Docket: T-2005-14
Citation:
2016 FC 664
Toronto, Ontario, June 14, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Strickland
BETWEEN:
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MICHAEL LANDRIAULT
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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]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision of the Public Service Pension Centre (“Pension Centre”) of Public
Works and Government Services Canada (“PWGSC”), denying the request of the
Applicant that he be permitted to participate in the Service Buyback Program of
the Public Service Superannuation Act, RSC 1985, c P-36 (“PSSA”) for
periods of service provided under contracts with Environment Canada.
Background
[2]
Between March 1992 and April 2005 the Applicant
provided services to Environment Canada primarily by way of thirteen contracts
(collectively, the “Contracts”). He became an indeterminate employee of
Environment Canada in April 2005. The Contracts were made between Environment
Canada and M.T.L Analytical (“MTL”) or Michael T. Landriault “doing business under the name of M.T.L Analytical” or
“doing business as” or “operating
as” MTL and were for consulting and professional services related to oil
chromatography and separations. The Contracts, when signed, were signed by the
Applicant as the owner or president of MTL.
[3]
On May 13, 2008 the Applicant submitted an
Election Form for Elective Pensionable Services whereby he sought to elect to
pay for past service provided by way of the Contracts. That is, he requested
that his service under the Contracts with Environment Canada be treated as
pensionable service under the PSSA (“Buyback Request”). On July 21, 2008 the
superannuation, pension, transition and client services sector of PWGSC wrote
to the Applicant noting that, as a rule, contract service is “not countable under the PSSA”, but that it may be
recognized as public service if it is determined that an employer/employee
relationship existed. To assess whether or not an employer/employee
relationship existed, PWGSC requested further information, including copies of
the thirteen contracts and an explanation of why the service should be
considered employment in the public service. The letter also stated that, in
order to determine whether such a relationship existed, PWGSC evaluated nine
factors which it listed in the form of questions to the Applicant.
[4]
On October 15, 2008 the Applicant replied
providing copies of the Contracts, a copy of his job description and responses
to each of the listed factors.
[5]
On February 4, 2009 PWGSC wrote to Environment
Canada providing the information submitted by the Applicant. The letter stated
that the determination of an individual’s employment status is the
responsibility of the employer department. Further, that a period of contract
service may be recognized as public service if the contracting department is of
the opinion that the service should be recognized as public service and the
opinion is supported by a rationale demonstrating that an employer/employee
relationship existed during the tenure of the contracts. It recommended that
Environment Canada review the documentation and provide an opinion as to
whether an employer/employee relationship existed during all or part of the
tenure of the Contracts or if the service in question should remain as contract
employment. Further, that this should be assessed using the Treasury Board of
Canada Secretariat (“TBS”) Contracting Policy and the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”)
guidelines and the facts of the relationship between the Applicant and the
department. The letter also stated that an opinion was required so that PWGSC
could make a final determination with respect to the Applicant’s pension
status.
[6]
Over four years later, on April 23, 2013,
Environment Canada responded to the February 4, 2009 letter (“EC Position”).
It stated that Environment Canada had reviewed the documentation available
regarding the Applicant’s contract service and that the Applicant had provided
services as a third party contractor through mechanisms such as a placement
agency or a consulting firm. Further, that when Environment Canada engages
third parties under contract, it does not accept responsibility for their
employees. In the absence of clear evidence to the contrary, any claim for
employment related benefits is the responsibility of the third party
contractor.
[7]
By memorandum dated July 5, 2013 the PWGSC
policy and advisory services division advised contributor services that, in the
normal course, contract service is not countable under the PSSA as it is not
employment in the public service. Employment in the public service applies to
individuals who are hired under the Public Service Employment Act, SC
2003, c 22 (“PSEA”) or a similar hiring authority. However, in some cases
where an employer/employee relationship existed for periods of contract
service, the service may be eligible for pension purposes under the PSSA. In
this case, Environment Canada was of the opinion that there was no
employer/employee relationship. Therefore, the Applicant’s service retained
its status as contract service. Given that determination, the periods of
contract service could not be counted under the PSSA and the Applicant’s Buyback
Request was considered invalid. That decision was relayed by PWGSC to the
Applicant by letter dated January 8, 2014 (“PWGSC Decision”).
[8]
By letters dated March 27, 2014 the Applicant,
through his counsel, requested that both PWGSC and Environment Canada review
their positions, based on the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in 1392644
Ontario Inc (Connor Homes) v Canada (National Revenue), 2013 FCA 85 [Connor
Homes], and alleged that a factual analysis regarding the nature of the
relationship between the Applicant and Environment Canada was required but had
not been conducted. Further, that it was inappropriate to base the PWGSC Decision
solely on Environment Canada’s opinion. In those letters, the Applicant’s
counsel made submissions and included documents to support the Buyback Request.
[9]
By letter of July 10, 2014 PWGSC responded to
the request of the Applicant’s counsel (“PWGSC Reconsideration”). It advised
that the Pension Centre had conducted an extensive review of the case, including
the supporting documents provided by counsel. The letter stated that each
contract was between Environment Canada and MTL. Further, because Environment
Canada contracted with the agency/firm, the services it provided to Environment
Canada were rendered by a consultant of the agency/firm. The Applicant was
selected by the firm to fulfil the provisions of the Contracts. Therefore, a
tripartite relationship was established. The employer/employee relationship
was established between the consultant and their agency/firm while the contract
was between Environment Canada and the agency/firm. In the tripartite
relationship, two employer/employee relationships could not exist
simultaneously. Therefore, the Applicant’s periods of contract service could
not be considered employment in the public service for pension purposes. The
letter also stated that while the opinion of Environment Canada had been requested,
the final determination of whether an employee/employer relationship existed
for pension purposes was the responsibility of the Pension Centre which had
made that determination in full consideration of all evidence provided.
