Ivanhoe inc. v. UFCW, Local 500, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 565, 2001
SCC 47
Ivanhoe inc., Service d’entretien Empro inc.
and La Compagnie d’entretien d’édifice Arcade Ltée Appellants
v.
United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 500,
Labour Court, Réal Bibeault (in his capacity as labour
commissioner), Labour Commissioner General and
Judge Bernard Prud’homme (in his capacity as judge
of the Labour Court) Respondents
and
Distinction Service d’entretien inc. (in continuance
of suit for Prestige Maintenance inc.), 2621-3249
Québec inc. (in continuance of suit for Service
d’entretien Laurier) and Moderne Service
d’entretien d’immeubles inc. Mis
en cause
and between
Distinction Service d’entretien inc.
(in continuance of suit for Prestige Maintenance inc.) Appellant
v.
United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 500,
Réal Bibeault (in his capacity as labour commissioner),
Labour Commissioner General, Judge Bernard Prud’homme
(in his capacity as judge of the Labour Court) and Labour Court Respondents
and
Ivanhoe inc., Service d’entretien Empro inc.,
Compagnie d’entretien d’édifice Arcade ltée,
2621-3249 Québec inc. (in continuance of suit for
Service d’entretien Laurier) and Moderne Service
d’entretien d’immeubles inc. Mis
en cause
and between
Ivanhoe inc. Appellant
v.
United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 500,
Labour Court, Jean Boily (in his capacity as labour
commissioner), Labour Commissioner General and
Judge Bernard Prud’homme (in his capacity as judge
of the Labour Court) Respondents
and between
United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 500 Appellant
v.
Ivanhoe inc., Service d’entretien Empro inc.,
Compagnie d’entretien d’édifice Arcade ltée,
Distinction Service d’entretien inc.
(in continuance of suit for Prestige Maintenance inc.)
and 2621-3249 Québec Inc.
(in continuance of suit for Service d’entretien Laurier) Respondents
and
Réal Bibeault (in his capacity as labour commissioner),
Judge Bernard Prud’homme (in his capacity as judge of
the Labour Court) and Moderne Service d’entretien
d’immeubles inc. Mis en cause
Indexed as: Ivanhoe inc. v. UFCW, Local 500
Neutral citation: 2001 SCC 47.
File No.: 27121.
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 quebec court of appeal
Labour law -- Transfer of operation of part of
undertaking -- Subcontracting of janitorial services -- Definition of
undertaking -- Legal relationship between successive employers -- Degree of
autonomy subcontractors given -- Theory of retrocession -- Contract for
janitorial services awarded to new subcontractors -- Decision of labour
commissioner finding transfer of operation of part of undertaking and
transferring certification but not collective agreement to new subcontractors
-- Whether commissioner adopted functional definition of undertaking and
rejected requirement for legal relationship between former and new employer –
Whether commissioner may transfer certification and refuse to transfer
collective agreement -- Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, s. 45.
Labour law -- Certification -- Transfer of
operation of part of undertaking -- Subcontracting of janitorial services --
Petition for cancellation of certification -- Interest required -- Whether
former employer has interest required for presenting petition for cancellation
of certification despite having no employees -- If so, whether certification
granted in respect of former employer may be cancelled during term of transfer
of operation -- Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, s. 41.
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.
Administrative law -- Judicial review -- Standard
of review -- Labour Court -- Standard of review applicable to decisions of
Labour Court in relation to cancellation of union’s certification -- Labour
Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, ss. 41, 139.
Ivanhoe is a property management company. It handled
janitorial services at its buildings itself until 1989, when it contracted
those services to Moderne. All of Ivanhoe’s janitorial employees were then
transferred to Moderne. The labour commissioner granted a motion under s. 45 of
the Labour Code for recognition of the transfer of the certification and
collective agreement to Moderne. In 1991, when its contract with Moderne was
about to expire, Ivanhoe invited bids for a new janitorial contract. Moderne
did not bid, but it signed a new collective agreement with its janitorial
employees. Ivanhoe decided to engage four contractors, and when Moderne’s
contract expired it dismissed the entire janitorial staff responsible for
Ivanhoe’s buildings. There is no legal relationship between Moderne and the
four contractors, which employed their own staff and used their own equipment.
The work performed by the contractors’ employees was the same as the work that
had been done for Moderne and previously for Ivanhoe.
The union applied again under s. 45 to have the
certification and the collective agreement signed with Moderne transferred to
the contractors. Ivanhoe applied under s. 41 of the Code to have the union’s
certification cancelled with respect to itself. The labour commissioner
allowed the motion under s. 45 in part and found that the certification that
originally covered Ivanhoe, but not the collective agreement signed by Moderne
and the union, had to be transferred to the new contractors. A second
commissioner dismissed the petition for cancellation of the certification. The
Labour Court affirmed the commissioners’ decisions. It found that operation of
part of an undertaking had been transferred -- the right to operate the
janitorial services -- and that s. 45 had to be applied since the tests in Bibeault
had been met. The requirement that there be a legal relationship between
successive employers had also been met since when the Moderne contract expired,
Ivanhoe resumed its legal authority over the part of the undertaking which had
been operated by another, and transferred it afresh to the contractors. The
Labour Court dismissed the union’s appeal regarding the transfer of the
collective agreement with Moderne because that agreement had lapsed when the
contract expired and could not be transferred to the new contractors. It also
refused to transfer the last collective agreement signed by Ivanhoe with the
union that had expired in 1989. With respect to the petition for cancellation
of the certification, the Labour Court concluded that a company which contracts
out work cannot rid itself permanently of the certification during a period
when an undertaking is temporarily operated by another. The Superior Court
dismissed the applications for judicial review brought by the union, Ivanhoe
and three of the contractors. The Court of Appeal affirmed that decision.
Held (Bastarache J.
dissenting in part): The appeals should be dismissed.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major and Arbour JJ.: Under the pragmatic
and functional approach adopted by this Court, the standard of review to be
applied to decisions relating to s. 45 of the Labour Code must be
patent unreasonableness. Although Bibeault held, in 1988, that the applicable
standard was correctness, there have been major changes since that time.
First, the labour commissioners have developed their own expertise in this
regard; most importantly, s. 46 of the Code itself has been amended. By
amending that section, the legislature made an unequivocal statement that its
intent was to give the commissioner exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether
an undertaking had been alienated or was being operated by another. As well,
the standard of review applicable to decisions relating to the application of
s. 41 of the Code is patent unreasonableness. The relevant factors in
determining the standard of review, and particularly the full privative clauses
set out in the Labour Code, confirm this.
In Bibeault, this Court concluded that there
must be a consensual legal transfer of the undertaking from one employer to
another and adopted the organic definition of an undertaking. That decision
was based on a very particular fact situation and was intended to put an end to
the debate that had divided the Labour Court on these two questions. The
conclusions in Bibeault regarding the definition of an undertaking and
the legal relationship that must exist between the former employer and the new
employer must be understood in that context. After the decision in Bibeault,
the Labour Court has developed interpretive policies regarding the two issues
that are accepted and followed by virtually all of its members. The existence
of a settled consensus in a specialized administrative tribunal acting within
its jurisdiction should be a factor in favour of a very high degree of
deference on the part of the superior courts. In a situation like this,
judicial deference makes it possible both to respect the decision-making autonomy
of administrative tribunals and to ensure consistency and predictability of the
law. This ideal balance should only be disturbed by the superior courts where
there are clearly absurd or irrational results.
The labour commissioner and the Labour Court had the
authority, by virtue of the Labour Code and the decisions of this Court,
to assess the respective importance of the various components of the
undertaking and to conclude in this case that the transfer of a right to
operate, combined with the transfer of functions, was sufficient to result in
s. 45 being applied, under the organic definition of an undertaking. The only
requirement that those decisions impose in respect of identifying an
undertaking or part of an undertaking for the purpose of applying s. 45 is
that an organic rather than a functional definition of an undertaking be
adopted, although in some cases similarity of functions may still be decisive,
where the undertaking has no other special characteristics. The tests that are
to be applied in defining the concept of an undertaking, in the context of the
transfer of certification, therefore vary with the specific circumstances of
each case and the administrative tribunals charged with applying s. 45
enjoy wide discretion in determining and weighing the factors they apply in
defining an undertaking and are at liberty to develop specific tests to respond
to the situation in a given industry. With regard to subcontracting of
janitorial services, after Bibeault, the Labour Court developed tests to
be used in order to make consistent determinations as to whether the operation
of part of an undertaking had been transferred. Where part of the operation is
transferred, it is simply not necessary that the portion of the activities
transferred be essential to the purpose of the undertaking as a whole. The
only requirement laid down by Bibeault is actually that the elements
that characterize the essence of the part of the undertaking be transferred.
On the question of the degree of autonomy that must be granted to the
transferee in order for it to be concluded that an undertaking has been
transferred, where the main characteristic of the part of the undertaking
operated by another consists, as it does in this case, of the specific right to
operate on the premises of the main undertaking, the part transferred cannot
enjoy wholly autonomous existence. In such a situation, it is sufficient that
the transferee be legally independent and be responsible for the work performed
by its employees, even if the transferor continues to exercise administrative
or legal control under a contract. Otherwise, there could be no transfer of
the operation of part of an undertaking’s support services. In this case, that
was the approach adopted by the Labour Court. That approach is a reasonable
interpretation of s. 45 which does not conflict with Bibeault.
Nor does transferring the certification to the four
new contractors when the contract with Moderne expired conflict with the
requirement that there be a legal relationship between successive employers,
which was laid down in Bibeault -- a case in which the certification was
not, as it was in this case, originally granted in respect of the party which
had contracted out the work. To give effect to the purpose of s. 45 in cases
involving the temporary transfer of the operation of an undertaking, the Labour
Court developed the theory of retrocession, according to which a certification
originally granted in respect of the transferor remains with it, but is
temporarily inactive during the period of operation by another and is then
transferred to the successive subcontractors. An essentially temporary
transfer of the operation of an undertaking therefore does not operate to
permanently terminate the certification. Under that theory, when its contract
with Moderne expired, Ivanhoe took back responsibility for its undertaking and
was once again bound by the certification, which was then transferred to the
new contractors. The fact that there was no formal juridical act of alienation
when the transfer of operation to Moderne expired is not an insurmountable
barrier to transfer of the certification, since the transfer of operation of an
undertaking which results in s. 45 applying can take different legal
forms. In the instant case, the undertaking was transferred by way of a
retrocession agreed upon by the parties in advance at the time the term of the
transfer was negotiated. The interpretation by the Labour Court of the
requirement that there be a legal relationship between successive employers and
of its application to situations in which an original certification has been
granted in respect of the transferor is a reasonable exercise of its
jurisdiction. The fiction of the potential employer that the Labour Court has
developed allows s. 45 to be applied without it being necessary for the party
that contracted out the work to actually take back the operation of the
undertaking that had been transferred.
Although, generally speaking, transfer of both the
collective agreement and the certification will follow from a decision finding
that an undertaking has been alienated or is being operated by another, the
decision of the labour commissioner and of the Labour Court to transfer only
the certification to the new contractors is not patently unreasonable. By
enacting s. 46 of the Labour Code, the legislature gave the
responsibility for settling difficulties arising out of the application of
s. 45 to labour commissioners and the Labour Court. Those authorities
must settle these issues, which are central to their specialized jurisdiction,
on a daily basis. The solution adopted in this case allows the new employers,
which are bound by the certification, to enter into negotiations with the
association of employees without being bound by an agreement signed by one of
their competitors, or by an agreement that has become obsolete. The fact that
there are other solutions that could have been adopted, some of which would
have enabled the employees to keep their jobs, is insufficient to justify
judicial review. The recognition by the legislature and the courts that there
are many potential solutions to a dispute is the very essence of the patent
unreasonableness standard of review, which would be meaningless if it was found
that there is only one acceptable solution. Since the principles that are
applied do not result in absurdity, judicial review will be appropriate only
where the results are clearly irrational.
Ivanhoe was entitled to submit its petition for
cancellation of the certification under s. 41 of the Labour Code despite
the fact that it had no employees. Recognizing that Ivanhoe has the necessary
interest to present the petition does not mean that Ivanhoe is being regarded
as a “present employer”. The mere fact that an employer’s name appears on the
certificate of certification is sufficient in itself to give the employer the
interest that is needed to present a petition for cancellation. The Labour
Court, acting within its jurisdiction, has laid down rational tests for
determining the employer in respect of which, in the event of a temporary
transfer of the operation of an undertaking resulting in the application of s.
45, the representativeness of the union should be verified for the purpose of
determining whether the certification should be cancelled. The employer that
contracted out the work will be free to seek cancellation if it takes back
control of its undertaking; for the term of the transfer, however, the
transferee to which the certification actually applies must present the
petition if it believes that the association no longer represents the majority
of the employees in the bargaining unit. Since it is reasonable to conclude
that an employer cannot rid itself of a certification by arranging for a
temporary transfer of the operation of an undertaking, it may be equally
appropriate to deny it cancellation of the certification during the period
covered by the transfer, on the ground that the fact that it has no employees
results precisely from the temporary transfer of the undertaking. Such an
approach permits consistent application of ss. 41 and 45 of the Code to
temporary transfer situations. That approach, which was adopted by the labour
commissioner and the Labour Court in this case, is not patently unreasonable.
Lastly, on the question of the time period prescribed for presenting the
petition for cancellation, the labour commissioner implicitly accepted that the
calculation of the time period must be based on the last collective agreement
signed by Ivanhoe rather than on the agreements that its transferees might have
made. In so doing, the commissioner and the Labour Court made a decision that
was entirely within their jurisdiction to make. That approach to calculating
the time period is consistent with the principles laid down by the Labour
Court, which provide that collective agreements negotiated by subcontractors
cannot be binding on the party that contracted out the work. However, although
Ivanhoe presented its petition at the proper time, the commissioner had the
authority to deny it on the merits because the certification was in effect in
respect of another employer, Ivanhoe’s transferee, on a temporary basis.
Per Bastarache J.
(dissenting in part): A legal relation between successive employers is
required in order to trigger successorship provisions. On the law as it has
been modified by Ajax, there need not be a strict mutual, intentional,
or consensual transfer. The legal relation between
successive employers can be based on a mere historical connection. Here, the
legal relation required in order to establish a sufficient organizational nexus
is not satisfied and the successorship provision should not be triggered.
There is no history of any corporate connection or evidence of any kind of
relationship between the party who would be, for the purpose of s. 45 of the Labour
Code, the “new employer” and the party who would be the “former employer”.
The present case is rather a situation in which one contractor loses his
contract to another with whom he has no connection.
Bibeault’s definition
of “undertaking” for the purpose of s. 45 of the Labour Code, unchanged
by Ajax, 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.
To allow mere functions to constitute an undertaking in situations where there
is nothing else to be passed amounts to a return to a purely functional
definition of undertaking which was prohibited in Bibeault. The factual
distinction between the present case and Bibeault is not material to Bibeault’s
prohibition of the functional definition of an undertaking. An agreement to
ignore Bibeault or to undermine the organic definition in Bibeault
should not acquire the force of law simply because the Labour Court has agreed
to do it and has more or less consistently taken that approach. It is patently
unreasonable to use an approach to the definition of an undertaking that is
inconsistent with Bibeault.
