SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Francine
Bourdon, Lise Chamberland, Gudrun Deumié,
Yvon
Laprade, Shirley Smith and Michel Tanguay
Appellants
and
Stelco Inc.
Respondent
‑ and ‑
Superintendent
of Financial Services
Intervener
Official English Translation
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella
and Charron JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 39)
|
LeBel J. (McLachlin C.J. and
Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ.
concurring)
|
Appeal heard and
judgment rendered: June 10, 2005
Reasons delivered:
November 10, 2005
______________________________
Boucher v.
Stelco Inc., [2005] 3 S.C.R. 279, 2005 SCC 64
Francine
Bourdon, Lise Chamberland, Gudrun Deumié,
Yvon Laprade,
Shirley Smith and Michel Tanguay Appellants
v.
Stelco Inc. Respondent
and
Superintendent
of Financial Services Intervener
Indexed as:
Boucher v. Stelco Inc.
Neutral
citation: 2005 SCC 64.
File No.:
30299.
Hearing and
Judgment: June 10, 2005.
Reasons
delivered: November 10, 2005.
Present:
McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella
and Charron JJ.
on appeal from
the court of appeal for quebec
Pensions — Pension plans — Partial wind up of pension plan — Wind up
report approved by Ontario’s Superintendent of Financial Services granting
early retirement benefits to plan members employed in Ontario and deferred
pensions to members employed in Quebec — Superintendent’s decision not contested
in Ontario — Quebec members instead bringing action based on employment
contract in Quebec to claim early retirement benefits — Whether Quebec Superior
Court may rule on conclusions sought in action.
Civil procedure — Exception to dismiss action — Res judicata — Issue
estoppel — Partial wind up of pension plan — Wind up report approved by
Ontario’s Superintendent of Financial Services granting early retirement
benefits to plan members employed in Ontario and deferred pensions to members
employed in Quebec — Superintendent’s decision not contested in Ontario —
Quebec members instead bringing action based on employment contract in Quebec
to claim early retirement benefits — Whether action inadmissible in light of
civil law principles relating to res judicata and common law principles
relating to estoppel — Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64, art. 3137.
Private international law — Jurisdiction of Quebec courts — Doctrine
of forum non conveniens — Partial wind up of pension plan — Wind up report approved
by Ontario’s Superintendent of Financial Services granting early retirement
benefits to plan members employed in Ontario and deferred pensions to members
employed in Quebec — Superintendent’s decision not contested in Ontario —
Quebec members instead bringing action based on employment contract in Quebec
to claim early retirement benefits — Whether Superior Court had to decline
jurisdiction based on doctrine of forum non conveniens — Civil Code of Québec,
S.Q. 1991, c. 64, art. 3135.
The respondent, S, set up a single pension plan for all its employees
in Canada, regardless of their place of work. The plan was governed by the laws
of Ontario. In 1990, as part of a reorganization, S closed three plants in
Quebec. Several of the laid-off employees, including the appellants, sought to
obtain pension benefits. Ontario’s Superintendent of Pensions then ordered a
partial wind up of the plan and approved the partial wind up report, which
provided for early retirement benefits for plan members employed in Ontario
only. For the appellants, all of whom were members employed in Quebec, the
report applied Quebec law and the entire amount of the pension was accordingly
deferred until the normal age of retirement. The appellants did not institute
proceedings in Ontario to contest that decision but instead brought an action
in Quebec that was based on contracts of employment. They claimed to be
entitled to early retirement benefits on the basis that the plan was subject to
Ontario law. The trial judge began by recognizing that the Superior Court had
jurisdiction, but dismissed the appellants’ action on the merits, holding that
early retirement benefits were limited to plan members employed in Ontario. The
majority of the Court of Appeal affirmed the trial judge’s decision both on the
issue of jurisdiction and on the merits.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
The appellants’ action is inadmissible. Under the interprovincial
framework agreement on pension plans, which applied to S’s plan, Ontario’s
Superintendent of Financial Services was expressly entitled to exercise all the
powers conferred by the Ontario legislature and to make any necessary decisions
for the administration and wind up of the plan, such as verifying and approving
the benefits payable to each plan member, including those employed in Quebec.
The Superintendent’s decision was not contested in Ontario and is final. In
light of the civil law principles relating to res judicata and the
common law principles relating to estoppel, the appellants cannot contest that
decision indirectly by means of this action. [20] [26-28] [31]
At this stage of the proceedings, from the perspective of Quebec law,
the conditions for applying the principle of res judicata have been met.
