Supreme Court of Canada
Labour
Relations Board of New Brunswick v. Eastern Bakeries Limited et al., [1961]
S.C.R. 72
Date:
1960-12-19
The Labour Relations Board of the Province of New
Brunswick (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Eastern Bakeries Limited (Plaintiff) Respondent.
and
Local Union No. 76, Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, Helpers and Miscellaneous Workers and the Attorney General of New
Brunswick.
1960: October 18, 19; 1960: December 19.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau, Locke, Cartwright,
Fauteux, Abbott, Martland, Judson and Ritchie JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW BRUNSWICK, APPEAL
DIVISION.
Labour—Union application for certification as a
bargaining agent for certain employees—Attempt by company to include employees
not resident within Province—Jurisdiction of Labour Relations Board—Right of
Board to participate in certiorari proceedings—Labour Relations Act, R.S.N.B.
1952, c. 124.
The union made application under the provisions of the Labour
Relations Act of New Brunswick for certification as bargaining agent for
all employees of the respondent company, employed in certain categories, at the
latter's Moncton plant. At the hearing of the application before
[Page 73]
the Labour Relations Board, respondent endeavoured
unsuccessfully to have the bargaining unit described to include all employees
"on the payroll of the Moncton plant". Pursuant to the terms of an
order made on June 26, 1959, the Board's secretary conducted a mail vote, but
only respondent's employees resident and employed in New Brunswick were
considered by him as eligible to vote. A majority of the said employees being
in favour of the union as bargaining agent, the Board issued a certification
order.
The respondent company obtained a writ of certiorari removing
the matter to the Court of Appeal, which Court granted a rule absolute and
quashed the certification order. The Board then appealed to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be allowed and the order
of certification restored.
Per Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau and Cartwright JJ.: The
final order for certification correctly carried out the Board's previous
direction as embodied in its order of June 26, 1959. The Board never intended
and never ordered that the bargaining agent should include nonresident
employees.
The New Brunswick Labour Relations Board can have no
jurisdiction over persons residing and working outside that province so as to
declare that they are part of the membership of a unit of the company's
employees residing and working in New Brunswick.
In this case the Board not only had a right to be heard in
Court but was entitled to make clear exactly what had occurred and as to the
position it took on the question of its jurisdiction. The Labour Relations
Board of Saskatchewan v. Dominion Fire Brick and Clay Products, Ltd., [1947]
S.C.R. 336, referred to.
Per Locke, Cartwright, Fauteux, Abbott, Martland,
Judson and Ritchie JJ.: The certification order should be so interpreted that
the Board intended to limit its application to employees working at
respondent's Moncton plant. Therefore no constitutional question as to the
competence of the Board to make the order can arise.
There was nothing in the record to establish that the
appellant acted in excess of its jurisdiction or that it declined jurisdiction,
and as the order of the Board was not attacked on any other ground it was not
subject to review by the Courts in proceedings by way of certiorari.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Supreme Court of New
Brunswick, Appeal Division, granting a rule absolute for a writ of
certiorari. Appeal allowed.
Eric L. Teed, for the defendant, appellant.
Adrien Gilbert, Q.C., for the plaintiff,
respondent.
E. R. Pepper, for the Attorney-General for
Ontario.
L. Lalande, Q.C., for the Attorney-General of
Quebec.
Lorne Ingle, for the Attorney-General for
Saskatchewan.
[Page 74]
R. W. Cleary, for the Attorney-General for
Alberta.
Ian P. Maikin, for Local Union No. 76,
Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, Helpers and Miscellaneous Workers.
The judgment of Kerwin C.J. and of Taschereau J. was delivered
by
The Chief Justice:—Upon
the application of Eastern Bakeries Limited, a Justice of the Supreme Court of
New Brunswick ordered the Registrar to issue a writ of certiorari directed
to the Labour Relations Board of the Province for the removal into the Court of
the Board's order of July 31, 1959, certifying Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, Helpers and Miscellaneous Workers Local Union #76 to be the
bargaining agent for certain employees employed by "Eastern Bakeries
Limited, Moncton, N.B.", and also the application for certification, and
all proceedings upon which the said order for certification was based. Such
writ was to be made returnable at the next sitting of the Court of Appeal at
which time and place it was ordered that the Board show cause why the said
certification should not be quashed or such order made as might seem right. The
writ was duly issued the next day.