The concept of “potential employer” or retrocession --
where upon the termination of Moderne’s contract, the undertaking would have
returned to Ivanhoe in order to be re-transferred to the four new contractors
-- is a patently unreasonable interpretation of s. 45 and is in no way
supported by the text of that provision. The provision itself gives no indication
that it is meant to apply to more than the last two actual employers in a line
of successive employers. This is particularly true in this case where no
employees are being transferred and Ivanhoe, the potential employer, to which
the undertaking would be returned, has no employees to receive the benefit of
the transferred certification. Moreover, retrocession is an entirely fictional
operation. While the law admits of instances of “legal fiction”, it is not
acceptable in the context of labour legislation. Ivanhoe ceased being the
employer of the janitorial staff when it transferred all of those employees to
Moderne. When the contract between Ivanhoe and Moderne came to an end, these
employees were dismissed by the latter and Ivanhoe did not become their
employer again. Ivanhoe did not re-enter the business of performing these
janitorial services and the new companies performing the work did not include
any Moderne or former-Ivanhoe employees. It is patently unreasonable to keep
the certification alive through an artificial interpretation of s. 45.
Although Ivanhoe retained the power to consign the undertaking at the end of
the contract and could, without the concept of retrocession, have used
short-term or temporary contracts to evade collective agreements, this is how
s. 45 is written. There is no ambiguity and its scope is well defined.
The forced or artificial nature of this interpretation
of s. 45 can be seen with respect to two other issues. First, if the
retrocession argument was sound, the collective agreement would have been
included with the certification. In order for the operation of the
successorship provision to be meaningful, one must follow the other. Yet,
every decision-maker in this case has held that the collective agreement
entered into by Moderne and the union could not be transferred back to Ivanhoe
in order to be re-transferred to the four new employers along with the
certification. To allow the certification but not the collective agreement to
pass indicates that this is not a situation in which the successorship
provision should apply at all. Second, commitment to the retrocession
interpretation of s. 45 creates difficulty in the application of s. 41 of
the Labour Code, which allows for the cancellation of the certification
of a union that no longer comprises the absolute majority of the employees in
the bargaining unit for which it was certified. The need to avoid defeating
the initial purpose of the retrocession interpretation of s. 45 leads to
an illogical position with respect to s. 41 in which the giver of work is
treated both as the present employer -- i.e., potential employer -- for the
purposes of making the request to cancel the certification and as the former
employer in the decision to determine union support in relation to the
temporary employer.
Cases Cited
By Arbour J.
Followed: 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; Ajax
(Town) v. CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000 SCC 23, aff’g (1998),
41 O.R. (3d) 426; National Bank of Canada v. Retail Clerks’ International
Union, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 269; Sept-Îles (City) v. Quebec (Labour Court),
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 670, 2001 SCC 48; Pushpanathan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982; considered: Pasiechnyk
v. Saskatchewan (Workers’ Compensation Board), [1997] 2 S.C.R. 890; General
Motors Products of Canada Ltd. v. Kravitz, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 790; Montreal
Tramways Co. v. Léveillé, [1933] S.C.R. 456; Dobson (Litigation Guardian
of) v. Dobson, [1999] 2 S.C.R. 753; distinguished: U.E.S., Local
298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048; Entreprises Rolland Bergeron inc.
v. Geoffroy, [1987] R.J.Q. 2331; referred to: 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; Syndicat des cols bleus de Ville de St-Hubert v. Ville de
St-Hubert, [1999] R.J.D.T. 76, leave to appeal refused, [1999] 3 S.C.R.
xii; Syndicat des employés de la Communauté régionale de l’Outaouais v.
Collines-de-l’Outaouais (Municipalité régionale de comté des), [1999]
R.J.D.T. 97; Union des employées et employés de la restauration,
métallurgistes unis d’Amérique, section locale 8470 v. Ultramar Canada inc.,
[1999] R.J.D.T. 110; Maison L’Intégrale inc. v. Tribunal du travail,
[1996] R.J.Q. 859, leave to appeal refused, [1996] 3 S.C.R. xi; Canadian
Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2
S.C.R. 227; Fraser v. Public Service Staff Relations Board, [1985] 2
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l’Estrie v. Sherbrooke (City), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 84; Syndicat national des
employés de l’aluminium d’Arvida inc. v. J.-R. Théberge ltée, [1965] R.D.T.
449; Centrale de Chauffage enr. v. Syndicat des employés des Institutions
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Service Ltd. v. Association internationale des machinistes et des travailleurs
de l’aéroastronautique, section locale 2235, [1972] T.T. 1; Syndicat des
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l’alimentation et d’autres industries, section locale P-766, [1981] T.T.
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Service Station v. Teamsters Local Union 900, [1975] T.T. 125; Vitriers-travailleurs
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employés du Cégep du Vieux-Montréal v. Clair et Net ltée, [1992] T.T. 85; Syndicat
des employés du Cégep du Vieux-Montréal v. Service d’entretien d’immeubles
Staff 2000 inc., D.T.E. 93T-665; Gatineau (Ville de) v. Syndicat
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commissions scolaires de la régionale Chauveau v. Groupe Admari inc.,
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service, section locale 800, D.T.E. 95T-296; Entreprises Chando-net enr.
v. Union des employées et employés de service, section locale 800, [1992]
T.T. 620, motion for evocation dismissed, Sup. Ct. Quebec, No.
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Société mutuelle d’assurance-vie v. Syndicat des employés de coopératives
d’assurance-vie, D.T.E. 87T-300; Collège d’enseignement général et
professionnel de Limoilou v. Syndicat du personnel de soutien du Collège de
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matière de lésions professionnelles), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 756; Tremblay v.
Quebec (Commission des affaires sociales), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 952; Adam v.
Daniel Roy Ltée, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 683; Union des employés de service,
service locale 298 v. Syndicat national des employés de la Commission scolaire
régionale de Baie-des-Chaleurs, [1973] T.T. 332; Distribution Réal
Chagnon inc. v. Prud’homme, J.E. 90-1027; Syndicat des employés de
coopératives d’assurance-vie v. Les Coopérants, [1991] R.J.Q. 1248; Emballages
industriels Vulcan ltée v. Syndicat des travailleurs de l’énergie et de la
chimie, section locale 106, [1991] T.T. 29; Syndicat des salariées et
salariés cléricaux et techniques de l’amiante v. LAB, société en commandite,
D.T.E. 94T-13, motion for evocation dismissed, Sup. Ct. Quebec, No.
200-05-003286-932, February 23, 1994; Groupe des ex-salariés de Transbéton
v. Groupe des ex-salariés de Transmix, [1999] R.J.D.T. 513; Syndicat des
travailleurs de S.O.S. v. Syndicat international des travailleurs et
travailleuses unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 502,
[1992] T.T. 109; Union internationale des travailleurs unis de
l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 301 W v. Brasserie Molson-O’Keefe,
D.T.E. 91T-914; Syndicat national des employés de l’alimentation en gros de
Québec inc. v. Épiciers unis Métro-Richelieu inc., D.T.E. 85T-114; Syndicat
des employées et employés professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v.
Centre financier aux entreprises du Sud-Ouest de Montréal, D.T.E.
2000T-113; Metro Capital Group ltée v. Hamelin, [2000] R.J.D.T. 491; Syndicat
national des employés de l’alimentation en gros de Québec inc. v. Épiciers unis
Métro-Richelieu inc., [1987] T.A. 333; Syndicat des employés de la
Commission scolaire des Deux-Rives v. Commission scolaire de la Jonquière,
[1990] T.T. 419; Syndicat des professionnels et des techniciens de la santé
du Québec v. Syndicat des employés du C.L.S.C. de la Guadeloupe, D.T.E.
86T-759; Syndicat des employés du Carrefour des jeunes de Montréal v. Union
des employés de service, section locale 298, [1990] T.T. 398; Centrale
des unions indépendantes de l’industrie de l’automobile v. Fraternité
canadienne des cheminots, employés du transport et autres ouvriers, section
locale 300, [1982] T.T. 340; Rothmans, Benson & Hedges inc. v.
Travailleurs unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 501,
D.T.E. 87T-976; Syndicat québécois des employées et employés de service,
section locale 298 v. Syndicat des employées et employés des services sociaux
du Centre jeunesse Laval, [2001] R.J.D.T. 134.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting in part)
Ajax (Town) v. CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000 SCC 23; 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; U.E.S., Local
298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048; Mode Amazone v. Comité
conjoint de Montréal de l’Union internationale des ouvriers du vêtement pour
dames, [1983] T.T. 227; Syndicat des employées et employés
professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v. Commission scolaire Laurenval,
[1999] R.J.D.T. 1; Université McGill v. St-Georges, [1999] R.J.D.T. 9; Entreprises
Rolland Bergeron inc. v. Geoffroy, [1987] R.J.Q. 2331.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64, ss. 617, 1218 to 1255, 1242, 1279, 1440,
1442, 1444 to 1450, 1814, 2447.
Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, ss. 22c), d), 41 [am. 1983,
c. 22, s. 23], 45, 46 [repl. 1990, c. 69, s. 2], 52.2, 58 [am.
1983, c. 22, s. 28], 59, 139 [repl. 1982, c. 16, s. 5; am. 1983,
c. 22, s. 93; am. 1985, c. 12, s. 93, am. 1990, c. 4,
s. 232], 139.1 [am. 1982, c. 16, s. 6], 140 [repl. idem,
s. 7].
Authors Cited
Barré, Alain. “La sous-traitance
et l’article 45 du Code du travail après l’affaire C.S.R.O.” (1991), 32 C.
de D. 179.
Beaudoin, Jean-Louis, et
Pierre-Gabriel Jobin. Les obligations, 5e éd.
Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1998.
Brière, Germain. Donations,
substitutions et fiducie. Montréal: Wilson & Lafleur, 1988.
Deleury, Édith, et Dominique
Goubau. Le droit des personnes physiques, 2e éd.
Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1997.
Edwards, Jeffrey. La garantie
de qualité du vendeur en droit québécois. Montréal: Wilson & Lafleur,
1998.
Gagnon, Robert P. Le droit du
travail du Québec: pratiques et théories, 4e éd. Cowansville,
Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1999.
Jobin, Pierre-Gabriel. La
vente dans le Code civil du Québec. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1993.
APPEALS from judgments of the Quebec Court of Appeal,
[1999] R.J.Q. 32, [1999] R.J.D.T. 30, [1998] Q.J. No. 3663 (QL), affirming a
judgment of the Superior Court, D.T.E. 94T-1219, dismissing motions for
evocation against judgments of the Labour Court, [1993] T.T. 493 and [1993]
T.T. 600, upholding decisions of the labour commissioners, D.T.E.
92T-1305. Appeals dismissed, Bastarache J. dissenting in part.
Serge Benoît and Monique
Lagacé, for the appellants/respondents/mis en cause Ivanhoe inc., Service
d’entretien Empro inc. and la Compagnie d’entretien d’édifice Arcade ltée.
Jean-Marc Brodeur, for
the appellant/respondent/mis en cause Distinction Service d’entretien inc.
Robert Laurin, for the
respondent/appellant United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 500.
Benoît Belleau, for the
respondent Labour Court.
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
These appeals were heard together with Sept‑Îles (City) v.
Quebec (Labour Court), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 670, 2001 SCC 48, in which reasons
are pronounced with this decision. The central 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
the operation by another of an undertaking, that is in conflict with the
decisions of this Court, and more specifically with U.E.S., Local 298 v.
Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048. For the reasons that follow, I
find that the approach taken by that court is not inconsistent with the
decisions of this Court and constitutes a reasonable interpretation of the
provisions which that specialized agency is instructed to apply. Accordingly,
the decisions of the administrative tribunals in this case should not be varied
and the appeals should be dismissed.
2
The jurisdiction of commissioners and of the Labour Court in
interpreting and applying s. 45 of the Labour Code is the crux of
these appeals. This provision having been a subject of considerable
debate in Quebec labour law, I shall reproduce it before proceeding:
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.
II. The Facts
3
Ivanhoe inc. is a property management, development and investment
company primarily engaged in managing shopping centres. It handled its
own interior and exterior building maintenance until 1989. On
May 23, 1974, the United Food and Commercial Workers union, local 500
(the “union”) was certified to represent the janitorial staff at Ivanhoe’s
shopping centres in Quebec. The parties signed a number of collective
agreements, including the last one which was to be in effect from
May 23, 1986 to May 22, 1989. On March 6, 1989,
Ivanhoe decided to contract out the janitorial services at its shopping centres
to Moderne Service d’entretien d’immeubles inc. (“Moderne”), under a contract
that was to run until August 31, 1991. The 68 full-time and 18 part‑time
janitorial employees were transferred to Moderne.
4
The union applied under s. 45 of the Labour Code for
recognition of the transfer of the certification and collective agreement to
Moderne. The motion was not opposed and labour commissioner Gareau granted it
in a decision dated May 22, 1991, and corrected on
July 11, 1991. The union negotiated a collective agreement with
Moderne that was in effect from May 22, 1989 to
May 22, 1991. On July 5, 1991, when its contract with Moderne was
about to expire, Ivanhoe invited bids for a new contract. Moderne did not bid,
but on August 29, 1991, two days before its contract expired, it
signed a collective agreement effective until May 22, 1994.
5
As a result of the bids that it received, Ivanhoe decided to engage four
companies (the “contractors”): Service d’entretien Empro inc., Compagnie
d’entretien d’édifices Arcade ltée, Prestige Maintenance inc. (now represented
in continuance of suit by Distinction Service d’entretien inc.) and Service
d’entretien Laurier enr. (now represented by 2621‑3249 Québec inc.). All
of these companies specialize in janitorial services, and they are in
competition with one another. Each of them signed a contract with Ivanhoe that
took effect on September 1, 1991 and ended on
August 31, 1993. For each of the companies, Ivanhoe was only one of
a number of customers.
6
On August 31, 1991, Moderne’s contract expired and it
dismissed the entire janitorial staff responsible for Ivanhoe’s
buildings. None of those employees was hired by the contractors who took
over building maintenance the following day. It is admitted that there is no
legal relationship between Moderne and the contractors, which employed their
own staff and used their own equipment. The work performed by the contractors’
employees was the same as the work that had been done for Moderne and
previously for Ivanhoe.
7
On September 25, 1991, the union applied under s. 45 to
have the certification and the collective agreement signed with Moderne
transferred to the contractors. On January 14, 1992, Ivanhoe
applied under s. 41 of the Labour Code to have the union’s
certification cancelled with regard to itself.
III. Previous
Decisions
A. Commissioner
Bibeault (s. 45), D.T.E. 92T-1305
8
The commissioner found that the certification that originally covered
Ivanhoe had to be transferred to the new contractors. In his view,
subcontracting janitorial services could amount to operation by another of part
of an undertaking, with the result that s. 45 of the Labour Code
would apply. When the contract with Moderne expired, Ivanhoe once again became
the potential employer and could transfer its certification to the contractors.
