Quebec
(Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse) v.
Quebec (Attorney General), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 185, 2004 SCC 39
Commission
des droits de la personne et des
droits de
la jeunesse, acting on behalf of
Normand
Morin, Jocelyne Fortin, Chantal Douesnard,
Josée
Thomassin, Claude Dufour et al. Appellant
v.
Attorney
General of Quebec, Centrale
de
l’enseignement du Québec, now
Centrale
des syndicats du Québec, and
Fédération
des syndicats de l’enseignement Respondents
and
Canadian
Human Rights Commission,
Ontario
Human Rights Commission,
Quebec
Human Rights Tribunal, Confédération
des
syndicats nationaux, Fédération des travailleurs
et
travailleuses du Québec and Canadian Union of
Public
Employees Interveners
Indexed
as: Quebec (Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse)
v. Quebec (Attorney General)
Neutral
citation: 2004 SCC 39.
File No.:
29188.
2003:
October 14; 2004: June 11.
Present:
McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and Fish JJ.
on appeal from
the court of appeal for quebec
Labour law — Grievance arbitrator — Jurisdiction — Labour dispute
raising human rights issue — Discriminatory clause included in collective
agreement — Whether Human Rights Tribunal barred from hearing complaint —
Whether labour arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction over dispute.
Civil rights — Human rights tribunal — Jurisdiction — Labour
dispute raising human rights issue — Discriminatory clause in collective
agreement — Whether Human Rights Tribunal barred from hearing complaint —
Whether labour arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction over dispute.
The teachers’ unions entered into a modification of a collective
agreement with the Province, which affected a minority group composed primarily
of younger and less experienced teachers. The younger teachers complained to
the Quebec Human Rights Commission that the agreement discriminated against
them, treating them less favourably than older teachers and violating the
equality guarantee of the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms.
The Commission brought the matter before the Human Rights Tribunal. The
respondents filed a motion asking the Tribunal to decline jurisdiction on the
ground that the labour arbitrator possessed exclusive jurisdiction over the
dispute. The Tribunal rejected the motion but the Quebec Court of Appeal
reversed the decision.
Held (Bastarache and Arbour JJ. dissenting): The appeal should
be allowed. The Human Rights Tribunal has jurisdiction over the dispute.
Per McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major, Binnie and Fish JJ.: Weber
does not stand for the proposition that labour arbitrators always have
exclusive jurisdiction in employer-union disputes. Depending on the
legislation and the nature of the dispute, other tribunals may possess
overlapping jurisdiction, concurrent jurisdiction, or themselves be endowed
with exclusive jurisdiction. The question in each case is whether the relevant
legislation applied to the dispute at issue, taken in its full factual context,
establishes that the labour arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction over the
dispute. The first step is to look at the relevant legislation and what it
says about the arbitrator’s jurisdiction. The second step is to look at the
nature of the dispute, and see whether the legislation suggests it falls
exclusively to the arbitrator.
Here, this is not a matter over which the arbitrator had exclusive
jurisdiction. While s. 100 of the Quebec Labour Code gave
jurisdiction over matters arising out of the collective agreement’s operation
to the arbitrator, the main fact that animates the dispute between the parties
is that those responsible for negotiations agreed to a term in the collective
agreement that treats the complainants and members of their group less
favourably than more senior teachers. The dispute, viewed not formalistically
but in its essential nature, thus engages matters which pertain more to alleged
discrimination in the formation and validity of the agreement, than to its
“interpretation and application”, which is the source of the arbitrator’s
jurisdiction under the Labour Code. The Human Rights Tribunal was
entitled to exercise its jurisdiction over the matter under the governing
legislation since it was satisfied that the complainants had not, on the basis
of the same facts, personally pursued one of the remedies provided for in
ss. 49 and 80 of the Charter, avoiding duplication.
Further, the complainants cannot be faulted for not asking the unions
to file a grievance on their behalf. First, the nature of the question does
not lend itself to characterization as a grievance under the collective
agreement, since the claim is not that the agreement has been violated, but
that it is itself discriminatory. Second, the unions were, on the face of it,
opposed in interest to the complainants, being affiliated with one of the negotiating
groups that made the allegedly discriminatory agreement. If the unions chose
not to file a grievance before the arbitrator, the teachers could be left with
no legal recourse. Third, even if the unions had filed a grievance on behalf
of the complainants, the arbitrator would not have jurisdiction over all of the
parties to the dispute. Finally, because the complainants’ general challenge
to the validity of a provision in the collective agreement affected hundreds of
teachers, the Human Rights Tribunal was a “better fit” for the dispute than the
appointment of a single arbitrator to deal with a single grievance within the
statutory framework of the Labour Code.
Per Bastarache and Arbour JJ. (dissenting): Arbitrators have
exclusive jurisdiction over issues arising from the interpretation,
application, administration or violation of a collective agreement. This
exclusive jurisdiction is consistent with the legislature’s intention that is
apparent from s. 100 of the Labour Code, with the principle of
exclusive arbitral jurisdiction that characterizes Canadian labour relations
schemes and with the recent case law. According to this model, two factors
must be considered when making the determination of the appropriate forum: the
essential character of the dispute in its factual context and the ambit of the
collective agreement.
Here, the Human Rights Tribunal did not have jurisdiction ratione
materiae to hear the dispute. A legal characterization of the cause of
action in this dispute, which would cast the dispute as being over the unlawful
interference with the right to equality, ignores the factual context and the
provisions of the collective agreement. An examination of this context shows
that the dispute, in its essential character, concerns pay and the taking into
account of experience gained during the 1996‑1997 school year for the
purpose of setting pay. Such issues form the very foundation of the contract
and working conditions and are clearly within the scope of the collective
agreement and the exclusive jurisdiction of the arbitrator. The negotiation of
clauses in a collective agreement and the resulting agreements are closely
linked to the application of the collective agreement of which they are a
part. The negotiation of an accord at the provincial level, subsequently
accepted by the teachers’ unions, does not constitute an independent ground for
a grievance outside the collective agreement, and we cannot separate them for
the purpose of determining the essential character of the dispute. Moreover,
since the accord constitutes in law a collective agreement, conflicts over its
interpretation or application will give rise to grievances that may, if
necessary, be put to arbitration.
The fact that the Tribunal has greater expertise than arbitrators with
respect to human rights violations is an insufficient basis on which to
conclude that arbitrators should not have the power to uphold fundamental
rights. The human rights issue is not incidental to a collective agreement.
The substantive rights and obligations provided for under human rights
legislation are not only implicitly incorporated into every collective
agreement, but also, in this case, expressly incorporated into the agreement.
Moreover, even if the problem in this case could be characterized exclusively
as a human rights violation, it would still be subject to the arbitrator’s
exclusive jurisdiction, as the arbitrator has jurisdiction over any issue that
is expressly or inferentially linked or related to the collective agreement.
Arbitrators have the authority to remedy Charter violations because
their enabling legislation authorizes them to render decisions in this regard.
Arbitrators have been delegated this authority in order to advance the fundamental
objective of this delegation, namely the prompt, final and binding resolution
of workplace disputes. This is also consistent with the legislative intent,
because the Quebec legislature has given its Human Rights Tribunal non‑exclusive
jurisdiction and stipulated that administrative bodies that do not specialize
in human rights would nevertheless have a duty to ensure that their decisions
protect human rights. Finally, referring such disputes to an arbitrator is the
logical choice. Reaching a collective agreement, with the intention of
amending it through negotiations, raises a multitude of issues that an
arbitrator is by far in the best position to handle on an informed basis.
Cases Cited
By McLachlin C.J.
Applied: Weber v. Ontario Hydro, [1995]
2 S.C.R. 929; referred to: Goudie v. Ottawa (City),
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 141, 2003 SCC 14; Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employees Canadian Pacific System Federation v. Canadian
Pacific Ltd., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 495; Regina Police Assn. Inc. v.
Regina (City) Board of Police Commissioners, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 360,
2000 SCC 14; Wainwright v. Vancouver Shipyards Co. (1987), 38 D.L.R.
(4th) 760; Johnston v. Dresser Industries Canada Ltd. (1990), 75 O.R.
(2d) 609; Parry Sound (District) Social Services Administration Board v.
