracted to one
another, he was not successful at finding employment in Alberta while
she had no desire to leave that province.
[6] Circumstances overcame them. In February 1995,
Creighton moved to Ontario to work at the Drayton Festival Theatre.
He asked Bjornson
to relocate but she refused. She was not willing to move
to Ontario since her friends, family and employment were all in
Alberta. Creighton
returned to Alberta to visit Bjornson several times in 1995,
and Bjornson made some visits to Ontario. In 1996, Bjornson learned
she was expecting
a child with Creighton. She moved to Ontario to be with Creighton,
arriving on or about August 14, 1996 – only 9 days before the
premature delivery of their son on August 23, 1996. Three weeks later
she returned to the Calgary area with her son and spent seven weeks
with her family. She then took up residence with Creighton in his
father’s home in Walkerton. Creighton and Bjornson moved to
Waterloo, Ontario in November 1996. She remained on maternity
leave from her employment at Foothills Hospital until August 1997.
[7] In October 1998, although still under care for
post-partum depression, Bjornson secured employment as a part-time
nurse in the Intensive
Care Unit of St. Mary’s General Hospital in Kitchener, Ontario.
She worked twelve to twenty hours per week at $23 per hour,
and had no seniority status.
[8] By the summer of 1999, after a common law relationship
of approximately three years, the relationship between Creighton
and Bjornson was in
difficulty. The reasons of the trial judge deal with it from
Bjornson’s
perspective. She was lonely. Her family and friends were all in the
west. Because of her lack of seniority, and in order to accommodate
Creighton’s apparently demanding schedule, she had to work irregular
shifts. She was able to do this with the help of Pat Allen,
a neighbourhood baby-sitter.
[9] Creighton’s repeated failure to file income
tax returns became an issue between them. The trial judge found
Creighton owed
tax arrears of $80,000-$100,000. Creighton would not give
Bjornson his social insurance number, which she required in order
to claim
a child tax credit on her tax return. When she raised the
issue of returning to Alberta, Creighton indicated she could go
at any time
but that she could not take the child.
[10] By the end of the summer of 1999, Bjornson had seen a counsellor
at the Catholic Family Services and had received advice from a lawyer.
On September 9, 1999, while Creighton was on a golf trip in the Maritimes,
Bjornson left the home she shared with Creighton and took their son
with her. They moved into a basement apartment in the home of friends.
[11] The statement of claim in this action was issued the next day.
In it Bjornson asked for custody of her son. It also states at paragraph
7, that:
The plaintiff would ultimately like to return to Alberta where she
has a full time position at Foothills Hospital and where she has family
support.
[12] In his counter-claim Creighton asked for a declaration
that mother and father were “equally entitled to custody” and
for an order that both “share in parenting.” At trial,
after the mother’s case was completed, the father amended his
pleadings to claim joint custody. Creighton alleged on several occasions,
and in different contexts, that while he was away, Bjornson had intended
to leave for Alberta with their child. The trial judge’s finding
to the contrary is amply supported by the evidence. Notwithstanding
this, Creighton asked for an order restricting Bjornson from changing
the ordinary residence of the child without court order or Creighton’s
written consent.
[13] Interim orders were made on consent on September
16 and 30, 1999, declaring the parents equally entitled to custody,
the child’s
ordinary residence to be a specified address in Waterloo, Ontario
and the parents to “share in the parenting of the child”.
Both parents were restricted from changing that residence
without court order or the consent of the other.
[14] The central issues in the action were custody
and mobility. For convenience, the trial judge’s reasons dealing
with those are attached as an appendix to these reasons.
[15] There cannot have been serious doubt about the
resolution of the question of custody. The mother asked for sole
custody; the father
did not. The trial judge was persuaded that this was not
an appropriate case for joint custody. He was so persuaded on the
basis of the following:
the evidence regarding the termination of the relationship
between mother and father; the father’s rather different style of parenting
-- sometimes described as “rambunctious” or “aggressive”;
and the father’s tendency to control and distrust the mother.
[16] Creighton appeals from the decision awarding
sole custody to Bjornson and again asks for “shared parenting” or “joint
custody.” He does not ask for sole custody. In my view, it is
sufficient to dispose of this aspect of the matter by saying
that the reasoning of the trial judge was entirely correct. I would
not
alter the award of sole custody to the mother.
