Date: 20080304
Docket: T-1184-07
Citation: 2008 FC 285
Ottawa, Ontario, March
4, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
HENRY
SZTERN
Applicant
and
ME ANDRÉ DESLONGCHAMPS,
ES QUALITÉ DELEGATE OF THE
SUPERINTENDENT OF BANKRUPTCY
and
SYLVIE LAPERIERRE, ES QUALITÉ SENIOR
ANALYST
FOR THE OFFICE OF THE
SUPERINTENDENT OF BANKRUPTCY
Respondents
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The
applicant seeks to judicially review an interlocutory decision (the Decision) rendered
pursuant to subsection 14.02 of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, R.S.C
1985, c. B-3 (the Act), by Me André Deslongchamps, (the Delegate), a delegate
of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (the Superintendent), which rejected on
June 5, 2007, the applicant’s motion for the Delegate’s recusal.
[2]
The
applicant, Henry Sztern, held a trustee licence issued under the Act by the
Superintendent. Henry Sztern & Associés Inc (Sztern Inc.) held a corporate
trustee licence. The applicant and Sztern Inc. (together, the trustees) administered
bankruptcy files, including the Estate of Meco Ltd. (Meco).
[3]
Creditors of Meco,
represented by Me Marc Duchesne (who eventually joined the same law firm as the
Delegate) instituted legal proceedings in the Quebec Superior Court against
Sztern Inc. pursuant to subsection 81(4) of the Act with respect to the
validity and rank of the creditors’ proofs of claim in the Meco bankruptcy matter.
The Court rendered a judgment in favor of Sztern Inc. on November 23, 2000. On May
6, 2004, the Court of Appeal rendered its decision accepting, in part, the
creditors’ proofs of claim and determining their rank.
[4]
In 2003,
the Office of the Superintendent uncovered various allegations of professional
misconduct against the trustees. All the trustees’ estate files were removed
from their administration and remitted to H.H. Davis & Associés Inc. (H.H.
Davis). H.H. Davis subsequently filed a claim against the trustees in the
Quebec Superior Court for the purpose of recuperating missing funds from a
number of bankruptcy estates which had been under the trustees’ administration,
including the Estate of Meco.
[5]
In 2005, Sylvie
Laperrière, Senior Analyst acting on behalf of the Superintendent and one of
the respondents in the case at bar, issued a report concluding that the
trustees had committed numerous disciplinary infractions. As a result of Ms.
Laperrière’s report, the applicant became the subject of disciplinary
proceedings initiated pursuant to subsections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act (the
Disciplinary Proceedings). Ms. Laperrière recommend the trustees’ licences be
cancelled and the restitution of missing funds in ten bankruptcy estates
(including the Meco bankruptcy matter), 399 summary administration estates and
201 consumer proposal files. To avoid any potential for lis pendens
between the Disciplinary Proceedings and the civil proceedings, Ms. Laperrière
removed the proposed restitution sanctions in the five bankruptcy estate matters
(including Meco) that were before the Superior Court.
[6]
In October
2005, the Superintendent delegated his power to preside over the Disciplinary Proceedings
to the Honourable Lawrence A. Poitras, formerly Chief Justice of the Quebec
Superior Court and then a member of the law firm Borden Ladner Gervais (BLG). In
February 2006, Lawrence A. Poitras became unable to fulfill his duties and was
accordingly discharged of them. The Delegate, formerly Assistant Chief Justice
of the Quebec Superior Court and also a member of BLG, was appointed to replace
Mr. Poitras in presiding over the Disciplinary Proceedings.
On April 19, 2006, the Delegate convened a pre-trial
conference and rendered an interlocutory decision denying the applicant’s
request to examine the opposing party prior to filing a contestation. The Disciplinary
Proceedings were scheduled for September 2006; however, due to the Delegate’s illness,
the hearing date was postponed.
