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The Full Court of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (McClelland DCJ, Riethmuller & Kari JJ) in Arrighetti & Qodirova [2026] FedCFamC1A 1 delivered a landmark appellate judgment clarifying the scope of judicial discretion in cases involving emotional and psychological harm to children. The Court dismissed a mother’s appeal challenging draconian parenting orders that imposed a six-month moratorium on contact with her daughter, indefinite supervision thereafter, and a total prohibition on contact between the child and the maternal grandmother. The case underscores the balance courts must strike between protecting children from emotional harm and preserving their right to maintain relationships with both parents under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Facts and Issues
Facts:
- The child (aged 10) had lived primarily with the mother since 2018.
- The mother alleged the father sexually abused the child; these claims were not substantiated.
- The primary judge found that the mother and maternal grandmother’s entrenched and unjustified beliefs caused emotional harm to the child, justifying a change of residence to the father and a moratorium on maternal contact for six months, followed by indefinite supervised time.
- The mother appealed, arguing the measures were disproportionate, unsupported by evidence, and failed to consider alternatives that preserved the child’s relationship with her primary carer and extended family.
Issues:
- Did the trial judge err in finding the mother posed an “unacceptable risk” of harm?
- Were the orders for six-month moratorium and indefinite supervision disproportionate?
- Did the primary judge fail to consider less restrictive alternatives that protected both safety and relationship continuity?
- Did the trial judge’s reasoning satisfy the obligation to explain key factual and legal conclusions?
Rule (Law)
- Best Interests Principle: Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) ss 60B, 60CA, 60CC, 65AA, 65D.
- The child’s best interests are the paramount consideration, particularly the safety of the child and the benefit of maintaining parental relationships where safe to do so.
- Judicial Discretion: The appeal court will intervene only where the discretion was exercised on a wrong principle or led to a plainly unjust result (House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499).
- Risk Assessment: Determinations of “unacceptable risk” must be evidence-based rather than discretionary (Isles & Nelissen (2022) FLC 94-092).
- Proportionality: Courts must ensure orders are proportionate to the degree of risk, balancing protection and parental contact (Betros & Betros [2017] FamCAFC 90).
- International Influence: UN Convention on the Rights of the Child arts 7, 9, 18 underscore children’s rights to know and be cared for by both parents, subject to safety considerations.
Application (Analysis)
1. Apprehended Risk and Maternal Beliefs
The Court upheld the finding that the mother’s persistent belief that the father was a sexual abuser, though unsubstantiated, created an unacceptable risk of emotional and psychological harm. Evidence included recordings of the mother and grandmother encouraging the child to frustrate contact with the father and engage police unnecessarily. The expert psychologist, Mr D, described “diffuse boundaries” and an “emotional alliance” between mother and child that impaired the child’s development and relationship with the father.
2. Moratorium and Indefinite Supervision
While the appellate bench acknowledged that the trial judge mistakenly thought the family report writer endorsed a six-month moratorium, it found the error immaterial since the evidence still justified a substantial period of no contact to stabilise the child’s new environment.
The Court reaffirmed that long-term supervised contact is undesirable but may be justified where a parent’s entrenched psychological stance cannot be contained and poses ongoing emotional risk.
3. Proportionality and Alternatives
McClelland DCJ accepted that courts must ordinarily explore alternatives to indefinite supervision (Betros & Betros, Slater & Light, Moose & Moose), but held that the mother’s refusal to moderate her beliefs and the grandmother’s reinforcing conduct left no safe alternative. The supervision order was therefore protective, not punitive, aligning with s 60CC(2)(a)’s emphasis on safety.
4. Rights of the Child and International Context
The Court invoked CROC to emphasize that while children have a right to parental connection (Arts 7, 9, 18), such rights exist only “where it is safe to do so.” The judgment reaffirmed that the Family Law Amendment Act 2023 shifted focus from “maximum involvement” to safety-first decision-making.
It was acknowledged that emotional abuse stemming from unfounded fixed beliefs constitutes a form of “harm” under s 60CC(2)(a), justifying the restrictions.
Judgment and Reasoning
- Outcome: Appeal dismissed; orders upheld.