[10]
By letter dated July 28, 2014 to the PWGSC the
Applicant’s counsel stated that in his view the PWGSC Reconsideration was wrong
in fact and law and again asked that it be reconsidered. The letter made
various submissions including that MTL is not a real company, the Applicant was
not an employee of MTL, that MTL was not incorporated, it had no separate bank
account and that the Applicant had registered for a GST number in his own name,
MTL had no employees other than the Applicant and had only been created because
the Applicant had been asked to do so by Environment Canada and for tax and
accounting purposes. The letter asserted that a proper analysis of the nature
of the relationship had not been done as the PWGSC Decision had failed to perform
a fundamental control test (Pointe-Claire (City) v Quebec (Labour Court), [1997]
1 SCR 1015 [Pointe-Claire]). The Applicant’s counsel
advised that if he did not receive a response within thirty days he would
commence proceedings in the Federal Court.
[11]
By email of August 28, 2014 counsel for PWGSC
responded. The email stated that, at the outset it should be known that her
client’s decision remained as stated in its July 10, 2014 letter, the PWGSC
Reconsideration. Further, that the final determination of whether an
employer/employee relationship exists during the period in question rests with
the Pension Centre, with input from the relevant department. Therefore, based
on the facts and explanations provided in the PWGSC Reconsideration, the
Applicant’s contract employment could not be considered employment in the
Public Service for pension purposes.
[12]
On September 25, 2014 the Applicant filed the
present application for judicial review referring to an August 28, 2014
decision of PWGSC and/or the Pension Centre as the underlying decision, but
also stating that there were three relevant decisions of PWGSC, dated
January 8, 2014, July 10, 2014 and August 28, 2014. The notice
sought an order quashing the August 28, 2014 decision and granting
his Buyback Request. In the alternative, it sought an order requiring PWGSC to
reconsider its decision pursuant to accepted principles for determining if an employer/employee
relationship exists.
Issues
[13]
The Applicant submits that six issues arise:
i.
Did PWGSC apply the correct law in denying the
Applicant’s Buyback Request?
ii.
Did PWGSC follow its own policies in denying the
Applicant’s Buyback Request?
iii.
Did PWGSC consider all the facts (and law) in
denying the Applicant’s Buyback Request?
iv.
Did PWGSC act arbitrarily and/or inconsistently
thereby denying the Applicant natural justice?
v.
Has PWGSC failed to provide sufficient
disclosure thereby denying the Applicant natural justice rights?
vi.
Was the Applicant in an employer/employee
relationship with Environment Canada for the period March 1992 to April 2005?
[14]
The Respondent submits that there are four
issues:
i.
Is the application for judicial review out of
time?
ii.
If not, what decision is under review?
iii.
What is the appropriate standard of review?
iv.
Is the Pension Centre’s decision denying the
Applicant’s request for his contractual service to be considered pensionable
under the PSSA reasonable?
[15]
In my view, the issues in this application can
be reframed as follows:
1. Is the application for judicial review out of time?
2. If not, which decision is under review?
3. Was the decision denying the Applicant’s Buyback Request reasonable?
Standard
of Review
[16]
The substantive issue raised in this application
is one of mixed law and fact and is therefore reviewable on the reasonableness
standard (Public Service Alliance of Canada v Canada (Attorney General),
2008 FC 474 at paras 17-18; Cohen v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC
676 at paras 10-20 [Cohen]; Baribeau v Canada (Attorney General),
2015 FC 615 at paras 8-9 [Baribeau]; Professional Assn of Foreign
Service Officers v Canada (Attorney General), 2003 FCA 162 at para 12 [Foreign
Service Officers]). I would also note that questions of law arising under
a tribunal’s home statute are presumptively reviewed on a reasonableness
standard (Tervita Corp v Canada (Commissioner of Competition), 2015 SCC
3 at para 35; Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta
Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61 at para 30; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9 at para 54 [Dunsmuir]).
[17]
In applying the reasonableness standard, the
Court will be concerned with the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility in the decision-making process and also whether the decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes in respect of the facts
and the law (Dunsmuir at para 47).
Issue 1: Is the application out of time?
[18]
The Respondent submits that the application is
out of time as the July 28, 2014 letter from PWGSC’s legal counsel is not a
decision. Rather, the letter is no more than a “courtesy
response” which is not subject to judicial review (Dhaliwal v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] FCJ No 982 [Dhaliwal]).
This is unlike the PWGSC Decision and the PWGSC Reconsideration, which were
discrete exercises of discretion constituting decisions reviewable by this
Court pursuant to s 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7 [Federal Courts
Act]. And, as the PWGSC Reconsideration was rendered on July 10, 2014, the
Respondent submits that the deadline for filing the application for judicial
review was August 10, 2014. As the Applicant filed on September 25, 2014,
the application is out of time.
[19]
The Applicant submits that the letter from PWGSC’s
legal counsel is a reviewable decision and the application is, therefore, not
out of time. The Applicant also refers to Dhaliwal and submits that it
stands for the proposition that if new issues are introduced by counsel, then
the response is a reviewable decision. The Applicant also submits that even if
the application was filed out of time, the Court should exercise its discretion
to extend the deadline on the basis of the factors set out in Exeter v
Canada (Attorney General), 2011 FCA 253 at para 4 [Exeter]. The
Applicant submits that he meets each of the four factors: he pursued the
application diligently; there is no prejudice to the Respondent as the buyback
period has remained the same; the delay was a reasonable attempt by counsel to
negotiate a settlement rather than commencing legal action; and, the
application has a reasonable prospect of success as the Applicant’s affidavit demonstrates
that he meets the criteria for an employer/employee relationship. The
Applicant also submits that the limitation period in s 18.1 of the Federal
Courts Act does not apply because the Pension Centre is not a “federal board, commission or tribunal”.