[7]
On April 3,
2007, the applicant informed the Delegate that he was believed to be in a
situation of conflict of interest and that there were reasonable grounds to
apprehend a bias on his part. The basis of these allegations is as follows: Me
Marc Duchesne is a member of BLG; upon being appointed as a delegate, Me
Poitras of BLG conducted a verification of office files to determine whether a
potential conflict of interest existed; the verification revealed that BLG
through Me Duchesne represented Natsumi Management in the Meco bankruptcy matter
from August 2001 to March 2007. As a result of this verification, BLG’s legal
involvement in the Meco matter (a matter the applicant alleges is at the heart
of the Disciplinary Proceedings), was known or ought to have been known at the
commencement of the Disciplinary Proceedings. The applicant therefore argues
that Me Poitras and the Delegate should have recused themselves instead of continuing
their paid mandate acting as a quasi-adjudicator with no mention of this
conflict.
[8]
On May 7,
2007, the Delegate requested that the parties to the Disciplinary Proceedings
submit their respective arguments regarding the Delegate’s alleged conflict of
interest and reasonable apprehension of bias. The Delegate considered the
submissions made by the parties and concluded that he was not in a conflict of
interest by virtue of his affiliation with BLG, nor was there a reasonable
apprehension of bias on his part. The motion for recusal was dismissed on June
5, 2007. The Decision was communicated to the applicant a day later.
[9]
In the
Decision, the Delegate summarizes the applicant’s conflict of interest and
reasonable apprehension of bias arguments as follows:
Par sa lettre du 3 avril 2007, Henry
Sztern reproche au soussigné et à l’honorable Lawrence A. Poitras de ne pas
avoir dénoncé que Me Marc Duchesne, également de la firme [BLG] à Montréal,
avait entrepris des procédures contre [Sztern Inc.] à titre de syndic dans
l’affaire Meco Limitée, affaire qui fait l’objet d’une des 24 plaintes ou
offenses reprochées à Henry Sztern et à [Sztern Inc.] et qu’en conséquence, il
y a conflit d’intérêt et crainte raisonnable de partialité.
[10]
The Delegate
emphasized that when the Meco file was opened at BLG on February 22, 2001 (the
date Me Duchesne joined the firm), the name Meco appeared in the file opening
system and there was no reference to the applicant or to Sztern Inc. Further,
the Delegate noted that the entire time BLG worked on the Meco bankruptcy file,
namely from February 22, 2001 to May 6, 2004, the applicant knew or ought to
have known that Me Duchesne was acting on behalf of certain creditors. Indeed, by
April 2, 2003, the applicant must have been aware of Me Duchesne’s involvement
on the Meco file as he was in attendance at the hearing. Similarly, the
Delegate stated that between October
2005 (the date the Superintendent delegated his power to preside over the
Disciplinary Proceedings to Me Poitras of BLG), until April 2007, the applicant
actively participated in the case management of the Disciplinary Proceedings
and did not once raise the question of a potential conflict of interest. The Delegate was of the view
that “la demande de Henry Sztern du 3 avril 2007 nous parait pour le moins
surprenante et de nature purement obstructive et dilatoire.”
[11]
The Delegate
concluded as follows :
Non seulement le dossier de Me Duchesne
invoqué par Henry Sztern est fermé, mais
-
considérant
la nature de la demande pilotée par Me Duchesne qui consistait en une requête
en revendication d’une partie des remboursements de la taxe de vente fédérale;
-
considérant
que le dossier de Me Duchesne, Henry Sztern & Associées Inc. agissait en sa
qualité de syndic et que Henry Sztern et Henry Sztern & Associées Inc. n’y
étaient pas impliqués personnellement;
-
considérant
que la question de protèger la confidentialité client/procureur n’est pas
pertinente dans la présente affaire;
-
considérant
que le rapport à être fait au Surintendant des faillites et ses conclusions
relèvent de l’application des principes disciplinaires et déontologiques
découlant de la Loi sur la faillite et non des principes découlant de
l’exercice des droits des créanciers d’une faillite;
-
considérant
qu’aucun privilège avocat/client n’existe entre le soussigné et Henry Sztern et
Henry Sztern & Associées Inc.;
-
considérant
que le soussigné n’a aucun intérêt personnel dans le dossier relevant de Me
Duchesne; le conflit d’intérêt allégué est mal fondée [sic] en droit.
