Supreme Court of Canada
Kinnaird v. Workmen's Compensation
Board, [1963] S.C.R. 239
Date: 1963-04-01
Robert C.
Kinnaird (Prosecutor) Appellant;
and
The
Workmen's Compensation Board (Respondent) Respondent.
1963: March 7, 8; 1963: April
1.
Present: Cartwright, Fauteux,
Martland, Ritchie and Hall JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Workmen's compensation—Discontinuance
of pension by Board—Examination of workman under medical appeal provision—Notification
rejecting appeal—Matters contained in specialist's certificate not included in
notification—Application for writ of mandamus with certiorari in aid to quash
Board's decision—Workmen's Compensation Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 413.
The appellant contracted dermatitis as a result of his employment
as a painter and was granted compensation therefor by the Workmen's
Compensation Board from February 1945 until February 1947, when his pension was
discontinued and he was advised by the Board that he should obtain employment
of a clerical type. At that time there was no medical appeal provision in the Workmen's
Compensation Act, R.S.B.C. 1936, c. 312, but such a provision was added as
s. 54A of the Act by 1955 (B.C.), c. 98, s. 15. In 1956 the appellant applied
to the Board, under the provisions of s. 54A, to be examined by a specialist
and his application was granted. Some time after the examination the appellant
was informed by a letter from the Board that the latter had received the
certificate of the specialist. He was further informed that his claim had been
reviewed, that the matters contained in the certificate had been fully
considered, and that no change had been made in the status or disposition of
his claim. An application for a writ of mandamus with certiorari
in aid to quash the decision of the Board was dismissed by Brown J. and his
judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeal, one member dissenting. By leave
of the Court of Appeal, an appeal was brought to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
[Page 240]
Per Curiam: The contention that the Board had
"declined jurisdiction" by failing to notify the appellant of its
decision regarding the matters contained in the specialist's certificate
failed. The provisions of s. 54A (9) did not give the workman a right to
anything more from the Board than a notification in writing of its decision.
The Board had complied with this section, albeit in a most niggardly fashion.
The contention that as s. 54A(5) makes the specialist's
certificate "conclusive as to the matters certified" and as the certificate
in the present case certified that his disability was "a result of his
occupation", the Board had no jurisdiction to do otherwise than to
reinstate the appellant's pension in accordance with this finding also failed.
This contention overlooked the fact that the specialist's report is initiated
on the strength of a physician's certificate "certifying that in the
opinion of such physician there is a bona fide medical dispute to be
resolved". It is for the purpose of resolving this dispute that the specialist
makes his examination and furnishes his certificate to the Board, and it is his
opinion as to how this dispute is to be resolved which is embodied in the
certificate and made conclusive and binding on the Board by s. 54A(5). The
effect of this certificate upon the Board's decision with respect to whether
compensation was to be awarded or not was another matter and the fact that the
specialist's certificate was not intended to be conclusive in this regard was
demonstrated by the provisions of s. 54A (9) which clearly contemplate a review
of the whole claim and the making of an independent decision by the Board after
the certificate has been received.
Under the provisions of the present s. 77 (d)
(formerly s. 76) of the Act, the Board is given "… exclusive jurisdiction
to inquire into, hear and determine …. (d) the degree of diminution of
earning capacity by reason of any injury;" and s. 22(1) of the Act
provides that when the Board is awarding compensation "regard shall be had
to the workman's fitness to continue in the occupation in which he was injured
or to adapt himself to some other suitable employment or business".
Accordingly, the Board had jurisdiction to review the appellant's claim in
light of the specialist's certificate and to determine that no change should be
made in the disposition of his case because of the degree of his fitness to
adapt himself to employment at clerical work if he chose to do so. Whether or
not this formed the basis of the Board's decision was not for the Court to say.
In assessing the effect of the specialist's certificate on the appellant's
right to compensation it was within the jurisdiction of the Board to examine
all other data available to it for the purpose of determining whether or not
the appellant's earning capacity had been diminished as a result of his
disability and the fact that the Court was unable, on the material before it,
to understand how the Board reached the decision which it did was beside the
point. Farrell v. Workmen's Compensation Board [1962] S.C.R. 48,
followed; Battaglia v. Workmen's Compensation Board (1960), 32 W.W.R. 1,
distinguished.
Per Hall J.: The appellant did not appear to have
received the substantial justice which s. 79 of the Act contemplates. However,
the courts are without power to review the merits of the case on certiorari.
The legislature has given the Board unlimited discretion not subject to appeal
or judicial review as long as the Board acts within its jurisdiction.
[Page 241]
APPEAL from a judgment of the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia, affirming a judgment of Brown J. Appeal dismissed.
T. R. Berger, for the
appellant.
C. C. Locke, Q.C., for the
respondent.
The judgment of Cartwright,
Fauteux, Martland and Ritchie JJ. was delivered by
RITCHIE J.:— This is an appeal brought
by leave of the Court of Appeal of British Columbia from a judgment of that
Court, (O'Halloran
J.A. dissenting) affirming the judgment of Brown J. whereby he dismissed the
appellant's application for a writ of mandamus with certiorari in
aid to quash a decision of the Workmen's Compensation Board of British
Columbia, dated March 28, 1957.
