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Jodi Lazare: Ensuring Economic Equality Across Provincial Borders

Jeudi, 2 juillet, 2015 12:30à13:30
Pavillon Chancellor-Day NCDH 316, 3644, rue Peel, Montréal, QC, H3A 1W9, CA

Cet été encore, le Centre Paul-André Crépeau de droit privé et comparé tiendra une série de séminaires d’été auxquels toute la communauté de la Faculté de droit est invitée à prendre part. Le but principal de ce séminaire d’été est d’offrir un forum aux jeunes chercheurs pour présenter leurs idées et débattre de celle d’autres chercheurs dans un cadre informel.

Boissons froides et biscuits seront servis.

°ä´Ç²Ô´Úé°ù±ð²Ô³¦¾±Ã¨°ù±ð: Jodi Lazare, Ï㽶ÊÓƵ

¸éé²õ³Ü³¾Ã©: This paper examines the opposing attitudes of the Quebec courts, on the one hand, and Canada’s common law courts, on the other, toward the use of the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines, a set of non-binding guidelines establishing ranges for amount and duration of spousal support awards. The Advisory Guidelines are meant to provide consistency and predictability in the determination of spousal support and to effectively minimize the habitual discretion in family law.

Outside of Quebec, the Advisory Guidelines have been a genuine success. Since their first release in 2005, appellate courts throughout country have endorsed them as a useful tool for ensuring economic fairness in the granting of spousal support. They have thus become the central tool in determining spousal support and a vital part of the practice of family law.

Quebec’s approach to the Advisory Guidelines is markedly different. The Quebec Court of Appeal has gone from completely unreceptive to the Advisory Guidelines to open but cautious, while Quebec trial judges have questioned their legitimacy and described them as conceptually defective.

This paper explores the divided reception to the Advisory Guidelines. It examines the distinctive understandings of the role and function of spousal support in Quebec and other provinces and argues that Quebec’s approach is rooted in outdated social principles, not reflected in the legislation or case law. It suggests that Quebec adopt a comparative approach to spousal support, as it did relative to the family law reforms of the 1980’s. Such an approach would better ensure economic equality and fair outcomes for divorcing spouses.

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