[12]
Turning to the issue
of reasonable apprehension of bias, the Delegate noted that in Wewaykum Indian
Band v. Canada, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 259 (Wewaykum), the Supreme Court of
Canada reasoned that “the burden is on the party arguing for disqualification
to establish that the circumstances justify a finding that the judge must be
disqualified.” Likewise, the Delegate relied on the following criteria (expressed
by de Grandpré J. in Committee for Justice and Liberty v. Canada
(National Energy Board),
[1978] 1 S.C.R. 369 (Committee for Justice) and cited in Wewaykum),
to establish reasonable apprehension of bias:
...
the apprehension of bias must be a reasonable one, held by reasonable and right
minded persons, applying themselves to the question and obtaining thereon the
required information. In the words of the Court of Appeal, that test is “what
would an informed person, viewing the matter realistically and practically --
and having thought the matter through -- conclude. Would he think that it is
more likely than not that [the decision-maker], whether consciously or
unconsciously, would not decide fairly.”
[13]
In conclusion, the
Delegate did not believe that an informed person, viewing the matter
realistically and practically and having thought the matter through would
conclude that the Delegate would not decide the Disciplinary Proceedings fairly.
The motion for the Delegate’s recusal was dismissed.
[14]
The
applicant now contests the legality of the Decision on essentially two grounds.
First, the applicant submits the Delegate erred in concluding that he did not
have a real or perceived conflict of interest as a result of the fact that BLG
represented creditors in a matter which is essentially at the heart of the
Disciplinary Proceedings over which the Delegate currently presides. The
applicant suggests clients of BLG are substantial unsecured creditors
(totalling almost $1,300,000) in the Estate of Meco and thus, these clients
stand to gain financially from the Disciplinary Proceedings. The applicant
states it was incumbent on the Delegate to immediately inform both parties to
the Disciplinary Proceedings of this conflict and to recuse himself forthwith. In
making this argument, the applicant relies on the Judicial code of ethics,
R.R.Q. 1981, c. T-16, r.4.1; the Code of ethics of advocates, R.R.Q. 1981,
c. B-1, r.1; and the Canadian Judicial Council’s publication entitled “Ethical
Principles for Judges.” Secondly, the applicant states the Delegate erred in
concluding there was no reasonable apprehension of bias on his part. A
reasonable-minded person upon analyzing all the facts would conclude that there
is indeed a reasonable apprehension of bias.
[15]
Neither
party made submissions regarding the standard of review. Nevertheless, in Sam Lévy &
Associés Inc. v. Mayrand, 2005 FC 702, [2006] 2
F.C.R. 543, (Sam Lévy); affirmed by the Federal Court of Appeal in Sam
Lévy & Associés Inc. v. Canada (Superintendent of Bankruptcy), 2006 FCA
205, [2006] F.C.J. No. 867 (QL), leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada
refused, I concluded that questions of law (such as the scope of
procedural safeguards, impartiality and the independence of the system for
investigating the conduct of trustees in bankruptcy) are reviewable by this
Court applying the standard of the correct decision. Given that this judicial review involves
issues of procedural fairness, I am of therefore of opinion that the
appropriate standard of review of the Board’s Decision regarding
conflict of interest and reasonable apprehension of bias is that of correctness.
[16]
At the hearing, the respondents (who are represented by the
Attorney General of Canada which should have been named as respondent by virtue
of Rule 303(2) of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, as amended),
noted for the first time that the application for judicial review was premature
and ought to be dismissed on that sole ground. By direction of the Court, the
parties filed supplemental written representations addressing this issue.
