Docket: T-1992-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1180
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, October 19, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Roy
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BETWEEN:
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MARIE MACHE
RAMEAU
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Marie Mache Rameau (the applicant) says she is
caught in a vicious circle. She had filed a complaint with the Canadian Human
Rights Commission (the Commission) 12 years ago, but the case was
supposedly resolved when the parties agreed to a settlement under the Canadian
Human Rights Act, RSC, 1985, c H-6 (the Act). It appears that the
settlement is now the subject of a dispute over its interpretation, and the
applicant is looking for a decision-making body to cut this Gordian knot.
[2]
To this end, the applicant is now turning to the
Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (the Tribunal). In decision with reasons dated
August 26, 2014, the Tribunal declined to deal with the case. The
applicant seeks judicial review of that decision under section 18.1 of the
Federal Courts Act, RSC, 1985, c F-7.
[3]
The role of a court of law is to dispose of
disputes that parties submit to it, not to provide legal opinions. In this
case, the Court must find that the Tribunal’s refusal to interpret a clause in
a settlement to which it is not a party in any capacity, in the absence of a
complaint filed with it, was appropriate. In my opinion, the Tribunal had no
choice, particularly since the settlement became an order of this Court by a
decision of Justice Pinard on May 29, 2012, in accordance with
subsection 48(3) of the Act. The application for judicial review must
therefore be dismissed.
I.
Facts
[4]
The facts in this case are unusual, so a
timeline is provided to give a much-needed overview that aids in understanding
the factual background:
•
July 2003: The applicant filed a complaint with
the Commission. In that complaint, she alleged that the Canadian International
Development Agency (CIDA) had discriminated against her on the basis of race.
•
December 23, 2005: Having completed its
investigation, the Commission recommended that a tribunal be appointed to deal
with the complaint, as permitted by the Act.
•
November 29, 2006: The mediation suggested
by the Tribunal, held in accordance with the Tribunal’s internal procedures and
with the consent of the parties, resulted in the drafting of minutes of
settlement between the parties before the complaint could be dealt with. This
is the settlement referred to above. This settlement provides that the
Commission will monitor it [translation] “to ensure the performance of the terms and conditions agreed
herein” (para 14). The settlement includes a dispute resolution
mechanism of its own, as Article 16 of the settlement expressly provides
that [translation] “[o]nce the settlement has been approved by the Commission, in
the event of a disagreement concerning the performance of any of its
conditions, the parties agree to resume mediation to renegotiate the points in
dispute”.
•
January 16, 2007: The Commission confirmed
that the settlement had been approved under subsection 48(1) of the Act.
In a letter addressed to the Tribunal, a request was made to have the Tribunal
issue a notice of discontinuance. The applicant was sent a carbon copy.
Moreover, on December 8, 2006, the Tribunal had given direct notice that
it would be issuing a letter staying the proceedings.
•
January 17, 2007: The Tribunal notified the
applicant that it was staying proceedings and closing her file.
•
July 3, 2009: The settlement provides that
the applicant shall be assigned to the Public Service Commission for 12 months
at level PE-4, one level higher than the one she held at CIDA. The costs of
this 12-month assignment were to be covered by CIDA. Said assignment one level
higher was in an acting position. The applicant remained at the Public Service
Commission for two years. The costs of the second year were covered by the
Public Service Commission. When she returned to CIDA in February 2009, the
applicant requested a permanent appointment, as she was entitled to do,
according to her interpretation of Clause 6 of the settlement. On
July 3, she notified the Commission that CIDA was not complying with the
settlement.
•
June 23, 2010: The parties having agreed that
the Commission would monitor the settlement and that, in the event of a disagreement
regarding the performance of the settlement, they would resume mediation to
renegotiate the points in dispute, the Commission asked the Tribunal on this
day to preside over mediation session.
•
September 24, 2010: After deliberating, the Tribunal
concluded that it would be inappropriate for it to play this role. It noted
that the file had been closed since January 17, 2007, that the member who
had taken part in the original mediation several years ago was no longer with
the Tribunal, and that the settlement had been approved by the Commission.
•
March 7, 2012: After the Tribunal refused to act
as mediator, a mediation session was held without the Tribunal’s assistance
until CIDA withdrew from it on March 7.
•
May 29, 2012: On the applicant’s initiative,
the settlement between her and CIDA, approved by the Commission on
November 29, 2006, was [translation]
“made an order of the Federal Court” by order of
Justice Pinard, of this Court, dated May 29, 2012.