Mobility
[17] I take an entirely different view, however, on the matter
of mobility. The decision in Gordon v. Goertz, 1996 CanLII
191 (S.C.C.), [1996] 2 S.C.R. 27 (“Gordon”) is the guiding authority.
A couple in Saskatoon separated. The mother was awarded custody
of the young daughter who was seven years old at the time the Supreme
Court of Canada issued its reasons. The father was awarded generous
access and, in fact, spent more time with the daughter than awarded.
The mother then proposed to move to Adelaide, Australia to study
orthodontics. To that end, she applied to vary the original custody
order. Despite the father’s objections, the variation was
allowed. This decision was sustained by both the Saskatchewan
Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Canada. At the Supreme
Court
of Canada, the reasons of six of the nine judges were given
by McLachlin J. (as she then was).
[18] The Gordon proceeding dealt with mobility within the context
of an application to vary an order. In the instant case, the issue
of mobility was dealt with at the original hearing following the two
interlocutory orders made on consent. Despite these differences, the
guiding principles set out in Gordon, which remain applicable in the
case before us, are:
1. The judge must embark on a fresh inquiry into what
is in the best interest of the child, having regard to all the relevant
circumstances
relating to the child’s needs and the ability of the respective
parents to satisfy them.
2. The inquiry does not begin with a legal presumption
in favour of the custodial parent, although the custodial parent’s
views are entitled to great respect and the most serious consideration.
3. Each case turns on its own unique circumstances. The only issue
is the best interest of the child in the particular circumstances
of the case.
4. The focus is on the best interests of the child, not the interest
and rights of the parents.
5. More particularly, the judge should consider, inter alia:
(a) the existing custody arrangement and relationship between the
child and the custodial parent;
(b) the existing access arrangement and the relationship between
the child and the access parent;
(c) the desirability of maximizing contact between the child and
both parents;
(d) the views of the child;
(e) the custodial parent’s reasons for moving, only in the
exceptional case where it is relevant to that parent’s ability
to meet the needs of the child;
(f) the disruption to the child of a change in custody; and
(g) the disruption to the child consequent on removal from family,
schools and the community he has come to know.
[19] In applying the guidelines provided by Gordon
to the instant case two matters require consideration. The first
is that at the outset
of the trial, the parents were “equally entitled to custody”.
As a result, for analysis purposes, the parents could not be divided
into “custodial parent” and “access parent”.
The second is that the organization of his reasons is such
that the trial judge appears to have decided the question of mobility
first
and the question of custody second. With respect, that strikes
me as putting the cart before the horse.
Best Interests of the Child Include Being With a Well-Functioning
Parent
[20] At paragraph 58 of his reasons, the trial judge concluded
his analysis on the issue of mobility, stating that “[t]he availability
of full time employment in Calgary does not overcome the need for
the child to have ready access to his father at the present time.” The
learned trial judge did not appreciate that employment, though important,
was only one factor in Bjornson’s wanting to return to Alberta.
[21] I recognize that as an appellate court we have
only a narrow scope of judicial review (Van de Perre v. Edwards,
2001 SCC 60 (CanLII),
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 1014 at 1021-1026). In my view, however,
the trial judge erred in reducing the issue of the child’s best interests
to one that deals only with employment. In doing so, the trial judge
overlooked or disregarded the social, psychological and emotional
aspects of the mother’s desire to return to Alberta with the
child. Bjornson wishes to return to Alberta to regain the
general stability, control and independence that she enjoyed in her
emotional,
professional, psychological and social life there.
[22] Serious regard must be paid to the views of Bjornson.
Most important among them are those concerning her family, her friends
and her job.
Her family includes her parents who live in Red Deer, about
85 miles away from Calgary. She usually visited them twice a month,
and some
times more. Bjornson’s sister, Brenda, Brenda’s husband
and their two young children live just outside of Calgary. Brenda
is an older sister on whom Bjornson leans for advice. Brenda’s
two children enjoy playing with Bjornson’s child. Bjornson’s
brother, a paediatric neurologist, lives in Richmond, British Columbia.
The Bjornsons are a close-knit family who visit and communicate with
one another on a regular and supportive basis. Bjornson’s roots
and connections remain in the west. She still has her own
doctor and dentist there.
