Sept-Îles (City) v. Quebec (Labour Court), [2001] 2 S.C.R.
670, 2001 SCC 48
City of Sept-Îles Appellant
v.
Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 2589 Respondent
and
Labour Court Respondent
and
2862-3775 Québec inc. Respondent
and
Services sanitaires du St-Laurent inc. Respondent
Indexed as: Sept-Îles (City) v. Quebec (Labour Court)
Neutral citation: 2001 SCC 48.
File No.: 27291.
2000: October 30; 2001: July 13.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé, Gonthier,
Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache and Arbour JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Labour law — Transfer
of operation of part of undertaking — Subcontracting of municipal
service — Definition of undertaking — Degree of autonomy
subcontractors given — Decision of labour commissioner finding transfer
of operation of part of undertaking and transferring certification and
collective agreement to new subcontractors — Degree of autonomy required
to find transfer of operation of part of undertaking — Whether
commissioner adopted functional definition of undertaking — Labour Code,
R.S.Q., c. C‑27, s. 45.
Administrative law — Judicial
review — Standard of review — Labour Court — Standard of
review applicable to decisions of Labour Court in relation to whether
undertaking alienated or operated by another — Labour Code, R.S.Q.,
c. C‑27, ss. 45, 46.
The appellant City contracted out garbage collection
in certain districts of the City to subcontractors. In accordance with
art. 15 of the collective agreement between the City and the respondent
union representing the City’s salaried manual labourers, no unionized employees
were laid off, had wages cut or lost benefits as a result of the contracts with
the subcontractors. The union filed motions under s. 45 of the Labour
Code with the labour commissioner general, seeking to have the transfer of
the certification and the collective agreement to the subcontractors recorded.
According to the evidence adduced, the subcontractors used their own staff and
their own equipment, continued to exercise complete authority to manage their
staff and were required to comply with the City’s instructions regarding the
proper performance of the contract. The City continued to be ultimately
responsible for a number of aspects of the garbage collection service. In a
decision affirmed by the Labour Court, the commissioner recorded the partial
transfer of the City’s rights and obligations to the subcontractors and held
that they were bound by the certification and collective agreement. The
Superior Court found that it was patently unreasonable to consider only the
transfer of functions and allowed the applications for judicial review brought by
the City and one of its subcontractors. The Court of Appeal restored the
decision of the Labour Court, stating that the applicable standard of review
was patent unreasonableness and that the decision of the Labour Court in the
case at bar did not contain any error that might justify intervention by the
superior courts.
Held (Bastarache J.
dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed. The Labour Court’s decision is
not patently unreasonable.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major and Arbour JJ.: The standard of
review is patent unreasonableness. Under the principles developed by the
Labour Court following Bibeault, s. 45 of the Labour Code may
apply to subcontracts where the transferee, in addition to performing functions
similar to those performed by the transferor to which the certification
originally applied, receives a right to operate part of the transferor’s
undertaking. Those principles are not patently unreasonable and do not
conflict with the decisions of this Court, which provide that it is up to the
specialized decision‑making authorities to weigh the applicable criteria
in order to determine whether a transfer of the operation of an undertaking has
occurred. Moreover, the decisions of the commissioner and the Labour Court in
this case do not represent a return to a functional definition of an
undertaking. On the contrary, the specialized decision-making authorities have
sought to identify the essential elements of the part of an undertaking of which
the operation had been transferred, by considering the nature of the
undertaking and the relative importance of its various components. That
approach is consistent with the definition of an undertaking adopted by this
Court in Bibeault.
In addition, in situations involving the transfer of
the operation of part of an undertaking, the Labour Court has developed
reasonable principles for adapting the requirement that the transferee be given
a sufficient degree of autonomy so that a conclusion may be made that the
operation of an undertaking has been transferred. The existence of a contract
laying down certain precise methods of performing the work is not a barrier to
applying s. 45. In previous decisions, this Court has not adopted a rigid
and absolute requirement that a subcontractor must have total control over the
part of the undertaking of which the operation was transferred. In this case,
the commissioner and the Labour Court used the criterion of the subordination
of the employees to the contractors in order to determine the degree of legal
autonomy that the contracts gave the contractors in operating the part of the
undertaking that had been transferred. The function of developing the criteria
for assessing the degree of autonomy that the transferee must be given in order
to conclude that s. 45 applies is central to the specialized jurisdiction
of the labour commissioner as it relates to the transfer of the operation of an
undertaking. The principles that were applied in this case do not result in
absurdity, but rather ensure the rational and realistic application of
s. 45.
Article 15 of the collective agreement, which
authorizes subcontracting on certain conditions, does not amount to a waiver of
the application of s. 45, or a contractual exception to that provision.
Indeed, since s. 45 is a provision of public order, its application cannot
be precluded by a contractual provision.
Although the collective agreement will normally follow
the certification, a distinction can be made, under ss. 45 and 46 of the Labour
Code, between first transferring the certification and then deciding
whether it is appropriate to transfer the entire collective agreement.
Contractual provisions designed to protect the employees in the event of a
transfer of operation, as well as the concrete fact situation prevailing in the
undertaking and the industry in general, are relevant factors that the
commissioner may consider when deciding whether the collective agreement should
be transferred. However, the commissioner and the Labour Court have the sole
authority to examine the factors in question and select the solution they
consider most appropriate. In this case, the specialized decision-making authorities
opted for transfer of the collective agreement. That solution involves certain
disadvantages, but they are not sufficient to warrant judicial review in a
situation where the standard of review to be applied is patent
unreasonableness.
The Act respecting sales of municipal public
utilities is not relevant in determining whether s. 45 of the Labour
Code applies. The fact that there are special mechanisms to enable a
municipality to alienate certain public utilities does not affect the analysis
of the consequences, in labour law, of the alienation or transfer of those
services.