The notice of motion by which
these proceedings were initiated sought relief upon the following grounds:
1. Workmen's Compensation
Board did not notify the Prosecutor in writing of its decision regarding the
matters contained in the certificate made in 1957 by Dr. K. Greenwood pursuant
to the provisions of section 54A of the Workmen's Compensation Act, and thereby
declined jurisdiction.
2. Workmen's Compensation
Board neglected or refused to consider the certificate of the specialist
appointed pursuant to the provisions of section 54A in 1957 as conclusive as to
the matters certified therein, and thereby declined jurisdiction.
3. That the said Board,
following receipt of the specialist's certificate, neglected or refused to pay
compensation to the Prosecutor, and thereby declined jurisdiction.
The circumstances giving rise to
this application are that Robert C. Kinnaird, the prosecutor, contracted
dermatitis in December 1944, as a result of his employment as a painter and was
granted compensation therefor by the Workmen's Compensation Board from February
1945 until February 1947, when his pension was discontinued and he was advised
by the Board that:
From the medical information
now on file it is considered that as far as any disability arising out of your
employment with the Newcastle Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. is concerned, it cannot
obviously be now considered to be produced by occupational contact, and your
claim is therefore terminated this date and a cheque accordingly for time-loss
to February 5th inclusive, together with subsistence allowance for January 8th,
and transportation, is herewith enclosed.
[Page 242]
It is the belief of this
Board that you should immediately apply yourself to the suggestion given you by
Dr. Williams and obtain employment, light in nature, clean and of a clerical
type.
At this time, there was no
medical appeal provision in the Workmen's Compensation Act, but by s. 15
of c. 91 of the Statutes of British Columbia, 1955, s. 54A was added to the
statute whereby provision was made entitling any workman who disputed a finding
of the Board to be examined by a specialist to be nominated by him from a list
of specialists provided by the Board. The request initiating such an
examination was required to be
…accompanied by a
certificate from a physician certifying that in the opinion of such physician
there is a bona fide medical dispute to be resolved, with sufficient
particulars thereof to define the question in issue.
Under the provisions of s. 54A
(5) the specialist so selected was required to report to the Board within 18
days after his appointment, certifying as to:
(a) The condition of
the workman;
(b) His fitness for
employment;
(c) If unfit, the cause
of such unfitness;
(d) The extent of his
temporary or permanent disability by reason of the injury in respect of which
he has claimed compensation; and
(e) Such other
matters as may, in his opinion, or in the opinion of the Board, be pertinent to
the claim;
and such certificate, which
shall be in the form provided by regulation, shall be conclusive as to the
matters certified. (The italics are mine.)
On September 15, 1956, the
appellant decided to take advantage of the provisions of this section and applied
to the Board in writing to be examined by a specialist, enclosing a certificate
of a physician certifying that in his opinion there was a bona fide
medical dispute to be resolved. Upon this application being granted, the
appellant nominated Dr. Greenwood as the specialist to conduct the examination
and the examination was conducted on January 29, 1957. Dr. Greenwood furnished
the Board with his certificate in accordance with s. 54A(5) on February 1, 1957,
in which he reported as follows:
(a) Examination of
the skin revealed a mild non-specific eczematous process involving the fingers,
with some active vesiculation. Occasional similar lesions are present also on
the feet. The skin appears otherwise clear.
[Page 243]
(b) This patient is
temporarily unfit for work, on account of his recent coronary attacks. The
exceptionally sensitive condition of his skin precludes him from any occupation
except for dry, clean work such as clerical work. He is unfit to continue in
his two trades, namely, painting and baking.
(c) This unfitness is
due to the skin having been previously severely sensitized as a result of his
occupation.
(d) The skin in
itself would constitute very little disability to an individual employed in
clerical work. This man, however, is permanently unfit for either of his two
trades. He also states that his educational attainments do not fit him for any
other more suitable job.
(e) I would estimate
that there is an element of resentment in this case, and that this
psychological factor may well be responsible for the recalcitrance of the
disease process. It is not possible to say whether or not the patient could
have employed himself in a nonirritating occupation, had this
"negative" attitude been absent.
Under the provisions of s. 54A(9)
the Board is required "within eighteen days of the receipt of the
certificate from the specialist …." to "review the claim and notify
the workman in writing of its decision regarding the matters contained in such
certificate".
The notification which the
appellant received from the Board pursuant to this section is contained in a
letter dated March 28,1957, which reads as follows:
The certificate of the
specialist nominated by you for examination under Section 54A of the Workmen's
Compensation Act has been received.
Your claim has been reviewed
by the Board and the matters contained in the certificate fully considered and
this is to inform you that no change has been made in the status or disposition
of your claim.