•
November 2, 2012: Claiming a breach of the settlement
made an order of this Court, the applicant brought contempt of court
proceedings against CIDA in the Federal Court. Justice Boivin dismissed
the proceedings with costs. Essentially, Justice Boivin found that the
order that had allegedly been breached, thus justifying a finding of contempt,
was not as clear as it should be. The ambiguity in Clause 6 was such that
there could not be a deliberate breach. The judge therefore found the clause to
be vague, which was enough to conclude that the motion should be dismissed; he
did not resolve the ambiguity. No appeal was filed against that decision.
•
November 20, 2012: The applicant invited
the respondent to resume mediation, but to no avail.
•
January 18, 2013: The applicant asked the
Tribunal to intervene [translation] “to decide a limited question of interpretation regarding the
application of the Minutes of Settlement”.
•
August 26, 2014: The Tribunal declared that it
could not intervene.
II.
Decision under review
[5]
The decision under judicial review is the
Tribunal decision dated August 26, 2014. The applicant wanted the Tribunal
to deal with the disagreement over the scope and interpretation of
Clause 6 of the Minutes of Settlement, which constitute the settlement
approved by the Commission.
[6]
Essentially, the Tribunal denied the request
because it is of the opinion that it no longer has jurisdiction over the
matter. It therefore declared itself to be functus officio. The
settlement between the parties resulted in the Tribunal closing the file that
had originally been submitted to it.
[7]
In the Tribunal’s opinion, its jurisdiction arose
from a complaint that the Commission had referred to it, and no such complaint
exists anymore. What is more, the settlement that the Commission had approved
was made an order of the Federal Court by order of Justice Pinard. The Tribunal’s
decision is neatly summed up at paragraph 60 of that decision:
[translation]
[60] In light of the relevant legal
provisions and, more specifically, the provisions of subsection 48(1) and
section 49 of the Act I referred to above, as well as the lack of any
relevant provision in the minutes of settlement that would allow the Tribunal
to retain jurisdiction, I find that the Tribunal cannot intervene in response
to the request made by the complainant to resolve any dispute respecting the
settlement between the parties dated November 29, 2006.
[8]
In the end, the applicant raises public policy
as a basis for the Tribunal’s jurisdiction here. The Tribunal declines
jurisdiction, noting that the applicant’s argument is not supported by any
authorities.
III.
Standard of review
[9]
The applicant alleges that the Tribunal made
errors of law in its decision and seeks judicial review of that decision on the
correctness standard. She concedes that the questions of mixed fact and law are
subject to the reasonableness standard.
[10]
The applicant relies on two decisions of the
Federal Court of Appeal to support her argument that the correctness standard
should prevail. In Canada (Attorney General) v Johnstone, 2014 FCA 110 [Johnstone],
a panel of that Court concluded that the questions submitted to it in that case
were subject to that standard despite the presumption that, on judicial review,
the Court is required to show deference with regard to questions of law
pertaining to the statute that an administrative tribunal is responsible for
applying. The other case cited is Canada (Attorney General) v Cruden,
2014 FCA 131 (Cruden).
[11]
In my view, these two judgments do not appear to
be of any assistance to the applicant in her efforts to have the Tribunal’s
decision reviewed on the correctness standard. Moreover, the applicant did
little to develop her argument based on the two judgments.
[12]
Since Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 [Dunsmuir], it has been recognized that four types
of questions are reviewed on the correctness standard:
i)
a question of law that is of utmost importance
for the legal system and that is outside the specialized area of expertise of
the administrative tribunal;
ii)
questions of law regarding the division of powers
between Parliament and the provinces;
iii)
questions of law truly concerning jurisdiction
and constitutionality. The Court noted that “[j]urisdiction
is intended in the narrow sense of whether or not the tribunal had the
authority to make the inquiry. In other words, true jurisdiction questions
arise where the tribunal must explicitly determine whether its statutory grant
of power gives it the authority to decide a particular matter” [para 59];
iv)
questions regarding the jurisdictional lines
between two or more competing specialized tribunals will also be subject to the
correctness standard.
In addition to these four types of
questions, there is the case where an administrative tribunal and a court can
rule at first instance on the same question of law. It would be inconsistent
for the Court, on judicial review, to apply the reasonableness standard to such
a decision by an administrative tribunal when an appeal from the Court’s
decision at first instance would be subject to the correctness standard. The
Supreme Court therefore concluded in Rogers Communications Inc v Society of
Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 SCR
283 [Rogers Communications], that the correctness standard applies to a
question of law decided by an administrative tribunal when the same question
could be submitted to a court of law sitting as court of first instance.