Per Bastarache J.
(dissenting): The Labour Board’s decision – that the
contracting out of the garbage collection was a partial operation by another of
the City’s undertaking sufficient to trigger s. 45 of the Labour Code
– was patently unreasonable. First, Bibeault prohibited
a purely functional definition of “undertaking” in s. 45 that would be
revived by a finding of successorship in a situation where all that was
transferred was tasks or work. In that decision, a “total control”
understanding of the type of subcontracting that could trigger s. 45 was
adopted. Here, while the subcontractors had responsibility over their
personnel, the City did not assign them total control over the garbage
collection service but rather continued to play a management and supervisory
role. Section 45 can only apply to subcontracting situations in which the
former employer gives up overall responsibility for the work performed and the
contractor assumes complete responsibility for that work. Second, the autonomy
requirement in a successorship analysis found in Lester was not met.
This requirement involves two elements. The first element is the idea that
what is being transferred must be a viable functional economic vehicle or
entity. The second element is one of finality to the transfer in the sense
that the first business no longer has control over the part of the business
that has been given over. When, as here, what is being ceded is work alone and
the transferor maintains responsibility over the transferee, this element of
finality has not been satisfied.
Cases Cited
By Arbour J.
Followed: Ivanhoe
inc. v. UFCW, Local 500, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 565, 2001 SCC 47, aff’g [1999]
R.J.Q. 32; U.E.S., Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048; Lester
(W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the
Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 644; considered:
Université McGill v. St-Georges, [1999] R.J.D.T. 9; Syndicat des
employées et employés professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v.
Commission scolaire Laurenval, [1999] R.J.D.T. 1; referred to: Syndicat
des cols bleus de Ville de Saint-Hubert v. Ville de Saint-Hubert, [1999]
R.J.D.T. 76, aff’g St-Hubert (Ville de) v. Prud’homme, J.E. 95-1642,
rev’g Syndicat des cols bleus de Ville de St-Hubert v. Entreprises Gilles
Tisseur inc., D.T.E. 95T-318; Maison L’Intégrale inc. v. Tribunal
du travail, [1996] R.J.Q. 859, leave to appeal refused, [1996] 3 S.C.R. xi.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting)
Ivanhoe inc. v. UFCW, Local 500, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 565, 2001 SCC 47, aff’g [1999] R.J.Q. 32; Ajax
(Town) v. CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000 SCC 23; U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048; Lester (W.W.) (1978) Ltd.
v. United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and
Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 644.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act respecting sales of
municipal public utilities, R.S.Q., c. V-4,
s. 1 [repl. 1987, c. 57, s. 814].
Act respecting the conditions
of employment in the public sector and the municipal sector, S.Q. 1993, c. 37.
Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27,
ss. 45, 46 [repl. 1990, c. 69, s. 2].
Authors Cited
Gagnon, Robert P. Le droit du
travail du Québec: pratiques et théories, 4e éd. Cowansville,
Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1999.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
rendered March 16, 1999, setting aside a decision of the Superior Court,
D.T.E. 96T-747, which had quashed a decision of the Labour Court, [1995] T.T.
395, affirming a decision of the labour commissioner, D.T.E. 94T-1246. Appeal
dismissed, Bastarache J. dissenting.
Claude Bureau, for the
appellant.
Gaston Nadeau and Richard
Gauthier, for the respondent the Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local
2589.
Benoit Belleau, for the
respondent the Labour Court.
No one appeared for the respondents 2862-3775 Québec
inc. and Services sanitaires du St-Laurent inc.
English version of the judgment of McLachlin C.J. and
L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major and Arbour JJ. delivered by
Arbour J. —
I. Introduction
1
This appeal was heard together with Ivanhoe inc. v. UFCW,
Local 500, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 565, 2001 SCC 47, in which reasons are
pronounced with this decision. The issue is whether the Quebec Labour Court
has adopted an interpretive policy with respect to the application of
s. 45 of the Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, regarding transfer of
the operation of part of an undertaking that is in conflict with U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048, or the subsequent
decisions of this Court. More specifically, the question to be decided is
whether the Labour Court has the power to conclude that a union’s certification
and collective agreement may be transferred to a subcontractor of the
employer. For the reasons that follow and the reasons given in support of my
decision in Ivanhoe, I find that the approach taken by the Labour Court
constitutes a reasonable exercise of its specialized jurisdiction that is not
in conflict with the decisions of this Court. Accordingly, the appeal must be
dismissed.
2
Sections 45 and 46 of the Labour Code are in issue in
this case. Those sections provide:
45. The alienation or operation by another in whole or in part
of an undertaking otherwise than by judicial sale shall not invalidate any
certification granted under this code, any collective agreement or any
proceeding for the securing of certification or for the making or carrying out
of a collective agreement.
The new employer, notwithstanding the division,
amalgamation or changed legal structure of the undertaking, shall be bound by
the certification or collective agreement as if he were named therein and shall
become ipso facto a party to any proceeding relating thereto, in
the place and stead of the former employer.
46. It shall be the duty of the labour commissioner, upon the
motion of an interested party, to rule on any matter relating to the
application of section 45.
For such purpose, the labour commissioner may
determine the applicability of that section and issue any order deemed
necessary to effect the transfer of rights or obligations contemplated
therein. He may also settle any difficulty arising out of the application of
that section.
II. The Facts
3
The respondent, the Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 2589 (the
“union”), has been certified since May 19, 1982, to represent all of
the salaried manual labourers employed by the appellant, the City of
Sept-Îles. The manual labourers employed by the appellant had been the subject
of a similar certification since 1961. There was a collective agreement between
the City and the union for the period from October 1, 1990 to September 30,
1993. That agreement was extended to September 30, 1995, pursuant to the Act
respecting the conditions of employment in the public sector and the municipal
sector, S.Q. 1993, c. 37. In 1991, the City decided to contract out
garbage collection in the Clarke, Ferland and de la Rive districts to C.A.
