Difference between revisions of "Responding to a Court Proceeding in a Family Matter"

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If an action has been started against you, you have two choices: do nothing or defend yourself. If you agree with the orders sought, doing nothing is the cheapest and quickest way to handle the matter. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or completely disagree you must answer the claim or you risk losing by default.
If a court proceeding has been started against you, you have two choices. You can do nothing or you can respond to the proceeding and defend yourself. If you agree with the orders the other party is asking for, doing nothing is the cheapest and quickest way to handle the matter. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or completely disagree you ''must'' respond to the claim or you risk losing by default.


This chapter will discuss the process for defending an action in the Supreme Court and in the Provincial Court. Sample court documents are provided.
This section describes basic elements of the Provincial Court process, but please consider the resources on Legal Aid BC's Family Law website and the links posted at the end of this section. This section also deals with the processes for starting a proceeding in the Supreme Court. For a more complete picture of the court process, you should read this section together with the section on [[Starting a Court Proceeding in a Family Matter|Starting a Court Proceeding]].


For a more complete picture of the court process, this chapter should be read together with the previous chapter, The Legal System > Starting an Action, which sets out the obligations and responsibilities of the person who starts an action and features a detailed discussion of Judicial Case Conferences and Family Case Conferences.
==The Provincial Court==
If a court proceeding has been started in Surrey or Victoria, a different process for ''[https://www.clicklaw.bc.ca/resource/4843 Early Resolution]'' registries will apply.
 
If you are not in Surrey or Victoria, you are the ''respondent'' once you have been served with [[PCFR Form 3 Application About a Family Law Matter|Application About a Family Law Matter in Form 3]]. The person who started the proceeding is the ''applicant''. If you agree with the orders the applicant is asking for, doing nothing is the fastest way to handle things and you should let the applicant know that you're okay with the orders they're asking for. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or if you completely disagree with what the applicant is asking for, you should prepare a ''[[PCFR Form 6 Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter|Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter]]'' in Form 6. This is a special form required by the [http://canlii.ca/t/b8rn Provincial Court Family Rules].
 
You can learn more about the Provincial Court's procedure from Legal Aid BC's Family Law website, in particular the resource called ''[https://family.legalaid.bc.ca/bc-legal-system/ive-been-served-court-form/served-provincial-court-form/respond-to-form-3 Respond if you've been served with Form 3]''.
 
===Limitations of the Provincial Court===
 
The Provincial Court is built for people who are not represented by a lawyer. There are no filing fees in this court, in some ways the forms are easier to prepare, the rules of court are simplified, and the court registry will sometimes take care of things like drafting court orders. The main disadvantage of bringing your case to the Provincial Court is that the authority of the court is limited. The Provincial Court can only hear applications under the ''[[Family Law Act]]'' on certain subjects, including:
 
#guardianship;
#parental responsibilities and parenting time;
#contact with a child;
#child support;
#spousal support;
#protection orders; and,
#payment of household bills such as mortgage and utilities until trial or settlement.
 
The Provincial Court cannot hear any claims under the federal ''[[Divorce Act]]''. However, it also cannot hear claims for orders relating to the division of property and debt under the provincial ''Family Law Act''.
 
===Parallel proceedings in the Supreme Court===
 
If the applicant has started a court proceeding against you in the Provincial Court, the Provincial Court is where you are. If you need to ask for orders under the ''Divorce Act'' or orders about the division of property and debt, you can start a separate court proceeding in the Supreme Court. My personal preference, and I think the preference of most family law lawyers, is to keep everything in the same court if that's at all possible. The general rules about what happens if there's a court proceeding in each court are set out in section 194 of the ''Family Law Act'':
 
<blockquote><tt>(1) If a proceeding respecting a family law dispute may be started in either the Supreme Court or the Provincial Court, the starting of a proceeding in one court does not prevent the starting of a second proceeding in the other court, unless the relief applied for in the second proceeding has already been granted or refused in the first proceeding.</tt></blockquote>
<blockquote><tt>(2) If proceedings are started in both courts and each court may make an order for the same relief, the making of an order by one court does not prevent an application for an order in the other court unless the relief that is the subject of the application to the other court has already been granted or refused by the first court.</tt></blockquote>
<blockquote><tt>(3) If proceedings are started in both courts, a court, on application and to the extent that the matter is within the court's jurisdiction under section 192 [Supreme Court jurisdiction] or 193 [Provincial Court jurisdiction], as applicable, may do one or more of the following:</tt></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(a) decline to hear a matter;</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(b) decline to hear a matter until another matter under this Act, or under any other law of British Columbia or Canada, has been heard in the other court;</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(c) consolidate proceedings started in the other court with proceedings started in the court;</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(d) hear a matter.</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><tt>(4) Despite subsection (2), the Supreme Court may change, suspend or terminate, under section 215 [changing, suspending or terminating orders generally], an order of the Provincial Court if</tt></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(a) the Supreme Court is making an order that affects an order of the Provincial Court, and</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><blockquote><tt>(b) the parties would have to go back to the Provincial Court to have the Provincial Court's order changed, suspended or terminated as a result.</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
<blockquote><tt>(5) If the Supreme Court acts under subsection (4), the Supreme Court's order is deemed to be an order of the Provincial Court for all purposes.</tt></blockquote>
<blockquote><tt>(6) Nothing in this section authorizes the Supreme Court to change, suspend or terminate an order of the Provincial Court if the Provincial Court has refused to change, suspend or terminate the order, except as provided under section 233 [appeals from Provincial Court orders].</tt></blockquote>
 
