Use this special affidavit to apply to become the guardian of a child if you're a parent who doesn't have guardianship or a non-parent (relative or non-relative) who wants to become the child's guardian. An affidavit is a written statement that contains facts that you swear or affirm to be true to support your case. See How can you become a child's guardian? for more information about how to apply for guardianship.
A document stating facts that you swear under oath or affirm to be true in front of a commissioner for taking affidavits (could be a lawyer or notary public). Use this form to create an affidavit:
See Write a Supreme Court affidavit for help with what to put into your affidavit.
Use this form to list the facts that support your application for an order that says you don't have to pay court fees if you can't afford them. This affidavit must be sworn or affirmed.
Use this form to prove in court that court documents have been delivered to the person they're meant for according to the rules of court.
Use this form to prove in court that court documents have been personally delivered, by someone other than the parties involved, to the person they're meant for, according to the rules of court.
Use this form to set out the required facts of the marriage and separation, and to give information about the children, if any, in an application for an undefended (uncontested) sole or joint divorce. It can also be used to apply for a consent order if you've resolved all the issues in your case but don't need a divorce (because, for example, you aren't married).
Use this form if you and the other person agree on the income of the party who'll be paying child support (the payor). This form is easier to fill out than a Financial Statement (Form F8), and you won't need to swear or affirm the contents.
If you're going to Chambers, you need to create an Application Record, a loose-leaf ring binder that contains photocopies of the information and evidence you'll give to the judge or master. Use this form to create the table of contents and list all the documents in your Application Record.
Use this form to book a time with the registrar to work out the terms of an order when you and the other party can't agree about what the judge ordered.
This form proves that you're divorced. It's signed and issued by the court registrar after your divorce is final.
Use this form when you file your application for divorce. The court registrar must sign it to check that your documents are in order before they send them to the judge.
Use this form to outline what financial arrangements have been made for the children if you're applying for an undefended (uncontested) sole or joint divorce or to get a final consent order when all the issues are settled and you don't need a divorce.
Use this form if you're applying for an interim order or an order to change a final order, and you and the other party agree on what the order should say.
See Write a Supreme Court order for help with what to put into your order.
Use this form to ask the court to make the orders you want for child or spousal support, parenting arrangements, or about family property or debt if you're responding to a Notice of Family Claim (F3). This document tells the court more about you and your spouse, details about your marriage (relationship) and separation, and everything that you want the court to order.
If you want the other party to use the new forms instead of documents filed before July 1, 2010, you can complete and serve a Demand (F99) on the other party, and the other party must file the requested document within 21 days of being served with the Demand.
Use this form to confirm that the document you've e-filed shows your original signature and is a true copy of the original paper version of the document that you filed electronically.
Use this form as a cover sheet when you're serving Supreme Court documents on the other party by fax.
Use this form to set out the details of what you're asking the court to order after a hearing (except for a changed order, interim order, or order made without notice and without a hearing). For example, use it if you're making a joint or sole application for an undefended divorce. This form will become the final order for your divorce once it's been signed by the judge.
See Write a Supreme Court order for help with what to put into your order.
Use this form to tell the judge or master about your income, expenses, assets, and debts. It must be filed in some cases if you apply for child support, and in all cases when you apply for or respond to an application for spousal support or respond to an application for child support. See Complete a Supreme Court Financial Statement (Form F8) for information on how to fill out this form and what to do with it.
Use this form during the discovery process to list all the documents that you have, or used to have, in your possession or control (that means you can get them even if you don't have them right now) that could be used by any party at trial to prove or disprove a material fact and all other documents that you intend to refer to at trial. You even have to share any documents that you're not planning to use because they don't support your case. You must serve the List of Documents on the other party. The other party can then ask for copies of any of the documents. You can't use any documents at trial that you didn't include on your List of Documents. If you want to add any documents, you have to update the form and serve it on the other party again.
This isn't actually a form. It's a guide to Judicial Case Conferences (JCC). Read it to prepare for your JCC.
Use this form to add or change the address at which you want to have documents served on you. You must fill out the form, file it at the court registry, and have it served on the other party before the change will take effect.
Use this form if you've filed a Notice of Family Claim (F3) and you're applying for an interim order or applying to change an order. You can also use this form to enforce a parenting order or filed written agreement, or to set aside an agreement. It sets out what type of order you want, what evidence you'll use, what the legal basis is for the order, and how long you think the hearing will take.
See Write a Supreme Court order for help with what to put into your Notice of Application.
Use this form to end all or part of a family law case. This notice can be given only if a Notice of Trial (F44) hasn't been filed.
Use this form to start most family law cases, including an application for parenting arrangements, child or spousal support, or family property and debt orders. It sets out information about you and the other party, your relationship, and the final orders you want. If you're applying jointly with your spouse for any of these orders and/or a divorce, use a Notice of Joint Family Claim (F1).
Tip: The five schedules are in the PDF form but they don't appear when you first open the file. To make them appear, either:
Use this form if there's been a delay of a year or more in your Supreme Court action (that is, no step has been taken) and you want to start it up again. This form lets the other party know that you want to continue with the court action, even if you might seem to have abandoned it.
Use this form to start an application for an undefended family law case if you're applying jointly with your spouse. You must agree on how to settle all your issues. This form sets out information about you and the other party, about your relationship, and about the final order you want.