Construction enr., 2862-3775 Québec inc. (“C.A. Construction”), under a
contract that was in effect from January 1, 1992 to December 31, 1994.
In 1992, the City also awarded two waste collection and removal contracts to
Services sanitaires du St‑Laurent inc. (“Services sanitaires”). The
first contract was for commercial buildings and multi-family buildings with
five or more units located in the downtown area and covered the period from
August 1, 1992 to July 31, 1997. Services sanitaires also
agreed to supply the City with steel containers which would become the property
of the City at the end of the contract. The second agreement provided that
Services sanitaires was to collect and remove garbage from homes and apartment
buildings with four or fewer units in the downtown area, for the period from
January 4, 1993 to January 3, 1998. Before these contracts
were awarded, garbage collection had always been handled by City employees
covered by the certification held by the respondent, except in the de la Rive
district, where collection had always been subcontracted.
4
Since 1968, all collective agreements signed by the City with
associations representing manual labourers had contained a provision
authorizing subcontracting subject to certain conditions. Article 15 of the
agreement in effect from 1990 to 1995 provided:
[translation] ARTICLE
15 SUBCONTRACTING
15.01 No employee covered by this agreement
may be dismissed or laid off or have his or her wages cut as a result of the
subcontracting of work normally performed by permanent employees of the City.
Employees may be transferred or assigned to other equivalent duties.
15.02 The City agrees to recall temporarily laid
off employees before having work normally done by regular employees to whom
this agreement applies performed by subcontractors, provided that they are able
to perform the work immediately and that the City has the necessary equipment.
15.03 The City agrees not to temporarily lay off
any regular employees if at the time of the layoff it is employing
subcontractors to perform work normally done by regular employees to whom this
agreement applies.
15.04 The Employer will simultaneously forward
to the union a copy of the invitations to tender that it publishes in the
newspapers.
15.05 The Employer will use rented machinery
only where the machinery of the same type owned by the City is unavailable.
Accordingly,
no unionized employees were laid off, had wages cut or lost benefits as a
result of the contracts with which we are concerned. C.A. Construction and
Services sanitaires did not hire any permanent or full-time employees of the
City. Furthermore, it is admitted that the City did not transfer technology,
equipment, permits or immovable property to the subcontractors, who used their
own staff and their own equipment.
5
On January 28, 1993, the union filed two motions under
s. 45 of the Labour Code with the labour commissioner general,
seeking to have the transfer of the certification and the collective agreement,
except for the de la Rive district, to C.A. Construction and Services
sanitaires recorded.
6
The contractors’ bids and the contracts signed pursuant to those bids
were drawn up on the basis of detailed specifications prepared by the City and
incorporated into the contracts. According to the evidence adduced before the
labour commissioner, the City continued to be responsible for the landfill site
and for a number of aspects of the garbage collection service, even for the
districts which the subcontractors were in charge of. For example, the City
normally decided when and how often garbage would be collected for each
district, and what days were public holidays. It set the number and volume of
the containers to be installed for the various establishments and approved the
machinery used by the subcontractors. If the subcontractors failed to perform
their obligations within the time allowed, the City could perform them itself
using its own employees and its own equipment, at the contractor’s expense.
7
The subcontractors were required to comply with the instructions given
by the City regarding the proper performance of the contract. For this
purpose, the contracts provided that a radio link would be installed in the
contractors’ trucks or that the contractors would have to provide cellular
telephones, so that the City foreman could contact the truck driver if
necessary. The City engineer could add tasks not included in the
specifications if he considered them to be essential for carrying out the
project, and he had the authority to manage the work and interpret the
specifications. The City also continued to be responsible at all times for
dealing with customers. The City received complaints and managed changes,
stoppages and temporary interruptions of service based on seasonal conditions,
weather and customer needs.
8
However, under the contracts, the contractors continued to exercise
complete authority to manage their staff. They alone were responsible for
hiring and paying their employees and for the employees’ working conditions.
They could also subcontract part of their work if they complied with certain
conditions. The contractors had to ensure that their employees did a clean
job, did not make too much noise, did not take any items for themselves that
taxpayers put out for collection and were polite to the public at all times.
They had to take the disciplinary measures that were needed to ensure
compliance with these requirements. If any breach occurred, the City could
take action against the contractors, but never directly against their
employees.
9
The contractors also had to comply with all obligations imposed on
employers by the applicable occupational health and safety legislation. They
were responsible for eliminating any danger to the health, safety, or personal
security both of their own employees and of anyone present at the work site. They
were also liable for any harm done to persons or property through carelessness,
negligence, want of skill or failure to perform the work, and they had to
provide any additional staff needed to avoid delays.
III. Previous Decisions
A. Labour Commissioner, D.T.E. 94T-1246
10
Commissioner Garant granted the union’s motions and recorded the partial
transfer of the City’s rights and obligations to the contractors, who would be
bound by the certification and collective agreement. He noted that according
to the previous decisions of the Labour Court, s. 45 could be applied to
the transfer of a right to operate janitorial or green space upkeep services.
In his opinion, the situation was the same for garbage collection. With regard
to the degree of control retained by the City, the commissioner was of the view
that this was not a barrier to applying s. 45, since garbage collection is
a job that must be done in a specific, routine way in order to keep up the
quality of the service. The contractors were still autonomous in terms of how
they did the work and most importantly how they managed their staff, since the
City exercised no control over their employees. The fact that the collective
agreement contained a clause authorizing subcontracting could not defeat the
application of s. 45, which is a provision of public order.
B. Labour Court, [1995] T.T. 395
11
Judge Yergeau dismissed the application for leave to appeal made by C.A.
