Docket: T-297-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1367
Ottawa, Ontario, December 9, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice McVeigh
BETWEEN:
|
DERINA MARCIA
|
Applicant
|
and
|
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant, Derina Marcia [“Ms. Marcia”],
challenges a decision dated January 13, 2016, from the Social Security Tribunal
– Appeal Division [the Appeal Division], which refused leave to appeal. Ms.
Marcia represented herself at the Federal Court. What I heard is a very human
story by a hardworking, articulate, and wonderfully caring 71 year old woman. It
appears that the complete story including new evidence has never all been
before a decision maker for a number of reasons.
II.
Background
[2]
Ms. Marcia was employed by the John Howard
Society of Saskatchewan from June 1, 2009 to October 31, 2014. She was in the
position of Residential Youth Caseworker from 2009 to 2012 and Supported
Independent living Caseworker from 2012 to 2014. Ms. Marcia is passionate about
her work with youth at risk. There is no doubt that early on in this saga,
something went terribly wrong. She related all of the very emotional facts in
great detail from the beginning to the ultimate refusal by the Appeal Division.
[3]
The foundation of this judicial review is a
determination that Ms. Marcia has to pay back $4,407.00 of employment insurance
benefits. The Social Security Commission determined Ms. Marcia was not entitled
to the benefits as she voluntarily left her job rather than having left for just
cause as provided for in the Employment Insurance Act, SC 1996, c 23, ss
29, 30 [EI Act].
[4]
As explained to Ms. Marcia, this is a judicial review
application which is governed by administrative law principles. The judicial review
will be of a decision on a standard of reasonableness. I can only review the
legality of the decision, not determine the merits or do any fact finding.
[5]
This is not the legal vehicle that can have Ms.
Marcia not having to pay back the employment insurance money or the former
employment relationship resolved. I cannot unwind time and start this all over
again.
[6]
The background to this case is important to
understand how all of this started and to untangle how Ms. Marcia got to this
point. I listened carefully to all the facts but will not recite the details or
the individuals’ names regarding the genesis of Ms. Marcia’s application for employment
insurance.
[7]
On September 30, 2014, unaware she was doing
something wrong, Ms. Marcia obtained the personal phone number of a residential
home employee from a staff coordinator and contacted that casual employee about
union business. This act was in breach of John Howard Society’s privacy policy
and John Howard Society’s contractual agreement with the province of
Saskatchewan. Even though she had no idea it was a breach of conduct, she
accepted responsibility and apologized for doing it.
[8]
The union representative suggested that Ms.
Marcia go to the provincial director’s office and repeat what she had told the
union representative and this could be settled. Ms Marcia went to his office
and was told that he would not discuss it and that her superior would deal with
her. The next day, she went to her Director’s office to tell her side of the
story and resolve the issue. She did not understand the seriousness of the
breach or that the meeting was to be any more than a discussion of what had
transpired so that the supervisor knew her side of the story. Ms. Marcia was
offered and declined to have a union representative present at this meeting as
she could not imagine it was necessary just to talk about something that had
innocently occurred; this was especially true since she was a valued and
trusted employee. At the time she prided herself as being trusted with information
and duties beyond the scope of her employment because of caring so much about
the residents and her job.
[9]
Ms. Marcia was shocked at the meeting when she
was handed a prepared disciplinary letter marked confidential and not to be
shared with anyone. Ms. Marcia was not given an opportunity to discuss the
circumstances of her taking the phone number. She was distraught by the letter
and the process by which she was reprimanded. She felt that the relationship of
trust between herself and her employer was broken as the entire job was built on
trust considering her job was caring for vulnerable youth.
[10]
Her superior took a phone call during the
conversation with Ms. Marcia, and as a result she left the office when the telephone
call came in. Her superior said she would find her and finish their
conversation after she dealt with the phone call. Ms. Marcia waited and when no
one showed up, she went home distraught.
