Date: 20091216
Docket: T‑1733‑08
Citation: 2009 FC 1273
Ottawa, Ontario,
December 16, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice
Mainville
BETWEEN:
CHARLOTTE RHÉAUME
Applicant
and
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
The applicant, Charlotte Rhéaume (the applicant)
seeks judicial review of a decision of Renaud Paquet, an adjudicator appointed
by the Public Service Labour Relations Board, dated October 6, 2008,
wherein the adjudicator dismissed the grievance filed by the applicant on
January 21, 2002, since he was without jurisdiction under section 92 of
the former Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. (1985), c. P‑35.
[2]
If the Court finds that the adjudicator did not
have jurisdiction to hear the applicant’s grievance under section 92 of the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act, the applicant, in the
alternative, seeks judicial review of the final decision of her employer, the
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, on her grievance, dated February 2, 2004, and, consequently, an extension
of time.
Relevant facts
[3]
The applicant works for the Canada Customs and
Revenue Agency (the Agency). She was based in Montréal and performed tasks in
connection with the administration and interpretation of the Goods and Services
Tax (GST) and some aspects relating to excise taxes. For this, she held a
position classified as PM‑2. As the result of an administrative
reorganization, the applicant’s tasks were assigned to other administrative
units and centres.
[4]
In late October 2001, the Agency assigned
the applicant new tasks as an office review officer, also a PM‑2 position
but involving work that was very different from what the applicant was doing
before. Considering the applicant’s little experience in these new tasks, the
Agency temporarily assigned her PM‑1 level tasks under what the Agency
described as a [translation] “planned
training plan” so that the applicant would be [translation]
“qualified to perform PM‑2 functions within a reasonable lapse of
time” (Exhibit D‑4 of the applicant’s affidavit, Applicant’s Record,
at page 63).
[5]
The applicant felt aggrieved by these
assignments and, with the support of her union, the Public Service Alliance of
Canada, filed a grievance on January 21, 2002. This grievance bore number 2002‑1208‑33498
at first, but was subsequently dealt with under number 2002‑1208‑34825
(the grievance). The grievance was several pages long, but the most relevant
elements are the following (Exhibit D‑1 of the applicant’s
affidavit, Applicant’s Record, at pages 52 and 53):
[translation]
I believe that
the employer:
·
has transferred me prematurely;
·
has violated the Employment Equity Act;
·
is limiting my opportunities for advancement by
ignoring my qualifications, experience and interests;
·
is not providing me with access to relevant and
necessary training;
·
is assigning me non‑professional tasks at
the lower level of PM‑01 and is violating my dignity;
·
is tarnishing my professional image;
·
is limiting access to assignments in the
scientific field, for which I have a master’s degree and experience;
·
is contravening section 11 of the Canadian
Charter and the Employment Equity Act and its related regulations;
·
has violated the Public Service Employment
Act and Regulations; and
·
has failed to comply with the Canada Customs
and Revenue Agency Act.
Corrective
measures requested
That the
employer assign me work appropriate for my group and level and not at the lower
PM‑01 level;
Considering that
the employer has temporarily assigned me to a position in Income Tax, that the
employer immediately give me adequate technical training so that I can be
comfortable in this new sector, perform my work professionally and understand the
context of my work and its implications until I obtain a specialized position
meeting my qualifications and interests;
That the
employer respect the Charter, the Public Service Employment Act and Regulations
, the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act and the Equity Act by
retroactively applying to November 1, 1999, the Work Force Adjustment
Policy/Directive and correct my present level;
That the
employer allow me priority access to positions employment in the scientific
field, on an indeterminate basis or for assignments;
Should the
employer fail to apply the Work Force Adjustment Policy/Directive, that the
employer repatriate my GST tasks to Montréal;
That the
employer reinstate me, in priority to all other persons, in a position in the
public service at my position level.
[6]
This grievance unsuccessfully went through the
various levels of the grievance process to be finally dismissed at the final
level on February 2, 2004,
in a decision of the Assistant Commissioner of the Agency’s Human Resources
Branch, for the following reasons (Applicant’s Record, at pages 66 and 67):
[translation]
. . .
Concerning the
retroactive application of the Work Force Adjustment Appendix (WAA) to November
1, 1999, I must advise you that I consider your grievance to be out of time. In
fact, under your collective agreement, your grievance cannot concern situations
that happened more than 25 days before you filed the grievance. For this
reason, your grievance is dismissed on this point.
I have
nevertheless studied your file. I consider that management did not have to apply
the Work Force Adjustment Appendix in 1999 because at that time you still had
to perform tasks that were related to your duties. I also consider that
management acted correctly in October 2001 by notifying you that your
workload had become clearly insufficient to warrant preserving your position
and by offering you two permanent transfers, which you refused. Finally, I am
of the opinion that management properly complied with the Work Force Adjustment
Appendix by determining that you were surplus in 2002 and by offering you a
guarantee of a reasonable job offer. If your grievance had been filed within
the time limits, it would also have been dismissed for the reasons mentioned
above.
As far as your
request for training and your dissatisfaction with your tasks are concerned,
your union representative acknowledged that this grievance had become moot
because, since your grievance in January 2002, you were given a training
plan and you are now performing PM‑2 tasks. I am therefore informing you
that your grievance is dismissed.