The application for the writ was supported by the affidavit
of John G. Patterson, branch manager of the company's plant at Moncton, to
which was attached as Exhibit A a copy of a letter to the company, dated June
9, 1959, from the Board under the signature of its secretary, John C. Tonner,
notifying the company that the Board had received an application from the union
for certification as bargaining agent affecting teamsters, chauffeurs,
warehousemen, helpers and miscellaneous workers Local Union #76 and
"Eastern Bakeries Ltd., Moncton, N.B.". The letter also enclosed a
copy of the application and drew the company's attention to the Board's rules
as to the necessity of the company filing a notice of desire to intervene to
contest or not to contest the application and file a reply there-to. Exhibit B
to Mr. Patterson's affidavit is a copy of the application which was made by the
Local Union for certification as a bargaining agent pursuant to the Labour
[Page 75]
Relations Act of New Brunswick, R.S.N.B. 1952, c.
124, as amended. In answer to No. 4 on the form of application for
certification reading:
Description and location of the bargaining unit which
applicant claims is appropriate for collective bargaining and for which
certification is desired,
the applicant gave the description and location of the
bargaining unit as:
All employees of the employer employed as driver salesmen,
spare driver-salesmen, special delivery drivers and highway drivers and helpers
employed at the Moncton plant of the Employer.
In the application the union stated that the total
number of employees in the unit which it desired to represent was fifteen and
the approximate total number of employees in the work, undertaking, business,
plant or plants involved was seventy-five. The number of employees in the
proposed bargaining unit who were members in good standing of the union was
stated to be twelve or a percentage of eighty per cent. Exhibit C to Mr.
Patterson's affidavit is a copy of the reply of the company to the application.
That reply alleges that the description of the bargaining agent was not
appropriate but in the event of certification any bargaining unit should
include all such employees of the company whether at Moncton or elsewhere and
requested that the Board investigate and rule that the proposed bargaining unit
is not an appropriate unit for collective bargaining. Exhibit D is a copy of
the Board's order, dated June 26, 1959, defining the appropriate bargaining
unit as "all driver-salesmen, spare driver-salesmen, special delivery
drivers, highway drivers and driver helpers employed by Eastern Bakeries
Limited, Moncton, N.B.". Exhibit E is a copy of the Board's order, dated
July 31, 1959, certifying Local No. 76 as the bargaining agent "for all
driver-salesmen, spare driver-salesmen, special delivery drivers, highway
drivers and driver helpers employed by Eastern Bakeries, Limited, Moncton, N.B.".
The above being the material upon which the writ of certiorari
was issued, the Board submitted, as an answer, "the attached return,
being the order for certification; the application for certification, the
affidavit of John C. Tonner as to the proceedings taken before the Board, and
the reasons for the same". Exhibit A to the affidavit of John C.
[Page 76]
Tonner referred to is a copy of the application to the Board
for certification,—already filed on the application for the writ. Mr. Tonner's
affidavit stated that at the hearing part of the proceedings were recorded by a
recording machine and part of the proceedings were unrecorded. Exhibit B to his
affidavit was a copy, certified by him as true, of the minutes of the hearing
whereby it appeared that on that occasion the solicitor for Eastern Bakeries
Limited stressed that the appropriate unit should be "All Driver-Salesmen,
Spare Driver Salesmen, Special Delivery Drivers, Highway Drivers and Driver
Helpers on the payroll of the Moncton, N.B. branch of the
Eastern Bakeries Limited". The minutes also show that the Board directed
that the appropriate unit would be "all employees employed as driver
salesmen, spare driver salesmen, highway drivers and driver helpers employed by
Eastern Bakeries Limited, Moncton branch". Mr. Tonner's affidavit further
stated:
That during the hearing the Board advised Eastern Bakeries
Limited that it considered it had no jurisdiction in other Provinces and for
the purposes of Certification, any person employed and resident outside the Province
of New Brunswick was not an employee within the meaning of the New Brunswick
Labour Relations Act for purposes of the application.
