Docket: T-356-13
Citation:
2015 FC 149
Ottawa, Ontario, February 5, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
|
CANADIAN DOCTORS FOR REFUGEE CARE, THE CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF
REFUGEE LAWYERS, DANIEL GARCIA RODRIGUES, HANIF AYUBI AND JUSTICE FOR
CHILDREN AND YOUTH
|
Applicants
|
And
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA AND MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondents
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ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
For many years, the Government of Canada funded
comprehensive health insurance coverage for refugee claimants and others who
came to Canada seeking its protection through the Interim Federal Health
Program. In 2012, the Governor in Council passed two Orders in Council which
significantly reduced the level of health care coverage available to many such
individuals, and all but eliminated it for others pursuing risk-based claims.
[2]
On July 4, 2014, I released a judgment in which
I concluded that the 2012 changes to the Interim Federal Health Program were
inconsistent with sections 12 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms and were of no force or effect. I suspended the operation of my
judgment for a period of four months in order to give the Governor in Council time
to respond to my decision.
[3]
My decision is currently under appeal and on
October 31, 2014, the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the Respondents’ motion
for a stay of my judgment.
[4]
On November 5, 2014, the Government of Canada instituted
a new Federal Health Program, which it described as “temporary
health-care measures … consistent with the Federal Court’s ruling”.
[5]
The applicants are of the view that the 2014
Federal Health Program fails to address the Charter violations
identified in my judgment. Consequently, they have brought a motion in which
they seek “an Order for directions” and “an Order for clarification” in relation to my July 4,
2014 judgment, as well as “an Order compelling the
Respondents to comply” with the judgment.
[6]
While the applicants may have other avenues of
recourse available to them to address their concerns, I have concluded that
having already issued a final judgment in relation to this application, I no
longer have jurisdiction over this matter. Consequently, the applicants’ motion
will be dismissed.
I.
The Principle of Functus Officio
[7]
The principle of functus officio provides
that once a decision-maker has done everything necessary to perfect his or her
decision, he or she is then barred from revisiting that decision, other than to
correct clerical or other minor errors. The policy rationale underlying this
doctrine is the need for finality in proceedings: Chandler v. Alberta
Association of Architects, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 848, at paras. 20-21, [1989]
S.C.J. No. 102.
[8]
In order to engage the principle of functus
officio, the decision in issue must be final. In the context of judicial
decision-making, a decision may be described as final when “... it leaves nothing to be judicially determined or
ascertained thereafter, in order to render it effective and capable of
execution, and is absolute, complete and certain ...”: G. Spencer Bower
& A.K. Turner, The Doctrine of Res Judicata 2d. ed. (London:
Butterworths, 1969) at 132, cited in Donald J.M. Brown & John M. Evans, Judicial
Review of Administrative Action in Canada, loose-leaf (Toronto: Thomson
Reuters, 2014) vol. 3 at 12:6222.
[9]
I do not understand there to be any disagreement
that my July 4, 2014 judgment was indeed a final decision. In it, I disposed of
all of the applicants’ claims for relief, and granted them some, but not all,
of the declaratory relief that they were seeking. I had thus exhausted my
jurisdiction over the subject matter of this litigation.
[10]
As Justice Pelletier observed in Halford v.
Seed Hawk Inc., 2004 FC 455 at para. 6, 253 F.T.R. 122, “[i]n order for a judge to reopen the judgment, there must be
some authority for doing so, since the entire system of justice is predicated
on the finality of judgments”. Indeed, in Doucet-Boudreau v. Nova Scotia (Minister of Education), 2003 SCC 62 at para. 116, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 3, Justices
LeBel and Deschamps noted that “only in strictly
limited circumstances can a court revisit an order or a judgment”
[my emphasis]. While Justices LeBel and Deschamps were writing in dissent, it
was not on this point.
[11]
The Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106,
identify limited circumstances in which a court may revisit a final decision.
Rule 397 is a “slip rule” that allows the Court to
correct minor errors, and Rule 399 allows the Court to set aside an order
in certain defined circumstances. The applicants concede that neither Rule has
any application in this case.
[12]
The question, then, is whether there is any
other basis upon which I could grant the relief that the applicants are
seeking. The arguments advanced by the applicants will be addressed in the next
section of these reasons.
II.
Analysis
[13]
The applicants seek “an Order
for clarification” with respect to my July 4, 2014 judgment, submitting
that courts “have innate jurisdiction” to clarify their judgments. At the same time, however,
the applicants acknowledge that my judgment was “perfectly
clear”. Indeed, the applicants had sought declarations in their Notice
of Application declaring, amongst other things, that the 2012 changes to the
Interim Federal Health Program were inconsistent with sections 12 and 15 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part 1 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 being Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.), 1982, c.