[7]
The union refused to refer the grievance to adjudication
before the Public Service Labour Relations Board. The applicant did not file a complaint
against or seek a remedy from her union for refusing to refer the grievance to adjudication.
[8]
Despite the union’s refusal, the applicant
decided to refer the grievance to adjudication herself, without her union’s support
or consent . She referred three grievances to adjudication:
a. The first reference to adjudication, dated March 16, 2004, was made under subparagraph 92(1)(b)(ii)
of the former Public Service Staff Relations Act. It should be noted
that the numbering of the English and French versions of paragraph 92(1)(b)
of this Act does not match, since the English version is divided into subparagraphs
(i) and (ii), which are not in the French version; however, the legal scope of both
versions is identical. The applicant made the following handwritten note on the
referral form: [translation] “constructive
dismissal, demotion and workforce adjustment” (Exhibit D‑7 of the
applicant’s affidavit, Applicant’s Record, at pages 92 and 93).
b. The second reference to adjudication, also
dated March 16, 2004, was made under paragraph 92(1)(c) of the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act. The applicant made the
following handwritten note on the referral form: [translation] “and workforce adjustment” (Exhibit D‑7
of the applicant’s affidavit, Applicant’s Record, pages 95 and 96).
c. The third reference to adjudication, dated March 23, 2004, was made under section 99
of the former Public Service Staff Relations Act (Exhibit D‑7
of the applicant’s affidavit, Applicant’s Record, at pages 98 and 99).
[9]
On October 25, 2004, the Agency made a
preliminary objection to the references to adjudication and to the adjudicator’s
jurisdiction. The applicant requested and obtained two postponements of the
hearing before the adjudicator at which the preliminary objection was to be disposed
of. A hearing was finally held on this issue, and the adjudicator’s decision dated
October 6, 2008, allowed
the Agency’s objections and dismissed the grievance for lack of jurisdiction.
Relevant legislation
[10]
The new Public Service Labour Relations Act,
S.C. 2003, c. 22, s. 2, came into force on April 1,
2005. The new Act replaced the former Public Service Staff Relations Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. P‑35, subject to the transitional
provisions in the Public Service Modernization Act, S.C. 2003,
c. 22. Among other things, these transitional provisions provided the
following:
57. (1) The
following rules apply to requests for arbitration made before the day on
which section 136 of the new Act comes into force and for which no
arbitral award had been made before that day:
(a) if
no arbitration board had been established or arbitrator appointed before that
day, the request is to be dealt with as though it had been made under
section 136 of the new Act;
(b) if
an arbitrator had been appointed before that day, the arbitrator is deemed to
be an arbitration board consisting of a single member established under
section 139 of the new Act and the arbitration is to continue in
accordance with Division 9 of Part 1 of the new Act; and
(c) if an arbitration board had
been established before that day, the arbitration board is deemed to be an
arbitration board consisting of three members established under
section 140 of the new Act and the arbitration is to continue in
accordance with Division 9 of Part 1 of the new Act.
(2) For greater certainty, an arbitral
award may be made under subsection (1) only in respect of a term or
condition of employment that could have been embodied in an arbitral award
made under the former Act as it read immediately before the day on which
section 140 of the new Act comes into force.
. . .
61. (1) Subject to subsection (5),
every grievance presented in accordance with the former Act that was not
finally dealt with before the day on which section 208 of the new Act
comes into force is to be dealt with on and after that day in accordance with
the provisions of the former Act, as they read immediately before that day.
|
57. (1) Les
règles ci‑après s’appliquent aux demandes d’arbitrage présentées avant
la date d’entrée en vigueur de l’article 136 de la nouvelle loi et qui n’ont
fait l’objet d’aucune décision arbitrale :
a) si aucun conseil d’arbitrage n’a été créé ni aucun arbitre nommé
avant cette date, il est décidé de la demande comme si elle avait été
présentée en vertu de cet article;
b) si un arbitre a été nommé avant cette date, celui‑ci est
réputé être un conseil d’arbitrage à membre unique créé aux termes de l’article 139
de la nouvelle loi et il est décidé de la demande conformément à la
section 9 de la partie 1 de cette loi;
c) si un
conseil d’arbitrage a été créé avant cette date, celui‑ci est réputé
être un conseil d’arbitrage de trois membres créé aux termes de l’article 140
de la nouvelle loi et il est décidé de la demande conformément à la
section 9 de la partie 1 de cette loi.
(2) Il est entendu que la décision
arbitrale rendue au titre du paragraphe (1) ne peut porter que sur une
condition d’emploi susceptible d’être incluse dans une décision arbitrale
rendue au titre de l’ancienne loi, dans sa version antérieure à la date d’entrée
en vigueur de l’article 140 de la nouvelle loi.
[...]
61. (1) Sous réserve du
paragraphe (5), il est statué conformément à l’ancienne loi, dans sa
version antérieure à la date d’entrée en vigueur de l’article 208 de la
nouvelle loi, sur les griefs présentés sous le régime de l’ancienne loi s’ils
n’ont pas encore fait l’objet d’une décision définitive à cette date.
|
[11]
The relevant provisions of the former Public
Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P‑35, as
amended, are the following:
91. (1) Where any employee feels
aggrieved
(a) by the interpretation or
application, in respect of the employee, of
(i) a provision of a statute, or of a
regulation, by‑law, direction or other instrument made or issued by the
employer, dealing with terms and conditions of employment, or
(ii) a provision of a collective
agreement or an arbitral award, or
(b) as a result of any occurrence
or matter affecting the terms and conditions of employment of the employee,
other than a provision described in subparagraph (a)(i) or (ii),
in respect of which no administrative
procedure for redress is provided in or under an Act of Parliament, the
employee is entitled, subject to subsection (2), to present the
grievance at each of the levels, up to and including the final level, in the
grievance process provided for by this Act.
