Common-law relationships are those that don’t involve any sort of formal marriage ceremony. They are established once you and your partner having been living together (or cohabiting) for a length of time.
If you decide to stop cohabiting and end the relationship, you may be unclear on what legal rights you have against each other. Usually there are questions about financial support and property division, and the answers can be more complicated for common-law couples than married partners. That’s because the laws governing common-law unions are different than those that relate to marriages.
1. Common Law as it Relates to Financial Support
As most people know, if you and your spouse are legally married, you have an obligation to financially support each other both during your marriage, and after you separate and divorce. The same goes if you are part of an unmarried couple – provided you and your partner have lived together continuously as a common-law couple:
or
This means that if you and your common-law partner meet either of these criteria, then under Ontario law, you are considered to be “spouses” who are obliged to financially support each other once your relationship ends.
2. Common Law as it Relates to Property Division
When it comes time to divide property, being in a common-law relationship makes things a little more complicated. Property division is dictated not so much by how long you have been living together, but rather by the nature of your relationship – and the mutual investment you each made – while you were cohabiting.
Unlike married couples, for whom the equal-division regime under the Ontario Family Law Actgoverns, unmarried partners who choose to separate have no equivalent legislation to protect them. So if you were in a common-law relationship that has now ended, you do not have the same rights as married spouses in connection with equally dividing up the property you may own. Instead, you must rely on certain legal tests that the courts will apply to your situation, to try to achieve a fair result.
The first step involves the court looking at whether you and your common-law partner have what is called a “joint family venture” together, meaning one where each of you contributed or worked towards a broader family goal.
To illustrate, let’s say you and your partner established a successful business while you were living together, but it was only made possible because you took on the childcare or household duties that allowed your partner to work long hours. Even though you do not have a legal ownership interest in the business, you may be able to ask the court to compensate you for being unable to work and earn income. The Court can do this by either making a court Order that divides the asset more fairly, or else by awarding you money for your efforts.
To prove that a “joint family venture” existed, you must show:[2]
Identifying that the business was joint family venture is only the first step. The second one is to satisfy the Court that there was “unjust enrichment” that served to benefit your common-law partner, while operating to your own detriment. You must prove:
If all of those elements have been proven, then the Court may see fit to award you monetary damages, either on a fee-for-service basis, or else by first putting a dollar-value on the joint family venture. Or, if damages are insufficient, the Court may declare that the joint family venture is impressed with what is called a “constructive trust” in your favour.[3]
Generally speaking, the longer your common-law relationship, the more likely you may be able to succeed in establishing a constructive trust; however, this is always decided on a case-by-case basis.
3. The Bottom Line
If you are in a common-law relationship and decide to separate, your legal rights are context-specific, and much less straightforward than if you and your partner were formally married. If you find yourself in this situation, this makes it all the more important for you to get good legal advice.
[1] Under s. 19 of the Family Law Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.3
[2]Kerr v. Baranow, 2011 SCC 10 (CanLII)
[3]Martin v. Sansome, 2014 ONCA 14 (CanLII)