Ontario, Canada
The following excerpt is from M.T. v. J.L.-T., 2018 ONCJ 654 (CanLII):
Therefore, the first part of the test in Drygala v. Pauli is to ask whether the payor is intentionally under-employed or unemployed. The court stated that there is no need to find a specific intent to evade child support obligations before income is imputed; the payor is intentionally under-employed if he or she chooses to earn less than what he or she is capable of earning. The court must look at whether the act is voluntary and reasonable.
The second part of the test in Drygala v. Pauli requires the court to determine if the payor is intentionally under-employed, is this by virtue of his/or her reasonable educational needs, the needs of the child of the marriage or reasonable health needs?
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