[13]
Aside from these five types of questions, the
presumption continues to apply. The applicant did not raise any of these
categories in her memorandum of fact and law, relying instead on Johnstone,
above. However, in my view, Johnstone is based on a line of reasoning
that does not lend itself easily to the case under review.
[14]
In Johnstone, the Court, relying on the
fact that the presumption (Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v
Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654 (Alberta
Teachers’)) that deference must be shown to an administrative tribunal’s
interpretation of its home statute is rebuttable, concluded that the meaning of
“marital status”, a prohibited ground of
discrimination recognized by statute, and the definition of the test to be used
to determine whether there is discrimination within the meaning of the
legislation should be reviewed on the correctness standard. No comparable issue
is at stake in the present case.
[15]
Indeed, the Federal Court of Appeal noted that
the two questions under review in that case concerned the scope of the
protection afforded by a quasi-constitutional statute. According to the Court,
the standard of review applicable to constitutional questions should prevail
for a quasi-constitutional statute involving fundamental rights.
[16]
Furthermore, many courts and administrative
tribunals are called upon to apply such quasi-constitutional statutes, which
suggests that the correctness standard should apply, as in Rogers
Communications, above. Indeed, it would be unfortunate if divergent
interpretations could be presented before different administrative tribunals
and courts.
[17]
The Federal Court of Appeal was also of the
opinion that the two issues in that case were of central importance to the
legal system (Johnstone, at para 51). Finally, the Federal Court of
Appeal cited previous judgments favouring the correctness standard in cases
involving a determination of the meaning and scope of “marital
status”.
[18]
With respect, I have difficulty seeing how the
questions raised in Johnstone, above, could be equated with those at
issue here. It seems to me that we are far from the definition of “marital status” or what constitutes the test for
determining where there is discrimination when we are dealing with the
Tribunal’s jurisdiction to dispose of issues beyond a complaint referred to it
by the Commission. In my opinion, Johnstone cannot be cited in support
of the proposition that any question of law that arises when interpreting the
Act must be reviewed on the correctness standard.
[19]
In Cruden, a decision of the Federal
Court of Appeal rendered after Johnstone, above, a different panel of
the Federal Court of Appeal (one of three judges sitting on two panels) cited Johnstone
without approving it. This panel concluded instead that the standard of review
was not important, since only one interpretation could prevail.
[20]
As was recognized in McLean v British
Columbia (Securities Commission), 2013 SCC 67, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 895 [McLean],
it is possible for two reasonable legal interpretations to co-exist. It is
therefore possible that a question of law can admit two different
interpretations, both of them reasonable. But this will not always be the case (McLean,
at para 38). In Cruden, above, the Federal Court of Appeal
therefore decided that it did not have to rule on the standard of review
because the end result would be the same. There was only one valid and
reasonable interpretation.
[21]
In the case at hand, I would conclude as the
Federal Court of Appeal did in Cruden. In my opinion, the Tribunal correctly
stated that it could not dispose of the question of interpretation that the
applicant wanted to submit to it. I cannot see how it could be otherwise. Its
decision was correct. Whether the standard of review is correctness or
reasonableness, the outcome is, in my view, the same.
[22]
I would not be inclined to agree with the
applicant’s argument based solely on Johnstone, above. The issues
decided in Johnstone are quite simply nothing like the one before this
Court, such that it could be called a question of law of central importance to
the legal system as a whole. In Mouvement laïque québécois v Saguenay (City),
2015 SCC 16, the Supreme Court gave another example of this sort of question:
[51] In her concurring reasons, Abella
J. disagrees with this approach to the applicable standards of review in the
instant case. In my opinion, in the context of this appeal, this Court’s
decisions, more specifically Dunsmuir, Mowat and Rogers,
to which I have referred, support a separate application of the standard of
correctness to the question of law concerning the scope of the state’s duty of
neutrality that flows from freedom of conscience and religion. I find that the
importance of this question to the legal system, its broad and general scope
and the need to decide it in a uniform and consistent manner are undeniable.
Moreover, the jurisdiction the legislature conferred on the Tribunal in this regard
in the Quebec Charter was intended to be non-exclusive; the Tribunal’s
jurisdiction is exercised concurrently with that of the ordinary courts. I am
therefore of the view that the presumption of deference has been rebutted for
this question. This Court confirmed in a recent case (Tervita, at paras.