Construction, because it was brought late. He dismissed the appeals by the City
and Services sanitaires on the merits, affirming the decision of commissioner
Garant. In his opinion, the decisions of the Labour Court and the principles
in Bibeault, supra, holding that the transfer of part of the
operation of an undertaking can result in s. 45 applying with respect to
janitorial services had to be followed. The same principles apply to garbage
collection. The City, which continues to be responsible to the public for
collection services, may nevertheless contract out the operation of the
services to someone else. The judge expressed his agreement with the Labour
Court’s decision in Syndicat des cols bleus de Ville de St-Hubert v.
Entreprises Gilles Tisseur inc., D.T.E. 95T-318, which recognized that
s. 45 applied to the transfer of part of the operation of a municipality’s
snow removal activities. More specifically, he concurred with Judge
Prud’homme’s comments that, although contracts for services involve much closer
control now than they used to, this does not mean that s. 45 cannot be
applied. In service industries, the transfer of technology or equipment is of
much less significance to the analysis that must be done under s. 45, and
the fact that taxing authority is not transferred is not decisive either. The
clause in the collective agreement authorizing subcontracting cannot defeat the
application of s. 45, which is a provision of public order.
C. Superior Court, D.T.E. 96T-747
12
Corriveau J. allowed the applications for judicial review brought
by the City and Services sanitaires against the decision of the Labour Court.
He found that Judge Yergeau had applied the functional definition of an
undertaking that was rejected by this Court in Bibeault, supra,
since he had recognized that only garbage collection tasks had been
transferred. It was patently unreasonable to consider only the transfer of
functions and ignore the other factors such as the transfer of assets,
goodwill, decision-making authority or accountability. The decision by Judge
Prud’homme in St-Hubert, supra, on which Judge Yergeau relied,
had been quashed by the Superior Court (St-Hubert (Ville de) v. Prud’homme,
J.E. 95-1642 (aff’d on other grounds [1999] R.J.D.T. 76 (C.A.))).
Corriveau J. adopted the Superior Court’s reasoning in that case and was
of the view that the Labour Court had committed the same errors in this case as
in St-Hubert and that Judge Yergeau’s decision should therefore be
quashed on the same grounds.
D. Court of Appeal, March 16, 1999
13
Rothman and Thibault JJ.A. and Philippon J. (ad hoc) allowed the
union’s appeal and restored the decision of the Labour Court. They stated that
the applicable standard of review was patent unreasonableness and that the
decision of the Labour Court in the case at bar did not contain any error that
might justify intervention by the superior courts. They referred to a number
of decisions of the Court of Appeal subsequent to the decision by
Corriveau J., including Maison L’Intégrale inc. v. Tribunal
du travail, [1996] R.J.Q. 859, leave to appeal refused, [1996] 3 S.C.R. xi,
in which the court stated the applicable standard of review and found that the
approach taken by the Labour Court, that the transfer of a right to operate may
result in s. 45 being applied, was not patently unreasonable.
14
The court also referred to Ivanhoe inc. v. Travailleurs
et travailleuses unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 500,
[1999] R.J.Q. 32 (C.A.), and to three other cases, Saint-Hubert (C.A.), supra,
leave to appeal refused, [1999] 3 S.C.R. xii, Université McGill v.
St-Georges, [1999] R.J.D.T. 9 (C.A.), and Syndicat des employées et
employés professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v. Commission
scolaire Laurenval, [1999] R.J.D.T. 1 (C.A.), which it had decided at the
same time as Ivanhoe. In Ivanhoe, writing for the majority of
this Court, at paras. 13-20, I summarize the approach adopted by the Court
of Appeal in the series of decisions rendered in December 1998.
Essentially, the majority of the court found that the approach taken by the
Labour Court to the application of s. 45 to transfers by way of subcontracting
was not patently unreasonable. In the case at bar, the Court of Appeal
followed that principle and concluded that this case could not be distinguished
from the other decisions cited.
IV. Issues
15
In this Court, the City of Sept-Îles is seeking to have the decision of
the Superior Court allowing its application for judicial review restored. In
its view, the decisions holding that the certification and the collective
agreement had to be transferred are patently unreasonable and inconsistent
with the decisions of this Court. It submits, first, that those decisions
adopt the functional definition of an undertaking which was rejected in Bibeault,
supra, by applying s. 45 to mere subcontracting of functions, and
second, that the labour commissioner and the Labour Court failed to comply with
the requirement that the transferee have received an identifiable and
autonomous part of the undertaking, established by this Court in Lester
(W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the
Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 644, and Bibeault,
supra, since the evidence could not support their finding that the
contractors were legally independent of the City in the conduct of their
operations.
16
In the appellant’s submission, art. 15 of the collective agreement
provides the employees with adequate protection. Refusing to apply s. 45
would not have caused any harm to the employees, since they kept their jobs and
were not disadvantaged in any respect because of the contracts entered into
with the contractors, whereas the transfer of municipal collective agreements
to subcontractors could inhibit the use of subcontracting by Quebec
municipalities, since contractors would refuse to bid, or would bid subject to
conditions that would not make it possible to save any public funds. The
appellant also believes that the operation of a municipal service could be
transferred only if the requirements of the Act respecting sales of
municipal public utilities, R.S.Q., c. V-4 (“ASMPU”), were met, and
that no transfer took place in the instant case.
V. Analysis
17
The standard of review that applies to judicial review of decisions
dealing with s. 45 of the Labour Code is patent unreasonableness,
as I state in Ivanhoe, supra, at paras. 24-30. The principle of
judicial deference therefore had to serve as a guide for the courts in
reviewing the administrative decisions made in this case. That principle is
especially important in labour law, as I also point out in Ivanhoe, at
para. 32.