It is contended on behalf of the
appellant that the Board "declined jurisdiction" by failing to notify
him of its decision regarding the matters contained in the specialist's
certificate, and although I am bound to say that, in my opinion, it would have
been more humane and more businesslike for the Board to have furnished the
appellant with a copy of the certificate and an explanation of its decision, I
am nevertheless unable to find that the provisions of s. 54A(9) give the
workman a right to anything more from the Board than a notification in writing
of its decision, and it seems to me that the Board complied with this section,
albeit in a most niggardly fashion, when it advised the appellant in its letter
of March 28, 1957, that after reviewing his claim and having given full
consideration to the certificate it had decided that there was no change in the
disposition of his claim.
[Page 244]
It is contended, however, that as
s. 54A(5) makes the specialist's certificate "conclusive as to the matters
certified" and as the certificate in the present case certifies that his
disability is "a result of his occupation", the Board had no
jurisdiction to do otherwise than to reinstate the appellant's pension in
accordance with this finding.
This contention appears to me to
overlook the fact that the specialist's report is initiated on the strength of
a physician's certificate "certifying that in the opinion of such
physician there is a bona fide medical dispute to be resolved …". It is
for the purpose of resolving this dispute that the specialist makes his
examination and furnishes his certificate to the Board, and it is his opinion
as to how this dispute is to be resolved which is embodied in the certificate
and made conclusive and binding on the Board by s. 54A(5). The effect of this
certificate upon the Board's decision with respect to whether compensation is
to be awarded or not is quite another matter and, in my view, the fact that the
specialist's certificate is not intended to be conclusive in this regard is
demonstrated by the provisions of s. 54A(9) which clearly contemplate a review
of the whole claim and the making of an independent decision by the Board after
the certificate has been received. If the specialist's certificate were
intended to be conclusive of the workman's right to compensation, there would
be no room for the jurisdiction to review and decide which the Board is
required to exercise under s. 54A(9).
In the course of the reasons for
judgment which he delivered on behalf of the majority of the Court of Appeal,
Davey J.A. expressed the following opinion:
In my opinion it is possible
that the Board may have accepted Dr. Greenwood's certificate but still have
concluded, rightly or wrongly, on law or facts falling within the Board's
exclusive jurisdiction that the opinion certified did not entitle the appellant
to restoration of his compensation.
Counsel for the appellant treated
this passage as meaning that the Court of Appeal required the appellant to
prove his case to the exclusion of all possibilities instead of in accordance
with the preponderance of evidence. I do not, however, think that any problem
concerning burden of proof is raised by the above-quoted passage or that Davey
J.A. was doing more than saying that it was open to the Board and within its
jurisdiction to reach the conclusion which it did.
[Page 245]
Under the provisions of the
present s. 77 (d) (formerly s. 76) of the Act, the Board is given
…exclusive jurisdiction to
inquire into, hear and determine . . .
(d) the degree of
diminution of earning capacity by reason of any injury;
and s. 22(1) of the Act provides
that when the Board is awarding compensation "regard shall be had to the
workman's fitness to continue in the occupation in which he was injured or to
adapt himself to some other suitable employment or business".
In my opinion, the Board has
jurisdiction to review the appellant's claim in light of the specialist's
certificate and to determine that no change should be made in the disposition
of his case because of the degree of his fitness to adapt himself to employment
at clerical work if he chose to do so. Whether or not this formed the basis of
the Board's decision is not for me to say. In assessing the effect of the
specialist's certificate on the appellant's right to compensation, it was, in
my opinion, within the jurisdiction of the Board to examine all other data
available to it for the purpose of determining whether or not the appellant's
earning capacity had been diminished as a result of his disability and the fact
that I am unable, on the material before us, to understand how the Board
reached the decision which it did is quite beside the point.
As was said by Judson J. in Farrell
v. Workmen's Compensation Board:
…even if there was error,
whether in law or fact, it was made within the exercise of the jurisdiction and
is not open to any judicial review including certiorari.
The case of Battaglia v.
Workmen's Compensation Board
stands on entirely different ground, because in that case it was clear that the
medical opinion embodied in the certificate of a specialist had been ignored by
the Board which had reached its decision on the basis of a contrary opinion
obtained from other doctors. In so doing, the Board disregarded the medical
conclusions contained in the certificate and thus trespassed on a field over
which the specialist had been given exclusive jurisdiction by s. 54A(5).
[Page 246]
In view of all the above, I would
dismiss this appeal.
I would, however, make no order
as to costs as I am of opinion that these proceedings might well have been
avoided had the Board seen fit to inform the appellant of the reasons for its
decision regarding the matters contained in Dr. Greenwood's certificate of
February 1, 1957.
HALL J.:—I concur in the judgment
of Ritchie J. I am impelled, however, to say, that this workman does not appear
to have received the substantial justice which s. 79 of the Workmen's
Compensation Act of British Columbia contemplates. Section 79 reads:
79. The decision of the
Board shall be upon the real merits and justice of the case, and it is not
bound to follow strict legal precedent.
The courts are without power to
review the merits of the case on certiorari. The legislature has given
the Board unlimited discretion not subject to appeal or judicial review as long
as the Board acts within its jurisdiction.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Shulman, Tupper, Worrall & Berger, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Ladner, Downs, Ladner, Locke, Clark & Lenox, Vancouver.