[17]
The respondents rely on the seminal case of Szczecka v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1993), 116 D.L.R. (4th)
333, [1993] F.C.J. No. 934 (QL) (Szczecka) for the proposition that
there exists a long standing rule before the Federal Courts barring
applications of interlocutory decisions absent exceptional circumstances. The
respondents are of the view that this rule applies to an interlocutory decision
pertaining to the recusal of an adjudicator. The respondents note in Ipsco
Inc. v. Sollac, Aciers d'Usinor (1999), 246 N.R. 197, [1999] F.C.J. No. 910
(QL) (Ipsco), the Federal Court of Appeal refused to judicially review a
decision by the Canadian International Trade Tribunal (CITT) disqualifying the
applicant's counsel from participating in the hearing as his appearance was
found to create a reasonable apprehension of bias. The Federal Court of Appeal in
Ipsco concluded that the matter was interlocutory in nature (since its
determination does not go to the merits of the issue in dispute before the CITT),
and, therefore, there were no special circumstances warranting the Court’s
intervention at that juncture. Moreover, in Lorenz v. Air Canada, [2000]
1 F.C. 494, [1999] F.C.J. No. 1383 (QL) (Air Canada), Justice Evans
states: “I find no authority for the proposition that an allegation of bias ipso
facto constitutes "exceptional circumstances" justifying judicial
review before the tribunal has rendered its final decision.” According to the
respondents, there are no exceptional circumstances in this case warranting
judicial review of the interlocutory decision. Indeed, were the Court to
judicially review the Delegate’s interlocutory decision, it would lead to a
fragmentation of issues; a waste of court resources; undue proliferation of
litigation; unnecessary delay of the Disciplinary Proceedings and would set a
negative precedent.
[18]
The applicant, for his part, attempts to distinguish the cases
relied on by the respondents. He argues that since the sanctions that a
Delegate may order pursuant to the Act can be of a penal nature, cases like Air
Canada (which was decided in the context of labour law), are of little
relevance. Further, in many of the cases cited by the respondents, the principal
hearing was stayed pending the disposition of the judicial review. In this
instance, the Delegate has continued the Disciplinary Proceedings. Finally, the
applicant states that in Zündel v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), [2000]
4 F.C. 255, [2000] F.C.J. No. 678 (QL), leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Canada refused [2000] S.C.C.A. No. 323, the Federal Court of Appeal ruled that
matters like bias have been held to go to the very jurisdiction of a tribunal
and therefore constitute special circumstances that warrant immediate judicial
review of a tribunal's interlocutory decision.
[19]
Despite the arguments
raised ably by the applicant who represents himself in this proceeding, I am of
the opinion that are no special circumstances in the case at bar which warrant
the immediate judicial review of the Delegate’s interlocutory decision. The
starting point of my analysis, per Szczecka, is that unless there
are special circumstances there should not be an immediate judicial review of
an interlocutory judgement. As I found in MiningWatch Canada v. Canada
(Minister of Fisheries and Oceans), 2007 FC 955, [2007] F.C.J.
No. 1249 (QL) at para. 148:
The rationale for this is
that applications for judicial review of an interlocutory ruling may ultimately
be totally unnecessary: a complaining party may be successful in the end
result, making the applications for judicial review of no value. Also, the
unnecessary delays and expenses associated with such applications can bring the
administration of justice into disrepute.
[20]
The applicant has failed to convince the Court that in this
instance, there are such “special circumstances.” To the contrary, I am of the
view that a determination of bias at the interlocutory stage runs the risk of
proliferating litigation unduly. For example, if the allegations of bias made
by the applicant as a ground for recusal were to be dismissed by the Court at
this point, there is nothing to prevent the applicant from raising them again
in another decision attacking the final decision of the Disciplinary
Proceedings. Likewise, if the Delegate’s future interlocutory rulings and final
decision alleviate any apprehension the applicant may have with regards to the
Delegate’s bias, the judicial review of the interlocutory recusal decision would
have been of no value and would have wasted precious Court resources.
