Date: 20110726
Docket: T-1353-10
Citation: 2011 FC 934
Ottawa, Ontario,
July 26, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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LINDA BARTLETT
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Applicant
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and
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THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of the alleged decision of the Minister,
dated 21 July 2010 (Decision), refusing the Applicant’s request for remedial
action pursuant to subsection 66(4) of the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-8 (CPP),
specifically for an award of interest on her retroactive disability
pension benefits.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant first applied for disability pension benefits in 1977. This
application was refused. The Applicant again applied for disability benefits in
2001. This application was also denied both initially and upon reconsideration.
In 2003, the Applicant submitted new information, which resulted in a finding
by the Pension Appeals Board that the Applicant was disabled within the meaning
of the CPP.
[3]
The
Applicant began receiving disability pension benefits retroactive to 2000. In
2005, the Applicant, believing that she was being denied additional benefits
due to an administrative error, requested that the Minister review her file
pursuant to subsection 66(4). The Minister informed the Applicant that no such
error had occurred, a decision which the Applicant successfully challenged in a
judicial review application before the Federal Court (Bartlett v Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC 89). The
Minister subsequently reconsidered the Applicant’s subsection 66(4) request and
granted retroactive benefits on the basis of her first application. By letter
dated 28 August 2007, the Minister provided a breakdown of the Applicant’s CPP
disability payments from 1978 to 2007 and the amount she would be receiving
after taxes.
[4]
In
October 2007, the Applicant asked the Minister to review her file, alleging
that the amount she was being paid was too low and that “it is reasonable and
fair to ask to be paid cost of living increases from 1978 to 2007 … [and to be]
placed ‘in the position that [she] would be under the act had erroneous advice
not been given or the administrative error … not been made.”
[5]
By
letter dated 2 February 2009, the Minister responded, advising the Applicant
that she was paid her CPP disability pension starting in November 1977 and that
her lump sum retroactive payment reflected the increases in the cost of living.
She was also advised that when the calculation was made, her earnings were
adjusted upward to reflect increases in average wages and her calculated
benefit was escalated each year since 1977 by the Consumer Price Index to
reflect the increases in the cost of living. She was also advised that “there
is no statutory provision in the CPP to pay interest on CPP payments.”
[6]
Despite
continued correspondence between the Applicant and the Minister, the
Applicant’s request for additional monies was refused. On 14 June 2010, the
Applicant wrote directly to the Minister of Human Resources and Skills
development, requesting that the Minister take remedial action under subsection
66(4) of the CPP to award her interest on the retroactive payment of her
disability benefits. The Minister refused the request by letter dated 21 July
2010, stating that such action is not possible under the statutory provisions
of the CPP. This is the alleged Decision under review.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[7]
The
relevant passages of the Minister’s letter of July 21, 2010 are as follows:
As
I wrote to you in May 2010, the calculation of the retroactive payment of your
Disability benefit was correct and a payment of $51,300.22 that you were paid
in 2007 already included the cost-of-living increases from 1978 to 2007. A copy
of that letter is enclosed for your information. Please also find enclosed
letters that were sent to you from a Service Canada Centre in Victoria, which further explains the calculation of the retroactive
payment of your Disability benefit.
With
respect to your request for interest on the retroactive payment of your
disability benefit, I must advise you that this is not possible. Unlike the Income
Tax Act, which provides for the charging of interest on overdue taxes and
which pays interest on refunds, the CPP legislation does not contain such
provisions. Our policy is not to charge interest on overpaid benefits and, in
the same way, interest is not paid on benefits owing.
ISSUES
[8]
The
following preliminary issues arise on this application:
a.
Whether
the 21 July 2010 letter is a “decision” within the meaning of the Federal
Courts Act and therefore subject to judicial review; and
b.
Whether
the application is out of time.
[9]
Depending
on the Court’s determination of the preliminary issues, the following issue may
arise in this application:
Whether
the Minister has jurisdiction to award interest pursuant to subsection 66(4) of
the CPP.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[10]
The
following provisions of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 (Act), are applicable in
these proceedings:
Application
for judicial review
18.1 (1) An application for judicial review may be
made by the Attorney General of Canada or by anyone directly affected by the
matter in respect of which relief is sought.
Time limitation
(2) An application for judicial review
in respect of a decision or an order of a federal board, commission or other
tribunal shall be made within 30 days after the time the decision or order
was first communicated by the federal board, commission or other tribunal to
the office of the Deputy Attorney General of Canada or to the party directly
affected by it, or within any further time that a judge of the Federal Court
may fix or allow before or after the end of those 30 days.