Let's boil this down a bit. What section 194 says is this:
 
#the fact that there's a court proceeding in one court doesn't stop you from starting a second proceeding in another court;
#you can even ask orders about the same things, unless the first court has already made an order about that thing;
#once a court has made an order about a thing, the other court cannot make an order about that thing... unless the Supreme Court decides to change an order of the Provincial Court;
#a court can instead refuse to make an order about a thing the other court can make orders about; and,
#a court can also order that the two proceedings be ''consolidated'', that they be combined into a single court proceeding.
 
Consolidation under section 194(3)(c) is usually a good option if you want to get everything into one court. However, since the Supreme Court can deal with all of the claims that the Provincial Court can, as well as a bunch that it can't, the consolidated proceeding will be in the Supreme Court.
 
===Preparing, filing and delivering the Reply===
 
If you disagree with any of the orders the applicant is asking for in their Application About a Family Law Matter, you must complete a form called a ''[[PCFR Form 6 Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter| Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter]]'' and file it within 30 days of the date you were served with the Application About a Family Law Matter. There is no fee to file a Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter.


'''DRAFT ONLY'''
In your reply, you can do one or more of the following things:


==The Supreme Court==
#consent to some or all of the orders the applicant is asking for;
#object to some or all of the orders the applicant is asking for; and,
#ask for any orders you want the court to make.
 
The form you must use is Form 6, set out in the [http://canlii.ca/t/b8rn Provincial Court Family Rules]. Your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter must be filed in the same court registry that the applicant filed in. The court clerk will take care of delivering your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter to the applicant.
 
===The applicant's Reply to your Reply===


If you are being sued in the Supreme Court, you are the Respondent in the Claimant's action. The court form you must prepare is a Response to Family Claim; you may also prepare a form called a Counterclaim if there is a claim you would like to make against the Claimant. These documents, and the Claimant's Notice of Family Claim, are called pleadings.
If you have asked for any orders in your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter, the applicant has 30 days after receiving it to complete and file their own Reply to a Counter Application. The applicant's [[PCFR Form 8 Reply to a Counter Application|Reply to a Counter Application]] is in Form 8. The applicant may:


The primary rules about Responses to Family Claim and Counterclaims, and defending a law suit are:
#consent to some or all of the orders you're asking for; and,
#object to some or all of the orders you're asking for.


Rule 1-1: definitions
Very few applicants bother to file a Reply is to a Counter Application of their own. Most applicants only go to the trouble of preparing one if there was something really unusual or unexpected in your Form 6 Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter, and any counterclaims you made.
Rule 3-1: commencing an action
Rule 4-1: starting an action
Rule 4-3: Responses to Family Claim
Rule 4-4: Counterclaims
Rule 5-1: financial disclosure
Rule 6-3: personal service
Rule 7-1: Judicial Case Conferences
Part 9: disclosure and discovery of documents
Part 10: chambers procedure
Rule 11-4: discontinuing an action
Part 13: expert witnesses
Rule 11-3: summary trial procedure
Rule 14-7: trial procedure
A link to the Supreme Court Family Rules is provided in the section Resources & Links, and much more detailed information about the rules is available in New Rules 101.


Sample court forms and blank court forms for download are available in the Downloads segment below.
===The next steps===


===Preparing, Filing and Delivering the Response to Family Claim===
As discussed in the section on [[Starting a Court Proceeding in a Family Matter]], different steps are taken depending on the registry and location where the application was filed.  
This document contains your reply, or defence, to the Claimant's Notice of Family Claim. A Response to Family Claim sets out:


which of the Claimant's claims you agree with and which you oppose;
{{Template:BCPCJPBOFL2022}}
which of the facts given by the Claimant are true and which you say are untrue; and,
your address for service.
The form which must be used is Form F4, set out in Appendix A of the Supreme Court Family Rules of Court. You must file your Response to Family Claim at the court registry within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim, and send a copy of the filed Response to Family Claim to the Claimant by ordinary service.


It costs $25.00 to file a Response to Family Claim.
==The Supreme Court==


===Preparing, Filing and Delivering the Counterclaim===
If a court proceeding has been started against you in the Supreme Court, you are the ''respondent'' in the proceeding. The person who started the court proceeding is the ''claimant''. If you disagree with any of the orders the claimant is asking for, you must prepare a form called a ''Response to Family Claim'' in Form F4. If there are any orders you want to ask for, you can prepare a form called a ''Counterclaim'' in Form F5. These are special forms required by the [http://canlii.ca/t/8mcr Supreme Court Family Rules]. (These documents, together with the claimant's Notice of Family Claim, are called "pleadings.")
A Counterclaim sets out the Respondent's claims against the Claimant. It can be very important to file a Counterclaim if you want the court to make an order on different terms or about a different subject than the claims made in the Notice of Family Claim.