O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 157,
2003 SCC 42; Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd. v. Ontario (Human
Rights Commission) (2001), 209 D.L.R. (4th) 465, leave to appeal
refused, [2002] 3 S.C.R. x.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting)
Weber v. Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929; New Brunswick v.
O’Leary, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 967; Regina Police Assn. Inc. v. Regina (City)
Board of Police Commissioners, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 360, 2000 SCC 14; Allen
v. Alberta, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 128, 2003 SCC 13; St. Anne Nackawic Pulp
& Paper Co. v. Canadian Paper Workers Union, Local 219, [1986] 1 S.C.R.
704; Gendron v. Supply and Services Union of the Public Service Alliance of
Canada, Local 50057, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1298; Latulippe v. Commission
scolaire de la Jeune-Lorette, [2001] R.J.D.T. 26; Mayville v. Union
canadienne des travailleurs en communication (unité 4), [2001] Q.J. No. 366
(QL); Corporation municipale de la Ville de Gaspé v. Côté, [1996] R.D.J.
142; Leroux v. Centre hospitalier Ste-Jeanne d’Arc, [1998] R.J.D.T. 554;
Collège Dawson v. Muzaula, [1999] R.J.D.T. 1041; Furlong v. Résidence
Christophe‑Colomb, [1995] R.D.J. 162; Goudie v. Ottawa (City),
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 141, 2003 SCC 14; Wainwright v. Vancouver
Shipyards Co. (1987), 38 D.L.R. (4th) 760; Johnston v. Dresser
Industries Canada Ltd. (1990), 75 O.R. (2d) 609; Parry Sound (District)
Social Services Administration Board v. O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, [2003] 2
S.C.R. 157, 2003 SCC 42; R. v. 974649 Ontario Inc., [2001] 3 S.C.R. 575,
2001 SCC 81; Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières v. St-Pierre, J.E.
97-1309; Hydro-Québec v. Tremblay, J.E. 2001-200; Section locale 2995
du Syndicat canadien des communications, de l’énergie et du papier v. Spreitzer,
[2002] R.J.Q. 111; Centre d’hébergement et de soins de longue durée
Champlain-Manoir de Verdun v. Québec (Commission des droits de la personne et
des droits de la jeunesse), [1998] Q.J. No. 3250 (QL), motion to
dismiss appeal allowed, C.A. Mtl., No. 500-09-007442-981, September 20, 1999,
and leave to appeal refused, [2000] 1 S.C.R. ix; Syndicat des postiers du
Canada v. Société canadienne des postes, [1995] R.J.Q. 2404; Toronto
(City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487; Blanchard
v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476; Nova Scotia (Workers’
Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003 SCC 54; Douglas/Kwantlen
Faculty Assn. v. Douglas College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570; Béliveau
St-Jacques v. Fédération des employées et employés de services publics inc.,
[1996] 2 S.C.R. 345.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Act respecting the process of negotiation of the
collective agreements in the public and parapublic sectors, R.S.Q., c. R‑8.2,
ss. 1, 25, 26, 30, 31, 33.
Act respecting the reduction of labour costs in
the public sector and implementing the agreements reached for that purpose,
S.Q. 1997, c. 7.
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms,
R.S.Q., c. C-12, preamble, ss. 10, 13, 16, 49, 49.1, 52, 77, 80, 101, 111.
Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, ss. 1(f),
100, 100.12, 139.
Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2,
s. 45(1).
Pay Equity Act, R.S.Q., c. E-12.001.
Authors Cited
Brun, Henri, et Guy Tremblay. Droit
constitutionnel, 4e éd. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2002.
Nadeau, Denis. “Le Tribunal des droits de la
personne du Québec et le principe de l’exclusivité de l’arbitrage de grief ou
l’histoire d’une usurpation progressive de compétence” (2000), 60 R. du B.
387.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (2002), 1 Admin.
L.R. (4th) 187, [2002] Q.J. No. 365 (QL), reversing a judgment of the
Quebec Human Rights Tribunal, [2000] R.J.Q. 3097, [2000] J.T.D.P.Q. No. 24
(QL). Appeal allowed, Bastarache and Arbour JJ. dissenting.
Pierre-Yves Bourdeau and Christian Baillargeon, for the
appellant.
Patrice Claude and Mario Normandin, for the respondent
the Attorney General of Quebec.
Robert P. Gagnon and Pierre Brun, for the respondents
Centrale de l’enseignement du Québec, now Centrale des syndicats du Québec, and
Fédération des syndicats de l’enseignement.
Andrea Wright, for the intervener the Canadian Human Rights
Commission.
Anthony D. Griffin, for the intervener the Ontario Human Rights
Commission.
Written submissions only by Louise Cadieux and Dominique
Pilon, for the intervener the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal.
Written submissions only by Lise Lanno and Gérard Notebaert,
for the intervener Confédération des syndicats nationaux.
Written submissions only by Gaston Nadeau and Jean-Pierre
Néron, for the intervener Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du
Québec.
Written submissions only by Ronald Cloutier and Louise
Valiquette, for the intervener the Canadian Union of Public Employees.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major, Binnie and Fish
JJ. was delivered by
The Chief Justice —
A. Introduction
1
Should the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal be barred from hearing a
complaint of discrimination referred to it on the ground that the labour
arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction over the dispute? That is the issue on
this appeal.
2
In 1997 the teachers’ unions entered into a modification of a collective
agreement with the province of Quebec, which provided that experience acquired
by teachers during the 1996-1997 school year would not be recognized or
credited toward their salary increments or seniority. This term only affected
teachers who had not yet obtained the highest level of the pay scale — a
minority group composed primarily of younger and less experienced teachers.
The younger teachers complained that this term discriminated against them,
treating them less favourably than older teachers and violating the equality
guarantee of the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms, R.S.Q., c.
C-12.
3
The complainants took their complaint to the Human Rights Commission
established to resolve Charter discrimination claims and the Commission
brought the matter before the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal.
4
The Attorney General of Quebec, the school boards and the unions filed a
motion asking the Human Rights Tribunal to decline jurisdiction on the ground
that the labour arbitrator possessed exclusive jurisdiction over the dispute.
The Tribunal rejected this motion ([2000] R.J.Q. 3097). The Quebec Court of
Appeal reversed the Tribunal’s decision holding that the dispute should be
resolved by arbitration under the collective agreement ((2002), 1 Admin. L.R.
(4th) 187).
5
I conclude that the Human Rights Tribunal has jurisdiction over this
dispute and that the claim that the arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction must
be rejected. Accordingly, I would allow the appeal.
B. Analysis
6
The nature of Canadian labour-management relations changed dramatically
following the Second World War. Federal and provincial legislation, seeking to
create a better climate for the resolution of labour-management disputes,
introduced grievance arbitration to provide for the quick and efficient
resolution of disputes arising under collective agreements. Not surprisingly,
this conferral of authority on grievance arbitrators sometimes leads to
disputes about the proper scope of their jurisdiction.
7
There is no easy answer to the question of which of two possible
tribunals should decide disputes that arise in the labour context where
legislation appears to permit both to do so. As explained in Weber
v. Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929, three outcomes are possible.
8
The first possibility is to find jurisdiction over the dispute in both
tribunals. This is called the “concurrent” jurisdiction model. On this model,
any labour dispute could be brought before either the labour arbitrator or the
courts or other tribunals.
9
The second possibility is the “overlapping” jurisdiction model. On this
model, while labour tribunals consider traditional labour law issues, nothing
ousts the jurisdiction of courts or other tribunals over matters that arise in
the employment context, but fall outside traditional labour law issues.
10
The third possibility is the “exclusive” jurisdiction model. On this
model, jurisdiction lies exclusively in either the labour arbitrator or
in the alternate tribunal, but not in both.
11
Weber holds that the model that applies in a given situation
depends on the governing legislation, as applied to the dispute viewed in its
factual matrix. In Weber, the concurrent and overlapping jurisdiction
approaches were ruled out because the provisions of the Ontario Labour
Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2, when applied to the facts of the
dispute, dictated that the labour arbitrator had exclusive jurisdiction over
the dispute. However, Weber does not stand for the proposition that
labour arbitrators always have exclusive jurisdiction in employer-union
disputes. Depending on the legislation and the nature of the dispute, other
tribunals may possess overlapping jurisdiction, concurrent jurisdiction, or
themselves be endowed with exclusive jurisdiction; see, for example, Goudie
v. Ottawa (City), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 141, 2003 SCC 14; Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employees Canadian Pacific System Federation v. Canadian
Pacific Ltd., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 495. As stated in Weber, supra,
at para. 53, “[b]ecause the nature of the dispute and the ambit of the
collective agreement will vary from case to case, it is impossible to
categorize the classes of case that will fall within the exclusive jurisdiction
of the arbitrator.”