18
The decisions of the administrative authorities in the case at bar
comprise a direct application of the principles developed by the Labour Court
following Bibeault, supra. Pursuant to decisions of that court,
s. 45 may apply to subcontracts where the transferee, in addition to
performing functions similar to those performed by the transferor to which the
certification originally applied, receives a right to operate part of the
transferor’s undertaking. I explain in Ivanhoe, supra, at
paras. 62-81, that those principles are not patently unreasonable and do
not conflict with the decisions of this Court, which rather provide that it is
up to the specialized decision-making authorities to weigh the applicable
criteria in order to determine whether a transfer of the operation of an
undertaking has occurred.
19
In the case at bar, Judge Yergeau stated that [translation] “[i]t seems clear that technology or equipment
is not as important a consideration in a service undertaking” (p. 404). He
therefore believed that it was not necessary for physical items to be
transferred to the subcontractors in order to find that a transfer of the
operation of an undertaking had occurred. The right to operate that was
transferred related not only to the function of collecting and removing
garbage, but also to the undertaking itself, since it authorized the
contractors to perform their activities on land belonging to the municipality
and the public, and to use the municipality’s landfill site. In McGill,
supra, LeBel J.A., as he then was, wrote, at p. 14:
[translation] In U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, and also later in Lester (W.W.)
(1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices
of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, the Supreme Court
did not impose a uniform view of what an undertaking is in concrete terms. On
the contrary, it expressed the view that the components of the undertaking vary
depending on the economic sector in question. [Emphasis added.]
20
The decisions of the commissioner and the Labour Court in this case do
not therefore represent a return to a functional definition of an undertaking.
On the contrary, the specialized decision-making authorities have sought to
identify the essential elements of the part of an undertaking of which the
operation had been transferred, by considering the nature of the undertaking
and the relative importance of its various components. That approach is
consistent with the definition of an undertaking adopted by this Court in Bibeault,
supra, which LeBel J.A. described as follows at p. 54 of Ivanhoe,
supra:
[translation] On that
occasion, however, the Supreme Court certainly did not decide that it was
necessary that the new transferee be responsible for all of the activities of
the undertaking or that it was necessary, at least, to establish that the
undertaking in respect of which a transfer of operation had occurred had been
perfectly miniaturized. The Supreme Court’s decision seems rather to rest on
the concept of sufficiency, which is taken from the decision in Mode Amazone.
21
Furthermore, in Ivanhoe, at paras. 78-81, I review the
approach taken by the Labour Court to the requirement that the transferee be
given a sufficient degree of autonomy, without which it would be impossible to
conclude that the operation of an undertaking had been transferred. I note
that the Labour Court has developed reasonable principles for adapting this
requirement to situations involving the transfer of the operation of part of an
undertaking. In such cases, there continues to be a degree of integration
between the main undertaking and the part of the undertaking of which the
operation has been transferred. In the view of the Labour Court, as
LeBel J.A. put it in Ivanhoe, at p. 59, [translation] “[b]y its very essence, a
transfer of the operation of part of an undertaking must remain within the
sphere of the main undertaking, which gives it its identity”. In those
circumstances, it is not surprising that the transferor can impose constraints
on the new employers relating to how they perform their work, since it is still
in charge of controlling the operation of the main undertaking from which the
transfer derives. This was why the Labour Court held that the existence of
contracts laying down certain precise methods of performing the work was not a
barrier to applying s. 45.
22
In addition, with respect for the contrary opinion, I do not believe
that Bibeault, supra, established a requirement that in order for
s. 45 to apply the transferee must have total control over the part of the
undertaking of which the operation was transferred. In my view, the
explanations given by Beetz J. regarding terminology, at pp. 1079‑81,
were intended only to clarify the type of subcontracting involved in that case
and to properly characterize the contracts between the Commission scolaire
régionale de l’Outaouais and its subcontractors. Those passages did not relate
to the issue of the degree of autonomy that a subcontractor must be given in
order for s. 45 to apply, since that point was not in issue in Bibeault.
Furthermore, as I state in Ivanhoe, supra, at paras. 78‑79,
this Court also did not, in my view, adopt a rigid and absolute requirement in Lester,
supra, that a subcontractor must have total control over the part of the
undertaking of which the operation was transferred, although the Court implied
that some degree of autonomy on the part of the transferee was required.
23
Indeed, requiring total control would be incompatible with the very
concept of the transfer of the operation of part of an undertaking which, by
virtue of the wording of s. 45 of the Labour Code, must result in
the transfer of the certification. Since this Court has never ruled out the
transfer of the operation of part of an undertaking and has, on the contrary,
expressly recognized the possibility of applying s. 45 to subcontracting
(see Bibeault, supra, at pp. 1059‑60 and 1105; Ivanhoe,
supra, at para. 64), it is not possible, in my view, to require
that the transferee have absolute and exclusive control of the part of the
undertaking the operation of which has been transferred. In the case at bar,
it was up to the labour commissioner and the Labour Court to assess the degree
of autonomy that the subcontractors had to have been given in order for
s. 45 to apply, and to develop criteria that would enable it to determine
whether, in fact, Services sanitaires and C.A. Construction had the necessary
autonomy.
24
In this case, the commissioner and the Labour Court used the criterion
of the subordination of the employees to the contractors in order to determine
the degree of legal autonomy that the contracts gave the contractors in
operating the part of the undertaking that had been transferred. This
criterion can be used to establish whether the legal transaction between the
parties gives the transferee sufficient authority to enable it to effectively
become the new employer in charge of operating the part of the undertaking in
question. If so, s. 45 applies to ensure that there is an employer
legally capable of controlling the employees’ working conditions. This is a
contextual interpretation of the transfer of the operation of part of an
undertaking, adapted to the purposes of s. 45. The approach taken by the
Labour Court also seems to be consistent with what was said in Bibeault,
supra, regarding the concept of the transfer of the operation of an
undertaking. At p. 1120, Beetz J. wrote:
For the purposes of collective bargaining, the employer
who negotiates and is bound by the terms of the collective agreement must at
the same time be the one who controls the undertaking: otherwise, the employer
would be unable to perform the obligations imposed by the agreement.
