Wednesday, August 19, 2015

A Division of Pension Assets Based on the Period of Cohabitation, Not Marriage


Elliston v. Elliston, 2015 BCCA 274

This recent case from the B.C. Court of Appeal upheld an earlier decision where the trial judge elected to divide a pension in a divorce proceeding based not on the period of marriage, but on the period of cohabitation.

The parties began cohabiting in 1992, but didn’t marry until 2008 and eventually separated in 2012. The Appellant husband was a member of the Canadian Armed Forces and over the course of their period of cohabitation and marriage the two moved around the country a number of times in order to accommodate his career. The Respondent wife had comparatively small earnings, partly as a result of a workplace injury early in their relationship that resulted in her receiving workplace compensation benefits.

Both the lower court and the Court of Appeal noted that the division of a military pension is performed subject to a number of statutes, including portions of the B.C. Family Relations Act, the Pension Benefits Division Act, and the Division of Pensions Regulation (another B.C. statute). The Courts found that through the interplay of the relevant sections of these acts, a military pension is to be divided based on the couples’ period of cohabitation unless doing so would be unfair, having regard to a number of factors.


The Court found that the onus was on the Appellant husband, “to establish that an equal division based on the entire period of cohabitation would be unfair to him.” At trial, the judge found as a fact that the respondent wife did contribute to the pension and that there was a clear evidentiary basis to construe her support of her husband’s advancing career as a contribution to the pension, a family asset.