Powers of Federal Court
(3) On an application for judicial
review, the Federal Court may
(a) order a federal board, commission or other
tribunal to do any act or thing it has unlawfully failed or refused to do or
has unreasonably delayed in doing; or
(b) declare invalid or unlawful, or quash, set
aside or set aside and refer back for determination in accordance with such
directions as it considers to be appropriate, prohibit or restrain, a
decision, order, act or proceeding of a federal board, commission or other
tribunal.
Grounds of
review
(4) The Federal Court may grant relief
under subsection (3) if it is satisfied that the federal board, commission or
other tribunal
(a) acted without jurisdiction, acted beyond its
jurisdiction or refused to exercise its jurisdiction;
(b) failed to observe a principle of natural
justice, procedural fairness or other procedure that it was required by law
to observe;
(c) erred in law in making a decision or an order,
whether or not the error appears on the face of the record;
(d) based its decision or order on an erroneous
finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious manner or without
regard for the material before it;
(e) acted, or failed to act, by reason of fraud or
perjured evidence; or
(f) acted in any other way that was contrary to
law.
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Demande de
contrôle judiciaire
18.1 (1) Une demande de contrôle judiciaire peut être
présentée par le procureur général du Canada ou par quiconque est directement
touché par l’objet de la demande.
Délai de
présentation
(2) Les demandes de contrôle
judiciaire sont à présenter dans les trente jours qui suivent la première
communication, par l’office fédéral, de sa décision ou de son ordonnance au
bureau du sous-procureur général du Canada ou à la partie concernée, ou dans
le délai supplémentaire qu’un juge de la Cour fédérale peut, avant ou après
l’expiration de ces trente jours, fixer ou accorder.
Pouvoirs de la Cour fédérale
(3) Sur présentation d’une demande de
contrôle judiciaire, la Cour fédérale peut :
a)
ordonner à l’office fédéral en cause d’accomplir tout acte qu’il a
illégalement omis ou refusé d’accomplir ou dont il a retardé l’exécution de
manière déraisonnable;
b)
déclarer nul ou illégal, ou annuler, ou infirmer et renvoyer pour jugement
conformément aux instructions qu’elle estime appropriées, ou prohiber ou
encore restreindre toute décision, ordonnance, procédure ou tout autre acte
de l’office fédéral.
Motifs
(4) Les mesures prévues au paragraphe
(3) sont prises si la Cour fédérale est convaincue que l’office fédéral,
selon le cas :
a) a
agi sans compétence, outrepassé celle-ci ou refusé de l’exercer;
b)
n’a pas observé un principe de justice naturelle ou d’équité procédurale ou
toute autre procédure qu’il était légalement tenu de respecter;
c) a
rendu une décision ou une ordonnance entachée d’une erreur de droit, que
celle-ci soit manifeste ou non au vu du dossier;
d) a
rendu une décision ou une ordonnance fondée sur une conclusion de fait
erronée, tirée de façon abusive ou arbitraire ou sans tenir compte des
éléments dont il dispose;
e) a
agi ou omis d’agir en raison d’une fraude ou de faux témoignages;
f) a
agi de toute autre façon contraire à la loi.
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[11]
The
following provisions of the CPP are applicable in these proceedings:
Where
person denied benefit due to departmental error, etc.
66. (4) Where the Minister is satisfied that, as a result of
erroneous advice or administrative error in the administration of this Act,
any person has been denied
(a) a benefit, or portion thereof, to which that
person would have been entitled under this Act,
(b) a division of unadjusted pensionable earnings
under section 55 or 55.1, or
(c) an assignment of a retirement pension under
section 65.1,
the Minister shall take such remedial action as
the Minister considers appropriate to place the person in the position that
the person would be in under this Act had the erroneous advice not been given
or the administrative error not been made.
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Refus
d’une prestation en raison d’une erreur administrative
66. (4) Dans le cas où le ministre est convaincu qu’un avis
erroné ou une erreur administrative survenus dans le cadre de l’application
de la présente loi a eu pour résultat que soit refusé à cette personne, selon
le cas :
a)
en tout ou en partie, une prestation à laquelle elle aurait eu droit en vertu
de la présente loi,
b)
le partage des gains non ajustés ouvrant droit à pension en application de
l’article 55 ou 55.1,
c)
la cession d’une pension de retraite conformément à l’article 65.1,
le ministre prend les mesures correctives qu’il
estime indiquées pour placer la personne en question dans la situation où
cette dernière se retrouverait sous l’autorité de la présente loi s’il n’y
avait pas eu avis erroné ou erreur administrative.