Following the hearing, the Board made an order defining
the bargaining unit and directing a vote to be taken. The company furnished a
list of employees—twenty-two resident and employed in New Brunswick, three
resident and employed in Prince Edward Island, and thirteen resident and
employed in Nova Scotia. Pursuant to the Board's decision that employees
resident in Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia were not employees for the
purposes of the application, Mr. Tonner, as returning officer, ruled that those
persons were not eligible to vote and he conducted a vote by mail. His return
certified that the number of eligible workers was twenty-two; that the number
of votes cast was eighteen and that the number who voted "Yes" was
fourteen and that four voted "No".
The Appeal Division of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick
made absolute the rule and quashed the certification order of the Board. In the
reasons for judgment it is stated that the secretary, as returning officer on
the vote, certified the Local Union as the bargaining agent for "all
driver-salesmen, spare driver-salesmen, special delivery drivers,
[Page 77]
highway drivers and driver helpers employed by Eastern
Bakeries Limited, Moncton, N.B.". The reasons stated that the
"special delivery drivers" classification which had been omitted from
the direction of the Board of June 26, 1959, was included in its order for
certification of July 31, 1959; and later that "the wording used by the
board to define the bargaining unit can be interpreted only as including in it
the non-resident employees ruled ineligible to vote". While in the minutes
of the Board the words "special delivery drivers" are omitted in what
is stated to have been the Board's direction, the order of the Board, dated
June 26, 1959, signed by the secretary and issued as a result of the meeting of
that date, does include them. Subsection (1) of s. 47 of the Labour
Relations Act reads:
Any document purporting to contain or to be a copy of any
rule, decision, direction, consent or order of the Board, and purporting to be
signed by a member of the Board, or the secretary thereof, shall be accepted by
any court as evidence of the rule, decision, direction, consent, order or other
matter therein contained of which it purports to be a copy.
In view of all the material before the Court, it
appears to be clear that the final order for certification of July 31, 1959,
correctly carried out the Board's previous direction as embodied in its order
of June 26, 1959. The Board never intended and never ordered that the
bargaining agent should include non-resident employees.
However, the Appeal Division also decided that in the number
of employees hired at the Moncton branch of the company there should be
included not only those who resided in New Brunswick, but also those who
resided in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. It is stated that the Attorney
General of New Brunswick was named as an intervenant in the New Brunswick Court
but there is nothing to indicate that he was represented before the Appeal
Division. Because of the constitutional problem that might arise he, together
with the Attorney General of Canada and the Attorney General of each of the
other provinces, were notified of the proceedings in this Court but only the
Attorneys General of Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan and Alberta appeared by
counsel. The union had been allowed to intervene and counsel on its behalf filed
a factum and appeared. All of these, except counsel for the Attorney General of
[Page 78]
Quebec, supported the appellant while
the latter supported the position of the respondent in so far as the
constitutional point might be involved.
There is no evidence as to where the hiring of the resident
employees in Nova Scotia or Prince Edward Island occurred, but it does not
advance the case for the respondent if it took place at Moncton. The New
Brunswick Labour Relations Board can have no jurisdiction over persons residing
and working outside that province so as to declare that they are part of the
membership of a unit of the company's employees residing and working in New
Brunswick. The fact of proximity in the present instance does not distinguish
it from the case where employees of a company in Toronto may do work similar to
that of other employees of the same company in the same category residing and
working in Montreal. Such latter employees could not be included by an order of
the Ontario Labour Relations Board under similar legislation in Ontario for the
purpose of declaring a bargaining unit. The decision of this Court in Attorney
General for Ontario v. Scott deals with an entirely different
matter.
