Supreme Court of Canada
Bibeault v. McCaffrey, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 176
Date:1984-04-02
Réal Bibeault, Marc
Brière, Labour Court Appellants;
and
Kenneth McCaffrey Respondent;
and
Amalgamated Food
and Allied Workers, Local P-405
and
N.D.G. Meat Market
Ltd. Mis en cause.
and between
L’Association des
employés de La Laurentienne Appellant;
and
Robert Carrier,
Nicole Allard Respondents;
and
Maurice Vassart
and
La Laurentienne
Compagnie Mutuelle d’Assurance Mis en cause.
and between
Maurice Vassart Appellant;
and
Robert Carrier,
Nicole Allard Respondents;
and
L’Association des
employés de La Laurentienne
and
La Laurentienne
Compagnie Mutuelle d’Assurance Mis en cause.
File Nos.: 16840, 16842 and 16839.
1983: November 1; 1984: April 2.
Present: Dickson, Beetz, Chouinard, Lamer
and Wilson JJ.
[Page 177]
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
QUEBEC
Labour relations—Investigation into
definition of bargaining unit—Employees included in the bargaining unit denied
right to be present and to be heard by labour commissioners—Writ of
evocation—Whether employees interested parties—Code of Civil Procedure,
art. 846—Labour Code, R.S.Q. 1977, c. C-27 (as amended by 1977 (Que.), c.
41), ss. 25, 28, 32, 39, 43, 59, 118, 129, 131; formerly R.S.Q. 1964, c. 141 as
amended, ss. 22, 24a, 24e, 30, 34, 47, 103, 106, 108.
Administrative law—Judicial review—Employees
denied by Labour Court and labour commissioners the right to be heard at the
inquiry regarding the description of the bargaining unit—Appeals brought by two
labour commissioners, the Labour Court, and one of its judges—Locus standi.
These appeals are to determine whether
s. 32 of the Quebec Labour Code recognizes that employees included
in the bargaining unit for which a union is seeking certification have the
status of interested parties at an investigation by the labour commissioner
into the definition of the bargaining units.
In the first case, a labour commissioner
refused to hear respondent McCaffrey or to allow him to examine and
cross-examine witnesses, or even to attend the hearing regarding the
description of the bargaining unit. The Labour Court affirmed the decision of the commissioner and his interpretation of
s. 32, holding that the wording of that section does not give an
employee the status of an interested party or the right to be present. Alleging
an excess of jurisdiction and a failure to observe the audi alteram partem rule,
respondent then took the case to the Superior Court, which authorized a writ of
evocation to be issued against the decision of the commissioner and the Labour Court. The Court of Appeal affirmed
the judgment of the Superior Court. The commissioner, the Labour Court and its judge appealed from
this decision.
In the second case respondents Carrier and
Allard, following the refusal of the labour commissioner to hear them, went
directly to the Superior Court, making the same arguments as above, but the
latter dismissed their application for a writ of evocation. The Court of
Appeal, basing itself on its earlier judgment, reversed the judgment of the Superior
Court and authorized the writ to be issued. The commissioner and the employee
associa-
[Page 178]
tion, in two separate appeals, appealed from
this decision.
Held: The
appeals should be allowed.
An employee is not an interested party in
respect of the description of the bargaining unit for the purposes of the
commissioner’s investigation preceding the granting of certification to an
employee association. According to the principles of administrative law, in the
absence of any provision to the contrary any interested party generally has a
right to present his arguments and to be present at a hearing. By specifying in
s. 32 of the Code in whose presence the investigation of a bargaining unit
should be held—namely, in the presence of the “associations concerned” and of
“the employer”—the legislator indicated his intent to divest the employee of
the status of an interested party. This interpretation is indeed the most
coherent and logical, in light of the legislative context and the general
purport of the Code. This is therefore a case in which the issuance of writs of
evocation should be refused, since the decision of the commissioners and the Labour Court, protected by a privative
clause, was based on an interpretation of s. 32 which was not manifestly
unreasonable. Finally, the Labour Court, its judge and the commissioners were entitled to appeal. The
excess of jurisdiction alleged in the case at bar is of the kind which the
decisions of this Court have recognized as conferring on them the necessary
interest to be appellants.
Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local
963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation, [1979] 2
S.C.R. 227; Service Employees’ International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin
District Staff Nurses Association, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382; Air-Care Ltd. v.
United Steel Workers of America, [1976] 1 S.C.R. 2; Northwestern
Utilities Ltd. v. City of Edmonton, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 684; Canada
Labour Relations Board v. Transair Ltd., [1977] 1 S.C.R. 722; Labour
Relations Board of New Brunswick v. Eastern Bakeries Ltd., [1961] S.C.R.
72; Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan v. Dominion Fire Brick and Clay
Products Ltd., [1947] S.C.R. 336; International Association of
Machinists v. Genaire Ltd. (1958), 18 D.L.R. (2d) 588, referred to.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of
Appeal, [1981] C.A. 406,
affirming a judgment of the Superior Court
authorizing a writ of evocation to be issued. Appeal allowed.
[Page 179]
APPEALS from a judgment of the Quebec Court
of Appeal setting
aside a judgment of the Superior Court, [1981] C.S. 80, refusing to issue a
writ of evocation. Appeals allowed.
Louis Crête, for the appellants Bibeault
and Vassart.
Robert P. Gagnon, for the appellant and mis
en cause L’Association des employés de La Laurentienne.
H. Laddie Schnaiberg, Q.C., for the
respondents McCaffrey, Carrier and Allard.
English version of the judgment of the Court
delivered by
LAMER J.—This case concerns three appeals from
judgments of the Court of Appeal of Quebec, the effect of which was to authorize the issuance of writs of
evocation to the Labour Court
and to one of its judges. Although it relates to two separate cases, the
question raised is the same except for a few minor details.
Following an application for certification made
by an association, a commissioner undertook an investigation in each case into
the representative nature of the union and the definition of the proposed
bargaining units. One or more employees wished to make oral representations at
the investigation, to call witnesses and to cross-examine other parties’
witnesses regarding the definition of the bargaining unit. The commissioner
refused this request, and in one case also prohibited the employee,
Mr. McCaffrey, and his counsel, from attending that part of the
investigation. In both cases under consideration, the commissioners based their
decisions on s. 32 of the Labour Code (for the sake of convenience,
I will use the current numbering), which reads as follows:
32. After an
investigation, the labour commissioner seized of the matter shall decide as to
the representative nature of the petitioning association. He shall also settle,
after an investigation held in the presence of every association concerned and
the employer, any matter relating to the bargaining unit and the persons
contemplated by it.
[Page 180]
Only an employee included in the bargaining
unit, or an interested association of employees shall be deemed an interested
party as regards the representative character of an association of employees.
However, the two cases came to this Court by
different routes.
In Bibeault and Brière v. McCaffrey (hereinafter
called the N.D.G. Meat Market case), respondent McCaffrey, an employee
of N.D.G. Meat Market Ltd., first appealed from this decision to the Labour
Court as provided in s. 118 of the Code.
Judge Brière of the Labour
Court affirmed the decision of commissioner Real
Bibeault certifying the petitioning union and his description of the bargaining
unit, and gave to s. 32 L.C. the same interpretation as that given
by the commissioner.
Relying both on the wording of s. 32 and on
the general purport of the Code, Judge Brière refused to recognize the employee
as an “interested party”, or as having the right to be present, since the Code
does not require the commissioner to hold his investigation in public, as is
the case with the Labour Court. He concluded that the audi alteram partem rule
had not been infringed, as follows:
[TRANSLATION] In any case, contrary to the
allegations of appellant, the commissioner did not thereby infringe the audi
alteram partem rule, since the legislator has not conferred the status of
an interested party in any matter relating to the bargaining unit on an
employee individually, though he may in fact be affected by such a matter, and
this has undoubtedly been done in order to avoid the proliferation of such
interventions and unnecessary complication of the commissioner’s administrative
function in deciding on the appropriate bargaining unit: the participation of
the employer and of any employee association concerned has been held to be
sufficient.