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STANDARD OF REVIEW
[12]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9 held that a standard of review analysis need not be conducted in
every instance. Instead, where the standard of review applicable to the
particular question before the court is well-settled by past jurisprudence, the
reviewing court may adopt that standard of review. Only where this search
proves fruitless must the reviewing court undertake a consideration of the four
factors comprising the standard of review analysis.
[13]
Whether
the Minister can award interest pursuant to subsection 66(4) of the CPP is a question
of jurisdiction. It is reviewable on a standard of correctness. See Dunsmuir,
above at paragraph 59; and Dillon v Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC 900 at
paragraphs 13-14. When applying the correctness
standard, a reviewing court will not show deference to the decision-maker’s
reasoning process. Rather, it will undertake its own analysis of the question.
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
The
Minister Should Restore Her to the Same Position She Would Have Been in But For
the Administrative Error
[14]
The
Applicant concedes that, under section 66 of the CPP, there is no automatic
right to interest on retroactive disability pension payments. However, section
66 of the CPP allows the Minister to collect interest from an overpayment of
benefits. It also allows an applicant who has suffered a loss due to withheld
disability payments to collect interest on the retroactive payments. Under the
legislation, the applicant must be restored to the same position she would have
been in if the administrative error had not been made. If the Minister denies
the request for interest, an applicant can apply for judicial review of that
decision.
[15]
As a
result of an administrative error, the Applicant’s pension disability benefits
were withheld for 29 years. Although she did receive a retroactive payment, she
argues that it did not put her in the position she would have been in if the
administrative error had not been made. This is contrary to subsection 66(4) of
the CPP. When an administrative error has been made, as occurred in the instant
case, the Applicant asserts that the remedial action by the Minister should
favour the applicant.
[16]
Between
1978 and 2007, the Consumer Price lndex (CPI) increased by $497.14. Each month
for 10 months in 1978, the Applicant claims that she received $109.17; however,
the CPI for 2007 (when the Applicant received her retroactive payment) was
$606.31. The Applicant argues that she lost $4971.40 in buying power for the
year 1978. Furthermore, during the 29 years that her pension was withheld in error,
she lost $68,615.56 in buying power.
[17]
The
Applicant submits that the Minister did not follow the CPP guidelines during
the period from 2007 to 2010, when the Applicant was repeatedly requesting a
review of her file. The Minister failed to keep accurate records and to return
her phone calls and letters in a timely manner. The Applicant argues that she
had a legitimate expectation that the Minister would take remedial action under
subsection 66(4) so as to put her in the same position she would have been in
had the administrative error not occurred. Because the Minister did not, she
asks the Court to set aside the Minister’s Decision.
The Respondent
Preliminary
Issue #1: The 21 July 2010 Letter is not a “Decision”
[18]
The
Respondent submits that the 21 July 2010 letter is a courtesy letter. Contrary
to the Applicant’s assertions, it is not a “decision” within the meaning of the
Act and therefore cannot properly be made the subject of judicial review. In Hughes
v Canada (Customs and Revenue
Agency),
2004 FC 1055 at paragraph 6, Justice Douglas Campbell of this Court
distinguished between a “decision” and a courtesy letter. He said: “The case
law is clear that a courtesy letter written in response to a request for
reconsideration is not a decision or order within the meaning of the Federal
Courts Act, and, therefore, cannot be challenged by way of judicial review
….”
[19]
The
Respondent submits that a true decision demonstrates a fresh exercise of
discretion, whether or not the original decision is changed, varied or
maintained. It is a fresh decision if the decision-maker agrees to reconsider
his or her original decision by reference to facts and submissions that were
not on the record when the original decision was made. See Dumbrava v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration)
(1995), 101 FTR 230, 1995 FCJ No 1238 (QL), at paragraph 15. Where the decision-maker
does not refer to any new facts or submissions and does not state that he or
she is reconsidering the decision, there is no fresh exercise of discretion and
therefore no decision to attract judicial review. An applicant cannot extend
the date of decision by writing a letter with the intention of provoking a
reply. See Brar v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1997), 140 FTR 163, [1997]
FCJ No 1527 (QL) at paragraph 8.
[20]
The Respondent
argues that the 21 July 2010 letter does not consider new facts or submissions.
The Applicant’s request for payment of interest had already been addressed in a
series of letters from the Minister, confirming that no additional monies could
be paid. Indeed, the 21 July 2010 letter refers to one such letter. The 21 July
2010 letter is clearly limited to re-confirming what was already communicated
to the Applicant. It is a courtesy letter and is not subject to judicial
review. The application should be dismissed for this reason.
