November 6, 2024 – Religious Divorce & S. 21.1, Divorce Act

“At the close of the trial, the mother asked the court to order, as part of the final divorce order, the father to provide the mother with a religious divorce within 90 days of this decision. The mother did not give me any legal authority to make such an order. The only evidence at trial that pertains to this request was that the parties are Muslim, and the mother’s religion is very important to her. There was no evidence at trial that the mother had requested a religious divorce from the father or that the father had refused to provide it.

I find that the court does not have jurisdiction to make such an order at this time and dismiss this claim for the following reasons:

a.   The mother has not included a claim for a religious divorce in her pleadings. It is not in her Answer. While this is not necessarily fatal to her request, the fact that I did not have any evidence that the father was on notice that she was seeking such an order from the court means that I cannot find that, despite not being in her pleadings, it is otherwise just and in accordance with the court’s primary objective under Rule 2 to allow this claim to be raised at the end of the trial.

b.   The mother has not given me any authority in support of the court having jurisdiction to make the requested order.

c.   The process provided for under s. 21.1 of the Divorce Actaddresses removing barriers to remarriage, but that process has not been followed here. Under s.21.1, the court has discretion to refuse to hear a party who fails to eliminate barriers to the remarriage of the spouse entitled to a divorce in Canada (see Zargarian-Tala v. Bayat-Mokhtari, 2019 BCSC 448; Salehi v. Tawoosi, 2016 ONSC 54; Schiewitz v. Shiewitz, 2018 ONSC 3864). Usually, the s.21.1 process is initiated well before trial because the remedy provided under the Divorce Act is to strike pleadings if the barriers are not removed, not to make an order requiring a party to grant a religious divorce.

d.    Even if I were to attempt to use s.21.1 to grant some similar order to the one sought, the mother has not provided evidence at the trial of the barriers to remarriage or steps taken to obtain a religious divorce or the information otherwise required under s.21.1.

My decision not to make an order requiring the father to grant the mother a religious divorce should not be seen as condoning any refusal by the father to do so. To the extent that the father seeks relief in the future under the Divorce Act, such as on a motion to change, the mother may wish to attempt to use s.21.1 of the Divorce Act at that time. However, I am not deciding the issue of the application of section 21.1 to variation proceedings.”

            Sablani v. Sablani, 2023 ONSC 6288 (CanLII) at 13-14