- The Court found no appealable error in the trial judge’s factual findings or discretionary exercise. The mother was ordered to pay $13,979.86 in costs.
- Reasoning:
- The trial judge correctly prioritised psychological safety over relationship continuity.
- Findings were grounded in credible expert evidence and consistent with authority (Bielen & Kozma (2022), Pierce & Pierce (No 2) (2025)).
- The restrictive orders were open on the evidence, given the child’s exposure to harmful narratives.
- Supervision could be lifted if the mother demonstrated insight and compliance through therapeutic progress.
Precedents Relied Upon
- House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499
- Bielen & Kozma (2022) FLC 94-123
- Isles & Nelissen (2022) FLC 94-092
- Betros & Betros [2017] FamCAFC 90
- B & B (1993) FLC 92-357
- Bondelmonte v Bondelmonte (2017) 259 CLR 662
- Pierce & Pierce (No 2) [2025] FedCFamC1A 162
- Re: Thomas (2009) 41 Fam LR 220
Take-Home Lesson
This case is a cautionary tale in how emotional risk and fixed beliefs can be as harmful as physical abuse in the eyes of the Court.
Judicial discretion under the Family Law Act now operates within a safety-first paradigm, reinforced by the 2023 reforms.
Parents involved in high-conflict parenting disputes must demonstrate insight, therapeutic engagement, and the ability to separate belief from behaviour—or risk long-term supervision or loss of contact.
The judgment also clarifies that CROC’s influence persists as a moral compass for balancing children’s rights and safety, even though not directly incorporated into domestic law.
The appellate judgment in Leena & Leena [2025] FedCFamC1A 241 (Hogan, Altobelli & McNab JJ) serves as a critical reminder that judicial neutrality must not only exist but must be seen to exist. The Court partially allowed an appeal from parenting and property orders after finding that the trial judge’s premature comments and conduct during the hearing gave rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias. The case further addressed errors in the trial judge’s approach to contributions in the property settlement, setting aside those orders and remitting the matter for rehearing before a different judge.
Facts and Issues
- The appellant (mother) and respondent (father) disputed both parenting arrangements for two children and property settlement orders.
- During trial, the mother applied for the primary judge’s recusal, arguing his comments suggested prejudgment. Her application was refused, and the final orders were made largely in the father’s favour.
- The judge commented mid-trial that he was “not persuaded” the father posed a risk to the children—before the father was cross-examined—and made remarks suggesting the mother would “never find [the father] good enough”.
- On appeal, the mother alleged apprehended bias, failure to consider material evidence, and error in applying a presumption of equal contributions in property division.
The issues were:
- Whether the judge’s conduct and comments created a reasonable apprehension of bias.
- Whether the judge misapplied the law on property contributions, suggesting a presumption of equality.
- Whether the judge failed to provide adequate reasons and consider all relevant material.
Rule (Law)
- Apprehended Bias Principle:
- A judge is disqualified if “a fair-minded lay observer might reasonably apprehend that the judge might not bring an impartial mind to the resolution of the question” (Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (2000) 205 CLR 337; Charisteas v Charisteas (2021) 273 CLR 289).
- Judicial Conduct and Commentary:
- Judges may offer provisional views to assist counsel (Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488), but such remarks must not appear to predetermine issues or reflect prejudgment.
- Contributions in Property Settlement:
- Under s 79(4) of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), contributions are assessed holistically; there is no presumption of equality (Mallet v Mallet (1984) 156 CLR 605).
- Adequate Reasons:
- Failure to address key evidence or provide logical reasoning constitutes error (Beale v Government Insurance Office (NSW) (1997) 48 NSWLR 430).
Application (Analysis)
1. Apprehended Bias
Justice Hogan (with Altobelli and McNab JJ agreeing) found that the timing and tone of the primary judge’s remarks would lead a fair-minded observer to doubt his impartiality.
- On the first trial day, before all evidence was heard, the judge stated:
“I’m not persuaded that the father presents a risk to these children… I’m not persuaded that the interests of the children warrant reduction in time.”
- These comments, though qualified as “preliminary,” occurred mid-cross-examination of the mother and before hearing the father, implying a premature conclusion.