Think of it like this. Your Response to Family Claim is your defence to the claims made the Claimant in his or her Notice of Family Claim. Your Response to Family Claim doesn't ask for anything, it just says what you do and what you don't agree with. Unless a Counterclaim is filed, the only person asking for anything is the Claimant. If you are successful in your defence, there may be no claims left for the court to make an order about. Say the Claimant wants you to have the children on one weekend a month, but you would prefer a shared-parenting arrangement and have them every other week. It isn't enough just to say "I don't want to see the children just once each month" (which is what you'll say in your Response to Family Claim ), you also need to say "I want them for half the time" (which is what you'll say in your Counterclaim).
The main Supreme Court Family Rules about replying to a Notice of Family Claim, making your claims of your own against the claimant, and the management of court proceedings are


A Counterclaim is almost a mirror of the form used for the Notice of Family Claim. A Counterclaim sets out your version of the facts and the relief you seek against the Claimant.
*Rule 1-1: Definitions
*Rule 3-1: Starting a court proceeding
*Rule 4-3: Responding to a claim
*Rule 4-4: Making a counterclaim
*Rule 5-1: Financial disclosure
*Rule 6-2: Ordinary service
*Rule 7-1: Judicial case conferences
*Part 9: Disclosure and discovery of documents
*Part 10: Interim applications and chambers procedure
*Rule 11-4: Discontinuing a court proceeding and withdrawing a response to one
*Part 13: Expert witnesses
*Rule 11-3: Summary trial procedure
*Rule 14-7: Trial procedure
*Rule 15-2.1: Guardianship orders


The form which must be used is Form F5, set out in Appendix A of the Supreme Court Family Rules. This is a special form of Counterclaim used in family law actions. You must file your Counterclaim within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim, and send a copy of the filed Response to Family Claim to the Claimant by ordinary service.
Links to and examples of the Response to Family Claim, Counterclaim and other court forms can be found in this resource under [[Supreme Court Forms (Family Law)]]. For a quick introduction to how to reply to a proceeding, see [[How Do I Respond to a Family Law Action in the Supreme Court?]]. It's located in the Helpful Guides & Common Questions part of this resource.


It costs $200.00 to file a Counterclaim.
===Quick answers for common questions===


===The Next Steps===
The following issues are addressed in the ''Defending an Action'' section of the Helpful Guides & Common Questions part of this resource:
Although you've decided to defend the Claimant's claims, you're not necessarily going to wind up in a trial. One of three things are going to happen in your action:


you'll settle your disagreement out of court, and come up with either a separation agreement or an order that you both agree the court should make, called a consent order;
* '''Can't pay your court fees:''' If you can't afford to pay court fees, you can apply to court to have those fees waived. This used to be called applying for ''indigent status'', but this term is no longer used. To find out more, see [[How Do I Waive Filing Fees in the Supreme Court?]]
you'll not be able to agree, and the intervention of the court at a trial will be required; or,
* '''Need to change something in your Response to Family Claim or Counterclaim:''' To find out what happens when you need to change something in your Response to Family Claim or Counterclaim, see [[How Do I Change Something in My Response to Family Claim or Counterclaim?]]
after some initial scuffles, neither you nor the Claimant will take any steps to further the litigation and the matter will languish.
* '''Want to stop the court proceeding:''' You might want to stop defending the claimant's Notice of Family Claim or withdraw your Counterclaim if, for example, you have reached a settlement. To find out how to do this, see [[How Do I Stop Defending a Family Law Action in the Supreme Court?]]
Whether you're off to trial or a settlement can be reached, the steps until trial are usually these:


