Date:
20120604
Docket:
T-789-10
Citation:
2012 FC 681
Ottawa, Ontario, June 4, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Near
BETWEEN:
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SAMEH BOSHRA
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Applicant, Sameh Boshra, seeks judicial review of a decision of the Public
Service Staffing Tribunal (PSST) dated March 4, 2010. The PSST dismissed his
complaint regarding abuse of authority in an appointment process for a lack of
jurisdiction based on the Public Service Employment Act, SC 2003, c 22
(PSEA).
I. Preliminary
Matters
[2]
At
the outset of the hearing, the Applicant, as a self-represented litigant,
requested that I recuse myself from these proceedings on the basis of my
previous employment with the Department of Justice. He declined to participate
further if I continued to preside over the hearing.
[3]
I
saw no justification for recusing myself and declined the Applicant’s
invitation to do so, noting that there was no formal motion brought and no
supporting evidence beyond some general allegations made in the context of a
Motion to Reconsider my previous order striking his Notice of Constitutional
Question. I stated that I would proceed with the hearing of the main
application at that time. The Applicant indicated that he would not
participate further and I confirmed that the matter would be dealt with on the
written material already before me.
[4]
I
also rely on the principles governing such recusals as outlined by my colleague
Justice Richard
Mosley in Canada (Attorney General) v Khawaja, 2007 FC 533,
[2007] FCJ no 724. The Ethical Principles for Judges recognize that those
principles governing judges and the involvement of their former law firms
cannot be strictly applied to those who practiced in government. It is
recommended that I “avoid sitting on any case commenced in the particular local
office of the government institution” prior to my appointment. That is not an
issue in this instance.
[5]
In
my previous employment at the Department of Justice, specifically with
Environment Canada, I had no prior knowledge of or involvement with the
Applicant and the issues raised by his current application. As a consequence,
I see no conflict of interest or that an informed person viewing the matter
realistically and practically and having thought the matter through would
conclude that a reasonable apprehension of bias would be present in this case. I
therefore considered it necessary to reach a determination based on the written
record, given the Applicant’s refusal to participate at the oral hearing.
II. Background
[6]
The
Applicant expressed interest in working with the Office of Disability Issues
(ODI) at Human Resources and Social Development Canada (HRSDC) after completing
graduate studies in 2007. However, he subsequently received and accepted an
offer of employment from Statistics Canada (StatCan).
[7]
In
August 2008, the Applicant filed a grievance with StatCan related to a
workplace incident.
[8]
On
July 17, 2009, while working at StatCan, the Applicant received an email from
Guy Morissette, Manager, ODI, HRSDC inquiring whether he would consider
employment opportunities with ODI. On July 29, 2009, the Applicant met with
Mr. Morissette, who indicated his willingness to hire him. They began
corresponding regarding the arrangements, including a possible start date of
August 17, 2009. There also appear to have been some efforts on the part of
Mr. Morissette to prepare an office space and telephone line. A Request for
Human Resources Services document indicated that this would be an
“Indeterminate appointment” based on the “Deployment of Sameh Boshra.”
[9]
On
July 31, 2009, the Applicant received a termination notice from StatCan citing
“personal suitability” concerns. He subsequently filed a complaint with the
Public Service Labour Relations Board (PSLRB) for wrongful dismissal.
[10]
On
August 4, 2009, however, the Applicant sent an email to Mr. Morissette
notifying him of the change in his employment status with StatCan.
[11]
In
an email on August 5, 2009 (the initial draft having been prepared for internal
vetting on August 3, 2009), Mr. Morissette informed the Applicant that he was
unable to make a formal offer of employment. Given budgetary constraints,
approval from the Director General (DG) had not been forthcoming.
[12]
On
December 29, 2009, the Applicant received a reply to an Access to Information
and Privacy (ATIP) Request. After reviewing the records of HRSDC, he filed a
complaint with the PSST regarding the EC-04 non advertised appointment process,
claiming an abuse of authority and revocation of his offer.
[13]
On
February 1, 2010, the Applicant filed a request for an extension of time to
file his complaint, since relevant documents had only recently come into his
possession.
[14]
On
February 12, 2010, the Respondent before the PSST (HRSDC) brought a motion to
dismiss the complaint because no appointment or proposed appointment had been
made at the time it was filed.
[15]
In
its letter dated March 4, 2010, the PSST issued the decision that is now before
this Court.
III. Decision
Under Review
[16]
The
PSST noted that an employee’s right to make a complaint under section 77 of the
PSEA is conditional on an appointment or proposed appointment having been made.
Since no appointment had been made of the Applicant, the PSST found it did not
have jurisdiction to consider his complaint.