- On the second day, he urged settlement in line with the Independent Children’s Lawyer’s proposal—again suggesting he had formed an early preference.
- The Court cited Johnson v Johnson and Charisteas v Charisteas, reaffirming that the appearance of bias suffices to vitiate a judgment.
Justice Hogan observed that repeated expressions of scepticism toward one party’s case and the invitation to the opposing party to apply for interim orders during the other’s illness compounded the appearance of partiality.
“A fair-minded observer might reasonably apprehend that the primary judge might not bring an impartial mind to the resolution of the issues he was required to decide.”
Thus, the apprehended bias ground was made out.
2. Property Contributions
The appellate bench held that the trial judge had erred in treating contributions as presumptively equal, contrary to Mallet v Mallet. While equality can be a result, it cannot be a starting point. Repeated references to making an “adjustment” implied the judge assumed parity before considering evidence of the wife’s post-separation inheritance and homemaker contributions. This amounted to legal error warranting rehearing on property division.
3. Adequacy of Reasons
Certain factual and evidentiary matters—such as the mother’s medical evidence and child welfare concerns—were not adequately addressed. The Court cited Soulemezis v Dudley (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1987) 10 NSWLR 247 for the principle that reasons must expose the reasoning path; failure to do so renders appellate review impossible.
Judgment and Reasoning
- Appeal Outcome:
- The appeal was allowed in part. Parenting orders were upheld, but property orders (Orders 27–44) were set aside. The case was remitted for rehearing before a different judge.
- Both parties received costs certificates under the Federal Proceedings (Costs) Act 1981 (Cth) for the appeal and the new trial.
- Judicial Reasoning:
- The Court emphasized that even “tentative” judicial views can breach neutrality when they appear outcome-determinative.
- The principle of impartiality “overrides any case management considerations” and protects public confidence in the judiciary.
- Hogan J summarized:
“It was very unfortunate that the primary judge made the comments that he did… at a time when he had not seen the respondent be cross-examined.”
Precedents Relied Upon
- Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (2000) 205 CLR 337
- Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488
- Charisteas v Charisteas (2021) 273 CLR 289
- Mallet v Mallet (1984) 156 CLR 605
- Soulemezis v Dudley (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1987) 10 NSWLR 247
- House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499
Take-Home Lesson
Judges must avoid comments or conduct that could suggest prejudgment, especially during live evidence. Even expressions of “preliminary” opinions may create a perception of bias if made prematurely or repeatedly. For practitioners, this decision reinforces vigilance in protecting procedural fairness — and the need to object when judicial commentary risks crossing that line.
In Willis & Mulder [2025] FedCFamC1A 217, Justice Austin of the Federal Circuit and Family Court (Division 1, Appellate Jurisdiction) overturned a property settlement after the wife uncovered explosive new evidence — her husband, who claimed to be a pensioner with no income, had secretly declared a $176,000 annual salary to a lender just months later. The appellate court found that while the trial judge made no legal errors based on the original evidence, the husband’s post-trial loan documents “collided violently” with his sworn testimony. This new evidence fatally undermined the trial findings under s 75(2) of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), leading the Court to set aside the orders and send the matter back for rehearing.
📜 Facts and Issues
Facts
- The parties married in 2006 and separated in 2021.
- The wife commenced property proceedings in 2023; the husband, self-represented at trial, claimed he was on a Commonwealth old-age pension with no other income.
- The primary judge divided property 65/35 in the husband’s favour, rejecting claims of non-disclosure and finding both parties equally deficient in financial transparency.
- Shortly after judgment, the wife obtained loan application documents showing the husband declared an annual taxable income of $176,000, and affirmed he was self-employed.
- The wife appealed, arguing this new material proved both non-disclosure and a miscarriage in the primary judge’s s 75(2) assessment.
Issues
- Whether the husband’s undisclosed income and post-trial loan documents justified admitting fresh evidence on appeal.
- Whether the trial judge erred in failing to adjust property division under s 75(2) for financial disparity.
- Whether non-disclosure or false evidence warranted setting aside the final orders.
⚖️ Law
Statutory Framework
- Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) ss 75(2), 79 — financial and contribution-based adjustment principles.
- Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia Act 2021 (Cth) s 35(b) — power to receive further evidence on appeal.
- Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) s 164 — corroboration not required for acceptance of probative evidence.
Key Precedents
- CDJ v VAJ (1998) 197 CLR 172 – new evidence on appeal admissible if credible, material, and likely to produce a different result.
- Allesch v Maunz (2000) 203 CLR 172 – power to remit matter for rehearing if justice requires.
- Weir & Weir (1993) FLC 92–338 – consequences of deliberate non-disclosure.
- Gould & Gould (2007) FLC 93-333 – degrees of non-disclosure and their forensic consequences.
- Franklin & Ennis [2019] FamCAFC 91 – non-disclosure is not self-punishing; its impact depends on circumstances.
🔍 Application
1️⃣ Admissibility of New Evidence
Justice Austin applied CDJ v VAJ and held the wife’s evidence — comprising a broker’s declaration, a tax agent’s letter, and a loan application — met all criteria for admission:
- It was credible and created after the trial, hence unavailable earlier.
- It directly contradicted the husband’s sworn evidence of being on a pension.
- It was highly probative of the husband’s true financial circumstances and likely to affect the outcome on s 75(2) adjustment.
The Court described the husband’s admissions as “colliding violently” with his trial evidence (at [86]) and found that had the evidence been known earlier, the financial outcome would have differed materially.
2️⃣ Non-Disclosure and Section 75(2)
At trial, the husband’s alleged poverty limited the scope for any post-contribution adjustment. With the new material showing hidden income, the Court held the s 75(2) determination was now “vitiated” — particularly factors relating to income disparity, earning capacity, and future needs (at [88]–[89]).
Justice Austin emphasised that non-disclosure findings are means to an end, not punishment: what matters is whether the true financial position alters justice and equity under s 75(2).
3️⃣ No Primary Error, But New Injustice
Importantly, Justice Austin stressed that the primary judge committed no appealable error on the evidence before her (at [2]). The injustice only emerged due to new evidence unavailable at trial. Accordingly, the appeal succeeded not for legal error, but because the subsequent revelations fundamentally changed the factual matrix.
The husband’s “violent collision” of declarations warranted rehearing before a different judge (at [93]–[94]), preserving procedural fairness for both parties.
💬 Analysis of the Judgment
The appellate reasoning in Willis & Mulder highlights two vital principles:
- Fresh Evidence Jurisprudence — Following CDJ v VAJ, the Court reaffirmed that appellate intervention may be justified even absent trial error, where newly discovered facts make the original decision unsafe.
- Non-Disclosure and Forensic Balance — Echoing Weir & Weir and Gould & Gould, Austin J reiterated that not all non-disclosure is equal; its gravity depends on whether it conceals material wealth or merely delays proceedings.
The husband’s deliberate misrepresentation struck at the integrity of the property pool and the credibility of the evidence underpinning the judgment. Hence, justice required a rehearing, not just a recalculation.
🧠 Take-Home Lesson
“Truth told too late is still a lie — and in family property cases, lies cost judgments.”
Willis & Mulder reaffirms that:
- Full and frank disclosure is a continuing obligation under the Family Law Act.
- Post-trial evidence exposing dishonesty can reopen even a final judgment.
- Appellate courts will only disturb discretionary outcomes where new evidence is decisive, credible, and would likely change the result.
The wife’s diligence in obtaining the husband’s loan documents illustrates how forensic persistence can unearth concealed wealth — and overturn injustice.
In Nootkamp & Brulja (No 4) [2025] FedCFamC1A 210, the Full Court of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 1) dismissed a husband’s fourth attempt to overturn enforcement orders made to implement final property settlement orders from 2024. The self-represented appellant alleged judicial bias, procedural unfairness, and discretionary error, but the Full Court (Austin, Sutherland & Riethmuller JJ) found that he was simply re-litigating issues already determined and had been given ample opportunity to comply with the original orders. The Court reinforced the narrow grounds for alleging bias and the high threshold for obtaining leave to appeal interlocutory property orders.
📜 Facts and Issues
Facts
- Final property orders were made in October 2024 dividing the parties’ assets, including two properties (“Suburb E” to the wife and “Suburb J” to the husband).