[11]
Ms. Marcia was so upset that her trustworthiness
was called into question and that such a small matter had escalated so quickly,
that she went to her family doctor. She related how her integrity had been
called into question despite being a trusted employee; she felt the
employee-employer relationship had been destroyed. She loved her job and took very
seriously her clients’ care. The whole process shook her to her core. Her
doctor advised her to take time off work because of the stress this incident
had caused her. She took two weeks stress leave from work during which time she
contemplated about what to do about her future. During her two weeks leave, she
spoke with her union representative for advice, who suggested she apply for
short term disability. Ms. Marcia informed them she was not eligible as she was
over 70 years old so that was not an option. No one ever mentioned she could file
a grievance regarding the reprimand letter.
[12]
Ms. Marcia being unable to apply for medical
disability because of her age felt her only alternative was to quit. She said
this was an attack on her integrity as a person and as an employee and she
could not continue to work there. She could not imagine how her doctor’s advice
could be met other than by quitting her job.
[13]
Upon her return to work, Ms. Marcia gave two
weeks’ notice of her intention to resign. Her employer urged her to reconsider
but Ms. Marcia felt that employer/employee trust had been irreparably damaged
and with that she did not know how she could continue to independently do her
job for the residents. During the meeting when she handed in her resignation, the
meeting was interrupted by another personal care worker needing to see her
superior. Ms. Marcia had to leave the room to give them privacy and she was
never called back in to finish the meeting. So she went back to her office and
a couple of hours later she was emailed that her resignation was accepted and
was not contacted other than a co-worker said to hand in her cellular phone.
[14]
After she gave her two weeks’ notice, Ms. Marcia
was very busy trying to meet all her clients and their social workers to ensure
the transition to a different worker would be smooth. During this time she
never looked for other work as these two weeks were very demanding and she did
not consider doing it during work hours as this would not have been ethical.
[15]
Ms. Marcia did not attempt to speak a second
time with her supervisor about errors in the process or factual errors as she
was too distraught and concerned for the youths’ care handover. She completed
her final two weeks of work as she felt a duty to the clients with whom she
worked and cared for so much.
[16]
On November 20, 2014, Ms. Marcia made a claim
for employment insurance benefits. On January 23, 2015, the Commission allowed
Ms. Marcia benefits on the basis of just cause for voluntarily leaving her
employment. On February 9, 2015, the John Howard Society made a request for
reconsideration and on April 20, 2015, the Commission reversed its decision. As
a result, the Commission claimed an overpayment to Ms. Marcia in the amount of
$4,407.00. The Commission’s reversal led to the September 3, 2015 appeal and
dismissal of Ms. Marcia’s application by the Commission’s General Division [the
General Division].
[17]
The Appeal Division reviewed the permissible
grounds for appeal and came to a determination that Ms. Marcia was requesting
the Appeal Division to re-weigh evidence already presented to the General
Division. It noted that the role of the Appeal Division is not to re-hear cases
de novo; specifically, that new evidence not directly relating to a reviewable
error was not normally admissible. The presiding member of the Appeal Division
requested further submissions from Ms. Marcia including full and detailed
grounds of appeal. No grounds with a reviewable error were submitted.
[18]
On January 13, 2016, the Appeal Division refused
leave to appeal the General Division’s decision on the basis that the appeal
had no reasonable chance of success.
III.
Preliminary Issue
[19]
Ms. Marcia filed a Motion Record the day of the
hearing that was not compliant with the rules in a number of aspects. The motion
sought to introduce “fresh and new evidence” to
be considered at the judicial review. The new evidence sought to be admitted is
a Physician’s letter dated March 23, 2015, and submitted to the Tribunal for
Leave to Appeal; Saskatchewan Government and General Employees’ Union [SGEU]
letters dated November 18, 2015, and December 17, 2015; and pages 97-99 of the
SGEU agreement with the John Howard Society and SGEU. The grounds and the
relief of the Motion Record are similar to what was already before the Court in
the Judicial Review. The Respondent had no opportunity to provide written
submissions in response to the Motion Record.
