(905) 415-1636

Relocating with a Child who has Special Needs – Family Law

Sferruzzi v. Allan

This was a case where the child, M, had significant special needs because of his autism. The father, Mr. Sferruzzi, was the primary caregiver and invested an enormous amount of time and money on his son’s extensive care. He participated in and monitored his son’s intensive therapy and progress; and was the sole financial provider for these programs.

A court order precluded the father from moving with his son from Waterloo without the mother’s consent, so he brought a motion to vary this court order. If permitted to relocate to Pickering, the father would have significant support in raising his son from his girlfriend of 4 years. She would share the financial burdens of care, ultimately creating a healthier and happier environment where he would be physically, emotionally, and financially advantaged with regard to caring for his son.

The mother, Ms. Allan, opposed the motion, expressing concerns about the reduced frequency of contact that she would have with their son, about the disruption in her son’s relationships with her family and his treatment providers, and about the expenses and difficulties associated with access travel.

The motion judge decided that the proposed relocation was not in the son’s best interests and therefore dismissed the motion. The father appealed this decision, and the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that appellate intervention was warranted because the motions judge had erred in law by (1) placing the burden of proof on the father and (2) seriously misapprehending the evidence.

With regard to the burden of proof, the court explained: “Once the threshold requirement of demonstrating a material change in the child’s circumstances is met, the judge ’must embark on a fresh inquiry’ into the best interests of the child. Accordingly, it was an error for the motion judge to approach the motion on the basis that the appellant had to persuade him that the relocation was in M’s best interests.”

The Court of Appeal ultimately found that it was in the son’s best interest to move with his father to Pickering. With regard to the evidence, the father played a much larger role in son’s treatment and care, he was son’s sole caretaker, and the mother’s access time would not decrease after the move.

More From the Feldstein Blog

Ontario Family Law, Translated

The statute is dense. The stakes are personal. These articles unpack the parts clients ask about most.

Case Blog

R-S v. S., 2025 ONSC 6737

Background The Respondent husband and Applicant wife were married in 2013 and separated in 2022. One day before the wedding, each party signed different versions of a marriage ... Read more

June 26, 2026 · 6 min read

Feldstein Family Law Group, P.C.

The Law Is Complex.
The First Step Isn't.

Free, confidential consultation with an experienced Ontario family law lawyer. One call can change everything.

Markham · Oakville · Mississauga · Vaughan

Call (905) 415-1636

Responses within one business day — often the same day.

Our Offices

Serving Families Across Ontario & the Greater Toronto Area

Four Feldstein Family Law Group offices across the GTA — close to where our clients live, work, and raise their families.

Markham

20 Crown Steel Dr Suite 8
Markham, ON L3R 9X9, Canada

Map & Directions

Mississauga

3464 Semenyk Ct Suite 213
Mississauga, ON L5C 4P8, Canada

Map & Directions

Vaughan

3865 Major MacKenzie Dr W Suite 107
Vaughan, ON L4H 4P4, Canada

Map & Directions

Oakville

209 Speers Rd Suite 5
Oakville, ON L6K 0H5, Canada

Map & Directions

Communities We Serve

Feldstein Family Law Group represents clients across the Greater Toronto Area — including Toronto, Markham, Oakville, Mississauga, Vaughan, Richmond Hill, Thornhill, Unionville, Stouffville, Aurora, Newmarket, Brampton, Etobicoke, North York, Scarborough, Burlington, Milton, Georgetown, Woodbridge, Maple, King City, and the surrounding communities of York Region, Peel Region, Halton Region, and Durham Region.