The Superintendent had jurisdiction to make the decision, and the three
necessary elements of identical cause, object and parties are present. If it
were heard by a Quebec court, the main debate between the parties would concern
a question that has already been settled by the Superintendent, and the court
could not allow the action without varying or quashing his decision. [32]
Insofar as a decision of an administrative body created by the Ontario
legislature is in issue, in a case within that body’s jurisdiction under
Ontario law, applying the common law rules governing issue estoppel would lead
to the same result. In short, the appellants’ failure to make use of the usual
means of redress, together with the situation in which any other decision would
place S, militates against the court’s exercise of its residual discretion to
decline to apply estoppel. S could find itself in the strange position of
having to comply with the Superintendent’s decision under Ontario law while at
the same time being required to execute a Quebec judgment to the contrary. Such
a result could call into question the benefit calculations for all the retirees
and the measures taken to ensure the plan’s solvency. [33-34]
Finally, even if the Quebec courts had found that it was still legally
possible to contest the Superintendent’s decision, a proper application of the
doctrine of forum non conveniens would have justified them in declining
jurisdiction in the circumstances. An Ontario court would naturally be in a
better position to review the decision of the Ontario body that is responsible
for administering the plan, if only to reduce the risk of conflicting decisions
and to adhere to the principle of administration set out in the memorandum of
reciprocal agreement, especially in that the challenge by the Quebec plan
members could affect the plan as a whole and the rights of the other members.
[36] [38]
Cases Cited
Distinguished: J.J. Newberry Canadian Ltd. v. Régie des
rentes du Québec, [1986] R.J.Q. 1884; referred to: T.S.C.O. of
Canada Ltd. v. Châteauneuf, [1995] R.J.Q. 637; Pierre Moreault Ltée v.
Sauvé, [1997] R.J.Q. 44; Monsanto Canada Inc. v. Ontario (Superintendent
of Financial Services), [2004] 3 S.C.R. 152, 2004 SCC 54; Weber v.
Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929; Nova Scotia (Workers’ Compensation
Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003 SCC 54; Vaughan v. Canada,
[2005] 1 S.C.R. 146, 2005 SCC 11; Rocois Construction Inc. v. Québec Ready
Mix Inc., [1990] 2 R.C.S. 440; Danyluk v. Ainsworth Technologies Inc.,
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 460, 2001 SCC 44; Toronto (City) v. C.U.P.E., Local 79,
[2003] 3 S.C.R. 77, 2003 SCC 63; Quebec (Attorney General) v. Laroche,
[2002] 3 S.C.R. 708, 2002 SCC 72; Spar Aerospace Ltd. v. American Mobile
Satellite Corp., [2002] 4 S.C.R. 205, 2002 SCC 78; GreCon Dimter inc. v.
J.R. Normand inc., [2005] 2 S.C.R. 401, 2005 SCC 46; Lexus Maritime inc.
v. Oppenheim Forfait GmbH, [1998] Q.J. No. 2059 (QL).
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64,
arts. 2848, 3135, 3137, 3149.
Pension Benefits Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.8,
ss. 70(1), (2), (3), (4), 74, 109, 110.
Supplemental Pension Plans Act, R.S.Q., c.
R-15.1, ss. 6, 249, 254.
Authors
Cited
Goldstein, Gérald, et Ethel Groffier. Droit
international privé, t. 1, Théorie générale. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon
Blais, 1998.
Mercer Pension Manual, vol. 1, by William M.
Mercer Limited. Agincourt, Ont.: Carswell, 1988 (loose-leaf updated 2005,
release 4).
Poirier, Johanne. “Les ententes
intergouvernementales et la gouvernance fédérale: aux confins du droit et du
non-droit”, in Jean-François Gaudreault-DesBiens and Fabien Gélinas, eds., The
States and Moods of Federalism: Governance, Identity and Methodology.
Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2005, 441.
Royer, Jean-Claude. La preuve civile, 3e
éd. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2003.
Talpis, Jeffrey A., with the collaboration of
Shelley L. Kath. “If I am from Grand-Mère, Why Am I Being Sued in Texas?”
Responding to Inappropriate Foreign Jurisdiction in Quebec-United States
Crossborder Litigation. Montréal: Thémis, 2001.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Robert C.J.Q. and
Nuss and Morin JJ.A.), [2004] R.J.Q. 807 (sub nom. Bourdon v. Stelco. Inc.),
241 D.L.R. (4th) 266, 39 C.C.P.B. 214, [2004] Q.J. No. 1842 (QL), affirming a
judgment of Durocher J. (2000), 26 C.C.P.B. 20, [2000] Q.J. No. 6735 (QL),
rejecting the appellants’ action. Appeal dismissed.
Claude Tardif, Gaétan Lévesque and Stéphane Forest,
for the appellants.
Chantal Masse, Timothé R. Huot and Rachel Ravary,
for the respondent.
Deborah McPhail, for the intervener.
English version of the judgment of the Court delivered by
LeBel J. —
I. Introduction
1
This appeal concerns an action that was brought against the respondent,
Stelco Inc. (“Stelco”), by the appellants, who are laid-off employees, to claim
early retirement benefits. The issue in the case at bar, which is more than a
question of contract performance, relates to the exercise of jurisdiction by
the Quebec Superior Court in respect of a 1997 decision in which Ontario’s
Superintendent of Pensions approved the partial wind up of Stelco’s pension
plan. At the hearing, I concurred in dismissing the appellants’ action, but for
reasons that differ in part from those of the Quebec Court of Appeal. In my
view, the Superior Court should have declined to rule on the conclusions sought
in this action. Both the inadmissibility of the action — which is contrary to
the civil law principle of res judicata and to the common law principle
of issue estoppel — and the principles of forum non conveniens justify
dismissing a proceeding that is likely to become an impermissible collateral
attack on the Superintendent’s decision.
