No one plans to go to
family court. But life takes unexpected twists. A couple’s marriage hits
a rough spot. Tensions build, destabilizing the children and driving
away friends. At some point, divorce becomes the only viable option.
Suddenly, what was personal becomes legal. The estranged partners have to sever their relationship, divide their assets and determine who gets custody of the children.
And what was legal soon becomes financial. The typical hourly rate for a family lawyer in Ontario is $350 to $400. Most people gulp and pay, thinking their case will be settled quickly. But complications arise, more documents are needed, the proceedings are delayed, the presiding judge changes. Approximately half of family court litigants run out of money and wind up representing themselves.
The government could
write the forms litigants must fill out in clear, comprehensible
language. Macfarlane assigned a member of the team to complete Ontario’s
supposedly user-friendly forms. The third-year law student was
bewildered by some of the terms and couldn’t understand what “supporting
documentation” was being requested.
The Law Society of Upper Canada could allow licensed paralegals back into the practice of family law. It barred
them six years ago. Loosening the prohibition would offer litigants an
affordable alternative to get their documents prepared and their cases
ready.
Lawyers, court
officials and legal aid workers could steer more people toward
mediation. Many of the litigants in Macfarlane’s study were never
offered that option.
Law firms could
unbundle their services, allowing clients who can’t afford full-service
packages to buy the types of assistance they needed most.
The Canadian Judicial Council
could investigate complaints about inappropriate behaviour on the bench
more seriously. Denigrating a litigant who can’t afford a lawyer is not
only rude, it militates against a fair trial.
Courthouses could
offer orientation workshops so litigants would know what to expect, how
to address a judge, what court terms mean and what to bring to their
trial. In addition, they could provide on-site photocopying and
downloading for a nominal fee.
Scheduling officials could ensure that one judge — not a succession — handles a case from start to finish.
Large population
centres could set up special courts for self-represented litigants. They
would allow judges who were willing to do some coaching from the bench
to develop a specialty and would provide an alternate model of justice
for incoming judges.
None of these proposals would solve the fundamental problem: courts guarded by a coterie of powerful professionals.
But they would make life easier for people seeking justice in a system that treats them as bothersome amateurs.
Original Article
Source: thestar.com
Author: Carol Goar
Suddenly, what was personal becomes legal. The estranged partners have to sever their relationship, divide their assets and determine who gets custody of the children.
And what was legal soon becomes financial. The typical hourly rate for a family lawyer in Ontario is $350 to $400. Most people gulp and pay, thinking their case will be settled quickly. But complications arise, more documents are needed, the proceedings are delayed, the presiding judge changes. Approximately half of family court litigants run out of money and wind up representing themselves.
For about 10 per cent, it’s an intellectual challenge. For the rest, it’s an emotional nightmare.
The number of
self-represented litigants in Canada’s family court system has ballooned
in the past decade. In Toronto, three out of four people who appear in
family court today are without legal counsel. They have to do everything
themselves — from downloading court documents to proving their fitness
to raise a child.
Judges can be acid-tongued. Court officials can be unhelpful. The paperwork can be overwhelming.
Julie Macfarlane, a law professor at the University of Windsor, interviewed 283 individuals. Their accounts and her research
convinced her that Canada’s justice system is badly out of the step
with the times and the needs of the people it purports to serve.
The trouble is the two
best solutions — a reduction in lawyers’ fees and an expansion of legal
aid — aren’t going to happen anytime soon.
So Macfarlane and her
research team came up with a list of recommendations that would make the
current justice system fairer, easier to navigate and less rigid.
None of these proposals would solve the fundamental problem: courts guarded by a coterie of powerful professionals.
But they would make life easier for people seeking justice in a system that treats them as bothersome amateurs.
Source: thestar.com
Author: Carol Goar
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