On the other hand, the collective agreement that had been signed with Moderne
lapsed when the contract expired, and it could not be transferred to the new
contractors. When the first transfer of the operation of the undertaking
terminated, the previous situation was restored, and the fresh transfer was
made by Ivanhoe, rather than Moderne.
B. Commissioner Boily (s. 41),
September 24, 1992
9
Commissioner Boily held that, as a result of the decision of
commissioner Gareau finding that Ivanhoe’s rights and obligations had been
transferred to Moderne, the certification was still in effect at Moderne when
the petition for cancellation was made. The petition was therefore moot and
the commissioner dismissed it.
C. Labour Court (s. 45), [1993] T.T. 493
10
Judge Prud’homme found that when Ivanhoe contracted out the janitorial
services at its buildings it amounted, in this case, to operation by another of
part of an undertaking. In view of the fact that the essential element of the
agreement between Ivanhoe and its contractors was that it conferred a right to
operate or a responsibility to perform janitorial services, s. 45 had to
be applied, since the tests in Bibeault, supra, regarding the
definition of an undertaking had been met. In Judge Prud’homme’s view, the
requirement that there be a legal relationship between successive employers had
also been met in this case, since when the Moderne contract expired, Ivanhoe
resumed its legal authority over the part of the undertaking which had been
operated by another, and transferred it to the new contractors. However,
the union’s appeal regarding the transfer of the collective agreement was
dismissed, since the principles on which the commissioner had relied were
settled law and the union had presented no valid reason for them to be
revised. In addition, Judge Prud’homme was of the opinion that there was no
basis in law for the union’s alternative argument, that the last agreement
signed by Ivanhoe should be transferred to the contractors.
D. Labour Court (s. 41), [1993] T.T. 600
11
Judge Prud’homme held that even though Ivanhoe no longer had any
employees, it was entitled to apply for cancellation. However, granting
cancellation in this case would be contrary to the underlying principles of the
Labour Code, since during periods when an undertaking was temporarily
operated by another, the company which had contracted out the work would be
able to rid itself permanently of the certification and thus be able to take
over the operation of its undertaking again, or transfer the operation afresh,
with no certification. In Judge Prud’homme’s view, it would also be difficult
to determine whether the union still had a majority of the employees in the
bargaining unit, since there would be no employees to count. A petition for
cancellation presented by an employer that had created this situation, by
transferring the operation of the undertaking to another, would have to be
dismissed. The possibility of a certification being binding indefinitely on an
employer with no employees does not create a problem, since in that situation
the certification would have no effect. The dismissal of Ivanhoe’s petition was
therefore affirmed.
E. Superior Court, D.T.E. 94T-1219
12
Lévesque J. stated that the standard of review that applies to
judicial review of decisions of labour commissioners and of the Labour Court
was reasonableness. In his view, only the subsequent transfer of the operation
to the contractors was in issue in this case, since the parties had agreed to
the initial transfer of the operation to Moderne. Bibeault, supra,
had to be distinguished, since in that case, the party which had contracted out
the work had never operated the undertaking itself, unlike Ivanhoe, and most
importantly because the standard of review that applied at that time was
correctness. In this case, the commissioner and the Labour Court had not
committed an unreasonable error in finding that the janitorial activities had
been the subject of a second transfer of the operation of an undertaking, with
the result that s. 45 applied. Nor was the refusal to transfer the
collective agreement unreasonable. Lastly, the dismissal of Ivanhoe’s petition
for cancellation was a reasonable exercise of the jurisdiction of the commissioner
and the Labour Court, and there were no grounds for the Superior Court to
intervene.
F. Court of Appeal, [1999] R.J.Q. 32
13
LeBel J.A, now of this Court, Brossard J.A. and Zerbisias J. (ad hoc)
heard five other cases together with this case, all of them relating to
judicial review of decisions of the labour commissioner and the Labour Court
concerning s. 45 of the Labour Code (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; Syndicat des cols bleus de
Ville de St‑Hubert v. Ville de St-Hubert, [1999]
R.J.D.T. 76, leave to appeal refused, [1999] 3 S.C.R. xii; Syndicat
des employés de la Communauté régionale de l’Outaouais v. Collines‑de‑l’Outaouais
(Municipalité régionale de comté des), [1999] R.J.D.T. 97; and Union
des employées et employés de la restauration, métallurgistes unis d’Amérique,
section locale 8470 v. Ultramar Canada inc., [1999]
R.J.D.T. 110). The six decisions were rendered on the same day and when
read together they give a better understanding of the position taken by each of
the judges who wrote reasons in the case before us.
14
More specifically, in McGill and Laurenval, supra,
subcontracting of janitorial services was in issue. Zerbisias J.
wrote dissenting reasons in those cases, stating that it was unreasonable to
apply s. 45 to simple subcontracting of work cases. In her view, applying
s. 45 to the transfer of a right to operate or of a responsibility
amounted to reverting to the functional definition of an undertaking, which was
rejected by this Court in Bibeault, supra. In the opinion of
LeBel J.A., on the other hand, the Labour Court’s decisions did not
conflict with Bibeault and were not unreasonable. Brossard J.A.,
like Zerbisias J., took the view that the Labour Court’s approach conflicted
with Bibeault in adopting a functional definition of an undertaking and
in not taking into account the question of the centrality of the transferred
part of the undertaking. However, he found that the Labour Court’s decisions,
while in error, were not patently unreasonable.
15
In St‑Hubert, supra, the Court of Appeal found that
s. 45 did not apply to a subcontract for municipal snow removal. In
the view of Zerbisias J., to find otherwise would have been contrary to Bibeault,
supra, and therefore patently unreasonable. LeBel and Brossard JJ.A.,
on the other hand, based their decision on the fact that the union had not
demonstrated diligence in pursuing its remedies under s. 45. In the last
of these cases, Ultramar, supra, LeBel J.A. was of the view
that the applicable standard of review was correctness, since the case had
begun before the legislative amendments that changed the standard. He affirmed
the evocation of the Labour Court’s decision applying s. 45 to a series of
complex transactions involving the lease and sublease of a lot used to operate
a service station. In the opinion of Brossard J.A., Zerbisias J.
concurring, the Labour Court’s decision was in any event patently unreasonable,
and it was therefore unnecessary to consider the effects of the change in the
standard of review.
16
In the case before us, the Court of Appeal unanimously dismissed the
appeals and affirmed the decisions of the labour commissioners and the Labour
Court. However, here again, the three judges gave different reasons for the
result, each of them taking the same approach as in the other decisions rendered
on that date.
(a) Opinion of LeBel J.A.
17
In a remarkably thorough opinion, LeBel J.A. provided a complete
analysis of the situation. He stated, first, that the standard of review must
be unreasonableness or clearly irrational error. He then gave a detailed
background to the decision in Bibeault, supra, and analysed the
interpretive policy adopted by the Labour Court following that case. He also
examined the position taken by the Superior Court with respect to the consensus
in the Labour Court, and compared the Labour Court’s decisions with decisions
in the other Canadian provinces. Regarding the decision concerning the
transfer of certification, LeBel J.A. found that the principles applied by
the labour commissioner and the Labour Court in this case did not conflict with
Bibeault, since that case had never ruled out the possibility that
operation by another of part of an undertaking might result in s. 45
applying to janitorial services. Furthermore, the Labour Court had
applied the definition of an undertaking adopted by this Court. In the view of
LeBel J.A., the Labour Court’s decision that the undertaking reverted to
Ivanhoe when the contract with Moderne expired, and that operation of the
undertaking was then transferred afresh to the contractors, was not
unreasonable or inconsistent with the decisions of this Court.
18
In the view of LeBel J.A., the refusal to transfer the collective
agreement was justified, given that the purpose of s. 45 is to protect
collective rather than individual rights and that the certification and the
agreement were two separate legal matters. He noted that the Labour Court does
not take a blanket approach, and usually declines to impose an agreement on a
subcontractor that was negotiated by its predecessor. In doing this, it is
acting within the authority conferred on it by the Labour Code.
Furthermore, the agreement signed with Ivanhoe had expired and it was therefore
not unreasonable to decline to transfer it. Lastly, in the view of
LeBel J.A., the petition for cancellation was brought outside the relevant
time period and was therefore not properly before the Labour Court. On the
other hand, the decision by the commissioner and the Labour Court to deny the
petition was not unreasonable, since Ivanhoe did not have a sufficient interest
to present a petition for cancellation, because the certification was in effect
with respect to another employer.
(b) Opinion of Brossard J.A.
19
Brossard J.A. concurred in the opinion of LeBel J.A.
concerning the application of Bibeault, supra, to the facts of
this case and concerning the outcome of the appeals. In his view, the
decisions of the commissioners and the Labour Court in this case were not
patently unreasonable. However, he did not agree with his colleague’s opinion
regarding the interpretation of s. 45 and of the Bibeault case. He
also refused to express general approval for the jurisprudence of the Labour
Court cited by LeBel J.A. For example, Brossard J.A. said that he did not
approve of the complete rejection of the requirement that the part of the
undertaking operated by another be essential to the main undertaking, although
he believed that the weight given to that factor might vary with the facts of
the case. On the question of the principles to be applied, he referred to his
opinion in Ultramar, supra.
(c) Opinion of Zerbisias J. (ad
hoc)
20
Zerbisias J. also believed that the appeals should be dismissed,
but made it clear that her opinion should not be read as approval of the Labour
Court jurisprudence cited by LeBel J.A. On that point, she preferred to
refer to her opinions in the cases that the Court of Appeal had heard together
with the case now before us. She stated that the question of whether
s. 45 could apply to the transfer of the operation of the part of
Ivanhoe’s undertaking that involved janitorial services was not in issue in
this case, since at the time of the transfer to Moderne, Ivanhoe had not
opposed the application of s. 45. In the view of Zerbisias J., only
the legal relationship issue arose in this case. Lastly, like
Brossard J.A., she observed that the centrality of the transferred part of
the undertaking was, in her view, one of the factors to be considered in determining
whether s. 45 applied.
IV. Issues
21
In this Court, Ivanhoe and three of the contractors — Service
d’entretien Empro inc., Compagnie d’entretien d’édifice Arcade ltée and
Distinction Service d’entretien — are challenging the validity of the
decisions of commissioner Bibeault and the Labour Court transferring the
certification. In their view, these decisions are in direct conflict with Bibeault,
supra, and with later decisions by this Court, in that, first, they
adopt a functional definition of an undertaking so that s. 45 can apply to
subcontracts for janitorial services, and second, they reject the requirement
for a legal relationship between the former and the new employer.
22
In addition, the union is appealing the part of the decision of the
Court of Appeal affirming the refusal to transfer the collective agreement. In
its view, the collective agreement must necessarily follow the certification
once a commissioner has ruled that s. 45 applies.
23
Lastly, Ivanhoe is challenging the decision of commissioner Boily and
the Labour Court denying its petition for cancellation of the certification.
In Ivanhoe’s view, it is clear both that union members are no longer a majority
of its employees and that the Court of Appeal has held that employers which
have no employees are entitled to seek cancellation of the certification. In
the circumstances, refusing cancellation would be unreasonable and contrary to
what s. 41 provides.
V. Analysis
A. Applicable Standard of Review
24
The parties conceded that the applicable standard of review in this case
is patent unreasonableness. Bastarache J., in Pushpanathan v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1
S.C.R. 982, at paras. 23-38, clarified the tests to be applied in
determining the proper standard of review. He stated, at para. 27, that
the pragmatic and functional approach developed in Bibeault, supra,
must apply and that, accordingly, the analysis must seek to determine
legislative intent regarding the jurisdiction of the administrative tribunal in
question. Several factors must be examined in order to determine that intent.
The presence of a full privative clause is a strong indication of the intent to
leave determination of the issue to the tribunal. On that point,
Bastarache J. said, at para. 30:
The absence of a privative clause does not imply a
high standard of scrutiny, where other factors bespeak a low standard.
However, the presence of a “full” privative clause is compelling evidence that
the court ought to show deference to the tribunal’s decision, unless other
factors strongly indicate the contrary as regards the particular determination
in question.
This Court
defined the concept of a full privative clause in Pasiechnyk v. Saskatchewan
(Workers’ Compensation Board), [1997] 2 S.C.R. 890, at para. 17:
A “full” or “true” privative clause is one that
declares that decisions of the tribunal are final and conclusive from which no
appeal lies and all forms of judicial review are excluded.
Where such a
clause is present, the courts must therefore show deference to administrative
decisions. The other factors to be considered are the expertise of the
administrative tribunal, the purpose of the enabling legislation and of the
specific provision in issue, as well as the factual or legal nature of the
problem in the case at bar.
25
In this case, a rapid review of these factors clearly shows that the
parties rightly agreed that the applicable standard is patent unreasonableness,
the highest degree of judicial deference. The following provisions are found
in the Labour Code:
139. Except on a question of jurisdiction and except
when the Court is sitting in penal matters, no extraordinary recourse
contemplated in articles 834 to 846 of the Code of Civil Procedure (chapter C‑25)
shall be exercised and no injunction granted against an arbitrator, the Conseil
des services essentiels, a certification agent, a labour commissioner or the
Court acting in their official capacities.
139.1. Except on a question of jurisdiction, article
33 of the Code of Civil Procedure (chapter C‑25) does not apply to any
person, body or agency mentioned in section 139 acting in their official
capacities.
140. A judge of the Court of Appeal may annul
summarily, upon petition, any writ, order or injunction issued or granted
contrary to sections 139 and 139.1.
The Code
therefore contains general full privative clauses, clearly indicating the
legislative intent to leave the final disposition of all cases relating to the
Code to the administrative decision-makers. With regard to the application of
s. 45, the legislature has clearly expressed its intent by including an
additional privative clause, set out in s. 46, which provides that the
labour commissioner may “rule on any matter relating to the application of
section 45” and that for such purpose he or she may “determine the
applicability of that section”. In other words, the legislature has clearly
indicated that it intended to give the labour commissioner exclusive
jurisdiction to determine whether the conditions for s. 45 to apply are
present, and accordingly, to dispose of any questions relating to whether an
undertaking has been alienated or is being operated by another.
26
Furthermore, although determining whether the conditions that must be
met in order to conclude that an undertaking has been alienated or is being
operated by another are present may involve both civil law and labour law,
because the labour commissioners are continually applying the provisions of the
Labour Code to transfers of undertakings, they have developed special
expertise in this regard which is adapted to the specific context of labour
relations and which is not shared by the courts. In addition, it is clear that
the purpose of the Code is to establish a scheme that will “promote collective
bargaining as a better means of guaranteeing industrial peace and of
establishing equitable relations between employer and employees” (Bibeault,
supra, at p. 1103). The legislature believed that to attain
that objective, a specialized tribunal that would allow for the speedy and
final resolution of disputes was needed.
