Date:
20050419
Docket:
T-1522-03
Citation:
2005 FC 522
BETWEEN:
BOUCHRA
KADOURI
Applicant
and
THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER
de MONTIGNY J.
[1] This is
an application for judicial review of a decision dated July 18, 2003 of an
Appeal Board (the Board) established by the Public Service Commission of Canada
(the Commission) pursuant to section 21 of the Public Service
Employment Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-33 (the PSEA).
[2] After
an investigation, the Board concluded that the proposed appointments to the
positions of administrative assistant and telephony administrative clerk
following selection process 2002-REJ-CC-QUÉ-DGPS-101 and 2002-REH-CC-QUÉ-SAI-08
were in compliance with the merit principle, as required by the PSEA.
Facts
[3] The
applicant is an employee of the federal public service. Following a
competition notice posted by the Department of Human Resources Development on
October 15, 2002, to fill permanent positions of administrative assistant
and telephony administrative clerk at the CR-04 group and level, the applicant
submitted her candidacy.
[4] The
Department required that, for both positions, the successful candidates have
“Good ability to use a computer to produce a written document”. The Department
considered this skill was critical or essential for the administrative
assistant position and compensatory for the telephony administrative clerk
position. In other words, successful candidates for the telephony
administrative clerk position had to have certain skills in general, including
“Good ability to use a computer keyboard to produce a written document”.
[5] In both
competitions, the selection board assessing the candidates chose to assess the
candidates’ “Good ability to use a computer keyboard to produce a written
document” by a test in which the candidates had to use computer software to
reproduce a text in full within a given time frame.
[6] On
November 29, 2002, the selection board called the candidates, including
the applicant, to take this test. The test was held in the Department’s data
processing training room. The candidates had a computer at their disposal and
had to reproduce a given text in 13 minutes.
[7] However,
it appears, and this fact was not in dispute in this Court, that the keyboards
were not all identical: some had a French configuration and others an English
configuration. The result was that some candidates, including the applicant,
had to take the test with a different keyboard from the one they normally used.
[8] Realizing
this problem before the test was given, the selection board decided not to
penalize the candidates for mistakes involving accents or punctuation signs
associated with the language of the keyboard. However, it did not notify the
candidates before or during the test.
[9] The
applicant failed this test, receiving a grade of 18%. This grade was explained
by certain spelling mistakes, the repeated inversion of the words “Canadiennes
and Canadiens”, and by the omission of certain lines in the body of the text
and at the end thereof. Although she did quite well on the other tests, this
was enough to disqualify her (either because it was an essential skill for the
first position or because the grade had the effect of lowering her average
below the passing grade for the overall assessment of skills assessed for the
second position).
[10] The
applicant was notified by a letter dated December 10 (for the first
competition) and December 11 (for the second competition) that she had
failed and that no further action would be taken on her candidacy.
[11] In her
affidavit the applicant alleged that she had not objected to the fact that her
keyboard had an English configuration because she thought this difficulty was
part of the test. It was not until the test was over, when she spoke to other
candidates, that she realized that not all the keyboards had the same
configuration and that some candidates had a keyboard with French
configuration.
[12] Following
receipt of the letter notifying her that she had failed the test and that
consequently her candidacy would not be considered, she asked to meet with the
chairperson of the selection board and, on or around December 23, told him
about the differences in the keyboards used for the test. That was when she
learned that the Board did not take certain faults relating to the keyboard
configuration into account.
[13] The
eligibility list for the administrative assistant position was published on
January 31, 2003, and the eligibility list for the telephony
administrative clerk position was published on February 3, 2003.
Impugned
decision
[14] The
Appeal Board concluded that the applicant had been fairly and properly treated
and that no action was warranted, as the merit principle had been observed in
the course of the selection process. The Board accepted the Department’s
explanations and said that, in its opinion, all the candidates had been treated
equally, in view of the fact that mistakes involving accents and characters
relating to keyboard configuration had not been taken into account when the
test was graded.
[15] Further,
the Board concluded that it was up to the applicant to complain about her
keyboard as quickly as possible so that corrective action could be taken.
Relying on this Court’s previous decisions, and in particular on Cyr v.
Canada (Attorney General), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1916, the Board wrote:
The evidence shows that the appellant did not inform
the selection board of the inconveniences likely to hinder her full performance
until the eligibility lists were published. She might have been able to have
the selection board take a corrective measure such as letting her use a
keyboard with the same configuration as that at her workstation. Such a
decision by the selection board could have led to my intervention if it had
been shown to be unreasonable. In this circumstance, I cannot intervene.
Issues
[16] This
application for judicial review essentially raises two questions: (1) did
the Appeal Board err in concluding that the applicant had been fairly treated
and the merit principle observed? (2) did the Appeal Board make an error
of fact when it decided not to intervene on the ground that the applicant had
not objected to the problem of keyboard configuration before the eligibility
lists were published?