In the instant
case, the City does not have the authority under the contracts to decide what
the employees’ working conditions will be or what disciplinary action may be
taken against them. It can only ensure that the contracts are properly
performed by the contractors, which have complete authority to manage their
staff.
25
The function of developing the criteria for assessing the degree of
autonomy that the transferee must be given in order to conclude that s. 45
applies is central to the specialized jurisdiction of the labour commissioner
as it relates to the transfer of the operation of an undertaking. The
principles that were applied in this case do not result in absurdity, but
rather ensure the rational and realistic application of s. 45. There is
therefore no justification for intervention by the superior courts. This was
in fact the conclusion of the majority of the Court of Appeal in Laurenval
and McGill, supra. In those cases, the transferors reserved the
authority to control the manner in which the work was performed by the
subcontractors. In Laurenval, one of the subcontractors was required to
comply with instructions given by the transferor, who also had the authority to
supervise the work as a whole. In McGill, in addition to supervising
the work generally, the university set the timetable for completing the
contracts and reserved the authority to step in, in emergencies. LeBel and
Brossard JJ.A. concluded that it was not patently unreasonable to apply s.
45 in those circumstances, although Brossard J.A., erroneously in my view,
was of the opinion that the approach taken by the Labour Court conflicted with
the decisions of this Court.
26
In Saint-Hubert (C.A.), supra, which involved municipal
snow removal, the City, which had contracted out the work, had reserved a
substantial power of control, similar to what the contracts in this case left
with the City of Sept-Îles. The Court of Appeal in that case held that the
decision of the Labour Court concluding that s. 45 applied was patently
unreasonable, although the majority of the court based that conclusion solely
on the union’s lack of diligence in pursuing its remedies and on the confusion
in the evidence as to the intended scope of the original certification in
respect of the City. With respect to the reasoning of the Labour Court on the
merits, with which Judge Yergeau indicated his agreement in the instant case,
it should be noted that the majority of the court relied on its decisions in Ivanhoe
and Laurenval, supra, in which it had held that the approach
taken by the Labour Court was not patently unreasonable.
27
The commissioner and the Labour Court also held that art. 15 of the
collective agreement did not preclude the application of s. 45. That
clause, which authorized subcontracting on certain conditions, could not be
described as a waiver of the application of s. 45, or a contractual
exception to that provision. As LeBel J.A. stated in McGill, supra,
at p. 13:
[translation]
In that regard, the function of s. 45 L.C. differs from the function of
collective agreements. That provision is a legal mechanism that is not the
same as the contractual arrangements provided by the collective agreements. Section
45 L.C. is not prohibitive in nature in that, contrary to what we may sometimes
read, it does not prohibit the sale of the undertaking, the transfer of the
operation of the undertaking in whole or in part or the reorganization of the
undertaking. Its purpose is quite simply to attach certain consequences to
these transactions with respect to the certified union, the collective
agreement and certain related actions. [Emphasis added.]
If s. 45
does not prohibit subcontracting or transfer of part of the operation of an
undertaking, but merely attaches consequences to those transactions, it cannot
be said that a clause imposing conditions on subcontracting is intended to
create an exception to that provision. Indeed, even had the parties so
intended, the application of s. 45 could not have been precluded by a contractual
provision. On this point, R. P. Gagnon wrote, in Le droit du travail du
Québec: pratiques et théories (4th ed. 1999), at p. 324:
[translation]
The courts have unanimously recognized that section 45 is a provision of
public order which cannot be waived, at least in advance, whether by a
provision in a collective agreement or by any other agreement.
28
In addition, the protection provided by the collective agreement in this
case is different from and, in some respects, less than what is provided by
s. 45. Article 15 of the agreement protects only the City’s
permanent and full-time employees. Article 4 of the agreement provides for
several other types of employees, including employees on probation, temporary
employees, surplus employees, students and part-time employees, who do not
enjoy the protection of all the provisions of the collective agreement but
nevertheless have certain advantages in terms of wages and working conditions
that will not be preserved by applying art. 15 if the employer decides to
subcontract. Furthermore, there is nothing in the collective agreement that
would ensure that the certification was transferred in such a manner as to be
binding on another party, whereas s. 45 seeks above all to maintain a collective
bargaining framework in the undertaking by transferring the certification to
the new employer.
29
On the other hand, the fact that s. 45 is a provision of public
order does not mean that the labour commissioner may not take into account the
existence of a contractual provision that protects employees in the event of a
transfer of operation by a subcontract. As I indicate in Ivanhoe, supra,
at paras. 106-10, s. 46 of the Labour Code confers broad
powers on the commissioner to resolve any difficulties arising out of the
application of s. 45. For example, the commissioner may rule that
s. 45 applies, but decline to transfer a collective agreement, as was done
in Ivanhoe, although in general the agreement will follow the
certification.
30
There may be some disadvantages involved in transferring the generous
collective agreements negotiated at the municipal level to subcontractors.
First, this may limit the municipality’s opportunities for subcontracting by
deterring potential bidders. Second, it may prove difficult to put into effect
in the case of contractors that employ a small number of workers. Before the
labour commissioner, C.A. Construction pointed out that serious difficulties
should be anticipated if the collective agreement were transferred to it when
it had only two employees. Where contractual protection has been negotiated
for employees who suffer no disadvantage when the operation is transferred to a
subcontractor, as is the case here, the commissioner may examine all of the
difficulties that would result if s. 45 were applied, and has the
authority, if he considers it appropriate, to refuse to transfer the collective
agreement.
