Table 2
Family court cases, by type of case, selected provinces and territories, 2009/2010

Standard table symbols

Table 2
Family court cases, by type of case, selected provinces and territories, 2009/2010
Province or territory1 Type of active family court case2 Total active cases
Divorce Other family breakdown (non-divorce)3 Other4 Unknown
number
Nova Scotia 5,500 2,816 7,000 1 15,317
Ontario 53,452 54,370 61,705 81 169,608
Alberta 29,343 25,227 16,639 2,126 73,335
British Columbia 22,915 27,307 7,383 10,927 68,532
Yukon 240 105 245 0 590
Northwest Territories 137 175 110 602 1,024
Nunavut 39 189 617 0 845
Total 111,626 110,189 93,699 13,737 329,251
  percent
Nova Scotia 36 18 46 100
Ontario 32 32 36 100
Alberta 41 35 23 100
British Columbia 40 47 13 100
Yukon 41 18 42 100
Northwest Territories 32 41 26 100
Nunavut 5 22 73 100
Total 35 35 30 100
... not applicable
1. Excludes data from Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, Manitoba and Saskatchewan due to the unavailability of data.
2. Refers to family court cases that had activity or were initiated during the year. Information on the issues involved in active family cases has been derived from activity over the life of the case.
3. Refers to cases that addressed issues of custody, access, support or division of property outside of a divorce proceeding such as cases of separation or those deciding arrangements for a child born outside a union. Additionally, the category includes cases that may also have involved other issues, such as child protection, civil protection or guardianship.
4. Includes, for example, cases involving adoption, child protection, civil protection, enforcement of an existing order and those categorized as "other family". Cases involving only "other family" matters represent 49% of this category.
Note: Information related to separation, custody, access, support (child and/or spousal and/or other) and/or division of property may be under reported due to data limitations. Some cases under the "Other" or "Unknown" categories may have involved these issues, but they have not been identified in the survey data.
Source: Statistics Canada, Civil Court Survey.
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