Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Australia: The Search for Property in the Labyrinth of the Discretionary Trust
- Brazil: Intuitu Personae Adoption in the Brazilian Legal System
- Canada: Family Law at the Supreme Court of Canada
- China: Reform of the Marriage and Family Part of the Civil Code in China
- England and Wales: Beware of International Relationships
- European Court of Human Rights: Challenging Paternity under Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights
- France: A Chronicle of French Family Law: 2019
- Germany: Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation and Parentage: Family Law Lagging Behind
- Hong Kong: Hong Kong Family Law Today: Drowning not Waving?
- Korea: Full Guardianship in Korean Law: An Evaluation Over Seven Years from the Perspective of Family Court Practices and the Constitution
- Norway: The New Norwegian Adoption Act
- Poland: Discussion and Reform of Family Law in Poland
- Scotland: Making Scotland ‘The Best Place in the World to Grow Up’?
- Serbia: Child Maintenance and Welfare in Serbian Law
- Slovenia: New Regulation on Guardianship for Adults in Slovenia
- South Africa: Aspects of Dutch Colonial Family Law Related to the Indonesian Rajah of Tambora’s Exile at the Cape
- Sweden and California: On Children’s Rights to be Heard in Custody and Support Matters
- UN Committee on the Rights of the Child: Continued Reflections on Family Law Issues in the Jurisprudence of the CRC Committee: The Convention on the Rights of the Child @ 30
- Index
Canada: Family Law at the Supreme Court of Canada
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Australia: The Search for Property in the Labyrinth of the Discretionary Trust
- Brazil: Intuitu Personae Adoption in the Brazilian Legal System
- Canada: Family Law at the Supreme Court of Canada
- China: Reform of the Marriage and Family Part of the Civil Code in China
- England and Wales: Beware of International Relationships
- European Court of Human Rights: Challenging Paternity under Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights
- France: A Chronicle of French Family Law: 2019
- Germany: Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation and Parentage: Family Law Lagging Behind
- Hong Kong: Hong Kong Family Law Today: Drowning not Waving?
- Korea: Full Guardianship in Korean Law: An Evaluation Over Seven Years from the Perspective of Family Court Practices and the Constitution
- Norway: The New Norwegian Adoption Act
- Poland: Discussion and Reform of Family Law in Poland
- Scotland: Making Scotland ‘The Best Place in the World to Grow Up’?
- Serbia: Child Maintenance and Welfare in Serbian Law
- Slovenia: New Regulation on Guardianship for Adults in Slovenia
- South Africa: Aspects of Dutch Colonial Family Law Related to the Indonesian Rajah of Tambora’s Exile at the Cape
- Sweden and California: On Children’s Rights to be Heard in Custody and Support Matters
- UN Committee on the Rights of the Child: Continued Reflections on Family Law Issues in the Jurisprudence of the CRC Committee: The Convention on the Rights of the Child @ 30
- Index
Summary
Résumé
Le Canada est un véritable laboratoire de droit comparé en raison, d’une part, de la cohabitation des traditions juridiques de common law, de droit civil et de droit autochtone et, d’autre part, de la présence de ses deux langues officielles et de nombreuses langues aborigènes. Les juges de la Cour suprême doivent être capables d’entendre des affaires en français et en anglais, de fonctionner dans les systèmes de common law et de droit civil et de participer au mouvement d’intégration des traditions juridiques et des tribunaux autochtones dans le cadre juridique canadien contemporain. Les dossiers de droit familial dont a été saisie la Cour suprême en 2019 offrent des exemples de la variété des aptitudes exigées des magistrats.
INTRODUCTION
As Canada's highest court, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) hears appeals from the country's ten provinces and three territories. In most cases, leave to appeal is required. The SCC has broad discretion to grant leave, and generally does so only if the case raises a question of public importance or an important issue of law that warrants consideration by the SCC. The SCC hears only about 65–80 appeals each year, and of about 500–600 applications for leave to appeal, only about 50 are granted.
It difficult, then, to get leave to appeal, and for many the expense is prohibitive. After proceedings at the court of first instance and the first level of appeal in a province or territory, few parties can afford to pursue a further appeal to the SCC. The expense of family litigation prevents many parties from even hiring a lawyer for their initial hearing. The high percentage of self-represented litigants in family courts is a matter of general concern in Canada. Many of the family law cases that are pursued to the level of the SCC involve parties with substantial assets, and that is true of the three cases discussed here that came before the SCC in 2019.
The first case, Beaver v. Hill, raises important questions as to the recognition and role of Indigenous tribunals and laws for family law disputes, as well as the relationship between any such tribunals and laws on one hand and the provincial court systems and family law regimes on the other.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International Survey of Family Law 20202020 Edition, pp. 35 - 48Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2020