A. Origin of the Case
2
Stelco, a major manufacturing company, operated commercial and
industrial establishments in several provinces of Canada, including Quebec. In
1940, it set up a single pension plan for all its employees in Canada,
regardless of their place of work. At the time of the events that gave rise to
the case at bar, s. 21 of the plan then in effect stipulated that the plan was
governed by the laws of Ontario. The same section also provided that the
termination or wind up of the plan would be carried out in accordance with
Ontario’s Pension Benefits Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.8:
SECTION
21
Applicable
Law
(a) This Plan shall be construed and
interpreted in accordance with the laws of the Province of Ontario.
(b) In the event of the termination or windup
of the Plan such windup will be carried out in accordance with the provisions
of the Pension Benefits Act of Ontario.
3
After the pension plan came into effect, the provincial legislatures
gradually enacted legislation on supplemental pension plans. These similarly
constructed statutes establish a legal framework for such plans and set up
mechanisms for overseeing their management, ensuring their solvency and, if
need be, overseeing the wind up of a plan. To avoid subjecting interprovincial
plans such as that of Stelco to multiple administrative controls, the
provincial governments of Canada agreed on the importance of reciprocity in
overseeing them. In substance, their memorandums of reciprocal agreement
recognize as a majority “administrator” the regulatory authority of the
province in which the majority of the employees participating in a supplemental
pension plan work. A memorandum of reciprocal agreement entrusts the oversight
of the plan, and decisions on the management and wind up of the plan, to this
regulatory authority.
4
The memorandum of reciprocal agreement that is relevant to this appeal
was signed in 1968 by the Quebec Pension Board (“Régie des rentes du Québec”),
the Pension Commission of Ontario, and Alberta’s Superintendent of Pensions.
Most of the provinces eventually signed it. The memorandum of agreement
stipulates that the major authority exercises its own powers and the powers
that the minor authorities delegate to it with respect to a plan. In the case
of Stelco’s plan, the major authority within the meaning of the memorandum of
reciprocal agreement was the Pension Commission of Ontario; the major authority
is now the Superintendent of Financial Services, who for the last few years has
been exercising the duties of the Superintendent of Pensions. This memorandum
of agreement was still in effect when the problems that ultimately gave rise to
this case began.
5
In 1990, as part of a reorganization of its operations, Stelco decided
to close three plants in Quebec. The closures resulted in the elimination of
jobs. Some of the laid-off employees sought to obtain pension benefits.
Ontario’s Superintendent of Pensions then ordered a partial wind up of the
company’s pension plan in order to determine and guarantee the pension benefits
of the laid-off employees. Stelco contested the partial wind up of the plan and
appealed to the Divisional Court of Ontario ((1994), 115 D.L.R. (4th) 437).
After losing its case in that court and in the Ontario Court of Appeal ((1995),
126 D.L.R. (4th) 767), the employer was denied leave to appeal to this Court.
Consequently, on March 28, 1996, the Superintendent ordered the partial wind up
of the plan, on specified dates, with respect to certain classes of employees
affected by plant closures. The fact that the appellants were members of the
groups of employees affected by that decision is not in issue.
6
Further to that order, an actuarial firm prepared a wind up report,
which the company submitted to the Superintendent of Pensions in January 1997.
According to the appellants’ record, the employees concerned, including the
appellants, each received a personalized statement indicating the pension
benefits they would receive. On January 29, 1997, the Superintendent approved
the partial wind up report, including the description and calculation of the
benefits awarded to each employee.
7
That approval is at the heart of the case. To understand the nature of
the problem, it will be necessary to briefly review the provisions of the
Ontario and Quebec legislation on supplemental pension plans that apply to
early retirement. The appellants, who were employed in facilities in Quebec
when they were laid off, had not yet reached the normal age of retirement under
the laws of either Ontario or Quebec.
8
At that time — and this is still the case today — the legislation of
Quebec and Ontario treated employees pensioned off before the normal age of
retirement quite differently. Under Quebec’s Supplemental Pension Plans Act,
R.S.Q., c. R-15.1, such employees are entitled to benefits that they will not
receive until they reach the normal age of retirement. Ontario’s legislation
provides for the possibility of receiving early retirement benefits in such
cases. Under s. 74 of the Pension Benefits Act, a plan member whose age
plus total years of membership equals at least 55 has the right to receive
early retirement benefits. In other words, when a pension plan to which the
Quebec legislation applies is wound up in whole or in part, the employee’s
benefits will be deferred. Under Ontario’s legislation, if a plan member meets
the 55-year requirement, he or she will receive benefits immediately.
9
The partial wind up report provided for early retirement benefits for
plan members employed in Ontario only. For members employed in Quebec, the
report applied Quebec law and the entire amount of the pension was accordingly
deferred until the normal age of retirement.
