Date: 19980828
Docket: 97-513-UI
BETWEEN:
SUZANNE CÔTÉ,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
CHARRON, D.J.T.C.C.
[1] The object of this appeal heard at Québec, Quebec,
on June 17, 1998 was to determine whether the appellant held
insurable employment within the meaning of the Unemployment
Insurance Act ("the Act") during the period from
November 21 to December 2, 1994, when she was employed by the
Centre d'Énergie Humaine et Universelle Saguenay
Lac-St-Jean Inc., the payer.
[2] By a letter dated January 15, 1997 the respondent informed
the appellant that this employment was not insurable because it
was not held under a contract of service.
Statement of facts
[3] The facts on which the respondent relied in arriving at
his decision are set out in paragraph 5 of the Reply to the
Notice of Appeal as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
(a) the payer is a non-profit organization which was
established in the early 1990s; (admitted)
(b) the purpose of the payer was to give courses dealing with
energy transfer; (admitted)
(c) in late 1993 there were 10 people on the payer's board
of directors; (admitted)
(d) the appellant was one of the 10 and held the position of
treasurer; (admitted)
(e) the payer had no paid employees and the instructors (or
teachers) gave the courses free of charge; (denied)
(f) in November 1994 the payer entered into an agreement with
the appellant pursuant to which she was to retranscribe three
training booklets; (denied)
(g) the payer obtained approval for total remuneration of $560
for this work contract; (denied as written)
(h) that remuneration was based on two 40-hour work
weeks at $7 an hour; (admitted)
(i) the appellant worked at home and had no predetermined
schedule; (denied)
(j) she used her own computer and supplied the paper required
for the retranscribing and did so without compensation by the
payer; (denied)
(k) the payer was not concerned with either the
appellant's work methods or the number of hours she put in,
but only with the results; (denied)
(l) during the period at issue there was no employer-employee
relationship between the appellant and the payer, but rather a
contract for services. (denied)
[4] The appellant admitted all the subparagraphs of paragraph
5 of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal, except those which she
denied or of which she said she had no knowledge, as indicated in
parentheses at the end of each subparagraph.
Testimony of Suzanne Côté
[5] This individual worked for the payer from November 21 to
December 2, 1994. She has also been on the board of directors and
held the position of treasurer for two years. The purpose of the
payer's group was to educate beginners in the use of energy
transfers for healing disease by means of chakras. The appellant
was hired for a two-week period at $7 an hour for a maximum of
40 hours a week. The maximum salary paid was to be $560
(Exhibit A-1). The appellant worked from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
and was paid by cheque from whose amount source deductions had
been taken (Exhibits A-2, A-3 and A-4). She did her work at home
because the payer had no premises of its own. The appellant
supplied her computer and paper. If Ms. Côté
had to make photocopies, the payer paid for them. Mirette
Pellerin, vice-president of the payer, supervised the
appellant's work by telephoning her several times a week to
find out where she was with the work. The other members met five
or six evenings a week to update the material in question. The
three booklets to be updated were filed as
Exhibit A-5. The appellant will still be a member of
the payer for another year. At the time she obtained this
employment, she was looking for work. A committee of four persons
met three times a week to decide what changes should be made to
the three booklets. From May to November 1994 Suzanne
Côté worked for an apartment building, but did not
receive unemployment insurance benefits after her departure
because she lacked one week of insured employment. In her
capacity as treasurer she collected money owed to the payer and
she did this work free of charge, but did not give lectures. The
payer had no other employee, except for Christiane Boulay in
1992. The payer’s head office is located in the office of
Diane Lalancette, a member of the payer, in Chicoutimi. The
appellant's treasurer's duties took up a half-day of her
time every week. The booklets filed as Exhibit A-5 were the basis
for training members and were indispensable. Suzanne
Côté made an application for unemployment insurance
benefits which was accepted. In 1992 the payer had 12 members; it
now has between 1,000 and 1,500 recruits.
Testimony of Monique Dion
[6] Ms. Dion, an appeals investigation officer, did an
investigation of the appellant and contacted Mirette Pellerin,
Mado Tremblay and the appellant on October 9, 1996. The appellant
told her she had no work schedule but worked from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. every day. She was also treasurer, for which she was
not paid. For the purposes of her work she provided her own
computer, diskettes, paper and printer. Mirette Pellerin did not
know what Suzanne Côté's working hours or her
salary were. Mado Tremblay, Louise Bérubé and
Marcel Tremblay were responsible for amending the text of the
three booklets. Suzanne Côté's duties were
determined by the board of directors. According to Ms. Dion,
the booklets were necessary for the payer to survive, but
incidental; the appellant did not receive instructions from the
payer, but had two or three preliminary meetings with it, and
then five or six more to ensure the performance of the work. She
was undoubtedly the best prepared to do this work.
Analysis of the facts in the light of the law
[7] It must now be determined whether the appellant's
activity was included in the concept of insurable employment,
that is, whether or not there existed a contract of
employment.
[8] The courts have laid down four essential tests for
determining whether there is a contract of employment. The
leading case in this regard is City of Montreal v. Montreal
Locomotive Works Ltd., [1947] 1 D.L.R. 161. Those
tests are the following: (1) control; (2) ownership of the tools;
(3) chance of profit; and (4) risk of loss. In Wiebe Door
Services Ltd. v. M.N.R., the Federal Court of Appeal
added thereto the degree of integration, but this list is not
exhaustive.
[9] The evidence showed that the work done by the appellant
was done under the direction of the payer and that a relationship
of subordination existed between them. It was the payer that
owned the business necessary for the carrying on of its
activities. It was the payer alone who could make profits or
incur losses in the operation of its business, not the appellant,
who received only a fixed salary. Finally, the appellant did her
work at home as the payer had no permanent premises in which it
could offer her space.
[10] I therefore conclude that the payer operated a business
and that the appellant was employed by it during the period at
issue.
[11] The appeal is accordingly allowed and the
respondent's determination is reversed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 28th day of August 1998.
"G. Charron"
D.J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 31st day of March
1999.
Erich Klein, Revisor