12
In the present case the complainants filed a complaint with the Quebec
Human Rights Commission, which then decided to proceed with a claim before the
Human Rights Tribunal. The Commission, on behalf of the complainants, asked for
a declaration that the terms of the collective agreement violated the equality
provisions of the Quebec Charter. That, on its face, is precisely the
type of question, read in light of the legislation and in its factual matrix,
that the Human Rights Tribunal is mandated to answer.
13
However, the unions, school boards and the Attorney General object to
the Human Rights Tribunal resolving this issue. The basis of their objection
is that s. 100 of the Quebec Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, gives
arbitrators exclusive jurisdiction over grievances arising under collective
agreements. The complaint, they suggest, is such a grievance, and therefore,
the Human Rights Tribunal has no jurisdiction.
14
The case thus turns on whether the legislation confers exclusive
jurisdiction on the arbitrator over this dispute. At this point, I diverge,
with respect, from my colleague Bastarache J. who starts from the assumption
that there is an “established principle” of arbitral exclusivity in Quebec. He
formulates the principal question as whether “the principle of exclusive
arbitral jurisdiction, a well‑established principle in Quebec law,
[should] be abandoned in favour of the jurisdiction of the Human Rights
Tribunal in cases where a dispute between unionized workers and their employer
raises a human rights issue” (para. 32). Thus framed, the question presupposes
exclusivity. But, as we have seen, there is no legal presumption of
exclusivity in abstracto. Rather, the question in each case is whether
the relevant legislation applied to the dispute at issue, taken in its full
factual context, establishes that the labour arbitrator has exclusive
jurisdiction over the dispute.
15
This question suggests two related steps. The first step is to look at
the relevant legislation and what it says about the arbitrator’s jurisdiction.
The second step is to look at the nature of the dispute, and see
whether the legislation suggests it falls exclusively to the
arbitrator. The second step is logically necessary since the question is
whether the legislative mandate applies to the particular dispute at issue. It
facilitates a better fit between the tribunal and the dispute and helps “to
ensure that jurisdictional issues are decided in a manner that is consistent
with the statutory schemes governing the parties”, according to the underlying
rationale of Weber, supra; see Regina Police Assn. Inc. v.
Regina (City) Board of Police Commissioners, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 360, 2000 SCC
14, at para. 39.
16
Turning to the first step, s. 100 of the Quebec Labour Code
requires that “[e]very grievance shall be submitted to arbitration in the
manner provided in the collective agreement if it so provides and the certified
association and the employer abide by it.” This tells us that the arbitrator is
competent to resolve all grievances under the collective agreement. The Labour
Code s. 1(f), defines
“grievance” as “any disagreement respecting the interpretation or application
of a collective agreement”. In other words, the arbitrator has jurisdiction
over matters arising out of the collective agreement’s operation. In Weber,
this jurisdiction was found to be exclusive.
17
The Quebec Charter sets out a mechanism for the investigation and
enforcement of human rights. It creates the Commission, which has the
responsibility for investigating alleged violations of the Charter and
which may, in turn, submit the allegations to the Human Rights Tribunal for
remedy.
18
Section 111 of the Quebec Charter grants the Human Rights
Tribunal a large jurisdiction over human rights matters in Quebec; see H. Brun
and G. Tremblay, Droit constitutionnel (4th ed. 2002), at p. 991. The
Tribunal is responsible for interpreting and applying the Charter in a
wide range of circumstances. The importance of the Tribunal’s mandate is
underlined by the fact that the legislation provides that the president of the
Human Rights Tribunal be chosen from judges on the Court of Québec having
“notable experience and expertise in, sensitivity to and interest for matters of
human rights and freedoms”; see s. 101 of the Charter.
19
While the Tribunal enjoys generous jurisdiction over human rights
violations, it is not exclusive. First, the Quebec Charter expressly
exempts certain matters from the Commission’s purview. Section 77 does so
where a complainant or victim has personally pursued a remedy under s. 49 or s.
80 of the Charter. Similarly, s. 49.1 of the Charter removes the
Human Rights Tribunal’s jurisdiction over issues covered by the Pay Equity
Act, R.S.Q., c. E-12.001. Second, the Charter permits, but
does not oblige, the Commission to refuse to act or stop acting on behalf of a
complainant in certain situations, including where “the victim or the
complainant has, on the basis of the same facts, personally pursued a remedy
other than those provided for in sections 49 and 80” (s. 77(4)). It follows
that the Commission’s and the Human Rights Tribunal’s jurisdiction may be
concurrent with that of other adjudicative bodies; see Brun and Tremblay, supra,
at p. 992.
20
The second step is to look at the dispute in issue to determine whether
it falls within the ambit of the arbitrator’s exclusive jurisdiction. We must
look at the dispute in its full factual context. Its legal characterization —
whether it is a tort claim, a human rights claim, or a claim under the labour
contract — is not determinative. The question is whether the dispute, viewed
in its essential character and not formalistically, is one over which the
legislature intended the arbitrator to have exclusive jurisdiction; see Weber,
supra.
21
In Weber, this Court concluded that the dispute — a claim for
tort arising from the employer’s alleged trespass on the employee’s land in the
course of a dispute about sick-leave regulated by the collective agreement —
fell under the collective agreement and hence within the scope of s. 45 of the
Ontario Labour Relations Act, which provided:
45. — (1) Every collective agreement shall provide for the final
and binding settlement by arbitration, without stoppage of work, of all
differences between the parties arising from the interpretation, application,
administration or alleged violation of the agreement, including any question as
to whether a matter is arbitrable.
This clause is
arguably stronger than the clause conferring jurisdiction on the arbitrator in
the case at bar. However, the critical difference between Weber and
this case lies in the factual context that gave rise to the dispute.
22
In Weber, the dispute clearly arose out of the operation of the
collective agreement. It was basically a dispute about sick-leave, which
became encumbered with an incidental claim for trespass. In these
circumstances, the majority of the Court concluded that it fell squarely within
s. 45 and should be determined exclusively by the labour arbitrator.
23
Here, the same cannot be said. Taking the dispute in its factual
context, as Weber instructs, the main fact that animates the dispute
between the parties is that the collective agreement contains a term that
treats the complainants and members of their group — those teachers who had not
yet attained the highest level of the pay scale who were typically younger and
less experienced — less favourably than more senior teachers. This, in turn,
emerges from the fact that in the course of negotiating the collective
agreement, disputes arose over how to meet the government’s budgetary demands
and how cutbacks in the budget should be allocated among union members. In its
factual matrix, this is essentially a dispute as to how the collective
agreement should allocate decreased resources among union members. Ultimately,
the decision was to impose the costs of the budget cutbacks primarily on one
group of union members — those with less seniority. This gave rise to the
issue in the dispute: was it discriminatory to negotiate and agree to a term
that adversely affected only younger and less experienced teachers? The
essence of the dispute is the process of the negotiation and the inclusion of
this term in the collective agreement.
24
Viewed in its factual matrix, this is not a dispute over which the
arbitrator has exclusive jurisdiction. It does not arise out of the operation
of the collective agreement, so much as out of the pre-contractual negotiation
of that agreement. This Court has recognized that disputes that arise out of
prior contracts or the formation of the collective agreement itself may raise
issues that do not fall within the scope of arbitration; see, for example, Goudie,
supra; Weber, supra, at para. 52; see also Wainwright
v. Vancouver Shipyards Co. (1987), 38 D.L.R. (4th) 760 (B.C.C.A.); Johnston
v. Dresser Industries Canada Ltd. (1990), 75 O.R. (2d) 609 (C.A.).
Everyone agrees on how the agreement, if valid, should be interpreted and
applied. The only question is whether the process leading to the adoption of
the alleged discriminatory clause and the inclusion of that clause in the
agreement violates the Quebec Charter, rendering it unenforceable.