10
Although they were notified that they would only receive deferred
pensions, the appellants did not institute proceedings to contest the
Superintendent’s decision to approve the report. All that can be found in the
appellants’ record are some copies of a few exchanges of correspondence with
Stelco’s lawyers, in which these employees expressed their disagreement with
the assessment of their entitlements to benefits. In their view, since Stelco’s
plan provided that it was subject to Ontario law and was to be administered in
that province, they should have received early retirement benefits. Despite
these criticisms, Stelco applied the wind up report as approved by the
Superintendent.
11
In October 1998, the appellants joined forces in an action against
Stelco. In these proceedings, which took the form of an action based on
contracts of employment, they claimed to be entitled to early retirement
benefits on the basis that the plan was subject to Ontario law. Stelco
maintained that only plan members employed in Ontario were entitled to early
retirement benefits, and asked that the suit be dismissed.
B. Judicial History
1. Quebec Superior Court
12
The appellants first lost in the Superior Court: (2000), 26 C.C.P.B. 20.
Durocher J. began by recognizing that the Quebec Superior Court had
jurisdiction over the appellants’ action. He then decided that he had to rule
on the merits, and dismissed their claims. In his view, even though the plan
was subject to Ontario law, the appellants were not entitled to receive early
retirement benefits. Only plan members employed in Ontario were so entitled. To
his mind, Ontario’s Pension Benefits Act itself limited this benefit to
pensioners who had been employed in Ontario. The appellants then appealed to
the Quebec Court of Appeal.
2. Quebec Court of Appeal
13
The Quebec Court of Appeal was divided on the outcome of the appeal:
(2004), 241 D.L.R. (4th) 266. Robert C.J.Q. would have allowed the appeal and
the action. Morin and Nuss JJ.A. agreed, but for different reasons, that the
appeal should be dismissed.
14
According to Robert C.J.Q., the Superior Court had jurisdiction to hear
the appellants’ action. Although it was in fact an action based on contracts of
employment, those contracts had, as is permitted under Quebec private
international law, been made subject to Ontario law. Disagreeing with the
Superior Court, the Chief Justice concluded that a proper interpretation of the
Ontario legislation did not permit the advantage of early retirement benefits
to be limited to plan members employed in Ontario. It was also his view that
such a conclusion was not an impermissible collateral attack on the decision of
Ontario’s Superintendent of Pensions. The Superintendent had granted the
appellants the minimum benefits provided for under Quebec law; he had not
decided that they could not receive fuller benefits under Ontario law.
Moreover, Robert C.J.Q. was of the view that the Quebec Court of Appeal had
held in a previous decision, J.J. Newberry Canadian Ltd. v. Régie des rentes
du Québec, [1986] R.J.Q. 1884, that courts of original general jurisdiction
have jurisdiction to interpret the provisions of a pension plan and a statute
relating to the eligibility of pension plan members for benefits. He would
therefore have found in favour of the appellants in their action.
15
Morin J.A. took a completely different approach to the legal issues in
the appeal and to the consequences of resolving them. He concluded that the
Quebec Superior Court lacked jurisdiction. In his view, the proceedings
amounted to an application for judicial review of, or a disguised appeal from,
the decision of Ontario’s Superintendent of Pensions on the payments owed
following the partial wind up of Stelco’s pension plan. The action, as brought,
could not be allowed without first reversing the Superintendent’s decision. The
issues raised by the appellants should have been raised by way of administrative
appeals to the Pension Commission and actions in the Divisional Court of
Ontario. The applicability of Ontario law to the plan barred the Quebec courts
from exercising jurisdiction. In the alternative, he recognized, as Durocher J.
had, that the Ontario legislation limited early retirement benefits to plan
members employed in Ontario. For these reasons, he concluded that the appeal
should be dismissed. Although Nuss J.A. concurred with Robert C.J.Q. regarding
the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, he nevertheless concluded that the
appeal should be dismissed because he agreed with Morin J.A. that early
retirement benefits were limited to plan members employed in Ontario. The case
was then brought before this Court.
II. Analysis
A. Identification of the Issues
16
The outcome of this appeal depends on an accurate identification of the
decisive legal issues in the case. The hearing before this Court was largely
devoted to a debate on the definition and characterization of the issues in dispute.
Far more than questions of contract law or private international law, the case
raises, first and foremost, issues of procedure, administrative law, and
judicial review. It should be noted here that the parties have not raised the
question of the application of a collective agreement or the exercise of a
concurrent arbitral jurisdiction in relation to the rights in issue and the
individuals claiming them.
17
According to the appellants, the determinative issues in this appeal
relate primarily to the law of contracts and to the application of the rules
governing the conflict of laws. They submit that their action, which is based
on contracts of employment and in which they claim a right to the benefits
provided for in those contracts, is within the jurisdiction of the Quebec
courts. The pension plan incorporated into the contracts of employment is
subject to the laws of Ontario as the result of a choice which is valid under
the rules of Quebec private international law. Under Ontario law, the
appellants have the exact same benefits as plan members employed in Ontario.
The appellants argue that the decision of Ontario’s Superintendent of Pensions
regarding the benefits payable upon winding up the plan is not binding on the
Quebec courts, which may themselves rule on the proper interpretation of
Ontario law. On this issue, the appellants cite the reasons of Robert C.J.Q.
and the decision in Newberry.
