There is an increasing awareness of domestic violence as an issue in society and with this societal awareness has come recognition by the court. If, for example, a wife has been subjected to constant physical and emotional abuse by the husband to the extent that she is unable to fulfil her employment or has to change careers from a highly paid position (modelling) to a lower paid one (cleaning) as a direct result of the husband's abuse, the conduct can be taken into account by the court as having direct financial consequences. Such a set of circumstances takes into account the financial losses caused during the marriage by the conduct of the husband on the wife as well as possibly creating a higher future needs consideration, particularly as it affects future earning capacity. But the effects of violence are generally more subtle and it may not be that there is an obvious change from modelling to cleaning.
The court will consider the wife's potential to contribute had she not been the subject of abuse. Another example may be where one party's considered contribution as homemaker and parent may be increased where that party has endured domestic violence at the instigation of the other party. The court is required to assess the contribution that each spouse has made to the property over the period of the marriage. A course of violent conduct by one party towards another which makes the other party's contribution more arduous is a fact a trial judge is entitled to take into account. The application of that principle is not limited to domestic violence but can extend to other forms of conduct such as bad business deals, gambling and wasteful destruction of assets. Certain conduct may even be classified as resulting in a negative financial contributions.
Violence in the home is, of itself, an indication of a negative contribution to the welfare of the family and is therefore relevant in the determination of how to adjust property interests following the breakdown of a marriage. The effect of marital conduct in property settlement proceedings can get extremely technical.
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