27
Having regard to all of these factors, it is not surprising that the
Quebec Court of Appeal concluded, in Maison L’Intégrale inc. v. Tribunal
du travail, [1996] R.J.Q. 859, leave to appeal refused, [1996] 3
S.C.R. xi, that the standard of review to be applied in reviewing
decisions relating to s. 45 must be patent unreasonableness. What
prompted both the Court of Appeal and this Court, in this instance, to consider
the issue more closely was that in Bibeault, supra, at
pp. 1091‑98, Beetz J. concluded that the applicable standard
must be correctness. Beetz J. examined the purpose of s. 45 and the
expertise of the labour commissioner, which he found not to extend to such
civil law issues as the alienation or operation by another of an undertaking,
but most importantly the wording of s. 46 as it read at that time, and
concluded that the issue to be determined did not fall within the
commissioner’s specific jurisdiction. However, there have been major changes
since Bibeault was decided by this Court.
28
First, as I mentioned earlier, the labour commissioners have developed
their own expertise in this regard; most importantly, s. 46 itself has
been amended. As the Quebec Court of Appeal stated in Maison L’Intégrale,
supra, at pp. 867‑69, after Bibeault was decided,
the legislature wanted to make an unequivocal statement that its intent was to
give the commissioner exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether an
undertaking had been alienated or was being operated by another. Whereas when Bibeault
was decided, s. 46 read:
46. An [sic] labour commissioner may make any
order deemed necessary to record the transfer of rights and obligations
provided for in section 45 and settle any difficulty arising out of
the application thereof. [Emphasis added.]
Since 1990,
the section provides:
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.
[Emphasis added.]
29
In his analysis of the applicable standard of review, Beetz J.
stresses the language used in s. 46. He stated, at p. 1091:
The first point to be mentioned is that the
application of s. 45 does not result from the commissioner’s determination
that the requirements of that section have been met. Section 45 applies
automatically. The transfer of rights and obligations occurs as of right on
the day of the alienation, operation by another or change in legal structure of
the undertaking. No other conclusion can be drawn from the wording of
s. 46, which I cite again:
. . .
Under this section, the commissioner’s role is
limited to “recording” the transfer of rights and obligations guaranteed in
s. 45. [Emphasis added.]
That is what
persuaded the Court to conclude that not only was s. 46 not an additional
privative clause, but it gave the commissioner the authority only to resolve
administrative difficulties that might arise from the application of
s. 45, which applied by operation of law and not at the discretion of the
commissioner so that its application could not be affected by the general
privative clauses in the Labour Code. It is immediately apparent that
the new version of s. 46 is quite different and that the wording of that
section, which was drafted after Bibeault, is intended to give the
commissioner the express authority to determine the applicability of
s. 45, and thus the authority to decide whether an undertaking has been
alienated or is being operated by another.
30
The legislature has therefore extended the commissioner’s authority and
a commissioner is now always acting within his or her exclusive jurisdiction
when he or she determines whether an undertaking has been alienated or is being
operated by another. In these circumstances, only patently unreasonable errors
will result in intervention by the courts, and the only issue that arises in
the case before us is therefore whether the commissioner, and the Labour Court
after him, committed an error of that nature when they concluded that the
certification had to be transferred and the collective agreement did not.
31
With respect to the application of s. 41 of the Labour Code,
plainly, and again as admitted by the parties, by virtue of the general
privative clauses in the Code and the other factors set out above, the applicable
standard of review can only be patent unreasonableness.
32
It is important to bear in mind that judicial deference, which is
fundamental in administrative law, is of particularly central importance in
labour law, as this Court has pointed out on many occasions in the past (Canadian
Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp.,
[1979] 2 S.C.R. 227, at pp. 235‑36; Fraser v. Public
Service Staff Relations Board, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 455,
at pp. 464‑65; 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, at pp. 669‑70;
Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 941 (hereinafter “PSAC”), at pp. 960‑61).
Cory J., writing for the majority in Toronto (City) Board of Education
v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487, stated
at para. 35:
[PSAC] emphasized the essential importance
of curial deference in the context of labour relations where the decision of
the tribunal, like the Board of Arbitration in the instant appeal, is protected
by a broad privative clause. There are a great many reasons why curial
deference must be observed in such decisions. The field of labour
relations is sensitive and volatile. It is essential that there be a means of
providing speedy decisions by experts in the field who are sensitive to the
situation, and which can be considered by both sides to be final and binding.
33
At p. 50 of the judgment appealed from, LeBel J.A. stated that the
applicable standard of review was reasonableness. However, it is clear from
his decision that the analysis is in fact based on the standard of patent
unreasonableness: LeBel J.A. referred to the concept of clearly irrational
error, an expression adopted on several occasions by this Court to define the
content of the patent unreasonableness standard of review (see PSAC, supra,
at pp. 963-64; Ajax (Town) v. CAW, Local 222,
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000 SCC 23, at para. 2; Centre
communautaire juridique de l’Estrie v. Sherbrooke (City),
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 84, at para. 11; Toronto (City) Board of Education,
supra, at para. 46). He also cited with approval the decision
of the Court of Appeal in Maison L’Intégrale, supra, which
established that the applicable standard was patent unreasonableness (at
pp. 46-47) and referred, in his examination of the content of the standard
of review (at pp. 47-50), to a number of decisions of this Court relating
to the standard of patent unreasonableness.
34
The principle of judicial deference and the application of the standard
of patent unreasonableness mean that the Superior Court could have intervened
in this case only if the decision of the Labour Court was, in the words of
Cory J., again writing for the majority in PSAC, supra, at
pp. 963‑64, “clearly irrational, that is to say evidently not in
accordance with reason”. In order to make that determination, it is essential
to fully appreciate the broader context in which the impugned decisions were
rendered, and particularly the internal administrative conflicts that led to
the decision in Bibeault, supra, and the reaction of the Quebec
labour law authorities after that case was decided by this Court.
B. Background to Bibeault
35
The conclusions reached in Bibeault, supra, can be
understood only if we bear in mind not just the specific fact situation in that
case, but also the ongoing debate within the Labour Court which made it
necessary for this Court to intervene. At pp. 50-53 of the judgment
appealed from, LeBel J.A. did a detailed review of the approach taken by
the Labour Court before Bibeault. He noted that the precursor to
s. 45 of the Labour Code, s. 10a of the Labour Relations
Act, R.S.Q. 1941, c. 162A, was enacted in 1961 to correct the
injustices caused by the strict application of the civil law principle of
privity of contract, now codified in art. 1440 of the Civil Code of
Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64 (hereinafter “C.C.Q.”). He then
pointed out, at p. 51:
[translation]
The enactment of this legislation did not resolve the problems associated with
the transfer of an undertaking. In fact, it raised acute problems of
interpretation relating to the most fundamental concepts of the law, including
the concept of operation by another, especially with respect to issues of
operation by another of part of an undertaking. Quebec labour law
authorities had to intervene frequently, but were unable to establish a
uniform, consistent interpretive policy.
36
As explained by LeBel J.A., when the Labour Relations Board
considered a case involving operation by another of part of an undertaking in Syndicat
national des employés de l’aluminium d’Arvida inc. v. J.-R.
Théberge ltée, [1965] R.D.T. 449, it initially decided to adopt a so‑called
functional definition of an undertaking. The concept of an undertaking
therefore had to be defined in terms of the work being done. This definition
of an undertaking was then adopted by the Labour Court in two leading
decisions, Centrale de Chauffage enr. v. Syndicat des employés
des Institutions religieuses de Chicoutimi inc., [1970] R.D.T. 344,
and Barnes Security Service Ltd. v. Association internationale
des machinistes et des travailleurs de l’aéroastronautique, section locale 2235,
[1972] T.T. 1. During the early 1980s, the court became divided on this
issue, with some judges adopting instead a so‑called organic definition
of an undertaking and viewing it as a set of various kinds of components —
physical, human, intellectual and legal — which were used to carry on an
activity (syndicat des salariés de service d’entretien v. Montcalm
Carpets Specialists Ltd., [1981] T.T. 273; Entrepôts Schenker ltée
v. Travailleurs canadiens de l’alimentation et d’autres industries,
section locale P‑766, [1981] T.T. 420; Mode Amazone v.
Comité conjoint de Montréal de l’Union internationale des ouvriers du
vêtement pour dames, [1983] T.T. 227).
37
In Barnes, supra, the Labour Court also adopted the
requirement that there be a legal relationship between the transferor and the
transferee of the operation if it were to be concluded that the certification
and the collective agreement had to be transferred. The subsequent decisions
of the Labour Court followed this principle, declining to transfer the
certification originally respecting one transferee to the next transferee when
the first transfer of the operation expired. A few years later, in Jack
Schwartz Service Station v. Teamsters Local Union 900, [1975]
T.T. 125, the Labour Court changed its approach. In that case, the Labour
Court decided that where there was a new employer, and the two undertakings
were substantially the same, this was sufficient to conclude that the
certification had to be transferred, even where there was no legal
relationship. This principle was not unanimously accepted by all the judges of
the Labour Court, which was once again significantly divided, with some of its
decisions continuing to uphold the requirement that there be a meeting of minds
in order for it to be concluded that a transfer resulting in the certification
surviving had occurred (see Montcalm Carpets Specialists, supra).
38
LeBel J.A. described the situation that prevailed at the Labour
Court just before this Court intervened in Bibeault (at p. 52), as
follows:
[translation]
The organic and functional definitions of an undertaking clashed at the Labour
Court, as did various theories relating to the succession or substantial
continuity of undertakings or the need for a contractual relationship; this was
the case until Bibeault, in which the Labour Court, in a collegial
decision, tried in vain to establish a common interpretive approach. In
fact, the Labour Court issued six different opinions that were so divergent
that one author entitled its conclusions “Un consensus à rechercher” [still
seeking consensus] (Robert P. Gagnon, “L’article 45 du Code du
travail après le jugement C.S.R. Outaouais”, in Marc Brière, Robert
P. Gagnon and Catherine Saint‑Germain, La transmission
d’entreprise en droit du travail, Cowansville: Y. Blais, 1982,
p. 165).
39
It is therefore clear that at the time Bibeault, supra,
was decided, the Labour Court found itself so deadlocked that no solution could
apparently be reached unless the higher courts stepped in. At that point, the
Labour Court had been unable to develop a coherent policy for interpreting
s. 45 that would have provided a clear definition of what constitutes an
undertaking and of what type of transfer is required in order for s. 45 to
apply. The decision in Bibeault answered these questions and broke the
deadlock, so that the Labour Court could once again function properly. That
case was also based on a very particular fact situation, which had brought the
disagreements within the Labour Court clearly into focus.
40
Bibeault, supra, was in fact a dispute between two labour
unions. Beetz J. summarized the facts of the case at pp. 1056-58.
The CSN had been granted certification in relation to two subcontractors that
were responsible for janitorial services for the Commission scolaire régionale
de l’Outaouais (hereinafter “CSRO”), in respect of which no certification had
ever been granted, and which had never performed the janitorial services
itself. In 1980, the CSRO decided to contract the janitorial services out to a
new subcontractor. Shortly thereafter, the FTQ filed a petition for
certification covering the new subcontractor’s employees, and at the same time
the CSN sought to have the transfer of its certifications recognized. The
subcontractors had never entered into any agreement between themselves, and
were related only by the fact that they were operating competing undertakings
of the same type. After noting the ongoing debate within the Labour Court,
at pp. 1059‑65, Beetz J. stated at p. 1065:
In an attempt to resolve these contradictions in
the case at bar, the Labour Court adopted the suggestion of the parties that
the full bench of eleven judges should sit. As we shall see, despite the
existence of a clear majority on the conclusions, this attempt had only limited
success in terms of stating principles and clarifying concepts.
41
Indeed, although seven of the eleven judges agreed to affirm the
conclusion of the commissioner, which was that the CSN certifications had to be
transferred to the new subcontractor, they did not agree on the reasons
justifying that decision (Bibeault, at pp. 1066‑76).
With regard to the need for there to be a legal relationship between the two
employers, five judges took the view that this was not at all a condition for
the application of s. 45, one judge thought that while a relationship was
necessary, it was not mandatory that it be contractual or legal, and that in
the case in question it was provided by the CSRO, and another judge was of the
view that the requisite legal relationship could be indirect and that the fact
that the work was contracted out by the same party was sufficient in the case
in question to meet that requirement. The four dissenting judges took the view
that a legal relationship was essential and that it had to take the form of a
consensual act to transfer the undertaking, and that this requirement had
evidently not been met in the instant case.
42
On the question of the definition of the concept of an undertaking, the
differences of opinion were even more significant. Four of the majority judges
adopted a functional definition of an undertaking, while another took an
intermediate position, adopting a pragmatic approach based on the
certification, the work to be done and the place where it was to be done.
Another of the majority judges said he agreed both with the functional approach
and the intermediate position adopted by his colleague, while Judge Brière,
also a member of the majority, adopted a different definition of an undertaking
based on functions and the identity of the persons who performed them (that is,
for the purpose of the application of s. 45, the employees). Finally,
three of the dissenting judges adopted an organic definition of an undertaking,
while one of them opted for a different approach, defining the undertaking by
reference to the janitorial operations in specific schools, but finding that
the fact that there had never been a certification in respect of the Commission
scolaire itself was an insurmountable obstacle to the application of s. 45
in that case.
43
When presented with this decision of the Labour Court, the Superior
Court granted the writ of evocation sought by the FTQ in a decision summarized
by Beetz J. in Bibeault, at pp. 1076-79. The Superior Court held
that the applicable standard of review had to be correctness, and stated its
general agreement with the reasons of the dissenting judges. The Court of
Appeal affirmed that decision.
44
It was against this backdrop that Beetz J. sought to dispose
definitively of the two issues dividing the Labour Court and the parties.
He made it plain that in order for s. 45 to apply, there must be a
consensual legal transfer of the undertaking from one employer to another. He
stated, at p. 1122:
Section 45 is based on the following premise: a
specific undertaking is transferred from one employer to another. The wording
of this section does not support the conclusion that rights and obligations
have been transferred from one employer to another solely because each of them
hires employees engaged in similar activities.
Beetz J.
began by establishing, at pp. 1098‑1102, that collective
bargaining had to take place in a three‑part framework consisting of an
employer, an undertaking and an association of employees. When an undertaking
was alienated or operated by another, the essential components of this
framework therefore had to survive if it was to be concluded that s. 45
applied. One of the natural consequences of this requirement is that
s. 45 can have no effect unless there is a voluntary transfer of rights
between the former employer and the new employer (at pp. 1110‑20).
In Bibeault, there had been no transfers among the various
subcontractors, and the CSRO itself could not have transferred the operation
within the meaning s. 45, since no certification had ever been issued in
respect of it and it therefore had never been a part of the three-part
framework that had to exist with respect to successive employers. On
reading the specific facts of Bibeault, we see that the question of the
legal relationship between employers was really the point on which that case
turned, since a finding that there was no consensual transfer of an undertaking
necessarily, according to Beetz J., made s. 45 inapplicable and
disposed of the issue between the parties. In fact, in his summary of the
position taken by the judges of the Labour Court, Beetz J. stated, at
p. 1067:
They also were not in agreement on what is
probably the chief point in dispute: for s. 45 to apply, must there be
a legal relation between the old and the new employer, resulting from an
agreement between them to transfer the undertaking, such that the first
employer transfers a right or rights to the second? [Emphasis added.]