Exchange Financial Statements: Financial Statements are required whenever the division of property or the payment of support is at issue. Financial Statements must be exchanged before the first Judicial Case Conference, and updated statements will be required throughout the case and before trial.
===Preparing, filing and delivering the Response to Family Claim===
Have a Judicial Case Conference: A JCC is necessary before most interim applications can be brought. JCCs are informal, off-the-record meetings between the parties, their lawyers and a judge intended to canvas areas of agreement and disagreement, and set dates and deadlines for the remaining steps in the litigation. JCCs are discussed in more detail in the last part of this chapter.
Interim Applications: In almost all cases, parties need the court to decide certain issues on a temporary basis until the trial can be heard. Typically, people need a set of rules to guide them in their conduct towards each other and the children until the issues can be finally determined. The most common interim applications in family law cases involve financial and personal restraining orders, the care and control of the children, and the payment of child support and spousal support. The process for bringing interim applications is discussed in detail in the chapter The Legal System > Interim Applications.
Document Disclosure and Production: The Rules require that each party produce to the other all documents in their possession that are relevant to the matters at issue in an action. This can include things like bank statements, report cards, medical records, school reports and so forth. Each party must list these documents in a formal List of Documents, and keep their Lists of Documents updated when new documents are found or become available.
Discovery: The parties may, if they wish, conduct a cross-examination of the other party under oath, outside of court. This is called an Examination for Discovery. Examinations for Discovery are helpful to get the other party's views of the evidence and the matters at issue on the record. Discoveries are almost always held after Financial Statements have been prepared and the documents have been exchanged.
Have a Settlement Conference: The Rules allow a party to set a Settlement Conference before a judge ahead of trial. At this hearing, the parties will explain their positions to the court and their areas of disagreement and hopefully negotiate a settlement. These conferences can be very helpful, as the judge will often function as mediator and help the parties work towards setttlement. The judge may also express his or her opinion about the stengths and weaknesses of each party's position, which also encourages settlement.
Have a Trial Management Conference: A TMC is a formal hearing before a judge designed to fix the schedule of events at the trial and resolve as many disputes about evidence before trial as possible. Among other things, the judge will ask about the witnesses each party intends to call, the completeness of the disclosure made to date, expert's reports and expert witnesses, and anything else that can dealt with to help make sure the trial will go ahead and be completed within the time available. A TMC is generally not an opportunity to engage in settlement discussions.
Trial: At the end of the day, if you can't agree you will wind up at trial. At the trial, each side will call their witnesses to give evidence, cross-examine the witnesses of the other party, and give their argument as to why the judge ought to decide the case in their favour. The judge will hear all the evidence and the arguments, and reach a decision in the form of Reasons for Judgment. The lawyers, or the court clerk in the absence of lawyers, will prepare a final order based on the Reasons for Judgment.
This is, of course, just a rough sketch of the lengthy process of bringing an action to a conclusion. Not every case will need to use all of these steps (some people may not need to have Examinations for Discovery and others won't see the point of holding a Settlement Conference, for example), and some steps may need to be repeated more than once. As well, the actual trial process is much, much more complex that my brief description.


D. Downloads
If you disagree with any of the orders the claimant is asking for in their Notice of Family Claim, you must file a Response to Family Claim at the court registry within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim.
In this segment you can download blank court forms in Word format, samples of completed forms in PDF format and technical papers about the Supreme Court Family Rules. Additional court form templates can be found in the Resources & Links section of this website.


1. Sample Documents
The Notice of Family Claim describes the basic history of your relationship and provides an outline of the orders the claimant would like the court to make. Your Response to Family Claim lets you:
The links below will open sample court documents in a new window. You will require Adobe Acrobat Reader to view these files, a free program available for download from Adobe Software.


In this sample, our fictitious Respondent, John Doe, is defending a suit brought by his wife, Jane Doe. Jane is seeking orders relating to the care and control of the children, orders for the payment of spousal and child support, orders relating to the division of property, a common financial restraining order, and a declaration that the parties are unable to reconcile. John agrees with some of her claims, but he opposes her claims about the care of the children and the payment of spousal support. John is seeking orders about the care of the children and the division property, a declaration that the parties cannot reconcile and a certificate of pending litigation against the title of the family home.
#consent to some or all of the orders the claimant is asking for;
#object to some or all of the orders the claimant is asking for; and,
#say which of the facts set out in the Notice of Family Claim are inaccurate.


Form F4: Response to Family Claim (PDF)
The form you must use is Form F4, set out in the [http://canlii.ca/t/8mcr Supreme Court Family Rules]. This is a special form of response used only in family law cases. Your Response to Family Claim must be filed in the same court registry that the Notice of Family Claim was filed in. It currently <span class="noglossary">costs</span> $25 to file a Response to Family Claim.
Form F5: Counterclaim (PDF)
These related materials have already been filed by Jane:


Form F8: Financial Statement (PDF)
You must serve the claimant with a copy of your filed Response to Family Claim by ordinary service. When you file any document in Supreme Court, including your Response to Family Claim, the registry will keep the original of the document, so you will want to make and keep at least two additional copies &mdash; one for you to keep and one to serve on the claimant. ''Ordinary service'' means sending a copy of the filed response to the claimant at any of the addresses for service they provided in their Notice of Family Claim.
Form F19: Notice of Judicial Case Conference (PDF)
These sample documents are just that: samples. While they represent a more or less accurate picture of how John Doe might fill out his forms, they may not be applicable to your situation. Use them as a reference only together with the official court form.


2. Court Forms
===Preparing, filing and delivering a Counterclaim===
Click the links below to open templates in Word format. Areas where you must supply information are indicated in green text.


Form F4: Response to Family Claim (DOC)
If there are any orders you want to ask for, you may file a ''Counterclaim'' at the court registry within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim. A Counterclaim lets you describe the orders you would like the court to make.
Form F5: Counterclaim (DOC)
Form F8: Financial Statement (DOC)
Form F19: Notice of Judicial Case Conference (DOC)
Back to the top of this chapter.