18
Stelco contests, first, the contention that the benefits claimed under
the plan and under Ontario law are payable. It contends that there is nothing
in the plan indicating an intention to grant identical benefits to all members
without regard for their place of employment. It also submits that the relevant
statutory provisions limit early retirement benefits to Ontario plan members.
In addition, after discussing the powers of interpretation of the Régie des
rentes du Québec and its counterpart administrative bodies in Ontario, Stelco
contends that, at any rate, the Superior Court should have declined
jurisdiction. The appellants are challenging final decisions regarding the
administration and wind up of the pension plan that were made by the competent
administrative authorities even though they have not availed themselves of the
administrative appeals or legal proceedings that are available in such cases.
19
Despite all the attempts to sidestep it, the question of the nature and
effect of the Superintendent’s decision remains the central issue in this
appeal. It must be resolved before a ruling can be made on either the
admissibility of the appellant’s action or the attitude the Quebec courts
should adopt toward the exercise of their jurisdiction. A decision on this
issue that is contrary to the appellants’ submissions would imply that the
Quebec courts must decline jurisdiction. Indeed, the appellants’ action would
become inadmissible. There is thus no need to consider the merits of the
parties’ arguments concerning the interpretation of the Ontario legislation. I
will therefore focus my analysis on this issues of admissibility and
jurisdiction.
B. The Interprovincial Agreement on the
Administration of Pension Plans
20
When analysing the issues raised by the appellants’ action, we must bear
in mind the importance of the agreement entered into by most of the provinces
regarding the administration of supplemental pension plans. The proceeding in
the instant case relates to an important aspect of Canadian federalism, namely
the intergovernmental agreements designed to ensure that the provinces
cooperate with each other in exercising their legislative powers so as to
permit people to move and trade to flow freely within the Canadian political
space (see J. Poirier, “Les ententes intergouvernementales et la gouvernance
fédérale: aux confins du droit et du non-droit”, in J.-F. Gaudreault-DesBiens
and F. Gélinas, eds., The States and Moods of Federalism (2005), 441).
The framework agreement on pension plans is one such agreement. Recognizing
that the same companies maintain a presence in multiple provinces, this
agreement organizes the exercise of provincial powers in this area by endorsing
reciprocal delegations of administrative functions. The appellants’ action thus
tends toward reducing the effectiveness of these administrative mechanisms and
compromising their application. Under this framework agreement, the competent
authorities in Ontario were given responsibility for overseeing the
administration of Stelco’s pension plan. When confronted with the problem of
partially winding up this plan, they made decisions that included a
determination and calculation of plan members’ benefits. In conducting a legal
analysis of the situation, these decisions cannot simply be disregarded. They
are a reality. The appellants have never contested them in Ontario. Can they
now do so indirectly by means of this action? Bearing in mind the importance of
these decisions, I will now analyse the nature and legal framework of Stelco’s
pension plan.
C. The Nature and Legislative Framework of
Stelco’s Pension Plan
21
Quebec law treats pension plans such as Stelco’s as contracts. Section 6
of the Supplemental Pension Plans Act states this explicitly:
6. A pension plan is a contract under which retirement
benefits are provided to the member, under given conditions and at a given age,
the funding of which is ensured by contributions payable either by the employer
only, or by both the employer and the member.
Every pension plan, with the exception of insured
plans, shall have a pension fund into which, in particular, contributions and
the income derived therefrom are paid. The pension fund shall constitute a
trust patrimony appropriated mainly to the payment of the refunds and pension
benefits to which the members and beneficiaries are entitled.
(See also T.S.C.O. of Canada Ltd. v. Châteauneuf, [1995] R.J.Q.
637 (C.A.), at pp. 675, 704 and 706; Pierre Moreault Ltée v. Sauvé,
[1997] R.J.Q. 44 (C.A.), at pp. 46-47.)
22
Stelco’s pension plan is part of the contracts of employment between the
company and its employees or of their employer-employee relationship. The
appellants’ action must therefore be regarded as being based on a contract of
employment within the meaning of art. 3149 of the Civil Code of Québec,
S.Q. 1991, c. 64 (“C.C.Q.”). Since this question was not argued, I need
not consider the validity of this characterization in the law of the other
provinces or the scope of its application with regard to the plan as a whole.
23
As I mentioned above, this plan applied from its inception to employees
working in a number of provinces. Like all plans of the same nature, Stelco’s
plan gradually became subject to restrictive statutory and regulatory
frameworks, such as those established by Quebec’s Supplemental Pension Plans
Act and Ontario’s Pension Benefits Act (see Monsanto Canada Inc.
v. Ontario (Superintendent of Financial Services), [2004] 3 S.C.R. 152,
2004 SCC 54, at paras. 13-14, per Deschamps J.; The Mercer Pension
Manual (loose-leaf), vol. 1, at pp. 1-6 and 1-7).
24
In short, these statutory and regulatory schemes are intended primarily
to ensure the continued solvency of the plans so that their members will
receive the anticipated benefits when they retire. The schemes also ensure that
special care is taken to review any amendments to a plan as well as the terms
and conditions of the wind up of a plan. I need not discuss the complex
reporting and approval mechanisms set up for this purpose or the scope of the
powers of intervention — which can go as far as placing plans under trusteeship
— of the public bodies responsible for overseeing supplemental pension plans.