24 and 34-40) that the applicable standards on judicial review of the
conclusions of a specialized administrative tribunal can sometimes vary
depending on whether the questions being analyzed are of law, of fact, or of
mixed fact and law.
[23]
Here, the issue to be decided falls squarely
within those to be resolved by people who have the degree of expertise or field
sensitivity of “those working day to day in the
implementation of frequently complex administrative schemes” (Dunsmuir,
above, at para 49). It is simply a matter of determining whether the Act
permits a particular sort of question to be decided: the Tribunal must consider
its purpose, the nature of the question and its expertise. The issue in this
case is by no means outside the Tribunal’s expertise with regard to its home
statute. It had to be decided whether the Tribunal could deal with a question
that did not come to it through the filing of a complaint. I would have
expected its decision to be treated with deference.
[24]
In her memorandum of fact and law before this
Court, the applicant did not address the possibility that the issue in this
case falls in the category of true questions of jurisdiction, other than to
state at paragraph 33 that jurisdictional errors, when they are obvious,
require that a decision be quashed.
[25]
And yet the applicant made the issue of
jurisdiction the central pillar of her case at the hearing. Relying on paragraphs 59
and 60 of Dunsmuir, the applicant argued that this case turns on a
question of jurisdiction, even in the strict sense laid out in that judgment of
“whether or not the tribunal had the authority to make
the inquiry”. As the majority wrote,
[i]n other words, true jurisdiction
questions arise where the tribunal must explicitly determine whether its
statutory grant of power gives it the authority to decide a particular matter.
The tribunal must interpret the grant of authority correctly or its action will
be found to be ultra vires or to constitute a wrongful decline of
jurisdiction . . . .
Dunsmuir, at
para 59
[26]
It would appear that the difficulty lies in the
fact that the interpretation of an administrative tribunal’s home statute must
be afforded deference on judicial review. But jurisdictional questions are also
questions of home statute interpretation. When does one sort of question become
the other? Where is the line drawn? This is perhaps why the majority in Alberta
Teachers’ openly questioned whether questions of jurisdiction continue to
exist since Dunsmuir:
[34] The direction that the category of true
questions of jurisdiction should be interpreted narrowly takes on particular
importance when the tribunal is interpreting its home statute. In one sense,
anything a tribunal does that involves the interpretation of its home statute
involves the determination of whether it has the authority or jurisdiction to
do what is being challenged on judicial review. However, since Dunsmuir,
this Court has departed from that definition of jurisdiction. Indeed, in view
of recent jurisprudence, it may be that the time has come to reconsider
whether, for purposes of judicial review, the category of true questions of
jurisdiction exists and is necessary to identifying the appropriate standard of
review. However, in the absence of argument on the point in this case, it is
sufficient in these reasons to say that, unless the situation is exceptional,
and we have not seen such a situation since Dunsmuir, the interpretation
by the tribunal of “its own statute or statutes closely connected to its
function, with which it will have particular familiarity” should be presumed to
be a question of statutory interpretation subject to deference on judicial
review.
Alberta Teachers’, at para 34
[27]
At the hearing, I asked counsel for the
applicant if he could refer the Court to any authorities supporting his
proposition that we were dealing with a question of jurisdiction according to paragraph 59
of Dunsmuir, despite paragraph 34 of Alberta Teachers’. (I
note that the Court repeated its scepticism in ATCO Gas and Pipelines Ltd. v
Alberta (Utilities Commission), 2015 SCC 45 at para 27). He was unable
to provide any.
[28]
As I have tried to explain regarding the
argument half-heartedly made on the basis of Johnstone, the standard of
review is of no importance in this case because only one solution is possible
here. Even if the correctness standard is applied, the Tribunal had no
jurisdiction to consider a clause in a settlement to which it was not a party.
IV.
Analysis
[29]
In this Court, the applicant presented the same
arguments as it did before the Tribunal. She submits that her complaint is
still before the Tribunal. For her, [translation]
“the issue is not one of reopening a Tribunal decision,
but one of dealing with a question that is inextricably linked to the complaint’s
referral to the Tribunal” (Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, at
para 37). If I understand the argument correctly, because the complaint
was not decided on the merits, it should be possible for a question stemming
from the interpretation of the settlement ending the dispute between the
applicant and CIDA to be nonetheless referred to the Tribunal for adjudication.
The applicant would even have the burden of proof shifted to the respondent so
that the respondent would have to prove that the Tribunal lacks jurisdiction.
No authorities were cited in support of such an assertion.