Preliminary
Issue #2: The Application Is Out of Time
[21]
By
letter dated 28 August 2007, the Minister provided to the Applicant a detailed
breakdown of the benefits that she would be paid as a result of the Federal
Court’s 2007 ruling. Enclosed was a Payment Explanation Statement listing each
year for which benefits would be paid and the amount of the benefit. If the
Applicant disagreed with the Minister’s calculations, she should have applied
for judicial review within 30 days as is required under subsection 18.1(2) of
the Act.
[22]
By
letter dated 11 September 2007, the Minister again explained the calculation.
She confirmed that the amount being paid had been indexed for the cost of
living. This letter was sent to the Applicant as a courtesy in response to her
inquiry. Finally, in the letter dated 2 February 2009, the Minister set out, in
full, her position on the quantum of the benefits, the cost of living indexing
and the payment of interest. None of the subsequent letters constitute a fresh
consideration of the issue. The Applicant did not file her notice of application
for judicial review until 23 August 2010, approximately a year and a half
later. The application was brought too late in time and, therefore, should be
dismissed.
The CPP Does Not Provide
for Payment of Interest on Retroactive Benefits
[23]
The
Respondent submits that, if this Court decides that the application is properly
brought, the remaining issue is whether the Minister erred in determining that
there is no provision in the CPP for the payment of interest on retroactive
benefits.
[24]
The
Respondent argues that the jurisprudence favours an interpretation of
subsection 66(4) that is consistent with the Minister’s position that interest
is not payable on retroactive benefits. The Federal Court of Appeal in Whitton
v Canada (Attorney General), 2002 FCA 46 at
paragraph 37, considered section 32 of the Old Age Security Act, a
provision similar to subsection 66(4) of the CPP. The Court of Appeal said
that, with respect to a person who was denied benefits to which he was
entitled, “[t]he Minister must take the necessary action to place the appellant
to the position he would be in, had an administrative error not been made. The
action that must be taken is to reinstate the pension forthwith and repay the
benefits that were suspended, with interest.”
[25]
However,
the Federal Court noted in King v Canada, 2007 FC 272 at paragraphs
31-32, that there is no automatic right to interest on payments of retroactive
benefits but that an Applicant could seek interest from the Minister. The
Minister, it was stated, had the authority under subsection 66(4) to take
remedial action. The Federal Court decision was then appealed to the Federal
Court of Appeal (King v Canada (Minister of Human Resources and Social
Development), 2009 FCA 105 [King
FCA]), which distinguished Whitton, above, from cases involving
subsection 66(4). The Respondent therefore submits that Whitton provides
no authority for the proposition that the Minister can award interest under
subsection 66(4).
[26]
The
Respondent states that the most recent case on this issue is Jones v Canada
(Attorney General), 2010 FC 740 [Jones], which concerned an
application under subsection 66(4), seeking, inter alia, interest on
retroactive benefits. In that case, Justice Johanne Gauthier observed as
follows:
There
is also no need to deal with the parties’ argument with respect to the
Minister’s power to grant interest pursuant to subsection 66(4) of the CPP, except
to note that the case law referred to by the parties only addresses the issue
by way of obiter or as a suggestion. A more thorough analysis will be
required when this question really needs to be determined especially
considering the grave consequences it would have not only on claims under this
Act but under similar provisions in many other legislations.
The Respondent contends that Justice Gauthier’s comments
confirm that there is no jurisprudential authority to award interest on
retroactive benefits pursuant to subsection 66(4).
[27]
The
Respondent further suggests that the language of the CPP clearly indicates that
an award under subsection 66(4) is limited to the payment of benefits.
Subsection 66(4) allows the Minister the discretion to take such measures as
she considers appropriate to place the person in the position that the person
would be in “under this Act,” as opposed to in any other respect. This wording
suggests that the authority to grant interest must be found in the Act. As
there is no such provision in the Act, there is no such authority.
[28]
The
Respondent submits that the CPP is a complete code dealing with the payment of
benefits. In the absence of a specific provision allowing for the payment of
interest on benefits, such an obligation does not arise. See Gladstone v Canada (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 21 at
paragraph 12. The Respondent relies on the Ontario Court of Appeal decision in Gorecki
v Canada (Attorney General) (2006), 265 DLR (4th) 206, 146 ACWS
(3d) 834 [Gorecki] at paragraph 7, which states:
The
CPP is a complete statutory code that makes no provision for the payment of
interest on benefits where there is a delay between the date on which the
beneficiary became entitled to the benefit and the date on which the benefit
was paid. It has been held that where a comprehensive statutory scheme does not
provide for the payment of interest by the Crown, no interest is payable.
