Call us at: 1 (250) 480-4040
  • Home
  • Our Firm
  • Criminal Law
    • Top Ten Mistakes
    • Assault FAQ
    • Criminal Appeals FAQ
    • Criminal Law FAQ
    • Driving While Prohibited FAQ
    • Drug Offences FAQ
    • Homicide
    • Impaired Driving FAQ
    • Sexual Assault
    • Spousal Assault
    • Theft & Fraud
    • Vehicle Impoundment FAQ
  • Computer Forensics
    • Computer Forensics Concepts
    • Computer Forensics Overview
    • Legal Issues
    • Our Forensics Training
    • Our Services
  • Legal News
  • Contact Us
  • Menu Menu

Sugar, Support, and Frankie

October 2, 2025/in Legal News /by mtp_admin

 

A seven‑month marriage sparked on a sugar‑arrangement site, a $12,000/month support bid, and a dog named Frankie—this one has layers. We open with a candid walk‑through of interim spousal support: what it’s for, how courts weigh “capacity to pay,” and why selling capital assets to fund an opulent lifestyle isn’t the same as earning income. The applicant’s luxury‑level budget meets judicial scrutiny, while the respondent’s push to impute escort income and point to family wealth hits legal limits. The end result—$4,000/month plus a retroactive lump—shows how judges balance short marriages, realistic needs, and the difference between lifestyle and income.

Then the plot thickens. A same‑day, ex parte protection order leads to disputed removals from the home and a tussle over Frankie. We unpack how BC’s Family Law Act treats companion animals: not as handbags, but through factors like who provided care, safety concerns, and well‑being. On an interim basis, Frankie stays put—illustrating how courts separate urgent stability from final outcomes and insist on full candour when seeking protective relief.

The second half pivots to evidence law and a rare rebuke: the province sought a lifetime ban on a man from a welfare office, relying on an internal incident report as a “business record.” Both the trial court and the Court of Appeal said no. We explain why “ordinary course of business” demands reliability—think automated receipts and bank statements—not a narrative drafted post‑incident for litigation. Even beyond admissibility, the appellate court flags proportionality: a permanent injunction is an extraordinary remedy, not a default response.

If you care about how courts actually draw the line between income and spending, how interim orders stabilize without deciding the future, how pet custody really works, and when business records are admissible, this conversation is your blueprint. Listen, share with a friend who loves law done plainly, and leave a quick review to help others find the show.

 

Legally Speaking with Michael Mulligan is live on CFAX 1070 every Thursday at 12:30 p.m. It’s also available on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share by Mail
https://mtplaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/mtplaw-logo.svg 0 0 mtp_admin https://mtplaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/mtplaw-logo.svg mtp_admin2025-10-02 15:31:432025-10-02 15:31:43Sugar, Support, and Frankie

Contact Us

Robert A. Mulligan, K.C.
Michael T. Mulligan
Professional Experience

24 Hour Immediate Confidential Help

#105 – 777 Blanshard Street
Victoria, BC, Canada  V8W 2G9
P  250-480-4040
F  250-480-0004
TF 1-800-664-2785

Subscribe to the Legally Speaking podcast

Get in Touch

#105 – 777 Blanshard St.,
Victoria BC, V8W 2G9.

  • Ph 1 (250) 480-4040
  • Fx 1 (250) 480-0004
  • Tf 1 (800) 664-2785

Mulligan Defence Lawyers

  • Criminal Law
  • Computer Forensics

Our Lawyers

  • Robert A. Mulligan, K.C.
  • Michael T. Mulligan
  • Link to Facebook

© Copyright 2020 Mulligan Defence Lawyers

Link to: When Does Someone Become an Agent of the State? Link to: When Does Someone Become an Agent of the State? When Does Someone Become an Agent of the State?
Scroll to top