25
That is not to say that the arbitrator lacks the power to deal with all
issues which involve a Charter claim. This Court has recognized that
arbitrators may resolve legal issues incidental to their function of
interpreting and applying the collective agreement: Parry Sound (District)
Social Services Administration Board v. O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, [2003] 2
S.C.R. 157, 2003 SCC 42. Moreover, s. 100.12 of the Labour Code specifically
confers on the arbitrator the authority to interpret and apply any Act necessary
to settle a grievance. But, at the same time, the dispute, viewed not
formalistically but in its essential nature, engages matters which pertain more
to alleged discrimination in the formation and validity of the agreement, than
to its “interpretation or application”, which is the source of the arbitrator’s
jurisdiction under the Labour Code, s. 1(f). The Human Rights
Commission and the Human Rights Tribunal were created by the legislature to
resolve precisely these sorts of issues.
26
Here the complaint was brought by the teachers to the Commission, which
ultimately brought the matter before the Human Rights Tribunal. The Tribunal
was entitled to exercise its jurisdiction over it. It was satisfied that the
complainants had not “on the basis of the same facts, personally pursued one of
the remedies provided for in sections 49 and 80” (s. 77 of the Quebec Charter),
avoiding duplication. As noted, the Commission could have refused to proceed as
a matter of discretion if the complainants had, on the basis of the same
facts, “personally pursued a remedy other than those provided for
in sections 49 and 80” (also s. 77 of the Charter (emphasis added)).
But the complainants had not done so and thus the Commission was entitled to
file the complaint before the Human Rights Tribunal. Moreover, for these same
reasons, the Tribunal was entitled to exercise its jurisdiction over the claim
under the governing legislation.
27
It is argued that the Tribunal should not have taken jurisdiction
because the complainants could have asked their unions to “grieve” the alleged
violation under the collective agreement. I cannot accept this argument.
First, the nature of the question does not lend itself to characterization as a
grievance under the collective agreement, since the claim is not that
the agreement has been violated, but that it is itself discriminatory. Without
suggesting that the arbitrator could not have considered these matters
incidentally to a different dispute under the collective agreement, the
complainant cannot be faulted for taking this particular dispute to the Human
Rights Commission, which then filed a claim before the Human Rights Tribunal.
28
Second, the unions were, on the face of it, opposed in interest to the
complainants, being affiliated with one of the negotiating groups that made the
allegedly discriminatory agreement. If the unions chose not to file a
grievance before the arbitrator, the teachers would be left with no legal
recourse (other than possibly filing a claim against their unions for breaching
the duty of fair representation). This concern was summarized well by Abella
J.A. in Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd. v. Ontario (Human Rights Commission)
(2001), 209 D.L.R. (4th) 465 (Ont. C.A.) (leave to appeal refused, [2002] 3
S.C.R. x), at paras. 61-62 as follows:
[T]here may be circumstances where an individual unionized employee
finds the arbitral process foreclosed, since the decision whether to proceed
with a grievance is the union’s and not the employee’s. Moreover, the alleged
human rights violation may be against the union, as stipulated in the [Human
Rights] Code in ss. 6 and 45(1). . . .
In an arbitration under a collective agreement,
only the employer and union have party status. The unionized employee’s
interests are advanced by and through the union, which necessarily decides how
the allegations should be represented or defended. Applying Weber so as
to assign exclusive jurisdiction to labour arbitrators could therefore render
chimerical the rights of individual unionized employees.
29
Third, even if the unions had filed a grievance on behalf of the
complainants, the arbitrator would not have jurisdiction over all of the
parties to the dispute. Although the local unions and school boards were not
involved in negotiating and agreeing to the clause impugned as discriminatory,
the grievance and arbitration process set out in the collective agreement is
directed at the resolution of disputes between the local unions and the school
boards and not at those arising between the unions and the respondents that did
actually agree to this provision. Although the Centrale des syndicats du
Québec, the Fédération des syndicats de l’enseignement and the Minister are
authorized to intervene in arbitration proceedings, there is no formal
mechanism to bring these parties before the arbitrator.
30
Finally, because the complainants’ general challenge to the validity of
a provision in the collective agreement affected hundreds of teachers, the
Human Rights Tribunal was a “better fit” for this dispute than the appointment
of a single arbitrator to deal with a single grievance within the statutory
framework of the Labour Code. In these circumstances the complainants
cannot be faulted for taking their claim to the Human Rights Commission rather
than to the union with the hope (but no guarantee) of having it filed as a
grievance before a labour arbitrator.
C. Conclusion
31
I would allow the appeal and remit the matter to the Human Rights
Tribunal.
English version of the reasons of Bastarache and Arbour JJ. delivered
by
Bastarache J.
(dissenting) —
I. Introduction
32
The main issue in this case is the following: should the principle of
exclusive arbitral jurisdiction, a well-established principle in Quebec law, be
abandoned in favour of the jurisdiction of the Human Rights Tribunal in cases
where a dispute between unionized workers and their employer raises a human
rights issue? I am of the opinion that this question must be answered in the
negative.
33
It is a firmly established principle in Quebec that labour arbitrators
have exclusive authority to deal with all aspects of labour relations between
employers and employees. With respect, rejecting the exclusive jurisdiction
model, as proposed by the Chief Justice in her reasons, seems to me to be
incompatible with the recent decisions of this Court, contrary to the wording
of s. 100 of the Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, and irreconcilable
with the public interest considerations on which the existing case law is
based. In my opinion, we must recognize all the responsibilities that have
been assigned to arbitrators so that they can rule on virtually all aspects of
a case, insofar as those aspects are expressly or inferentially related to the
collective agreement. To this end, applying the exclusive jurisdiction model,
we must identify the essential character of the dispute in its factual context
and ignore the possible legal characterization of that dispute.
34
In this case, I see nothing in the scheme established by the
legislation, whether in the Labour Code or another statute, to prove
that the Quebec legislature had the obvious intention of removing questions
involving human rights, rights that are protected by the Charter of Human
Rights and Freedoms, R.S.Q., c. C-12, from the jurisdiction of
arbitrators. Accordingly, I am of the opinion that if the test developed by
this Court in Weber v. Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929, is applied we
find that the Human Rights Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to hear the
application brought by the Commission des droits de la personne et des droits
de la jeunesse, and that the Attorney General of Quebec’s motion to dismiss
should be allowed.
II. Facts
35
The dispute at issue arose from a provision negotiated and agreed to at
the provincial level by the parties in the spring of 1997. At that time, the
Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ) comprised 11 federations, including the
Fédération des enseignantes et enseignants de commissions scolaires (FECS), now
known as the Fédération des syndicats de l’enseignement (FSE), which comprised
a large number of unions, all of them certified associations within the meaning
of the Labour Code. The FSE is therefore a group of associations of
employees within the meaning of s. 26 of the Act respecting the process
of negotiation of the collective agreements in the public and parapublic
sectors, R.S.Q., c. R‑8.2 (the Act).
36
In this particular case, the FSE acted as bargaining agent, while the
CSQ coordinated negotiations with management in that sector. To this end,
ss. 30 and 31 of the Act provide for the creation of a management
negotiating committee composed of persons appointed by the Minister of
Education and others named by the group of school boards contemplated in the
Act. Pursuant to s. 33 of the Act, the management committee, under the
authority delegated by the Quebec government to the Minister of Education, is
responsible for negotiating and concluding agreements on behalf of the employer,
i.e., the school boards.
37
Upon reading s. 1 of the Act, it becomes apparent that the
agreement between the parties constitutes a collective agreement within the
meaning of the Labour Code. The clauses negotiated and agreed to by the
committee are binding on all school boards covered by the Act (s. 25).
All clauses negotiated at the provincial, regional or local level constitute
the applicable collective agreement between a given school board and its
employees.
38
In March 1997, the CSQ was coordinating sectoral negotiations with
the Quebec government. The purpose of these negotiations was to come to an
agreement on cost-saving measures sought by the government and thereby avoid
the enactment of special legislation imposing new working conditions. A
proposal submitted by the Quebec government on March 5 was rejected by
FSE-affiliated unions because it likely would have resulted in the elimination
of 3,000 teaching positions. After postponing the enactment of the special
legislation, the Minister of Education made a new proposal, which was also
rejected by the Federal Council of the FSE. The FSE was then instructed by its
affiliated unions to explore other possible solutions that would bring
$50 million in recurrent savings.
