Family And Divorce Law

Can an assault causing bodily harm against a spouse impact parenting time arrangements during a divorce in British Columbia?

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Can an Assault Causing Bodily Harm Against a Spouse Affect Parenting Time During Divorce in British Columbia?

Short answer: Yes. In British Columbia, an assault causing bodily harm against a spouse can affect parenting time, but it does not automatically do so. The court’s primary consideration is always the best interests of the child, including the child’s physical, emotional, and psychological safety, security, and well-being.

Quick Answer

An assault causing bodily harm against a spouse can materially affect parenting time in a British Columbia divorce. The court must consider family violence, including violence directed at another family member, and determine whether the child was directly or indirectly exposed to it and whether it affects the child’s safety, security, and well-being.

Depending on the evidence, the court may:

  • order supervised parenting time;
  • reduce the duration or frequency of parenting time;
  • impose conditions such as counselling or anger management;
  • restrict overnight parenting time; or
  • allow parenting time to continue if the evidence does not show a current risk to the child.

Legal Framework in British Columbia

For divorcing spouses in British Columbia, parenting issues are generally governed by the Divorce Act. British Columbia courts also regularly consider the Family Law Act, especially when interpreting family violence, parenting arrangements, and child safety.

Both statutes make it clear that the court must focus on the best interests of the child. Both also recognize that violence directed at one parent may be highly relevant even if the child was not the direct target.

What the Divorce Act Says

Section 16 of the Divorce Act requires the court to consider only the best interests of the child when making parenting orders. The statute states that primary consideration must be given to the child’s physical, emotional, and psychological safety, security, and well-being.

Family Violence Must Be Considered

The court must consider family violence and its impact on:

  • the ability and willingness of the person who engaged in the violence to care for and meet the needs of the child; and
  • whether cooperation between the parties in making decisions about the child is appropriate.

Family Violence Has a Broad Meaning

The Divorce Act defines family violence broadly. It includes violent or threatening conduct, coercive and controlling behaviour, conduct that causes a family member to fear for their safety, and, in the case of a child, direct or indirect exposure to such conduct.

Conditions and Supervision Are Available

Where appropriate, the court may impose conditions on parenting time, require supervised parenting time, or supervise the transfer of the child between parents.

For plain-language guidance from the federal government, see the Department of Justice Canada resource on family violence and parenting under the Divorce Act.

What BC’s Family Law Act Says

British Columbia’s Family Law Act follows the same core principle: the court must consider only the best interests of the child.

Violence Toward Another Family Member Still Matters

Section 37 of the Family Law Act requires the court to consider the impact of family violence on the child’s safety, security, and well-being, whether the violence was directed at the child or another family member.

The Court Must Assess Exposure and Harm

Section 38 requires the court to consider the nature and seriousness of the violence, whether the child was exposed to family violence that was not directed at the child, and the harm or risk of harm to the child’s physical, psychological, and emotional well-being.

For general provincial information, see the Government of British Columbia’s page on family violence.

Why Violence Against a Spouse Matters in Parenting Cases

 child does not need to be the direct victim of physical violence for the violence to affect parenting time. If a child sees, hears, senses, or is otherwise exposed to violence against a parent, the court may conclude that the child’s best interests are affected.

Exposure to domestic violence can undermine a child’s emotional security, create fear and instability, and raise concerns about the violent parent’s ability to parent safely and appropriately.

In practical terms, an assault against a spouse may suggest:

  • poor emotional regulation;
  • anger or impulse-control issues;
  • coercive or controlling behaviour;
  • an inability to communicate safely with the other parent; or
  • a parenting environment that exposes the child to fear, conflict, or instability.

Possible Parenting Outcomes

Where the evidence shows serious family violence, repeated assaults, threats, or direct or indirect exposure of the child to the violence, the court may order supervised parenting time.

The court may also impose restrictions such as:

  • shorter visits;
  • daytime-only parenting time;
  • no overnight visits;
  • neutral pick-up and drop-off arrangements;
  • communication through counsel or parenting apps only; and
  • counselling, treatment, or anger management requirements.

Where the relationship is abusive, volatile, or unsafe, the court may conclude that a shared parenting model or cooperative decision-making arrangement is unrealistic and not in the child’s best interests.