Using a variety of means, the administrative authorities responsible for
overseeing supplemental pension plans exercise similar functions.
25
The similarity of these oversight mechanisms, like the need for
effective oversight of supplemental pension plans, doubtlessly facilitated the
signing by the provinces of Canada of the memorandum of reciprocal agreement in
issue. The parties to the memorandum of agreement have agreed to give the
“major” authority full powers of oversight over an interprovincial pension
plan. Section 2 affirms the contracting parties’ intent to delegate extensive
oversight and decision-making powers to the major authority:
The major authority for each plan shall exercise both its own statutory
functions and powers and the statutory functions and powers of each minor
authority for such plan.
D. The Scope of the Powers of Ontario’s
Superintendent of Financial Services
26
The delegation mentioned above, which applied to Stelco’s pension plan,
accordingly conferred on Ontario’s Superintendent of Financial Services the
authority to make any necessary decisions for the administration and wind up of
the plan. The memorandum of agreement expressly granted him the right to
exercise all the powers conferred by the Ontario legislature. On this point, it
should be noted that s. 249 of the Supplemental Pension Plans Act
authorizes such agreements. Moreover, the validity of the delegations of
authority resulting from the Memorandum of Reciprocal Agreement has never been
contested. It is therefore necessary to refer to the Ontario legislation to
determine the scope of the powers delegated to the Superintendent in the
context of the partial wind up of Stelco’s plan.
27
In this regard, Ontario’s Pension Benefits Act is clear. It gives
the Superintendent the authority to verify and approve the benefits payable to
each plan member. On the one hand, s. 70(1) of the Act requires the plan
administrator to submit to the Superintendent a wind up report that sets out, inter
alia, the benefits payable to the plan members:
70.—(1) The administrator of a
pension plan that is to be wound up in whole or in part shall file a wind up
report that sets out,
(a) the assets and liabilities of the
pension plan;
(b) the benefits to be provided under the
pension plan to members, former members and other persons;
(c) the methods of allocating and
distributing the assets of the pension plan and determining the priorities for
payment of benefits; and
(d) such other information as is prescribed.
On the other
hand, s. 70(2) prohibits any payment being made out of the pension fund before
the Superintendent approves the wind up report, except for the continuation of
pension benefit payments that commenced before the wind up:
(2) No payment shall be made out of the
pension fund in respect of which notice of proposal to wind up has been given
until the Superintendent has approved the wind up report.
(3) Subsection (2) does not apply to prevent
continuation of payment of a pension or any other benefit the payment of which
commenced before the giving of the notice of proposal to wind up the pension
plan or to prevent any other payment that is prescribed or that is approved by
the Superintendent.
The corollary
to this rule can be found in s. 70(4), which prohibits the administrator of a
pension plan from making payments that have not been authorized by the
Superintendent:
(4) An administrator shall not make payment
out of the pension fund except in accordance with the wind up report approved
by the Superintendent.
Any plan
administrator who makes a payment in violation of these provisions is liable to
penal sanctions under ss. 109 and 110 of the Act.
28
The existence of these statutory rules applicable to the administration
and wind up of the plan disposes of the arguments the appellants have drawn
from the 1986 decision in Newberry. In that case, the Court of Appeal
held that the Régie des rentes du Québec did not have the authority to
intervene in the parties’ contractual relationship and that legal debate in
this respect was a matter for the civil courts (p. 1894). Based on that
decision, the appellants submit that the Superintendent could not rule on the
application of s. 74 of Ontario’s Pension Benefits Act. With respect,
the statutory provisions cited above expressly confer such authority, the
exercise of which is binding on the pension plan administrator. By virtue of a
delegation of authority that has never been contested or revoked, these
provisions applied to plan members employed in Quebec.
29
It should also be noted that the decision in Newberry was based
on a narrow view of the interpretative powers of administrative tribunals and
bodies from which this Court has since clearly distanced itself. It will
suffice to mention a few recent decisions, all of which recognize the need for
an expansive and flexible interpretation of these interpretative and
decision-making powers: Weber v. Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929; Nova
Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003
SCC 54; Vaughan v. Canada, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 146, 2005 SCC 11. From this
perspective, a consideration of the precedential value of Newberry
requires some circumspection, if the decision does in fact continue to be
relevant. I see no need to analyse this question any further. This appeal does
not concern the review of a situation governed by Quebec law. Nor does it
concern either the interpretation of the provisions setting out procedures for
submitting administrative questions relating to the application of Quebec’s Supplemental
Pension Plans Act (s. 254) to the civil courts or a review of the mechanics
and scope of appeals against, or judicial review of, decisions relating to the
application of that Act.