31
Although the collective agreement will normally follow the
certification, a distinction can be made, under ss. 45 and 46, between
first transferring the certification and then deciding whether it is
appropriate to transfer the entire collective agreement. Contractual
provisions designed to protect the employees in the event of a transfer of
operation, as well as the concrete fact situation prevailing in the undertaking
and the industry in general, are relevant factors that the commissioner may
consider when deciding whether the collective agreement should be transferred.
However, as I indicate in Ivanhoe, supra, at paras. 114-17, the
commissioner and the Labour Court have the sole authority to examine the
factors in question and select the solution they consider most appropriate. In
this case, the specialized decision-making authorities opted for transfer of
the collective agreement. That solution involves certain disadvantages, as did
the opposite solution which was adopted in Ivanhoe, but those
disadvantages are not sufficient to warrant judicial review in a situation
where the standard of review to be applied is patent unreasonableness.
32
Furthermore, under s. 1 ASMPU, no municipality may alienate
any public utility service belonging to it, “except by a by‑law which
requires the approval of the qualified voters and of the Government”. In this
case, no by‑law was submitted for the approval of the voters or the
government before contracts were awarded to C.A. Construction and to Services
sanitaires. In my view, the ASMPU is not relevant in determining
whether s. 45 of the Labour Code applies. The fact that there are
special mechanisms to enable a municipality to alienate certain public
utilities does not affect the analysis of the consequences, in labour law, of
the alienation or transfer of the operation of those services. Where the
commissioner determines that there has been an alienation or transfer of the
operation of an undertaking within the meaning of s. 45, the certification
and, in most cases, the collective agreement will be transferred to the new
employer. The ASMPU can be applied only to invalidate an alienation
that is contrary to the provisions of that Act. As Zerbisias J. (ad
hoc) stated in Saint-Hubert (C.A.), supra, at p. 82:
[translation]
This contract between the City and the subcontractors is not subject to the Act
respecting sales of municipal public utilities. However, that does not
mean that application of s. 45 L.C. cannot be triggered. It is quite
conceivable that an identifiable part of the municipal snow removal undertaking
could be transferred to a new undertaking without liability to third parties,
and the means of financing the activity sold, being transferred. [Emphasis
added.]
The argument
that s. 45 cannot be applied because the City cannot rid itself of its
obligation to collect garbage without complying with the requirements of the ASMPU
must therefore be rejected in this case.
33
In conclusion, the decision that there was a transfer of the operation
of part of an undertaking which triggered the application of s. 45 in this
case is neither patently unreasonable nor in conflict with the decisions of
this Court or the applicable legislation. There were therefore no grounds for
the Superior Court to intervene and the decision of the Court of Appeal must be
upheld.
VI. Disposition
34
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
The following are the reasons delivered by
35
Bastarache J. (dissenting)
— I have had the benefit of reading the reasons prepared by my colleague Madam
Justice Arbour for the majority in this case and in Ivanhoe inc. v. UFCW,
Local 500, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 565, 2001 SCC 47, released concurrently, and
must respectfully dissent here as I have done in Ivanhoe on the approach
taken toward the successorship provision in s. 45 of the Quebec Labour Code,
R.S.Q., c. C-27.
36
In Ivanhoe, my objections were essentially three: (i) the
lack of connection between the party who was “[t]he new employer” under s. 45
(the four contractors) and “the former employer” (Moderne) meant that the nexus
requirement in Ajax (Town) v. CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000
SCC 23, went unsatisfied; (ii) Bibeault’s (U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048) prohibition
of a purely functional definition of “undertaking” (“entreprise”) in s.
45 could not be inverted by reliance on the argument that in a situation in
which all there was to be transferred consisted merely of work, tasks or
functions, this was a satisfaction of the “organic” definition of undertaking
set out by Beetz J. in that case; and (iii) the “potential employer” or
retrocession approach in which Ivanhoe is said to be “the former employer” for
the purposes of s. 45 is nowhere supported by the text of this provision and is
a patently unreasonable interpretation of it.
37
The present case, while intersecting with some of the issues raised in Ivanhoe,
raises fewer of them. Of the three objections cited above, only the second one
is engaged here. Both the “potential employer” or retrocession argument as
well as the complete absence of a nexus between the new and former employer are
not issues here simply because this is a case of single-layer subcontracting.
The appellant, City of Sept‑Îles (the “City”) has contracted out its
garbage collection service to two companies, C.A. Construction enr. and
Services sanitaires du St-Laurent inc. (the “companies”). Hence, it is
uncontroversial that “the former employer” is the City and “[t]he new employer”
are the companies. There is no third link in the chain which is missing from
the legal relation requirement, and no “potential employer” or retrocession
argument is needed to artificially reconnect that party under s. 45. In other
words, this is a simple case of contracting out, and what needs to be decided
is whether the Labour Court’s decision ([1995] T.T. 395) that the contracting
out of the garbage collection was a partial operation by another of the City’s
undertaking sufficient to trigger s. 45 was patently unreasonable.
38
My own view is that this is a patently unreasonable decision, and
I base this on (i) substantially the same view of Bibeault, supra,
that I explained in my dissenting reasons in Ivanhoe, namely, that this
decision prohibited a purely functional definition of “undertaking” (“entreprise”)
in s. 45 that would be revived by a finding of successorship in a situation
where all that was transferred was tasks or work; and (ii) this Court’s
decision in Lester (W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen
and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990]
3 S.C.R. 644, in which the tasks attached to the transferred
undertaking were subjected to an autonomy requirement in a successorship analysis.
