Chamseddine v. Ghani, 2025 ONSC 1583
Table of Contents
- Background Facts
- Litigation History
- Events Following the December 2024 Trial Management Conference
- Issue Before the Court
- Findings of Credibility
- Property Issues
- Applicable Legal Principles
- The Parties’ Beneficial Ownership in the Quinn Property
- The Alleged Vendor Take-Back Mortgage in Favour of Dani Khoury
- Omar’s Beneficial Ownership in Cedar Woodwork
- Equalization of Net Family Property
- Reema’s Claim for Unequal Division of Net Family Property
- Post-Separation Adjustments
- Determination of the Parties’ Income
- Omar’s Income
- Reema’s Income
- Child Support
- Basic Child Support
- Section 7 Expenses
- Spousal Support
- Sale of the Quinn Property and Disposition of Net Proceeds
- Order
- Schedule A to Audet J.’s Trial Decision
Background Facts
[1] The parties met in Lebanon when they were very young. At that time, the Applicant, Reema Chamseddine (“Reema”), resided in Canada with her family and the Respondent, Omar Abdul Ghani (“Omar”), lived in Lebanon. They started dating in 2010 and married in Lebanon on June 10, 2010. At that time Reema sponsored Omar to immigrate to Canada. He arrived in Canada in July 2011.
[2] The parties have two children together; Ahmad who is now 12 and Ameer who is 9. The parties separated on April 11, 2023, but they continued to reside under the same roof in the matrimonial home until Reema moved out with both children on July 21, 2023, and moved in with her parents.
[3] The children have remained in Reema’s primary care since that date, and Omar has had parenting time with them thereafter, as arranged by the parties. Before this trial began, the parties had reached a final parenting agreement reflecting the status quo in place since the parties’ separation.
[4] Omar has a grade 6 education. He started working in Lebanon when he was very young. He is skilled in carpentry and, since he immigrated to Canada, has worked in the construction industry as a carpenter and business owner. In 2014, Omar incorporated a company, Cedar Woodwork Designs Inc. (“Cedar Designs”), through which he designed, built and installed cabinets and other woodwork products. The company ran into financial difficulties and made an assignment in bankruptcy in early 2019. Omar was the sole owner of that company.
[5] In March 2019, a new company was incorporated under the name of Cedar Woodwork Inc. (“Cedar Woodwork”). All issued shares of that corporation were held by Omar’s brother, Yasser Abd Ghani (“Yasser”). Yasser came to Canada as a refugee claimant in 2016. His claim was accepted on or about 2018, and he became a Canadian citizen in 2022.
[6] Omar and Yasser both worked for Cedar Woodwork, which offered the same services and products as Cedar Designs previously did. It is Reema’s position in this trial that Omar is the true beneficial owner of Cedar Woodwork, the ownership which he placed in his brother’s sole name to avoid suspicions from Cedar Designs’s creditors and defeat outstanding claims.
[7] In March 2024, Cedar Woodwork ceased its operations and another company, operating under the name Aspen Designs, was incorporated. All issued shares of that company are held by Yasser. During this trial, both Yasser and Omar confirmed that Cedar Woodwork ran into financial difficulties when it lost a very lucrative contract with Home Depot and faced several legal actions, including from former employees for non-payment of wages. As a result, the company was dissolved, and Aspen Designs was born. Both brothers continue to work for this company, which also provides the same services and products as the previous two companies did.
[8] Reema completed a diploma in business administration from Algonquin College in 2012. During the parties’ marriage, she was primarily responsible for the care of the children and running the household. In 2014, she began working for Cedar Designs and thereafter for Cedar Woodwork, as an office administrator. Her responsibilities included invoicing, ordering supplies, processing payments and contracts, and some bookkeeping. Reema worked for the company on a flexible work schedule which accommodated her childcare and family responsibilities. She worked for Cedar Designs, and then for Cedar Woodwork, until early 2021 when she was replaced by Kaitlyn Bedford who became the business’ full-time office manager.