[30]
The Court cannot follow the applicant down this
path. Both the Commission and the Tribunal are creatures of the Act. The
parties seem to agree that the Tribunal’s jurisdiction is dependent on the
Commission filing a complaint with the Tribunal (paragraph 44(3) of the
Act), following an investigation. But there is more. The Tribunal’s jurisdiction
is to institute an inquiry into a complaint. This is done in accordance with
sections 49 and 55 of the Act. However, in the case at bar, there was no
inquiry into the complaint. To speak in terms of “dealing
with a question that is inextricably linked to the complaint’s referral to the
Tribunal” simply skirts the issue. It is not enough that the complaint
was referred. The complaint would also have to be still before the Tribunal, or
the exercise that the Tribunal is asked to engage in would have to be an
inquiry into the complaint or part of such an inquiry. Such is not the case,
nor could it be.
[31]
The reason for this is very simple. The parties chose
to settle the matter as they are permitted to do. Section 48 of the Act
reads as follows:
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Referral of a settlement to Commission
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Présentation des conditions de règlement à la Commission
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48. (1) When, at any stage after the filing of a complaint and
before the commencement of a hearing before a Human Rights Tribunal in
respect thereof, a settlement is agreed on by the parties, the terms of the
settlement shall be referred to the Commission for approval or rejection.
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48. (1) Les parties qui conviennent d’un règlement à toute étape
postérieure au dépôt de la plainte, mais avant le début de l’audience d’un
tribunal des droits de la personne, en présentent les conditions à
l’approbation de la Commission.
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Certificate
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Certificat
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(2) If the Commission approves or rejects the terms of a
settlement referred to in subsection (1), it shall so certify and notify the
parties.
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(2) Dans le cas prévu au paragraphe (1), la Commission certifie sa
décision et la communique aux parties.
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Enforcement of settlement
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Exécution du règlement
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(3) A settlement approved under this section may, for the purpose
of enforcement, be made an order of the Federal Court on application to that
Court by the Commission or a party to the settlement.
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(3) Le règlement approuvé par la Commission peut, par requête
d’une partie ou de la Commission à la Cour fédérale, être assimilé à une
ordonnance de cette juridiction et être exécuté comme telle.
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[32]
Here, a settlement was reached. It was approved
by the Commission. The applicant chose to apply to this Court to have the
settlement “be made an order of the Federal Court”.
It should come as no surprise that the Tribunal closed her file, after
notifying her.
[33]
I am concerned not so much with the Tribunal’s
statement that the file is closed as with the fact that the dispute disappeared
with the settlement between the parties. The language of the settlement is
unambiguous. The applicant states at paragraph 10 of the settlement that [translation] “[t]he
complainant agrees that this settlement represents the final resolution of all
the incidents alleged in complaint No. 20031234 and forever releases and
discharges the respondent . . .”. The parties having agreed
that they accept no liability, it is stated at paragraph 12 that [translation] “[t]he
complainant acknowledges having taken part in the settlement of the complaint
voluntarily, without duress or coercion, and fully understands the conditions
to which she has agreed”. It is difficult to understand how the
complaint, being the subject of a full and final settlement, could still be
active or even relevant.
[34]
In fact, the Tribunal is in no way a party to
the settlement; it is a matter for the parties, approved by the Commission.
Strictly speaking, one wonders how the Tribunal could deal with a question of
interpreting a settlement that, at law, could not be within its jurisdiction
because it was signed before the Tribunal could conduct an inquiry. Indeed, as
section 48 states, a settlement may be agreed on “before
the commencement of a hearing before a Human Rights Tribunal”. When the
Supreme Court considered whether the Tribunal is sufficiently independent from
the Commission, in constitutional terms, it noted that the Tribunal adjudicates
complaints that have been referred to it by the Commission (Bell Canada v
Canadian Telephone Employees Association, 2003 SCC 36 at para 23,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 884). The Tribunal is independent from the Commission, as it
should be. But the jurisdiction is to institute inquiries into complaints. If
there is no inquiry being conducted, the Tribunal has no jurisdiction.
[35]
On the face of the language of the Act, the
Tribunal institutes inquiries into complaints (sections 49 and 50). The
settlement, which was signed before an inquiry into the complaint was
instituted, is independent of the Tribunal and beyond its jurisdiction. What
the Tribunal is being asked to do here is to deal with a question of law, that
is, the interpretation to be given to a settlement in accordance with section 48
of the Act. On this point, the Act is clear: the settlement was signed before a
Tribunal hearing could begin. The Tribunal inquires into complaints. There is
no mixing and matching.