[20]
In my view, the Applicant’s submission that the
Pension Centre is not a “federal board, commission or
tribunal” is without merit. The term “federal
board, commission or tribunal” is broadly defined in s 2 of the Federal
Courts Act and includes any body, person or persons having, exercising or
purporting to exercise jurisdiction or powers conferred by or under an Act of
Parliament. This definition has been described as “sweeping”
by the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada (Attorney General) v TeleZone Inc,
2010 SCC 62 at para 3 which held that the federal decision-makers encompassed
by that definition run the gamut from the Prime Minister and major boards and
agencies to local border guards and customs officials and everyone in between. Moreover,
prior cases before this Court have involved judicial review of Pension Centre
decisions on the basis of the Court’s jurisdiction under s 18.1 (see Baribeau
and Nash v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 683).
[21]
The Applicant also submits that, because he
raised new issues in his July 28, 2014 letter to PWGSC, this causes the email
response from counsel to comprise a new and reviewable decision. However, I
disagree. First, it is clear from a plain reading of the email that it was
merely a courtesy, as it was simply confirming the information that had been
provided, as was the case in Hallen v Canada (Attorney General), 2014 FC
88 at paras 6, 18. PWGSC’s counsel stated that it should be recognized from
the outset that her client’s position “remains as
previously stated in the July 10, 2014 letter”. Further, as the
Respondent submits, counsel also made it clear that she had no decision-making
authority, stating that the “final determination of
whether an employer-employee relationship existed…rests with the Pension Centre”.
For these reasons, I find that the letter did not “affect
legal rights, impose legal obligations, or cause prejudicial effects”
and, therefore, is not a reviewable decision (Air Canada v Toronto Port
Authority, 2011 FCA 347 at paras 28-30).
[22]
A factually somewhat similar situation arose in Cohen,
in which the Court considered whether the application was out of time. As in
this case, the applicant therein had received letters and the respondent
challenged whether the most recent letter was a decision. However, Cohen
is distinguishable as, in this matter, PWGSC’s counsel did not “engage in a reconsideration of the matter” as did the
letter at issue in Cohen.
[23]
Similarly, while in his letter of
July 28, 2014, counsel for the Applicant stated “If I do not hear from your office in thirty (30) days I will
commence proceedings in Federal Court”, this does not serve to extend
the date of the subject decision. It is also of note that thirty days from
July 28, 2014, the date of his submissions, would still have been beyond the
thirty day limitation for challenging the PWGSC Reconsideration, which was
rendered on July 10, 2014. As stated by Justice Pelletier, as he
then was, in Moresby Explorers Ltd v Superintendent of Gwaii Haanas National
Park Reserve, [2000] FCJ No 1944, referring to Dhaliwal:
In Dumbrava v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship & Immigration) (1995), 101 F.T.R. 230 (Fed. T.D.), Nöel J.
(as he then was), reviewed a series of cases dealing with the effect of
correspondence with a decision maker after a decision has been made. In those
cases, the Court held that a "courtesy response" does not create a
new decision from which judicial review may be taken. As it was put by McKeown
J. in Dhaliwal v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship & Immigration),
[1995] F.C.J. No. 982 (Fed. T.D.) “... counsel cannot extend the date of
decision by writing a letter with the intention of provoking a reply.” Before
there is a new decision, subject to judicial review, there must be a fresh
exercise of discretion such as a reconsideration of a prior decision on the
basis of new facts.
[24]
For these reasons, in my view, the decision that
the Applicant properly challenges is the PWGSC Reconsideration and he is out of
time.
[25]
The question, therefore, is whether the Court
should exercise its discretion to extend the deadline. The Applicant is
correct that the considerations for exercising this discretion were set out in Grewal
v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1985] FCJ No 144 as
applied more recently in Exeter at para 4:
1) Does the moving party have a continuing intention to pursue an
application for judicial review?
2) Has the responding party suffered any prejudice as a result of
the moving party’s delay?
3) Has the moving party offered a reasonable explanation for the
delay?
4) Does the intended application for judicial review have any
prospect of success?
[26]
I have decided that it is appropriate in these
circumstances to exercise my discretion and determine the application on its
merits. In this matter there was a continuing intention to pursue judicial
review, the delay was not significant and the Respondent suffered no
prejudice. Indeed, Environment Canada itself caused an unexplained four year
delay in responding to the Applicant during the period of 2009-2013. Nor can
it be said that the Applicant had no prospect of success. Accordingly, there is
a sufficient basis on which to ground the exercise of discretion.
Issue 2: Which decision is under review?
[27]
For the reasons discussed above, as the email
from PWGSC’s counsel is not a reviewable decision, the decision properly under
review is the PWGSC Reconsideration. I would also note that while Rule 302 of
the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 (“Rules”) states that, unless this
Court orders otherwise, an application for judicial review shall be limited to
a single order in which relief is sought, this does not apply when there is a
continuous course of conduct or ongoing situation (Shotclose v Shorey First
Nation, 2011 FC 750 at para 64; Festival Canadien des Films du Monde v
Téléfilm Canada, 2005 FC 1730). In my view, the PWGSC Decision and PWGSC
Reconsideration were so closely linked that they should be considered one
continuing decision (Truehope Nutritional Support Ltd v Canada (Attorney
General), 2004 FC 658 at para 6).
Both involved essentially the same facts, the same decision-making body and
both concerned the ongoing question of the Applicant’s Buyback Request.
Issue 3: Was the decision denying the Applicant’s Buyback
Request reasonable?
Applicant’s Position
[28]
The Applicant submits that it was a mistake in
law for the Pension Centre to rely solely on the “opinion”
of Environment Canada in making the PWGSC Decision. PWGSC was required to
evaluate the relationship between Environment Canada and the Applicant (Connor
Homes at para 37).