(2) An employee is not entitled to
present any grievance relating to the interpretation or application, in
respect of the employee, of a provision of a collective agreement or an
arbitral award unless the employee has the approval of and is represented by
the bargaining agent for the bargaining unit to which the collective
agreement or arbitral award applies, or any grievance relating to any action
taken pursuant to an instruction, direction or regulation given or made as
described in section 113.
. . .
92. (1) Where an employee has presented a
grievance, up to and including the final level in the grievance process, with
respect to
(a) the interpretation or
application in respect of the employee of a provision of a collective
agreement or an arbitral award,
(b) in the case of an employee in
a department or other portion of the public service of Canada specified in Part I of
Schedule I or designated pursuant to subsection (4),
(i) disciplinary action resulting in
suspension or a financial penalty, or
(ii) termination of employment or
demotion pursuant to paragraph 11(2)(f) or (g) of the Financial
Administration Act, or
(c) in the case of an employee not
described in paragraph (b), disciplinary action resulting in
termination of employment, suspension or a financial penalty,
and the grievance has not been dealt with
to the satisfaction of the employee, the employee may, subject to
subsection (2), refer the grievance to adjudication.
(2) Where a grievance that may be
presented by an employee to adjudication is a grievance described in
paragraph (1)(a), the employee is not entitled to refer the
grievance to adjudication unless the bargaining agent for the bargaining
unit, to which the collective agreement or arbitral award referred to in that
paragraph applies, signifies in the prescribed manner its approval of the
reference of the grievance to adjudication and its willingness to represent
the employee in the adjudication proceedings.
(3) Nothing in subsection (1) shall
be construed or applied as permitting the referral to adjudication of a
grievance with respect to any termination of employment under the Public
Service Employment Act.
(4) The Governor in Council may, by
order, designate for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b) any portion
of the public service of Canada specified in Part II of Schedule I.
99. (1) Where the employer and a
bargaining agent have executed a collective agreement or are bound by an
arbitral award and the employer or the bargaining agent seeks to enforce an
obligation that is alleged to arise out of the agreement or award, and the
obligation, if any, is not one the enforcement of which may be the subject of
a grievance of an employee in the bargaining unit to which the agreement or
award applies, either the employer or the bargaining agent may, in the
prescribed manner, refer the matter to the Board.
(1.1) Where the employer and a bargaining
agent have executed a collective agreement or are bound by an arbitral award
and the employer or the bargaining agent seeks to enforce an obligation that
is alleged to arise out of the agreement or award, and the obligation, if
any, is one the enforcement of which may be the subject of a grievance of an
employee in the bargaining unit to which the agreement or award applies, the
bargaining agent may, in the prescribed manner and with the agreement of the
employer, refer the matter to the Board.
(2) Where a matter is referred to the
Board pursuant to subsection (1) or (1.1), the Board shall hear and
determine whether there is an obligation as alleged and whether, if there is,
there has been a failure to observe or to carry out the obligation.
(3) The Board shall hear and determine
any matter referred to it pursuant to subsection (1) or (1.1) as though
the matter were a grievance, and subsection 96(2) and sections 97
and 98 apply in respect of the hearing and determination of that matter.
|
91. (1) Sous réserve du
paragraphe (2) et si aucun autre recours administratif de réparation ne
lui est ouvert sous le régime d’une loi fédérale, le fonctionnaire a le droit
de présenter un grief à tous les paliers de la procédure prévue à cette fin
par la présente loi, lorsqu’il s’estime lésé :
a) par l’interprétation
ou l’application à son égard :
(i) soit d’une disposition législative, d’un
règlement — administratif ou autre —, d’une instruction ou d’un
autre acte pris par l’employeur concernant les conditions d’emploi,
(ii) soit d’une disposition d’une
convention collective ou d’une décision arbitrale;
b) par
suite de tout fait autre que ceux mentionnés aux sous‑alinéas a)(i)
ou (ii) et portant atteinte à ses conditions d’emploi.
(2) Le fonctionnaire n’est pas admis à
présenter un grief portant sur une mesure prise en vertu d’une directive, d’une
instruction ou d’un règlement conforme à l’article 113. Par ailleurs, il
ne peut déposer de grief touchant à l’interprétation ou à l’application à son
égard d’une disposition d’une convention collective ou d’une décision
arbitrale qu’à condition d’avoir obtenu l’approbation de l’agent négociateur
de l’unité de négociation à laquelle s’applique la convention collective ou
la décision arbitrale et d’être représenté par cet agent.
[...]
92. (1) Après l’avoir porté jusqu’au
dernier palier de la procédure applicable sans avoir obtenu satisfaction, un
fonctionnaire peut renvoyer à l’arbitrage tout grief portant sur :
a) l’interprétation
ou l’application, à son endroit, d’une disposition d’une convention
collective ou d’une décision arbitrale;
b) dans le
cas d’un fonctionnaire d’un ministère ou secteur de l’administration publique
fédérale spécifié à la partie I de l’annexe I ou désigné par décret
pris au titre du paragraphe (4), soit une mesure disciplinaire
entraînant la suspension ou une sanction pécuniaire, soit un licenciement ou
une rétrogradation visé aux alinéas 11(2)f) ou g) de la Loi
sur la gestion des finances publiques;
c) dans
les autres cas, une mesure disciplinaire entraînant le licenciement, la
suspension ou une sanction pécuniaire.