[21]
I
am persuaded by the respondents’ careful examination
of the jurisprudence in this area. In particular, I find the facts in Air
Canada are very similar to the fact raised in this instance. In Air
Canada, the Court was tasked with determining: “Is an adjudicator appointed
under the Canada Labour Code to determine an unjust dismissal complaint
disqualified by bias because as a practising lawyer he was at that time
representing a client in an unjust dismissal claim under provincial employment
standards legislation against another employer?” In Air Canada, as in
this case, Justice Evans had the benefit of hearing the case in its entirety before
rendering his decision on prematurity. This provides a valuable context within
which to consider the exercise of the Court’s discretion over the grant of
relief. Having considered factors such as hardship to the applicant, waste,
delay, fragmentation, strength of the case, the statutory context and relevant
jurisprudence, Justice Evans concluded: “A non-frivolous allegation of bias
that falls short of a cast-iron case does not per se constitute “exceptional
circumstances”, even when the hearing before the tribunal is still some way
from completion, and there is no broad right of appeal from the tribunal. Nor
is it to be equated with a constitutional attack on the “very existence of a
tribunal” considered in Pfeiffer v. Canada
(Superintendent of Bankruptcy), supra.” I agree with
Justice Evans and for these reasons, this application for judicial review is
dismissed.
[22]
A trial judge who is
dealing with an unrepresented litigant has the right and the obligation to
ensure that the litigant understands the nature of the proceedings: Wagg v.
Canada, 2003 FCA 303, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1115 (QL) at para. 33. Accordingly,
I
have specifically considered the fact that the applicant is self-represented
and is not as familiar as lawyers are with concepts such as “conflicts of
interest” and “reasonable apprehension of bias”. In spite of my findings that this judicial review is
premature, I would have concluded that the Delegate’s decision with respect to
the absence of a conflict of interest was correct.
[23]
In essence, the
applicant is arguing that the Delegate is in a conflict of interest by virtue
of the fact that his colleague, Me Duchesne, instituted legal proceedings on
behalf of creditors of Meco contesting Sztern Inc.’s decision to disallow their
proofs of claim in the Meco matter. The applicant characterizes this as a
conflict of a “professional nature” that arises between one of the parties to a
dispute and one of the members of a tribunal deciding a case. I disagree. The
Delegate is not in a position of representing conflicting interests. The term “conflict
of interest” typically means an interest that would be likely to affect
adversely a lawyer's judgment on behalf of, or loyalty to, a client or prospective
client, or that a lawyer might be prompted to prefer to the interests of a
client or prospective client.
[24]
A client's affairs
may be seriously prejudiced unless the lawyer's judgment and freedom of action
on the client's behalf are as free as possible from conflict of interest. In MacDonald
Estate v. Martin, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1235 at para. 45, the Supreme Court of
Canada stated that cases involving potential conflicts of interest require two
questions to be answered: (1) Did the lawyer receive confidential information
attributable to a solicitor and client relationship relevant to the matter at
hand? (2) Is there a risk that it will be used to the prejudice of the client?
Taking this test (which is generally designed to ensure that lawyers do not
represent more than one side of a dispute) and applying it to the case at bar,
I see nothing in the evidentiary record which would lead me to conclude that the
Delegate (or Me Duchesne or BLG itself) received confidential information
attributable to a solicitor and client relationship with the creditors of the
Meco Estate that would be relevant to the matter at hand.
[25]
Indeed, I see nothing
in the facts to support the applicant’s assertion that Me Duchesne’s former
clients (in their capacity as creditors) would stand to gain financially or
psychologically from the Disciplinary Proceedings. At issue in the Disciplinary
Proceedings is whether or not the applicant committed a range of disciplinary
infractions which involve numerous bankruptcy estates, administration estates
and consumer proposals. The validity and rank of creditors’ proofs of claim in
the Meco matter is not even remotely at issue in the Disciplinary Proceedings. Further,
even if the applicant is found to have committed these alleged infractions, the
sanctions that are being sought involve the cancelling of the trustees’
licenses and do not include restitution for missing fund in the Meco matter. To
summarize, the Disciplinary Proceedings are a very different matter than the
bankruptcy proceedings (which involved Me Duchesne between 2000 and 2004). I
also emphasize that it is not improper for a lawyer to act against a client in
a fresh and independent matter wholly unrelated to any work the lawyer has
previously done for that person and where previously obtained confidential
information is irrelevant to that matter. As such, I am of the opinion that the
Delegate is not in a conflict of interest.