[29]
The Applicant further submits that, in the PWGSC
Reconsideration, the Pension Centre denied his request on the basis that he was
an employee of MTL and, therefore, could not be considered an employee of
Environment Canada, which issue was not raised in the PWGSC Decision. The
Pension Centre also erred in denying his request based solely on the fact that
MTL existed and should have considered the specifics of the operation and the
true nature of the creation of MTL. The Applicant relies on his affidavit
dated November 7, 2014 in submitting that MTL was not a “real” company, it was
not incorporated, it did not have a GST number or bank account in its name and
had no employees. Further, that Environment Canada directed the Applicant to
create MTL so he could continue working there. Requests for Proposals were sent
to MTL in advance by Environment Canada to ensure that it would win the
contracts. The Applicant notes that the January 22, 2015 Affidavit of Denise
Smith, a Senior Policy Advisor with the Advisory Services Division of the PWGSC
Pension Centre (“Smith Affidavit”) does not refute any of these points.
[30]
The Applicant also submits that, in determining
if there is a tripartite relationship, PWSGC failed to conduct the “fundamental control test” in order to identify the
real employer in a tripartite relationship as required by the Supreme Court’s
decision in Pointe-Claire and that during cross-examination of Denise
Smith on her affidavit counsel for the Respondent objected to questions on
fundamental control.
[31]
Further, the Applicant submits that PWGSC failed
to consider its own policies and criteria in determining if there is an
employer/employee relationship. He was informed by the letter of July 21, 2008
that his application would be assessed according to the specified nine factors
which are derived from TBS and CRA guidelines, but that neither decision
addresses these factors.
Respondent’s Position
[32]
The Respondent makes a distinction between the
private law factors relied on by the Applicant and the public law analysis
conducted by the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada (Attorney General) v
Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1991] 1 S.C.R. 614 [Econosult]. The
Respondent submits that the purpose of the PSSA is to provide pension benefits
to persons employed in the public service and that the PSSA provides
definitions for “public service”, “pensionable employment” and “salary”. In
view of these definitions, a person employed in the public service for the
purposes of the PSSA is a person who occupies a position in a department.
Therefore, as a rule, contractual periods of service are not “countable” under
the PSSA as contractors are not persons employed in the public service because they
are not appointed pursuant to a legislative authority and are not occupying a
position in the public service. As a result, private law factors normally
employed to resolve disputes regarding whether an individual is an employee or
an independent contractor, are not relevant.
[33]
Although Econosult dealt with the meaning
of “employees in the Public Service” pursuant to the Public Service Staff
Relations Act, RSC, 1985, c P-35 (Repealed, 2003, c 22, s 285)
(“PSSRA”), courts have applied similar reasoning to the interpretation of
employment in the public service in the context of the PSSA, being that a
person cannot be employed with the public service unless formally appointed (Burley
v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 525 [Burley]; Foreign
Service Officers; Cohen).
[34]
In this case, the Applicant was not employed
pursuant to the PSEA or other legislative authority but chose to
contract with the federal government as a consultant through MTL. The Contracts
indicate that they do not create an employer/employee relationship. The Applicant
did not meet the legislative requirements of the PSSA because he clearly
contracted to provide services to the federal government as an officer,
employee or agent of MTL during the relevant period. And, even if the
Applicant had contracted with the federal government directly, rather than
through MTL, he would still have been engaged contractually rather than under
statute, as an independent contractor rather than as an employee.
[35]
The Respondent also submits that to the extent
that private law principles apply to determining whether the Applicant was
employed in the public service, the PWGSC Decision took into consideration
Environment Canada’s conclusion, based on the nine factors and its review of
the Contracts, and that there was no basis to support the Applicant’s claim.
[36]
The terms of the Contracts, when assessed
against the factors normally used by a Court to gauge whether a worker is an
employee or an independent contractor, indicate that the Pension Centre’s
decision that the Applicant was not an employee of the federal government was
reasonable.
[37]
The Respondent submits that there is no one
conclusive test that can be applied to determine whether a person is an
employee or an independent contractor (671122 Ontario Ltd v Sagaz Industries
Canada Inc, 2001 SCC 59). Rather all of the factors that bear on the
nature of the relationship, including those contained in the July 21, 2008
letter, must be considered.
[38]
The Respondent submits that Pointe-Claire
is distinguishable as the issue in that case was one of statutory
interpretation to determine the employer in a tripartite relationship within
the scope of the Canada Labour Code’s collective bargaining regime. The
fundamental control test does not address the question of whether a tripartite
relationship exists in the first place.
[39]
As to the Applicant’s assertion that MTL is not
a “real” company, the party to the Contracts was a business entity named MTL
Analytical and the Applicant executed the Contracts as its officer and agent.
In any event, that information was not before the Pension Centre when it
rendered its decisions.
Relevant Legislation
[40]
In conducting this analysis it is necessary to
consider the relevant statutory provisions, which are set out below.
PSEA
2 (1) The
following definitions apply in this Act.
|
2 (1) Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente loi.
|
…
|
…
|
employee means a person employed in that part of
the public service to which the Commission has exclusive authority to make
appointments.
|
fonctionnaire Personne employée dans la fonction
publique et dont la nomination à celle-ci relève exclusivement de la
Commission.
|
employer means
|
employeur
|
(a) the
Treasury Board, in relation to an organization named in Schedule I or IV to
the Financial Administration Act; or
|
a) Le Conseil
du Trésor, dans le cas d’une administration figurant aux annexes I ou IV de
la Loi sur la gestion des finances publiques;
|
(b) in
relation to a separate agency to which the Commission has exclusive authority
to make appointments, that separate agency.
|
b)
l’organisme distinct en cause, dans le cas d’un organisme distinct dans
lequel les nominations relèvent exclusivement de la Commission.