[23] Bjornson is both fond and proud of her profession as a nurse
specializing in cardiac and intensive care work. Despite a move to
Ontario, she has done everything she can to maintain her credentials,
her position and her seniority at Foothills Hospital in Calgary. In
Ontario, her lack of seniority prevented her from earning as much
as she did, and could, earn in Calgary. It also prevented her from
controlling her hours of work, which was something she was able to
do in Calgary. The differentials between her work in Alberta and in
Ontario are not marginal. They are quite substantial.
[24] Bjornson came to Ontario in August 1996, expecting
to raise the child in a traditional family setting. When she first
arrived
in Ontario, she was dependent on Creighton for money. She
was unable to earn anything until October 1998. Because of the level
of her earnings
in Ontario she has remained financially dependent upon Creighton,
to a greater or lesser degree. Money was, and is, an issue
between them. Moving to Calgary and regaining employment at the
hospital there
would change this. According to Bjornson’s evidence, a return
to her work in Calgary would enable her not only to support
herself and her son, but also to contribute something towards enabling
Creighton
to exercise his right of access.
[25] Freeing Bjornson of her dependence on Creighton
would create the possibility of a new and positive relationship
between herself
and Creighton. It would also almost certainly create a new
and more positive relationship between Bjornson and her son. Freeing
Bjornson
from financial dependence on Creighton would give her an
independence she has never had during her son’s life.
[26] Bjornson’s life in Waterloo is controlled
by Creighton in ways other than financial. In cross-examination,
when asked why
she took their child and left the home without discussion
with Creighton, she said:
. . . I felt like I had to do it legally and with
legal counsel because I did not trust Bill and he’s always been somewhat controlling
and manipulative with me so I felt like that’s what I had to
do.
[27] Her sister also expressed the view that, throughout
the relationship, Creighton exercised both financial and emotional
control over Bjornson.
This continues notwithstanding their separation. Creighton
still retains a degree of control over Bjornson’s life. One illustration of
this control is Creighton’s manner of exercising access. Although
the present agreement is for Creighton to have the child
living with him from Thursday evening until Sunday evening, Creighton
usually
keeps the child over Sunday night and delivers him to school
on Monday morning. He regards this as a matter of his choice despite
the agreement.
[28] Moving to Alberta, where she plans to resume
a well-adjusted and independent life – a life that she worked hard for and had
achieved there previously -- will, in all the circumstances of this
case, enhance the best interests of the child. This is particularly
true when contrasted with the potential negative effects of prohibiting
Bjornson from relocating. The evidence indicates that Bjornson has
neither the 12 years seniority status that she accumulated in Alberta
nor the full time hours, self-scheduling and full benefits, including
pension, which came with her lengthy period of employment there. She
also does not have the support of her friends and family which is
beneficial, if not crucial, to raising a child as a single parent.
In this case, the child’s best interests are better served and
better achieved by a well-functioning and happy custodial
parent, operating at her full potential.
[29] In Gordon, the Supreme Court of Canada reiterated that the best
interests of the child test governs relocation disputes. Ultimately,
the only issue is what is in the best interests of the child. In determining
this, careful attention should be paid to the potential negative effects
on the child should the custodial parent be restricted from relocating.
Likewise, careful attention should be paid to the potential positive
effects on the child should the parent be permitted to relocate (Woodhouse
v. Woodhouse 1996 CanLII 902 (ON C.A.), (1996), 136 D.L.R. (4th) 577
per Weiler J.A. at 597.)
[30] With the greatest respect to the learned trial
judge, he did not contemplate what improvement, if any, would result
to the interests
of the child if the custodial parent were permitted to move
to Alberta. I agree with the statement of counsel for the mother,
as expressed
in her factum, that the trial judge failed to “give due regard
to the relationship between the quality of the custodial parent’s
emotional, psychological, social and economic well-being and the quality
of the child’s primary care-giving environment.” The learned
trial judge failed to appreciate the multi-faceted nature of the mother’s
desire to return to Alberta with the child and the concomitant positive
effects on the child’s best interests in being cared for by
a well-functioning and happy custodial parent.
Disproportionate Weight Assigned to Ready Access and to Evidence
of Baby-Sitter
[31] Sections 16(10) and 17(9) of the Divorce Act, R.S.C.,
1985, c.3(2nd Supp.) require that:
. . . the court shall give effect to the principle that a child of
the marriage should have as much contact with each (former) spouse
as is consistent with the best interests of the child . . . .
[32] Although this case is not taken under the Divorce Act, the principle
set out in sections 16(10) and 17(9) applies nonetheless because,
at the time of separation, the child had a relationship with each
of his parents.