[26]
With respect to the
applicant’s second argument, in Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2
S.C.R. 817 (Baker), the Court iterated that procedural fairness requires
that decisions be made by an impartial decision-maker and free from any
reasonable apprehension of bias. The classic test for reasonable apprehension
of bias was set out by Justice de Grandpré writing in dissent, in Committee
for Justice, above and was accurately quoted by the Delegate in his
Decision.
[27]
First, the mere fact
that the Delegate made an interlocutory ruling denying the applicant’s request
to examine the opposing party prior to filing a contestation, is insufficient
evidence, in my opinion, to raise a reasonable apprehension of bias, or to
conclude the judge is biased. I emphasize that the interlocutory contestation decision
is not the subject of the judicial review at bar. As such, I am hesitant to
comment on the Delegate’s findings in this area. Suffice it to state, the
Delegate’s interlocutory decision was within his jurisdiction, it did not run
contrary to any case law and it did not violate any of the applicant’s
procedural guarantees.
[28]
Secondly, I hold the
opinion that the mere fact that the Delegate is now associated with a lawyer
who previously advocated on behalf of creditors in a matter which involved
Sztern Inc. is insufficient to constitute a reasonable apprehension of bias in
the particular circumstances of this case.
[29]
Finally, I am of the
opinion that the applicant’s argument the Delegate is wearing multiple hats is without
merit. The applicant explains this argument as follows: “One hat as Delegate/Agent
of the [Superintendent]. Another hat as quasi-adjudicator in the undeniably
awkward position of having to decide on a matter where another member/employee/agent
of the [Superintendent] is also one of the parties in the litigation as against
[the applicant]. The last hat is that es qualité attorney representing the
interests of the [Superintendent].” As for the contention that the Delegate
would be institutionally biased because the process involves a delegation to
the Superintendent of (i) his investigation/prosecutorial function to a Senior
Disciplinary Analyst of the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy and (ii)
his adjudicative function to a retired judge, this does not amount to
institutional bias as was decided in various decisions (Métivier c. Mayrand,
[2003] R.J.Q. 3035, [2003] J.Q. no 15389 (C.A.)(QL); Sam Lévy & Associés
c. Marc Mayrand, 2006 CAF 205, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 543; Sheriff v. Attorney
General of Canada, 2006 FCA 139, [2006] F.C.J. No. 580 (QL); Canada (Procureur
général) c. Raymond Chabot et al, 2006 QCCA 1074, [2006] J.Q. no
9051 (QL) ). Moreover, the Delegate does not in any way act as an “attorney
representing the interests of the [Superintendent]” (my emphasis) but as a tribunal
invested with the powers mentioned in sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act.
[30]
As a final note, I
have also considered the other arguments made by the applicant, including the
arguments based on delay or negative publicity. These arguments are either
premature or irrelevant considering the particular nature of this proceeding,
the interlocutory character of the complained actions or decisions, and the
limited jurisdiction of the Court in a judicial review application. No doubt
the applicant is under considerable psychological stress, and the financial and
economic impact of this on-going process before the Delegate is immense to him.
Nonetheless, this, alone, does not entitle the Court to make the requested orders
given the absence of any reviewable error by the Delegate in dismissing the
applicant’s motion for recusal. I do note that in the course of his oral
submissions, the applicant alleged facts that are not part of the record or
which are subsequent to the impugned decision made by the Delegate. Rightly so,
respondents’ counsel objected to the admissibility of such evidence.
[31]
In conclusion, the
present application must fail. The respondents are entitled to costs.
ORDER
THIS
COURT ORDERS that this
application for judicial review be dismissed with costs.
“Luc Martineau”