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[41]
The PSSA does not define “employee”, however,
the following provisions are relevant:
3 (1) In this
Part,
|
3 (1) Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente partie.
|
…
|
…
|
contributor means a person required by section 5 to
contribute to the Public Service Pension Fund, and, unless the context
otherwise requires,
|
contributeur Personne tenue par l’article 5 de
contribuer à la Caisse de retraite de la fonction publique, et, à moins que
le contexte n’exige une interprétation différente :
|
(a) a person
who has ceased to be required by this Act to contribute to the Superannuation
Account or the Public Service Pension Fund, and
|
a) personne
qui a cessé d’être tenue par la présente loi de contribuer au compte de
pension de retraite ou à la Caisse de retraite de la fonction publique;
|
(b) for the
purposes of sections 25, 27 and 28, a contributor under Part I of the Superannuation
Act who has been granted an annual allowance under that Act or has died;
|
b) pour
l’application des articles 25, 27 et 28, contributeur selon la partie I de la
Loi sur la pension de retraite à qui a été accordée une allocation
annuelle sous le régime de cette loi, ou qui est décédé.
|
…
|
…
|
pensionable
employment
means any employment in respect of which there was an established
superannuation or pension fund or plan, approved by the Minister for the
purposes of this Part, for the benefit of persons engaged in that employment;
|
emploi
ouvrant droit à pension Tout emploi à l’égard duquel il existait un fonds ou régime
établi de pension de retraite ou de pension, approuvé par le ministre pour
l’application de la présente partie, au bénéfice de personnes qui occupent
cet emploi.
|
…
|
…
|
public service means the several positions in or under
any department or portion of the executive government of Canada, except those
portions of departments or portions of the executive government of Canada
prescribed by the regulations and, for the purposes of this Part, of the
Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament, office of the Senate Ethics
Officer, office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner and
Parliamentary Protective Service and any board, commission, corporation or
portion of the federal public administration specified in Schedule I;
|
fonction
publique Les
divers postes dans quelque ministère ou secteur du gouvernement exécutif du
Canada, ou relevant d’un tel ministère ou secteur, et, pour l’application de
la présente partie, du Sénat et de la Chambre des communes, de la
bibliothèque du Parlement, du bureau du conseiller sénatorial en éthique, du
bureau du commissaire aux conflits d’intérêts et à l’éthique, du Service de
protection parlementaire et de tout office, conseil, bureau, commission ou
personne morale, ou secteur de l’administration publique fédérale, que
mentionne l’annexe I, à l’exception d’un secteur du gouvernement exécutif du
Canada ou de la partie d’un ministère exclus par règlement de l’application
de la présente définition.
|
…
|
…
|
salary
means
|
traitement
|
(a) as
applied to the public service, the basic pay received by the person in
respect of whom the expression is being applied for the performance of the
regular duties of a position or office exclusive of any amount received as
allowances, special remuneration, payment for overtime or other compensation
or as a gratuity unless that amount is deemed to be or to have been included
in that person’s basic pay pursuant to any regulation made under paragraph
42(1)(e), and
|
a) La
rémunération de base versée pour l’accomplissement des fonctions normales
d’un poste dans la fonction publique, y compris les allocations, les
rémunérations spéciales ou pour temps supplémentaire ou autres indemnités et
les gratifications qui sont réputées en faire partie en vertu d’un règlement
pris en application de l’alinéa 42(1)e);
|
…
|
…
|
6 (1) Subject
to this Part, the following service may be counted by a contributor as
pensionable service for the purposes of this Part:
|
6 (1) Sous
réserve des autres dispositions de la présente partie, le service qui suit
peut être compté par un contributeur comme service ouvrant droit à pension
pour l’application de la présente partie :
|
…
|
…
|
(iii) with
reference to any contributor,
|
(iii)
relativement à un contributeur :
|
…
|
…
|
(F) any period of service in pensionable
employment immediately prior to becoming employed in the public service, if
he elects, within one year of becoming a contributor under this Part, to pay
for that service,
|
(F) toute
période de service dans un emploi ouvrant droit à pension, immédiatement
avant de devenir employé dans la fonction publique, s’il choisit, dans le
délai d’un an après qu’il est devenu contributeur selon la présente partie,
de payer pour ce service,
|
…
|
…
|
[42]
Section 11 of the Financial Administration
Act, RSC 1985, c F-11 (“FAA”), human resource management, defines “public
service”:
11 (1) The following definitions
apply in this section and sections 11.1 to 13.
|
11 (1) Les définitions qui suivent
s’appliquent au présent article et aux articles 11.1 à 13.
|
…
|
…
|
public service means the several positions in or under
|
fonction publique L’ensemble des postes qui sont compris dans les entités ci-après
ou qui en relèvent :
|
(a) the departments named in Schedule
I;
|
a) les ministères figurant à l’annexe
I;
|
(b) the other portions of the federal
public administration named in Schedule IV;
|
b) les autres secteurs de
l’administration publique fédérale figurant à l’annexe IV;
|
(c) the separate agencies named in
Schedule V; and
|
c) les organismes distincts figurant
à l’annexe V;
|
(d) any other portion of the federal
public administration that may be designated by the Governor in Council for
the purpose of this paragraph.
|
d) les autres secteurs de
l’administration publique fédérale que peut désigner le gouverneur en conseil
pour l’application du présent alinéa.
|
Analysis
[43]
Subject to limited exceptions, persons employed
in the public service are required to contribute to the Public Service Pension
Fund (“Pension Fund”) pursuant to s 5 of the PSSA. In this matter, it is
uncontested that the Applicant made no contributions to the Pension Fund during
the period covered by the Contracts. In effect, the Applicant argues that his
service under the Contracts was de facto employment with Environment
Canada, thereby making it pensionable service under the PSSA.