Analysis
[17] The
first question the Court must answer relates to the determination of the
applicable standard of review. Counsel for the applicant argued that the
Appeal Board’s decision not to intervene because the merit principle had not
been infringed was an error involving a mixed question of law and fact and
consequently attracted the intermediate standard of review. She further
submitted that the Board had made an error of fact when it concluded that the
applicant had not complained about the problem before the eligibility lists
were published.
[18] Counsel
for the respondent, on the other hand, argued that the appropriate standard was
patent unreasonableness, as the question whether the applicant was unfairly
treated was a question of fact. Alternatively, it was argued that this was a
mixed question of fact and law which attracted the reasonableness standard.
[19] I
consider that the pragmatic and functional approach set out by the Supreme
Court in Ryan, Dr. Q, Pushpanathan and Southam
cannot lead the Court to follow the standard of the reasonable decision.
Although the four tests set out by the highest court to guide us in our
discussion do not all point in the same direction, I feel that, properly
assessed in the context of the case at bar, it is the only possible conclusion.
[20] First, I
note that the Appeal Board’s decisions are not protected by a privative clause
and that applications for judicial review are not subject to the obtaining of a
prior authorization by this Court. Even if, according to the case-law, the
absence of a privative clause is not regarded in itself as a determining
factor, it is still an important indication of Parliament’s intent.
[21] Further,
there is no doubt that one of the purposes of the Act is to promote the merit
principle in the appointment process to public service positions. Although
determination of merit is not strictly speaking a question of a legal nature,
it is nonetheless of critical importance for candidates in a competition. We
are not concerned here with a debate the purpose of which is to strike a
delicate balance between various interests, but with a dispute involving the
immediate interests of the two parties, the employer and employee. If we
follow the analysis of Bastarache J. in Pushpanathan (at
page 1009), we are not dealing here with a problem that would require
“consideration of numerous interests simultaneously, and the promulgation of
solutions which concurrently balance benefits and costs for many different
parties”. Accordingly, the application of this test does not entail great
judicial restraint.
[22] On the
other hand, the Appeal Board’s expertise on these matters clearly cannot be
discounted. In view of their experience and the fact that they have to rule on
many competitions, the members of an appeal board undoubtedly enjoy a certain
advantage over judges of a court like this one. However, too much importance
should not be attached to this. As has been noted several times, this
advantage enjoyed by specialized administrative tribunals is more marked on
questions within their fields of expertise, and tends to diminish in relation
to questions of law or questions that do not require special expertise. Thus,
in Boucher et al. v. Canada (A.G.) (2000), 252 N.R. 186, the Federal
Court of Appeal, per Strayer J.A, concluded that the Federal Court
was not required to show very great deference to an appeal board on the
question whether the merit principle required that great or minimal importance
be given to the expertise and knowledge of candidates. In the same way, I am
inclined to think that an appeal board is not in a better position than this
Court when it has to deal with the question whether the merit principle
requires that candidates taking a test have all the same tools.
[23] Finally,
it seems to me that the determination the Appeal Board had to make involved a
mixed question of law and fact. In the case at bar, the Board had to determine
whether the merit principle had been infringed in the particular circumstances
in which the competition was held. Consequently, it had to determine whether
the facts submitted to it met the test set out in the Act. This is the
characteristic of a mixed question, which ordinarily requires some restraint by
the courts, but not quasi-total deference, as is the case for purely factual
questions.
[24] In view
of the foregoing analysis, therefore, I have come to the conclusion that the
applicable standard of review is reasonableness simpliciter. In other
words, the question the Court must ask is the following: was the decision by
the Appeal Board supported by a reason capable of withstanding [TRANSLATION] “careful” examination, even if this was not necessarily the only
decision that could have been reached.
[25] The
parties agree that the merit principle is at the heart of the Act and governs
the selection process for appointments to or from within the Public Service.
This rule is set out as clearly as possible in section 10(1) of the Act:
10.(1) Appointments to or from within the
Public Service shall be based on selection according to merit, as determined
by the Commission, and shall be made by the Commission, at the request of the
deputy head concerned, by competition or by such other process of personnel
selection designed to establish the merit of candidates as the Commission
considers is in the best interests of the Public Service.
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10.(1) Les nominations internes ou
externes à des postes de la fonction publique se font sur la base d’une
sélection fondée sur le mérite, selon ce que détermine la Commission, et à la
demande de l’administrateur général intéressé, soit par concours, soit par
tout autre mode de sélection du personnel fondé sur le mérite des candidats
que la Commission estime le mieux adapté aux intérêts de la fonction publique.
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[26] In this
context, the function of the Appeal Board created by the Commission is to investigate
and determine whether the merit principle has in fact been observed in the
process which has led to an appointment. Its first concern should not be to
protect the rights of an unsuccessful candidate, but to avoid an appointment
being made regardless of the principle of selection by merit. In Charest v.
Canada (Attorney General), [1973] F.C. 1217, the Federal Court of Appeal
clearly explained the function of an appeal board:
Under section 10 of the Public
Service Employment Act, “Appointments to . . . the Public
Service shall be based on selection according to merit . . .”.