McCaffrey took the case to the Superior Court by
a motion for a writ of evocation, alleging that the commissioner had infringed
the audi alteram partem rule, thereby exceeding his jurisdiction.
McCaffrey further alleged that the commissioner had exceeded his jurisdiction
by his refusal to exercise it, in not ordering that a vote be held
[Page 181]
based on proof of irregularities connected with
the signing of their membership cards by certain members of the unit. (This
argument was not raised in this Court.)
McCaffrey further argued that the Labour Court
and its judge had lost jurisdiction for refusing to exercise it, in not setting
aside the decision of the commissioner on these points, and added that the
Court and the judge had lost jurisdiction by rendering judgment some thirteen
months after the end of the hearing, thereby contravening s. 131 L.C.,
which provides that the judgment must be rendered within fifteen days.
Paradis J. of the Superior Court allowed this
motion as follows:
[TRANSLATION] This provision requires the
commissioner to proceed on matters relating to the bargaining unit in the
presence of any association concerned and of the employer, but does not exclude
anyone else. Manifestly, anyone who has an interest should be heard, and to
proceed disregarding this rule constitutes a serious irregularity and abuse of
power which leads me to conclude that justice was not done.
It may be concluded from this passage in his
reasons that he considered that the investigation should be public and that
McCaffrey and his counsel were entitled to be present at the hearing just as
any other person might be; also, that McCaffrey is an “interested party” in
this part of the commissioner’s investigation, and as such had the right not
only to be present but to be heard as well.
The Court of Appeal of Quebec, [1981] C.A. 406, upheld the decision of Paradis J., relying
essentially on the same reasons, though in a more elaborate form.
In the two appeals Vassart v. Carrier and
Allard and L’Association des employés de La Laurentienne v. Carrier and
Allard, respondents Carrier and Allard, two employees of La Laurentienne,
elected when denied a hearing to go directly to the Superior Court by a motion
for a writ of evocation, without waiting for the rest of the hearing and a
decision on the merits, alleging a violation of the audi alteram partem rule
by commissioner Vassart.
[Page 182]
Gonthier J. of the Superior Court, [1981] C.S.
80, dismissed their motion. Without ruling expressly on the question of whether
an employee is, regarding the definition of a bargaining unit, an “interested
party” within the meaning of s. 32 L.C., Gonthier J. stated that in
his opinion, in any case, only “associations concerned” and “the employer”, and
no others, be they interested parties or not, had a right to be present at this
stage and participate in this aspect of the hearing before the labour
commissioner.
Analysing section 32 L.C., he said
the following (at pp. 81-82):
[TRANSLATION] According to this section, the
labour commissioner must decide two questions, namely the representative nature
of the petitioning association and the bargaining unit. The parties interested
in each of these questions are not the same. The employer is excluded as an
interested party in the representative nature, but included with regard to any
matter relating to the bargaining unit, since the investigation must
necessarily be held in his presence. Any employee association concerned or
interested is specifically included in both cases. An employee included in the
bargaining unit is expressly regarded as an interested party so far as the
representative nature is concerned, but is not mentioned in connection with any
matter relating to the bargaining unit.
The provisions also differ as to the
hearing. No mention of it is made in relation to the representative nature,
undoubtedly because the status of interested party carries with it the right to
be heard in the absence of any provision to the contrary.
No definition is given of interested parties
in respect of the bargaining unit. On the other hand, there is a specific
provision as to the parties who are entitled to be present at the
investigation, that is every association concerned and the employer. The issue
turns on the scope of the latter provision.