[44]
In Econosult the question before the
Supreme Court of Canada was whether the Public Service Staff Relations Board
had jurisdiction to decide that teachers working at a penitentiary pursuant to a
government contract with Econosult were employees in the public service within
the meaning of the PSSRA. There the Supreme Court referred to the PSSRA,
the PSEA and the FAA as they then were, and found that, when they were read
together with the Canada Labour Code, RSC, 1985, c L-2, they revealed
a scheme that created two separate and distinct labour regimes for two
categories of federal employees. In the context of the labour relations scheme
described in that case, the Supreme Court held that “there
is just no place for species of de facto public servant”. At
paragraph 27 it adopted the reasoning of the Court below, the Federal Court of
Appeal, where Justice Marceau stated:
There is quite simply no place in this legal
structure for a public servant (that is an employee of Her Majesty, a member of
the Public Service) without a position created by the Treasury Board and
without an appointment made by the Public Service Commission.
[45]
Perhaps a more factually similar case is Cohen.
There, the applicant had sought to purchase his period of service with the Law
Reform Commission of Canada. Between 1985 and 1992 the applicant had worked
full time with the Commission under a series of renewable and uninterrupted
contracts and made no payments related to pension benefits. He worked at the
Commission’s premises, supervised many staff and was described as an integral
member of the management team. However, TBS determined that this period of
time was not countable for pension purposes under the PSSA as the evidence
indicated he was an independent contractor and not an employee of the Commission.
The Court noted that the decision-maker in that case had to make a
determination in applying the evidence to the legal framework set out in ss 7
and 8 of the Law Reform Commission Act, but that the most authoritative
decision on point was Econosult, referencing the language employed by Marceau
J, above.
[46]
Ultimately, the Court found that TBS’ decision
that the applicant was not eligible to purchase pensionable service for the
purposes of that legislation, to be reasonable. On appeal of the decision in Cohen,
the Federal Court of Appeal (2009 FCA 99) noted that, to succeed, the applicant
would have to convince it that he was appointed pursuant to s 7(1) of the Law
Reform Commission Act, i.e., that he was appointed in accordance with the
PSEA, however, that he had not succeeded in doing so. The Federal Court of
Appeal also noted that:
The decision of the Supreme Court of Canada
in Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada,
[1991] 1 S.C.R. 614 [Econosult], is squarely against the position taken
by the appellant. Status as a person employed under the Public Service
Employment Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-32, cannot be acquired informally. While
it may be that the parties could have organized their affairs differently, they
chose to do so in a particular way and, in the face of the statutory scheme, we
are unable to disregard the choices they made.
[47]
In Burley the issue before this Court was
whether the applicant was, for the purposes of the PSSA, employed by the public
service while he was engaged in language training as a recruit for the Foreign
Service Development program. The Court concluded that there was no basis to
interfere with the decision under review which found that, for the purpose of
the PSSA, the applicant was not employed in the federal public service while in
language training. He was not, therefore, required or entitled to contribute
to the superannuation fund during that period, and he was not entitled to
accrue pension credits under the PSSA during the time spent in language
training.
[48]
Justice Dawson also found that, on the evidence,
the decision-makers had correctly concluded that the applicant and the Department
of Foreign Affairs and International Trade had agreed that, while in language
training, the applicant had ab initio status and that the expressed
intention was that his employment would only commence after language training
was successfully completed. In that circumstance, the applicant was not
entitled to participate in the superannuation plan under the PSSA until after
successful completion of the language training.
[49]
However, recognizing that employment in the
public service is not governed solely by principles of contract or employment
law but is also regulated by statute, Justice Dawson found that it was
necessary to consider whether the conclusion reached by the decision-makers was
consistent with the provisions of the PSSA.
[50]
Upon review of the definitions of “public
service” and “salary” under ss 4(1), 5(1) of the PSSA, Justice Dawson stated:
[34] From these provisions, I take
that:
• the purpose of the PSSA is to provide for the payment of
superannuation benefits to “persons employed in the public service”;
• the PSSA covers a larger number of employees than the PSLRA;
• benefits are paid to those who are required to contribute to
one of the specified accounts or funds;
• contributions are made by persons “employed in the public
service”; and
• contributions are tied to a contributor’s salary, which is the
basic pay received for performing the regular duties of a position or office.
[35] The PSSA does not define what is
meant in subsection 5(1) by the phrase “persons employed in the public service.”
[36] To determine whether Mr. Burley
was employed in the public service while on language training, I take
instruction from the approach adopted by the Federal Court of Appeal in Professional
Association of Foreign Service Officers v. Canada (Attorney General),
[2003] F.C.J. No. 483 (C.A.) (QL).
[37] That case involved persons
similarly situated to Mr. Burley and the question before the Court of Appeal
was whether successful candidates in the FSDP, while taking language training,
were employees so as to be included in the bargaining unit represented by the association.
[38] At paragraph 10 of its reasons, the
Court of Appeal characterized the question before the Public Service Staff
Relations Board to be “whether someone who was not working under any private
contract but was occupied as a student of language in a government language
program and being paid a stipend by the Government of Canada for her presence
there could be considered to be ‘employed in the Public Service.’” The
Court of Appeal stated that determination of that question did not involve
common law principles of contract law. Rather, the question would be answered
by the application of relevant federal statutes governing employment in the
public service.
[39] The Court of Appeal then went on,
at paragraph 14, to state:
The Board had to decide what is
required for one to become an “employee” within the meaning of section 34 of
the Public Service Staff Relations Act. In the Econosult case at 634 Sopinka J.
quoted with approval from the decision of this Court under appeal where Marceau
J.A. stated:
There is quite simply no place in
this legal structure for a public servant (that is, an employee of Her Majesty,
a member of the Public Service) without a position created by the Treasury
Board and without an appointment made by the Public Service Commission.
For this reason the Supreme Court
found that there was “just no place for a species of de facto public servant
who is neither fish nor fowl”.(Page 633). In the present case the applicant is
contending that the candidates for the FSDP, while on language training, were
some kind of de facto employees although they had not yet been given any formal
appointment. It is true that DFAIT had recruited these candidates, screened
them and put them on language training. It is not in dispute that DFAIT had the
delegated authority from the Public Service Commission to appoint these
candidates to Foreign Service Officer positions. But there is no formal
instrument making such an appointment prior to their completion of language
training. Section 22 of the Public Service Employment Act which governs hiring
in the Public Service provides as follows:
22. An appointment under this Act
takes effect on the date specified in the instrument of appointment, which date
may be any date before, on or after the date of the instrument.
