A consent order or judgment is considered at law to be a contract between the parties: Teitelbaum v. Dyson (2000), 7 C.P.C. (5th) 356. I can only conclude that the applicant father and the respondent mother agreed to share these expenses equally no matter which one of them advanced the money to pay the extraordinary expense to the child or paid for that expense directly. It is my view that the agreement made by the parties and formalized in an order supplanted any reliance on section 7 either of them may have had to define their proportionate shares of extraordinary expenses geared to their respective incomes.
"The most advanced legal research software ever built."
The above passage should not be considered legal advice. Reliable answers to complex legal questions require comprehensive research memos. To learn more visit www.alexi.com.