In its literal sense, this provision gives
the right to be present to every association concerned and the employer, on any
matter relating to the bargaining unit and the persons contemplated by it. It
does not exclude the presence of other persons, nor does it exclude the
possibility that other persons may be interested, but it does not give them a
right to be present.
Taken in its literal sense, therefore, this
provision contemplates a hearing in which the employer and one or more employee
associations will be represented. This
[Page 183]
is consistent with other provisions of the Labour
Code, in particular:
(1) Section 28(a) provides that if
the certification agent comes to the conclusion that the association has the
representative character required, and if he ascertains that there is agreement
between the employer and the association on the bargaining unit and the persons
contemplated by it, he must certify it immediately, and indicate which group of
employees constitutes the bargaining unit. Under section 28(c), the
same rule applies if the employer refuses his agreement but neglects or refuses
to communicate the reasons for his disagreement within ten days of a request
made to him to that effect by the certification agent. In such circumstances,
the certification takes place without the employees being entitled to
participate.
(2) According to section 28(d),
if there is agreement between the employer and association on the bargaining
unit but not on certain persons contemplated in the petition, the certification
agent must also certify the association immediately for the bargaining unit
applied for regardless of whether the persons in respect of whom there is no
agreement are eventually, by the decision of the labour commissioner, included
in the bargaining unit or excluded. This section specifically provides
that disagreement as to certain persons contemplated shall not have the effect
of preventing the making of a collective agreement.
(3) Section 39 provides another remedy,
this time for any interested party, who may request the labour commissioner to
decide whether a person is an employee or a member of an association, whether
he is included in the bargaining unit and any other matters relating to
certification.
(4) So far as an appeal from a decision of
a labour commissioner is concerned, in the case of the description of a
bargaining unit or the inclusion or exclusion of the persons contemplated by
it, section 129 gives this right only to the employer, the certified
association or any rival petitioning association, thus excluding any other
interested person and excluding employees included in the bargaining unit, who
nonetheless, also under section 129, expressly benefit from a right of
appeal in matters respecting the refusal or granting of certification.
These other provisions undoubtedly do not
determine who are interested parties before a labour commissioner or who is
entitled to be present at his investigation. However, they disclose an intent
by the legislator to limit the participation of employees in the discussion of
a bargaining unit.
[Page 184]
It is true that the second sentence of
section 32 does not state, like the last sentence of that section or
section 129, that only the persons mentioned therein are contemplated.
This suggests that the legislator did not necessarily exclude employees.
However, the undersigned is of the opinion that by expressly conferring the
right to be present on certain employees, he did not intend to confer the same
right on any interested party. This is the literal meaning of the provision, in
accordance with the expressio unius est exclusio alterius rule. This
interpretation is consistent with the intention stated in sections 28 and
129 to limit the participation of other persons in the discussion of a bargaining
unit and the persons included in it, and in the appeal from another remedy
under section 39, which authorizes the making of decisions on
individual rights of employees outside the investigation of a bargaining unit,
and so without delaying it. It is also consistent with the intent of the
legislator to promote the right of association and the certification of
employee associations for the purpose of making collective agreements.
He concludes his judgment as follows (at
p. 83):
[TRANSLATION] The undersigned accordingly
concludes that the labour commissioner was not required to allow petitioners to
participate in the hearing before him regarding matters relating to the
bargaining unit and the persons contemplated by it, and that he is not required
to summon them to such a hearing.
As this is a case of evocation and both the
commissioners and the Labour Court are protected by a privative clause, it was
unnecessary, in order to decide whether they exceeded their jurisdiction and
whether to issue a writ, to find that their interpretation of s. 32 was
the correct one, as Gonthier J. did. It would have been sufficient to conclude
that this interpretation is not patently unreasonable (Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation, [1979] 2
S.C.R. 227; Service Employees’ International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin
District Staff Nurses Association, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382).