45
However, in Bibeault, the Court also had to decide what
definition of an undertaking should be adopted for the purposes of s. 45,
first, because the Labour Court was even more divided on that issue than on the
legal relationship question, and, second, because according to Beetz J.,
it was partly the adoption of a functional definition of an undertaking that
allowed the judges of the majority to exclude any necessity for a legal
relationship between successive employers (p. 1110). The question of how
to define an undertaking was therefore central to Bibeault, not because
the Court thought that the janitorial undertaking in question could never have
been the subject of a transfer that would result in s. 45 applying in
other circumstances, but rather because that definition related to the central
issue to be determined: the need for a consensual transfer between successive
employers.
46
Beetz J. unequivocally rejected the functional approach preferred
by several of the Labour Court judges (p. 1104). He opted instead for the
organic definition of an undertaking that had been adopted by some of the
dissenting judges. Thus, he unreservedly adopted the definition stated by
one of them, Judge Lesage, later Chief Judge of the Labour Court, in a decision
he rendered some time after Bibeault. Beetz J. said,
at pp. 1105‑6:
Instead of being reduced to a list of duties or
functions, the undertaking covers all the means available to an employer to
attain his objective. I adopt the definition of an undertaking proposed
by Judge Lesage in a subsequent case, Mode Amazone v. Comité conjoint
de Montréal de l'Union internationale des ouvriers du vêtement pour dames,
[1983] T.T. 227, at p. 231:
[translation]
The undertaking consists in an organization of resources that together suffice
for the pursuit, in whole or in part, of specific activities. These
resources may, according to the circumstances, be limited to legal, technical,
physical, or abstract elements. Most often, particularly where there is
no operation of the undertaking by a subcontractor, the undertaking may be said
to be constituted when, because a sufficient number of those components that
permit the specific activities to be conducted or carried out are present, one
can conclude that the very foundations of the undertaking exist: in
other words, when the undertaking may be described as a going concern. In Barnes
Security, Judge René Beaudry, as he then was, expressed exactly the same
idea when he stated that the undertaking consists of “everything used to
implement the employer’s ideas”.
. . .
[E]ach case is unique in terms of adding a number of components to
determine the foundations of the undertaking, in whole or in part. It is
not always necessary for the movable and immovable property to be transferred,
for specialized technical resources to be transferred, for inventory and know‑how
to be included in the transaction. There must however be adequate resources,
directed towards a certain activity by the first employer, which are used by
the second in an identifiable way for the same purposes in terms of the work
required from employees, even if the commercial or industrial objective is
different.
Precisely because of the need to identify in the
second employer's operations the same use of operating resources transferred by
the first employer (otherwise there would simply have been a transfer of
physical assets which can be used for any purpose), it was found to be
desirable to simplify matters and to say that, once the same activities were
carried on by a second employer, it followed that the latter must have acquired
sufficient operating resources from the first to ensure continuity of the
undertaking. Some have gone even further and, seeking simple guidelines and
accessible formulas, have purported to see passages in certain judgments as
affirming a so‑called occupational theory of the undertaking. This is an
indirect way of getting around the problem of the legal relation, by reducing
or indeed eliminating the practical necessity for a legal relation in the
continuity of the undertaking.
47
Hence, it is in a very specific context, in terms both of the fact
situation and of the case law which existed, that this Court held, in Bibeault,
that s. 45 cannot apply where work has been contracted to a series of
subcontractors by the same party, in respect of which no certification has ever
been granted. The conclusions stated by Beetz J. regarding the definition
of an undertaking and the legal relationship that must exist between the former
employer and the new employer must be understood in that context, and this
makes it easier to understand the influence of the decision in Bibeault
on the case at bar.
C. The Present Situation and the Impugned Decisions
48
Bibeault put an end to the debate that had divided the Labour
Court. In the judgment here appealed from, LeBel J.A. conducted a
thorough examination of the cases decided by the Labour Court after Bibeault.
He explained that the Labour Court has developed an interpretive policy to be
used for deciding difficult cases involving the transfer of operation of part
of an undertaking, especially in service sectors like janitorial work (at
pp. 58-62), and also to be used to resolve cases in which work had been
contracted to a series of different subcontractors by the same party, in
respect of which there had originally been a certification granted (pp. 68-73).
LeBel J.A. summarized the present situation as follows (at p. 58):
[translation]
Since the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Bibeault, the
Labour Court has succeeded in defining a consistent interpretation of sections 45
and 46 L.C., particularly in terms of how they apply in the janitorial
services sector, except in the case of one of its members, Judge
Brière. . . .
49
After Bibeault was decided by this Court, the Labour Court sought
to apply the organic definition of an undertaking to cases where operation of
part of an undertaking had been transferred, for which express provision is
made in s. 45 of the Labour Code. As LeBel J.A. explained,
the Labour Court developed a practically unanimous approach in this regard, which
requires, most importantly, that the definition of an undertaking be adapted to
various kinds of workplaces and types of undertaking. This means that the
essential elements from which it may be determined that an undertaking or part
of an undertaking has been transferred will vary depending on the undertaking
in question. In all cases, sufficient elements must be present in the new
employer’s business so that the transferor’s undertaking, or part of that
undertaking, may be identified as being present in the new employer’s business,
under the organic definition of an undertaking.
50
Taking as a starting point the comments made by Judge Lesage in Mode
Amazone, supra, which were cited with approval by Beetz J. (Bibeault,
at pp. 1105-6), suggesting that an organic definition of an
undertaking did not preclude the application of s. 45 to transfers by
subcontract, the court developed tests that may be used to determine in what
circumstances subcontracting will result in transfer of the certification under
s. 45.
51
In a series of decisions concerning transfer of the operation of all or
part of an undertaking engaged in service activities, the court held that one
of the elements of an undertaking that must be present in the transferee’s
business, in order to conclude that s. 45 applies, in addition to
similarity of functions, which is still relevant, is the right to operate, that
is, the right to perform specific duties at a specific location for a specific
purpose (Vitriers-travailleurs du verre, section locale 1135 de la
Fraternité internationale des peintres et métiers connexes v. Vetroform
inc., [1990] T.T. 514; Syndicat des travailleurs de l’énergie et de
la chimie, section locale 115 v. Fornet inc., [1991]
T.T. 413; Syndicat des employés du Cégep du Vieux‑Montréal
v. Clair et Net ltée, [1992] T.T. 85; Syndicat des employés
du Cégep du Vieux‑Montréal v. Service d’entretien
d’immeubles Staff 2000 inc., D.T.E. 93T‑665 (L.C.); Gatineau (Ville
de) v. Syndicat des cols bleus de Gatineau, [1992] T.T. 599; Syndicat
des employés des commissions scolaires de la régionale Chauveau v. Groupe
Admari inc., [1991] T.T. 351; Université McGill v. Union
des employées et employés de service, section locale 800, D.T.E. 95T‑296
(L.C.); Entreprises Chando‑net enr. v. Union des
employées et employés de service, section locale 800, [1992] T.T. 620).
52
As part of its examination of the concept of transfer of the operation
of part of an undertaking, the Labour Court also developed a definition of the
concept of part of an undertaking, as discussed by LeBel J.A.
(pp. 60-62). The Labour Court held that a component of an undertaking
that was capable of sufficient autonomy so that it could carry on its intended
activities outside the main undertaking, even though it did so in association
with it, was a part of the undertaking the transfer of the operation of which
could result in the application of s. 45. Although it need not
necessarily be viable in a completely independent manner, the part of the
undertaking operated by another must itself comprise an organized economic
entity with a certain management authority that is independent of the
directives of the main undertaking. It is not necessary that the transfer of
operation relate to a so-called essential part of the undertaking; it need only
concern a component that is one of the elements which make it possible for the
main undertaking to achieve its objectives. The activities of the part of
the undertaking operated by another must also be part of the usual, as opposed
to exceptional, activities of the transferor undertaking.
53
With respect to the consensus reached by the Labour Court regarding
subcontracting and the definition of an undertaking or part of an undertaking,
LeBel J.A. said (at p. 61):
[translation]
For more than 30 years the Labour Court and, before it, the Quebec Labour
Relations Board, have recognized that an employer’s janitorial services
comprise an element of the undertaking that can be operated by another within
the meaning of section 45 L.C. Furthermore, Judge Lesage of the Labour Court
pointed out that the contrary interpretation would limit the collective rights
of the employees hired to perform the peripheral activities of an undertaking.
Their certifications and their rights under collective agreements would not be
as solidly protected as those of employees hired to perform activities
described as central (Luc Construction inc. v. Syndicat des employés
de Ville de Brossard, [1992] T.T. 589, 596; Ville de Gatineau v.
Syndicat des cols bleus de Gatineau, [1992] T.T. 599, 607).
He went on to
say (at p. 62):
[translation]
This interpretation of section 45 L.C. regarding the definition of an
undertaking in the analysis of the idea of operation by another of part of the
undertaking now amounts to a genuine interpretation by the Labour Court. Only
one judge, Judge Brière, differs; however, he concedes that his colleagues’
position does not involve patently unreasonable error. . . .
Lastly,
regarding the position of Judge Brière, LeBel J.A. explained (at p. 62):
[translation]
That position is rejected by the Labour Court as a whole and cannot be regarded
as a tendency that divides the Court as it was during the period preceding Bibeault.
54
On the question of the need for a legal relationship between successive
employers, LeBel J.A. said, at pp. 67-73, that the Labour Court had
followed Bibeault, but had soon found that not every situation could be
resolved by applying the principles laid down in that case. It was often the
case that an employer to which a certification applied would subcontract the
operation of part of its undertaking on a temporary basis. When the
transfer expired, the employer could take back the operation of the part of the
undertaking in question, or transfer it afresh to another subcontractor, as
more often happened. The Labour Court had to determine whether this practice
could terminate the certification when the first transfer expired, or when the
second transfer to another employer took place. It was in this context that
the Labour Court developed the theory of retrocession. In Coopérants (Les),
Société mutuelle d’assurance‑vie v. Syndicat des employés
de coopératives d’assurance‑vie, D.T.E. 87T‑300 (L.C.), Judge Lesage
stated that when the operation of part of an undertaking was transferred, the
transferor employer was potentially still in charge of the undertaking and was
bound by a temporarily unusable certification. When the transfer terminated,
the previous situation was restored and the transferor once again became bound
by the original certification, which it could transmit again if it chose to
make a new transfer of operation (see Collège d’enseignement général et
professionnel de Limoilou v. Syndicat du personnel de soutien du
Collège de Limoilou, L.C., No. 200‑28‑000041‑90,
October 11, 1990). It was also held in the leading case of Syndicat
des travailleurs du Holiday Inn Ste‑Foy v. Prime Hospitality inc.,
[1991] T.T. 40, signed by Chief Judge Morin, that the certification must
be transferred to all of the successive subcontractors where the original
employer was covered by that certification and transferred the operation afresh
when each subcontract expired. That principle was subsequently applied consistently
by the Labour Court, inter alia in Conciergerie C.D.J. (Québec) inc.
v. Fraternité canadienne des cheminots, employés des transports et
autres ouvriers, section locale 277, D.T.E. 92T‑1043, and Syndicat
des employés de la Ville de Brossard v. Services d’entretien Fany
inc., [1995] T.T. 423.
55
Once again, Judge Brière took a different position from his colleagues’,
holding that retrocession could apply only if the transferee executed a true
instrument of transfer to the original transferor when the transfer of
operation expired. However, with respect to Judge Brière’s position as
compared to his colleagues’, LeBel J.A. said (at p. 72):
[translation]
That position is still isolated within the Labour Court, which we note takes
the position that the transferor employer, being still the potential employer
during the period of the transfer, once again becomes the employer within the
meaning of the Labour Code when the transfer terminates.
56
Thus, as was the case for transfers of the operation of part of an
undertaking in the service sector, we see that there is a consensus in the
Labour Court regarding the legal relationship that is needed in order for the
certification to be passed on to the successive subcontractors of the employer
to which it originally applied.
57
In fact, the only decision-making authority in Quebec that seems to be
genuinely divided at present on the issues that concern us is the Superior
Court. As LeBel J.A. explained in the judgment a quo (at
pp. 62-64), some members of that Court regard the consensus reached by the
Labour Court as a repudiation of Bibeault and are therefore inclined to
evoke the decisions of the Labour Court (for example, For‑Net inc.
v. Tribunal du travail, [1992] R.J.Q. 445; Commission scolaire
Laurenval v. Lalonde, [1997] R.J.Q. 983). On the other
hand, some judges of the Superior Court believe that the approach taken by the
Labour Court is within its exclusive jurisdiction and that there is nothing
about that approach that would justify intervention by the superior courts (see
Rosemère (Ville de) v. St‑Arnaud, D.T.E. 97T‑1039;
Entreprises Chando‑net enr. v. Morin, Sup. Ct. Quebec,
No. 200‑05‑002218‑928, December 23, 1992).
58
Hence it is plain that the situation in the Labour Court at present is
completely different from the situation in that court immediately before Bibeault.
Not only has the standard of review changed, but, after the decision in Bibeault,
the Labour Court has developed interpretive policies regarding the two issues
that divided it at the time that are accepted and followed by virtually all of
its members. What we find is not ongoing debate and paralysis, but the
effective functioning of the administrative bodies responsible for applying
s. 45 of the Labour Code.
59
This Court has stressed the importance of the consensus positions
adopted by administrative tribunals. Consensus allows for a degree of
consistency and predictability in the law that fosters the equitable resolution
of administrative disputes. In Domtar Inc. v. Quebec
(Commission d’appel en matière de lésions professionnelles), [1993] 2
S.C.R. 756, L’Heureux‑Dubé J., for the Court, stated, at
p. 784:
While the analysis of the standard of review
applicable in the case at bar has made clear the significance of the decision‑making
autonomy of an administrative tribunal, the requirement of consistency is also
an important objective. As our legal system abhors whatever is arbitrary, it
must be based on a degree of consistency, equality and predictability in the
application of the law.
Also, in Tremblay
v. Quebec (Commission des affaires sociales), [1992] 1 S.C.R.
952, Gonthier J. wrote on behalf of the Court, at p. 968:
[T]he objective of consistency responds to litigants’ need for
stability but also to the dictates of justice. As the Commission’s decisions
are not subject to appeal, it is the Commission itself which has the duty of
preventing inconsistent decision‑making.
60
Accordingly, while lack of unanimity is not a sufficient basis for the
courts to intervene despite the high standard of patent unreasonableness, it
seems clear that, in applying that standard of review, the existence of a
settled consensus in a specialized administrative tribunal acting within its
jurisdiction should be a factor in favour of a very high degree of deference on
the part of the superior courts. In a situation like this, judicial
deference makes it possible both to respect the decision‑making autonomy
of administrative tribunals and to ensure consistency and predictability of the
law. This ideal balance should only be disturbed by the superior courts where
there are clearly absurd or irrational results.