- The husband was to pay the wife $128,469, and if he failed, his property (Suburb J) would be sold to satisfy the debt.
- He failed to comply and instead filed multiple enforcement and appeal applications, including to the High Court, all of which were dismissed.
- In August 2025, the Family Court made enforcement orders giving the wife possession of Suburb J to sell it if the husband did not pay the required sum.
- The husband appealed again, alleging bias, denial of procedural fairness, and factual error in the judge’s assessment of evidence.
Issues
- Was there judicial bias, actual or apprehended, by the primary judge?
- Was procedural fairness denied during the enforcement proceedings (e.g. refusal of adjournment, amendment or cross-examination)?
- Did the trial judge err in exercising discretion in enforcing the final property orders?
- Was there any legal error in applying repealed cost provisions?
⚖️ Law
The Court applied well-established appellate and procedural principles:
- Leave to Appeal (Interlocutory) – Medlow & Medlow (2016) FLC 93-692 at [44]–[57]: leave requires doubt about the correctness of the order and risk of substantial injustice.
- Judicial Bias – Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (2000) 205 CLR 337; Vakauta v Kelly (1989) 167 CLR 568: actual bias requires proof the judge was not impartial.
- Procedural Fairness – Parties must have a reasonable opportunity to be heard, but procedural rules must be obeyed (Family Court Rules 2021 (WA) rr 85, 180).
- Costs Transition – Repeal of s 117 of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) and introduction of s 114UB under the Family Law Amendment Act 2024 (Cth).
⚖️ Immaterial Legal Error – Use of Repealed Costs Provision
At paragraph [53], the Full Court acknowledged that the primary judge technically erred by referring to section 117 of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) — a provision repealed under the Family Law Amendment Act 2024 (Cth) — when determining costs, rather than the current section 114UB.
The error arose because the judgment below was delivered after the commencement of the 2024 amendments, which relocated the costs framework to Part XVIA of the Act. However, the Full Court held that this mistake was immaterial, since the substantive test under both provisions is identical: each requires the Court to consider whether a party should bear costs “having regard to the conduct of the parties and the circumstances of the case.”
There was no difference in the discretion conferred, the considerations applied, or the reasoning used. In short, the citation of the repealed section did not alter the outcome — the judge applied the correct legal principle, albeit under the old section number. Consequently, the appeal could not succeed on this ground, because appellate correction is only warranted where an error is material, meaning it affected the result (House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 504–505).
🔍 Application
1️⃣ Judicial Bias
The husband’s claims of bias were based on previous adverse comments, alleged preferential treatment of the wife, and repetition of arguments rejected in earlier appeals.
The Court found these entirely without merit, noting that:
- The same allegations had been dismissed in Nootkamp & Brulja (No 3) [2025] FedCFamC1A 116.
- Dissatisfaction with the result does not establish bias (Feldman v Nationwide News (2020) 103 NSWLR 307 at [43]).
- The judge’s comments were contextual and did not show prejudgment.
Result: No actual or apprehended bias was found.
2️⃣ Procedural Fairness
The husband raised five procedural complaints — late amendment, refused adjournment, combined hearing of costs and enforcement, refusal to entertain late amendment, and no cross-examination.
The Court held all five were unsustainable:
- The wife’s amendment was permissible under r 180(1)(b) and caused no prejudice.
- The adjournment refusal was proper — the husband had ample time and resources to obtain advice.
- The combined hearing of costs and enforcement was efficient and fair.
- Late amendment after judgment was reserved was impermissible.
- Cross-examination was barred by s 102NA (self-represented party cannot cross-examine the other party where family violence risk exists).
Result: No procedural unfairness occurred.
3️⃣ Discretion and Evidence
The Court upheld the enforcement orders as a sound exercise of discretion:
- The husband’s application contradicted the final orders and was “ill-conceived”.
- The judge’s factual findings matched the wife’s evidence; the husband failed to specify errors per r 13.23(3).
- Any minor factual dispute was immaterial — he was given time to pay and did so within 28 days.
4️⃣ Immaterial Legal Error
Although the trial judge referenced repealed s 117 instead of new s 114UB, the Full Court ruled this was immaterial because both provisions were substantively identical.