[20]
I will accept the non-compliant Motion Record
for filing but dismiss the motion to file new evidence. As a general rule, a
Judicial Review will proceed on the material that was before the decision maker.
The new evidence contained in the Motion Record does not meet the test for
admission as an exception to the rule as it is not necessary as a general
background nor is it necessary for procedural defects or to highlight there was
no evidence before the decision maker. The evidence within the motion is the
gist of what is already contained in the Judicial Review application (Association
of Universities and Colleges of Canada v Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency,
2012 FCA 22 at para 20).
[21]
The Judicial Review will proceed on the
Certified Tribunal Record which contains the evidentiary record that was before
the decision maker.
IV.
Issue
[22]
Was the decision of the Appeal Division not to
grant leave reasonable?
V.
Standard of Review
[23]
The Standard of Review when reviewing Social
Security Tribunal – Appeal Division leave decisions is reasonableness (Tracey
v Canada (AG), 2015 FC 1300 at paras 17-23). The Court must be
satisfied as to the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility
within the decision-making process, and find that the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paras 47-48 [Dunsmuir]).
[24]
Any breach of procedural fairness will be
reviewed on a correctness standard (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v
Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 43).
VI.
Analysis
[25]
I will dismiss this application for the reasons
that follow.
[26]
Ms. Marcia is upset at her union, previous
employer and the tribunal/judicial process generally. She has clearly spent an
enormous amount of time researching and submitting information to various
tribunals which she feels has been largely ignored. It is equally clear she
feels she has not been given a fair shake by her employer (for giving her the
disciplinary letter without discussion in the first place; plus she feels she
exhausted all avenues of internal dispute resolution by attempting to speak to
the regional supervisor). She feels her union has equally failed her for poor
representation given that evidence she feels is crucial has been left out and
that no one ever mentioned the possibility of using the grievance process as
disability was not an option available to her.
[27]
Ms. Marcia argues that she should be allowed to
present and correct factual errors made throughout the process. Ms. Marcia
argues that the Appeal Division failed to allow her to provide further new
medical evidence (dated October 21, 2015) that clarified the doctor’s brief
first note when he explained in his new doctor’s note that she should quit her
job for the sake of her health. She says the Appeal Division decision should
also have considered: the SGEU letters by Kelly Hardy Labour Relations Officer
dated November 17 and December 17, 2015, which stating her union had not agreed
to the reprimand letter that was issued to Ms. Marcia which is contrary to what
her employer verbally told her. Ms. Marcia feels that this new evidence creates
a just cause for her quitting the John Howard Society and the Appeal Division
should have considered this new evidence as well as any other new evidence she
has now produced to correct the facts, such as portions of the collective
agreement between her former employee and the union; a Regina Public School Pamphlet.
[28]
Finally, she cannot believe that after Social
Security determined that she had just cause for voluntarily leaving her
employment and paid her employment insurance that as a former valued employee, the
John Howard Society would contest her receiving employment insurance. She says
if the Appeal Division or the General Division would read her doctor’s follow
up clarification report that it is clear she left her job for just cause and
should be entitled to benefits as was originally determined.
[29]
The test for determining leave to appeal a
decision of the General Division is found at subsection 58(2) of the Department
of Employment and Social Development Act, SC 2005, c 34 [the DESDA]: “leave to appeal is refused if the Appeal Division is
satisfied that the appeal has no reasonable chance of success.” An
applicant must satisfy the Appeal Division that their appeal has a reasonable
chance of success on at least one of the three grounds found under subsection
58(1):
(a) The General Division failed to observe a
principle of natural justice or otherwise acted beyond or refused to exercise
its jurisdiction;
(b) The General Division erred in law in
making its decision, whether or not the error appears on the face of the
record; or,
(c) The General Division based its decision
on an erroneous finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious manner
or without regard for the material before it.
[30]
None of these three grounds having been argued
by Ms. Marcia, the Respondent submits the Appeal Division’s decision was
reasonable.