(a) Application of Section 45
in the Case at Bar
61
An analysis of the applicable principles and of the findings in Bibeault
regarding the definition of an undertaking and the requirement that there be a
legal relationship between the former employer and the new employer leads to
the conclusion that the decisions of commissioner Bibeault and Judge Prud’homme
transferring the certification were neither patently unreasonable nor in
conflict with the decisions of this Court.
(i) Definition of an Undertaking
62
As I noted earlier, the main issue in Bibeault involved the legal
relationship rather than the definition of an undertaking, although the Court
also thought it necessary to dispose of the latter point. It is important to
note at the outset that if Beetz J. had thought that it was impossible for
s. 45 to apply to a janitorial services subcontract situation, it would
have been pointless to analyse what was the crux of the matter in Bibeault:
the legal relationship. As Judge Lesage, then Associate Chief Judge, pointed
out in Luc Construction inc. v. Syndicat des employés de Ville de Brossard,
[1992] T.T. 589, at p. 596:
[translation]
I do not hesitate to say that at every stage in the seven years of the
proceedings in this case relating to the C.S.R.O., all of the lawyers and
judges consistently took it for granted that if the school board had performed
its own janitorial services and there had been a certification granted in
respect of it in that regard, section 45 would have applied to all of its successive
subcontractors starting from when it ceased to perform the work itself.
In the
judgment a quo, LeBel J.A. expressed that idea as follows (at
p. 54):
[translation]
Although the Supreme Court found in Bibeault that the element of
continuity of the undertaking had not been established because of the absence
of a voluntary transfer, it did not decide that section 45 L.C. could not
apply to activities like janitorial services. Nor did it rule out the
possibility of a transfer of operation of part of an undertaking. On the
contrary, in discussing the problem of continuity, it seems to have taken for
granted that the operation of part of an undertaking may be transferred,
including in this sector. If it had thought that the transfer of operation of
part of an undertaking, especially a janitorial services undertaking, were
excluded from the application of section 45 L.C., that conclusion would
have meant that it did not even have to consider the problem of continuity.
63
Indeed, a reading of Bibeault shows that when the issue was
examined from the standpoint of the transfer of an undertaking between
subcontractors, the only possible transfer in that case, since no certification
had originally been granted in respect of the CSRO, this Court expressly
recognized that the application of s. 45 to the transfer of part of a
janitorial services undertaking was possible. Beetz J. stated, at
p. 1121:
In the case at bar, only an alienation or
agreement to operate made by Netco or MBD in favour of Services
Ménagers Roy of that part of their undertaking concerned with janitorial
services in the C.S.R.O. schools would have caused a transfer of rights
and obligations to be effected under s. 45 between Netco and MBD
on the one hand and Services Ménagers Roy on the other. [Emphasis
added.]
Beetz J.
clearly explained that the fact that no certification had ever been granted in
respect of the CSRO was, in his view, the main obstacle to the application of
s. 45. He stated at pp. 1117‑19:
For the purposes of interpreting s. 45, the
requirement of a relationship of control between the employer and the
undertaking seems to me to lead inevitably to two conclusions. First,
the undertaking which is alienated or operated by another must be that of the
employer in respect of whom the certification is issued or with whom the
collective agreement is concluded. Second, the alienation or agreement must
occur between the previous and the new employer.
. . .
The C.S.R.O. is not, and has never been, an employer as defined
by s. 1 of the Labour Code:
1. . . .
(k) “employer” ‑‑
anyone, including Her Majesty, who has work done by an employee;
. . .
The mere right to engage in an activity is not a basis for concluding
that an undertaking exists, while that right has neither taken concrete form
through the allocation of personnel nor been formally recognized in the
certificate of certification.
. . .
The only janitorial service undertaking that can be
in question here is that of the subcontractors, that is, of the “employers”,
and the conclusion of the majority of the Court to the contrary, in view of the
wording of s. 45, has rightly occasioned surprise (R. P. Gagnon,
“L’article 45 du Code du travail après le jugement C.S.R. Outaouais”, loc.
cit., at p. 156). As there was no link between the schoolboard and the
janitorial service undertaking, it follows that the C.S.R.O. could
neither alienate nor confer a right to operate it, nor, as Judge Morin
maintained, be the source of a legal relation between the subcontractors in
question. [Emphasis added.]
64
In addition, the reasons of Beetz J. contain numerous passages
indicating more generally that this Court did not intend, in that decision, to
exclude subcontracting from the application of s. 45. For example, at
pp. 1059‑60, Beetz J. reproduced a passage from Adam v.
Daniel Roy Ltée, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 683, at pp. 688‑89, in
which Chouinard J., for the Court, outlined the history of s. 45. On
the question of the reasons that prompted the enactment of the precursor to
s. 45, s. 10a of the Labour Relations Act,
Chouinard J. stated:
In Centrale de chauffage Enr. v. Syndicat des
employés des institutions religieuses de Chicoutimi Inc. et l’Hôpital de
Chicoutimi, [1970] R.D.T. 344, Donat Quimper A.C.J. of the Labour Court
explained, at pp. 347‑48, the reasons justifying adoption of this
article and the intent of the legislator:
[translation]
In the years that followed adoption of the Labour Relations Act in 1944,
it became apparent that certain transfers of ownership and work transfers had
the effect of impeding the normal exercise of the right of association. In the
case of a sale, unless there was an agreement to the contrary the buyer had no
obligation either to the employees or to their association. The certification
or collective agreement binding on the former owner ceased to apply.
.
. .
Similarly, the practice of certain employers of
giving work which was usually done in their own establishments to third parties
to do could interfere with an application for certification if the transaction
was accompanied by layoffs, and, in some cases, deprive the employees
transferred to the service of the subcontractor of the benefits of an existing
or future agreement. Here again, the certification or agreement was
effective only with regard to the principal employer.
These are the two (2) situations which the
legislator sought to remedy by enacting the first paragraph of section 10a.
[Emphasis added.]
Furthermore,
when he adopted the definition of an undertaking developed by Judge Lesage in Mode
Amazone, supra, Beetz J. also cited with approval, at
p. 1105, the statement that [translation]
“[m]ost often, particularly where there is no operation of the undertaking
by a subcontractor, the undertaking may be said to be
constituted . . . because a sufficient number of those
components that permit the specific activities to be conducted or carried out
are present” (emphasis added). It is therefore clear that the decisions of
this Court do not rule out applying s. 45 to cases of subcontracting in
general, any more than to cases of subcontracting of janitorial services, since
the Court indicated, on the contrary, that s. 45 may apply in the appropriate
circumstances.
65
Whether all or part of the operation is transferred, the definition of
an undertaking for the purposes of s. 45 cannot be restricted to a list of
functions, but rather must be consistent with the organic approach adopted by
Beetz J. in Bibeault, supra. On the other hand, it is also
not possible to completely ignore similarity of functions in the analysis to
determine whether the operation has been transferred. In that regard,
Beetz J. wrote, at p. 1101:
Each undertaking consists of a series of different
components which together constitute an operational entity. It goes without
saying that one of these components is the work done in the undertaking;
but the specific identity of the undertaking is also determined by its
particular physical, intellectual, human, technical and legal components.
[Emphasis added.]
He went on to
say, at p. 1107:
I repeat that similarity of functions is necessary
to determine whether the essential elements of the undertaking continue to
exist, but it is a mistake to make this the absolute criterion for applying
s. 45. In general this criterion does not allow a distinction to be made
between two rival undertakings. Similarity of functions as such could
only indicate continuity in an undertaking to the extent that the undertaking
in question has no other special characteristic.
Instead of an unwarranted focus on a single factor,
the test of continuity in an undertaking requires identification of the
essential elements of the undertaking, which must be found to exist to a
sufficient degree in the new employer’s operations. Each component
must be weighed according to its respective importance. If the clientele
of a certain undertaking is by nature fluid, the fact that the new purchaser
has kept none of his predecessor’s customers will not be significant. On the
other hand, an undertaking whose primary characteristic is exclusive equipment
will be transferred to a new employer only in so far as the latter has acquired
inter alia the equipment in question. [Emphasis added.]
66
The principle set out in Bibeault that the weight to be given to
the different factors to be considered, based on the organic definition of an
undertaking, varies depending on the specific circumstances in an undertaking
or an economic sector, has been adopted and applied in the subsequent decisions
of this Court. In Lester, supra, the Court considered a
provision that was, for our purposes, similar to s. 45, and that was in
force in Newfoundland: s. 89(1) of the Labour Relations Act, 1977,
S.N. 1977, c. 64. McLachlin J., as she then was, for the majority, noted
that the criteria for identifying an undertaking and concluding that it has
been transferred may vary depending on the industry in question; at
p. 677, she said:
No single factor is determinative, since factors which are sufficient
to support a successorship finding in one type of industry may be insufficient
in another. . . .
McLachlin J.
reviewed the responses of labour boards to the construction industry, and
noted, at p. 678, that application of traditional factors to the construction
industry may “render it easy for a contractor to erode the protection which
successorship provisions are meant to provide for bargaining rights”. She then
explained, also at p. 678:
In response to this type of tactic, labour boards
began to apply different tests when examining successorship in the construction
context.
67
In Lester, McLachlin J. took the view that even the specific
tests applied by boards in the construction industry had not been followed. It
was for this reason, and not because it is impossible to apply different tests
in a specific industry or to conclude that a transfer has occurred solely on
the grounds of a limited number of factors, that McLachlin J. found, at
p. 693, that it was patently unreasonable in that case to apply
s. 89(1) of the Labour Relations Act, 1977. This Court has
therefore recognized that administrative tribunals charged with applying
provisions like s. 45 of the Labour Code enjoy wide discretion in
determining and weighing the factors that apply in defining an undertaking, and
are at liberty to develop specific tests to respond to the situation in a given
industry.
68
This principle was also affirmed quite recently in Ajax, supra.
In that case, the Town of Ajax had transferred the operation of its transit
system to a private company, Charterways Transportation Ltd. The
respondent union was certified with Charterways to represent the employees in
question. The Town of Ajax, in respect of which no certification had ever been
issued for the transit system, unilaterally decided to terminate Charterways’
contract and take over the operation of its transit system itself. Charterways
was forced to lay off the employees in question, a significant number of whom
were hired by the Town to perform the same duties. McLachlin C.J.,
for the majority of this Court, affirmed the decision of Goudge J.A., for
the Ontario Court of Appeal (Ajax (Town) v. National
Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers Union of Canada (CAW‑Canada),
Local 222 (1998), 41 O.R. (3d) 426), holding that the decision of the
Ontario Labour Relations Board that the certification had been transferred was
not patently unreasonable. The applicable legislation, s. 64 of the Labour
Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2, as amended by S.O. 1992, c. 21,
s. 29, was, once again, similar to s. 45 of the Labour Code
for our purposes.
69
The decision of the Court of Appeal contains the following passage, at
p. 433:
The Board found that the scope of the business engaged in by
Charterways for Ajax consisted primarily of the provision of this skilled work
force to the Town and that therefore this work force could be considered the
most valuable asset of that business. The importance to the Town of the
continuity and stability of this work force is reflected in the terms of the
contract between the parties and in the results of the hiring done by the Town
when it took back the operation of the transit system.
In essence, the Board found that what was
transferred was not just the work formerly done by the Charterways employees
nor the employees themselves. There was the added value that came with
the continuity, experience and stability of this work force. Hence, there was
a reasonable basis for the finding that what was transferred to Ajax was a
significant part of the business which Charterways conducted for Ajax. This
finding was not patently unreasonable.
Once again, we
see that this Court recognizes that the tests that are to be applied in
defining the concept of an undertaking, in the context of the transfer of
certification, vary with the specific circumstances of each case. The transfer
of a limited number of components, such as the employees and their functions,
may be sufficient, pursuant to an organic definition of an undertaking, where
those components are significant in comparison with the others.
70
It is therefore clear that neither Bibeault, supra, nor
the subsequent decisions of this Court establish a rigid test for identifying
an undertaking or part of an undertaking for the purpose of applying s. 45
of the Labour Code or similar provisions. The only requirement
that those decisions impose is that an organic rather than a functional definition
of an undertaking be adopted, although in some cases similarity of functions
may still be decisive, where the undertaking has no other special
characteristics (Bibeault, at p. 1107).
71
With regard to subcontracting of janitorial services, after Bibeault,
the Labour Court developed tests to be used in order to make consistent
determinations as to whether the operation of part of an undertaking has been
transferred. The specific criterion of the transfer of a right to operate,
combined with the similarity of the functions that form part of the usual
activities of the undertaking, may be used to identify the cases in which the
certification must be transferred. This criterion does not conflict with the definition
of an undertaking adopted in Bibeault. On the contrary, Beetz J.
specifically anticipated this possibility. At pp. 1115‑16, in
examining the definition of operation by another in civil law, he said:
The intent to give up the right of ownership or
the right to operate an undertaking is thus essential to the existence of
an alienation or operation by another. This intent may be either immediate or
conditional: it suffices that the holder of the rights in the undertaking
consents to the acquisition of the ownership of the undertaking or to its
operation by another.
. . .
In 1970, in Centrale de Chauffage, supra, Associate Chief
Judge Quimper gave a definition of the words “operation by another” which has
become classic (at p. 239):
[translation]
The words operation by another
. . . cannot be interpreted in the limited sense of the granting of a
privilege, benefit or favour. Rather it must be given a broad meaning capable
of embracing every kind of subcontract, otherwise it would be meaningless.
For there to be operation by another, therefore, two
conditions must exist:
(1) the transfer of operations to a third
party must originate within the framework of the undertaking; [Emphasis
added by Beetz J.]
(2) the work transferred must be covered
by a collective agreement or certification.
Some two years later, Judge Beaudry also concluded
in Barnes Security Service Ltd. v. Association internationale des
machinistes et des travailleurs de l'aéroastronautique, local 2235, [1972]
T.T. 1, at p. 12, that a legal relation must exist:
[translation]
In interpreting the words “operation by another” there does not appear to be
any conflict between the English and French meanings. Neither assumes the
idea of a sale, assignment or transfer of movable or immovable property or of
rights. On the contrary, these expressions indicate the involvement of
a third party in the management, administration or performance of the
operations of the undertaking, in whole or in part, by gratuitous or onerous
contract. [Emphasis added.]
In my view,
these passages make it clear that the analysis done by Beetz J. envisages
the possibility that operation by another of an undertaking may be thought of
as the transfer of a right to operate. Beetz J. certainly did not rule
out this concept; rather, he said that s. 45 could have been applied in Bibeault
if there had actually been a mutual agreement between the successive employers
concerning transfer of a right to operate the undertaking in question.
72
As Bastarache J. says at para. 143, a janitorial services
undertaking may in fact consist of one or more elements, apart from the
functions, which could be transferred. In my view, however, the labour
commissioner and the Labour Court had the authority, by virtue of the Labour
Code and the decisions of this Court, to assess the respective importance
of the various components of the undertaking and to conclude, in the
circumstances with which we are concerned, that the transfer of a right to
operate, combined with the transfer of functions, was sufficient to result in
s. 45 being applied, under the organic definition of an undertaking.
