Date: 20081218
Docket: T‑643‑07
Citation: 2008 FC 1393
Ottawa, Ontario, December 18, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Max M. Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
MARITIME
EMPLOYERS ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN OF CANADA
(HUMAN RESOURCES AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT CANADA)
and
SYNDICAT DES DÉBARDEURS CUPE
LOCAL 375
and
ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONALE DES
DÉBARDEURS,
ILA, SECTION LOCALE 1657
and
LOGISTEC STEVEDORING INC.
and
MONTREAL GATEWAY TERMINALS PARTNERSHIP
and
TERMONT MONTRÉAL INC.
and
EMPIRE STEVEDORING CO. LTD.
and
CERESCORP INC.
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review in which the applicant seeks a
declaratory judgment that the “new direction” of the Department of Human
Resources and Skills Development and the assurance of voluntary compliance
suggested to the applicant violate section 15 of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms, Part I of The Constitution Act, 1982
(U.K.), being Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.), 1982, c. 11
(Charter). The applicant also seeks a declaration from this Court that
Part II of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. L‑2 (CLC)
must be applied uniformly across the country.
[2]
In
Maritime Employers’ Association v. Syndicat des débardeurs C.U.P.E. Local 375,
2006 FCA 360, another file involving the applicant and one of the
respondents herein, the Federal Court of Appeal rendered a decision affirming
the decision of Mr. Justice Yves de Montigny of this Court (docket T‑213‑05)
and determining that the appeals officer’s decision to consider the applicant as
an employer for purposes of paragraph 145(2)(a) of the CLC was not patently
unreasonable and that, considering the applicant’s situation, it could not be
excluded from the application of Part II of the CLC.
[3]
On
the strength of this Federal Court of Appeal decision, the Labour Directorate
of the Department of Human Resources and Skills Development (HRSD) decided to
tell the applicant about the impact this decision would have on the application
of Part II of the CLC to the Port of Montreal, and, more specifically, to the
applicant and its activities.
[4]
In
particular, during that information session on February 13, 2007, the
HRSD Labour Directorate reminded the applicant of its duties as an employer
under Part II of the CLC.
[5]
On
April 4, 2007, a heath and safety officer, acting under Part II
of the CLC, noting that the applicant had not established a policy health and
safety committee as required by subsection 134.1(1) of the CLC, suggested that
the applicant take the necessary steps to voluntarily comply with this
provision by signing an assurance of voluntary compliance (Applicant’s Record, Volume I,
Tab 9, pages 318 to 319).
[6]
Since
the applicant did not believe that it was the employer, it refused to sign the assurance
of voluntary compliance and, instead, commenced this proceeding on
April 18, 2007 (Applicant’s Record, Volume I, Tab 10,
page 321).
[7]
On
July 9, 2007, a health and safety officer issued a direction under section 145
of the CLC to the employer directing it to comply with subsection 134.1(1)
of the CLC, that is, to establish a policy health and safety committee (Affidavit
of France de Repentigny, Respondent’s Record, Volume III,
page 396, paragraph 3).
[8]
Sections 134.1(1)
and 145(2)(a) of the CLC provide as follows:
|
134.1(1)
[Establishment mandatory]
For
the purposes of addressing health and safety matters that apply to the work,
undertaking or business of an employer, every employer who normally employs
directly three hundred or more employees shall establish a policy health and
safety committee and, subject to section 135.1, select and appoint its
members.
145(2)[Dangerous
situation – direction to employer]
If
a health and safety officer considers that the use or operation of a machine
or thing, a condition in a place or the performance of an activity
constitutes a danger to an employee while at work,
(a)
the officer shall notify the employer of the danger and issue directions in
writing to the employer directing the employer, immediately or within the
period that the officer specifies, to take measures to
(i) correct the hazard or condition or alter the activity that constitutes
the danger; or
(ii) protect any person from the danger;
|
134.1(1)
[Constitution obligatoire]
L’employeur
qui compte habituellement trois cents employés directs ou plus constitue un
comité d’orientation chargé d’examiner les questions qui concernent
l’entreprise de l’employeur en matière de santé et de sécurité; il en choisit
et nomme les membres sous réserve de l’article 135.1.
145(2)[Situation
dangereuse] S’il estime que l’utilisation d’une machine ou chose, une
situation existant dans un lieu de travail ou l’accomplissement d’une tâche
constitue un danger pour un employé au travail, l’agent :
a) en avertit l’employeur et lui enjoint, par instruction écrite, de
procéder, immédiatement ou dans le délai qu’il précise, à la prise de mesures
propres :
(i) soit à écarter le risque, à corriger la situation ou à modifier la tâche,
(ii) soit à protéger les personnes contre ce danger;
|
[9]
On
August 6, 2007, the applicant appealed this direction under
section 146 of the CLC and requested that it be suspended pending the
outcome of this judicial review. An appeals officer granted the suspension on
August 15, 2007 (Affidavit of France de Repentigny, Respondent’s
Record, Volume III, page 396, paragraphs 4 and 5).
[10]
Section 146
of the CLC provides as follows:
|
146.(1)
[Appeal of direction]
An
employer, employee or trade union that feels aggrieved by a direction issued
by a health and safety officer under this Part may appeal the direction in
writing to an appeals officer within thirty days after the date of the
direction being issued or confirmed in writing.
(2) [Direction not stayed] Unless otherwise ordered by an appeals officer on
application by the employer, employee or trade union, an appeal of a
direction does not operate as a stay of the direction.
|
146.(1)
[Procédure] Tout employeur, employés ou syndicat qui se sent lésé par des
instructions données par l’agent de santé et de sécurité en vertu de la
présente partie peut, dans les trente jours qui suivent la date où les
instructions sont données ou confirmées par écrit, interjeter appel de
celles-ci par écrit à un agent d’appel.