(2) Pour pouvoir renvoyer à l’arbitrage
un grief du type visé à l’alinéa (1)a), le fonctionnaire doit
obtenir, dans les formes réglementaires, l’approbation de son agent
négociateur et son acceptation de le représenter dans la procédure d’arbitrage.
(3) Le paragraphe (1) n’a pas pour
effet de permettre le renvoi à l’arbitrage d’un grief portant sur le
licenciement prévu sous le régime de la Loi sur l’emploi dans la fonction
publique.
(4) Le gouverneur en conseil peut, par
décret, désigner, pour l’application de l’alinéa (1)b), tout
secteur de l’administration publique fédérale spécifié à la partie II de
l’annexe I.
99. (1) L’employeur et l’agent
négociateur qui ont signé une convention collective ou sont liés par une
décision arbitrale peuvent, dans les cas où l’un ou l’autre cherche à faire
exécuter une obligation qui, selon lui, découlerait de cette convention ou
décision, renvoyer l’affaire à la Commission, dans les formes réglementaires,
sauf s’il s’agit d’une obligation dont l’exécution peut faire l’objet d’un
grief de la part d’un fonctionnaire de l’unité de négociation visée par la
convention ou la décision.
(1.1) L’agent négociateur peut, avec le
consentement de l’employeur, renvoyer l’affaire à la Commission s’il s’agit d’une
obligation dont l’exécution peut faire l’objet d’un grief de la part du
fonctionnaire de l’unité de négociation visée par la convention ou la
décision.
(2) Après avoir entendu l’affaire qui lui
est renvoyée au titre du présent article, la Commission se prononce sur l’existence
de l’obligation alléguée et, selon le cas, détermine s’il y a eu ou non
manquement.
(3) La Commission entend et juge l’affaire
qui lui est renvoyée au titre du présent article comme s’il s’agissait d’un
grief, et le paragraphe 96(2) ainsi que les articles 97 et 98 s’appliquent
à l’audition et à la décision.
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[12]
It is to be noted that the Agency is not
mentioned in Part I of Schedule I to the former Public Service
Staff Relations Act but in Part II of Schedule I as a portion of the public
service of Canada that is a
separate employer. The Agency was included in Part II by operation of section 177
of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act, S.C. 1999, c. 17,
s. 177. No order designating the Agency was filed in Court by the
applicant, and the respondent confirmed that no such order had been issued.
Adjudicator’s decision
[13]
After having established the relevant facts, the
adjudicator noted that the “evidence showed that the grievor never stopped
receiving her PM‑02 salary, even though she performed PM‑01 tasks
for a few months in 2002”. The adjudicator then described the Agency’s
preliminary objections and the applicant’s replies.
[14]
The adjudicator found that the applicant could
not refer her grievance to adjudication under subsection 99(1) of the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act, since, according to the very
wording of the Act, this recourse was intended for the employer and the bargaining
agent.
[15]
The adjudicator also concluded that the
applicant could not refer her grievance to adjudication under paragraph 92(1)(b)
of the former Act because this recourse was only available to public servants
who work for a portion of the public service of Canada included in Part I
of Schedule I to the former Act, which excludes the Agency.
[16]
The adjudicator also concluded that the
applicant could not refer the grievance to adjudication under paragraph 92(1)(a)
of the former Act because the bargaining agent refused to approve the reference
and this approval was required under section 92.
[17]
Finally, the adjudicator concluded that the
grievance could not be referred to adjudication under paragraph 92(1)(c)
of the former Act because this paragraph concerns disciplinary action resulting
in termination of employment, suspension or a financial penalty, which did not
apply to the applicant. The adjudicator noted that the applicant mentioned constructive
dismissal in her reference to adjudication, but the adjudicator dismissed this
argument because “. . . from reading the grievance, [he saw] no
indication that it deal[t] with constructive dismissal”, adding the following:
[24] By
claiming that her grievance deals with disciplinary action, the grievor is
altering the essence of the grievance since disciplinary action is not part of
the grievance as originally filed. As established in Burchill, [Burchill
v. Attorney General of Canada, [1981] 1 F.C. 109], an adjudicator has
jurisdiction to deal only with the original grievance and not with a different
grievance or one the essence of which is no longer the same. The grievor’s
original grievance focuses primarily on the Work Force Adjustment policy
and is in no way a disciplinary grievance. Therefore, I allow the employer’s
objection to that effect. (adjudicator’s decision, p. 10, reproduced in
the Applicant’s Record, at page 33).
Parties’ positions
[18]
The applicant, who is acting on her own behalf, raised
a large number of questions in her written and oral submissions. The questions relate
to a basic position, namely the applicant’s argument that she was constructively
dismissed from her previous position at the Agency, where her tasks involved the
interpretation and application of the GST and some aspects relating to excise
taxes. Because of this constructive dismissal, the applicant submits that the
adjudicator erred with respect to the nature of grievance and therefore erred when
he decided that he was without jurisdiction.