[36]
The applicant wants the Tribunal to assume
jurisdiction to interpret a settlement to which it is not a party and which, by
definition, came into being before the Tribunal could exercise its
jurisdiction, which is to conduct inquiries into complaints. Not only does this
place us at point in time before the exercise of the jurisdiction conferred by
Parliament, but the applicant would have the Tribunal do something other than
inquire into the complaint: she wants the Tribunal to interpret a settlement,
specifically, the minutes of settlement, which constitute a contractual document
that settles the dispute between the parties that gave rise to the complaint.
[37]
The settlement itself could not be clearer
regarding its effect. One need only read the introduction to the minutes of
settlement, which sets out the scope of the settlement: [translation] “The
parties have discussed the issues concerning complaint number 20031234 and
Tribunal file number T-1148-3006 in mediations and have decided to settle the
complaint in accordance with the following terms” (emphasis added). I
have already referred to paragraphs 10 and 12 of the settlement, which unequivocally
confirm the intention of the complainant, that is, the applicant. To my mind,
there is no room for conjecture. There is no complaint pending. But even if
there was, the applicant is not asking for an inquiry into the complaint. She
wants the Tribunal to interpret a settlement disposing of the complaint. This,
in my view, is not a request that can receive a positive answer without the
Tribunal exceeding the jurisdiction granted to it by Parliament.
[38]
The Court is also of the opinion that some
weight should be given to the fact that the settlement was made an order of
this Court. The applicant did indeed try to challenge the decision of this
Court, which refused to consider her contempt of court application. In a
display of legal gymnastics, she tried to show that the refusal to deal with
the contempt application because the provision in respect of which there was a
breach of an order of this Court (namely, the settlement approved by the Commission,
which the applicant had made into an order) is ambiguous and constitutes reason
in itself for the Tribunal to assume jurisdiction.
[39]
The picture that emerges is one of someone who
would like to have an order of this Court interpreted by an administrative
tribunal, failing which she could apply to this same Court for judicial review.
In support of this argument, she raises the refusal of our Court to interpret
the provision in dispute, in a proceeding with defined parameters, namely, a
contempt of court proceeding.
[40]
I see no point in muddying the waters; returning
to the basic principles will do. While it is certainly true that this Court
found ambiguity preventing contempt of court, it is unclear how confirming the
ambiguity gives jurisdiction to a statutory body to interpret settlements that
have been made orders of this Court. We are confronted with an order of this
Court, signed by Justice Pinard, that transformed the settlement approved
by the Commission into an order. That order was not carried out as sought in
the contempt proceeding. That is all. The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal is not
involved.
[41]
Indeed, Justice Boivin’s decision on the
contempt proceeding merely points out that the recourse chosen by the applicant
to have the order of this Court (per Justice Pinard) enforced is
inappropriate because the obligation to be performed must be clear, not
ambiguous. In other words, the breach must be deliberate. In my view, the
applicant is mistaken in noting at paragraph 56 of her memorandum of fact
and law that [translation] “it is not surprising that the Federal Court would not
interpret minutes of settlement that were not drafted by the Court itself”.
That is not the issue. The Court did not refuse to interpret the Minutes; it
simply found them to be ambiguous, which was enough to shut the door on the
contempt of court proceeding. The applicant chose an avenue that led her in the
wrong direction. There is nothing else to be gained from this venture. This
does not mean, by a sort of reverse logic, that the Tribunal must now have
jurisdiction. It is still a matter of interpreting an order of this Court for
enforcement purposes. It does not create any legal relationship with the Tribunal.
[42]
I would add in passing that it is ironic to say
the least that the applicant concedes that the Court was correct to not
interpret a settlement that it did not draft while at the same time she insists
that the Tribunal should do just that, even though the Tribunal did not draft
that settlement either. One would have thought that the same logic should
apply.
[43]
The applicant attacked the Tribunal’s use of the
functus officio doctrine in its decision. Neither the applicant nor the Tribunal
defined this doctrine, such that it is difficult to glean from this anything
more than an expression of the impossibility for the Tribunal to be forced to
assume jurisdiction.