The Appeal Division considered that counsel for the Board
should have refrained from involvement in the controversy. In The Labour
Relations Board of Saskatchewan v. Dominion Fire Brick and Clay Products,
Limited, it was held by the majority of
the Court that the Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan had a right to be
heard in Court. In this particular case the Board not only had such a right but
was entitled to make clear exactly what had occurred and as to the position it
took on the question of its jurisdiction.
The appeal should be allowed and the order for certification
of the Board restored. No order as to costs was made by the Appeal Division in
making absolute the order nisi and quashing the certification order; nor
was any order as to costs made when that Court gave leave to the Board to
appeal to this Court. The parties have agreed that there should be no costs of
the appeal to this Court.
[Page 79]
The judgment of Locke, Fauteux, Abbott, Martland, Judson and
Ritchie JJ. was delivered by
Abbott J.:—This
appeal by the Labour Relations Board of New Brunswick is from a decision of the
Supreme Court of New Brunswick rendered February 12, 1960, granting a rule
absolute for a writ of certiorari and quashing an order of the Board
given July 31, 1959, certifying Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, Helpers and
Miscellaneous Workers, Local Union No. 76 (which I shall hereafter refer to as
the union) as bargaining agent for certain employees of Eastern Bakeries Ltd.,
Moncton N.B.
The facts are these: On June 5, 1959, the union made
application under the provisions of the Labour Relations Act of New
Brunswick, R.S.N.B. 1952, c. 124, for certification as a bargaining agent for
all employees of the respondent company employed as driver salesmen, spare
driver salesmen, special delivery drivers, and highway drivers and helpers, at
the Moncton plant of the respondent.
Pursuant to the provisions of the Labour Relations Act, and
rules made thereunder, appellant gave notice of the application for
certification to respondent, and hearing of the application was held on June 26,
1959, at which respondent was represented by one of its officers and by
counsel. Respondent had filed a reply to the application, objecting that the
proposed bargaining unit was not an appropriate unit, and also submitting that
it did not have the requisite number of employees.
In its application for certification as bargaining agent,
the union asked that the bargaining unit contain only persons "employed at
the Moncton plant of the employer". At the hearing before the Board,
respondent endeavoured to have the bargaining unit described to include all
employees "on the payroll of the Moncton plant", but the Board
refused to accept that description.
An affidavit of the secretary of the Board filed in the
present proceedings states that during the hearing the Board advised the
respondent that it considered it had no jurisdiction in other provinces and,
for the purposes of certification, any person employed and resident outside the
Province of New Brunswick was not an employee within the meaning of the New Brunswick
Labour Relations Act, for the purposes of the application.
[Page 80]
The order of the Board, made on the same day as the hearing,
defined the bargaining unit in the following terms:
All Driver-Salesmen, Spare Driver-Salesmen, Special Delivery
Drivers, Highway Drivers and Driver Helpers employed by Eastern Bakeries
Limited, Moncton, N.B.
The order directed that a vote be taken to determine the
wishes of the employees concerned.
In a letter dated July 2nd from the secretary of the Board
to the respondent, with reference to the vote which the Board had directed to
be taken, it was stated:
The N.B. Labour Relations Board has directed that a vote be
conducted in connection with the above-mentioned application. A copy of the
Board's order is enclosed.
This vote will be conducted by mail and those eligible to
vote are all Driver-Salesmen, Spare Driver-Salesmen, Special Delivery Drivers,
Highway Drivers and Driver Helpers. Needless to say the vote will be limited to
employees in the above classification employed in the Province of New
Brunswick.
It will be necessary for you to provide the writer with a
list of such employees, showing their addresses, at your earliest convenience.
Your early attention to this matter will be appreciated.
A copy of the Board's order of June 26 was enclosed with
this letter. In a letter to the respondent's solicitor dated July 10 the
secretary of the Board stated:
As you are aware the Labour Relations Board of New Brunswick
has no authority to certify a bargaining agent for employees in any other
province.
