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Veterans of Ottawa family courts aren't expecting any miracles either. "We need a Unified Family Court like we need another arsehole," says Brett Peters, president and founding member of FARE (Fathers After Rights Equalization), which currently has 300 Ontario members. Peters' wife got up one morning in 1995, "kissed me good-bye, took the baby and went into a shelter in Carleton Place. Days later, she signed a seven-page affidavit saying I raped her, I beat her, I stole her money and confined her in closets. Because of this, I now have only supervised visits with my daughter once a week." Peters, outspoken and unapologetically rude, puts no faith in a UFC: "I don't care what they call the system, whether it's the Family United Court, the Family United Way Court or the Family Universe Court. It's going to be the same thing with a different name. Before anything changes, you have to get rid of the arrogant, deadbeat judges."
The majority of Ottawa's senior family lawyers quietly agree that most judges are not fully competent in family law. They also agree that anti-male bias on the bench is Ottawa's worst kept secret. But they're quick to defend the same judges, pointing out that those on the bench are only human, and seriously overworked.
"It's probably fair to say there's a gender bias in, [for example], custody matters," says Carol Cochrane of the law firm Low Murchison. "I think there's a feeling among many judges that the tender-years doctrine is still applicable to preschool kids. The sentiment is they are better off with Mom. I think this dismisses the very big change that men have made. It's now standard fare to have a two-income, two-career household and a nurturing dad. I think that's been lost on the judges."
Norm Christie, who so far has spent $35,000 on legal fees, says he knows first hand how judges tend to treat men in divorce cases. "Our first judge was a complete idiot. He didn't read the material properly. All he said was I would have to have a [psychological] assessment and pay support. He made an error in his ruling based on the [federal child-support] guidelines. It cost me $2,000 to go back to court to correct it."
Then there's the story of Nicole Sly, who says she has also experienced judicial anti-male bias. She has been in and out of a Belleville court thirty times in thirty-six months helping her common-law husband, who looks after his three children almost full time. "We were invited into one judge's chambers during a hearing. He took our forty-two pages of evidence proving [my partner's] wife was a liar and was using the police to harass us. The judge simply turned them facedown. He said, 'I don't care. What are you doing here?' " Sly, whose fiancé has been forced to declare bankruptcy, knows the judge would have reacted differently if the genders had been reversed. "My partner would never have seen his kids."
It is hard to imagine judges changing their entrenched perceptions just because of an appointment to a UFC. Moreover, it's unlikely their workload will decrease, says Leonard Levencrown, a senior family lawyer with MacKinnon & Phillips. "It depends on the resources [the government] gives the court," he says. But he is not optimistic, especially since there may be a mandatory mediation component. "There are certain situations where the parties will never mediate. So it will just cause more delays and more paperwork. I happen to think it's going to be even more paper-intensive than it already is." As for the idea that an exclusive judge assigned to each file will ease the agony of divorce, "I don't buy it," he says. "How much do you think a judge can remember when he hears literally hundreds of cases?"
If traditionalist, overworked judges aren't causing major problems for family law, the unskilled lawyers plying their trade in Ottawa certainly are, says family-law specialist Gary Steinberg, who echoes virtually every experienced lawyer in the field. Dangerously clogging the system, as well as driving the cost of a single divorce as high as $120,000 for an average-income family, unskilled family-law solicitors are easy to explain: supply and demand. In the past half-dozen years, the real estate market plunged (before picking up again in the past eighteen months) and motor vehicle negligence work dried up with the introduction of no-fault drivers insurance in 1994. Legal-aid cutbacks two years ago also made criminal law less attractive. That left family law.
Nicole Sly has managed to stay with her first lawyer, but Norm Christie is on his second. (He shudders when he recalls how his first lawyer consented - without permission - to a restraining order that allowed him only supervised visits, visits that eventually petered out entirely.) For his part, Brett Peters has lost count of the lawyers he has hired and, in fact, has given upon them altogether. "I fired them all," he says. "They're only after one thing. Money." He still has a solicitor of record, but only as a formality.
One twenty-three-year veteran of Ottawa's family-law scene has a free piece of advice to anyone contemplating divorce. "Hire the best lawyer in town, and make sure your spouse hires the second best," says Hunter Phillips, who charges $250 an hour. He insists that borrowing the money to retain an expert is better than paying $100 an hour for an inexperienced solicitor and maintains that ninety-five per cent of his clients, like the majority of divorce parties generally, settle out of court through either negotiation or mediation.
Many inexperienced lawyers, Phillips argues, "don't know what the courts are awarding. And they can't necessarily recognize a reasonable settlement offer when they receive one. Or they may not have the confidence to make an offer themselves. The only safe way for them to handle a case is to let a judge decide."
There is no reason to believe a UFC will alleviate this problem, given that the new court can't reduce the number of divorces or, consequently, the need for lawyers. The only plus, if it is one, is that inept lawyers will be pulled along by judges who are versed, at least in theory, on the intricacies of family law. "[UFC] judges are essentially specialists, so even if the lawyer is not, the judge will still be able to make a sensible judgment," argues Payne.
There is also no reason to believe that the number of court-ordered psychological assessments will decline when the UFC comes to town. In Ottawa's family-law quagmire, conducting court-ordered assessments has become something of a cottage industry. At least a dozen agencies virtually survive by offering the service. The busiest of these until five years ago - the Royal Ottawa Hospital's Family Court Clinic - was doing about 100 custody and access assessments annually. Today, because of cutbacks, the clinic handles only about twenty-five such cases a year. So there is no shortage of work for other psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers who do them. In part, that's because of the exploding number of allegations of abuse, almost always made in affidavits by a wife against her husband.
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