[19]
The applicant submits that the Agency’s changing
her tasks was not a workforce adjustment within the meaning of administrative
policies, but rather an artificial adjustment made by the employer that led to her
constructive dismissal from her former position. In support of her allegations,
the applicant cites the definition of the term “work force adjustment” in Appendix
E of the collective agreement applicable at that time and which was entered
into between the Agency and the Public Service Alliance of Canada (Applicant’s
Record, at page 77):
Work force
adjustment—is a
situation that occurs when a deputy head decides that the services of one or
more indeterminate employees will no longer be required beyond a specified date
because of a lack of work, the discontinuance of a function, a relocation in
which the employee does not wish to participate or an alternative delivery
initiative.
[20]
According to the applicant, her former GST-related
tasks still exist, but were moved from Montréal to Ottawa, or to other departments, agencies and administrative centres. There
was therefore no real workforce adjustment within the meaning of Appendix E. In
addition, Appendix E requires that a “deputy head” decides to abolish a
position. However, according to the applicant, in her case, Regional Headquarters
had abolished her position. In the applicant’s view, this is a constructive
dismissal, especially since, after her former position was abolished, the
Agency assigned her tasks which were at a lower level than those of a PM‑2
position.
[21]
The applicant submits that the adjudicator failed
to deal with the constructive dismissal and that, accordingly, his decision
dismissing her reference to adjudication for lack of jurisdiction must be set
aside.
[22]
The respondent submits that several exhibits
filed by the applicant before the Federal Court in support of her claim of an
alleged constructive dismissal were not submitted to the adjudicator and consequently
these exhibits should be struck from the record. The Court will deal with this
issue further on.
[23]
The respondent submits that the applicable
standard of review in this case is that of reasonableness considering that the
adjudicator’s decision is based on a question of mixed law and fact, namely,
the interpretation of section 92 of the former Public Service Staff
Relations Act and the assessment of the facts relevant to the grievance
filed by the applicant.
[24]
On the substantive issue, the respondent submits
that the adjudicator was without jurisdiction, basically for the same reasons
as those given by the adjudicator in his decision.
Motion to
strike
[25]
In a notice of motion filed before the Court on January 20, 2009, the respondent requested
that several paragraphs of the applicant’s affidavit in support of her
application for judicial review be struck, principally because they contained
legal arguments, which was contrary to Rule 81 of the Federal Courts
Rules. The respondent also applied to have certain exhibits struck from the
record as a result of this and also asked to have the exhibits which had not
been filed in evidence before the adjudicator struck.
[26]
The respondent’s motion was dismissed with costs
by Prothonotary Mireille Tabib for the reasons stated in her decision dated
March 2, 2009. The respondent did not appeal the decision.
[27]
At the hearing before me, the respondent
repeated the same arguments submitted to the Prothonotary in support of the motion
to strike the affidavit and various exhibits. This is an indirect appeal of the
Prothonotary’s decision. Since the respondent did not appeal the Prothonotary’s
decision in a timely manner, there is no need to deal with this application any
further.
[28]
I note, however, that the applicant’s
application for judicial review obviously concerns the adjudicator’s decision
but also includes an alternative application for the judicial review of the
Agency’s final decision on the applicant’s grievance should the adjudicator be
without jurisdiction to dispose of it. I will deal with this alternative application
later, but, for the purpose of the motion to strike, I note that the applicant
could in fact submit the exhibits in question in support of her alternative
application.
[29]
Nevertheless, as far as the judicial review of
the adjudicator’s decision is concerned, this Court usually examines a case as
it was before the administrative tribunal in question: see, among others, Ontario
Association of Architects v. Association of Architectural Technologists of
Ontario, 2002 FCA 218, [2003] 1 F.C.331, at paragraph 30. This way of
proceeding is not, however, without exceptions, according to the principle that
justice is not a slave to procedure. Accordingly, there are many circumstances in
which this approach must not be used. In this case, the file as it was before
the adjudicator will be considered for the judicial review of the impugned decision.
I note, however, that the decision regarding the judicial review of the
adjudicator’s decision would be the same, whether or not all the exhibits filed
by the applicant are considered.
Applicable standard of review
[30]
In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at
paragraph 62, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the process of judicial
review involves two steps. First, courts ascertain whether the jurisprudence
has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of deference to be
accorded with regard to a particular category of question. Second, where the
first inquiry proves unfruitful, courts must proceed to an analysis of the
factors making it possible to identify the proper standard of review.
[31]
The issue before the adjudicator in the present
case was whether the applicant’s grievance could be referred to adjudication
under section 92 or 99 of the former Public Service Staff Relations
Act, specifically regarding the applicant’s allegations that this grievance
concerned a constructive dismissal. To answer this question, the adjudicator
had to interpret sections 92 and 99 of the Act in question, reproduced above,
analyze and interpret the language of the grievance and determine on the basis
of the facts before him whether the grievance established a constructive
dismissal.
[32]
There is some disagreement in case law about the
standard of review which applies in similar circumstances. In fact, the issue
before the adjudicator was one of jurisdiction, but it is also an issue which
is at the core of the adjudicator’s expertise in labour relations matters in
the federal public service.
