Zitat Judge rules mom is milking her parental rights with breastfeeding defence
KIRK MAKIN
From Monday's Globe and Mail
April 27, 2009 at 3:21 AM EDT
JUSTICE REPORTER
If you refuse to wean, then get a machine, an Ontario Superior Court judge has told a mother who used her breastfeeding schedule as a technique to deny access to her baby's father.
Jennifer Johne and Carl Cavannah met at a wedding on Aug. 27, 2005. Their brief affair resulted in a baby girl being born on June 16, 2006.
After the child was born, Mr. Cavannah quit his job teaching special-needs children and moved to Collingwood, Ont., to be closer to his daughter. He started making voluntary child-support payments, took parenting courses and pored over baby books.
However, Mr. Cavannah's intensive efforts to become a fully involved parent were thwarted, in part, by a rigorous breast-feeding schedule imposed by Ms. Johne.
"The child is now more than 29 months of age and is still being breastfed," Mr. Justice Alan Ingram wrote in an eight-page ruling.
"Jen believed strongly - through medical advice - in the merits of breastfeeding. However, the breastfeeding has a secondary impact upon Carl in that it is used as an excuse to restrict his access."
Judge Ingram quoted from an e-mail that Ms. Johne, a 35-year-old artist, sent to Mr. Cavannah shortly after the baby was born.
"A baby belongs with its mother, and if you had an understanding of the needs of a fully breast-fed baby and truly had [her] interests at heart, you would not be bringing this subject up again," she stated in the e-mail.
Given her intransigence, Judge Ingram said that Mr. Cavannah, 42, had been remarkably patient.
"Jen has been unwilling to give a timetable as to when the breastfeeding will end," Judge Ingram said. "But now, the time has come for Jen to have greater consideration for the relationship between the child and Carl. If she used a breast pump and provided the milk to Carl, he would be willing to give it to [the child]."
The judge also praised the child's parents. "She has two parents who have made her the centre of their lives, unusual in that this was an unplanned pregnancy between two parents who had a brief relationship and had not committed to having children," he said.
Under the Children's Law Reform Act, a mother and father are equally entitled to custody of a child. When an access dispute breaks out, judges use a list of criteria to determine whether or not to depart from an equal-access regime.
Judge Ingram ruled that Ms. Johne and Mr. Cavannah's child would be best served by a 50/50 access arrangement. ...
SPOUSAL SUPPORT Father gets 'clean break' on spousal costs Court puts cap on ruling ordering man to pay wife of two years $1,500 a month for indefinite period
KIRK MAKIN
April 27, 2009
JUSTICE REPORTER
After ending a two-year marriage that had produced no children, Rod Refcio had every reason to believe that his spousal support obligations would be modest.
Ontario Court Judge Thomas Granger instead shocked the young London, Ont., lawyer in 2006 by ordering him to pay his ex-wife $1,500 a month - indefinitely.
Last week, a Divisional Court panel capped the award, saying that it will end next year. There must be a realistic end to the compensation to which Katia Refcio is entitled, the court said. "There needs to be a finality and a clean break at a reasonable point in time."
Legal experts said the Refcio case illustrates how dysfunctional and unpredictable the spousal support system can be.
"The problem with spousal support right across Canada is that there really is not the kind of predictability that lawyers and clients want and need," said Michael Cochrane, a Toronto family lawyer.