1. The Centrality of the Part of the
Undertaking Operated by Another in Relation to the Purpose of the Main
Undertaking
73
At p. 63 of the judgment a quo, LeBel J.A. noted that some
Superior Court judges have interpreted Bibeault to require that the part
of the undertaking operated by another be essential to the purposes of the
undertaking in order for it to be possible for the certification to be
transferred. On this point, LeBel J.A. stated (at p. 60):
[translation]
Having adopted a flexible concept both of the idea of an undertaking and, most
importantly, of the concept of operation by another of part of an undertaking,
the Labour Court logically rejected the theory of the purpose of the
undertaking, according to which section 45 L.C. does not apply to operation
by another of an activity like janitorial services since it is allegedly not an
integral or essential part of the transferor’s undertaking. Since according to
this approach it is not connected with the purpose of the undertaking and is
not directly involved in generating profits or in the actual operation of the
undertaking, section 45 L.C. would not apply to it.
74
LeBel J.A. was of the view that this requirement was not adopted in
Bibeault (p. 54). On the contrary, that case presupposes that a
transfer of the operation of a part of an undertaking involving janitorial
services is possible in the education sector, even though that activity is not
directly related to the purpose of the undertaking.
75
I do not believe that this Court has ever stated that the only instance
in which a certification will be transferred is where the operation of an
essential part of an undertaking is transferred. In Bibeault, supra,
at p. 1107, Beetz J. did refer to continuity or preservation of “the
essential elements” of the undertaking, and it was in that context that he said
that the importance of the various elements will vary with the circumstances,
so that, for example, the fluidity of the clientele could make this element
lose all significance. When Beetz J. referred to the essential elements of the
undertaking, clearly he meant the various elements that may be used to
characterize an undertaking, such as its activities, employees, equipment or
know-how. At that time there was simply no need to determine whether, where
part of the operation was transferred, the portion of the activities
transferred had to be essential to the purpose of the undertaking as a whole.
The only requirement laid down by Bibeault is actually that the elements
that characterize the essence of the part of the undertaking in question be
transferred. That case does not limit transfer of the operation of part of an
undertaking to cases in which the central parts of the undertaking are
transferred.
76
In Lester, supra, McLachlin J. said, at p. 676,
concerning the requirements that apply with respect to the transfer of part of
an undertaking in Canadian law, that “[r]ather, a discernable part of
the business must be disposed of” (emphasis added). That case therefore also
does not adopt a test of necessity in relation to the purpose of the
undertaking as a whole.
77
In the case at bar, Judge Prud’homme concluded, at
pp. 500-501, that janitorial services are an essential part of the
undertaking in that, while they are not the most important part, they
contribute with the other activities to the purpose of the undertaking and are
permanently, rather than exceptionally, associated with the undertaking. That
approach in no way conflicts with Bibeault, supra, nor is it
inconsistent with the subsequent decisions of this Court.
2. The autonomy of the Part of the
Undertaking Operated by Another in Relation to the Main Undertaking
78
Where the main characteristic of the part of the undertaking operated by
another consists, as it does in this case, of the specific right to operate on
the premises of the main undertaking, it clearly cannot enjoy wholly autonomous
existence. In Lester, supra, McLachlin J. briefly
considered the issue of the degree of autonomy the transferee must receive in
order to conclude that a transfer of an undertaking has in fact taken place.
At pp. 676‑77, she explained the generally accepted position in
Canadian law:
As Adams, in his text, Canadian Labour Law (1985), at
p. 414, states in concluding a review of the law from various
jurisdictions: “In virtually all cases where a sale of part of a business has
been found, a separate and identifiable part of the predecessor’s operations
has been transferred”. Adams continues at p. 415:
What is clear from all these cases is that what must be transferred is
a portion of the business capable of being defined and identified as a
functioning entity that is viable in itself or sufficiently distinguishable to
be severable from the whole.
. . .
Because a business is not merely a collection of assets, the vital
consideration “is whether the transferee has acquired from the transferrer a
functional economic vehicle”: Metropolitan Parking Inc., supra,
at p. 209.
79
In interpreting an enactment that refers to transfer of the operation of
part of an undertaking, the Labour Court has developed a specific approach to
the autonomy test. LeBel J.A. described the court’s reasoning as follows
(at p. 60):
[translation] Where there
is a transfer of operation of part of an undertaking, a close association
remains, even though the work is now done under the direction of another
employer. . . .
. . .
The test of the creation of a viable, functional or operational
economic entity, which was used, for example, in the decision of the Ontario
Labour Relations Board in Canadian Union of Public Employees and
Metropolitan Parking Inc. (1980) 1 C.L.R.B.R. 197 and in Lester (W.W.)
(1978) Ltd., is not understood in strictly economic terms. Rather, it
is analysed on the basis of the cohesion of the components of the part of the
undertaking, their constitution as an autonomous and organized economic entity
generating activities or requiring the hiring of staff (Syndicat national
des employés municipaux d’Iberville v. Ville d’Iberville, T.T. Montréal
500-28-000011-916, May 6, 1991 (D.T.E. 91T‑712), p. 21 of the
judgment). In the case of support services benefiting the entire undertaking,
the view of the Labour Court is that the Labour Code does not require
that the transferred part of the undertaking be capable of being sold or be
completely economically viable as an autonomous unit (Id., p. 7 of
the judgment; Syndicat des employés des commissions scolaires de la
régionale Chauveau (C.S.N.) v. Groupe Admari inc., [1991] T.T. 351,
357-58).
80
In the view of the Labour Court, therefore, [translation] “it is of the essence of operation by another of
part of the undertaking that its activities continue to be carried on within
the fold of the central undertaking that provides it with its identity”, as
Judge Lesage, then Associate Chief Judge, said in Luc Construction, supra,
at pp. 592‑93. However, the Labour Court will still take the
autonomy test into account. LeBel J.A. wrote (at p. 62):
[translation]
In the view of the Labour Court, however, the concept of operation by another
of an undertaking requires that a sufficient degree of autonomy be given to the
transferee, which must be legally independent and be responsible for the work
performed by its employees, even if it is subject to administrative or legal
control under the contract by which the operation was transferred.
81
That is the approach that Judge Prud’homme adopted in this case, at
pp. 500-501, in concluding that the operation of the part of Ivanhoe’s
undertaking concerned with janitorial services had been transferred but was
still integrated into the main undertaking, and was directly involved in its activities.
Otherwise, there could be no transfer of the operation of part of an
undertaking’s support activities. That approach is a reasonable interpretation
of s. 45 which does not conflict with Bibeault, supra.
Furthermore, the reasoning of the Labour Court is a reasonable adaptation of
the tests developed by this Court in its analysis of the legislation in force
in the other Canadian provinces to Quebec law. That interpretation falls
within the specialized jurisdiction of the Labour Court and allows for the
rational application of s. 45 in the respect of the transfer of the
operation of the undertaking’s support activities.
(ii) Legal relationship
82
The determination that the certification had to be transferred to the
four new contractors when the contract with Moderne expired does not conflict
with the requirement that there be a legal relationship between successive
employers, which was laid down in Bibeault, supra. With respect
to the theory of retrocession developed by the Labour Court, LeBel J.A.
wrote, at p. 69:
[translation]
The approach taken by the Labour Court does not seem, first, to have been ruled
out by Bibeault. As noted here, that case involved a situation in
which certification had been granted only with respect to the subcontractor.
In this case, the certification was first granted in respect of Ivanhoe itself
(Alain Barré, “La sous-traitance de l’article 45 du Code du travail
après l’affaire C.S.R.O.”, (1991) 32 C. de D. 179, 216). [Emphasis
added.]
This is indeed
a fundamental factual distinction as a result of which we may not treat this
case as simply involving a direct application of the principles laid down in Bibeault.
83
As Professor Barré stated (“La sous‑traitance et l’article 45 du Code
du travail après l’affaire C.S.R.O.” (1991), 32 C. de D. 179,
at pp. 223‑24), the theory of retrocession, according to which
a certification originally granted in respect of the transferor remains with
it, but is temporarily inactive during the period of operation by another and
is then transferred to the successive subcontractors, was developed by the
Labour Court well before Bibeault, supra. Before the 1975
decision in Jack Schwartz, supra, the Labour Court required that
there be a legal relationship between successive employers. When the
certification was originally granted in respect of a subcontractor, the Labour
Court was of the view that this requirement prevented s. 45 from applying
when there was a transfer to a new subcontractor. On the other hand, where the
certification was initially granted in respect of the transferor of the
operation, the court was of the view that it had to be transferred to all
successive subcontractors by virtue of the theory of retrocession (see Union
des employés de service, section locale 298 v. Syndicat national
des employés de la Commission scolaire régionale de Baie‑des‑Chaleurs,
[1973] T.T. 332). Subsequently, the members of the Labour Court who had
adopted the approach developed in Jack Schwartz holding that a legal
relationship is not necessary ceased to distinguish between the two situations,
since certification could then be transferred in both cases.
84
Bibeault did not address cases in which the certification was
originally granted in respect of the party which had contracted out the work.
On the contrary, the entire analysis was based on identifying the undertaking
that has been subject to a transfer of operation resulting in the application
of s. 45. At p. 1117, Beetz J. said that for the purposes of
s. 45, “the undertaking which is alienated or operated by another must be
that of the employer in respect of whom the certification is issued or with
whom the collective agreement is concluded” and at p. 1118, he stated:
Whatever the merits in terms of purely economic analysis of the
argument that the janitorial services undertaking is that of the C.S.R.O.
because it is “the party that in reality gives out the work”, this argument
finds no place in the context of collective bargaining. Collective bargaining,
and indeed labour law, is concerned with labour relations, that is, with the
relations between the employer and the employees. The C.S.R.O.
is not, and has never been, an employer as defined by s. 1 of the Labour
Code. . . . [Emphasis added.]
He went on to
say, at p. 1119:
The only janitorial service undertaking that can
be in question here is that of the subcontractors, that is, of the “employers”
. . . As there was no link between the schoolboard and the
janitorial service undertaking, it follows that the C.S.R.O. could
neither alienate nor confer a right to operate it, nor, as Judge Morin
maintained, be the source of a legal relation between the subcontractors in
question. [Emphasis added.]
85
Thus, in Bibeault, the only undertaking that could be operated by
another or alienated, for the purposes of s. 45, was the part of the
subcontractors’ undertaking which was concerned with the janitorial services
for the CSRO’s schools and which was never operated by the CSRO as an employer
for the purposes of the Labour Code, since there had never been a
certification granted in respect of the CSRO. Because the subcontractors had
not transferred that part of their undertaking to another employer, the
certification had simply ceased to exist when the contract between them and the
CSRO expired. Beetz J., at p. 1124, quoting from p. 278 of Montcalm
Carpets Specialists, supra, said:
The certification inexorably follows the fate of an undertaking
whose viability depends on a contract, when no part of the undertaking
survives in the operations of a new employer following termination of the
contract:
[translation]
The fate and the existence of a certification, like the fate and existence of
an agreement, are linked to those of the undertaking covered by the
certification and agreement: the fate of the appellant’s certification and
agreement here was linked to that of the undertaking of the
mis en cause at the owner’s premises, and this is what appellant
understood and intended when the certification was in effect. The undertaking
only existed for a limited time: obviously everything associated with it was
also ephemeral. When this undertaking ceased or disappeared, and there
was nothing to act as a bridge between it and some other undertaking which
might, through the actions of the mis en cause, come after it, the
appellant’s certification and agreement on the premises of the
mis en cause became invalid. [First emphasis added; second
emphasis in original.]
He went on to
say, at p. 1126 :
I have already noted the ephemeral nature of the certification
associated with an undertaking, or part thereof, whose existence is limited by
a contract. The certification becomes inapplicable once the contract
expires and no essential part of the undertaking is passed on to a new
employer. [Emphasis added.]
86
In Bibeault, the CSRO itself did not own a janitorial services
undertaking within the meaning of s. 45. The legal relationships which
successively existed between it and the various subcontractors could therefore
not lead to the transfer of a certification that had never applied to the
CSRO. Nor did the CSRO have the legal authority to transfer the undertaking
belonging to its subcontractors to new employers. Beetz J. wrote, at
p. 1113:
Alienation and operation by another are defined in terms of the
relation between the holder of a right and the person who acquires the use of
it. It is apparent that only someone who enjoys a right of ownership can
alienate his undertaking. [Emphasis added.]
87
Hence, in Bibeault, the certification could not have applied to
the new subcontractor, since the former subcontractors had not transferred the
operation of their undertaking to it. The CSRO itself was simply incapable of
transferring the operation of the undertaking within the meaning of s. 45,
since it had never owned it. The requirement that there be a legal relationship
between the former employer and the new employer must therefore be analysed
having regard to the principle that the undertaking which is alienated or
operated by another is the one that belongs to the employer in respect of which
the certification was granted. As Professor Barré, supra, stated,
at p. 218, the situation is completely different where the
certification applies to the party that contracted out the work:
[translation] While the
transfer that is to occur between “the former employer and the new employer”
must relate to “the undertaking . . . of the employer in respect of
which the certification was granted”, there is no doubt that the Supreme Court
in no way contemplated, where a change of subcontractors occurs, the situation
where the certification was granted in respect of the party that contracted out
the work, since the former employer is in no way capable in that situation
of transferring any right whatsoever in the undertaking belonging to the party
that contracted out the work. [Emphasis added.]
88
Thus we see that the situation in this case is clearly different from
the situation in respect of which Beetz J. had to rule in Bibeault.
In this case it is the transfer of the operation of the undertaking belonging
to Ivanhoe, the transferor, and not the undertaking belonging to its
subcontractor, Moderne, that must be identified. That being the case, the
legal relationships between Ivanhoe and its successive subcontractors become
extremely relevant. In addition, the former employer, Moderne, is not the one
that has the authority in this case, when its contract expires, to transfer the
operation of the undertaking which is relevant for the purposes of s. 45,
that is, the undertaking belonging to Ivanhoe. To give effect to the purpose
of s. 45 in a situation of this nature, which evidently has never been
considered by this Court in the past, the Labour Court developed the theory of
retrocession. That concept is easily explained once the legal nature of
operation by another is understood. On this point, Professor Barré, supra,
wrote, at p. 218:
[translation] When the
operation of an undertaking is transferred, the employer transfers to another, on
a temporary basis, a right to operate a part -- or even the whole -- of its
undertaking. Can it be argued in such a case that the certification completely
ceases to have effect with respect to the transferor employer? [Emphasis
added.]
The writer
concludes, at pp. 218‑23, that it is actually impossible for
the transfer of operation of an undertaking, the essential characteristic of
which is that it is temporary, to operate, in and of itself, to permanently
terminate the certification. In the judgment a quo, LeBel J.A.
said (at p. 72) :
[translation]
A temporary transfer of operation implies both the transfer of rights
and obligations to the transferee and the retrocession of those rights when the
transfer terminates. [Emphasis added.]
