Date: 20080506
Docket: T-1206-07
Citation: 2008 FC 576
Ottawa, Ontario, May 6, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
ANDY
KHANNA
Applicant
and
THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The Canadian Human Rights Commission decided not
to deal with a portion of Andy Khanna’s human rights complaint against
his former employer, the Canadian Border Services Agency, because
it concluded that part of the complaint was based on
acts which occurred more than one year before the filing of the complaint.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I am satisfied that
the Commission’s decision was unreasonable. As a consequence, the application
for judicial review will be allowed.
Background
[3]
On June 20, 2004, Mr. Khanna began working as a Customs inspector with
the CBSA. He was hired on a one-year term contract.
[4]
Mr. Khanna alleges that in the course of his employment, he was
subjected to ongoing and continuous harassment and discrimination from his
colleagues and superiors, because of his national or ethnic origin and his
perceived sexual orientation. Mr. Khanna’s complaint also alleges
discrimination on the basis of disability.
[5]
In particular, Mr. Khanna’s complaint refers to a series of events, many
of which involved either a CBSA Superintendent or an Inspector, both of whom
are named as individual respondents in his human rights complaint.
[6]
The first of the events specifically identified in the complaint
allegedly took place on July 9, 2004. According to the complaint, the
discriminatory conduct continued up until June 20, 2005, when CBSA informed Mr.
Khanna that he would not be offered a new contract.
[7]
Mr. Khanna first contacted the Canadian Human Rights Commission with
respect to his allegations against the CBSA on May 16, 2006. He did not,
however, file his formal complaint with the Commission until September 1, 2006.
[8]
Mr. Khanna has suffered from depression since 2000. He asserts that his
depression worsened as a result of the treatment to which he was subjected at
the CBSA, which negatively affected his ability to pursue his human rights
complaint. In support of his claim, he provided the Commission investigator
with medical evidence indicating that Mr. Khanna was incapacitated for a period
of time after the termination of his employment with the CBSA.
The Commission Investigation
[9]
Mr. Khanna’s human rights complaint was not filed until
approximately 14 months after he left his employment with the CBSA. Section
41(1)(e) of the Canadian Human Rights Act allows the Commission to
decline to deal with human rights complaints, where the complaint in question is based on acts or omissions the last of which occurred more than
one year before receipt of the complaint.
[10]
As a result, after receiving Mr. Khanna’s complaint, the
Commission carried out a “section 41 investigation”, to assist the
Commissioners in deciding whether or not to exercise their discretion to deal
with the complaint.
[11]
After consulting with Mr. Khanna and the CBSA, the
investigator prepared a brief report, which concluded with the recommendation
that the Commission not deal with events occurring between the commencement of
Mr. Khanna’s employment in June of 2004, and April of 2005. The investigator
did, however, recommend that the Commission deal with allegations relating to
May and June of 2005.
[12]
This recommendation was subsequently accepted by
the Commission. In its May 24, 2007 decision letter, the Commission stated that
the Commission would not deal with the allegations relating to the period between
June of 2004 and April of 2005 because “the[y] are based on acts which occurred
more than one year before the filing of the complaint”. With respect to the
allegations relating to the period in May and June of 2005, the Commission said
that it would deal with these allegations because “it appears that the
complainant was unable to pursue the complaint for reasons related to his
health”.
[13]
Given the cursory nature of Commission decisions, investigation reports
must be read as the Commission’s reasons: see Sketchley v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2005 FCA 404 at ¶ 37.
[14]
In this regard, the operative portion of the investigation report
provides that:
10. The
documentation shows that the alleged acts took place from July 2004 to April
2005, and from May 2005 to June 2005. The complainant initially contacted the
Commission [on] 16 May 2006 and the complaint was accepted [on] 01 September
2006. Allegations in time could date back to 16 May 2005.
11. The
evidence supports that the allegations from July 2004 to April 2005 fall
outside of the one year time limit. Medical documentation does not support that
the complainant was unable to deal with his complain[t] during this time.
Evidence does show that the complainant was able to consult with his Union and
file a grievance as required in June 2005.
12. Medical
documentation submitted does support that the complainant may have been
‘incapacitated’ and unable to deal with his complaint during the Fall of 2005
and therefore further inquiry may be warranted into the allegations from May
2005 to June 2005.
Standard of Review
[15]
Mr. Khanna argues that the Commission does not
have the jurisdiction to ‘sever’ complaints. That is, he contends that, as a
matter of law, it was not open to the Commission to decide to deal with part of
his complaint, and not to deal with the rest of the complaint. As a question
of law, Mr. Khanna says that the Commission’s decision is reviewable against
the standard of correctness.
[16]
However, in argument, Mr. Khanna conceded that
complaints could be severed in certain circumstances, that is, where different
aspects of the complaint dealt with different time periods, and involved
different people. As a consequence, it appears that what Mr. Khanna really
takes issue with is the Commission’s determination as to when the limitation
period started to run, and how the Commission exercised its discretion in this
case.
[17]
Prior to the recent decision of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, [2008] S.C.J. No. 9, a determination
as to when the limitation period contained in section 41 of the Canadian
Human Rights Act started to run was subject to review on the standard of
reasonableness simpliciter, whereas the exercise of the Commission’s
discretionary power to extend the time limit was reviewable against the
standard of patent unreasonableness: see, for example Bredin v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2006 FC 1178, at paragraph 47.
