Date:
20151112
Docket:
T-1010-15
Citation: 2015 FC 1265
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, November 12, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
BETWEEN:
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KOMI GRATIAS
GLIGBE
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Plaintiff
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
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Defendant
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ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is a motion to strike a statement under 221
and 369 of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 [the Rules]. The defendant
is seeking to strike in its entirety, without leave to amend, the statement of
claim of the plaintiff, who is seeking damages following his release from the
Canadian Forces [CF].
[2]
Upon considering the parties’ written
submissions, the Court allows the application and authorizes the filing of a
new statement of claim for the reasons set out below.
II.
Facts
[3]
The plaintiff enrolled with the CF on July 15,
2009.
[4]
On April 23, 2010, after he had completed
his Basic Military Qualification course, the plaintiff was assigned to the
personnel development section in the CF Support Unit in Ottawa. By February 22,
2011, the plaintiff had completed Modules 1 and 2 of his training.
[5]
On April 5, 2011, the plaintiff was in
training, and, during this time, the Progress Review Board [the Board]
concluded that the plaintiff should be ordered to cease training. He was
removed from the Personnel Selection Officer’s course, and the Board
recommended a compulsory occupation reassignment.
[6]
On May 6, 2011, the officer responsible for
reviewing the plaintiff’s file substituted a recommendation for compulsory
release for the compulsory occupation reassignment.
[7]
On September 21, 2011, the commanding
officer of the CF Support Unit supported the Board’s recommendation for
compulsory release.
[8]
On February 2, 2012, the plaintiff filed a
grievance against the cessation of his training and the recommendation to
release him from the CF.
[9]
On May 12, 2012, the plaintiff received a
notification of release from the Director Military Careers Administration
[DMCA]. This decision became effective on June 18, 2012.
[10]
On July 3, 2013, upon review of the plaintiff’s
file, the Military Grievances External Review Committee [MGERC] recommended
that his grievance be allowed in part. Paragraph 16 of the statement of
claim describes this decision in the following manner:
[translation]
16. On July 3, 2013, the Military
Grievances External Review Committee (MGERC), which investigated my grievance,
issued its Findings and Recommendations, which it transmitted to the Chief of
the Defence Staff (CDS) and to me. The Committee identified several violations
of my rights on the part of the Progress Review Board (PRB), writing that [translation] “. . . there have
been significant violations of the principles of procedural fairness”. The
MGERC recommended, among other things, that an unwarranted remedial measure be
withdrawn from my military record (first warning on March 22, 2011). The Committee
found the 18‑month forced separation from my family (imposed restriction)
to be excessive ([translation] “incredibly
long”); determined that the questioning of my integrity was unfounded and considered
the argument of the PSO [personnel selection officer] who evaluated me and
questioned whether I was truly interested in being a member of the Canadian
Forces to be [translation] “unreasonable”.
The Board also questioned whether an effective assessment was performed in
order for the Training Development Support Section to grant an academic waiver
for my first choice of trade, that of military police officer. Lastly, the
Committee concluded that my compulsory release was [translation] “unreasonable” as it was [translation] “based on hasty conclusions
and on factors taken out of context”. The Committee recommended that my
re-enrolment in the Canadian Forces be facilitated.
[11]
The MGERC’s recommendations were then
transmitted to the Chief of the Defence Staff [CDS]. On March 17, 2014,
the CDS reviewed the file de novo and found that the plaintiff had been
aggrieved and that he would be granted partial redress. This redress was to
include the withdrawal of a remedial measure dated March 22, 2011, from
the plaintiff’s record and a positive reference from the Chief of the Defence
Staff regarding the plaintiff’s [translation] “re-enrollment”.
Paragraph 17 of the statement describes this decision in the following
manner:
[translation]
17. On March 17, 2014, the Chief
of the Defence Staff issued his decision on the grievance and on the Committee’s
Findings and Recommendations. He recognized the many violations of my
fundamental rights, ordered that the unwarranted remedial measure (first
warning of March 22, 2011) be removed from my military record and
authorized that I be re-enrolled in the Canadian Forces in way of partial
redress of the damage I had suffered. The CDS did note that the decision to
release me was [translation] “not
illogical”. I feel, however, that the decision was the result of my being hounded
and many serious procedural errors, as well as being based on proven and
established incorrect facts. This was not merely a matter of an isolated
incident of procedural unfairness. It was a string of nine systematic
violations of my fundamental rights during the Progress Review Board and the
release processes, demonstrating the determination to precipitate my release from
the Canadian Forces. One of the basic errors of fact is that incorrect
information was sent to the Chief of the Defence Staff, namely that my first
choice was definite. This led the CDS to conclude that since all avenues had
been exhausted, it was not illogical for me to be released. This is an error in
fact and in law.