11. That is the relief I granted, and no clarification of my judgment is
required.
[14]
The applicants further submit that this Court
has “innate jurisdiction” to ensure compliance
with its own judgments, submitting that if litigants were free to ignore court
orders, “anarchy cannot be far behind”: Canada
(Human Rights Commission) v. Taylor, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 892 at para. 180,
[1990] S.C.J. No. 129.
[15]
I accept that a declaratory judgment is binding,
that it has legal effect, and that it must be complied with: Assiniboine v.
Meeches, 2013 FCA 114, at paras. 12-14, [2013] F.C.J. No. 474. I further
accept that this Court has the power to enforce its own judgments. However,
that is not what the applicants are really asking for in this case. At its core,
what the applicants are seeking is not the “enforcement”
of my July 4, 2014 judgment, but a ruling that the 2014 Federal Health Program
violates sections 12 and 15 of the Charter.
[16]
I agree with the respondents that the practical
effect of what the applicants are now seeking is to have me interpret and amend
my July 4, 2014 judgment to stipulate that sections 12 and 15 of the Charter
require the Government of Canada to fund healthcare to a certain specified
level for those seeking the protection of Canada: see the applicants’ Written
Response at paras. 14 and 15.
[17]
The cases that the applicants rely on to support
their jurisdictional argument are, moreover, readily distinguishable from the
present situation. They do not provide a principled basis for me to “clarify” my judgment, to issue “directions” relating to
my judgment, or to issue an order “compelling the
Respondents to comply” with my judgment.
[18]
For example, in Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v. Mahjoub, 2009 FC 34, 338 F.T.R. 74 and Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Jaballah, 2009 FC 33, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 23, I had to determine whether the Charter rights of persons
named in security certificates were being violated by the way in which
conditions of release imposed by the Court were being enforced. While orders
had previously been issued in relation to periodic detention reviews for each
of Messrs. Mahjoub and Jaballah, the Charter motions were brought in the
context of ongoing security certificate proceedings, and not after the
release of the Court’s final judgment in each case.
[19]
The applicants cite this Court’s decision in
MacDonald v. Swecan International Ltée. (1990), 40 F.T.R. 272, [1990]
F.C.J. No. 826 as authority for the proposition that the Court’s jurisdiction
extends to all proceedings related to the enforcement of its judgments.
[20]
It is true that in the MacDonald case,
the Court stated that its jurisdiction “is not
automatically extinguished when judgment is given in the main action, but
rather it subsists in any proceedings relating to the enforcement of that
judgment”. This comment must, however, be read in context.
[21]
MacDonald
involved the seizure of goods pursuant to a writ of fieri facias,
executing on a judgment issued in a patent matter. The Federal Courts Rules
contain comprehensive provisions dealing with the enforcement of judgments
through execution proceedings such as the seizure of property and the
garnishment of wages. These Rules do not, however, create an exception to the
principle of functus officio that would allow the Court to reopen a
final judgment in the circumstances of this case.
[22]
The decision of the Alberta Court of Queen’s
Bench in Criminal Trial Lawyers’ Assn. v. Alberta (Solicitor General),
2004 ABQB 534, 364 A.R. 109, a case involving prisoners’ telephone access to
counsel, is also readily distinguishable from the present situation. Not only
does it appear that a final judgment had not yet issued in that case, the Court
had, moreover, specifically retained jurisdiction over the matter: see para.
113.
[23]
The remedial discretion conferred on Courts by
the Charter allows judges to make supervision orders where it is appropriate
and just for them to do so: Doucet-Boudreau, above. Such orders permit
judges to monitor the implementation of judgments in Charter litigation. No
such order was, however, sought or granted in the present case.
[24]
In Wong v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (1998), 159 F.T.R. 154, [1998] F.C.J. No. 1791, this Court did
issue an order purporting to clarify an earlier judgment in light of subsequent
events. However, it appears from the Court’s brief reasons that both parties
sought the clarification, and no issue was raised as to the Court’s continuing
jurisdiction over the matter: see para. 8. This decision is thus of limited
assistance.
[25]
The applicants also submit that they do not have
to commence a fresh challenge to the 2014 Federal Health Program because it is
not a “new” policy, but merely an “interim” policy that only came into effect because the
Federal Court of Appeal refused to stay the operation of my judgment. With all
due respect, this is a distinction without a difference.