[29]
The
Respondent argues that, had Parliament intended to create an entitlement to
interest, it could have easily done so. In King, above, the Federal
Court of Appeal, at paragraph 37, cautioned about opening the “floodgates” when
triggering a monetary remedy under subsection 66(4). It observed that “the
financial impact on various government departments might well be substantial,”
particularly considering that “[m]any benefit-conferring statutes contain
similar provisions to subsection 66(4) of the CPP.”
[30]
The
Respondent submits that, if interest is to be payable on retroactive benefits,
it is for Parliament expressly to decide, taking into full consideration the
cost and feasibility of such a remedy in the context of the program being
administered.
ANALYSIS
Background
[31]
Ms.
Bartlett feels that the Minister of Human Resources Development Canada has not
dealt fairly with her.
[32]
After
being refused disability pension benefits in 1977 she persisted and was
eventually found to be disabled within the meaning of the CPP in 2003.
[33]
She
began receiving disability pension benefits retroactive to 2000, but she felt
she was entitled to more and convinced this Court that she was right and that
she had been denied additional benefits through administrative error.
[34]
Following
Justice Yvon Pinard’s decision to this effect, the Minister reconsidered Ms.
Bartlett’s subsection 66(4) request and granted her retroactive benefits back
to 1978.
[35]
The
Minister’s decision to this effect under subsection 66(4) of the CPP is found
in a letter dated 28 August 2007. That letter provided a Payment Explanation
Statement setting out Ms. Bartlett’s CPP benefit entitlements for each year from
1978 to 2007 as well as the tax implications. The total CPP payment to Ms.
Bartlett net of tax was $87,374.20 out of a total taxable benefit of
$138,674.42. The letter of 28 August 2007 invited Ms. Bartlett to call Human
Resources and Social Development if she had any questions. Ms. Bartlett
certainly did have questions.
[36]
She
was understandably upset that she had been denied her legal entitlement to
benefits for such a long time and she did not feel that receipt of monies in
2007 was the same thing as receipt when they should have been paid to her.
[37]
Ms.
Bartlett is tenacious and highly articulate. She represented herself very ably
in the hearing before me. Based upon her past experiences with CPP, she does
not trust them to get things right and she does not give up. Without ill will
or rancour (Ms. Bartlett was very pleasant in Court) she told me that if I did
not get this application right and agree with her she would be placing the
matter before the Federal Court of Appeal, so I too am on notice.
[38]
After
receiving the letter of 28 August 2007, which set out the benefits to which the
Minister felt Ms. Bartlett was entitled following reconsideration under
subsection 66(4) as a result of Justice Pinard’s decision of 30 January 2007,
Ms. Bartlett set about trying to persuade the Minister that the payments which he
had decided to award her through the exercise of the powers granted by
subsection 66(4) of the CPP were not sufficient to put her in the position that
she would have been in “had erroneous advice not been given or the
administrative error … not been made.”
[39]
At
first, Ms. Bartlett argued and tried to persuade the Minister that the payments
were too low because they did not take into account cost-of-living increases that
had occurred between 1978 and 2007. Ms. Bartlett wrote to the department, and
the Minister informed her in various letters that the lump sum retroactive
payment she had received had taken into account, and so reflected,
cost-of-living increases during the relevant period. She was also advised that
the lump sum calculation had adjusted her earnings upward to reflect increases
in average wages and that her benefit had been escalated each year since 1977
by the Consumer Price Index to reflect increases in the cost of living.
[40]
Ms.
Bartlett continued to argue with the Minister that the payment was too low and
that she had not been placed in the position that she would have been in had
the administrative error not been made.
[41]
The
Minister continued to explain that no error had been made in the calculation of
her benefits and that the reconsideration decision of 28 August 2007 placed her
in the position that she would have been in accordance with subsection 66(4)
and that no other payments could be made. A letter of 2 February 2009, for
instance, clearly informed Ms. Bartlett that no interest would or could be paid
to her: “there is no statutory provision in the CPP to pay interest on CPP
payments.”
[42]
None
of this satisfied Ms. Bartlett. It appears as though she wrote to the Minister
of Human Resources and Skills Development on 22 April 2010 through her member
of Parliament, Ms. Cathy McLeod, and was told by the Acting Director General
Payments and Processing in an updated reply that, as previous letters had
already explained, the calculation of payments was correct and would stand.
Then, on 14 June 2010, she again wrote a letter to the Hon. Diane Finley, the
Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development in which she explained her
request and concluded as follows:
I
ask that the Minister consider Remedial action under s. 66(4) of the Canada
Pension Act to award interest on the retroactive Disability Pension Benefits.
Thankyou (sic).