[12]
On July 18, 2014, the plaintiff filed an
application for judicial review before the Federal Court. The case was stayed
on May 13, 2015, to allow the parties to enter into mediation.
[13]
It is in this context that the plaintiff filed a
statement of claim in order to institute an action for damages that is distinct
from that application for judicial review. He again sets out the steps that
resulted in his release, as described in paragraphs 16 and 17 of his
statement of claim. Furthermore, in paragraph 20 of his statement of
claim, the plaintiff criticized the alleged errors of the Chief of the Defence
Staff:
[translation]
20. . . . I submit that the Chief
of the Defence Staff erred in fact and in law in not finding the decision to
release me to be unfair and unreasonable, resulting in the total redress.
[14]
The plaintiff provides the following explanation
for his civil proceeding in paragraph 21:
21. I am filing this civil action
because I cannot claim the damages caused by my arbitrary release in a judicial
review proceeding.
[15]
Lastly, the plaintiff sets out the monetary
damages he suffered as a result of his release. These damages are broken down
into categories and amount to $275,533.26.
III.
Legislative framework
Motion to strike
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Requête en radiation
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221. (1) On motion, the Court may, at any time,
order that a pleading, or anything contained therein, be struck out, with or
without leave to amend, on the ground that it
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221. (1) À tout moment, la Cour peut, sur requête, ordonner la
radiation de tout ou partie d’un acte de procédure, avec ou sans autorisation
de le modifier, au motif, selon le cas :
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(a) discloses no
reasonable cause of action or defence, as the case may be,
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a) qu’il ne
révèle aucune cause d’action ou de défense valable;
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(b) is immaterial
or redundant,
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b) qu’il n’est
pas pertinent ou qu’il est redondant;
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(c) is
scandalous, frivolous or vexatious,
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c) qu’il est
scandaleux, frivole ou vexatoire;
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(d) may prejudice
or delay the fair trial of the action,
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d) qu’il risque
de nuire à l’instruction équitable de l’action ou de la retarder;
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(e) constitutes a
departure from a previous pleading, or
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e) qu’il diverge
d’un acte de procédure antérieur;
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(f) is otherwise
an abuse of the process of the Court, and may order the action be dismissed
or judgment entered accordingly.
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f) qu’il constitue
autrement un abus de procédure. Elle peut aussi ordonner que l’action soit
rejetée ou qu’un jugement soit enregistré en conséquence.
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Evidence
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Preuve
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(2) No evidence
shall be heard on a motion for an order under paragraph (1)(a).
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(2) Aucune preuve
n’est admissible dans le cadre d’une requête invoquant le motif visé à l’alinéa
(1)a).
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IV.
Issues
[16]
The issues are as follows:
1.
Does the plaintiff’s statement of claim disclose
a reasonable cause of action?
2.
Is the plaintiff’s statement of claim frivolous
or vexatious?
3.
Does the plaintiff’s statement of claim constitute
abuse of process?
4.
Should the plaintiff be granted leave to amend
his statement of claim?
V.
Analysis
A.
Does the statement of claim disclose a reasonable
cause of action? [Rule 221(1)(a)]
[17]
A statement of claim is struck for the reason
given in paragraph 221(1)(a) of the Rules if the plaintiff
demonstrates that it is “plain and obvious” that the action has no chance of
success, according to the well-established test for reasonable cause of action,
as set out in Hunt v Carey Canada Inc, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 959, at
pages 979-980, and reiterated in Canada (Attorney General) v Anglehart,
2009 FCA 241, at paragraph 4. In its analysis, the Court must take
the facts contained in the statement of claim and in the record to be true (Sauvé
v Canada, 2011 FCA 141, at paragraph 8), and no evidence shall be
heard under subsection 221(2) of the Rules.