[33] Instead of considering contact with each of the
child’s
parents, the trial judge focussed his attention on the child’s
contact with his father and the fact that the father’s ready
access would be compromised by the relocation. He did not
consider that if the mother moved to Alberta, her contact with the
child would
be maximized because she would be able to work straight days
while the child was in school, as opposed to the shift work, including
evenings,
she had been working in Ontario.
[34] While the “maximum contact” principle
does apply and is an important one, it is not absolute and it remains
one factor
in the whole of the analysis. It ought not to be treated
as the governing factor. In Gordon, at paragraph 24, McLachlin J.
noted that:
The “maximum contact” principle, as it has been called,
is mandatory, but not absolute. The Act only obliges the judge to
respect it to the extent that such contact is consistent with the
child’s best interests; if other factors show that it would
not be in the child’s best interests, the court can and should
restrict contact: Young v. Young, 1993 CanLII 34 (S.C.C.),
[1993] 4 S.C.R. 3, at pp. 117-18.
[35] The trial judge’s focus on ready access, almost to the
exclusion of consideration of the child’s contact with the mother
and, as I have indicated, almost to the exclusion of the mother’s
views, resulted in a less than complete consideration of the impact
of the move on the child’s best interests.
[36] Related to this, the learned trial judge appears
to have assigned more weight than is appropriate to the non-expert
baby-sitter’s
opinion. At paragraph 44 of his reasons, after reviewing the evidence
of the baby-sitter he writes, “In her view, the child Justin
needed stability in his relationship with both his parents.” At
paragraph 54(c) the trial judge relied on the baby-sitter’s
opinion and wrote,
Immediately following the separation of the plaintiff
and the defendant, the child reacted adversely to the separation
as observed by Ms. Allen,
who expressed the view that the child Justin needs two loving
parents [“children were better off having two loving parents”].
She indicated by her evidence that this child requires stability
in his relationship with each of the mother and father and needs
to know
that both his parents love and care for him, and are available
to him even though they no longer live as a family unit.
This comment ignores the fact that the child will still know both
his parents love and care for him whether they are both in Ontario
or not.
Stereotypes Entered into the Analysis
[37] The learned trial judge appears to have placed more
importance on the father’s career than he did on the mother’s
career. The effects of prohibiting Bjornson from relocating, professionally
and otherwise, have already been discussed. At paragraph 49 of his
reasons, the trial judge considered the respondent father’s
career and wrote,
All of the evidence in this case about the employment of the defendant
with the Drayton Festival Organization indicates that the defendant
had obtained a good job, that he was good at the job and he was being
reasonably well paid. He now earns $53,000 per annum managing a budget
of some $3 million for this theatrical company and an additional $3,000
from other contract sources. There is no evidence that comparable
employment was available to him in Alberta and even if it were found
that the expressed intention of the defendant was to return to Alberta
after one or two years in this job, it is foolish and unreasonable
in the extreme for the plaintiff to have expected the defendant to
give up this continuing opportunity in Ontario to return to Alberta
without any assurance of gainful employment [emphasis added].
[38] One might reverse this scenario to state that
it is “foolish
and unreasonable in the extreme” to expect Bjornson -- a qualified
nurse with an established position and the ability to earn approximately
$53,000 per year -- to sacrifice the opportunities and advantages
she earned as a nurse in Alberta, in order to remain in Ontario. This
is particularly so when there is actual evidence, not speculation,
that she is at a disadvantage professionally in Ontario as compared
to Alberta. While it is true that the defendant has no assurance of
gainful employment in Alberta it is also true, and supported by actual
evidence, that Bjornson’s professional life, earning potential
and self-fulfillment will continue to be significantly compromised
if she remains in Ontario.
Views of a Custodial Parent
[39] I noted in paragraph 19 that in delivering judgment
the trial judge dealt with mobility before dealing with custody
and that appeared to me to be the wrong sequence. Had he decided
the question of custody first, he could then have properly factored
that finding into his decision of the mobility question.
[40] Had he followed that course, he would then have
been required to deal with the position and views of Bjornson as
the custodial parent
as directed in Gordon. While the majority of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Gordon rejected the idea of a legal presumption
in favour
of the custodial parent’s views, it nonetheless stated that
the views of the custodial parent are “entitled to great respect
and the most serious consideration.” At paragraph 48 McLachlin
J. said,
While a legal presumption in favour of the custodial
parent must be rejected, the views of the custodial parent, who
lives with the
child and is charged with making decisions in its interest
on a day-to-day basis, are entitled to great respect and the most
serious consideration.