[17]
Moreover,
if the staffing transaction was indeed contemplated as a deployment, the PSST
would not have jurisdiction to consider and dispose of the complaint. Subsection
53(1) of the PSEA specifically excludes a “deployment” from the meaning of
“appointment.” As a consequence, neither a deployment nor its revocation fall
within the jurisdiction assigned to the PSST under section 77 of the PSEA.
[18]
The
PSST dismissed the complaint because it had no jurisdiction over it and
suggested there was no need to render a decision on the complainant’s request
for an extension of time to file his complaint.
IV. Relevant
Provisions
[19]
Subsection
88(2) establishes the mandate of the PSST to consider complaints under the
PSEA, including those related to appointments or proposed appointments, as
follows:
Mandate
(2) The mandate of the Tribunal
is to consider and dispose of complaints made under subsection 65(1) and sections
74, 77 and 83.
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Mission
(2) Le Tribunal a pour mission
d’instruire les plaintes présentées en vertu du paragraphe 65(1) ou des
articles 74, 77 ou 83 et de statuer sur elles.
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[20]
To
make a complaint alleging abuse of authority under subsection 77(1), an
appointment or proposed appointment must have taken place. The provision
reads:
Grounds
of complaint
77. (1) When the Commission has
made or proposed an appointment in an internal appointment process, a person
in the area of recourse referred to in subsection (2) may — in the manner and
within the period provided by the Tribunal’s regulations — make a complaint
to the Tribunal that he or she was not appointed or proposed for appointment
by reason of
(a) an abuse of authority by
the Commission or the deputy head in the exercise
of its or his or her authority
under subsection 30(2);
(b) an abuse of authority by
the Commission in choosing between an advertised and a non-advertised
internal appointment process; or
(c) the failure of the
Commission to assess the complainant in the official language of his or her
choice as required by subsection 37(1).
Area
of recourse
(2) For the purposes of
subsection (1), a person is in the area of recourse if the person is
(a) an unsuccessful candidate
in the area of selection determined under section 34, in the case of an
advertised internal appointment process; and
(b) any person in the area of
selection determined under section 34, in the case of a non-advertised
internal appointment process.
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Motifs
des plaintes
77. (1) Lorsque la Commission a
fait une proposition de nomination ou une nomination dans le cadre d’un
processus de nomination interne, la personne qui est dans la zone de recours
visée au paragraphe (2) peut, selon les modalités et dans le délai fixés par
règlement du Tribunal, présenter à celui-ci une plainte selon laquelle elle
n’a pas été nommée ou fait l’objet d’une proposition de nomination pour l’une
ou l’autre des raisons suivantes :
a) abus de pouvoir de la part
de la Commission ou de l’administrateur général
dans l’exercice de leurs
attributions respectives au titre du paragraphe 30(2);
b) abus de pouvoir de la part
de la Commission du fait qu’elle a choisi un processus de nomination interne
annoncé ou non annoncé, selon le cas;
c) omission de la part de la
Commission d’évaluer le plaignant dans la langue officielle de son choix, en
contravention du paragraphe 37(1).
Zone
de recours
(2) Pour l’application du
paragraphe (1), une personne est dans la zone de recours si :
a) dans le cas d’un processus
de nomination interne annoncé, elle est un candidat non reçu et est dans la
zone de sélection définie en vertu de l’article 34;
b) dans le cas d’un processus
de nomination interne non annoncé, elle est dans la zone de sélection définie
en vertu de l’article 34.
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[21]
Complaints
related to the revocation of an appointment are brought under section 74:
Complaint
74. A person whose appointment
is revoked by the Commission under subsection 67(1) or by the deputy head
under subsection 15(3) or 67(2) may, in the manner and within the period
provided by the Tribunal’s regulations, make a complaint to the Tribunal that
the revocation was unreasonable.
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Plaintes au Tribunal
74. La personne dont
la nomination est révoquée par la Commission en vertu du paragraphe 67(1) ou
par l’administrateur général en vertu des paragraphes 15(3) ou 67(2) peut,
selon les modalités et dans le délai fixés par règlement du Tribunal,
présenter à celui-ci une plainte selon laquelle la révocation n’était pas
raisonnable
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[22]
However,
a deployment is excluded from the definition of an appointment, and
consequently the jurisdiction of the PSST to decide a related complaint, by
virtue of subsection 53(1):
Deployment
not an appointment
53. (1) A deployment is not an
appointment within the meaning of this Act.
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Précision
53. (1) Les mutations ne
constituent pas des nominations pour l’application de la présente loi.
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[23]
For
the purposes of the PSEA, a deployment is defined in subsection 2(1):
“deployment”
means the transfer of a person from one position to another in accordance
with Part 3.
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«
mutation » Transfert d’une personne d’un poste à un autre sous le régime de
la partie 3.