39
On March 21, 1997, the Federal Council of the FSE recommended
accepting an accord that had been negotiated. At their respective general
meetings, a majority of the 69 unions representing teachers employed by the
school boards decided to accept the agreement in principle of March 21,
1997. Agreements in principle were then reached between the Quebec government
and each of the CSQ-affiliated federations contemplated in the Act
respecting the reduction of labour costs in the public sector and implementing
the agreements reached for that purpose, S.Q. 1997, c. 7.
40
On July 3, 1997, acting on instructions from the affiliated unions,
the President of the FSE signed an accord (the Accord) amending the agreement (the
Agreement) between the management negotiating committee and the CSQ for the
period from 1995 to 1998. Under clause 6 of the Accord, which replaced
para. D) of clause 6‑4.01 of the Agreement, experience acquired in
the 1996-1997 school year would not be counted for the purpose of determining
one’s standing on the pay scale. The clause reads as follows:
[translation]
6-4.01 D) Notwithstanding the preceding,
experience gained in 1982‑1983 and 1996-1997 shall not count toward pay
progression.
41
Following the negotiations, the Commission des droits de la personne et
des droits de la jeunesse (the Commission) received numerous complaints from
young teachers. Consequently, on March 17, 2000, the Commission filed an
application instituting proceedings asking that the Human Rights Tribunal (the
Tribunal) declare the amended clause invalid because it discriminated against
younger teachers in violation of ss. 10, 13 and 16 of the Quebec Charter.
The Commission also requested that the respondents be ordered to take teaching
experience acquired in the 1996-1997 school year into account for the purpose
of calculating raises in the applicable pay scale and to indemnify the teachers
affected.
42
The respondents filed two motions to dismiss the Commission’s
application, claiming the Tribunal lacked jurisdiction ratione materiae because
of the exclusive jurisdiction of arbitrators. The Tribunal dismissed the
motions ([2000] R.J.Q. 3097). A majority of the Court of Appeal reversed the
Tribunal’s decision, allowed the motions and dismissed the appellant
Commission’s action ((2002), 1 Admin. L.R. (4th) 187).
III. Analysis
A. Exclusive Jurisdiction of Arbitrators
(1) The Exclusive
Jurisdiction Model
43
This Court has, on numerous occasions and in a variety of legislative
contexts, recognized that arbitrators have exclusive jurisdiction over issues
arising from the interpretation, application, administration or violation of a
collective agreement: Weber, supra; New Brunswick v. O’Leary,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 967; Regina Police Assn. Inc. v. Regina (City)
Board of Police Commissioners, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 360, 2000 SCC
14; Allen v. Alberta, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 128, 2003 SCC 13. In Weber,
the Court rejected the concurrent model and the model of overlapping
jurisdictions in relation to the jurisdiction of arbitrators versus other
tribunals in favour of the exclusive jurisdiction model. McLachlin J. (as she
then was) gave three reasons for adopting the exclusive jurisdiction model (at
para. 58):
. . . [this] model gives full credit to the
language of s. 45(1) of the Labour Relations Act. It accords with
this Court’s approach in St. Anne Nackawic. It satisfies the concern that
the dispute resolution process which the various labour statutes of this
country have established should not be duplicated and undermined by concurrent
actions. It conforms to a pattern of growing judicial deference for the
arbitration and grievance process and correlative restrictions on the rights of
parties to proceed with parallel or overlapping litigation in the courts: see Ontario
(Attorney-General) v. Bowie (1993), 110 D.L.R. (4th) 444 (Ont. Div. Ct.), per
O’Brien J.
44
In other words, the adoption of the exclusive jurisdiction model is the
result, first, of the desire to be consistent with the decision of this Court
in St. Anne Nackawic Pulp & Paper Co. v. Canadian Paper Workers Union,
Local 219, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 704, in which it was held that mandatory
arbitration clauses in labour relations statutes deprive the courts of any
concurrent jurisdiction. Second, the language of s. 45(1) of the Ontario Labour
Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2, made arbitration the only
available remedy for “all differences between the parties arising from the
interpretation, application, administration or alleged violation of the
agreement”. And third, the adoption of the exclusive jurisdiction model makes
it possible to achieve the objectives of the scheme established by the various
labour relations statutes in Canada, namely to provide a speedy, economical,
final and enforceable dispute resolution procedure that is not duplicated or
undermined by concurrent actions.
45
In this case, the Chief Justice rejects the exclusive jurisdiction model
and the essential character of the dispute test in favour of the best fit
approach. In my opinion, that approach is precisely what was rejected in Weber
when the three criteria that support the exclusive jurisdiction of the arbitrator
were adopted. Adopting those criteria offers certainty in terms of the model
to be followed and confirms the policy of judicial deference in respect of the
exclusive and comprehensive dispute resolution mechanisms in the field of
labour relations that the legislature has adopted.
46
I am of the opinion that the exclusive jurisdiction model, and
consequently the essential character of the dispute test, best reflect the
legislature’s intention in this case. According to the exclusive jurisdiction
model, the determination of the appropriate forum centres on the dispute
between the parties and, more specifically, whether the dispute arises out of
the collective agreement: Weber, supra, at para. 51. Two
factors must be considered when making this determination: the nature of the
dispute and the ambit of the collective agreement: Weber, at para. 51,
and Regina Police, supra, at para. 25. The Chief Justice
now says that the legal characterization is an issue even though it is not determinative.
I see no justification for this change of direction.
Application to the Scheme in Issue
(i) Language of the Provision
47
It seems to me that the legislature’s intention is apparent from the
language of s. 100 of the Labour Code, as it was from the language
of s. 45(1) of the Labour Relations Act in Weber. That
provision, which clearly required that the exclusive jurisdiction model be
applied, reads as follows:
45. — (1) Every collective agreement shall
provide for the final and binding settlement by arbitration, without stoppage
of work, of all differences between the parties arising from the
interpretation, application, administration or alleged violation of the agreement,
including any question as to whether a matter is arbitrable. [Emphasis added.]
In enacting
that subsection, the Ontario legislature manifested its intent not to apply the
concurrent jurisdiction model or the model of overlapping jurisdictions. In my
opinion, the same legislative intent is found in s. 100 of the Labour
Code:
1. . . .
(f) “grievance”: any disagreement
respecting the interpretation or application of a collective agreement;
100. Every grievance shall be submitted to arbitration
in the manner provided in the collective agreement if it so provides and the
certified association and the employer abide by it; otherwise it shall be
referred to an arbitrator chosen by the parties or, failing agreement,
appointed by the Minister. . . . [Emphasis added.]
48
It is apparent from this comparison that the two provisions contain
similar clauses granting exclusive arbitral jurisdiction over the settlement of
disputes arising from the interpretation or application of a collective
agreement.
(ii) Comprehensiveness of the
Scheme
49
Adopting the exclusive jurisdiction model in this case is consistent
with the principle of exclusive arbitral jurisdiction that characterizes
Canadian labour relations schemes. The objectives of those schemes were
considered in Gendron v. Supply and Services Union of the Public Service
Alliance of Canada, Local 50057, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1298, at
p. 1326:
It is clear then that this Court has enunciated a
principle of deference, not only to decision‑making structures under the
collective agreement but as well to structures set up by labour legislation and
in general, to specialized tribunals operating within their fields of
expertise. When the relevant statute requires collective agreements to provide
for the final and binding settlement of disputes, it becomes difficult if not
impossible to distinguish St. Anne, supra, and similarly reasoned
cases on the basis that the issue in those cases concerned the relationship
between contractual dispute resolution and the jurisdiction of the ordinary
courts, not the relationship between statutory dispute resolution and the
courts. The concern that recourse to the ordinary courts may jeopardize the
comprehensive dispute resolution process contained in labour relations
legislation is one that arises in this latter situation as well. Allowing
parties to disputes which, by their very nature, are those contemplated and
regulated by labour legislation, to have recourse to the ordinary courts would
fly in the face of the demonstrated intention of Parliament to provide an
exclusive and comprehensive mechanism for labour dispute resolution,
particularly in the context of the present case.
50
In this case, I have no doubt that we are dealing with a “comprehensive
statutory scheme designed to govern all aspects of the relationship of the
parties in a labour relations setting”: see St. Anne Nackawic, supra,
at p. 721. It is clear that the Labour Code creates an exclusive
and comprehensive mechanism for the settlement of disputes in labour relations
cases by requiring that all grievances be submitted to arbitration
exclusively. Adopting a model other than the exclusive jurisdiction model in
this case would undermine the comprehensiveness of the scheme, and would be
contrary to the legislature’s intention.