The decision of the custodial parent to live and work where
he or she chooses is likewise entitled to respect, barring an improper
motive
reflecting adversely on the custodial parent’s parenting ability
[emphasis added].
At paragraph 36, she wrote,
The judge will normally place great weight on the
views of the custodial parent, who may be expected to have the most
intimate and perceptive
knowledge of what is in the child’s interest. The judge’s
ultimate task, however, is to determine where, in light of
the material change [not the instant situation], the best interests
of the child
lie [emphasis added].
[41] At paragraph 46, she said:
The child’s best interest must be found within the practical
context of the reality of the parents’ lives and circumstances,
one aspect of which may involve relocation.
[42] At paragraph 32, McLachlin J. wrote that the
common element in Carter v. Brooks 1990 CanLII 2623 (ON C.A.), (1990),
30 R.F.L.
(3d) 53, MacGyver v. Richards reflex, (1995), 22 O.R. (3d)
481, 123 D.L.R. (4th) 562 and Gordon is the view that significant
weight is
to be accorded to the custodial parent’s view. She wrote,
Although some have read MacGyver as a departure from
Carter v. Brooks … the
difference between the cases may not be as great as sometimes supposed.
Both cases urge careful consideration of the views of the custodial
parent: the court is directed to accord them a “reasonable measure
of respect” in Carter, and an “overwhelming respect” or “presumptive
deference” in MacGyver. Despite the stronger language of the
majority in MacGyver, neither decision proposes a legal presumption
in favor of the custodial parent.
[43] At paragraph 37, McLachlin J. said:
Nor does the great burden borne by custodial parents justify a presumption
in their favour. Custodial responsibilities curb the personal freedom
of parents in many ways.
Having said that, the existence of the “great burden borne
by custodial parents” must be recognized.
[44] In concluding that part of her reasons which summarized the
law on this subject (see paragraph 18 above) McLachlin J. said, at
paragraph 50 of Gordon:
In the end, the importance of the child remaining
with the parent to whose custody it has become accustomed in the
new location must
be weighed against the continuance of full contact with the
child’s
access parent, its extended family and its community. The
ultimate question in every case is this: what is in the best interest
of the
child in all the circumstances, old as well as new?
[45] The views of the custodial parent, despite the
Supreme Court’s
rejection of a legal presumption in their favour, remain a very important
consideration in any analysis of the best interests of the child.
Moreover, the views of the custodial parent are a factor which the
Supreme Court of Canada considered significant enough to single out
as being worthy of “great respect” and “the most
serious consideration.” With the greatest of respect to the
learned trial judge, it does not appear to me that he made the depth
of enquiry required in the circumstances or that in doing so he gave
the evidence of the mother the “great respect” or “most
serious consideration” to which it was entitled.
Disposition
[46] In the best of all worlds the appropriate disposition
of this appeal would be to send it back to be retried and
to retry, in particular, the question of the child’s best interest.
But that is impractical. Neither parent has unlimited resources
and the child’s biological clock moves inexorably on. His
childhood should not be spent in court or in a state of
doubt. In any event, neither counsel invited us to send the matter
back for
rehearing. In Gordon, the Supreme Court of Canada chose
to proceed notwithstanding an incomplete record below. Our obligation
is to
do the best that we can.
[47] In paragraphs 53 and 57 of his reasons the trial
judge refers to “the probability that each of [the parents] will develop
a new attachment, which will hopefully provide happiness for each
of them. Much care will have to be taken to incorporate the well-being
of this child into each of these new family units.” It is now
well over two years since these words were written and even longer
since the evidence on which they were based was uttered. The trial
judge’s optimistic expectation that each parent would develop
a new relationship and that bonds would develop between such
relationships and the child has not been fulfilled.
[48] As a consequence of the passage of time since the trial and
the filing of fresh evidence on the appeal, it can be seen that to
a large extent the parents are not pursuing new lives but rather are
still fighting the old ones. The interlocutory proceedings leading
up to the argument of the appeal suggest that much of the time and
energy of the parents is spent in litigation about their respective
rights and obligations. The trial judge might have foreseen this as
a distinct possibility arising from their proximity.