[33]
Accordingly, in Shneidman v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2007 FCA 192, at paragraphs 15 to 21, a panel of the Federal
Court of Appeal ruled that the standard of correctness applied to an
adjudicator’s decision about her jurisdiction under subsection 92(1) of
the former Public Service Staff Relations Act. However, in Archambault
v. Customs and Revenue Agency, 2006 FCA 63, another panel of the
Federal Court of Appeal upheld the decision of Justice Tremblay‑Lamer,
2005 FC 183, at paragraphs 13 to 15, in which the standard of review of patent unreasonableness
was applied to an adjudicator’s decision on an alleged constructive dismissal,
in which the adjudicator concluded that he did not have jurisdiction for a
grievance under paragraph 92(1)(c) of the former Act. In contrast, the
standard of correctness was applied in Canada (Attorney General) v. Frazee,
2007 FC 1176, at paragraphs 14 to 16, and in Olson v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2008 FC 209, at paragraph 16, to adjudication decisions on section 92
of the former Act. However, in Canada (Attorney General) v. Basra, 2008
FC 606, at paragraphs 12 to 13, a mixed standard was established, namely that of
correctness for the legal test to be used and that of reasonableness for the
application of the legal test to the facts, for an adjudicator’s decision
rendered under section 209 of the new Public Service Labour Relations Act,
the current equivalent of section 92 of the former Act.
[34]
In these circumstances, it seems to me to be
appropriate to proceed to an analysis of the factors making it possible to
identify the proper standard of review for the purposes of this case.
[35]
According to paragraph 64 of Dunsmuir,
this analysis must be contextual and “. . . is dependent on the
application of a number of relevant factors, including: (1) the presence or
absence of a privative clause; (2) the purpose of the tribunal as determined by
interpretation of enabling legislation; (3) the nature of the question at
issue, and; (4) the expertise of the tribunal”. It is, however, not always necessary
to consider all of the factors, as some of them may be determinative of the applicable
standard of review in a specific case.
[36]
In this case, the adjudicator’s decision is not
protected by a privative clause. In fact, section 101 of the former Public
Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. (1985), c. P‑35, which included a
full privative clause for adjudicators’ decisions made under this Act, was
repealed by the Public Service Reform Act, S.C. 1992, c. 54, s. 73.
A privative clause similar to the one in section 101 of the former Act is
now provided in section 233 of the new Public Service Labour Relations Act,
S.C. 2003, c. 22, s. 233. Nevertheless, for the period concerned
in this case, no privative clause was in force. However, in Barry v. Canada
(Treasury Board), 221 N.R. 237, [1997] F.C.J. No. 1404 (QL) (FCA), the
Federal Court of Appeal noted that the fact that the privative clause in
section 101 of the former Act was repealed did not in any way change the
applicable standard of review:
2 A preliminary issue raised on this
appeal concerns the standard of curial deference owed the adjudicator’s
decision. The Motions Judge was of the view that because the privative clause
contained in the Act was repealed as of June 1, 1993, the proper standard
embraces the question of whether the adjudicator’s decision is “supportable by
the evidence”: see Public Service Reform Act, S.C. 1992, c.54,
s.73; and Canada (Attorney General) v. Wiseman (1995), 95 F.T.R. 200;
Canada (Procureur
général) v. Séguin (1995), 101 F.T.R. 64.
3 In our respectful view, the
standard of review adopted by the Motions Judge is contrary to the teachings of
the Supreme Court. It is true that prior to the repeal of the privative clause,
that Court had held in Canada (Attorney General) v. PSAC [1993] 1 S.C.R. 941
(“PSAC No. 2) that the appropriate standard of review for decisions of an
adjudicator acting under the Act was whether the decision was “patently
unreasonable”. In our view, nothing has changed by virtue of the repeal of the
privative clause. In United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of
America, Local 579 v. Bradco Construction Ltd., [1993] 2 S.C.R. 316
at 337‑38, Sopinka J. writing for the Court, held that even where
there is no privative clause the standard of review for arbitral awards which
involve the interpretation of collective agreements is circumscribed by the
concept of patently unreasonable:
In a number of
past decisions, this Court has indicated that judicial deference should be
accorded to the decisions of arbitrators interpreting a collective agreement
even in the absence of a privative clause. For example, in Douglas Aircraft
Co. of Canada v. McConnell, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 245,
Estey J. commented, at p. 275, with the rest of the Court concurring
on this point, that:
the law of
review has evolved, even in the absence of a privative clause, to a point of
recognition of the purpose of contractually‑rooted statutory arbitration;
namely, the speedy, inexpensive and certain settlement of differences without
interruption of the work of the parties. The scope of review only mirrors this
purpose if it concerns itself only with matters of law which assume
jurisdictional proportions.
. . .
A similarly
deferential approach based on the purpose of arbitration was taken in Volvo
Canada Ltd. v. U.A.W., Local 720, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 178,
at p. 214. In that case, a majority of this Court applied the patently
unreasonable test to the decision of an arbitrator appointed pursuant to a
collective agreement, even though this was consensual rather than statutory
arbitration and there was no privative clause per se. Noting that
neither of the parties to the agreement had any choice but to have a grievance
arbitrated, Pigeon J. stressed, at p. 214 that:
[o]n the other
hand, the arbitration is not meant to be an additional
step before the matter goes before the courts, the decision is meant to be
final. It is therefore imperative that decisions on the construction of a
collective agreement not be approached by asking how the Court would decide the
point but by asking whether it is a “patently unreasonable” interpretation of
the agreement.