(iii) Trend in the Case Law
51
In this case, where there is an exclusivity clause and a comprehensive
and exclusive scheme for the settlement of disputes, adopting the exclusive
jurisdiction model is consistent with the decisions of this Court in Regina
Police, supra, Weber, supra, and St. Anne Nackawic,
supra. The Quebec Court of Appeal, too, has on numerous occasions
applied the exclusive jurisdiction model to collective agreements subject to
Quebec’s Labour Code: see, for example, Latulippe v. Commission
scolaire de la Jeune-Lorette, [2001] R.J.D.T. 26; Mayville v. Union
canadienne des travailleurs en communication (unité 4), [2001] Q.J.
No. 366 (QL); Corporation municipale de la Ville de Gaspé v. Côté,
[1996] R.D.J. 142; Leroux v. Centre hospitalier Ste-Jeanne d’Arc, [1998]
R.J.D.T. 554; Collège Dawson v. Muzaula, [1999] R.J.D.T. 1041;
Furlong v. Résidence Christophe‑Colomb, [1995] R.D.J. 162.
52
With respect, I believe that s. 100 of the Labour Code, like
s. 45(1) of the Labour Relations Act, lends itself solely to the
exclusive jurisdiction model and grants arbitrators exclusive jurisdiction to
hear disputes whose essential character relates to the application or
interpretation of a collective agreement. Given that the claim brought by the
plaintiffs in this case is, in its essential character, based on the
application of a clause in a collective agreement, there can be no doubt that
this dispute falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the arbitrator.
(2) The Essential
Character Test
53
When we examine the nature of the dispute, the goal is to determine the
dispute’s essential character. This determination is made on the basis of the
facts surrounding the dispute between the parties, not on the basis of the
legal issues that could be raised: see Weber, supra, at
para. 43, and Regina Police, supra, at para. 25.
54
In Weber, supra, this Court defined the applicable test:
if the dispute, in its essential character, concerns the interpretation,
application, administration or violation of the collective agreement, the
applicant’s recourse must be arbitration. The language of s. 100 of the Labour
Code requires, for its part, that the dispute, in its essential character,
relate to the interpretation or application of the collective agreement. As
noted earlier, the Chief Justice is now departing from that rule.
Application to the Facts in This Case
55
At para. 23 of her reasons for judgment, the Chief Justice states
that “the main fact that animates the dispute between the parties is that the
collective agreement contains a term that treats the complainants and members
of their group . . . less favourably than more senior teachers”. She
characterizes the grievance as the assertion of a Quebec Charter right
and concludes that an assertion of this kind does not, in its essential
character, arise from the interpretation or the application of the collective
agreement. Therefore, the arbitrator may not claim exclusive jurisdiction.
56
With respect, I believe that such an approach is contrary to the
principles laid down by this Court in Weber, supra, and St.
Anne Nackawic, supra, because its effect is to determine the essence
of the dispute by reference solely to the nature of the right invoked. It is
important to note that the issue raised in this case is very similar to the one
raised in Weber. While the dispute at bar concerns a claim founded on
an infringement of the right to equality guaranteed by the Quebec Charter,
with regard to the application of the collective agreement, in Weber it
was necessary to determine whether a claim founded on s. 24(1) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the arbitrator because of its attachment to the collective agreement. In both
cases, the essential character of the dispute will determine who will hear the
case. In Weber, the action founded on ss. 7 and 8 of the Canadian
Charter arose from Mr. Weber being placed under surveillance after
claiming health insurance benefits under the collective agreement. The
essential character of the dispute was not arrived at solely on the basis of
the violation of privacy resulting from the surveillance — an issue relating to
the determination of the fundamental rights of Mr. Weber and any other
employee under surveillance — but rather on the basis of all the facts alleged
by the parties, which in this case indicated that the dispute between the
parties arose out of the application of the collective agreement. The
surveillance was unfair treatment of the employee, even though the parties had
not specifically contemplated such conduct in the collective agreement.
Following the principles set out in Weber and applying the essential
character test to the case at bar while paying close attention to the factual
context, we arrive at the same result: the essential character of the dispute
arises out of the application of the collective agreement and places the
dispute within the arbitrator’s exclusive jurisdiction. As Professor
D. Nadeau explains in the article entitled “Le Tribunal des droits de la
personne du Québec et le principe de l’exclusivité de l’arbitrage de grief ou
l’histoire d’une usurpation progressive de compétence” (2000), 60 R. du B.
387, at p. 398:
[translation] When
defining the “essential character” of a dispute . . . we are not
required to delve into the very quintessence of the dispute, nor to examine its
legal characterization. The procedure to be applied is simple and much more
objective, as it consists solely in “examining the factual context” out of
which the dispute arose and in determining if the facts surrounding the dispute
between the parties concern a matter covered by the collective
agreement, that is, if the dispute “had to do with the collective
agreement or did not” or “arose expressly or inferentially out of it.”
[Emphasis in original.]
57
In the case at bar, an examination of the factual context shows that the
dispute, in its essential character, concerns pay and the taking into account
of experience gained during the 1996-1997 school year for the purpose of
setting pay. Such issues form the very foundation of a contract and working
conditions. More specifically, this application concerns the reimbursement of
lost wages resulting from the refusal to recognize experience gained over the
1996-1997 school year, an issue that is clearly within the scope of the
collective agreement. A legal characterization of the cause of action in this
dispute, which would cast the dispute as being over the unlawful interference
with the right to equality, ignores the factual context and the provisions of
the collective agreement in question. I believe it cannot be denied that the
arbitrator would have had jurisdiction to rule on the grievance if the
arbitrator had heard it. If that is the case, I can see no way here to avoid
applying the clause granting exclusive jurisdiction.
58
The Chief Justice, at para. 23 of her reasons, also states that the
essential character of the dispute “is the process of the negotiation and the
inclusion of [its terms] in the collective agreement”. In her opinion,
disputes arising out of the negotiation of collective agreements do not fall
within the exclusive jurisdiction of the arbitrator. I cannot accept this
argument for two reasons.
59
First, that reasoning treats disputes arising out of the negotiation of
a collective agreement in the same manner as disputes arising from contracts
predating the collective agreement. Sometimes the time when the claim
originated is important, such as in cases of contracts agreed to before the
collective agreement is signed: see Weber, supra, at
para. 52; Goudie v. Ottawa (City), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 141,
2003 SCC 14; Wainwright v. Vancouver Shipyards Co. (1987), 38
D.L.R. (4th) 760 (B.C.C.A.); Johnston v. Dresser Industries Canada Ltd.
(1990), 75 O.R. (2d) 609 (C.A.). However, I do not think that negotiations
leading up to the conclusion of a collective agreement could qualify as
independent grounds for a grievance in the way that pre-employment agreements
can, for example.
60
The facts of the present case can be distinguished from the situation in
Goudie, supra, in which this Court decided that the essential
character of the dispute consisted in a demand arising out of an alleged
pre-employment agreement. Since this dispute was clearly not related to the
collective agreement, the Court ruled that it was not covered by the
legislature’s intent to favour arbitration: Goudie, supra, at
para. 24. On the contrary, both the negotiation of clauses in a
collective agreement and the resulting collective agreement are, as in the
present case, closely linked to the application of the collective agreement of
which they are a part. Thus, the negotiation of the Accord does not constitute
an independent ground for a grievance outside the collective agreement. We
cannot separate them for the purpose of determining the essential character of
the dispute.
61
Second, as Judge Rivet explained for the Tribunal, under s. 1
of the Act, the Accord between the government and the FSE constitutes a
collective agreement within the meaning of the Labour Code:
1. This Act applies to the negotiation and making of a
collective agreement within the meaning of the Labour Code (chapter C‑27)
between an association of employees within the meaning of the said Code and a
school board . . . .
62
It is the entire collection of provisions negotiated by the parties that
constitutes the collective agreement binding on an association of employees and
a school board. Section 25 of the Act confirms this:
25. The clauses of a collective agreement binding between an
association of employees and a school board, a college or an institution shall
be negotiated and agreed by unions and management at the national level or at
the local or regional level in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.