[44]
In Canada, the classic description of the
doctrine is found in the reasons of Justice Sopinka, writing for the
majority, in Chandler v Alberta Association of Architects, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 848,
at pages 861 and 862:
20 I
do not understand Martland J. to go so far as to hold that
functus officio has
no application to administrative tribunals. Apart from the English practice
which is based on a reluctance to amend or reopen formal judgments, there is a
sound policy reason for recognizing the finality of proceedings before
administrative tribunals. As a general rule, once such a tribunal has reached a
final decision in respect to the matter that is before it in accordance with
its enabling statute, that decision cannot be revisited because the tribunal
has changed its mind, made an error within jurisdiction or because there has
been a change of circumstances. It can only do so if authorized by statute or
if there has been a slip or error within the exceptions enunciated in
Paper Machinery Ltd. v. J. O. Ross Engineering Corp., supra.
21 To this extent, the principle of functus
officio applies. It is based, however, on the policy ground which favours
finality of proceedings rather than the rule which was developed with respect
to formal judgments of a court whose decision was subject to a full appeal. For
this reason I am of the opinion that its application must be more flexible and
less formalistic in respect to the decisions of administrative tribunals which
are subject to appeal only on a point of law. Justice may require the reopening
of administrative proceedings in order to provide relief which would otherwise
be available on appeal.
22 Accordingly, the principle should
not be strictly applied where there are indications in the enabling statute
that a decision can be reopened in order to enable the tribunal to discharge
the function committed to it by enabling legislation. This was the situation in
Grillas, supra.
23 Furthermore,
if the tribunal has failed to dispose of an issue which is fairly raised by
the proceedings and of which the tribunal is empowered by its enabling statute
to dispose, it ought to be allowed to complete its statutory task. If,
however, the administrative entity is empowered to dispose of a matter by one
or more specified remedies or by alternative remedies, the fact that one is
selected does not entitle it to reopen proceedings to make another or further
selection. Nor will reserving the right to do so preserve the continuing
jurisdiction of the tribunal unless a power to make provisional or interim
orders has been conferred on it by statute. See
Huneault v. Central Mortgage and Housing Corp. (1981), 41 N.R. 214 (F.C.A.).
[Emphasis added.]
[45]
Upon reading the Tribunal’s decision in its
entirety, it becomes clear that the words “functus officio” were used to
refer to the lack of authority to act in respect of a settlement made an order
of this Court. The Tribunal claims to be functus because the settlement
disposed of the matter, and this settlement has now become an order of this
Court.
[46]
The Tribunal could have chosen its words better
or explained them at greater length. However, the context in which they are
used shows—clearly, in my view—that the Tribunal found that it did not have
jurisdiction. My reading of paragraph 56 to 59 of the Tribunal’s decision
confirms for me that the Tribunal was merely noting its lack of jurisdiction.
[47]
In my opinion, the cited passage from the
Supreme Court’s decision in Chandler is not in any way inconsistent with
what the Tribunal decided. An administrative tribunal should be able to finish
the job if it has “failed to dispose of an issue which is fairly raised by the
proceedings and of which the tribunal is empowered by its enabling statute to
dispose”. The issue that the applicant would like to see resolved by the Tribunal
does not meet the stated conditions. This is by no means a matter of allowing
the Tribunal to finish the job with which it is tasked under the Act.
[48]
The applicant did indeed try to rely on the
decision of this Court in Elsipogtog First Nation Band Council v Peters,
2012 FC 398 (Peters). In that case, unlike here, the decision under
review had been rendered by an adjudicator who wanted to retain jurisdiction
and did not want to be found to be functus officio. In Peters,
however, the issue was whether the adjudicator was functus officio in
respect of his own decision which left two issues open. The Court in Peters
thus concluded that the adjudicator was not functus and that he was
entitled to consider the issues left unresolved in his arbitral award.
[49]
We have nothing of the sort in the present case.
There is no Tribunal decision leaving anything whatsoever unresolved. The onus
is on the person seeking judicial review of a decision to show that the Tribunal
declined to exercise a jurisdiction granted to it. The applicant did not do so,
so Peters is of no assistance to her. It is perhaps this inability to
show how the Tribunal has jurisdiction to interpret a settlement to which it is
not a party and which falls outside a proper inquiry into a complaint that led
the applicant to claim, surprisingly, that [translation]
“the burden is on the respondent to prove that
the Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to hear a question of interpretation
regarding the minutes of settlement” (Memorandum of Fact and Law, para 38).
No authorities were cited in support of this rather extraordinary proposition. The
Court is not aware of any. The burden of proof lies on the person challenging a
given interpretation (Wilson v British Columbia (Superintendent of Motor
Vehicles), 2015 SCC 47 at para 41, citing McLean, above).
