Roxana Soica
Founder | Family Law Lawyer
If you are experiencing or have experienced domestic violence, abuse, or coercive control in your relationship, you are not alone — and you have legal options that can protect you and your children.
At Soica & Associates, we provide compassionate, confidential, and strategically focused legal support to survivors of domestic violence across Ontario. We help you understand your rights, take immediate protective steps, and move toward a secure future with clarity and dignity.
If you are in immediate danger, please call 911. For confidential support, the Assaulted Women’s Helpline is available 24/7 at 1-866-863-0511.
Family violence is taken very seriously by Ontario courts and has been given explicit statutory recognition since the 2021 amendments to Canada’s Divorce Act. Courts are now required to consider any family violence when making orders about parenting arrangements — including decision-making responsibility and parenting time. This is not a discretionary consideration — it is a mandatory factor in every parenting assessment where family violence is alleged.
Courts assess:
A history of domestic violence — even if it was never reported to police — is relevant evidence in family court proceedings. It can be presented through your own affidavit evidence and testimony, witnesseses, videos, recordings, medical or counselling records, photographs, and communications. Our lawyers will help you document and present your experience effectively, safely, and in a way that is strategically positioned for your specific matter.

When safety is a concern, the law provides powerful tools that can be obtained quickly — in some cases on the same day, without advance notice to the other party.
Under the Family Law Act, a court can issue a restraining order prohibiting your spouse or partner from contacting you, attending your home or workplace, or engaging in specified conduct. Restraining orders can be obtained on an urgent basis. In cases of immediate risk, they can be granted without notice to the other party (ex parte) — meaning your abuser is not informed until after the order is in place. Violating a restraining order is a criminal offence.
In urgent situations involving the safety of a child, courts can issue temporary parenting orders on short notice to ensure children are in the appropriate parent’s care without delay. These emergency applications can proceed on an expedited basis and do not require a full hearing before relief is granted.
Even if your spouse’s name is on the title, a court can order them to leave the family home and grant you exclusive possession — particularly where children are involved or where remaining in the home poses a genuine safety risk. Courts can make these orders on an urgent basis. This is one of the most protective tools available to survivors of domestic violence and should be considered early.
In addition to civil family law remedies, the criminal justice system may be engaged. A peace bond is a court order requiring an individual to keep the peace and abide by specific conditions. Criminal charges may also be pursued where the conduct meets the relevant threshold. If your abuser is charged criminally, they will likely be under criminal court conditions to be away from you and your home. Our family lawyers work alongside criminal counsel where appropriate to ensure all available protective avenues are pursued simultaneously.
This is one of the most urgent questions survivors ask when seeking legal help. Under current Ontario law, family violence is a significant — and mandatory — factor in all parenting decisions. Courts will not automatically award equal parenting time in situations involving documented family violence. Possible outcomes depending on the severity and nature of the violence include:
Every situation is different. Our lawyers help you understand what outcome is achievable based on the specific documented history in your case and advocate for the arrangements that will keep you and your children safe.
Domestic violence does not automatically entitle a victim to a greater share of property. Division of Property in Ontario for married couples is governed by the equalization framework under the Family Law Act regardless of the conduct of the parties during the marriage. However, violence and coercion can affect property division indirectly in important ways:

Leaving an abusive relationship requires careful planning — both for your immediate safety and your legal position going forward. Some important guidance:
Out-of-court processes — including mediation, collaborative law, and negotiation — are not appropriate in situations involving domestic violence or coercive control. These processes require a basic level of safety and balance between the parties that cannot exist where one party has used violence or coercion against the other. Our lawyers will always screen for these issues and will never recommend an out-of-court process where it would put you at risk. Court proceedings — including urgent motions — remain fully available and are often the only appropriate path for survivors.
Emergency ex parte restraining orders: Can be obtained on the day of application in urgent circumstances.
Urgent parenting orders: Typically heard within weeks to months of filing.
Full contested parenting and support proceedings: 12 months to 3+ years.
Legal Aid: May be available for eligible survivors of domestic violence.
→ In domestic violence situations, speed is critical. Contact us immediately to discuss your options.
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Yes. Under Ontario’s Family Law Act, a court can issue a restraining order prohibiting your spouse from contacting you or attending specified locations. In urgent situations, these orders can be obtained on the same day, sometimes without your spouse being notified in advance. Violation of a restraining order is a criminal offence. Contact a family lawyer immediately to discuss your situation.
Yes, significantly. Under the 2021 amendments to the Divorce Act, courts are required to consider family violence as a mandatory factor in all parenting decisions. Depending on the nature and severity of the violence, courts may order supervised parenting time, impose conditions, or in serious cases deny parenting time entirely. A history of violence — even if not criminally prosecuted — is relevant evidence in family court proceedings.
Call 911 if you are in immediate danger. If you need to leave urgently but are not in immediate danger, contact the Assaulted Women’s Helpline at 1-866-863-0511 for immediate safety planning support. Contact a family lawyer as soon as it is safe to do so — emergency legal orders can be obtained quickly and may allow you to return to the home with your children while your spouse is required to leave.
Yes. A separation agreement or marriage contract signed under duress, coercion, or undue influence can be challenged and set aside by a court. The same applies if you were not provided with adequate disclosure or independent legal advice before signing. Our lawyers regularly review agreements in these circumstances and advise on the strength of a potential challenge.
Not directly — Ontario’s equalization framework is based on financial calculations rather than spousal conduct. However, if violence or coercion led you to sign an agreement you would not otherwise have signed, that agreement may be challengeable. Where a spouse has recklessly or deliberately dissipated assets during or in anticipation of separation, courts can make an unequal division of net family property.
If you did not find the answer you’re looking for, you may speak with a family law lawyer about your situation and receive clear next steps. No obligations.