If the
agreement resulting from negotiations constitutes a collective agreement, then
conflicts over the interpretation and application of that agreement will give
rise to grievances within the meaning of s. 1(f) of the Labour
Code that may, if necessary, be put to arbitration. It is not possible to
separate agreements resulting from negotiations and the collective agreement
itself.
63
For these reasons, it is my opinion that the Tribunal erred in
attempting to centre the debate on the negotiation of the Accord when the
discrimination alleged by the Commission is actually a result of the
application of a clause of the collective agreement. As Nadeau explains, supra,
at pp. 402‑5:
[translation]
We feel it is safe to assume that any clause of a collective agreement that a
party alleges to be discriminatory would certainly have been preceded by
negotiations. However, it is not the negotiations that the complainants
challenge, but rather the application of the collective agreement resulting
from them. Even if the collective agreement was negotiated at the [provincial]
level . . . this does not change the fact that the collective
agreement in question is applied and interpreted at the school board level.
. . . Therefore, to avoid finding a link between the claim and the
collective agreement, the Tribunal invoked the essential character of the
dispute, claiming that the dispute stemmed from what it called “an effect
. . . arising out of the negotiation process”. We cannot accept
. . . this new variation on the essential character test.
. . . In adopting a subjective method for
analysing the cause of action and in casting the arbitrator’s jurisdiction as
narrowly as possible, these tribunals are, as the Supreme Court put it,
undermining both “the legislative purposes underlying” the establishment of a
system of mandatory arbitration and “the intention of the parties to the
agreement”.
64
Although the clause in dispute here was negotiated at the provincial
level, it is part of every collective agreement between a school board
represented by the management committee and an association of employees
representing teachers who work for that school board. The cause of the alleged
injury is not the negotiations leading up to the Accord, but the tangible
effect of the negotiations, namely the signing of the Agreement and the
incorporation of clause 6-4.01D) into each collective agreement binding the parties
affected by the negotiations. It is the results, not the talks, that are
challenged. The Accord is without effect on the parties until the Agreement,
and by extension the collective agreements, is amended. Therefore, the
arbitrator’s exclusive jurisdiction over disputes relating to the
interpretation and application of clause 6‑4.01D) cannot be ousted.
65
In discussing the appropriate forum for settling this dispute, the Chief
Justice observes that this Court “has recognized that arbitrators may resolve
legal issues incidental to their function of interpreting and applying the
collective agreement” (para. 25). In my opinion, however, the principle
actually stated by this Court in Parry Sound (District) Social Services
Administration Board v. O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 157,
2003 SCC 42, is this: the substantive rights and obligations provided
for under human rights legislation are incorporated into every collective
agreement. As Iacobucci J. stated, at para. 28: “The absence of an
express provision that prohibits the violation of a particular statutory right
is insufficient to conclude that a violation of that right does not constitute
a violation of the collective agreement.” It cannot be said that a human
rights issue is incidental to a collective agreement if it is implicitly
incorporated into it.
66
Moreover, in the case at bar, clause 14‑3.02 of the Agreement
incorporates into the collective agreement the right of teachers to the full
and equal exercise of the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Quebec Charter.
Human rights are clearly not incidental to the collective agreement; in this
case, they are expressly incorporated into it. It would be most peculiar if
the Labour Code were to be interpreted liberally in all cases
except those where the infringement of a Quebec Charter right is
alleged, especially in light of the above-mentioned clause 14-3.02 and
ss. 100 and 139 of the Labour Code.
67
Even if the problem in this case could be characterized exclusively as a
human rights violation, it would still be subject to the arbitrator’s exclusive
jurisdiction, as the arbitrator has jurisdiction over any issue that is
expressly or inferentially linked to the collective agreement. Arbitrators
have the authority to remedy Canadian Charter violations because their
enabling legislation authorizes them to render decisions in this regard: see Weber,
supra, and R. v. 974649 Ontario Inc.,
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 575, 2001 SCC 81. The same is true in Quebec.
In Quebec law, arbitrators are empowered to remedy Charter violations
(ss. 100 and 100.12 of the Labour Code). Even if the remedy
requested is founded on an infringement of fundamental rights guaranteed by the
Charters, the Quebec case law is consistent on this point: arbitrators
retain their exclusive jurisdiction so long as there is a link or relationship
between the aggrieved conduct and the provisions of the collective agreement: Gaspé
v. Côté, supra; Leroux, supra; Université du Québec
à Trois-Rivières v. St-Pierre, J.E. 97‑1309 (C.A.); Hydro-Québec
v. Tremblay, J.E. 2001-200 (C.A.); Collège Dawson, supra; Latulippe,
supra; Mayville, supra; Section locale 2995 du Syndicat
canadien des communications, de l’énergie et du papier v. Spreitzer, [2002]
R.J.Q. 111 (C.A.); Centre d’hébergement et de soins de longue durée
Champlain-Manoir de Verdun v. Québec (Commission des droits de la personne et
des droits de la jeunesse), [1998] Q.J. No. 3250 (QL) (Sup. Ct.),
motion to dismiss appeal allowed, C.A. Mtl., No. 500‑09‑007442-981,
September 20, 1999, and leave for the Commission to appeal refused, [2000] 1
S.C.R. ix; Syndicat des postiers du Canada v. Société canadienne des postes,
[1995] R.J.Q. 2404. Thus, even if we characterized this dispute as being over
the infringement of a Quebec Charter right, it would still be subject to
the arbitrator’s exclusive jurisdiction.
B. The Integration of Fundamental Rights in the
Arbitration Process
68
There is no cause to call into question the principle of exclusive
arbitral jurisdiction, as this principle governs all aspects of the
relationship between the parties respecting labour relations. We should bear
in mind that arbitrators have been delegated the authority to enforce the
substantive rights and obligations provided for under human rights legislation
in order to advance the fundamental objective of this delegation, namely the
prompt, final and binding resolution of workplace disputes for the benefit of
the parties and society as a whole: see Parry Sound, supra, at
para. 50; Toronto (City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 487, at para. 36; Blanchard v. Control Data
Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476, at p. 489. It is
important that administrative bodies with the authority to apply the Charters
be called upon to do so and that they incorporate into their procedures a
constant concern for upholding the Charters’ guiding principles. This
is consistent with the legislative intent, because the Quebec legislature has
given its Human Rights Tribunal non‑exclusive jurisdiction and stipulated
that administrative bodies that do not specialize in human rights would
nevertheless have a duty to ensure that their decisions protect human rights.
It seems clear to me that the legislative objective is to foster the
development of a general culture of respect for human rights throughout
Quebec’s administrative system.
69
Although there already is a tribunal for resolving disputes involving
human rights, this does not mean that delegating arbitrators the authority to
enforce the substantive rights and obligations provided for under the Charters
cannot serve to reinforce human rights protection: Parry Sound, supra,
at para. 52. I also believe that referring such disputes to an arbitrator
is the logical choice, since reaching a collective agreement, with the
intention of amending it through negotiations, raises a multitude of issues
that an arbitrator is by far in the best position to handle on an informed
basis. If, for example, one benefit under a collective agreement or its newly
negotiated clauses is exchanged for another, or if a group is disadvantaged by
one clause while being favoured by another, it is only by examining the
collective agreement as a whole that a full assessment of the problem can be
achieved. In the context of a collective agreement, it is not enough to
examine the contested clause in isolation. Since arbitrators have exclusive
jurisdiction to hear disputes related to collective agreements, only an
arbitrator is competent to hear this case. On this point, I would also note
that decisions of the Human Rights Tribunal and of arbitrators are all subject
to judicial review, and that it is therefore not so much their legal expertise that
should concern us here as their expertise in assessing facts: see, on this
point, Nova Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2
S.C.R. 504, 2003 SCC 54, at para. 30; Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty Assn. v.
Douglas College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570, at pp. 604-5.
70
As Rousseau-Houle J.A. explained in the Court of Appeal decision,
only a comprehensive vision of the situation will allow us to resolve disputes
related to a collective agreement (at para. 129):
[translation]
In the case at bar, the alleged discrimination must be interpreted in light of the
simultaneously collective and individual nature of the rights under the
collective agreement and of the bargaining system currently in force under
Quebec labour law. As Gagnon, LeBel and Verge wrote, “The collective agreement
encompasses an incredibly varied range of aspects of the relationships between
employers, unions and employees, to the point where it has become a veritable
‘Workplace Charter of Rights’. [Emphasis in original.]