[emphasis added]
[51]
Justice Dawson acknowledged that the
determination in Foreign Service Officers was made in the context of
different legislation, the PSSRA, but she considered the nature of the Court of
Appeal’s analysis to be applicable in determining whether Mr. Burley was
employed in the public service for the purpose of the PSSA while in language
training. She concluded that the only document capable of being an instrument
of appointment within the meaning of s 22 of the PSSA was the letter offering
him an indeterminate appointment with the public service. Therefore, he was
not, for the purpose of the PSSA, employed until the date of that letter and, for
that reason, was not entitled to accrue pension credits under the PSSA prior to
the date of that letter.
[52]
In my view, Burley and Foreign Service
Officers are somewhat distinguishable on their facts as they concern
whether time spent in language training for ab initio recruits was
pensionable employment. As stated in Foreign Service Officers, in distinguishing
Econosult, the decision-maker was not considering whether a person
engaged under private contract was de facto employed in the public
service. Rather, whether a person in a government language program being paid
a stipend could be considered to be an employee in the public service (at para
10). A determination of that question involved not common law principles of
contract law as in the Econosult case, but the application of relevant
federal laws related to employment by the federal government.
[53]
The recent decision of Baribeau is
factually very similar to the matter before me. There the applicant also
challenged the decision of the Pension Centre refusing to recognise her periods
of employment as an independent contractor for Environment Canada as pension
service under the PSSA. This Court granted the application for judicial
review.
[54]
It is of note that in that case, even though the
contracts contained a clause providing that they were service contracts and
that the applicant was not being hired as an employee, as is also the
circumstance in this matter, Revenue Quebec and the CRA found that there was an
employer/employee relationship between Environment Canada and the applicant for
tax purposes. The applicant also argued that the contractual provision,
stating that an employer/employee relationship was not created, was not determinative
in characterizing the contract and that the Pension Centre erred in concluding
that there was a tripartite relationship because she and her company were one
and the same person.
[55]
The Court agreed that even though the CRA’s
decision was not determinative, it was not reasonable for the Pension Centre to
reach a different conclusion from that of the CRA, using a tool developed by
the CRA, without explaining the reason for the contradiction. Justice Gagné
also concluded that the Pension Centre erred in applying the common law
criteria rather than taking into consideration the Quebec Civil Code. This was
a critical error because it led the Pension Centre to give importance to the
parties’ intentions as expressed in the contracts rather than to an assessment
of the objective facts of the parties’ reality, which played a crucial role in
civil law. Justice Gagné also stated that it was an error to conclude that the
applicant acted through a separate entity as “a company
name is not a legal entity or a separate entity from the individual or
corporation using it”.
[56]
In my view, it must be recalled that in Econosult
the issue was whether the Public Service Staff Relations Board had jurisdiction
to decide if teachers working pursuant to a contract between Econosult and a government
department were employees within the meaning of the PSSRA. The Supreme Court
of Canada’s ultimate conclusion was that the Board did not have that jurisdiction
in that circumstance. Further, the Supreme Court noted that the Federal Court
of Appeal had distinguished the case from those involving a dispute as to whether
a person is an independent contractor or employee and, as there was no dispute
that the teachers provided by Econosult were employees rather than independent
contractors, the question was whether they were government employees or
employees of Econosult. Further, that in the case of employees of the private
or semi-private sector, the legal relationship may be inferred from a situation
of fact, and no particular form is necessary to give rise to the relationship
of employer/employee. However, “[o]n the other hand,
the status of a public servant cannot be inferred from a mere situation of
fact, as employment in the public service is subject to a comprehensive set of
rules which are strictly enforced”.
[57]
I do not understand this to suggest that in a
situation such as this one where a person provides services under contract, and
his status as an employee of either the business entity or of government is at
issue, that the surrounding factual situation can be entirely disregarded. The
Respondent suggests that in this situation the only relevant criterion is that
the Applicant was not appointed as a member of the public service. However, on
that premise, there would have been no need for the Pension Centre to have
consulted with Environment Canada as the absence of an appointment would alone have
sufficed to deny the Buyback Request. Further, as the Contracts were entered
into with MTL, and as a business entity cannot be appointed as a public
servant, this too would have been a complete answer to the request.
[58]
Indeed, the Pension Centre does not appear to
have viewed the situation in the light of Econosult. In its July 21,
2008 letter to the Applicant it acknowledged that, as a rule, contract service
is not countable as public service, however, it went on to state that when it
is determined that an employer/employee relationship existed during the period
of contract employment, the service may be recognized as public service. It
explicitly stated that to determine whether an employer/employee relationship
existed “we evaluate such factors as for each 13
periods [sic]”:
• Who was responsible for supervising / disciplinary control?
• Who provided the tools, facilities or material to perform
the work?
• Were you subject to a risk of profit or loss?
• Was the work you performed an integral part of the work of
the organization?
• Were you paid for statutory holidays, sickness, annual
leave or injury on the job?
• Did you have authority to sub contract?
• Were you subject to deductions at source from your pay for
such things as a pension plan, Employment Insurance, Canada Pension Plan /
Quebec Pension Plan / or income taxes?
• Was the work comparable to that being carried out by the
public service?
[59]
And, in its February 4, 2009 letter to
Environment Canada, the Pension Centre advised Environment Canada that the
Buyback Request should be assessed using the TBS Contracting Policy and the CRA
guidelines to determine if an individual was an employee or self-employed
during the period in question and that: “[t]he facts of
the relationship between the individual and the department should be considered
in order to determine the employment relationship between the individual and
the department”.