[26]
My July 4, 2014 judgment declared that the 2012
changes to the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP) were inconsistent with
sections 12 and 15 of the Charter and were of no force or effect. With
the Federal Court of Appeal’s refusal to stay this decision, my judgment came
into effect four months after its release. The 2012 IFHP is no longer in
effect, and has been replaced by the 2014 Federal Health Program. While there
may be a question as to whether this new policy is Charter-compliant,
that question should be decided in the context of a new application for
judicial review, on the basis of a proper evidentiary record.
[27]
Indeed, that is precisely what happened in British
Columbia Teachers’ Federation v. British Columbia, 2014 BCSC 121, 54
B.C.L.R. (5th) 286, the case that is most closely analogous to the present
situation. There, the British Columbia Supreme Court had issued a declaration
that legislation that deleted terms from collective agreements and prohibited
collective bargaining in relation to issues related to class size, class
composition, and support for special needs students interfered with teachers’
collective bargaining rights and breached subsection 2(d) of the Charter.
The Court suspended the order striking down the legislation for a period of 12
months to allow the Province time to address the Court’s decision.
[28]
After the suspension period expired, the
Province enacted legislation that was virtually identical to the legislation
the Court had struck down. In order to challenge the new legislation, the British
Columbia Teachers’ Federation commenced a new proceeding seeking to have the
new legislation struck down and damages awarded for the Government’s conduct.
The Court agreed that a second application was necessary to challenge the new
legislation, and that any remedies relating to the unconstitutionality of the
new legislation had to be granted in the context of that second application:
at para. 649.
[29]
The applicants further contend that I must take
jurisdiction over this matter as the 2014 Federal Health Program continues to
put lives at risk, and the applicants have no other effective remedy. According
to the applicants, commencing a new application to challenge the 2014 Federal
Health Program is not a realistic alternative given that the 2014 Federal Health
Program is only an interim policy, brought in to cover the period during which
my decision is under appeal. According to the applicants, it is not realistic
to think that a fresh Charter challenge could be mounted and argued
before the appeal of my decision is heard.
[30]
There are, however, several difficulties with
this submission.
[31]
The first is that I either have jurisdiction to
deal with the applicants’ motion or I do not. The fact that it may take time to
bring a challenge to the 2014 Federal Health Program does not confer
jurisdiction on me where it would not otherwise exist.
[32]
It is, moreover, by no means clear that a
challenge to the 2014 Federal Health Program could not be dealt with before the
issues raised by this case have been finally decided.
[33]
No date has been set for the hearing of the
appeal from my decision, and the applicants have not brought a motion to have
the hearing expedited. As a consequence, the hearing of the appeal is months
away. Given the complexity of the issues raised by this case, it could take
months more before the Federal Court of Appeal renders its decision. There is,
moreover, no guarantee that the Federal Court of Appeal will have the last word
in this matter. Given the importance of the issues raised by this case, it is
reasonable to assume that leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada may well
be sought by the unsuccessful parties, and that the Supreme Court may
ultimately grant leave. In other words, the final resolution of this case may
be many months, if not years, away.
[34]
Additionally, this Court makes every effort to
provide timely justice, and can expedite the hearing of applications where it
is satisfied that it is in the interests of justice to do so. Indeed, an
example of an application for judicial review implicating Charter rights
that was brought, heard and decided within a six-week period was discussed
during the hearing of this motion: see Tursunbayev v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2012 FC 504 at paras. 10-13, 409
F.T.R. 176.
[35]
A Charter challenge to a government
policy is undoubtedly a complex matter. However, given that this matter has
already been extensively litigated and a substantial evidentiary record
compiled, both in this Court and in the Federal Court of Appeal, it is by no
means clear that a challenge to the 2014 Federal Health Program could not be
dealt with in a relatively expeditious manner.
[36]
Both sides also referred to the possibility of
contempt proceedings being brought against the Respondent Minister as a means
of enforcing my judgment. However, the applicants argue that the procedural
requirements of contempt proceedings are such that they could not obtain a
timely decision as to whether the Government of Canada has complied with my
judgment.
[37]
I will leave for another day the question of
whether a finding of contempt is in fact available in relation to a declaratory
judgment, but would note that contempt proceedings are generally summary in
nature and can be dealt with in an expeditious fashion where it is appropriate
to do so.
III.
Conclusion
[38]
For these reasons, I have concluded that having
issued a final judgment in this matter, my jurisdiction over this matter has
been exhausted. Consequently, the applicants’ motion is dismissed.
[39]
Having dismissed the motion on jurisdictional
grounds, I offer no opinion as to the constitutionality of the 2014 Federal
Health Program.
[40]
In accordance with the agreement of the parties,
each side shall bear their own costs.