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[24]
Some
of the additional provisions governing deployments under Part 3 are as follows:
Authority
of deputy heads to deploy
51. (1) Except as provided in
this or any other Act, a deputy head may deploy employees to or within the
deputy head’s organization.
Deployment
from separate agencies
(2) Except as provided in this
or any other Act, a deputy head may deploy to the deputy head’s organization
persons who are employed in a separate agency to which the Commission does
not have the exclusive authority to make appointments if the Commission has,
after reviewing the staffing program of the separate agency at the agency’s
request, approved deployments from it.
Deployment
within or between groups
(3) A deployment may be made
within an occupational group or, unless excluded by regulations under
paragraph 26(1)(a), between occupational groups.
Treasury
Board directives and regulations
(4) A deployment to or within
an organization named in Schedule I or IV to the Financial Administration
Act shall be made in the manner directed by the Treasury Board and in
accordance with any regulations of the Treasury Board.
Employment
status preserved
(5) The deployment of a person
may not
(a) constitute a promotion,
within the meaning of regulations of the Treasury Board, in the case of an
organization named in Schedule I or IV to the Financial Administration Act,
or as determined by the separate agency, in the case of a separate agency to
which the Commission has the exclusive authority to make appointments; or
(b) change a person’s period of
employment from a specified term to indeterminate.
Consent
to deployment
(6) No person may be deployed
without his or her consent unless
(a) agreement to being deployed
is a condition of employment of the person’s current position; or
(b) the deputy head of the
organization in which the person is employed finds, after investigation, that
the person has harassed another person in the course of his or her employment
and the deployment is made within the same organization.
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Droit
d’effectuer des mutations
51. (1) Sauf disposition
contraire de la présente loi ou de toute autre loi, l’administrateur général
peut muter des fonctionnaires à l’administration relevant de sa compétence ou
au sein de cette administration.
Mutations
en provenance d’organismes distincts
(2) Sauf disposition contraire
de la présente loi ou de toute autre loi, l’administrateur général peut muter
à l’administration relevant de sa compétence des employés d’un organisme
distinct dans lequel les nominations ne relèvent pas exclusivement de la
Commission, si celle-ci, après avoir étudié, sur demande de l’organisme
distinct, le régime de dotation de celui-ci, a approuvé les mutations en
provenance de l’organisme.
Mouvements
de personnel
(3) La mutation peut
s’effectuer à l’intérieur d’un groupe professionnel ou, sauf exclusion par
les règlements pris en vertu de l’alinéa 26(1)a), entre groupes
professionnels.
Modalités
(4) Dans le cas d’une
administration figurant aux annexes I ou IV de la Loi sur la gestion des
finances publiques, la mutation se fait selon les modalités fixées par le
Conseil du Trésor et conformément à ses règlements.
Maintien
de la situation du fonctionnaire
(5)
Aucune mutation ne peut :
a) constituer une promotion —
au sens des règlements du Conseil du Trésor dans le cas d’une administration
figurant aux annexes I ou IV de la Loi sur la gestion des finances
publiques ou au sens donné au terme par l’organisme distinct en cause
dans le cas d’un organisme distinct dans lequel les nominations relèvent
exclusivement de la Commission;
b) changer la durée des
fonctions d’une personne de déterminée à indéterminée.
Consentement
du fonctionnaire
(6) La mutation ne peut
s’effectuer sans le consentement de la personne en cause, sauf dans les cas
suivants:
a) le consentement à la
mutation fait partie des conditions d’emploi de son poste actuel;
b) l’administrateur général
dont elle relève conclut après enquête qu’elle a harcelé une autre personne
dans l’exercice de ses fonctions et la mutation se fait au sein de la même
administration.
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V. Issues
[25]
This
application raises the following issues:
(a) Did the PSST fail to
exercise jurisdiction by dismissing the complaint?
(b) Did
the PSST breach natural justice or procedural fairness by not investigating the
allegations raised in the complaint?
(c) Did
the PSST err in finding that there was no appointment or proposed appointment
to bring a complaint under the PSEA?
VI. Standard
of Review
[26]
The
standard of review applicable to questions of jurisdiction and procedural
fairness is correctness (see Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, 2009 CarswellNat 434 at paras
42-43).
[27]
However,
reasonableness was found applicable to the PSST’s decisions concerning the
procedures and approach to hearing the complaint as well as its assessments of
a case as questions of mixed fact and law (see Lavigne v Canada (Deputy Minister of Justice), 2009 FC 684, [2009] FCJ no 827 at paras 31-32).
[28]
As
articulated in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at
para 47, reasonableness is “concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process” as well as “whether the decision falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
VII. Analysis
A. Did
the PSST Fail to Exercise Jurisdiction by Dismissing the Complaint?