4 In conclusion, the standard of
review of an adjudicator’s decision, rendered under the Act, with respect to
the interpretation of the provisions of a collective agreement is whether the
decision is patently unreasonable. This was true prior to June 1, 1993 and the same holds true after
that date.
[37]
The nature of the scheme established by the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act also calls for the
application of the standard of reasonableness. Both the Supreme Court and the
Federal Court of Appeal have often recognized the relative expertise of
adjudicators in the interpretation of collective agreements and have applied a deferential
standard of review to such decisions: Canadian Union of Public Employees,
Local 963 v N. B. Liquor Corporation, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227, at pages 235
and 236; Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 941, at pages 962 and 963; Canada Safeway Ltd. v. RWDSU,
Local 454, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 1079, at paragraph 58; Plourde v. Walmart
Company of Canada Inc., 2009 SCC 54, at paragraph 34; Public
Service Alliance of Canada v. Canada (Canadian Food Inspection Agency), 2005
FCA 366, at paragraph 18; and Barry v. Canada (Treasury Board), 221
N.R. 237, [1997] F.C.J. No. 1404 (QL) (FCA).
[38]
In this case, the adjudicator interpreted and
applied his enabling statute rather than a collective agreement. On the basis
of Dunsmuir, at paragraph 68, “. . . adjudicators acting under the PSLRA
[the Public Service Labour Relations Act, R.S.N.B. 1973, c. P‑25]
can be presumed to hold relative expertise in the interpretation of the
legislation that gives them their mandate, as well as related legislation that
they might often encounter in the course of their functions”. There is no
reason not to apply the same presumption to adjudicators appointed under the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act. In fact, as was also emphasized
by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir at paragraph 54: “Deference
will usually result where a tribunal is interpreting its own statute or
statutes closely connected to its function, with which it will have particular
familiarity: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations Board),
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 157, at para. 48; Toronto (City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487, at para. 39”.
[39]
The purpose of the former Public Service
Staff Relations Act concerning grievances and adjudication also favours
deference. In fact, the purpose is clearly to establish expeditious and
inexpensive procedures for the settlement of grievances in all sectors of the
federal public service.
[40]
Finally, the nature of the issues in question
also calls for the standard of reasonableness. In fact, the issues in question
are not of central importance to the legal system and are within an adjudicator’s
expertise, since they concern the organization of labour relations (see Dunsmuir,
at paragraphs 55 and 70).
[41]
Nevertheless, the interpretation of section 92
of the former Act does somewhat relate to an adjudicator’s jurisdiction. The
Supreme Court of Canada teaches that true issues of jurisdiction are
subject to the standard of correctness: Dunsmuir, at paragraph 59. Justice Rothstein
recently had an opportunity to clarify what is meant by a true issue of
jurisdiction in Nolan v. Kerry (Canada) Inc., 2009 SCC 39, at paragraphs 33 and 34, which
concerned the judicial review of a decision of the Ontario Financial Services
Tribunal and its jurisdiction to award costs:
[33] Administrative tribunals are creatures of
statute and questions that arise over a tribunal’s authority that engage the
interpretation of a tribunal’s constating statute might in one sense be
characterized as jurisdictional. However, the admonition of para. 59 of Dunsmuir
is that courts should be cautious in doing so for fear of returning “to the
jurisdiction/preliminary question doctrine that plagued the jurisprudence in
this area for many years”.
[34] The inference to be drawn from paras. 54
and 59 of Dunsmuir is that courts should usually defer when the tribunal
is interpreting its own statute and will only exceptionally apply a correctness
of standard when interpretation of that statute raises a broad question of the
tribunal’s authority.
[42]
Considering the nature of the labour relations scheme
established by the statute in question and the legal issues raised, I consider
that the adjudicator’s decision should be reviewed on the standard of
reasonableness. In any event, as I will point out later, the adjudicator’s
decision is not only reasonable but also correct from all points of view.
Accordingly, although, in my view, the standard of review of reasonableness
applies in this case, I would reach the same conclusions by applying the
correctness standard.
Was the adjudicator’s decision reasonable?
[43]
There is no doubt that the bargaining agent
refused to approve the referral of the applicant’s grievance to adjudication.
In this case, the adjudicator’s decision that the essential conditions for the
referral of the grievance to adjudication under paragraph 92(1)(a)
of the former Public Service Staff Relations Act had not been satisfied is
above reproach considering the mandatory provisions of subsection 92(2) of
this Act. In fact, the applicant did not file a reference to adjudication under
this provision.
[44]
There is also no doubt that the Agency is listed
in Part II of Schedule I to the former Act as a portion of the public
service of Canada that is a
separate employer. In addition, the applicant was not able to offer any orders concerning
the Agency that might have been issued under subsection 92(4) of the
former Public Service Staff Relations Act, and the respondent confirmed
that no such order had been issued. Consequently, the adjudicator’s decision
that the applicant was not contemplated by paragraph 92(1)(b) of
the former Act and could therefore not refer her grievance to adjudication
under this paragraph is not only reasonable but also correct. The provision
concerns employees in a department or other portion of the public service of Canada specified in Part I of Schedule I
or designated pursuant to subsection 92(4) of this Act.
