Introduction
About this guide
This guide is for you if you have a family agreement dealing with parenting, support, and/or property and debt, and:
- the agreement is, or will be, filed in Supreme Court,
- you want to set aside (cancel) or replace all or part of the agreement and get a new court order, and
- you can't agree with the other person.
This includes the parts of the agreement to do with:
- guardianship,
- parenting time,
- allocation of parental responsibilities,
- contact with a child,
- parenting coordinators,
- spousal support, and
- child support.
Please read through all of this guide before you begin so that you understand the documents and forms you need to prepare and what you can expect in court.
Get legal help
It's a good idea to get some legal help before you use this guide. If you can't afford a lawyer, you can get legal help in other ways, including:
- Lawyer Referral Service
- free (pro bono) legal clinics
- family duty counsel
- family advice lawyers
- family justice counsellors
Staff at Justice Access Centres in Abbotsford, Nanaimo, Surrey, Victoria, and Vancouver can also answer your questions and help you fill out forms.
For information about legal aid, see the Legal Aid BC website.
File your agreement
You'll need
- A copy of your existing agreement
File your agreement at the registry
You can only apply to set aside your agreement if it's filed with the court. This means you give the registry the copy of your agreement and they put it in a court file for you.
If you haven’t already filed your agreement, see File your agreement in Supreme Court. Either you or the other person can file it.
Once you file an agreement, you have an open family law case and you can take steps to set aside your agreement.
Consider scheduling a Judicial Case Conference
A Judicial Case Conference (JCC) is optional if you're applying to set aside all or part of an agreement. But you should consider whether it would be helpful to attend in your case, even if you don't have to.
A JCC is a confidential meeting with a judge or master and the other person before a court application's made. It provides a good opportunity to see if you can resolve your case without going to court or, if you do end up going to court, to understand what you need to do to prepare for the court hearing.
If you don't want a JCC, or you had one but didn't come to an agreement, continue to the next step to get a Chambers hearing.
Prepare the court documents
You'll need
- A Notice of Application (Form F31)
- An Affidavit (Form F30) to support the application
- A Financial Statement (Form F8), if necessary
Fill out the forms and complete the documents
If you don't have a JCC, or don't work things out there, you need to complete several forms.
On the Notice of Application, you'll ask the court to set aside all or part of your agreement. You can also ask the court to make new orders to replace any parts of the agreement that are set aside.
For information about what to put into the Notice of Application, see Write a Supreme Court order.
For help writing the Affidavit, see:
- Checklist of information to include in an affidavit or bring to court,
- How do you write an affidavit? and
- Write an affidavit.
The forms contain technical instructions to help you fill them out. For more help using the forms, see:
For help filling out a Financial Statement (if you're applying to change an order for child or spousal support), see Complete a Supreme Court Financial Statement (Form F8).
Swear or affirm the documents
After you've completed the Affidavit (Form F30), and the Financial Statement (Form F8) if you need one, and attached all the relevant documents, you must swear or affirm that the information that appears in these documents is true. You have to swear or affirm your documents in front of a lawyer, notary public, government agent, or clerk at the court registry. See Who can swear an affidavit? for more information about this.
Take photo identification with you.
Copy, file, and serve the documents
You'll need
- Your completed documents:
- Notice of Application (Form F31)
- Affidavit (Form F30) to support the application (with any attachments)
- Financial Statement (Form 8), if required
- Any other supporting Affidavits or documents that you intend to refer to at the hearing, but that haven't already been filed
- $80 to file a Notice of Application
- Someone to serve the documents on the other person
Make copies
Make three copies of all your documents:
- The registry will keep the original
- One copy's for you
- One copy's served on the other person
- One copy's to attach to the Affidavit of Personal Service (Form F15)
File the documents at the registry
Take all the copies of your documents, plus the filing fee, to the registry more than 21 business days before the date set for the hearing. (This means that 21 business days must pass in between the day you serve the documents and the hearing day.)
A clerk at the registry will take your money, check your documents, stamp them with the court seal, and put the originals into the file for your case. The three copies of the forms will be returned to you.
Serve the documents on the other person
Serve the documents on the respondent, including the filed Notice of Application, at least 21 business days before the date set for the hearing. (This means that 21 business days must pass in between the day you serve the documents and the hearing day.)
Have the Affidavit of Personal Service (Form F15) ready to show in court in case the other person doesn't show up. This will prove to the judge that the other person has the documents and knows about the hearing.
Wait and respond
You'll need
- To wait up to 14 days to receive the other person's response
- An Affidavit (Form F30), if they raised new facts or issues in their response
If they agree with your application
If the other person agrees with what you're asking for, you can either:
- sit down and work out a new agreement together, or
- both show up in court on the date set for the hearing and ask for a consent order.
If they don't agree with your application
If the other person opposes the application, they must file their response at the court registry and serve you with a copy of their response within 14 business days of being served with your documents.