[50]
The onus was on the applicant to demonstrate how
the Tribunal could have had jurisdiction when no inquiry into a complaint had
been instituted. The applicant would have imposed on the Tribunal the
jurisdiction to interpret the settlement resolving the complaint. The applicant
was unable to make an argument that would allow an administrative tribunal,
whose jurisdiction derives from the language of the Act, to consider that
issue.
[51]
Finally, in a last ditch effort, the applicant
claims that procedural fairness was violated because the Tribunal refused to interpret
the Minutes of Settlement. She argues that it would be in the public interest
to have the Tribunal deal with the issue of the interpretation of the
settlement.
[52]
The applicant does not cite any authorities in
support of her claims, nor does she expand on what principle of procedural
fairness would be at issue here. While procedural fairness has many facets,
each facet has to be identified so that it can be demonstrated how the
violation stems from rules of procedural fairness that were respected.
[53]
As its name suggests, procedural fairness
relates to the procedure to be followed. Brown and Evans, in Judicial Review
of Administrative Action in Canada (Brown and Evans, Judicial Review of
Administrative Action in Canada. Toronto, ON: Carswell, 2013 (loose-leaf),
c 7 at 1100), describes as follows what is now called the “duty of fairness”:
7 :1100 .
. .
Administrative action is subject to judicial review on the ground of
procedural impropriety. In particular, many public decision-makers are under a
legal duty to afford to interested persons a fair opportunity to participate in
the decision-making process before any action is taken that is detrimental to
their interests. These participatory rights may be found under different legal
labels. At common law, the notions of “the rules of natural justice” and, more
recently, “the duty of fairness,” are frequently used to denote the several
rules and principles that provide those participatory rights.
[54]
The applicant is trying to create jurisdiction
where there otherwise is none. Her attempt cannot succeed. An administrative
tribunal does not have inherent jurisdiction. It derives its existence, and its
jurisdiction, from the statute creating it. The applicant is not advancing her
arguments any further by raising the principles of procedural fairness. She has
simply raised two decisions of the Tribunal. If indeed these two decisions deal
with procedural fairness, which I doubt, they are not relevant.
[55]
The Tribunal’s decision in Berberi v Attorney
General of Canada, 2011 CHRT 23 [Berberi] is of absolutely no
assistance here. In Berberi, the Tribunal merely agreed to decide a
dispute in relation to a remedial order properly made by the Tribunal.
An inquiry had been made into a complaint, but there was a persisting dispute
over the remedy ordered. In our case, the Tribunal not only made no such order,
but also was by no means in the process of making an inquiry into a complaint. What
is being asked of the Tribunal in this case has nothing to do with an inquiry
into a complaint; the complaint was settled, and it is this settlement, not the
complaint, that is in issue.
[56]
The applicant is equally mistaken in relying on
the Tribunal’s decision in Powell v United Parcel Service Canada Ltd,
2008 CHRT 43 [Powell]. In that case, the Tribunal continued its inquiry
into a complaint after the parties reached an agreement in principle but failed
to sign a final settlement. Absent a settlement, an inquiry had to be made.
Such is clearly not the case here, where a settlement was signed and then made
an order of this Court. Powell actually favours the decision in our
case, where the Tribunal is consistent in refusing to go along with a remedy
that does not stem from a complaint. Indeed, the applicant is not even trying
to revive her complaint; she wants to claim that the Tribunal must hear the
dispute over a settlement that, according to the very terms of the Minutes of
Settlement, has resolved the complaint. At minimum, Powell concluded
that, absent a settlement, the complaint itself had to be heard. Powell is
consistent with the decision rendered by the Tribunal in our case.
V.
Conclusion
[57]
As I have tried to explain, the applicant cannot
succeed. Her request for an interpretation cannot be part of an inquiry into a
complaint that has been disposed of. Moreover, having tried to have the order
that she obtained from this Court enforced, the applicant now wants to have the
ambiguity resolved by a statutory tribunal that is neither a party to the
settlement approved by the Commission nor a party to an order of a court. Much
to the applicant’s chagrin, she turned to a decision-making body that correctly
declined her invitation to intervene. This Court must likewise refuse to
intervene on judicial review.
[58]
The application for judicial review must
therefore be dismissed. The Tribunal, being a creature of statute, did not have
jurisdiction to consider a settlement signed by the parties and approved by the
Commission. Essentially, the Tribunal was correct to rule itself out of the
running to decide this matter. This settlement made an order of the Federal
Court cannot be interpreted by the Tribunal unless Parliament provides that it
may do so.
[59]
The respondent sought costs. Costs are awarded
to the respondent in the amount of $1,000, including disbursements.