[18]
However, as a result of Dunsmuir, there are
now only two standards of review: reasonableness and correctness. According to
Dunsmuir, a reviewing Court must go through a two-stage analysis in
order to ascertain which of these standards should apply in a given case.
[19]
Firstly, the Court must determine whether the
degree of deference to be accorded to the type of question in issue has already
been identified by the jurisprudence. If this has been done, it is not
necessary to carry out a complete standard of review analysis.
[20]
Where, however, no such an analysis has previously
been carried out, the second stage of the inquiry requires that the Court
consider the traditional standard of review factors. These are the presence or
absence of a privative clause, the purpose of the decision-maker in question,
the nature of the question at issue, and the relative expertise of the
decision-maker: see Dunsmuir
at paragraphs 57, 62, and 64.
[21]
There has been no post-Dunsmuir judicial
consideration of the standard of review to be applied to Commission decisions
taken under section 41 of the Canadian Human Rights Act. However, Dunsmuir teaches that where the question in issue involves
the exercise of discretion, deference will usually apply automatically, and the
standard of review will generally be one of reasonableness: see Dunsmuir at paragraphs 51 and 53.
[22]
Moreover, a review of the four
factors relevant to the standard of review analysis leads to a similar
conclusion.
[23]
In this regard, it should be
observed that there is no privative clause in the Canadian Human
Rights Act, nor is there any statutory right of appeal. A decision whether
to extend the time limits to deal with a complaint has a significant factual
component to it, and, as noted above, involves the exercise of discretion.
While the purpose of the legislation is to give effect to the fundamental
Canadian value of equality, the Act grants the Commission a remarkable degree
of latitude when it is performing its screening functions. Finally, while the
Commission has considerable expertise in human rights matters, and in balancing
the competing interests of the parties to a complaint, it has no greater
expertise than the Court in ascertaining when a limitation period starts to
run.
[24]
Taking the relevant factors
into account, I am satisfied that both the Commission’s determination as to when the limitation period started to run, and the
exercise of the Commission’s discretionary power to extend the time limit are
reviewable under the reasonableness standard.
[25]
In reviewing a decision against the reasonableness standard,
a reviewing court must consider the justification, transparency and
intelligibility of the decision-making process. The Court must also consider
whether the decision falls within a range of possible acceptable outcomes which
are defensible in light of the facts and law: see Dunsmuir at paragraph
47.
[26]
Mr. Khanna also argues that the
Commission’s section 41 investigation was not sufficiently thorough. In light
of the Court’s conclusion on the first issue, it has not been necessary to
address this argument.
Analysis
[27]
There are several reasons why I have found that
the Commission’s decision not to exercise its discretion to consider the
portions of Mr. Khanna’s human rights complaint relating to the period before
May of 2005 to be unreasonable.
[28]
The first of these concerns the investigator’s finding
at paragraphs 3 and 10 of the investigation report that the complaint involved
two discrete periods - that is the period from July of 2004 to April of 2005,
and a second period from May to June of 2005. A review of the complaint form
discloses an alleged pattern of abusive behaviour involving certain named
employees of the CBSA, which is said to have continued throughout the duration
of Mr. Khanna’s employment.
[29]
The investigator has provided no explanation for
the finding that the complaint involved two distinct time periods, and it is
not apparent on the face of the record how this conclusion was arrived at. As
a consequence, the decision lacks the justification,
transparency and intelligibility required of a reasonable decision.
[30]
The second problem with the decision is the
investigator’s focus on Mr. Khanna’s capacity to file a human rights complaint during
the time that he was employed by CBSA. This is reflected at paragraph 11 of
the investigation report, where the investigator observes that:
The evidence supports
that the allegations from July 2004 to April 2005 fall outside of the one year
time limit. Medical documentation does not support that the complainant was
unable to deal with his complain[t] during this time. Evidence does show
that the complainant was able to consult with his Union and file a grievance as
required in June 2005. [Emphasis added]
[31]
With respect, the question to be determined was
not whether Mr. Khanna had been able to file a complaint with respect to the
conduct that he was allegedly experiencing in the workplace while it was
ongoing. Rather, the investigator was required to consider Mr. Khanna’s
capacity to pursue the matter in the period from the date of the last incident
complained of, namely June of 2005, and September 1, 2006, which was the date
on which the complaint was actually filed with the Commission.
[32]
The final problem is
the investigator’s finding at paragraph 10 of the investigation report that “Allegations in time could date back to 16 May 2005”.
[33]
Section 41(1)(e) of the Canadian Human
Rights Act requires that the
Commission deal with human rights complaints, unless a complaint is based on acts or omissions the last
of which occurred more than one year before receipt of the complaint. In
such cases, it is up to the Commission to decide whether to extend the time
limit. If allegations relating to events allegedly occurring on or after May
16, 2005 were “in time”, as the investigator has found, then it would follow
that the whole complaint should have been dealt with, as the last several
events complained of occurred “in time”.
[34]
In light of the foregoing findings, the
Court is satisfied that the decision under review was unreasonable. As a
consequence, the application for judicial review is allowed, with costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS
AND ADJUDGES that the application for judicial
review is allowed, with costs. The May 24, 2007 decision of
the Canadian Human Rights Commission is set aside, and
the matter is remitted to the Commission for re-determination
in accordance with these reasons.
“Anne
Mactavish”