(2) [Absence de suspension]
À
moins que l’agent d’appel n’en ordonne autrement à la demande de l’employeur,
de l’employé ou du syndicat, l’appel n’a pas pour effet de suspendre la mise
en œuvre des instructions.
|
[11]
The respondent invites the Federal Court to refuse to hear the
applicant’s application for judicial review, given that the applicant has not
exhausted all the appeal mechanisms prescribed by the CLC.
[12]
Consequently,
the question that this Court must ask is whether the applicant’s application
for judicial review is premature and whether the applicant must exhaust all
internal remedies before the Federal Court can hear the matter.
[13]
As
stated in section 122.1, the purpose of Part II of the CLC, entitled Occupational
Health and Safety, is to prevent accidents and injury to health arising out
of, linked with or occurring in the course of employment to which this Part
applies. This section provides as follows:
|
122.1
[Purpose of Part] The purpose of this Part is to prevent accidents and injury
to health arising out of, linked with or occurring in the course of
employment to which this Part applies.
|
122.1
[Prévention des accidents et des maladies] La présente partie a pour objet de
prévenir les accidents et les maladies liés à l’occupation d’un emploi régi
par ses dispositions.
|
[14]
The
duties of employers in this regard are set out in Sections 124 to 125.3 of
the CLC. Section 124 provides as follows:
|
124.
[General duty of employer] Every employer shall ensure that the health and
safety at work of every person employed by the employer is protected.
|
124.
[Obligation générale] L’employeur veuille à la protection de ses employés en
matière de santé et de sécurité au travail.
|
[15]
In
addition, Part II of the CLC contains its own definition of employer,
which is broader than the one in Part I of the CLC, which deals with
industrial relations.
[16]
Among
the various duties of employers, section 134.1 of the CLC provides that they
must establish a policy health and safety committee.
[17]
Health
and safety officers designated under section 140 of the CLC are responsible
for the application of Part II and, therefore, may issue a direction to an
employer under section 145 of the CLC if they find a contravention.
[18]
Under
section 146 of the CLC, an employer, employee or trade union that feels
aggrieved by a direction issued by a health and safety officer may appeal the
direction to an appeals officer who may modify, set aside or confirm the
direction.
[19]
The
assurance of voluntary compliance is neither a procedure nor a step provided by
any provision of Part II of the CLC but stems from a policy of compliance
developed by HRSD (Record of the Attorney General, Volume I, pages 1 to
21).
[20]
The
assurance of voluntary compliance is a preliminary, voluntary measure that
enables an employer to correct a violation of Part II of the CLC before a
direction is given under section 145 of the CLC.
[21]
Consequently,
considering that the assurance of voluntary compliance has no effect and cannot
affect the applicant’s rights, I find that this proceeding is premature because
the applicant should have waited to receive a direction and then followed the
administrative appeal process set out in the CLC rather than proceeding
directly to this Court to assert its position.
[22]
The
cases decided by this Court point out that judicial review will not be granted
if there is an adequate alternate remedy that has not been exhausted. In this
case, judicial review is only appropriate after an appeals officer has made a
decision under section 146 of the CLC. An application for judicial review
of an assurance of voluntary compliance issued by a health and safety officer,
carrying out his or her duties at the Department of Human Resources and Skills
Development, is not the appropriate route, given the appeal procedure set out
in the CLC and the remedy provided in section 146 (Anderson v. Canada (Operations
Officer, Fourth Maritime Operations Group), [1997] 1 F.C. 273, 141
D.L.R. (4d) 54; Collin v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 F.C. 544,
72 W.C.B. (2d) 141; Ramautar v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 F.C. 1003, 160 A.C.W.S. (3d) 1044).
[23]
The
applicant should have exhausted all avenues of redress available under the CLC before
filing this application. Therefore, the application for judicial review must be
dismissed.
[24]
The
applicant’s submissions under section 15 of the Charter are not tenable.
[25]
Since
1972, the case law has clearly established that the term “every individual” (“tous”)
in the Charter absolutely does not include a corporation (or, as in this case,
an employer) (see R. v. Colgate Palmolive (1972), 8 C.C.C. (2d)
40).
[26]
I am completely
satisfied that a corporation cannot avail itself of the protection offered by section 15
of the Charter, given that this section clearly refers to “every individual” (“tous”)
(see Smith, Kline & French Laboratories et al v. A.G. of Canada,
[1986] 1 F.C. 274 (F.C.T.D.) where the appeal was dismissed on
other grounds).
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES
that this application for judicial review is dismissed with
costs.
“Max
M. Teitelbaum”
Mary
Jo Egan, LLB
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T‑643‑07
STYLE OF CAUSE: MARITIME
EMPLOYERS ASSOCIATION v. HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN OF CANADA et al
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING: October 20, 2008
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT BY: TEITELBAUM D.J.
DATED: December 18, 2008
APPEARANCES:
|
André C. Giroux
Robert Monette
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
|
Nadia Hudon
Nadine Perron
Catherine Pronovost
Philippe C. Vachon
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT A.G. of Canada
FOR THE OTHER RESPONDENTS
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
|
OGILVY RENAULT
S.E.N.C.R.L., s.r.l.
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
|
John H. Sims, Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
BORDEN, LADNER, GERVAIS
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT A.G. of Canada
FOR THE OTHER RESPONDENTS
|