30
The instant case concerns a decision of the Superintendent of Pensions,
who, pursuant to powers clearly delegated to him in the memorandum of
reciprocal agreement, denied early retirement benefits to plan members employed
in Quebec. As the Superintendent of Financial Services pointed out in his
argument, it was necessary to consider the situations of all plan members when
calculating the benefits owed to each one of them, and to assess the impact of
paying those benefits on the financial stability of the plan and the protection
of the benefits to be paid. The approval of the wind up report left the
employer no choice. Under the Act, it could not even pay benefits other than in
accordance with the Superintendent’s decision. Serious difficulties accordingly
arose in relation to the effect of the decision on the legal proceedings
instituted by the appellants in Quebec. These difficulties concerned, first,
the very admissibility of the action in light of the principles relating to res
judicata in civil law and issue estoppel at common law, and the principles
of public law applicable to the role of the courts. The principles in question
discourage collateral attacks on judicial or quasi-judicial decisions in order
to preserve the finality of the decisions. In the alternative, a proper
application of the principle of forum non conveniens, under art. 3135 C.C.Q.,
would at any rate have led the Quebec Superior Court to decline jurisdiction.
E. The Finality of the Decision of Ontario’s
Superintendent of Pensions and the Admissibility of the Appellants’ Action
31
As I mentioned above, I do not question the Quebec Superior Court’s
jurisdiction to hear an action in which benefits are claimed under a contract
of employment in the absence of any debate regarding the existence and exercise
of an arbitral jurisdiction under the relevant labour legislation. However, the
action must be admissible in law. The right to retirement benefits claimed by
the appellants exists only if the payment of early retirement benefits is
authorized by the Superintendent. The action against Stelco has no legal basis
except insofar as the employer is authorized and required to pay the benefits
claimed. The employer may not pay them unless such payment is authorized by the
Superintendent’s decision approving the wind up report. In the absence of such
an authorization, the debt claimed from the employer does not exist. The early
retirement benefits cannot be claimed if the Superintendent’s decision still
applies. The problem cannot be circumvented by presuming that it does not
exist. I repeat that no appeal or judicial review proceedings have been
instituted in Ontario. In order to consider the merits of the appellants’
action, the Quebec courts would now have to treat the decision as if it were
already non-existent or invalid, or quash it themselves.
32
At this stage of the proceedings, from the perspective of Quebec law,
the problem is one of res judicata. The three necessary elements of
identical cause, object and parties are present. The conditions for applying
this principle pursuant to art. 2848 C.C.Q. and the case law have been
met (see Rocois Construction Inc. v. Québec Ready Mix Inc., [1990] 2
S.C.R. 440). The Superintendent had jurisdiction to make the decision. The
Quebec action implicitly requires a review of the question of the right to
pension benefits, on which the Superintendent has already ruled. Moreover, the
appellants were parties to the process before the Superintendent. The content
of the wind up report and the benefit calculations were sent to them, and it
was open to them to raise any objections they might have had. Lastly, the
principle of res judicata applies not only to the decisions of courts,
but also to the decisions of administrative tribunals and bodies (see J.-C.
Royer, La preuve civile (3rd ed. 2003), at pp. 567-68). In the instant
case, the main debate between the parties thus concerns a question that was
already settled by the Superintendent, since the action cannot succeed unless
his decision is varied or quashed. In this context, the principle of res
judicata, which is in fact codified for the purposes of Quebec private
international law in art. 3137 C.C.Q., bars the suit even if Quebec law
applies to this aspect of the case.
33
Insofar as a decision of an administrative body created by the Ontario
legislature is in issue, in a case within that body’s jurisdiction under
Ontario law, the common law rules governing issue estoppel lead to the same
result regarding the admissibility of the action. This Court recently
considered the conditions for this type of estoppel in Danyluk v. Ainsworth
Technologies Inc., [2001] 2 S.C.R. 460, 2001 SCC 44, and Toronto (City)
v. C.U.P.E., Local 79, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 77, 2003 SCC 63. In City of
Toronto, Arbour J., citing the reasons of Binnie J. in Danyluk, set
out three preconditions for issue estoppel:
Issue estoppel is a branch of res judicata
(the other branch being cause of action estoppel), which precludes the
relitigation of issues previously decided in court in another proceeding. For
issue estoppel to be successfully invoked, three preconditions must be met: (1)
the issue must be the same as the one decided in the prior decision; (2) the
prior judicial decision must have been final; and (3) the parties to both
proceedings must be the same, or their privies (Danyluk v. Ainsworth
Technologies Inc., [2001] 2 S.C.R. 460, 2001 SCC 44, at para. 25, per Binnie
J.). [Emphasis in original; para. 23.]
34
These three preconditions are met in the case at bar. The issue, that
is, the principal object of the case, is the same as the one decided by the
Superintendent. The parties were also involved in the approval procedure for
the partial wind up. And the decision that was rendered is final in nature.
Also, in my view, the facts of the instant case would not justify the courts in
exercising their residual discretion to decline to apply estoppel. Not only the
appellants’ failure to make use of the usual means of redress — appeal or
judicial review — but also the situation in which any other decision would
place the respondent, militates against this. Stelco could find itself in the
strange position of having to comply with the Superintendent’s decision under
Ontario law while at the same time being required to execute a Quebec judgment
to the contrary, at least with regard to former plan members from Quebec. As
the intervener points out, such a result could call into question the benefit
calculations for all the retirees and the measures taken to ensure the plan’s
solvency.