==The Provincial Court==
It can be very important to prepare a Counterclaim if you want the court to make an order on different terms, or about different issues, than the orders described in the Notice of Family Claim. Think of it like this. Your Response to Family Claim is your defence to the claims made by the claimant in their Notice of Family Claim. Your Response to Family Claim doesn't ask for anything; it just says what orders you do and don't agree with. Unless a Counterclaim is filed, the only person asking for anything is the claimant. If you are successful in your defence, there may be no claims left for the court to make an order about.
 
Rule 4-4 of the Supreme Court Family Rules provides information about Counterclaims. The form you must use is Form F5. This is a special form of counterclaim used in family law cases. Additional pages that require more detailed information must be added to the Counterclaim when you are asking for orders about:


If you are being sued in the Provincial Court, you are the Respondent to the Applicant's appliction, (which I'll call an action to keep things simple). If you've been served with an Application to Obtain an Order or an Application to Change an Order, you have two choices: do nothing or defend yourself. If you agree with the relief sought, doing nothing is the cheapest and quickest way to handle the matter. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or if you completely disagree with the Applicant's claims you must reply to the Application to Obtain an Order or the Application to Change an Order, or you risk losing by default.
#divorce;
#the care of children and child support;
#spousal support;
#the division of property and debt; and,
#orders about other subjects, like orders for the protection of people or orders for the change of a person's name.


===Preparing, Filing and Delivering the Reply===
Your Counterclaim must be filed in the court registry and be served on the claimant by ordinary service. To save a little bit money and time, you'd normally want to serve the claimant with your  Response to Family Claim and Counterclaim at the same time. It currently <span class="noglossary">costs</span> $200 to file a Counterclaim.
If you choose to defend yourself, you must complete and file a document called a "Reply" within 30 days of the date you were served with the application. There is no fee to file a Reply.


In your Reply, you can do one or more of the following things:
===The applicant's Response to Counterclaim===


consent to the relief claimed in the application, or consent to only some of the relief claimed by the Applicant;
The claimant has 30 days to complete and file a ''Response to Counterclaim'' in Form F6 after being served with your Counterclaim. Very few people bother to file a Response to Counterclaim. Most claimants would only go to the trouble of preparing a response if there was something really unusual or unexpected in your Counterclaim.
object to all or some of the relief claimed in the application, providing you give reasons as to why you oppose the relief; and,
apply for the orders you would like the court to make.
The form which must be used is Form 3, set out in the Provincial Court Family Court Manual. A link to the Provincial (Family) Court Rules of Court is provided in the section Resources & Links.


===The Next Steps===
===The next steps===
In certain registries of the Provincial (Family) Court the parties must meet with a "Family Justice Counsellor," and, if children are involved, attend a Parenting After Separation program, before any further steps can be taken in a case. This will apply even if you are seeking a default judgment. The court clerk will refer you to the Family Justice Counsellor and tell you where the Parenting After Separation is offered. You will have to file a certificate that you've completed the program before any action can be taken in your case.


At court registries that do not have this requirement, an interim application can be brought at any time after the action has commenced by the filing of an Application to Obtain an Order, or one of the other sorts of actions listed above.
Disagreeing with the orders the claimant has asked for, or asking for orders of your own, doesn't necessarily mean you will wind up in a trial. One of three things is going to happen in your court proceeding:


The steps which follow the commencement of an action in Provincial (Family) Court are a watered down version of the Supreme Court process. There are less hoops to jump through, but also less means to extract information and documents from the other side.
#you'll settle your disagreement out of court, and come up with either a ''separation agreement'' or an order that you both agree the court should make, called a ''consent order''.
#you'll not be able to agree, and the intervention of the court at a ''trial'' will be required; or,
#after some initial scuffles, neither you nor the respondent will take any further steps in the court proceeding and the proceeding will languish.


Interim Applications: In almost all cases, the parties need the court to decide certain issues on a temporary basis until the trial can be heard. Typically, people need a set of rules to guide them in their conduct towards each other and the children until the issues between them can be finally determined. The most common applications in family law involve restraining orders, issues relating to the care and control of the children, child support and spousal support. The process for bringing interim applications is discussed in detail in the next chapter The Legal System > Interim Applications.
Again, I hope it'll be the first.
Exchange Financial Statements: Financial Statements are required whenever the payment of support is at issue. Financial Statements are prepared using Form 4.
Have a Family Case Conference: This is a hearing similar the the Judicial Case Conference required by the Supreme Court. It is an informal, off-the-record meeting between the parties, their lawyers and a judge intended to canvas areas of agreement and set dates and deadlines for the remaining steps in the litigation. All they are very usual and often result in settlement, FCCs are not mandatory unless you have been referred to an FCC by a judge. If you think a FCC will help resolve your case, ask for one! FCCs are discussed in detail in the previous chapter The Legal System > Starting an Action.
Have a Settlement Conference: The Rules allow a party to set a Settlement Conference before a judge. At this hearing, the parties will explain their positions to the court and their areas of disagreement and hopefully negotiate a settlement. These conferences can be very helpful, as the judge will often express his or her opinion about each party's position and what the judge thinks the likely result of a trial will be.
Trial: At the end of the day, if you can't agree on an appropriate settlement, you will wind up at trial. At the trial, each side will call their witnesses to give evidence, cross-examine the witnesses of the other party, and give their argument as to why the judge ought to decide the case in their favour. The judge will hear all the evidence and the arguments and reach a decision in the form of Reasons for Judgment. Where neither party is represented by a lawyer, the court clerk will draft a final order based on the judge's Reasons for Judgment.