The holding of a competition is one means provided by the Act to attain the
objective of selection by merit. However, it is important to remember that the
purpose of section 21 conferring a right of appeal on candidates who were
unsuccessful in a competition is also to ensure that the principle of selection
by merit is observed. When an unsuccessful candidate exercises this right, he
is not challenging the decision which has found him unqualified, he is, as
section 21 indicates, appealing against the appointment which has been, or
is about to be, made on the basis of the competition. If a right of appeal is
created by section 21, this is not to protect the appellant’s rights, it
is to prevent an appointment being made contrary to the merit principle. As,
in my view, this is what the legislator had in mind in enacting
section 21, it seems clear that a Board appointed under this section is
not acting in an irregular manner if, having found that a competition was held
in circumstances such that there could be some doubt as to its fitness to
determine the merit of candidates, it decides that no appointment should be
made as a result of that competition. Such a decision may well cause some
hardship to qualified candidates who have nothing wrong. However, aside from
the fact that it is not an undue hardship (since candidates can always enter
another competition), one cannot admit, in order to avoid this hardship, that
appointments can be made in the Public Service without ensuring that the merit
principle is observed.
[27] In the
case at bar, the Appeal Board clearly made an error when it refused to
intervene on the ground that the applicant had failed to complain in due time,
that is, before the eligibility list was published. It is quite clear from the
evidence that the applicant informed the selection board as soon as she
received a letter telling her that she had failed the test involving use of a
computer keyboard, that is, over a month before the eligibility lists for the
two competitions for which she had applied were published. The principle
applied by my colleague Tremblay-Lamer J. in Cyr v. Canada (Attorney
General), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1916, was thus not applicable in the case
at bar, as counsel for the respondent in fact conceded at the hearing. It
would undoubtedly have been desirable for the applicant to complain as soon as
she learned of the fact that the keyboards did not all have the same
configuration; but I cannot conclude from that that she did not complain in due
time.
[28] That
being said, the respondent argued that this was not a fatal error since the
applicant was in any case treated fairly and properly by the selection board.
Not only did she not testify about the way in which the keyboard configuration
could have affected her performance, there is no evidence that other candidates
might have been given an unfair advantage as a result of the fact that they had
a keyboard configured according to their needs. Counsel for the respondent
further argued that the selection board had taken into account the additional
difficulty which some candidates might have faced by allowing more time to
reproduce the text than would ordinarily have been required, and by not taking
into account mistakes involving accents and signs associated with the keyboard
configuration.
[29] With
respect, I cannot subscribe to that argument. On the contrary, it seems to me
that, at a minimum, the merit principle, according to which the best candidate
to fill a position should be found, requires that all candidates be placed on
an equal footing when the time comes to assess them. How can one be sure that
the best candidate is chosen if they are not given the same tools to do the
test? It may well be that the corrective measure which the authorities tried
to apply could alleviate the disadvantages suffered by some candidates, but how
can one be sure?
[30] By
allowing more time than would ordinarily have been required, an advantage was
still being indirectly given to those who had a keyboard with a French
configuration, as they may have had time to revise their text, which the others
perhaps did not have a chance to do. As to the fact that mistakes relating to
keyboard configuration were not taken into account, how can we be sure that
this was the only effect of the stress occasioned by the use of a keyboard with
an English configuration?
[31] It may
well be that the disadvantage associated with the use of a keyboard with which
one is not familiar was offset by notifying candidates at the start of the test
that mistakes involving the keyboard configuration would not be taken into
account. I do not have to decide that point in considering the application for
judicial review at bar. However, I cannot help pointing out that the best way
of ensuring that everyone is treated equally would simply be to provide
keyboards configured in the language of the test, or compatible with the
preferences of candidates.
[32] In
conclusion, I consider that the Appeal Board erred when it decided that it
could not intervene and that the merit principle had been observed in all
respects. It was not reasonable to conclude that candidates had had an equal
chance despite the fact that some of them had to use a keyboard with which they
were not familiar. In the circumstances, the merit principle clearly was not
observed and the Appeal Board should have intervened to draw the Commission’s
attention to the irregularity vitiating the selection process, in accordance
with subsection 21(3) of the Act.
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(s)
“Yves de Montigny”
Judge
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Certified
true translation
François Brunet, LL.B., B.C.L.
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1522-03
STYLE OF CAUSE: BOUCHRA KADOURI
v. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
PLACE OF HEARING: Ottawa, Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: April 4, 2005
REASONS FOR ORDER BY: The Honourable Mr. Justice de
Montigny
DATED: April
19, 2005
APPEARANCES:
James Cameron
FOR THE APPLICANT
Marie Crowley
FOR THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Raven, Allen, Cameron & Ballantyne
FOR THE APPLICANT
Ottawa, Ontario
John H. Sims, Q.C.
FOR THE RESPONDENT
Deputy Attorney
General of Canada
Ottawa, Ontario