[49] The trial judge found as a fact that it was not
the mother’s
intention to “remove Mr. Creighton as the loving, involved father
figure” from her son’s life. If allowed to return to Calgary,
Bjornson suggested generous access to the father, including significant
time periods in the summer, during the Christmas period and spring
break and for family occasions such as weddings, birthdays and the
like. She indicated a willingness to accompany their son to Ontario
for access purposes and to pay her own way while Creighton would pay
for their son’s way. Bjornson would also welcome Creighton out
west when convenient for him. I propose a month in the summer, a week
at Christmas time and a week at the spring break, all to be spent
in the east with the father, who will pay the child’s transportation.
In addition, the father should be entitled to two weeks access
in the west at his expense, provided such access does not require
the
child to be absent from school. If the parties are unable
to work out the details of the exercise of access, it is anticipated
that
direction will be sought where the child resides, namely
in Alberta.
[50] Bjornson testified that she would provide her
son with a telephone card and would arrange for what she described
as an “interactive
video” so that father and son could see each other and talk.
I expect her to do this.
[51] I accept that a move to Calgary will reduce the
amount of time father and son would spend together. As I have indicated,
it does
not necessarily follow, however, that the move would not
be in the best interests of the child. To the contrary, when the
factors enunciated
by McLachlin J. in Gordon v. Goertz are properly considered,
I am of the opinion that it would be in the child’s best interest
for Bjornson to return to Calgary. Having regard to my comments above
respecting Creighton’s control and the probable improvement
in the circumstances of the mother consequent upon returning
to residence and employment in Calgary, the best interests of the
child would almost
certainly be served by the separation of the parents in the
manner proposed by the custodial mother.
[52] I would therefore set aside the order below except for: a) paragraph
one, which grants sole custody of the child to Bjornson; b) paragraph
eight, which deals with the annual certification of incomes, and c)
paragraph nine, which deals with the medical and dental coverage.
I see no reason to restrict the whereabouts of the parties other than
to require each parent to notify the other a month in advance of any
proposal to take the child out of the country, other than for holiday
purposes.
[53] It was Bjornson’s position on the appeal that once re-employed
in Calgary, she would be able to maintain herself and her son without
support from Creighton. This may be an accurate prediction but to
protect the position of her son I would maintain a minimum support
link to the father. Accordingly, I would order that any arrears of
child support or child expenses be paid forthwith and that regular
child support payments be maintained and continued until two months
after mother and son have returned to the Calgary area. Paragraphs
six, seven and eleven of the judgment shall remain in effect for that
purpose and to that extent. Thereafter, support and expense payments
shall be reduced to $1.00 per year. It may be anticipated that Bjornson’s
return to Calgary will not take place immediately; school
terms and accommodation will have to be dealt with by Bjornson.
[54] A good deal of material was tendered as fresh evidence on the
hearing of the appeal. We invited counsel to deal with it while reserving
our decision as to whether to admit it. The material deals in some
detail with the usual minutiae of custody litigation. In view of the
resolution of the merits of the appeal, I see no need to deal with
that material.
[55] Both counsel provided material as to the fees and disbursements
incurred from the date of judgment to a day or two before the hearing
of the appeal. By coincidence, the fees in each total approximately
$25,000 on a substantial indemnity basis and the disbursements total
about $1,900 in one case and $2,000 in the other. In the circumstances,
I would award costs in favour of Bjornson on a partial indemnity basis
at a total of $23,000 inclusive of all disbursements and GST.
RELEASED: November 19, 2001
“ Austin J.A.”
“I agree K. M. Weiler J.A.”
“I agree John I. Laskin J.A.”
APPENDIX
Indexed as:
Bjornson v. Creighton
Between
Charlotte Bjornson, plaintiff, and
Earl Cameron Creighton, defendant
[2000] O.J. No. 5168
Court File No. 1068/99
Ontario Superior Court of Justice
Sills J.
Application of the Children's Law Reform Act
¶ 51 Against the foregoing factual background, this court is
asked to deal with the issues of custody and access and whether the
plaintiff mother should be permitted to return to Calgary with the
child. All of the cases to which I've been referred with respect to
the mobility issue deal with the mobility of a custodial parent seeking
a variation in a custody and access order to accommodate the move
of the custodial parent. Also, the decided cases to which I've been
referred all deal with the mobility issue as between two previously
married parents. In the case before me, the parents of the child were
never married, but I am conscious of the provisions of section 1(1)
which provides that "a person is the child of his or her natural
parents and his or her status as their child is independent of whether
the child is born within or outside marriage".