[60]
Based on this, it is apparent that the Pension Centre
was of the view that the factual circumstances pertaining to the nature of the
relationship between the Applicant and Environment Canada were relevant. Further,
during cross-examinations on her affidavit, Ms. Smith confirmed in her testimony
that the Pension Centre applies the nine criteria that were identified to the
Applicant in the July 28, 2008 letter. And, when asked if the nine criteria
help the Pension Centre determine if there is an employer/employee
relationship, she testified that she believed this to be the case.
[61]
The Applicant responded to the nine factors by
his letter of October 15, 2008. The Pension Centre asked Environment Canada to
provide an opinion as to whether an employer/employee relationship existed. It
recommended that Environment Canada review the documentation provided by the
Applicant, the history of Environment Canada and that the issue be assessed
using the TBS Contracting Policy and the CRA guidelines. The Pension Centre
also specifically noted that “[t]he facts of the
relationship between the individual and the department should be considered in
order to determine the employment relationship between the individual and the department”.
[62]
The Environment Canada reply on April 23, 2013
stated that the available documentation had been reviewed and concluded that
the Applicant had provided services as a third party contractor through mechanisms
such as a placement agency or consulting firm. No rationale was provided and
the PWGSC Decision stated in its one paragraph response that the request was
denied because Environment Canada was of the opinion that there was no employer/employee
relationship.
[63]
I agree with the Applicant that because PWGSC
identified specific factors and specified that Environment Canada was to
consider the facts of the relationship between the Applicant and Environment
Canada in determining whether or not an employer/employee relationship existed,
Environment Canada was required to consider those factors in the context of its
relationship with the Applicant and the related factual circumstances.
However, when cross-examined on her affidavit, Ms. Smith could not explain why
the Environment Canada position did not address the nine criteria. She also
did not know if Environment Canada had considered the nature of MTL before it
issued its opinion, nor whether the Pension Centre had investigated the nature
of MTL before making its decision. Further, the record contains no information
disclosed by Environment Canada or the Pension Centre in response to this
application that would allow the Court to determine if the criteria or the
factual circumstances of the relationship, other than the fact that the Contracts
were entered into by MTL, were considered. I also note that during the course
of the cross-examination of Ms. Smith, counsel for the Respondent objected to
all requests for undertakings to provide the materials upon which the
Environment Canada position was based.
[64]
Thus, the difficulty in this case is that there
is no evidence that Environment Canada conducted the analysis that the Pension
Centre deemed necessary when Environment Canada generated its “opinion”, upon
which the PWGSC Decision is founded.
[65]
Nor is this cured by the PWGSC Reconsideration.
While this states that the information provided by Applicant’s counsel by
letter of March 27, 2014 was considered, it simply concluded that because
Environment Canada had contracted directly with MTL, a tripartite relationship
existed and an employer/employee relationship was therefore established between
the “consultant and the agency/firm whereas the work
contract is between EC and the agency/firm”. It does not indicate that
it sought and reviewed the Environment Canada file materials that would or
should have formed the basis of its opinion or that it considered any other
factual circumstances.
[66]
The Respondent is correct that information concerning
the nature of MTL submitted subsequent to the PWGSC Reconsideration was not
before the Pension Centre when it made its decision. This information included
the Applicant’s submission that MTL was not incorporated and that it did not
have a bank account in its name, as described above. Therefore, the Pension Centre
cannot be faulted for not considering that information. However, had
Environment Canada provided any reasons in support of its opinion, it is
possible that this would have prompted the Applicant to provide that
information in response, prior to the PWGSC Reconsideration being issued.
[67]
Based on the record before me it is not apparent
that Environment Canada considered the nine factual criteria that the Pension
Centre identified as necessary to evaluate whether an employer/employee
relationship existed or considered the facts of the relationship. Further,
despite its reliance on Environment Canada’s opinion, the Pension Centre provided
no rationale for its support of Environment Canada’s position. Although
inadequacy of reasons is not a stand-alone ground of review Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011
SCC 62, in order to meet the reasonableness standard, the decision under review
must be justified, intelligible and transparent (Dunsmuir at para 47). In
my view, for the reasons set out above, the PWGSC Decision and the PWGSC
Reconsideration do not meet the reasonableness standard.
[68]
Further, the Pension Centre’s representations
contained in its July 21, 2008 letter to the Applicant were clear, unambiguous
and unqualified and refer to a process that it stated would be followed in
assessing the Applicant’s Buyback Request. Although the Applicant does not
allege that he was promised a particular outcome (Agraira v Canada (Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at paras 95-97; Mavi v
Canada (Attorney General), 2011 SCC 30 at paras 68-69), based on this
representation, the Applicant had a legitimate expectation that those factors
would be utilized in processing his application. Absent evidence that the process
was followed, he therefore was also not afforded procedural fairness.
[69]
As a final point, there was discussion within
the written submissions and before me as to the sufficiency of PWGSC’s
disclosure in response to the Applicant’s Rule 317 request and the effect of
the many objections of Respondent’s counsel during the cross-examination of Ms. Smith.
The Respondent correctly states that the Applicant could and should have
followed up on the objections made by the Respondent to the Applicant’s
questions during examinations pursuant to Rule 97 of the Rules. Further, that Rule
318 provides a process for challenging objections to production which the Applicant
did not utilize.
[70]
As I have determined that the application must
be granted, I need not address these issues. However, prior to the matter
being re-determined by the Pension Centre, all documents properly encompassed
by Rule 317 should be disclosed in accordance with the requirements of that
Rule. If the Applicant is not satisfied with the response he must address this
by way of Rule 318. Further, in the course of its redetermination the
Pension Centre shall consider the Applicant’s submissions of July 28, 2014 and
accept such other documentation as may be relevant to its application of the
factors it has identified for consideration when determining the existence of
an employer/employee relationship as well as the facts relevant to that
relationship.