The complaint by the employees that the audi
alteram partem rule has been infringed assumes that the law gives them the
status of interested party and that, if so, it has not deprived them of the
characteristics of that status. Such a finding is within the authority of the
commissioners, and the
[Page 185]
latter, as a consequence of the privative
clause, is immune from review by the superior courts unless it is patently
unreasonable.
In my view, the decision of the commissioners
and the Labour Court rests on an interpretation of s. 32 L.C. which
is not patently unreasonable.
In fact, I agree with the conclusion by Gonthier
J. and with his reasons, except in so far as they implicitly give the employee
by implication the status of an interested party to whom the right to be
present has been denied.
The legislative history of s. 32, quite
apart from the question of whether an employee is an interested party, clearly
indicates the intent of the legislator to exclude the employer from the first
part of the investigation and the employee from the second. Until 1969 the Labour
Code was silent regarding “interested parties” or the obligation to conduct
the investigation in anyone’s presence.
At that time s. 28 of the Code read:
28. If after
investigation, the Board considers that the petitioning association represents
the majority of the whole or of a separate group of the employees of the
employer mentioned in the petition, it shall grant certification.
The Board shall render a written decision
accordingly and specify the group which the certified association represents.
A copy of such decision shall be sent to
the employer.
In 1969, the legislator twice amended the
wording, which became successively s. 24b of the Code (1969 (Que.),
c. 47, s. 12) and then s. 24e of the same Code (1969 (Que.),
c. 48, s. 14):
24b. The investigation commissioner shall have all the powers, immunities
and privileges of a commissioner appointed under the Public Inquiry Commission
Act; he shall have in particular the power to summon witnesses, to require the
taking of oaths and administer the same, to compel any person to produce
exhibits or documents in his possession and generally to perform any act
necessary for the pursuit of his investigation.
After making an investigation on the
premises respecting the petitioning association, the investigation
[Page 186]
commissioner shall decide as to its
representative nature. After an investigation held in the presence of the
association and the employer, he shall also settle any dispute relating to the
bargaining unit and the persons contemplated by it.
As soon as he has terminated his
investigation or at the latest within the three following days, the
investigation commissioner shall render his decision either to grant or to
refuse certification, and, should the case arise, shall describe the
appropriate bargaining unit. Such decision shall be rendered in writing and
shall state the reasons therefor. Certified true copies thereof must be sent to
the association and to the employer.
The transcription of the stenographic notes
of the investigation, or of the recording thereof on magnetic tape, the exhibits
or documents produced and the decision of the investigation commissioner shall
constitute the record of the investigation.
24e. After an investigation, the investigation commissioner seized of
the matter shall decide as to the representative nature of the
petitioning association. He shall also settle, after an investigation held in
the presence of every association concerned and the employer, any matter
relating to the bargaining unit and the persons contemplated by it.
Only an employee included in the bargaining
unit, or an interested association of employees shall be deemed an interested
party as regards the representative character of an association of employees.
By enacting s. 24b in 1969, the
legislator for the first time divided the certification procedure in two: the
representative nature and matters relating to the bargaining unit. Equally
important, however, is the fact that for the first time he created an
obligation for the commissioner to proceed “respecting the petitioning
association” or “in the presence” of that association and the employer.
The list of parties to be consulted and to be
present at the two stages of the investigation is an addition to s. 28,
which made provision for no one, and the list was consequently exhaustive. The
fact that the legislator sought a few months later to clearly exclude the
employer and provide for participation by the employee in the first stage of
the investigation, by a text which says this specifically (“only an employee…
“) does not in any way alter the exhaustive nature of the list of persons to
[Page 187]
be present for the second stage of the
investigation, which stayed the same and has done so until the present time.
While I agree with Gonthier J. as to the
exhaustive nature of the list of those to be present at the investigation of a
bargaining unit, I also agree with Judge Brière in saying that the right of an
employee to be present was not provided for because he was not intended to be
an “interested party”. In short, instead of saying that the employee is an
interested party who has been refused the important right of being present, I
would say that the refusal of this important right, in light of the general
purport of the Code and the other rights of which he has been deprived,
reflects the intent of the legislator to divest him of that status.