[18]
In order for a statement of claim to disclose a
cause of action, it must (1) allege facts that are capable of giving rise to a cause
of action; (2) disclose the nature of the action which is to be founded on
those facts; and (3) indicate the relief sought, which must be of a type that
the action could produce and that the Court has jurisdiction to grant: Oleynik
v Canada (Attorney General), 2014 FC 896, para 5.
[19]
The defendant submits that the plaintiff’s
statement of claim does not disclose a reasonable cause of action since he did
not present any material facts; among other things, he did not identify any
servant of the defendant or describe the context in which a servant of the defendant
may have been at fault. The defendant further submits that the criticism
regarding the Chief of the Defence Staff’s response during the grievance process
with respect to the plaintiff’s release cannot be directed at the defendant.
The absence of the facts of the fault in the plaintiff’s statement of claim
eliminates the possibility of establishing a causal link with the alleged
damages.
[20]
I will not strike the statement of claim on the
basis that it does not identify any individuals or provide a more complete
context, as the defendant suggests I do. The plaintiff is not represented, and,
in such circumstances, a litigant such as he must be given some leeway with
respect to his pleadings. The pleadings allege sufficient general facts
regarding the MGERC’s findings to suggest that more specific material facts
exist. It would suffice therefore to argue and introduce the allegations of
abuse that were presented before the MGERC.
[21]
However, I agree that the allegations in the
statement of claim do not disclose a reasonable cause of action. In fact, the plaintiff
is seeking to obtain the damages that would result from a favourable decision
in the administrative grievance settlement process, mainly damages relating to
the period between the date of his release from the CF and that of his
reinstatement.
[22]
Litigants are not allowed to seek relief in an
action, in this case an action for damages, arising from a cause of action
based on facts relating to statutory administrative rights and concerning the
lawfulness of a decision that could be judicially reviewed under sections 18
and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act. Litigants may therefore not
present facts supporting a claim to set aside an administrative decision as the
basis for their action for damages.
[23]
Under section 17 of the Federal Courts
Act, the Federal Court does not have original jurisdiction with respect to
proceedings or relief available under administrative law, such as
reinstatement. There is no causal link between the cause of action the plaintiff
is attempting to argue and the relief he is seeking.
[24]
In Radil Bros. Fishing Co v Canada
(Department of Fisheries and Oceans) (2000), 197 FTR 169 [Radil
2000], Justice McKeown noted that “[a]n action
based only on the availability of judicial review does not disclose any cause
of action known in law” (Radil 2000, para 30). Even though
the Federal Court of Appeal reversed this decision in part (Radil Bros
Fishing Co Ltd v Canada (Department of Fisheries and Oceans), 2001 FCA
317) [Radil 2001], it did so because it found that the judge appeared “to have misunderstood the true nature of the cause of action
alleged by [the plaintiff] in its claim for damages against the Crown” (Radil
2001, para 34). The judge’s error was therefore “to have based his decision on the understanding that the
cause of action was the illegality of the decision of the Minister, rather than
the duty of care owed to [the plaintiff], whatever the legality of the decision”
(Radil 2001, para 36). In the matter at bar, the alleged facts
concern the grievance settlement process, which does not seem to entail a duty
of care towards the plaintiff.
B.
Is the statement of claim frivolous or
vexatious? [Rule 221(1)(c)]
[25]
A action is characterized as frivolous or vexatious
when it reveals so few facts that the defendant simply does not know how to
answer the claim and that it makes it impossible for a court to regulate the
proceedings: Pellikaan v Canada, [2002] 4 F.C. 169, para 15.
[26]
Termination of employment is generally a serious
affair, and when there are reasons to believe that the termination was
unjustified, a statement of claim may not, usually, be dismissed as being
frivolous or vexatious. As I indicated above, regardless of any
jurisdiction-related impediments with respect to the institution of this
action, I would allow the plaintiff to amend his statement of claim to provide
the material facts establishing the alleged unjustified termination—because
these facts do seem to exist based on my reading of the pleadings—as arising
from the MGERC’s findings on the mistreatment of the plaintiff.
[27]
Consequently, I would not conclude that the
application is frivolous or vexatious before giving the plaintiff an
opportunity to present additional material facts assuming that the statement of
claim is not struck and leave to amend is granted.
C.
Does the statement of claim constitute abuse of
process?