💬 Analysis of Judgment
The Full Court reaffirmed key appellate principles:
- Re-litigation of prior complaints (bias, delay, enforcement) will not succeed.
- The Ebner test requires a reasonable apprehension of bias, not mere dissatisfaction.
- Procedural fairness is about opportunity to be heard, not unlimited procedural indulgence.
- Minor legal missteps are not appealable without material impact (House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499).
The judges emphasized that self-representation does not exempt a party from procedural compliance or from the consequences of delay and obstruction. The appeal lacked merit, and costs of $15,000 were ordered against the husband.
🧭 Take-Home Lesson
“Persistence is not a substitute for merit — appellate courts will not rescue a party from the consequences of their own non-compliance.”
- Repeated appeals on bias or fairness grounds will fail without clear, demonstrable error.
- The 2024 Family Law reforms modernised costs provisions but didn’t change the substance of fairness tests.
- Courts expect finality — once property orders are made, enforcement is a matter of compliance, not negotiation.
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Adamo vs. Vinci: Upholding Justice through Procedural Integrity and Evidentiary Standards"
Citation:
Adamo & Vinci (No 2) [2024] FedCFamC1A 96
Introduction:
The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, Division 1, delivered a pivotal judgment in the case of Adamo & Vinci (No 2) [2024] FedCFamC1A 96. This appeal case centered around the appellant's attempts to discharge final parenting and property orders, alleging a material change of circumstances and procedural errors by the primary judge.
Facts:
- The appellant (Mr. Adamo) and the respondent (Ms. Vinci) were previously married and have two children.
- Final parenting and property orders were made in October 2020, with the children primarily residing with the respondent.
- The appellant sought to discharge these orders, claiming a material change in circumstances and procedural issues.
- The primary judge dismissed the appellant's application, leading to this appeal.
Issues:
- Whether there was a material change of circumstances justifying the re-litigation of parenting orders.
- Whether the primary judge erred in dismissing the application to set aside property orders under sections 79A(1)(a), (c), and (d) of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth).
- Whether further evidence should be admitted on appeal.
- Whether the appellant should bear the costs of the appeal.
Rule:
- Family Law Act 1975 (Cth): Sections 79A(1)(a), (c), and (d) for setting aside property orders.
- Evidence Act 1995 (Cth): Section 50 regarding the admissibility of evidence.
- Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia Act 2021 (Cth): Section 35 for procedural compliance.
Analysis:
Key Paragraphs from the Judgment:
- Material Change of Circumstances: The primary judge found that the appellant had not established a material change in circumstances warranting re-litigation of parenting orders (paragraphs 1-5).
- Paragraph 98: "The primary judge concluded that even based on the appellant's evidence, the children had spent significantly less time with him than provided for in the orders. This was not deemed a change in circumstances."
- Application of Wrong Principles of Law: The appellant failed to elucidate how the primary judge applied wrong principles of law (paragraph 17).
- Paragraph 37: "The appellant's submissions lacked precision, failing to demonstrate the application of wrong principles by the primary judge."
- Admissibility of Further Evidence: The appellant's application to adduce further evidence was dismissed as it lacked materiality and nexus that would alter the primary judge's decision (paragraphs 18-33).
- Paragraph 22: "The appellant could not demonstrate how the omitted documents would have produced a different result at trial."
- Costs: The appellant was ordered to pay the respondent's costs fixed at $18,800 due to the wholly unsuccessful appeal (paragraphs 112-117).
- Paragraph 117: "Impecuniosity is no bar to an award of costs being made."
Reasons for Judgment:
The Court dismissed the appeal, emphasizing that the appellant failed to demonstrate any material change of circumstances or errors in the primary judge's application of legal principles. The application to adduce further evidence was also dismissed due to its lack of relevance and potential impact on the original decision. Costs were awarded to the respondent due to the appellant's wholly unsuccessful appeal.
Take Home Lesson:
This case underscores the importance of establishing a clear and substantial change in circumstances when seeking to alter final parenting and property orders. It also highlights the necessity for precise and relevant evidence in appeals and the potential financial repercussions of unsuccessful litigation.