Tip: The five schedules are in the PDF form but they don't appear when you first open the file. To make them appear, either:
File this form at the court registry to ask for a date and time for your Judicial Case Conference (JCC) and give it to the other party to let them know the date and time of the JCC. You have to set and attend a JCC before applying for most contested family orders. But there are some exceptions. See the relevant self-help guide for more information.
Use this form to let the other party know that you've filed a Notice of Family Claim (F3) or Counterclaim (F5) by publishing a "legal notice" in, for example, the classified section of the local newspaper. The court might let you use this alternative method of personal service if the person to be served can't be found or is avoiding service of the documents.
Use this form to officially schedule your trial. You can only file this form once you've reserved trial dates either at a Judicial Case Conference or with the Trial Coordinator at the court registry. You must file the Notice of Trial and serve it on the other party within 30 days of reserving your trial dates.
Use this form if you change your mind and want to withdraw your Response to Family Claim (F4) or any of the individual claims made in your Response.
Use this form if you decide you disagree with any claim filed in a Notice of Joint Family Claim (F1), and you no longer agree on the orders you want the court to make.
Use this form when you change your mind about any claim filed in a Notice of Family Claim (F3), a Response to Family Claim (F4), a Counterclaim (F5), or a Response to Counterclaim (F6) and you want to officially withdraw something you've put in one of these documents.
Use this form to ask the other person to "admit" the truth of certain facts and documents, usually facts that you agree on and aren't controversial. This way neither of you has to take the time to prove them at trial. A Notice to Admit is an effective tool for speeding up your case and shortening the trial. The facts you agree to are called admissions.
Use this form within 28 days before a Supreme Court trial in which you want to cross-examine the person who created a Section 211 child-related assessment for your case. See step 2 of Schedule and prepare for your Supreme Court trial for more information about how to use this form.
Use this form when you apply for an interim order or an order to vary (change) an existing order and the other party doesn't agree. Set out the details of what you want the judge to order. If the judge or master decides to grant the order you asked for, they'll sign the form and it will become an official court order.
See Write a Supreme Court order for help with what to put into your order.
Use this form when you and the other person have agreed on terms at a Judicial Case Conference. Set out the details of what you've agreed to. If they decide to grant the order you've agreed to, they'll sign the form and it will become an official court order.
See Write a Supreme Court order for help with what to put into your order.
Use this form when you apply for an order without providing notice to the other party. Set out the details of what you want the judge or master to order. If they decide to grant the order you ask for, they'll sign the form and it will become an official court order.
Use this form to draft the details of what you want the judge or master to order when you apply for an order to waive fees because you can't afford to pay court fees. If they decide to grant the order you ask for, they'll sign the form and it will become an official court order.
Use this form to start some types of family law cases, including when you apply to change a support or parenting order made under the Divorce Act by a court outside BC if there's no existing family law case in BC. Other types of cases started by petition are listed in Supreme Court Family Rule 3-1.
Use this form to set out the details of what you want the court to order when you apply for an order to protect you or a family member. If the judge or master decides to grant the order you ask for, they'll sign the form and it will become an official court order.
Fill in this form online to register your divorce application with the federal government.
Use this form to give the court permission to carry out the necessary Protection Order Registry check on you when you apply for guardianship of a child. See How can you become a child's guardian? for more information about how to apply for guardianship.
Use this form when you apply for a family law protection order to ask the court to arrange to serve (deliver) the granted protection order on the other person to avoid putting anyone at risk.
Use this requisition to request something from the court or to accompany documents you're filing (for example, when you apply for a consent order or to apply for an exemption from a JCC). The self-help guides on this site set out when you need to use a Requisition (F17).
Use this requisition to accompany an agreement you're filing at the Supreme Court registry. File your agreement in Supreme Court sets out when you need to use this Requisition (F17.1).
Use this requisition for an undefended (uncontested) family law case (for example, a desk order divorce). This form lists the documents that are filed with your application for an undefended family law case. You must file all the necessary documents or your application will be rejected.
Use this requisition when you apply for an order where you and the other person agree or where no notice has been given to the other person. Or use it to apply for an order for substituted service (once you've tried everything you can to serve the documents on the other person). The requisition informs the court registry that you're applying for one of these orders.
Use this form to respond to the other person's Counterclaim (F5).
Use this form to respond to the other person's Notice of Family Claim (F3).
If you're planning to apply for child support, spousal support, or a parenting order under the Divorce Act, the court has to check for existing civil protection orders, criminal proceedings/orders, and child protection proceedings/orders. You'll need to fill out this form and file it with the court before an order will be made.
If your spouse continues to fail to pay child or spousal support (you might call it maintenance), use this form to ask the judge or master to order your spouse to attend a court hearing and explain. If your spouse doesn't appear, they can be arrested and jailed.
If your spouse fails to pay support (you might call it maintenance), use this form to ask the judge or master to order your spouse to attend a court hearing and explain.
Use this form to create a title page for Supreme Court Application Records.
Use this form to describe your case and file it at the registry at least 7 days before your Supreme Court trial management conference. See step 3 of Schedule and prepare for your Supreme Court trial for more information about how to use this form.
File this form at the court registry at least 14 (but no more than 28) days before your trial starts to indicate that you're ready to start the trial and that all examinations for discovery have been completed. You'll also indicate how long you estimate the trial will take and that the Trial Management Conference has been held. See step 9 of Schedule and prepare for your Supreme Court trial for more information about how to use this form.
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