[28]
The Supreme Court gave effect to the common law
doctrine of abuse of process, which makes it possible to preclude relitigation
in circumstances where the strict requirements of issue estoppel are not met,
but where allowing the litigation to proceed would nonetheless violate such
principles as judicial economy, consistency, finality and the integrity of the
administration of justice: Toronto (City) v C.U.P.E., Local 79, [2003]
3 S.C.R. 77, para 37.
[29]
The defendant submits that the statement of
claim and the application for judicial review filed by the plaintiff raise the
same questions of law and fact, which creates a situation of lis pendens.
By instituting two distinct proceedings, the plaintiff is also abusing the
judicial system.
[30]
The plaintiff justifies his action before this
Court in paragraph 21 of his statement of claim, where he states that he
is seeking full redress for the damages he suffered following his allegedly
unjustified release from the CF, redress that [translation]
“[cannot be claimed] in an application for judicial
review”.
[31]
The plaintiff did not provide any reasons to
support his conclusion that he is unable to obtain damages through an
application for judicial review. There are, however, reasons to suggest that
the plaintiff is right and that he may not be able to recover through the
grievance settlement process what he lost as a result of his unjustified
release. This at least is the provisional conclusion of author R.G. Fowler in
his recent article entitled “The Canadian Forces Grievance Process: How
Adequate an Alternative Remedy Is It?” (2014) 27 Can J Admin
L & Prac 277. Fowler submits that neither reinstatement nor
damages are necessarily awarded to CF members when their rights have been violated.
[32]
The author generally condemns the entire
grievance process, including the endemic delays. Two of the author’s
observations, in particular, concern the fact that the administrative
authorities do not have comprehensive remedial powers and are unable to award
damages, points he addresses in the following manner in the introduction to his
article, at page 278 (footnotes omitted):
Secondly, CF grievance authorities lack comprehensive remedial
powers. With one exception, they do not possess additional remedial powers
apart from the powers vested in their positions independent of the grievance
process. Particularly, none has the power to award damages. Consequently, how
could the grievance process ever be an adequate alternative remedy to an action
for damages?
Finally, notwithstanding evolution in the courts’ perception of the
power of administrative tribunals to act as courts of competent jurisdiction
pursuant to s. 24 of the Charter, the unanimous judgment from R.
v. Conway does not impart upon administrative tribunals the power to award
damages where such tribunals cannot trace such power back to their enabling
statute.
[33]
Fowler also makes the following analysis
(footnotes omitted) of the obstacles the plaintiff probably faced in seeking
proper relief for the violation of his rights:
Notwithstanding that the Supreme Court of Canada has held that
dismissal from public service should be examined through the lens of contract,
the Victorian perception of the unique nature of the Crown-soldier relationship
persists. CF personnel are precluded from seeking damages for wrongful
dismissal, because they are not in privity of contract with Her Majesty. They
are entitled only to a procedurally fair release. Where a release does not
comply with the mandatory regulatory regime, the grievance process can be
procedurally curative. Where reasons for the release are insufficient, and the
grievor is still a member of the CF when the grievance is determined, the
grievance process can be substantively curative—the release is cancelled.
But such simplicity assumes that the grievance is determined before
the release is completed. If the grievance process takes longer than release
proceedings, as is typically the case, then a grievor will become a civilian by
the time the grievance is determined. The available remedies will be diminished.
Presently, the sole remedy where a grievor has been released is an
offer to re-enrol in the CF. Bill C‑15, which received Royal Assent
19 June 2013, proposes to broaden the CDS’s [Chief of the Defence Staff’s]
powers of reinstatement. Currently, the CDS may order reinstatement only where
a sentence to dismissal from the CF under the Code of Service Discipline is
overturned on appeal. The proposed amendment would permit the CDS to cancel any
release, with the consent of the member, that the CDS is satisfied was
improper. A CF member who is reinstated is deemed never to have been released,
and is thus deemed to have had unbroken service.
However, even once these amended provisions
enter into force, it is uncertain that a member would be entitled to payment of
salary for any period of time between “improper release” and reinstatement. The
pay of a member of the CF may be forfeited if no service is rendered. The Financial
Administration Act bars payment where service has not been rendered.
