16 Case Study Number 7: Deepa and Amol
Profile |
Woman |
Man |
Name |
Deepa |
Amol |
Age at time of marriage |
42 |
28 |
Age * |
53 |
39 |
Country of Origin |
India |
India |
Religion |
Sikh |
Sikh |
Education |
Undergraduate Degree |
Undergraduate Degree |
English language ability |
Proficient |
Proficient |
Employment before migration |
Airline worker; cabin crew |
Electric engineer |
Employment* |
Unemployed |
Started his own trucking business in 2009; sole owner and director of this corporation |
Category under which immigrated |
Economic Class |
Economic Class |
Immigration status* |
Permanent Resident (PR) | Permanent Resident (PR) |
Number of years of marriage*: 11
Children*
|
*At the time of the Family Court application
Pre-Migration History
Deepa worked as a cabin crew member on an international airline prior to her marriage to Amol. They both resided in a large city in India at the time of their marriage. Deepa used her savings to purchase an apartment for the family after they were married. When the family migrated to Canada, the apartment was sold, and the money used by Amol to purchase property in India in his own name. Deepa took voluntary retirement from the airline prior to migration. She cashed out her retirement benefits to bring CAD $27,000.00, at the time approximately IRS 15 Lakh (Indian Rupees), to Canada. Amol had an excessive drinking habit from the beginning of their relationship.
Settlement in Canada
The couple applied for immigration to Canada and Amol was first to arrive. In July 2007 he started working in construction and labour jobs as he began to settle in the family’s new surroundings. Deepa arrived in August 2008 with their children. In 2009 Amol started his own trucking business; he was the sole owner and director of this corporation. Deepa realized that Amol was having an extra-marital relationship with another woman before she arrived in the country. Deepa confronted Amol, but he told her that she had no choice but to live with him. She decided to stay for the sake of the children.
Domestic Violence
The couple began to have serious marital difficulties and would fight frequently because of issues related to Amol’s extra-marital relationship and his excessive drinking. He would drink and drive with the children in his truck and leave his alcohol out in the open in the home. He would disguise his liquor in juice bottles and on one occasion, their daughter accidentally drank from one of the bottles filled with liquor.When he was drinking, he would become verbally and physically abusive toward Deepa which was witnessed by the children. While Amol was intoxicated, he would yell and shout at the children. He would also watch sexually explicit materials on the internet in their presence. As a result, the children became afraid of him. Sometimes after fighting with Deepa, he would drive while intoxicated, return home and then fall asleep in the yard.
In September 2009, Amol assaulted Deepa and she decided to report the incident at the local police station. Amol was charged with assault and for uttering a death threat. He was released on bail and ordered to have no contact with Deepa until the court proceedings. The Children's Aid Society (CAS) became involved. The parties were living separately in basement apartments, Deepa with the children, and Amol alone. Although there was no contact order, he started coming to her apartment for access to the children. In April 2010, the criminal court had Amol sign a peace bond for twelve months, again with conditions of no contact for one year. However, the extended families became involved and tried to get the couple to resume their relationship. At the request of the families, Deepa reconciled with Amol. The relationship was still tenuous however, he involved a lawyer to put a condition before reconciliation that they would live together only if she signed a separation agreement. Amol hired another lawyer to supposedly give independent legal adviceto Deepa and to witness her signing the agreement. In June 2010, Deepa signed the official separation documents, without fully understanding what she was signing as she was provided no proper explanation by either of the two lawyers involved. Included in the agreement was a nominal child support payment of only $150 and released Amol from having to pay any spousal support to Deepa. At the time the arrangement was signed, Amol did not provide financial disclosure. The agreement also stated that Deepa would have sole custody and Amol would have access to the children at Deepa’s residence. She also waived all rights related to property as she was under the impression that he wanted this arrangement to be made as a precondition to reconciliation.
In August 2010, Amol moved into the basement apartment with Deepa and the children. In November 2010, Amol bought a property, solely in his name, and the family moved in together. Amol’s parents visited in the new year and stayed for six months. After their departure, Amol left for a friend’s wedding in India. He returned in December 2011 in time to celebrate the twins’ birthday. The next day, Deepa received an anonymous phone call telling her that her husband had gotten married during his time in India. Deepa opened Amol’s luggage and found a DVD of the marriage. She had been unaware of the fact that Amol had filed for divorce in a neighbouring city, and that the order was granted in April 2010, 7 months prior to his trip to India. Deepa was never served the divorce application and she was unaware of how he was able to secure the divorce without officially serving her with papers[1]. She confronted Amol and he moved out of the house in December 2011. Deepa applied for Ontario Works (OW) and remained on social assistance for eight months. She found part-time employment as a school bus driver during the school year in September 2012. Deepa continued to live in Amol’s house with the children. After leaving, Amol called the house and had his friends call the house on several occasions demanding that Deepa leave the premises.