===Financial Statements===
==Resources and links==


If a case involves a claim for spousal support or child support, each party must prepare and file a Financial Statement. A Financial Statement sets out a party's income, expenses, assets and liabilities and is sworn on oath or affirmation, just like an Affidavit, by a lawyer, notary public or registry clerk. Each party must attach to their Financial Statements the following documents:
===Legislation===


their last three years' worth of tax returns;
* ''[http://canlii.ca/t/849w Provincial Court Act]''
their Notices of Assessment and Reassessment for the last three tax years;
* [http://canlii.ca/t/85pb Provincial Court Family Rules]
their most recent paystub, showing their earnings-to-date, or if the party isn't working, then their most recent WCB statement, social assistance statement or EI statement; and,
* ''[http://canlii.ca/t/84d8 Supreme Court Act]''
if the party is involved in a business, certain other business and/or corporate records.
* [http://canlii.ca/t/8mcr Supreme Court Family Rules]
The form which must be used is Form 4, set out in the provincial court Family Court Manual.
* ''[http://canlii.ca/t/84h8 Court Rules Act]''


===Family Case Conferences===
===Resources===
Family Case Conferences are relatively informal, off-the-record, private meetings between the parties, their lawyers and a judge in a courtroom to explore settlement options. FCCs are not mandatory and there is no requirement that an FCC must be heard before any interim applications.


FCCs are discussed in mode detail in the previous chapter The Legal System > Starting an Action.
* [https://www.provincialcourt.bc.ca/types-of-cases/family-matters/chief-judge-practice-directions Provincial Court Family Practice Directions]
* [https://www.bccourts.ca/supreme_court/practice_and_procedure/family_practice_directions.aspx Supreme Court Family Practice Directions]
* [https://www.bccourts.ca/supreme_court/practice_and_procedure/administrative_notices.aspx Supreme Court Administrative Notices]
* [https://www.bccourts.ca/supreme_court/scheduling/ Supreme Court Trial Scheduling]


E. Downloads
===Links===
The link below will open a sample Reply in a new window.


In the sample Reply, our fictitious respondent, Suzie Schwartz, agrees with the application of her partner, Simon Chang, for an order that she not remove their child from British Columbia, but she disagrees with everything else. As well, she seeks a few orders relating to the care and control of the child herself, as well as a restraining Order stopping Simon from harassing her.
* [https://www.bccourts.ca/supreme_court/ Supreme Court website]
* [https://www.provincialcourt.bc.ca Provincial Court website]
* Provincial Court: [https://www.clicklaw.bc.ca/resource/4498 Family Cases]
* Legal Aid BC's Family Law website's information pages:
** [https://www.clicklaw.bc.ca/resource/4652 "I've been served with a court form"]
** [https://family.legalaid.bc.ca/bc-legal-system/ive-been-served-court-form/served-provincial-court-form/respond-to-form-3 "Respond if you've been served with Form 3"]


Form 3: Reply
Form 4: Financial Statement
This sample document is just that: a sample. While it represents a more or less accurate picture of how Suzie Schwartz might fill out this form, it may not be applicable to your situation. Use it as a reference only together with the official court form.


Areas where you must supply information are indicated in black script.
{{REVIEWED | reviewer = [[JP Boyd]], 4 April 2020}}


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Latest revision as of 21:49, 20 July 2022

If a court proceeding has been started against you, you have two choices. You can do nothing or you can respond to the proceeding and defend yourself. If you agree with the orders the other party is asking for, doing nothing is the cheapest and quickest way to handle the matter. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or completely disagree you must respond to the claim or you risk losing by default.

This section describes basic elements of the Provincial Court process, but please consider the resources on Legal Aid BC's Family Law website and the links posted at the end of this section. This section also deals with the processes for starting a proceeding in the Supreme Court. For a more complete picture of the court process, you should read this section together with the section on Starting a Court Proceeding.

The Provincial Court

If a court proceeding has been started in Surrey or Victoria, a different process for Early Resolution registries will apply.

If you are not in Surrey or Victoria, you are the respondent once you have been served with Application About a Family Law Matter in Form 3. The person who started the proceeding is the applicant. If you agree with the orders the applicant is asking for, doing nothing is the fastest way to handle things and you should let the applicant know that you're okay with the orders they're asking for. On the other hand, if you only partly agree or if you completely disagree with what the applicant is asking for, you should prepare a Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter in Form 6. This is a special form required by the Provincial Court Family Rules.

You can learn more about the Provincial Court's procedure from Legal Aid BC's Family Law website, in particular the resource called Respond if you've been served with Form 3.