[43]
At
this point, the Applicant decided to re-characterize her request for additional
monies as a claim for interest. The immediate reply to this 14 June 2010 letter
was another letter from the Acting Director General Payments and Processing,
confirming previous correspondence. This letter, dated 21 July 2010, also
addressed the Applicant’s recent demand for interest:
With
respect to your request for interest on the retroactive payment of your
disability benefit, I must advise you that this is not possible. Unlike the Income
Tax Act, which provides for the charging of interest on overdue taxes and
which pays interest on refunds, the CPP legislation does not contain such
provisions. Our policy is not to charge interest on overpaid benefits and, in
the same way, interest is not paid on benefits owing.
[44]
This
is the letter which Ms. Bartlett says is a decision of the Minister not to
exercise her discretion under subsection 66(4) of the CPP to pay her interest and
which is the subject of this judicial review application.
Is There a Decision to
Review?
[45]
It
is immediately apparent from the correspondence to which I have referred (and
the rest of the correspondence on the record bears this out) that Ms.
Bartlett’s request for interest dated 14 June 2010 was made as part of her
on-going effort to secure greater payments than had been awarded to her in the reconsideration
decision of 28 August 2007. The Minister’s replies to Ms. Bartlett have all
been confirmations of that decision and polite letters of explanation as to why
the calculations were correct and took into account Ms. Bartlett’s cost-of-living
concerns and as to why no further payment could or would be made. The letter of
2 February 2009 specifically advises her that “there is no statutory provision
in the CPP to pay interest of CPP payments.”
[46]
Ms.
Bartlett seeks to avoid the problems arising from her decision not to seek
judicial review of the 28 August 2007 reconsideration by characterizing her 14 June
2010 request for interest as a new request for the Minister to exercise her
discretion under subsection 66(4) on a new matter and the 21 July 2010 letter
as a new decision by the Minister that this Court should now review.
[47]
There
are several reasons why I think the Court cannot accept Ms. Bartlett’s
characterization of what she is asking the Court to review.
[48]
First
of all, the record reveals that, whether Ms. Bartlett characterizes her request
for a greater payment as a claim for cost-of-living increases or a claim for
interest, her complaint about the 28 August 2007 reconsideration decision that
followed Justice Pinard’s judgment is essentially the same. She is saying that
being paid a sum of money in 2007 is not the same thing as receiving it at
earlier dates when it should have been paid. To my mind, there is merit in this
argument, but that is not the issue I am faced with here.
[49]
The
essential point is that the 21 July 2010 letter upon which this application is
based is not a new decision and is not a new exercise by the Minister of the
powers granted by subsection 66(4) of the CPP. The letter is, rather, one in a
long series of letters to the Applicant explaining why the 28 August 2007
reconsideration decision must stand and why no additional payments can be made
to her, however those additional payments are characterized.
[50]
Ms.
Bartlett was unhappy with the 28 August 2007 reconsideration when she received
it and yet she has not asked this Court to review it. The letter of 21 July
2010 is simply further confirmation that the reconsideration decision cannot be
revisited. The Minister exercised her discretion under subsection 66(4) and the
result was the 28 August 2007 reconsideration decision, which is not before
this Court for review.
[51]
With
all sympathy for Ms. Bartlett, I have to accept the facts before me which
reveal that the 21 July 2010 letter is not a new decision. It is one of many
courtesy letters of explanation addressing why the 28 August 2007 decision must
stand. In my view, it would have been quite acceptable for Ms. Bartlett to
attack the reconsideration decision of 28 August 2007 by way of judicial review
before this Court within the timeframes allowed. It is not acceptable, however,
to bring a belated collateral attempt to attack that decision by treating the 21
July 2010 letter as a new decision.
[52]
Second,
I can find nothing in the CPP or the jurisprudence that gives the Minister the
jurisdiction or the power to revisit and reconsider the decision on entitlement
that was made on 28 August 2007 because Ms. Bartlett has belatedly decided
to re-characterize her request for additional payments as a request for
interest.
[53]
Ms.
Bartlett originally complained that the payments were not sufficient because
they did not reflect cost-of-living increases and other related factors. Yet
she never attempted to seek judicial review of the 28 August 2007
reconsideration decision on these grounds. Her belated request for interest is
an attempt to secure additional monies for the same reasons: the difference in
time between payment of benefits and the time when they should have been paid.
[54]
As
the Respondent points out:
An
application for judicial review in respect of a decision of a federal
board, commission or other tribunal shall be made within 30 days after the time
the decision or order was first communicated by the federal board, commission
or other tribunal to the office of the Deputy Attorney General of Canada or to
the party directly affected by it, or within any further time that a judge of
the Federal Court may fix or allow before or after the expiration of those 30
days.