¶ 52 I find as a fact, on the evidence, that it was not the
intention of the plaintiff/mother as alleged by the defendant/father,
to "remove Mr. Creighton as the loving, involved father figure" in
the child's life. Both parties are acknowledged to be loving
and caring and involved parents of the child. To remove the child
to Calgary
from Waterloo would inevitably reduce the involvement of
the defendant in parenting the child. If this child remains in Waterloo
the defendant
will continue to be involved in the parenting of the child
and be able to expose the child to a beneficial association with other
members
of the defendant's family. If the child remains in Waterloo
it necessarily follows from the evidence of the plaintiff mother that
she will remain
in Waterloo and continue to be very much involved in parenting
the child. However, it also follows that the child will probably not
have
an equally beneficial exposure to other members of the mother's
family, unless arrangements can be made to accommodate this extended
relationship
in Alberta.
¶ 53 Plaintiff and the defendant had discussed
having a large family, the defendant speaking somewhat more aggressively
in this
regard. That goal for the defendant may continue to be achievable
although it is less likely for the plaintiff. In any event,
that whole discussion may be somewhat speculative at this time.
However, it is
very likely that these two people will each develop a new
relationship which, hopefully, will be a happy one for each of them.
It will be
in the best interest of this child that, in forming new attachments,
these parties foster with any new family units, commitments
between those new family units and this child. It will require a
real effort
on the part of everyone involved to maintain a strong parental
bond with this child and the plaintiff and defendant might just
as well
corn e to grips with this prospect sooner than later. Their
individual happiness continues to be important but during the minority
of this
child, his best interest will continue to govern any determination
of the parental relationships of these parties and this child.
¶ 54 Custody of and access to children are addressed in Part
3 of the Children's Law Reform Act and the purposes of this Part are
stated to ensure that determinations under this Part are made "on
the basis of the best interest of the children". The best interests
of a child are determined pursuant to section 24 of the Children Law
Reform Act. Subsection (2) thereof mandates a court to "consider
all the needs and circumstances of the child", including specific
considerations found in (a) - (g):
"(a)
The love, affection and emotional ties between the child and,
(i)
each person entitled to or claiming custody of or access to the child
(ii)
other members of the child's family who reside with the child and
(iii)
persons involved in the care and upbringing of the
child;"
In this regard, the evidence clearly confirms that these circumstances
are satisfied by both parents. There are no other members of the child's
family residing with the child but Patricia Allen, who provides daycare
on a frequent basis has established a significant bond with the child.
"(b)
The views and preference of the child" - in this
case such views and preferences cannot reasonably be ascertained.
" (c)
The length of time the child has lived in a stable
home environment".
Since September of 1999 the child has been the subject of
a shared parenting regime as laid out in the consent orders of Taliano,
J.
and Whitten, J. Immediately following the separation of the
plaintiff and the defendant, the child reacted adversely to the
separation as
observed by Ms. Allen, who expressed the view that the child
Justin needs two loving parents. She indicated by her evidence that
this
child requires stability in his relationship with each of
the mother and father and needs to know that both his parents love
and care for
him, and are available to him even though they no longer
live as a family unit.
" (d)
The ability and willingness of each person applying
for custody of the child to provide the child with guidance and
education, the necessaries
of life and any special needs of the child;" - in this regard,
both parents have the ability and willingness to satisfy
this consideration.
" (e)
Any plans proposed for the care and upbringing of
the child." The
plaintiff/mother presented two alternative plans. The first
of these plans was to return to the Calgary area, resume her employment
at
Foothills Hospital, and to reside with her sister and family
until she could obtain a place of her own. The plan for the day
to day care
and upbringing of the child was expressed by the plaintiff
in her evidence at some length and demonstrated an adequate plan.
Alternatively,
if she was not permitted to move with the child to the Calgary
area, she intended to remain in Waterloo, continue her employment,
for the
moment, on a part time basis at St. Mary's Hospital and to
make use of the quite adequate recreational and educational facilities
for
the child. The defendant father seeks to continue his close
involvement in the care and upbringing of the child and made reference
to his
intention to seek admission of the child to a Montessori
school at an early date.