[45]
As far as paragraph 92(1)(c) of the former
Act is concerned, the applicant could refer her grievance to adjudication
pursuant to this paragraph only if her grievance concerned “disciplinary action
resulting in termination of employment, suspension or a financial penalty”. The
issue therefore is whether the applicant’s grievance in fact concerned such
disciplinary action. On reading the grievance, the adjudicator noted that it
did not concern such an action and that the applicant could therefore not refer
her grievance to adjudication by operation of this provision. This part of the
adjudicator’s decision seems to me to be not only reasonable but also correct.
In fact, even a generous reading of the grievance does not reveal any allusions
to disciplinary action resulting in termination of employment, suspension or a
financial penalty.
[46]
However, the applicant submits that one must go
beyond the words used in her grievance to understand that it actually does refer
to a constructive dismissal. A close reading of this grievance does not support
such an interpretation. The grievance concerns administrative reorganization,
lack of training, the contested assignment of duties, requests for priority for
other positions, and so on. The corrective measures requested are of the same
type. This is not a grievance about constructive dismissal, and the adjudicator’s
decision in this respect is not only reasonable but also correct.
[47]
The applicant tried to amend the grievance when she
referred it to adjudication to turn it into a grievance on dismissal by writing
the words [translation] “constructive
dismissal, demotion and workforce adjustment” on the referral document. Can the
grievance therefore be referred to adjudication under paragraph 92(1)(c)
of the former Act? The adjudicator decided that it could not on the basis of Burchill
v. Attorney General of Canada, [1981] 1 F.C. 109. This aspect of the
adjudicator’s decision is also reasonable and correct. In fact, the Federal
Court of Appeal dealt with a similar issue in Burchill, above, by
refusing to allow such a change. The Federal Court recently confirmed this
approach in Shneidman, above, at paragraph 26. There is therefore
no need to dwell on this issue.
[48]
Finally, as far as the referral of the grievance
under section 99 of the former Public Service Staff Relations
Act is concerned, here, too, the adjudicator’s decision is not only
reasonable but also correct because only the employer and the bargaining agent
are concerned by this section. In fact, the applicant is no longer contesting
that aspect of the adjudicator’s decision according to which her grievance could
not be referred to adjudication under section 99 (see paragraph 61 of
the applicant’s memorandum of fact and law, Applicant’s Record, at page 157).
[49]
In conclusion, the adjudicator’s decision is
reasonable and correct in all aspects.
Alternative
application
[50]
The applicant, in the alternative, seeks judicial
review of her employer’s final decision on her grievance, dated February 2,
2004, and consequently an extension of time for that purpose.
[51]
I understand that the applicant is seeking
permission from this Court to extend the 30‑day time limit under subsection
18.1(2) of the Federal Courts Act to allow her to file an application
for judicial review of the Agency’s final decision on her grievance of more
than five years ago and dated February 2, 2004. By doing so, the
applicant could apply for judicial review of her employer’s decision before
this Court if she is unable to refer her grievance to adjudication.
[52]
This application for permission should have been
made in a separate motion rather than by way of an alternative finding in a
judicial review proceeding. However, even if I were to consider the alternative
finding on its merits I must dismiss the application.
[53]
The decision whether to grant an extension of
the time provided for in section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act is
discretionary. The principles to guide the Court in exercising its
discretionary power were recently reiterated by the Federal Court of Appeal in Muckenheim
v. Canada (Employment
Insurance Commission), 2008 FCA 249, at paragraph 8:
The decision whether
to grant an extension of time is a discretionary one. This court has set out
the principles that should guide the exercise of that discretion in Canada (Attorney General) v.
Hennelly (1999), 167 F.T.R. 158:
The proper test
is whether the applicant has demonstrated:
a. a continuing intention to pursue his
or her application;
b. the application has some merit;
c. that no prejudice to the respondent
arises from the delay; and that a reasonable explanation for the delay exists.
[54]
The applicant does not meet any of these
criteria.
[55]
The decisions rendered under the grievance
procedure established under section 91 of the former Public Service
Staff Relations Act can be subject to judicial review if the grievances
underlying these decisions are not likely to be referred to adjudication under section
92 of this Act (see, among others, Vaughan v. Canada, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 146,
at paragraphs 2 and 32, Hagel v. Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FC
329, and Julien v. Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 115).
[56]
As I have already stated, the applicant’s grievance
does not concern a disciplinary measure but rather an administrative
reorganization. Concerning the application of the appendix to the collective
agreement dealing with workforce adjustment, her employer argued that the
grievance was out of time (see the final decision dated February 2, 2004, Applicant’s
Record, at pages 66 and 67). With regard to this aspect of the grievance and
the other aspects regarding the applicant’s dissatisfaction with the changes to
her tasks and with the new position assigned to her, her bargaining agent
refused to support the referral of the grievance to adjudication.
[57]
This is therefore not a situation in which the
applicant’s grievance cannot be referred to adjudication because of statutory provisions.
Instead, the grievance was not referred to adjudication because of the
bargaining agent’s refusal to agree to this.
[58]
In addition, this grievance is out of time in
several respects. Finally, the employer resolved some aspects of the grievance several
years ago already by assigning PM‑2 tasks to the applicant.
[59]
Allowing a judicial review in such circumstances
seems unusual, especially considering that over five years have passed since
the employer’s final decision.
Conclusion
[60]
The application for judicial review is therefore
dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT IS that the application for
judicial review is dismissed, with costs to the respondent.
“Robert M. Mainville”
Certified true
translation
Johanna Kratz