Although members of the CF are not part of the Federal Public Administration,
absent a regulation granting payment for the period where service was not
rendered, forfeiture would be consistent with the practices relating to the
Federal Public Administration. It would be much more predictable—and less
arbitrary—to create specific regulations or instructions concerning eligibility
for pay and benefits in light of reinstatement.
[34]
It is said that the doctrine supports the
inherent power of a court to take action to prevent abuses of its process that
would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. Given the apparent
shortfalls of the redress offered to the plaintiff under the grievance process,
I do not feel that an attempt to obtain relief in a court where damages could
be awarded can be seen as being an abuse of process, even if the statement of
claim, as it is drafted, does not disclose a reasonable cause of action.
D.
Is there no possibility of amendment?
[35]
This Court reiterated that when there is “neither a possibility of a curative amendment, nor any
indication that the action could be instituted again in an acceptable form”,
the plaintiff’s pleadings should be struck out, without leave to amend: ‘Maitreya’
Isis Maryjane Blackshear v Canada, 2013 FC 590, para 14.
[36]
As to whether the plaintiff should be allowed to
amend his statement of claim, this depends on whether the application for leave
to amend is made on a basis other than the fact that the cause of action is
based on the outcome of a grievance process. Of course, if amendment were
allowed, it would have to be by way of a new statement of claim, given the fact
that the plaintiff would have to argue a different cause of action based on the
facts related to his release from CF.
[37]
In this respect, the Court notes that the
defendant is not seeking to have the statement of claim struck on the ground
that the plaintiff, as a member of the CF, is not entitled to relief before the
civilian courts. This would have been the argument I would have expected in
light of a long line of judicial decisions dating back to Mitchell v The
Queen, [1896] 1 Q.B. 121 (Q.B. England) [Mitchell]. This
decision was first applied in Canada in Cooke v R., [1929] Ex. C.R.
20, and later in a series of more modern decisions, starting with Gallant v
R., 91 D.L.R. (3d) 695 (F.C.T.D.), 1978 CarswellNat 560 [Gallant].
[38]
In Gallant, Justice Marceau struck the
statement of claim of a CF member seeking damages. He stated at paragraph 4
of Gallant that the Court had no jurisdiction in the matter since the
relationship between the Crown and a member of the CF was not a contractual
one, but was based on an imperfect obligation that amounted to “a unilateral commitment in return for which the Queen
assumes no obligations, and that . . . in no way [gives] rise to a
remedy in the civil Courts”. The courts have applied the Gallant
decision systematically to applications dealing with unjust dismissal: Hainsworth
v Canada, [2003] O.J. No. 6162; McClennan v Canada (Minister of National
Defence), 2002 FCT 244.
[39]
There are however good reasons for concluding
that the Mitchell decision and the series of Canadian decisions in which
it was applied may no longer be valid precedents. This may explain the
defendant’s decision not to directly challenge the statement of claim by
arguing that members of the CF may not sue the Crown for damages before the
civilian courts.
[40]
In his recent article entitled “Sergeant
Dunsmuir: The Crown-Soldier Relationship in Canada” (2011) 24 Can J Admin
L & Prac 57, R. J. Stokes deals with this subject and
concludes that, in light of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir], a modern reassessment
of the Crown–CF member relationship is required by the courts and the CF. In
line with a previous decision, Wells v Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R.
199 [Wells], the Supreme Court established in Dunsmuir that, with
few exceptions, any termination of employment of a public servant must be
reviewed through the lens of contract law. This means that, unless any
exceptions apply, public servants who believe to have been unjustly terminated
must seek a private law remedy under contract law (Dunsmuir, para 95).
[41]
I do not propose examining the persuasive, very
thorough arguments set out by Stokes in his article in favour of recognizing a
contractual cause of action for CF members who find themselves in a situation
akin to an unjust termination. This is unnecessary when dealing with a motion
to strike a statement of claim. It is enough to acknowledge that there is a
novel, legitimate claim. It is recognized that, when dealing with a motion to
strike for not disclosing a reasonable cause of action, the approach must be
generous and err on the side of permitting a novel but arguable claim to
proceed to trial: R. v Imperial Tobacco Ltd., 2011 SCC 42, para 21.
[42]
In light of Dunsmuir and Stokes’ highly
persuasive article, I conclude that the statement of claim sets out sufficient
material facts describing a possible basis for a cause of action for unjust
dismissal in contract such that the plaintiff could be awarded contractual
damages in accordance with common law labour law principles.
