Supreme Court of Canada changes guidelines for international child custody cases
Canada’s top court is issuing new guidelines on how international custody disputes should be judged, saying “all relevant circumstances” should be taken into account when deciding what country a child should live in.
The direction from the Supreme Court of Canada comes in a ruling on a custody battle involving parents who clashed on whether their children should live in Canada or Germany. Much of the case hinged on how much say children should have in such matters and what constitutes their “habitual residence.”
“The issues raised are important, and the law on how cases such as this fall to be decided requires clarification,” the court said in a written decision issued Friday.
To date, judgements in Canada have been based mainly on what a parent’s circumstances and “intentions” were when taking a child across borders in breach of a custody agreement, the top court said.