" (f)
The permanence and stability of the family unit with
which it is proposed that the child will live;" - in this regard
there will continue to be, at least for the present, the divided
family unit
of mother and child on the one hand and father and child
on the other and both parties are reasonably well able to recognize
the importance
of each other with respect to the upbringing of this child
and to provide as much stability as is possible in a divided household.
" (g)
The relationship by blood" - in this regard each
of the parties to this litigation are equally related by blood to
the child and are
equally entitled to custody of the child, which entitlement
is subject to alteration by the order of this court.
¶ 55 I have some concern that the child rearing
philosophy of the father may be overly aggressive. As I said earlier
in these reasons,
his approach to parenting, although I think genuine, may
be somewhat overly demanding of the child in the father's search
for excellence
in the child.
¶ 56 The defendant father appears to be on his
way to recovery from a financial problem having its genesis in his
failure to remit
income tax and goods and services tax. The problem is of
sufficient magnitude that the defendant may be hampered in the achievement
of
his goals for the education and betterment of the child by,
virtue of his financial obligations. He expressed in his evidence
a desire
to see the child enrolled in a Montessori school within the
next year or two and it would seem that this child might well be
a candidate
for such training or something similar. A potential difficulty
which I foresee is that the defendant might well insist on initiating
such
training at a cost which he may not be able to afford and
for which he might expect a contribution from the mother, which
she may not
be able to afford. Whatever plans are developed for this
child and however deserving the child may be, a good deal of cooperation
and
understanding between the plaintiff and the defendant will
be required in dealing with such issues.
¶ 57 I have earlier alluded to my views regarding
the permanence and stability of the family units within which this
child will live.
Each of the parties hereto currently have only their own
extended families to rely upon. Both extended families are strong
and stable,
albeit that the plaintiffs family unit is located entirely
in the Province of Alberta. The father's extended family is generally
within
the ambit of Southern Ontario. I repeat the probability that
each of these parties will develop a new attachment which will hopefully
provide happiness for each of them. Much care will have to
be taken
to incorporate the wellbeing of this child into each of these
new family units. It is speculative at this time to contemplate
what might
be and therefore I propose to deal with the situation as
it exists now, leaving it to future agreement between the parties
or other court
orders to determine the best interests of the child as circumstances
then dictate.
The Mobility Issue
¶ 58 I find that it is now in the best interests
of this child that he continue to have the benefit of a close and
loving relationship
with each of his parents and that this can best be achieved
at this time by maintaining the residence of the child somewhere
in or near
the Regional Municipality of Waterloo. As the circumstances
of the child and the parents change it will be open to the parents,
particularly
the mother, to seek a change in residence that might well
be in the best interests of the child. At this time the plaintiff
mother is
employed by St. Mary's General Hospital as a regular part
time nurse in the hospital intensive care unit working 12 to 20
hours per week
and generating income of approximately $24,000 per annum.
Although future full time employment is not certain at St. Mary's
or elsewhere
in the Kitchener-Waterloo area, there are prospects which
may develop. The availability of full time employment in Calgary
does not overcome
the need for the child to continue to have ready access to
his father at the present time.
The Custody Issue
¶ 59 In this case the plaintiff/mother has sought
sole custody of the child given that she seeks a court order permitting
her to
move with the child back to Alberta. Alternatively, if the
plaintiff is not permitted to move to Alberta with the child she
seeks sole
custody, maintaining that joint custody is not appropriate
in the circumstances.
¶ 60 The defendant seeks an order that would
restrict the residence of the child to the Kitchener-Waterloo area
and permit a continued
involvement in the parenting of the child.
¶ 61 I have reviewed all of the cases that have
been referred to me by both counsel. On the facts of this case I
have come to the
conclusion that an order for joint custody is not appropriate.
The plaintiff appears willing to accommodate the wishes of the defendant
to participate actively in the parenting of the child and
to actively
encourage the involvement of the child with the defendant's
extended family. The defendant, in my view, seems to recognize the
importance
of the child's relationship with the plaintiff and her family
in Alberta but demonstrates a more controlling manner and distrust
of the plaintiffs
motives. At the same time, the defendant has a genuine love
and affection for this child, which love and affection is returned.
Nevertheless,
in the circumstances that exist in this case, one of the
parents needs to be in charge in the best interests of the child
and in my opinion,
this can only be accomplished by granting to the mother sole
custody. This order for custody will, of necessity, carry with it
a restriction
on the residence of the child within a geographical area
of one hundred kilometres from the municipal limits of the cities
of Kitchener or
Waterloo.