[29]
The
Applicant submits that the dismissal of his complaint by the PSST amounts to a
failure to exercise jurisdiction. He disputes the PSST’s conclusion that it
did not have jurisdiction to consider the complaint because there was no
appointment or proposed appointment and any staffing action would have been
contemplated as a deployment. He points to evidence of the efforts made to
hire him and prepare for his arrival. This includes suggestions in internal
emails that a workstation was being prepared and that Laura Oleson, the
Director General had previously approved the hiring despite his later
notification to the contrary.
[30]
The
Applicant refers to the Human Resources staffing document as additional
evidence of the conclusion of an appointment process. While the document refers
to a “deployment”, the Applicant insists that this was not initially
contemplated as a deployment as the PSST suggested. He maintains that Mr.
Morissette did not inquire into his status with StatCan until after he had been
offered a position.
[31]
However,
this does not amount to an error of jurisdiction. There is evidence of fairly
advanced plans to hire the Applicant, but that evidence also points to a
deployment as opposed to an appointment process. The Human Resources staffing
document is clear on this particular point. Although the Applicant suggests
that Mr. Morissette did not inquire into his status, there was awareness of his
employment with the Public Service at StatCan that would facilitate a
deployment. Critical evidence therefore points to this being a deployment as
opposed to an appointment process.
[32]
Subsection
53(1) is clear that a deployment is not an appointment within the meaning of
the PSEA. The PSST is not entitled to consider complaints in relation to a
deployment. As a consequence, its dismissal for lack of jurisdiction because
there was no appointment or proposed appointment and any action would have been
by way of deployment is not in error.
B. Did
the PSST Breach Natural Justice or Procedural Fairness by not Investigating the
Allegations Raised in the Complaint?
[33]
The
Applicant claims a violation of his right to be heard in bringing this
complaint based on the reference to that requirement in subsection 79(1) of the
PSEA. Given the evidence submitted and the PSST’s uncertainty as to jurisdiction,
the Applicant insists an oral hearing would have provided him with the
opportunity to address the question of jurisdiction, as well as make
submissions with respect to whether the selection process had been completed
and an appointment had been proposed or made.
[34]
However,
the Applicant is not automatically entitled to an oral hearing in response to
his complaint. Subsection 99(3) allows the PSST to decide a complaint without
holding a hearing. According to Justice Michel Shore in Lavigne, above
at para 92, this “must be interpreted as confirming that the Tribunal is not
obligated to hold hearings in all cases.” He also held at para 97 that the
PSST did not err in exercising its discretion regarding whether or not to hold
an oral hearing where the complainant was given every opportunity to state
their factual issues and arguments in writing and the PSST had enough
information to make its decision without holding an oral hearing.
[35]
I
am unwilling to find a breach of natural justice or procedural fairness solely
on the grounds of a failure to provide the Applicant with an oral hearing to
present his case, particularly when the PSST was of the opinion that it did not
have jurisdiction to hear the complaint.
C. Did
the PSST Err in Finding that there was no Appointment or Proposed Appointment
to Bring a Complaint Under the PSEA?
[36]
The
Applicant further contests the reasonableness of the PSST’s decision that there
was no appointment or proposed appointment and any action would have been in
relation to a deployment based on the evidence. Once again, he emphasizes the
extent to which arrangements were made to hire him. He suggests that this
evidence warranted further consideration by the PSST. More specifically, the Applicant
insists the PSST had to engage in further analysis of whether any appointment
or proposed appointment existed and whether it was truly contemplated as a
deployment.
[37]
In
light of clear evidence in the Human Resources staffing document that this was
to be contemplated as a deployment, however, the PSST’s conclusions were not
unreasonable. They accord with the evidence that while there were efforts made
to hire the Applicant; it was not yet finalized and would be in relation to a
deployment. Moreover, the termination of his status with the Public Service
could have made that deployment infeasible.
[38]
The
PSST was justified in weighing the evidence as it did to find that it should
dismiss the complaint because of jurisdictional considerations in relation to
an appointment or deployment. The PSST is entitled to deference in its
determination regarding the facts.
VIII. Conclusion
[39]
The
decision of the PSST dismissing the complaint does not amount to a failure to
exercise jurisdiction, breach of natural justice or procedural fairness by not
providing an oral hearing, or unreasonableness in the determination that there
was no appointment or proposed appointment. Whatever the Applicant’s concern
regarding his interactions with Mr. Morissette; there is a strong indication
that this was in relation to a deployment to which the PSEA does not provide
for recourse with the PSST.
[40]
Accordingly,
this application for judicial review is dismissed
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that this
application for judicial review is dismissed.
“
D. G. Near ”