35
The situation in which the respondent could find itself if the
principles of res judicata or issue estoppel were not applied
illustrates the danger of a collateral attack and of the failure to avail
oneself in a timely manner of the recourses against decisions of administrative
bodies or courts of law that are available in the Canadian legal system. The
stability and finality of judgments are fundamental objectives and are
requisite conditions for ensuring that judicial action is effective and that
effect is given to the rights of interested parties. Modern adjective law and
administrative law have gradually established various appeal mechanisms and
sophisticated judicial review procedures, so as to reduce the chance of errors
or injustice. Even so, the parties must avail themselves of those options
properly and in a timely manner. Should they fail to do so, the case law does
not in most situations allow collateral attacks on final decisions (City of
Toronto, at paras. 33-34), which Arbour J. likened to a form of abuse of
process (para. 34) (see also: Quebec (Attorney General) v. Laroche,
[2002] 3 S.C.R. 708, 2002 SCC 72, at paras. 73-76). In the case at bar, the
type of action brought by the appellants necessarily entailed an impermissible
collateral attack on the Superintendent’s decision, as can be seen from the
analysis regarding res judicata. Consequently, the action was
inadmissible.
F. Forum Non Conveniens
36
In the alternative, if, in the circumstances of the instant case, the
Quebec courts had found that it was still legally possible to contest the
Superintendent’s decision, a proper application of the doctrine of forum non
conveniens would have justified them in declining jurisdiction. As we know,
after a period of uncertainty and debate, the civil law of Quebec recognized
the existence and applicability of this doctrine in the implementation of its
conflict of laws rules (G. Goldstein and E. Groffier, Droit international
privé, vol. I, Théorie générale (1998), at pp. 308-12). Moreover,
the Quebec legislature expressly accepted the doctrine by codifying it in art. 3135
C.C.Q.:
3135. Even though a Québec authority has
jurisdiction to hear a dispute, it may exceptionally and on an application by a
party, decline jurisdiction if it considers that the authorities of another
country are in a better position to decide.
37
The doctrine of forum non conveniens confers on the court a
supplementary power to decline to exercise a jurisdiction that is otherwise
granted to it by one of the conflict of laws rules provided for in the
C.C.Q. The law attaches an exceptional character to this power, although
the exercise of the power is not regarded as unusual (Spar Aerospace Ltd. v.
American Mobile Satellite Corp., [2002] 4 S.C.R. 205, 2002 SCC 78, at
paras. 77 and 81; GreCon Dimter inc. v. J.R. Normand inc., [2005] 2
S.C.R. 401, 2005 SCC 46, at para. 33). Furthermore, the judge may exercise it
only at the request of a party, and not on his or her own initiative. The
application of this doctrine requires a review of various, and variable,
criteria. On the basis of the Quebec Court of Appeal’s decision in Lexus
Maritime inc. v. Oppenheim Forfait GmbH, [1998] Q.J. No. 2059 (QL), at
para. 18, Professor J. A. Talpis enumerated the most important factors as
follows:
The criteria most commonly used in the Quebec
jurisprudence on forum non conveniens include: 1) the residence and
domicile of the parties, 2) the location of the natural forum, 3) the location
of the evidence, 4) the place of residence of the witnesses, 5) the location of
the alleged conduct and transaction, including the place of formation and
execution of the contract, 6) the existence of an action pending in another
jurisdiction between the same parties (in an imperfect lis pendens
situation) and the stage of such proceeding, 7) the law applicable to the
dispute, 8) the ability to join all parties, 9) the need for enforcement in the
alternative court, 10) the juridical advantages for the plaintiff, and 11) the
interests of justice. As the Quebec Court of Appeal observes in Oppenheim
Forfait G.M.B.H. v. Lexus Maritime inc., these and other less
frequently used criteria, have evolved from the jurisprudence in Quebec as well
as in the common law jurisdictions. [Footnotes omitted.]
(J. A. Talpis, “If I am from Grand-Mère, Why Am I Being Sued in
Texas?” Responding to Inappropriate Foreign Jurisdiction in
Quebec-United States Crossborder Litigation (2001), at pp. 44-45; see also Spar
Aerospace, at para. 71.)
38
In this appeal, the application of the most relevant factors would have
led a Quebec court to recognize that an Ontario court would be in a better
position to hear the action. Indeed, the principal object of the case is the
judicial review of the decision of an Ontario administrative body that has been
delegated the authority to administer the pension plan even with regard to plan
members in Quebec. The natural forum for reviewing this body’s decisions would
appear to be an Ontario court, if only to reduce the risk of conflicting
decisions and to adhere to the principle of administration set out in the memorandum
of reciprocal agreement. This conclusion is all the more compelling in that the
challenge by the Quebec plan members could affect the plan as a whole and the
rights of the other members.
III. Conclusion
39
Since the action as brought is inadmissible, there is no need to
consider the other issues raised by the parties. Consequently, for the reasons
set out above, I concurred with my colleagues that the appeal should be
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Rivest Schmidt, Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondent: McCarthy Tétrault, Montréal.
Solicitor for the intervener: Ministry of the Attorney General,
Toronto.