The material before us establishes that at the hearing
the Board made a decision that it had no jurisdiction in other provinces and
that for the purposes of certification a person employed and resident outside
New Brunswick was not an employee for the purposes of the application. That
ruling was made in the presence of representatives of both the respondent and
the union.
Section 55(1) (a) and (f) of the Labour
Relations Act provide as follows:
55. (1) If in any proceeding before the Board a question
arises under this Act as to whether
(a) a person is an
employer or employee;
* * *
(f) a group of employees
is a unit appropriate for collective bargaining;
* * *
the Board shall decide the question and its decision shall
be final and conclusive for all the purposes of this Act.
[Page 81]
There is no doubt that under s. 8(1) of the Act the Board
could determine as a bargaining unit a group of the respondent's employees
comprising those employees employed in New Brunswick at the Moncton plant. That
is what the application of the union sought. That was the kind of group which,
on the basis of its decision at the hearing, the Board had decided to certify.
Respondent furnished appellant with a list of the names and
addresses of employees of its Moncton branch, of whom 22 were resident and
employed in New Brunswick, and 16 outside that province. Pursuant to the terms
of the order, the secretary of the Board acting as returning officer, conducted
a mail vote, but only respondent's employees resident and employed in New
Brunswick were considered by him as eligible to vote. A majority of the
employees to whom ballots were sent, were in favour of the union as bargaining
agent, and on July 31, 1959, the Board made the certification order which is the
subject of the present appeal.
Upon the view (i) that the Board was entitled to include in
a bargaining unit, certified under the Act, persons who reside outside New
Brunswick and (ii) that the terms of the order should be interpreted as
including in it nonresident employees ruled ineligible to vote, and thereby
deprived of an opportunity to express their wishes, the Court below held that
"as the condition precedent to the exercise by the Board of its
jurisdiction did not exist, the certification order was made without authority
and should be quashed".
The respondent operates plants at various points in New
Brunswick and also a plant in Nova Scotia. It would no doubt have been
preferable to include in the formal order the word "at" immediately
before the words "Moncton, N.B.", but it is obvious from the
correspondence between appellant and respondent which is in the record, from
the proceedings before the Board, and from the vote subsequently taken, that
there was no doubt in the mind of the parties but that the Board intended to
limit the application of the order to employees working at respondent's Moncton
plant and, with the utmost respect for the learned judges in the Court below
who reached a different view, in my opinion the order should be so interpreted.
It follows, of
[Page 82]
course, that no constitutional question as to the competence
of the Board to make the order in question can arise here.
Since preparing these reasons, I have had the opportunity of
considering those of the Chief Justice. Had the Board attempted to include in
its order persons working in another province, I share his view that the Board
can have no jurisdiction over such persons.
There was no failure to give an opportunity to be heard, and
therefore no question of jurisdiction can arise on this ground. The Act imposes
no obligation on the Board to adopt any particular method in order to ascertain
the wishes of employees to be included in a proposed bargaining unit. Section
8(1) provides only that the Board "shall take such steps as it deems
appropriate to determine the wishes of the employees in the unit as to the
selection of a bargaining agent to act on their behalf". In my opinion,
there is nothing in the record to establish that the appellant acted in excess
of its jurisdiction or that it declined jurisdiction, and as the order of the
Board was not attacked on any other ground it was not subject to review by the
Courts in proceedings by way of certiorari.
I would allow the appeal and restore the order of the Board.
It was agreed at the hearing before us that there would be no costs on the
appeal to this Court.
Cartwright J.:—I
agree with the reasons of the Chief Justice and with those of my brother Abbott
and would dispose of the appeal as they propose.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitor for the defendant, appellant: Eric L.
Teed, Saint John.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, respondent: Gilbert,
McGlogan & Gillis, Saint John.
Solicitor for Local Union No. 76, Teamsters,
Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, Helpers and Miscellaneous Workers:
Ian P. Mackin, Saint John.