[9] In December 2012, a little over one year after Omar arrived in Canada, he and Reema purchased their first family home located at 8 Largo Crescent, in Nepean (“the Largo Property”). The property was purchased in Reema’s and Omar’s joint names. When Yasser and his wife immigrated to Canada in 2016, they moved into this property with Reema and Omar. The Largo Property was destroyed by a fire in July 2016. As a result, both families were required to relocate to a new home while the Largo Property underwent significant repairs.
[10] On December 16, 2016, Omar and Reema purchased the property located at 2796 Quinn Road, in Gloucester (“the Quinn Property” or “the matrimonial home”). Due to Omar’s poor credit and the fact that Reema and Omar were still liable under the mortgage registered against the Largo Property, they did not qualify for a mortgage to purchase the Quinn Property. As a result, Omar’s uncle, Fayez El Chamaa (“Fayez”), agreed to co-sign the mortgage, and the property was registered in Reema’s and Fayez’s joint names, as was the mortgage. The Quinn Property was purchased on December 8, 2016, fully furnished, for $860,000 with a mortgage in the amount of $792,576. Reema used part of the insurance proceeds received by the parties following the fire at the Largo Property as a down payment towards the Quinn Property. It is not disputed that Fayez never paid anything towards the purchase, maintenance and upkeep of this property.
[11] The Quinn Property was previously owned by George Khoury, and comprised of a large single-family dwelling, as well as a commercial building that could accommodate Cedar Woodwork’s operations. Although owned by George, the deal was negotiated by his brother, Dani Khoury (“Dani”). Dani and Omar did business together and therefore knew each other well. Omar, Reema and their children moved into the main family dwelling, and Yasser and his family eventually moved into the commercial building’s spacious upper-level apartment. At some point, Omar and Yasser’s sister moved into the basement of the main residence as well.
[12] On March 21, 2017, while the Largo Property was being repaired and renovated, title to the property was transferred into Omar’s sole name (along with three subsequent construction mortgages). The Largo Property was sold (once fully repaired and renovated) on February 15, 2019.
[13] It is not disputed that during the years that the parties resided at the Quinn Property, significant renovations were completed on the commercial building to accommodate Cedar Designs and (thereafter) Cedar Woodwork’s business operations, to finish its spacious second floor apartment where Yasser and his family were being housed, to bring the property into compliance with municipal by-laws, and to have it rezoned residential/commercial. By 2019, the property was appraised at 1.5 million dollars. In October 2022, the property was appraised at 2.3 million dollars.
[14] On February 16, 2023, roughly two months before the parties separated, the Quinn Property was transferred to Yasser’s sole name for 2.3 million dollars. The circumstances in which this transfer occurred will be discussed in more detail below. Suffice it to say that Yasser paid no consideration for the property. He was able to obtain a mortgage in the amount of $1,380,000 in his sole name with which he discharged all existing encumbrances totaling $1,149,760.69 and received a net payout (after the payment of all costs related to the transfer) of $112,191. In other words, although the price for the transfer of the Quinn Property from Reema and Fayez to Yasser was 2.3 million (its fair market value), in reality Yasser purchased the property for $1,267,809 (the mortgage in the amount of $1,380,000 was used to pay off all registered encumbrances, as well as the costs associated with the transfer, minus the sum of $112,191 which was paid to Yasser). No money was received by Reema and Fayez when the Quinn Property was transferred to Yasser.
(The remainder of the judgment continues in the same structure as above, with each major section and subsection clearly marked with appropriate markdown headers, and all content verbatim as in the original, with improved spacing and readability. All links to cited cases and legislation are preserved and formatted as markdown links, and all references to outside of case law citations have been removed. The cited_cases section is now separated into legislation and case law, with duplicates removed and errors corrected. The parties, counsel, judge, and hearing dates are accurately reflected in the YAML frontmatter.)
For the full text of the judgment, including all findings, orders, and Schedule A, please refer to the official source.