[43]
Consequently, I am willing to allow the
plaintiff to file a new statement of claim under the same styles of cause and
docket number of this Court, subject to two conditions.
[44]
First, as described above, the statement of
claim should raise a different cause of action, namely, a cause of action that
gives rise to an action for unjust termination according to the principles of
contract law.
[45]
Given that the plaintiff is not represented, I
emphasize that, in unjust termination law, based on contractual law principles,
the issues are generally whether the plaintiff’s termination (in this case, the
plaintiff’s release) was justified and, if not, what damages may be claimed in
the circumstances. The amount of the damages is usually based on salary and
benefits in lieu of reasonable notice to allow the employee to find a new job.
Moreover, an additional amount may be claimed if the court finds that the
unjust termination was made in bad faith.
[46]
Second, the statement of claim should contain
more material facts to support the action for unjust release than the current
statement of claim does. Another decision-maker’s findings are usually not
relevant, except when the facts underlying these findings can be used to
establish that the plaintiff’s release was unjust. The statement of claim must
describe, in general terms, without citing evidence to support the facts, the
Crown’s conduct establishing that the release was unjust or was ordered in bad
faith, should bad faith be one of the plaintiff’s allegations.
[47]
The claim for damages must be broken down according
to the categories of damages admissible in unjust termination law, without it
being necessary, however, to provide many material facts—much in the same way
as it was done in the current statement of claim, as long as the defendant is
given an idea of the nature of the damages sought and the amounts claimed. In
this respect, the plaintiff must understand that reinstatement and the recovery
of salary and benefits lost in the meantime are not remedies that can be
obtained in contract law.
[48]
Moreover, since I am granting him leave to file
a new statement of claim, the plaintiff should not be surprised if he has to respond
to a new challenge from the defendant since the issues such a pleading will
raise are novel. The new statement of claim will provide the parties with an
opportunity to fully deal with the questions raised by the new pleading, which
is not possible if the proper cause of action is not argued.
[49]
Other than the striking of the statement of
claim without leave to amend, the defendant asked, in the alternative, that the
present action be stayed until a decision is rendered in the application for
judicial review under docket No. T-1641-14 of this Court. I understand
that this proceeding will conclude soon.
[50]
I see no reason why a new statement claim could
not be filed, if that is what the plaintiff intends to do, given that delays
should generally be avoided. I will, however, extend the deadline by which the
defendant must file a statement of defence in reply to the new statement of
claim by 30 days after judgment in docket No. T-1641-14 is rendered.
[51]
Since the plaintiff is not represented and may
need time to seek counsel on these matters, or to perform further research
himself, the Court shall grant him 60 days to file a new statement of
claim. If a new statement of claim is not filed within this time, the plaintiff
may not institute a new action based on the facts surrounding his release
without the authorization of this Court.
[52]
Neither party sought costs, and none will be
awarded.
JUDGMENT
FOR
THESE REASONS, THE COURT ORDERS that
1. The statement of claim is struck out;
2.
The plaintiff may file a new statement of claim
within 60 days of this order in accordance with the instructions provided
in the reasons, failing which the plaintiff may not institute a new action
based on the facts surrounding his release without the authorization of this
Court;
3. If the plaintiff files a new statement of claim within this time
period, the time for the defendant to file its statement of defence is extended
to at least 30 days after judgment is handed down in the application for judicial
review under docket No. T‑1614-14, should an extension be required.
4.
The parties shall bear their own costs.
“Peter Annis”
Certified true translation
Johanna Kratz, Translator
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET:
|
T-1010-15
|
STYLE OF CAUSE:
|
KOMI GRATIAS GLIGBE v. HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
|
MOTION IN WRITING CONSIDERED AT
OTTAWA, ONTARIO, PURSUANT TO RULE 369 OF THE FEDERAL COURTS RULES
ORDER
AND REASONS:
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ANNIS J.
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DATED:
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November
12
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WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS BY:
Komi Gratias Gligbe
|
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF
(ON
HIS OWN BEHALF)
|
Chantal Sauriol
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FOR
THE DEFENDANT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
FOR THE PLAINTIFF
(ON HIS OWN BEHALF)
William F. Pentney
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR
THE DEFENDANT
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