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LSB July 2022 LR

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FAMILY LAW CASE NOTES<br />

The appeal was allowed and the case<br />

remitted for rehearing.<br />

CHILDREN – ARTIFICIAL CONCEPTION<br />

PROCEDURE – RESPONDENT LACKED<br />

STANDING TO BRING A PARENTING<br />

APPLICATION WHERE SHE AND THE<br />

DECEASED MOTHER WERE NOT IN A DE<br />

FACTO RELATIONSHIP<br />

In Wickham & Toledano [<strong>2022</strong>]<br />

FedCFamC1F 32 (3 February, <strong>2022</strong>) Carew<br />

J heard an application for parenting orders<br />

by the maternal aunt and her husband in<br />

respect of twins born in 2021 where their<br />

birth mother died in that year.<br />

The respondent (Ms B) was the former<br />

partner of the late mother. After a short<br />

engagement and at least five separations,<br />

their same sex relationship ended in April,<br />

2021.<br />

The interim issue before the Court was<br />

Ms B’s standing to apply for a parenting<br />

order.<br />

It was agreed that per s 60H(1) of the<br />

Act, the respondent was a parent if she<br />

and the birth mother were in a de facto<br />

relationship at the time of carrying out of<br />

the artificial conception procedure which<br />

resulted in the birth of the children ([20]).<br />

Carew J said (from [21]):<br />

“Whether or not Ms B and the<br />

respondent lived in a de facto relationship<br />

at the time the artificial conception<br />

procedure was carried out is a question of<br />

fact …<br />

( … )<br />

[51] … [T]he relationship between the<br />

respondent and Ms B was short. … It was<br />

an intense and volatile relationship. They<br />

maintained their own residences despite<br />

Ms B spending time, including overnights,<br />

at the respondent’s residence … They<br />

owned no property together. They had no<br />

joint accounts. …<br />

[52] It could not be said that [at the<br />

time of the procedure] … that they had a<br />

relationship as a couple living together on<br />

a genuine domestic basis.<br />

[53] Accordingly, I find that the<br />

respondent is not a parent within the<br />

meaning of the Act.”<br />

The Court then found (at [75]) that<br />

Ms B was not a person concerned with<br />

the care, welfare and development of the<br />

children within the meaning of s 65C(c)<br />

(for reasons including that she had “no<br />

relationship with the children”), such that<br />

her application was dismissed and the case<br />

was otherwise listed for a final hearing.<br />

PROPERTY – INTERIM ORDERS TO SELL<br />

THE FORMER MATRIMONIAL HOME ARE<br />

NOT FINAL ORDERS SOLELY BECAUSE<br />

THEY RENDERED THE WIFE’S FINAL<br />

APPLICATION OTIOSE – WIFE RETAINED AN<br />

ABILITY TO PURCHASE THE HOME<br />

In Kartal & Templeman [<strong>2022</strong>]<br />

FedCFamC1A 46 (4 April, <strong>2022</strong>), Austin<br />

J, heard a wife’s application for leave to<br />

appeal against interim orders made by<br />

a magistrate in the Magistrates Court<br />

of Western Australia for the sale of the<br />

former matrimonial home.<br />

The parties had significant debt.<br />

The wife sought interim orders for the<br />

property to be transferred into her sole<br />

name so that she could re-finance the<br />

debt. The husband sought the interim sale<br />

of the property and for the debts to be<br />

discharged from the proceeds of sale. The<br />

magistrate made orders in the terms of the<br />

husband’s application. The wife appealed.<br />

Austin J said (from [17]):<br />

“The wife considers the sale orders<br />

are final because their execution would<br />

preclude her from pressing her application<br />

for orders granting her sole proprietorship<br />

of the former family home at … trial.<br />

While it is true the sale orders render<br />

otiose her application for final relief<br />

… that consequence does not convert<br />

interlocutory orders into final orders.<br />

[18] The orders are not ‘final’ because<br />

they do not exhaust the Court’s statutory<br />

power and are not dispositive of the<br />

parties’ respective applications …<br />

( … )<br />

[22] … If the former family home is<br />

sold according to the orders, nothing stops<br />

the wife from purchasing the property on<br />

the open market with the aid of the same<br />

financial assistance she had envisaged …<br />

to … acquire the husband’s one-half share.<br />

…<br />

( … )<br />

[59] … The wife’s application was<br />

to stop the sale by acquiring exclusive<br />

legal title in the property. Her aim was to<br />

preserve the home for herself …<br />

[60] What then … brought the wife’s<br />

application for an interim alteration of<br />

property interests within legal principles?<br />

Why should she have been able to preempt<br />

the outcome of the adjustment<br />

proceedings … by acquiring exclusive title<br />

… ? Why should the husband have been<br />

deprived of access to his share of the net<br />

equity … ? These were questions she did<br />

not answer … ”<br />

The wife’s application was dismissed<br />

with costs. B<br />

<strong>July</strong> <strong>2022</strong> THE BULLETIN 35

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