If employees were interested parties, the
legislator would not have to specify in whose presence the investigation should
be held. According to the principles of administrative law, in the absence of
any provision to the contrary any interested party generally has a right to
present his arguments and to be present at a hearing. It could hardly be
argued, for example, that the commissioner could refuse to receive
representations from employees as to the representative nature of the
association. Nonetheless, section 32 does not specifically state that an
investigation on this question should be held in their presence. The right to
be present and to make representations is implicit in the status of an interested
party.
If the employees were interested parties so far
as the bargaining unit is concerned, s. 32 L.C. would confer on the
commissioner the power to conduct his investigation into this question in the
absence of one of the interested parties, which would be extraordinary to say
the least. Employees, as interested parties, would be required to make their
representations, where or how no one knows, without knowing what the
associations and employers had said to the commissioner.
With respect, I consider that in this regard the
Court of Appeal of Quebec erred
in refusing to read the Act as a whole, and in construing s. 32 in
isolation, without reference to the legislative context. As Professor P.–A.
Côté observes in his book
[Page 188]
Interprétation des lois, 1982, Éditions. Yvon Biais Inc., at p. 256:
[TRANSLATION] …the law, which reflects the
thinking of a rational legislator, is thereby deemed to be based on a
consistent and logical approach and its interpreter must opt for whichever
meaning of the provision confirms the postulate of a rational legislator,
rather than the one which creates inconsistencies, illogicalities or antinomies
in the law… the law is interpreted as a whole, each of its parts being regarded
as fitting logically into the overall system formed by the law.
With reference to the legislative context, let
us consider first s. 28 of the Labour Code. According to that
section, the certification agent is authorized to certify an association once
he ascertains that the bargaining unit is representative and that there is an
agreement between the employer and the association as to the bargaining unit.
It would be somewhat strange, if the employee were an “interested party”, for
the certification agent to be able to disregard his position on definition of
the bargaining unit and proceed with certification without obtaining his
consent, or at least his opinion.
Moreover, how could an interested party have no
right of appeal? If it were held that employees are “interested parties” on the
question of the bargaining unit, the Code would not be consistent, since then
it would in practice confer a right of appeal on this question only on parties
whose presence was required by s. 32 L.C. (cf. s. 129(b)
L.C.). A situation would result in which the Code for no reason
placed certain interested parties in a less advantageous position than others,
which could not be justified.
The only construction capable of placing the
various parties on an equal footing so far as an appeal is concerned requires
that s. 32 L.C. be read as conferring the status of an interested
party as to the bargaining unit only on associations concerned and the
employer, thus excluding employees inter alia.
I am not shaken in my conviction by those who
argue, in support of the status of an interested party for employees, that
s. 25 L.C. requires them to be informed when a petition of
certification is
[Page 189]
filed. First, the fact that employees are not
interested parties so far as the bargaining unit is concerned does not deprive
them of that status in respect of the representative nature of an association:
hence the requirement of notice. Such notice is also necessary to inform
employees of the safeguarding of conditions of employment (s. 59) or, for
example, of the possibility that certification of an existing association may
be annulled (s. 43 L.C.).
Finally, it should be added that s. 39 L.C.
should not be construed so as to avoid the effects of s. 32 L.C.
39. Of its
own motion during its investigation and at any time upon request by an interested
party, the labour commissioner may decide if a person is an employee or a
member of an association, if he is included in the bargaining unit, and any
other matters relating to certification.
In either case, the labour commissioner may
request a certification agent to make an investigation. Such certification
agent shall draw up a report of his findings and send it to the parties. If the
parties accept in writing the report of the certification agent, the
commissioner may decide on the basis of the investigator’s report alone without
having to call the parties for a hearing.