Limitations of the Provincial Court

The Provincial Court is built for people who are not represented by a lawyer. There are no filing fees in this court, in some ways the forms are easier to prepare, the rules of court are simplified, and the court registry will sometimes take care of things like drafting court orders. The main disadvantage of bringing your case to the Provincial Court is that the authority of the court is limited. The Provincial Court can only hear applications under the Family Law Act on certain subjects, including:

  1. guardianship;
  2. parental responsibilities and parenting time;
  3. contact with a child;
  4. child support;
  5. spousal support;
  6. protection orders; and,
  7. payment of household bills such as mortgage and utilities until trial or settlement.

The Provincial Court cannot hear any claims under the federal Divorce Act. However, it also cannot hear claims for orders relating to the division of property and debt under the provincial Family Law Act.

Parallel proceedings in the Supreme Court

If the applicant has started a court proceeding against you in the Provincial Court, the Provincial Court is where you are. If you need to ask for orders under the Divorce Act or orders about the division of property and debt, you can start a separate court proceeding in the Supreme Court. My personal preference, and I think the preference of most family law lawyers, is to keep everything in the same court if that's at all possible. The general rules about what happens if there's a court proceeding in each court are set out in section 194 of the Family Law Act:

(1) If a proceeding respecting a family law dispute may be started in either the Supreme Court or the Provincial Court, the starting of a proceeding in one court does not prevent the starting of a second proceeding in the other court, unless the relief applied for in the second proceeding has already been granted or refused in the first proceeding.

(2) If proceedings are started in both courts and each court may make an order for the same relief, the making of an order by one court does not prevent an application for an order in the other court unless the relief that is the subject of the application to the other court has already been granted or refused by the first court.

(3) If proceedings are started in both courts, a court, on application and to the extent that the matter is within the court's jurisdiction under section 192 [Supreme Court jurisdiction] or 193 [Provincial Court jurisdiction], as applicable, may do one or more of the following:

(a) decline to hear a matter;

(b) decline to hear a matter until another matter under this Act, or under any other law of British Columbia or Canada, has been heard in the other court;

(c) consolidate proceedings started in the other court with proceedings started in the court;

(d) hear a matter.

(4) Despite subsection (2), the Supreme Court may change, suspend or terminate, under section 215 [changing, suspending or terminating orders generally], an order of the Provincial Court if

(a) the Supreme Court is making an order that affects an order of the Provincial Court, and

(b) the parties would have to go back to the Provincial Court to have the Provincial Court's order changed, suspended or terminated as a result.

(5) If the Supreme Court acts under subsection (4), the Supreme Court's order is deemed to be an order of the Provincial Court for all purposes.

(6) Nothing in this section authorizes the Supreme Court to change, suspend or terminate an order of the Provincial Court if the Provincial Court has refused to change, suspend or terminate the order, except as provided under section 233 [appeals from Provincial Court orders].

Let's boil this down a bit. What section 194 says is this:

  1. the fact that there's a court proceeding in one court doesn't stop you from starting a second proceeding in another court;
  2. you can even ask orders about the same things, unless the first court has already made an order about that thing;
  3. once a court has made an order about a thing, the other court cannot make an order about that thing... unless the Supreme Court decides to change an order of the Provincial Court;
  4. a court can instead refuse to make an order about a thing the other court can make orders about; and,
  5. a court can also order that the two proceedings be consolidated, that they be combined into a single court proceeding.

Consolidation under section 194(3)(c) is usually a good option if you want to get everything into one court. However, since the Supreme Court can deal with all of the claims that the Provincial Court can, as well as a bunch that it can't, the consolidated proceeding will be in the Supreme Court.

Preparing, filing and delivering the Reply

If you disagree with any of the orders the applicant is asking for in their Application About a Family Law Matter, you must complete a form called a Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter and file it within 30 days of the date you were served with the Application About a Family Law Matter. There is no fee to file a Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter.

In your reply, you can do one or more of the following things:

  1. consent to some or all of the orders the applicant is asking for;
  2. object to some or all of the orders the applicant is asking for; and,
  3. ask for any orders you want the court to make.

The form you must use is Form 6, set out in the Provincial Court Family Rules. Your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter must be filed in the same court registry that the applicant filed in. The court clerk will take care of delivering your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter to the applicant.

The applicant's Reply to your Reply

If you have asked for any orders in your Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter, the applicant has 30 days after receiving it to complete and file their own Reply to a Counter Application. The applicant's Reply to a Counter Application is in Form 8. The applicant may:

  1. consent to some or all of the orders you're asking for; and,
  2. object to some or all of the orders you're asking for.

Very few applicants bother to file a Reply is to a Counter Application of their own. Most applicants only go to the trouble of preparing one if there was something really unusual or unexpected in your Form 6 Reply to an Application About a Family Law Matter, and any counterclaims you made.

The next steps

As discussed in the section on Starting a Court Proceeding in a Family Matter, different steps are taken depending on the registry and location where the application was filed.

