A recent change to British Columbia’s Family Law Act
provides greater protection for inheritances from claims of spouses on the
breakdown of a marriage or marriage-like relationship. The basic structure of
our Family Law Act provides that some assets are “included property” in the division
of property and other assets are “excluded property.” In most cases, included
assets are divided equally between spouses following the breakdown of the marriage
or marriage-like relationship, and excluded property is, well, generally
excluded from the division. The court may in some circumstances deviate from this
scheme of division, but for the purpose of this blog, lets keep it simple.
When one spouse receives and inheritance or gift, that
property is excluded. However, if the property appreciates in value during the marriage
or relationship, then the gain is included, and divided equally. Say, for
example, one spouse inherits a house worth $800,000 from her mother (probably not
in Vancouver), and on separation from her spouse, the house is worth $1
million, then she keeps $800,000, but shares the $200,000 gain with her
ex-spouse.
This seems simple enough, and strikes me as fair. The mother
intended to benefit her daughter, rather than her daughter’s spouse, but on the
other hand, the appreciation in value occurred during the marriage. Where things
get murkier is if the daughter transfers the house into her spouse’s name
during the marriage. Perhaps she transfers title into a joint tenancy with her
spouse, so that if she dies before him, he will receive the house by right-of-survivorship.
In that case, does the house remain excluded property?
The British Columbia Court of Appeal, answered that if excluded
property is gifted by one spouse to the other, it is no longer excluded. I
wrote about the case of V.J.F v. S.K.W., 2016 BCCA 186 here. In that case, the
husband inherited $2 million from his employer, and used most of the funds to
buy land, the title to which he and his wife registered in her sole name. On
the breakdown of the relationship, both the trial judge and the Court of Appeal
held that the residence was no longer excluded property.
The British Columbia Government published a discussion paper in August 2016 discussing this issue and invited comments for potential
legislative change.
Now, the legislation has been changed, effective May 11,
2023. The following provision has been added to section 85:
(3) If property is excluded from family property under subsection (1), the exclusion applies despite any transfer of legal or beneficial ownership of the property from a spouse to the other spouse.
85 (1) excludes from family property inheritances as well as
certain other categories of property such as assets brought into the relationship,
and any property derived from the sale of excluded property.
If this new subsection 85(3) had been in effect when the proceeding
in V.J.F. was commenced, it is likely
that the $2 million would have been excluded, rather than shared between the
spouses.
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