In my opinion an employee is not an interested
party in respect of the description of the bargaining unit for the
purposes of the commissioner’s investigation preceding the granting of
certification to an employee association, whether that investigation is
conducted under s. 32 or s. 39 L.C. This clearly follows from
the fact that an employee has no more right of appeal in respect of a
bargaining unit description following a decision made pursuant to s. 39
than following such a decision pursuant to s. 32 L.C. To decide
otherwise would create confusion and inconsistency in the application of the
Code.
Of course, the foregoing should not be
interpreted as designed to allow one party to obtain the amendment or annulment
of a validly obtained certification by means of s. 39 L.C. I do not
think it is necessary for the purposes of the appeals at bar to decide this
question, or the interest of an
[Page 190]
employee under s. 39 L.C. when certification
has been granted to an employee association.
In conclusion, an employee is not an interested
party in respect of definition of the bargaining unit. The commissioner is not
required to hold his investigation in his presence, although he may do so, or
to allow him to intervene, call or cross-examine witnesses, or make
representations.
Though raised as an argument in the Superior
Court, the tardiness of the Labour Court in deciding in light of s. 131 L.C. was not raised in
this Court. In any case, for the same reasons given in support of the decision
of this Court in Air-Care Ltd. v. United Steel Workers of America, [1976]
1 S.C.R. 2, I consider that this argument should not succeed and justify the
issuing of a writ in the N.D.G. Meat Market case.
In his submission and in the course of the
hearing in this Court, counsel for the respondents challenged the right of the Labour Court, Judge Brière, a member of
that Court, and commissioners Vassart and Bibeault to be appellants. In support
of this argument, which sought to have two of these three appeals quashed, he
relied on the fact that this Court does not recognize tribunals and their
members as having a right to argue on appeal in support of their decisions or
to appeal judgments reversing them, except to defend their jurisdiction; and
that the concept of “jurisdiction” applied by this Court in this area is
limited to powers as such, and does not include such losses of jurisdiction, inter
alia, as result from infringing the principles of natural justice, as
respondents alleged was the case here: a departure from the audi alteram
partem rule (Northwestern Utilities Ltd. v. City of Edmonton, [1979]
1 S.C.R. 684; Canada Labour Relations Board v. Transair Ltd., [1977] 1
S.C.R. 722; Labour Relations Board of New Brunswick v. Eastern Bakeries
Ltd., [1961] S.C.R. 72; Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan v.
Dominion Fire Brick and Clay Products Ltd., [1947] S.C.R. 336; International
Association of Machinists v. Genaire Ltd. (1958), 18 D.L.R. (2d) 588).
[Page 191]
With respect, in my opinion this argument is
incorrect, considering the real question raised by the claims of the employees.
As I mentioned above, suggesting an infringement of the audi alteram partem rule
in the case at bar postulates a patently unreasonable interpretation of
s. 32 L.C. Such an interpretation by the commissioners, the judge
or the Labour Court would in
itself be an excess of jurisdiction of the kind recognized by the above-cited
decisions of this Court as conferring on the employees the necessary interest (locus
standi) to be appellants. In this sense the jurisdiction of
commissioners Vassart and Bibeault, the Labour Court and Judge Brière is at issue. As their jurisdiction is disputed in
this way, they are entitled to appeal in order to defend it.
I would therefore allow the three appeals,
reverse the judgments of the Court of Appeal, dismiss the motion pursuant to
art. 846 C.C.P. submitted to Paradis J., and restore the judgment
of Gonthier J. dismissing the motion submitted to him. Only appellant L’Association
des employés de La Laurentienne will be entitled to its costs, in all
courts.
Appeals allowed.
Solicitors for the appellants Bibeault
and Vassart: Boissonneault, Roy & Poulin, Montreal.
Solicitors for the appellant and mis en
cause L’Association des employés de La Laurentienne: Grondin, Le Bel, Poudrier,
Isabel, Morin & Gagnon, Quebec City.
Solicitors for the respondents McCaffrey,
Carrier and Allard: Schnaiberg & Schnaiberg, Montreal.