Make the Application Record
You'll need
- Two ring binders big enough to hold all the documents related to your case (1‑inch or 1.5‑inch are common)
- Two sets of tabbed binder dividers numbered 1 to 15, or higher
- Some loose-leaf paper
- A three-hole punch
- A Supreme Court Application Record title page
- An Application Record index
- Two elastic bands big enough to go around the binders
An Application Record is a loose-leaf ring binder, divided by tabs, that contains the evidence that the judge or master will use to decide whether to change your order. It includes a table of contents (called an index), and contains photocopies of the documents you've collected, including those sent by the other person.
You need two copies of the Application Record — one for you and one for the court. The court copy will be returned to you at the end of the court hearing. You don't have to make a copy for the other person.
What goes in an Application Record?
The Application Record can include draft orders, written arguments, lists of authorities (any case, textbook, article, or statute you might use to support your argument), or a draft bill of costs.
Your Application Record must not include Affidavits of Service, copies of authorities, or other documents unless the other person has agreed to let you include these.
Make a cover page
Prepare a cover page for the outside of the binder that contains:
- the style of proceedings (names of both of you), court file number, and registry,
- the title "APPLICATION RECORD" and a brief description of what the material is about (for example, "Application to change an order for child support"),
- contact information for each of you or your lawyers, including addresses for service, phone and fax numbers, or email addresses that the registry can use to contact you,
- the time, date, and place of the hearing,
- the name of the person or lawyer who's filing the Application Record, and
- the estimated length of time for the hearing.
Make an Application Record title page
Prepare a title page for the inside of the binder. The title page should have the style of cause, your name and the other person's name, and the names of your lawyers, if you have lawyers. The style of cause is in your previous order (all the information above the title of the document). Copy this information exactly as it appears on your order.
Add the dividers and documents
- Number your tabbed divider pages consecutively starting at 1, if they aren't already numbered.
- Punch holes in each page of your remaining set of photocopied documents, and put them into the binder behind the numbered tabs in the following order:
- Behind Tab 1, insert one copy of the filed Application (Form F31).
You must also include an extra loose copy of the Notice of Application (Form F31) with your Application Record. On that copy, highlight or mark in some way which orders you'll be referring to at the hearing. - Behind Tab 2, insert the Application Response (Form F32) from the other person (if you receive one).
- Behind Tab 1, insert one copy of the filed Application (Form F31).
- Insert the remaining documents behind the subsequent tabs in the following order:
- Your Affidavit to support the application.
- Any of your previous Affidavits that you want the court to consider.
- An Affidavit in response to the application from the other person, if you receive one.
- Your responding Affidavit, if any.
- Your most recent Financial Statement (Form F8) and any attachments.
- The other person's most recent Financial Statement and any attachments, if you received them.
- Insert any of the other person's Affidavits and Financial Statements behind tabs.
Make an index
Download a blank Application Record index form and use it to create a table of contents for the Application Record. List all the documents in the Application Record in the table of contents. Insert the completed index before Tab 1 and behind the title page.
Make a second Application Record
Repeat the whole process to create a second Application Record.
File the Application Record and serve the index
You'll need
- One copy of the complete Application Record
- One copy of the Application Record index only
File the Application Record at the court registry
Give one copy of the full Application Record to the court registry.
- after 9 am on the business day that's three full business days before your hearing, and
- before 4 pm on the day that's one full business day before the date set for the hearing.
Serve the Application Record index
If the other person responded to your Notice of Application, serve them a copy of the Application Record index. You can serve the index by ordinary service.
Appear in court
You'll need
- Your copy of the Application Record
- An Order Made After Application (Form F51)
Go to court
You'll be appearing in Chambers to ask a judge to change your order. See What happens in a Supreme Court Chambers hearing? to find out more about Chambers.
Prepare the Order Made After Application (Form F51)
After you appear in court, you have to prepare an Order Made After Application (Form F51) that says what the judge decided. If you or the other person has a lawyer, the lawyer's usually required by the court to prepare the order even if they're not your lawyer. Ask to review and sign the order as written by the lawyer before it's given to the court registry.
The Order Made After Application contains technical instructions to help you fill it out. For more information about preparing orders, see:
File the order at the court registry
You'll need
- A copy of the completed and signed order
Make a copy of the completed and signed order and take it to the court registry where the hearing was held.
The court registry staff will review the order, then have it signed by the court, stamped, and entered or filed. Keep your copy of the draft order for your records until you get the entered order.
Entering the order can take several weeks. Ask the court registry clerk when you might be able to pick up the entered order.
Get and send the order
You'll need
- The approved order
- A copy of the order for the other person
- A copy for BCFMA, if necessary
Pick up the approved order
You must either go to the court registry to pick up your order or provide a self-addressed envelope and ask the clerk to mail it to you. The entered (signed, sealed, and filed) order is your official court order. Be sure to keep a copy of the order for yourself.
Give a copy to the other person
You're responsible for mailing, giving, or emailing a copy of the entered order to the other person. Do this as soon as possible.