Violence against a spouse does not automatically end parenting time. If the violence is historical, the parent has accepted responsibility, addressed the risk, complied with conditions, and there is no evidence of current danger to the child, parenting time may continue or later expand.

Why It Is Not Automatic

British Columbia courts do not apply an automatic rule that an assault against a spouse always results in supervised or reduced parenting time. The court must assess the evidence and decide how the violence affects the child’s best interests in the specific circumstances of the case.

The court will consider issues such as the seriousness of the assault, whether it formed part of a pattern, whether the child was exposed to it, whether the violent parent accepts responsibility, whether treatment has taken place, and whether a present risk remains.

Key Factors the Court Will Consider

Was it isolated or part of a pattern?

Were there injuries, medical treatment, police involvement, or criminal charges?

Was it a one-time incident or repeated behaviour?

How recent was the violence?

Did the child see, hear, or otherwise experience the violence?

Does the conduct indicate instability, poor judgment, or lack of self-control?

Would shared decision-making or frequent communication be unsafe or unrealistic?

Has the parent addressed the issue, or does the danger continue?

Are supervision or structured exchanges required?

What parenting arrangement best protects the child while preserving an appropriate relationship with each parent?

Practical Guidance

Document incidents carefully and promptly.
Keep medical records, police file numbers, photographs, and witness information.
Record how the child was exposed or affected.
Consider whether a protection order or interim parenting order is necessary.
Seek legal advice as early as possible.

Take the allegations seriously.
Comply strictly with any court orders, bail conditions, or protection orders.
Consider counselling, anger management, parenting courses, or substance-use treatment where appropriate.
Avoid hostile communication or involving the child in the conflict.
Focus on demonstrating insight, stability, and present safety.

Related Pax Law Resources

Conclusion

An assault causing bodily harm against a spouse can significantly affect parenting time in a British Columbia divorce. The law does not treat spouse-directed violence as irrelevant simply because the child was not the direct victim. Instead, the court must assess whether the violence affects the child’s safety, security, emotional well-being, and overall best interests.

Depending on the evidence, the result may include supervised parenting time, restrictions, structured exchanges, or continued parenting time where the risk has been addressed. The outcome is always fact-specific.

If you are dealing with parenting issues involving allegations of assault, family violence, or coercive control, it is important to obtain legal advice as early as possible.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every family law case depends on its own facts. You should obtain legal advice about your specific circumstances.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. It can affect parenting time if the court finds the assault is relevant to the child’s best interests, safety, or emotional well-being.

No. A child’s direct or indirect exposure to violence can be enough to affect parenting arrangements.

No. Supervision is possible, but it is not automatic. The court assesses the evidence and the present level of risk.

A single incident can still matter, especially if it was serious, recent, or occurred in the child’s presence.

Family violence can still be highly relevant even without criminal charges or a conviction.

Yes. Family violence is broader than physical assault and can include threats, coercive control, and conduct that causes fear.

Yes. The Divorce Act usually governs parenting orders in divorce proceedings.

It means the court focuses on the arrangement that best protects and promotes the child’s welfare.

Yes. The court can permit daytime visits only if that is in the child’s best interests.

Yes. Sometimes parenting time remains unsupervised, but pick-up and drop-off arrangements are supervised or neutral.

Yes. Exposure to violence is an important factor even where the child was not the direct target.

It can help. Courts may consider treatment, counselling, insight, and demonstrated behavioural change.

The court will consider all available evidence. The absence of obvious harm does not automatically make family violence irrelevant.

Yes. Courts may require child-focused communication through text, counsel, or parenting apps.

Yes. If cooperation is unsafe or unrealistic, the court may reject shared decision-making.

Yes. Protection orders can shape contact, communication, and exchange terms.

Police reports, photographs, medical records, witness evidence, messages, and evidence of the child’s exposure or distress can all be important.

Yes. If the violence is historical and there is no current risk to the child, parenting time may continue or later expand.

No. Parenting decisions are meant to protect the child and serve the child’s best interests, not punish a parent.

Yes. Allegations or findings of family violence can significantly affect interim and final parenting orders.

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