71
Under the current legislative framework, we must determine the essential
character of the issue and find one single entity to handle it. If the parties
had several fora available to them, violence would be done to the comprehensive
statutory scheme designed to govern all aspects of the relationship of the
parties in a labour relations setting and the foundation upon which the
arbitrator’s exclusive jurisdiction is built would be undermined: St. Anne
Nackawic, supra, at p. 721. This would also be a source of
uncertainty in a number of cases in which the dominant aspect of a dispute or
the required degree of dissociation between the incident event, on the one
hand, and the collective agreement and its application, on the other, must be
addressed. The same problem could arise in cases where the grievance includes
several grounds, with only one of those grounds involving an infringement of Charter
rights.
72
Even if the remedy sought is founded on the infringement of fundamental
rights protected by the Quebec Charter, the arbitrator will have
exclusive jurisdiction as long as the essential character of the dispute
involves the interpretation or application of the collective agreement. The
fact that the Commission or the Tribunal has greater expertise than arbitrators
with respect to human rights violations is an insufficient basis on which to
conclude that arbitrators should not have the power to uphold fundamental
rights: Parry Sound, supra, at para. 53. In Weber,
supra, at para. 60, this Court gave a clear indication of the
advantages of giving arbitrators exclusive jurisdiction over issues of
fundamental rights raised in disputes that, based on their facts, would fall
within an arbitrator’s jurisdiction:
Citizens are permitted to assert their Charter rights in a
prompt, inexpensive, informal way. The parties are not required to duplicate
submissions on the case in two different fora, for determination of two
different legal issues. A specialized tribunal can quickly sift the facts and
compile a record for the reviewing court.
C. The Tribunal’s Lack of Exclusive Jurisdiction
73
Under the jurisdiction-endowing provisions provided for under the Quebec
Charter, the Tribunal does not have exclusive jurisdiction over hearing
and ruling on complaints concerning human rights violations. As the
respondents indicated, the Quebec Charter favours the universality of
jurisdiction for tribunals, be they ordinary or specialized ones, to ensure its
proper application. There is no provision in the Quebec Charter that
would favour or give precedence to one jurisdiction in particular.
74
In fact, s. 111 of the Quebec Charter, which defines the
scope of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction, does not indicate that this jurisdiction
is exclusive. This is compatible with s. 77, which recognizes that an
individual whose rights under the Quebec Charter have been infringed may
institute proceedings in a forum other than the Tribunal. Thus, there is
nothing in the Quebec Charter that would prevent such plaintiffs from
applying to a different forum, such as a court of law.
75
Moreover, once the Commission has determined that a complaint is sufficiently
founded and that all attempts at resolving the dispute have failed or the
agreed-upon proposal has not been implemented, s. 80 of the Quebec Charter
gives the Commission the right to apply to a tribunal to obtain, where
consistent with the public interest, any appropriate measure against the person
at fault or to demand, in favour of the victim, any measure of redress it
considers appropriate at that time. The tribunal that the Commission applies
to could just as well be a court of law as the specialized tribunal created by
the Quebec Charter.
76
In addition to the non-exclusive nature of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction,
it should be noted that any competent tribunal, not just the Tribunal, has the
power to grant a remedy pursuant to s. 49 of the Quebec Charter.
The Tribunal’s lack of exclusive jurisdiction was recognized by this Court in Béliveau
St-Jacques v. Fédération des employées et employés de services publics inc.,
[1996] 2 S.C.R. 345.
77
The Quebec legislature did not deem it essential to the implementation
of the Quebec Charter that the Tribunal alone should rule on fundamental
rights issues. Nevertheless, its intent with regard to the legislative
framework established by the Labour Code is very clear. It wished to
give arbitrators exclusive jurisdiction, without exception, over the resolution
of disputes arising out of collective agreements. Regardless of whether a case
concerns a simple pay dispute or discrimination in the determination of pay,
the principle of exclusive arbitral jurisdiction must still be applied. As I
observed in Regina Police, supra, at para. 34, we must avoid
formalistic interpretations of the provisions that would deny the
decision-making body jurisdiction where it was clearly the intention of the
legislature that it hear the dispute.
IV. Conclusion
78
Since in my view the Quebec Court of Appeal was correct in its decision
that the Tribunal did not have jurisdiction ratione materiae to hear the
dispute, I would dismiss the appeal, with costs.
APPENDIX
Legislative
Provisions:
Charter of
Human Rights and Freedoms, R.S.Q., c. C-12
10. Every person has a right to full and equal recognition and
exercise of his human rights and freedoms, without distinction, exclusion or
preference based on race, colour, sex, pregnancy, sexual orientation, civil
status, age except as provided by law, religion, political convictions,
language, ethnic or national origin, social condition, a handicap or the use of
any means to palliate a handicap.
49.1. Any complaint, dispute or remedy the subject-matter of
which is covered by the Pay Equity Act (chapter E-12.001) shall be dealt with
exclusively in accordance with the provisions of that Act.
52. No provision of any Act, even subsequent to the Charter, may
derogate from sections 1 to 38, except so far as provided by those sections,
unless such Act expressly states that it applies despite the Charter.
77. The commission shall refuse or cease to act in favour of
the victim where
(1) the victim or the complainant so requests, subject to the
commission’s ascertaining that such request is made freely and voluntarily;
(2) the victim or the complainant has, on the basis of the same facts,
personally pursued one of the remedies provided for in sections 49 and 80.
The commission may refuse or cease to act in favour
of the victim where
(1) the complaint is based on acts or omissions the last of which
occurred more than two years before the filing of the complaint;
(2) the victim or the complainant does not have a sufficient interest;
(3) the complaint is frivolous, vexatious or made in bad faith;
(4) the victim or the complainant has, on the basis of the same facts,
personally pursued a remedy other than those provided for in sections 49 and
80.
101. The Tribunal is composed of not fewer than 7 members,
including a president and assessors, appointed by the Government. The
president shall be chosen, after consultation with the chief judge of the Court
of Québec, from among the judges of that court having notable experience and
expertise in, sensitivity to and interest for matters of human rights and
freedoms; the assessors shall be chosen from among the persons included in the
panel provided for in the third paragraph of section 62.
111. The Tribunal is competent to hear and dispose of any
application submitted under section 80, 81 or 82, in particular in matters of
employment or housing or in connection with goods and services generally
available to the public, and any application submitted under section 88, 90 or
91 in respect of an affirmative action program.
Only the commission may initially submit an
application to the Tribunal to pursue any of the remedies provided for in any
of the said sections, subject to the substitution provided for in section 84 in
favour of a complainant and to the pursuit of the remedy provided for in
section 91 by a person on whom the Tribunal has previously imposed an
affirmative action program.
Labour Code,
R.S.Q., c. C-27
1. In this code, unless the context requires otherwise, the
following expressions mean:
.
. .
(f) “grievance”: any disagreement respecting
the interpretation or application of a collective agreement;
.
. .
100. Every grievance shall be submitted to arbitration in the
manner provided in the collective agreement if it so provides and the certified
association and the employer abide by it; otherwise it shall be referred to an
arbitrator chosen by the parties or, failing agreement, appointed by the
Minister.
100.12. In the exercise of his duties the arbitrator may
(a) interpret and apply any Act or
regulation to the extent necessary to settle a grievance;
.
. .
Appeal allowed, Bastarache
and Arbour JJ. dissenting.
Solicitor for the appellant: Commission des droits de la personne
et des droits de la jeunesse, Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondent the Attorney General of Quebec:
Bernard, Roy & Associés, Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondents Centrale de l’enseignement du Québec,
now Centrale des syndicats du Québec, and Fédération des syndicats de l’enseignement:
Grondin, Poudrier, Bernier, Québec.
Solicitor for the intervener the Canadian Human Rights Commission:
Canadian Human Rights Commission, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the intervener the Ontario Human Rights Commission:
Ontario Human Rights Commission, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal:
Lafortune, Leduc, Montréal.
Solicitor for the intervener Confédération des syndicats nationaux:
Confédération des syndicats nationaux, Montréal.
Solicitors for the intervener Fédération des travailleurs et
travailleuses du Québec: Trudel Nadeau, Montréal.
Solicitor for the intervener the Canadian Union of Public
Employees: Canadian Union of Public Employees, Montréal.