The
Federal Court has drawn a distinction between a “decision” within the meaning
of the Federal Courts Act which can properly be made the subject of
judicial review, and a courtesy letter which can not (sic).
Time Limitation
[55]
The
record also reveals that, on the related point of time limitation, Ms. Bartlett
has not brought her real complaint (i.e. her disagreement with the Minister’s
reconsideration decision of 28 August 2007) within the time specified by
the Federal Courts Rules and she has not sought an extension of time
within which to bring such an application.
[56]
In
the Minister’s letter dated 28 August 2007, Ms. Bartlett was given details of
the benefits she would be paid as a result of the Federal Court’s ruling.
Enclosed was a Payment Explanation Statement listing each year for which
benefits would be paid and the amount of the benefit. If Ms. Bartlett
disagreed with the Minister’s calculations, her recourse was to apply for
judicial review within 30 days. She did not commence such a challenge within
the requisite time, nor has she asked the Court to extend the time for bringing
any such application.
[57]
By
letter dated 11 September 2007, the calculation was again explained. It was
confirmed that the amount being paid had been indexed for the cost-of-living.
This letter was sent to Ms. Bartlett as a courtesy in response to her
inquiry.
[58]
An
additional letter was sent to Ms. Bartlett in response to a further inquiry. In
this letter, dated 2 February 2009, it was again confirmed that her benefits
had been indexed to the cost-of-living. The issue of interest was also clearly
and specifically addressed: “Also, there is no statutory provision in the CPP
to pay interest on CPP payments.”
[59]
At
this point the Minister’s position regarding the quantum of the benefits, the
cost-of-living indexing and the payment of interest had been fully confirmed
and set out, yet the application was not commenced until approximately a year
and a half later.
[60]
What
followed was a series of letters from Ms. Bartlett requesting additional monies
and responses from the Minister confirming that nothing further could be paid. I
have to agree with the Respondent that none of these letters constitutes a
fresh consideration of the issue sufficient to extend the date of the decision.
The application has to be dismissed as being out of time.
Availability of Interest
Payment
[61]
Should
I be wrong on the preliminary issues, then I will also address the merits of
this application.
[62]
Ms.
Bartlett is well aware that there is no provision in the CPP that specifically
addresses whether interest is payable on CPP payments. This is why she has
fallen back on the powers granted to the Minister under subsection 66(4) of the
CPP to request interest. This attempt to obtain interest through the back door
of subsection 66(4) is fraught with conceptual and political difficulties which
are all reflected in the case law associated with this statutory provision. Justice
Gauthier assessed relevant jurisprudence in her recent decision in Jones,
above, where she had the following to say at paragraph 63:
There is also no need to deal with the parties’ argument with
respect to the Minister’s power to grant interest pursuant to subsection 66(4)
of the CPP, except to note that the case law referred to by the parties only
addresses the issue by way of obiter or as a
suggestion. A more thorough analysis will be required when this question really
needs to be determined especially considering the grave consequences it would
have not only on claims under this Act but under similar provisions in many
other legislations.
[63]
Ms.
Bartlett showed herself to be fully alive to these legal issues and took the
position that this application is the very case to decide what Justice Gauthier
declined to decide. Ms. Bartlett also pointed out, correctly, that interest has
been awarded in earlier cases, notably Whitton, above. The implications
of Whitton are, however, difficult to assess, bearing in mind the
Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in King, above, and Justice
Gauthier’s assessment of the relevant jurisprudence in Jones, which
confirms that we have no real authority on the issue of whether or not interest
on benefits can be paid pursuant to subsection 66(4) of the CPP.
[64]
Having
already found that the application in the present case should be dismissed
because the 21 July 2010 letter is not a decision of the Minister and that the
real decision of 28 August 2007 has not been brought before the Court in
accordance with the time limitations set forth in the Federal Courts Rules,
anything I have to say on this matter will, once again, be obiter.
[65]
However,
in the event that I should be wrong on the grounds set out above, I find the
Respondent’s arguments persuasive on this issue.
[66]
Subsection
66(4) allows the Minister the discretion to take such measures as s/he
considers appropriate to place a person in the position that the person would
be in “under this Act” had the erroneous advice not been given or had the
administrative error not occurred. The person is therefore put in the position
he or she would have been in under the Act, as opposed to in any other respect.
The authority to grant interest therefore must, in my view, be found in the
Act. There is no such provision and therefore no such authority.