From 2013 onwards, Amol started defaulting on water and hydro payments for the property. Water service was cut off and the family was without water and heat for many months which included winter months. Deepa and the children were forced to bathe at the local community centre. Beginning in May 2015, Amol stopped paying for the home as well the mortgage payments. When that happened, the bank started legal proceedings to take over the property, and Deepa and her children were forced to move out of the house.
Resolution
A major point of contention, in this case, is when the official separation of the parties took place. Deepa was living with Amol and was under the impression that the marriage was valid until December 2011 when Amol left the house, although the separation agreement was signed in June 2009. This has implications for spousal and child support payments. Amol went to the courts in November 2012, claiming that Deepa had alienated the children from him and restricted his access to them. He then asked for custody and access of the children. Deepa refuted the accusation that she was restricting access and claimed that Amol had made no efforts to see the children in the past 11 months despite their daughter being very unwell. Deepa asked the courts to set aside the previous separation. She asked for sole custody of the children with supervised access for Amol. She asked that the children have their own lawyers, claimed child support, spousal support and requested a restraining orderagainst Amol.
Click on the links below to access Case Study questions related to the following:
Intersectional Vulnerabilities
Practitioners’ Subjectivity and Social Location
Migration and Transnationalism
Media Attributions
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- Upon investigation, Deepa’s lawyer was able to uncover what had happened in this case. In August 2010, Amol started living with Deepa and the children. However, he had filed an application for divorce in SCJ court in September 2010 (within 1 month of their reconciliation), and the divorce order was granted in April 2011 where Deepa was noted absent and it was granted by default by the court. The lawyer found out that Amol had filed an Affidavit of Service from a process server, who made a statement on oath that he had personally served Deepa with the Divorce Application "by leaving a copy with her" (which she had never received). She had never lived at the address he showed on Divorce Application, where the process server claimed to have served her personally. The process server was included in the list of witnesses. However, the court relied on Affidavit of Service to be true, consider her to be properly served, as the timeline of 30 days for her responding passed, she was noted in default and the court granted the divorce. ↵
A citizen of a country other than Canada who has been given the right to immigrate to Canada and stay in the country permanently
This is an order in criminal cases mandated either by the police or the court that prevents any direct or indirect communication between an accused person and the victim. The accused is to have absolutely no contact with the victim. Such orders can be arranged at any point during the criminal justice process and typically remains in place until such time the accused is either sentenced or found not guilty at trial. Since September 2014, no-contact conditions have been required for all probation orders and conditional sentences unless:
the Court finds there are exceptional circumstances; or
the victim agrees to the contact (Department of Justice, 2017)
These are the actions and activities which take place during a legal dispute. It is a blanket term that defines the entire legal process from beginning to end. This could also refer to a specific type of hearing or trial (Justice Education Society, 2019).
For over 100 years, the Ontario Association of Children’s Aid Societies (OACAS) has been serving and promoting the welfare and well-being of children, youth and families in Ontario. Their vision is to re-imagine child welfare: to create an effective children’s services system that supports ALL children, youth, families, and communities to thrive. There are 50 Children’s Aid Societies (CASs) and Indigenous Child and Family Well-Being Agencies in Ontario. OACAS is an association representing 49 member organizations. Of these, 47 of 49 are mandated CASs and Indigenous Child and Family Well-Being Agencies; two are pre-mandated Indigenous agencies. More information about the services provided by the OACAS can be found at http://www.oacas.org/
A peace bond is a protective court order issued by a Justice of the Peace(JP) in a criminal court. Essentially, it is a signed promise that a person will continue to maintain the peace and be of good behaviour for a period of time. It can be filed against a spouse, partner, or any other person with whom there is a relationship with. An individual may apply for this by way of court application or a court (CLEO, 2017).
If there is a conflict of interest in any legal matter, it is the duty of the current lawyer/paralegal, to recommend their client seek independent legal advice (ILA). In general terms, independent legal advice is provided by an outside lawyer or paralegal who is unrelated to the client’s matter, associated parties, or the lawyer or paralegal, and who does not have a conflicting interest. The purpose of this is to have an outside perspective on a certain topic or decision which is both objective in nature and free of any bias (Law Society of Ontario, 2019). ILA is important to ensure that a client has signed a document after understanding the consequences and with free will and no pressure or undue influence.
One person has the responsibility and authority to make major decisions about the child, primarily about the child’s health education and religion.
A restraining order can be requested from a family court if there is fear that a former spouse/partner could potentially cause harm to another member of the family. This is completed within a Family Court and must be mandated by a judge to be considered binding. Typically, it lists a number of conditions in which the spouse/partner must adhere to and obey and can either be broad or detailed, depending on the situation. An example of a general restraining order would be the instruction that the partner/spouse “cannot come near you or your children.” Alternatively, a more detailed order would stipulate that a partner/spouse cannot come to a place of employment, must maintain a specific distance, cannot visit children at school, or try to initiate communication at locations often frequented. It is applied for by way of a court application or a court motion (if urgent) (Ministry of Attorney General, 2009).