[31]
Ms. Marcia did not raise a justiciable issue
with a reasonable chance of success to the Appeal Division. The presiding
member in an effort to help Ms. Marcia requested that she submit additional
information on grounds he could review. Ms. Marcia mistakenly believed she had already
done so. In order to have a reasonable chance at success in the context of s.
58(2), is that the proposed appeal must have some arguable grounds to succeed (Osaj
v Canada (Attorney General), 2016 FC 115 at para 12).
[32]
The EI Act, s. 30 indicates that a person cannot
receive benefits if they left voluntarily without cause or if they were
dismissed for misconduct. Ms. Marcia would have to prove that she left
voluntarily but had just cause for doing so. The legal test for just cause is
set out in s. 29 of the EI Act and contains a non-exhaustive list of what is
just cause. The onus is on the Commission to show that the person left their
job voluntarily and then the onus shifts to the person to show whether they had
just cause for voluntarily leaving their job (Tanguay v Unemployment Insurance
Commission, [1985] FCJ No 910 (FCA)).
[33]
Justice Layden-Stevenson noted in Canada (Attorney
General) v White, 2011 FCA 190 at paragraph 5, that an employee has an
obligation to resolve disputes with an employer or demonstrate that they tried
to find other employment before they voluntarily quit their job.
[34]
New evidence is not permissible at the Appeal
Division as it is limited to the grounds in subsection 58(1) and the appeal
does not constitute a hearing de novo. As Ms. Marcia’s new
evidence pertaining to the General Division’s decision could not be admitted,
the Appeal Division did not err in not accepting it (Alves v Canada (Attorney
General), 2014 FC 1100 at para 73). Parliament has determined that the Appeal
Division is limited by the statute to what they can grant leave on (DESDA).
[35]
Ms. Marcia says the doctor’s note is not new
evidence, it is just a clarification letter and the SGEU letter just verifies
facts so the Appeal Division should have considered them.
[36]
I cannot legally agree with Ms. Marcia that
these new documents are not new evidence. This is where it must be frustrating
to be met with administrative law principles as a self-represented person.
[37]
Ms. Marcia presented to the Appeal Division that
they make a decision that involved weighing the evidence including new evidence
that was not before the General Division. It was reasonable for the Appeal Division
to not reweigh evidence or consider the new evidence to find the General Division
in error for not considering evidence that was not before them. The submissions
before the Appeal Division did not point to any error that the General Division
made under s. 58(2) which would make their decision to not grant leave
unreasonable.
[38]
The following was the conclusion of the Appeal
Division:
It is not sufficient for an Applicant to
plead that the General Division member was mistaken in his or her conclusions
and ask the Appeal Division for a different outcome. In order to have a reasonable
chance of success, the Applicant must explain in some detail how in their view
at least one reviewable error set out in the Act has been made. Having
failed to do so, even after having been prompted to do so by the Tribunal, I
find that this application for leave to appeal does not have a reasonable
chance of success and must be refused.
[39]
Ms. Marcia argued that it was procedurally unfair
that the Appeal Division did not allow the medical note from her doctor that
clarified the previously filed medical evidence. She says that because she did
not have legal representation, the General Division failed in its duty as it
should have assisted an unrepresented individual by allowing her to clarify the
first medical note by filing another.
[40]
She also filed two SGEU letters that address a
factual error where the union contradicts the employer evidence that they
agreed with the letter of reprimand as well as another document. While not
making a determination, it is possible that this information in a different
forum could have led to different outcome, but this is not the forum.
[41]
The tribunal rightly classed the doctor’s note, two
union letters and the Regina Public School Document as new evidence, for which
they had no authority to consider. There was no breach of procedural fairness
in not allowing new evidence before the Appeal Division.
[42]
The decision of the tribunal not to grant leave
is reasonable.
[43]
I make two observations now that all the factual
information is gathered. The first observation is that I see no reason that Ms.
Marcia and her employer could not attempt to resolve some issues with the
assistance of a mediator. My second observation is employment insurance could
consider an equitable resolution to the payback request. These are only my
observations and have no authority in law.
[44]
The Respondent did not ask for cost and there
will be no order as to costs.