I. Bibeault
39
In Bibeault, Beetz J. placed the word “subcontractor” in
quotation marks and in the terminology section of the decision, at p. 1080,
comments on his decision to do this, suggesting that he would rather use the
word “contractor” rather than “subcontractor” to describe a situation in which
successorship may be triggered. In his discussion of the use of
“subcontractor” by the courts below, he said, at p. 1080, that subcontracting
in this context does not describe a situation in which a person assumes [translation] “responsibility
for certain parts of a project, supply contract or undertaking for which
another has overall responsibility” but rather it means the [translation] “[p]ractice
by which an organization assigns the performance of certain work to an
independent specialized contractor [where] [t]his contractor assumes
complete responsibility for th[e] work, which he performs himself or has
performed by his own employees” (p. 1080 (emphasis added)). In other words, he
adopted a “total control” understanding of the type of subcontracting that
could trigger s. 45.
40
This is not a situation in which the City has assigned total control
over garbage collection to the companies. The City continues to play a
management and supervisory role in the provision of garbage collection
service. For example, the collection times are fixed by the City and can only
be changed by the City; the City handles complaints regarding the service; the
City meets with clients if they need more information about such things as the
volume of garbage, etc. While it is true that the companies have
responsibility over their personnel (e.g. working conditions and behaviour on
the job), the companies could not be said to have anything close to complete
control over the work.
41
This idea that s. 45 can only apply to subcontracting situations in
which the former employer gives up overall responsibility for the work
performed and the contractor assumes complete responsibility for that work is
consistent with this case’s rejection of the purely functional definition of an
undertaking. As I stated in Ivanhoe, at para. 140, according to Bibeault,
“an undertaking for the purposes of s. 45 cannot consist merely of work, tasks
or functions performed by the employees under the former employer. Something
more must be sold or operated by another in order for the successorship
provision to be triggered.” Using the language adopted by Beetz J. in Bibeault,
what is sold or operated by another must be the undertaking understood as “a
going concern”; it cannot solely be the work. However, what we have in this
case is the type of subcontracting that is the work alone and the City remains
responsible for the provision of the service. This is precisely the situation
in which Bibeault held that s. 45 would not be triggered. Again, I
cannot agree that work alone is sufficient to satisfy s. 45 where work
alone is all that is available to be transferred.
II. Lester
42
Speaking of successorship provisions in Lester, McLachlin J. (as
she then was), writing for the majority of the Court, said, at p. 676:
Case law from jurisdictions across Canada is to the
same effect. While there are slight variations from province to province in
terms of scope (i.e., some Acts speak only of disposition of a business whereas
other Acts provide for disposition of a part of a business) a common theme
throughout the jurisdictions is that something must be relinquished from the
first business and obtained by the second.
This idea of
the one party “relinquishing” something that the other “obtains” is conjoined
with the idea that this “something” must be what is variously called “a functioning
entity that is viable in itself or sufficiently distinguishable to be severable
from the whole” (p. 676) or “a functional economic vehicle” (p. 677).
Moreover, McLachlin J. says, “in some way the first company no longer has the
business or part of the business, which has been conveyed to the second
company” (pp. 675-76).
43
This, it seems to me, involves two important elements. First, there is
the idea that what is transferred must be a viable functional economic vehicle
or entity. Second, there is an element of finality to the transfer in the
sense that the first business no longer has control over the part of the
business that has been given over, i.e. relinquished it to be obtained by
another. This echoes the total control understanding of subcontracting adopted
by Beetz J. in Bibeault.
44
In the Court of Appeal decision in Ivanhoe inc. v.
Travailleurs et travailleuses unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section
locale 500, [1999] R.J.Q. 32, and accepted here by the majority, LeBel J.A.
(as he then was) said that what was being transferred did not need to be a [translation] “full
miniaturization of the undertaking” (p. 54) or the [translation] “miniaturized
original undertaking, containing all of the original elements” (p. 60). He
said that it is enough that the part of the undertaking [translation] “be
potentially autonomous” but it need not be [translation] “capable of being sold or be
completely economically viable as an autonomous unit” (p. 60).
45
With great respect, I cannot agree. In my view, s. 45 requires whatever
is sold or operated by another to be factually autonomous, not notionally,
provisionally or possibly autonomous. This is not enough to satisfy Lester’s
first requirement of being a viable functional economic vehicle or entity.
Moreover, when what is being transferred is work alone, and the transferor maintains
responsibility over the transferee, I do not see how the second requirement of
finality has been satisfied.
III. Conclusion
46
While I agree with the majority that Lester discussed the
specificity of the construction industry (see Ivanhoe, supra, at
para. 67) and a successorship evaluation may differ somewhat depending on the
nature of the industry in question, I cannot accept that an industry-related
classification such as “entreprise de services” (“service undertaking”)
means that what would otherwise be no more than a transfer of functions can be
taken to satisfy Bibeault’s organic approach.
47
I agree with the majority that services such as janitorial services and
garbage collection can legitimately trigger the successorship provision
if enough of the business engaged in providing those services is transferred.
I want to be clear that nothing here turns on “how important” or integral such
a service may be taken to be to the original employer. However, when a new
company takes on the provision of those services, I do not think that a mere
industry designation can stand as substantive satisfaction of the “going
concern” understanding of “undertaking” in Bibeault.
48
As I stated in my dissent in Ivanhoe, Ajax shows that this
Court has moved somewhat away from its earlier attitude towards successorship
provisions in Bibeault and Lester. However, Ajax did not
touch on Bibeault’s prohibition of a purely functional definition of
undertaking, nor did it affect the requirements in Lester that did not
relate to the existence of related companies and their commercial history.
49
I would allow the appeal on the grounds of a patently unreasonable
interpretation of this Court’s decisions in Bibeault and Lester.
Appeal dismissed with costs, Bastarache
J. dissenting.
Solicitor for the appellant: Claude Bureau,
Sept-Îles.
Solicitors for the respondent the Canadian Union of Public
Employees, Local 2589: Trudel, Nadeau, Lesage, Larivière & Associés,
Québec.
Solicitors for the respondent the Labour Court: Bernard, Roy &
Associés, Montréal.