The Supreme Court

If a court proceeding has been started against you in the Supreme Court, you are the respondent in the proceeding. The person who started the court proceeding is the claimant. If you disagree with any of the orders the claimant is asking for, you must prepare a form called a Response to Family Claim in Form F4. If there are any orders you want to ask for, you can prepare a form called a Counterclaim in Form F5. These are special forms required by the Supreme Court Family Rules. (These documents, together with the claimant's Notice of Family Claim, are called "pleadings.")

The main Supreme Court Family Rules about replying to a Notice of Family Claim, making your claims of your own against the claimant, and the management of court proceedings are

  • Rule 1-1: Definitions
  • Rule 3-1: Starting a court proceeding
  • Rule 4-3: Responding to a claim
  • Rule 4-4: Making a counterclaim
  • Rule 5-1: Financial disclosure
  • Rule 6-2: Ordinary service
  • Rule 7-1: Judicial case conferences
  • Part 9: Disclosure and discovery of documents
  • Part 10: Interim applications and chambers procedure
  • Rule 11-4: Discontinuing a court proceeding and withdrawing a response to one
  • Part 13: Expert witnesses
  • Rule 11-3: Summary trial procedure
  • Rule 14-7: Trial procedure
  • Rule 15-2.1: Guardianship orders

Links to and examples of the Response to Family Claim, Counterclaim and other court forms can be found in this resource under Supreme Court Forms (Family Law). For a quick introduction to how to reply to a proceeding, see How Do I Respond to a Family Law Action in the Supreme Court?. It's located in the Helpful Guides & Common Questions part of this resource.

Quick answers for common questions

The following issues are addressed in the Defending an Action section of the Helpful Guides & Common Questions part of this resource:

Preparing, filing and delivering the Response to Family Claim

If you disagree with any of the orders the claimant is asking for in their Notice of Family Claim, you must file a Response to Family Claim at the court registry within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim.

The Notice of Family Claim describes the basic history of your relationship and provides an outline of the orders the claimant would like the court to make. Your Response to Family Claim lets you:

  1. consent to some or all of the orders the claimant is asking for;
  2. object to some or all of the orders the claimant is asking for; and,
  3. say which of the facts set out in the Notice of Family Claim are inaccurate.

The form you must use is Form F4, set out in the Supreme Court Family Rules. This is a special form of response used only in family law cases. Your Response to Family Claim must be filed in the same court registry that the Notice of Family Claim was filed in. It currently costs $25 to file a Response to Family Claim.

You must serve the claimant with a copy of your filed Response to Family Claim by ordinary service. When you file any document in Supreme Court, including your Response to Family Claim, the registry will keep the original of the document, so you will want to make and keep at least two additional copies — one for you to keep and one to serve on the claimant. Ordinary service means sending a copy of the filed response to the claimant at any of the addresses for service they provided in their Notice of Family Claim.

Preparing, filing and delivering a Counterclaim

If there are any orders you want to ask for, you may file a Counterclaim at the court registry within 30 days of being served with the Notice of Family Claim. A Counterclaim lets you describe the orders you would like the court to make.

It can be very important to prepare a Counterclaim if you want the court to make an order on different terms, or about different issues, than the orders described in the Notice of Family Claim. Think of it like this. Your Response to Family Claim is your defence to the claims made by the claimant in their Notice of Family Claim. Your Response to Family Claim doesn't ask for anything; it just says what orders you do and don't agree with. Unless a Counterclaim is filed, the only person asking for anything is the claimant. If you are successful in your defence, there may be no claims left for the court to make an order about.

Rule 4-4 of the Supreme Court Family Rules provides information about Counterclaims. The form you must use is Form F5. This is a special form of counterclaim used in family law cases. Additional pages that require more detailed information must be added to the Counterclaim when you are asking for orders about:

  1. divorce;
  2. the care of children and child support;
  3. spousal support;
  4. the division of property and debt; and,
  5. orders about other subjects, like orders for the protection of people or orders for the change of a person's name.

Your Counterclaim must be filed in the court registry and be served on the claimant by ordinary service. To save a little bit money and time, you'd normally want to serve the claimant with your Response to Family Claim and Counterclaim at the same time. It currently costs $200 to file a Counterclaim.

The applicant's Response to Counterclaim

The claimant has 30 days to complete and file a Response to Counterclaim in Form F6 after being served with your Counterclaim. Very few people bother to file a Response to Counterclaim. Most claimants would only go to the trouble of preparing a response if there was something really unusual or unexpected in your Counterclaim.

The next steps

Disagreeing with the orders the claimant has asked for, or asking for orders of your own, doesn't necessarily mean you will wind up in a trial. One of three things is going to happen in your court proceeding:

  1. you'll settle your disagreement out of court, and come up with either a separation agreement or an order that you both agree the court should make, called a consent order.
  2. you'll not be able to agree, and the intervention of the court at a trial will be required; or,
  3. after some initial scuffles, neither you nor the respondent will take any further steps in the court proceeding and the proceeding will languish.

Again, I hope it'll be the first.

Resources and links

Legislation

Resources

Links


This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by JP Boyd, 4 April 2020.


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