[67]
I
accept the Respondent’s argument that the CPP should be regarded as a complete
code dealing with the payment of benefits. It imposes no obligation on the
Minister to pay interest in addition to other benefits set out in the Act. In
the absence of a specific provision allowing for the payment of interest on
benefits, such an obligation does not arise. The case law cited by the
Respondent appears to support this position and Ms. Bartlett has not provided
any real analysis of the statutory scheme. She simply relies on Whitton,
above, which does not really address the issues now raised directly by the
Respondent.
[68]
In Gorecki,
above, the appellant had filed a proposed class action seeking interest on a
lump sum retroactive payment awarded pursuant to a successful appeal of the
denial of his claim for disability benefits to the Pension Appeals Board. The
Attorney General brought a motion to strike the statement of claim on the
grounds of jurisdiction and standing and on the ground that the claim disclosed
no reasonable cause of action. The motion judge rejected the Attorney General’s
jurisdiction and standing arguments but did strike out the claim on breach of
trust, breach of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment. The Ontario Court of
Appeal agreed with the motion judge’s decision to strike the claims for breach
of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment. In doing so, the Court, at paragraph
7, said as follows:
The
CPP is a complete statutory code that makes no provision for the payment of
interest on benefits where there is a delay between the date on which the
beneficiary became entitled to the benefit and the date on which the benefit
was paid. It has been held that where a comprehensive statutory scheme does not
provide for the payment of interest by the Crown, no interest is payable.
[69]
It
would seem then that, as the Respondent points out, in the absence of an
express provision in the CPP allowing for the payment of interest on
retroactive benefits, no such obligation exists. Had Parliament intended to
create an entitlement to interest on retroactive benefits, it could have easily
done so. The lack of such explicit authority supports the Respondent’s position
that no such obligation exists.
[70]
In King
FCA, above, at paragraph 37, the Federal Court of Appeal cautioned about
opening the “floodgates” when triggering a monetary remedy
under subsection 66(4):
In closing, it should be noted that if the respondent were to
succeed on this appeal, the financial impact on various government departments
might well be substantial. Many benefit-conferring statutes contain similar
provisions to subsection 66(4) of the CPP (see, for example Old Age Security Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. O-9, section 32; Special Retirement Arrangements Act, S.C. 1992, c. 46,
Sch. I, section 23; War Veterans Allowance Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. W-3, section 26; Public Service
Superannuation Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-36, subsections 42(10) and
42(11)). If this court were to hold that “erroneous advice” can be taken to
have been given any time an initial decision denying a benefit is subsequently
reversed by a higher authority, thus triggering an entitlement to a monetary
remedy, the floodgates might be open to claims not only under the CPP, but
under all of these other statutes, as well. There is no indication that this
was Parliament’s intention.
[71]
Both
Justice Gauthier in Jones and Justice Edgar Sexton of the Federal Court
of Appeal writing for the panel in King FCA have cautioned against the
introduction of such a remedy without consideration of the impact thereof, not
just on the CPP but on other statutes with a provision similar to subsection
66(4). In my view, the inclusion of interest on retroactive benefits is a
matter that Parliament must specifically direct, with full consideration of the
cost and feasibility of such a remedy in the context of the program being
administered.
[72]
In
addition to the above, the approach to this matter put forward by Ms. Bartlett
gives rise to serious conceptual complications. In her written materials, Ms.
Bartlett puts forward no explanation as to how any such interest could be
calculated in her case. At the hearing, she suggested that an average of prime
could be used over the relevant period. However, she also suggested that what
she is looking for under subsection 66(4) is something approaching a tortious
measure of compensation: i.e. that she should be put in the position she would
have occupied had the administrative error not occurred. She mentioned
investments and uses she could have made of the benefit money if it had been
paid when it was supposed to be paid. No evidence was provided of any such loss.
If this approach were mandated under subsection 66(4), then the Minister would
need to engage in an extensive investigation for each applicant to determine
the consequences (foreseeable or otherwise) of failure to pay benefits when
due. Ms. Bartlett has placed no evidence before the Minister or the Court that
would allow for such an assessment. However, it seems to me that if the
Minister was required under subsection 66(4) to assess interest as a form of
compensation “to place the person in the position that the person would be in
under the Act had the erroneous advice not been given or the administrative
error not been made” then the legal and practical problems would become
insurmountable. Using an average of prime, as Ms. Bartlett suggests, would
simply be an arbitrary exercise because it might have nothing to do with
placing any particular applicant in the position that they would have been in,
at least in the sense suggested by Ms. Bartlett. This is another reason, in my
view, why Parliament could not have intended that interest should be awarded
under subsection 66(4) in this way and why this matter must be explicitly
directed by Parliament after full consideration of the cost and feasibility of
such a remedy.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that
1.
The application for
judicial review is dismissed.
2.
No costs are
requested by the respondent and none are awarded.
“James Russell”