89
Ivanhoe used a consensual juridical act to transfer the right to operate
part of its undertaking to Moderne for a fixed period of time. Moderne
therefore agreed at the outset that Ivanhoe would take back the right to
operate its undertaking when the transfer expired. Since Ivanhoe had never
permanently divested itself of its undertaking, it could not have divested
itself of the certification associated with that undertaking. When it took
back its rights, when the contract expired, the certification was reactivated
in respect of it and was then transferred to the new contractors.
90
In the case at bar, Ivanhoe decided not to take back the operation of
its janitorial undertaking when the first transfer expired. In Bibeault,
Beetz J. concluded that the mere fact that the CSRO could have decided to
perform the janitorial services itself was insufficient to conclude that there
was a legal relationship among its various subcontractors. At
p. 1118, he wrote:
The mere right to engage in an activity is not a basis for concluding
that an undertaking exists, while that right has neither taken concrete form
through the allocation of personnel nor been formally recognized in the
certificate of certification. [Emphasis added.]
In the instant
case, however, the undertaking that was originally transferred pursuant to
s. 45 was indeed Ivanhoe’s undertaking, and the activity in question was
duly set out in the certificate of certification. Unlike the CSRO, Ivanhoe was
the owner of an undertaking within the meaning of s. 45. In those
circumstances, it was reasonable for the Labour Court to find that Ivanhoe’s
legal capacity to take back the operation of its undertaking, which had been
the subject of the certification in the first place, when a transfer expired
was sufficient to give it the legal authority to transfer the operation of that
undertaking to the new contractors, with the result that s. 45 applied.
91
We know that in addition to requiring a legal relationship between successive
employers, Bibeault defined, at p. 1115, alienation or operation by
another as the voluntary transfer of a right. That requirement had to be
qualified by both the Quebec Court of Appeal and the Labour Court, in order to
respond to the situations that subsequently arose. For example, in Collines‑de‑l’Outaouais,
supra, in which judgment was rendered on the same day as the decision a
quo, both Zerbisias J. (ad hoc), at p. 107, and
LeBel J.A., at p. 110, concluded that the legal relationship required
in order for s. 45 to apply may be imposed by the legislature when it
provides for the succession of one municipal organization to another. In
general, however, a mutual agreement between the successive employers will be
necessary, as was held in Bibeault and the subsequent decisions of the
Labour Court. In this case, the retrocession of the undertaking is the result
precisely of such mutual agreement. The temporary nature of the transfer to
Moderne does not admit of any other conclusion.
92
Hence, the interpretation by the Labour Court of the requirement that
there be a legal relationship between successive employers and of its
application to situations in which a certification has been granted in respect
of the transferor is a reasonable exercise of its specialized jurisdiction.
The approach taken by the Labour Court does not conflict with Bibeault
and clearly falls within its jurisdiction, since its aim is to give effect to
the purpose of s. 45, while taking into account the reality of the
business practices it is addressing. The theory of retrocession makes it
possible to ensure that employers cannot permanently rid themselves of the
certifications that apply to them by engaging in mere temporary transfers of
operation, which would be contrary to the purposes of s. 45. In the
judgment a quo, LeBel J.A. wrote (at p. 72):
[translation] In
addition, at the level of the policy in relation to the application of labour
legislation, rejection of the principle of retrocession and successive
transfers would have potentially serious consequences for the stability of
certifications and the objective of continuity promoted by the application of
the Labour Code. It would, in effect, enable employers to rid
themselves of certifications and collective agreements by engaging in
successive transfers of operation of undertakings (see Conciergerie C.D.J.
(Québec) inc. v. Fraternité canadienne des cheminots, employés de transports et
autres ouvriers, section locale 277, T.T. Québec 200-28-000007-92, June 2,
1992 (D.T.E. 92T-1043), p. 28 of the judgment; see Syndicat des travailleurs
du Holiday Inn Ste-Foy (C.S.N.) v. Prime Hospitality Inc., [1991] T.T. 40,
46).
93
It was in fact for these reasons that Judge Prud’homme concluded at
pp. 501-2 that Bibeault did not hold that a transferor to which a
certification applied may rid itself of that certification by successively
transferring the operation of its undertaking to two subcontractors.
According to Judge Prud’homme, that approach would result in [translation] “precarious certification”
and the “indefensible gutting of section 45” which could not have been the
intention of this Court.
94
Furthermore, the cases decided by this Court since Bibeault have
confirmed that the question of whether an undertaking has been transferred must
be analysed using flexible tests that are, for the most part, to be assessed by
the administrative tribunals responsible for the matter. In Ajax, supra,
McLachlin C.J. wrote, at para. 2:
In my view, the historical and functional connection between
Charterways and the Town of Ajax constitutes evidence upon which the Board
would rationally have based its conclusion of successorship. I would
agree with Goudge J.A. that the conclusion of the Board was not “clearly
irrational”.
Goudge J.A.,
whose reasons were affirmed in their entirety by the majority of this Court,
stated, at p. 432:
The conclusion that these facts constitute a sale as defined by
s. 64 is not “clearly irrational”. It does not give the section a
patently unreasonable interpretation. The statutory definition is inclusive:
“‘sells’ includes leases, transfers and any other manner of disposition”.
Because of the remedial purpose of s. 64, namely the preservation of
bargaining rights, this definition is to be given a broad and liberal
interpretation. Moreover, it is not required that the transfer take any
particular legal form nor take place by way of legal transaction. In W.
W. Lester, supra, at pp. 674‑75, McLachlin J. put it
this way:
.
. .
In keeping with the purpose of successorship
provisions – to protect the permanence of bargaining rights – labour boards
have interpreted “disposition” broadly to include almost any mode of transfer
and have not relied on technical legal forms of business transactions.
As explained by the Ontario Board in United Steelworkers of America v.
Thorco Manufacturing Ltd. (1965), 65 C.L.L.C. ¶16,052, an expansive
definition accords with the purpose of the section -- to preserve bargaining
rights regardless of the legal form of the transaction which puts bargaining
rights in jeopardy. [Emphasis added.]
Thus, even
where there is no formal juridical act of transfer, this Court has found that
it was not patently unreasonable to conclude that the certification had to be
transferred. The specific business relationship that existed between the
successive employers was sufficient to allow the Board to find that part of the
undertaking had been transferred.
95
In addition, as McLachlin J. pointed out in Lester, supra,
at p. 675, it was decided in National Bank of Canada v. Retail
Clerks’ International Union, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 269, that a provision
similar to s. 45 of the Labour Code, s. 144 of the Canada
Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L‑1, which defined “sell” to include
“the lease, transfer and other disposition of the business”, could also apply
to a case involving the merger of two branches of the same bank where a
unionized branch had been closed and its operations transferred to a non‑unionized
branch. Even though the provision in question did not refer to merger or
changes within an undertaking, this Court found that the expressions “transfer”
and “other disposition” could cover the situation in question.
96
In the circumstances, it seems clear that the Labour Court could
reasonably find in this case that when the contract with Moderne expired,
Ivanhoe took back responsibility for its undertaking and was once again bound
by the certification. The fact that there was no formal juridical act of
alienation when the transfer of operation to Moderne expired is not an
insurmountable barrier to transfer of the certification, since the transfer of
operation of an undertaking which results in s. 45 applying can take different
legal forms. In the instant case, the undertaking was transferred by way
of a retrocession agreed upon by the parties in advance at the time the term of
the transfer was negotiated.
97
Furthermore, Professor Barré, supra, at pp. 223‑29,
believes that the theory of retrocession does not conflict with Bibeault
and is a logical approach that makes it possible to maintain stable collective
labour relations. Retrocession has also been approved by R.
P. Gagnon, who wrote, in Le droit du travail du Québec: pratiques et
théories (4th ed. 1999), at p. 338:
[translation]
Alienation and, frequently, operation by another of an undertaking may
eventually lead to retrocession of the undertaking. Where a certification has
been granted with respect to the transferor employer and is transferred by
section 45 to a new employer, the end of the transfer will result in the
transferred activities again falling under the certification that originally
applied to them. A subsequent alienation or transfer to another operator
will result in section 45 again applying between the transferor and that
operator. [Emphasis added.]
98
To give effect to the purpose of s. 45 in cases involving the
temporary transfer of the operation of an undertaking, the Labour Court
developed the concept of potential employer, which is tied to the concept of
retrocession. That notion explains why it is not necessary, in order for a new
transfer to result in s. 45 being applied, for the party that contracted
out the work to actually take back the operation of the part of the undertaking
that had been transferred. The mere fact that the transferor has the legal
authority to operate the undertaking, combined with the existence of a
certification that applied to it in the first place, is sufficient. This is an
approach that enables s. 45 to be adapted to the concrete situations to which
it applies. Indeed, this type of reasoning is not new in Quebec civil law.
Numerous legal fictions have been expressly created by law, for example in the
civil law institutions of substitution (see arts. 1218‑55 C.C.Q.
and G. Brière, Donations, substitutions et fiducie (1988),
at pp. 221‑64) and stipulation for another (see arts. 1444‑50
C.C.Q., and J.‑L. Baudouin and P.‑G. Jobin, Les
obligations (5th ed. 1998), at pp. 386‑93).
99
Other legal fictions have been wholly or partly created by the
courts. For example, in General Motors Products of Canada Ltd. v.
Kravitz, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 790, this Court took the view that the seller’s
warranty of quality was an accessory to the property and was transferred with
it on successive sales. Accordingly, the subsequent buyers could invoke
the contractual warranty of quality against the manufacturer, even though they
did not contract directly with it (see P.‑G. Jobin, La vente dans le
Code civil du Québec (1993), at pp. 138‑43; J. Edwards, La
garantie de qualité du vendeur en droit québécois (1998),
at pp. 71‑83). Otherwise, that warranty could only have had
effect between the contracting parties, by virtue of the principle of privity
of contracts which holds that a contract does not affect third persons
(art. 1440 C.C.Q.). As a result of the principle established in Kravitz
and now codified in art. 1442 C.C.Q., the contractual warranty of
quality is able to properly perform its function of protecting the buyer of
property.
100
In the law of persons, this Court held, in Montreal Tramways Co. v.
Léveillé, [1933] S.C.R. 456, that a child born alive and viable could
maintain an action in its own name for damages against the person who caused
the injury sustained by it in its pre‑natal state, even though in the
civil law legal personality cannot exist until birth (see also Dobson
(Litigation Guardian of) v. Dobson, [1999] 2 S.C.R. 753, at paras.
13-18). In that case, this Court recognized the existence of the civil law
principle that when a child is born alive and viable, its legal personality is
retroactive to the date of conception, through a legal fiction that operates
only for the benefit of the child and can never be used against it (see
É. Deleury and D. Goubau, Le droit des personnes physiques (2nd ed.
1997), at pp. 11‑17). This principle is expressly recognized
by the legislature in certain fields, such as successions (art. 617 C.C.Q.),
substitution (art. 1242 C.C.Q.), trusts (art. 1279 C.C.Q.),
gifts (art. 1814 C.C.Q.) and insurance of persons (art. 2447 C.C.Q.).
In Montreal Tramways, supra, this Court recognized that even
where the rule had not been generally codified, legal personality can be retroactive
to the date of conception whenever this is required in the interests of a child
born alive and viable.
101
From this brief overview of some of the legal fictions that are found in
civil law, we may observe that when the Labour Court developed the theory of
retrocession it was not only following a pragmatic and functional approach that
enabled effect to be given to the purpose of s. 45, but also adopting a
civil law approach in order to determine the effects of successive transfers of
operation of an undertaking. The Labour Court therefore respected the broader
context in which it must function, basing its approach on the specific legal
system in force in Quebec, from which the concepts of alienation and operation
by another used in s. 45 are derived, as Beetz J. clearly explained
in Bibeault, supra, at pp. 1097 and 1112‑13.
(b) The Transfer of the Collective
Agreement
102
Generally speaking, transfer of both the collective agreement and the
certification will follow from a decision finding that an undertaking has been
alienated or is being operated by another. The purpose of s. 45 is to
protect not only collective bargaining rights but also, where circumstances
permit, the individual rights of employees to have their working conditions
safeguarded. In Adam, supra, at pp. 694‑95,
Chouinard J. for the Court, described the goals contemplated by s. 45
(then s. 36):
The fact remains that the certification and agreement also confer
rights on the employees themselves, and I do not see anything in the wording
of s. 36 to justify the statement that “the protection [. . .]
is given to the employee association only”.
. . .
Section 36 seeks to encourage the stability of employment
and prevent the disruption of labour relations, and to protect the rights of
the union and the rights of the employees in the event of a change in the
management or organization of the undertaking. . . . [Emphasis
added.]
The most
common way of protecting employees’ rights will be to transfer the collective
agreement guaranteeing their working conditions and job security to the new
employer.
103
In this case, however, both the labour commissioner and the Labour Court
declined to transfer the collective agreement signed with Moderne to the new
employers. As we saw, the Labour Court took the view that the undertaking
transferred to the contractors was Ivanhoe’s rather than its subcontractor’s.
It therefore held that the agreement signed with Moderne became invalid when
its contract expired, and could not be transferred to the new
contractors. Furthermore, according to clause 25.01 of the last agreement
signed with Ivanhoe, that agreement expired on May 22, 1989. Thus, at the
time the operation of the undertaking was again transferred by Ivanhoe to the contractors,
on September 1, 1991, that agreement was no longer in force. The Labour Court
therefore declined to find that it had to be transferred.
104
In addition, both the Labour Code and the original collective
agreement signed with Ivanhoe contain provisions that apparently inhibit,
rather than facilitate, the determination of the fate of the collective
agreement in the case of a temporary transfer of operation of an undertaking.
Clause 25.02 of the collective agreement provided that it would remain in force
during renewal negotiations, until one of the parties exercised the right to
strike or to a lock-out. Section 59 of the Labour Code on the other
hand is a legal mechanism to safeguard working conditions on the expiration of
a collective agreement for a fixed period the length of which was determined,
before 1994, by reference to the acquisition of the right to lock out, and
since 1994, by reference to the exercise of the right to strike or to a
lock-out. However, references to the length of renewal negotiations and to the
acquisition or exercise of the right to lock out or to strike may apply only to
an employer that is in fact responsible for operating the undertaking at the
time the collective agreement expires and that is capable of negotiating a new
agreement with the association of employees. Thus, while those provisions may
apply to a subcontractor that is responsible for operating the undertaking at
the time the collective agreement expires, they are apparently not intended to
govern the situation with respect to the party that temporarily contracted out
the right to operate its undertaking, and they therefore leave open the
question of which collective agreement may or shall apply to it when the
transfer expires.
105
Therefore, the dilemma faced by the Labour Court in this case is
apparent. On the one hand, transferring the collective agreement signed with
Moderne shortly before its contract expired would allow a contractor to impose
working conditions on one of its competitors, even where no undertaking has
been transferred between them. On the other hand, transferring the agreement
originally signed by Ivanhoe would result in the application of obsolete
working conditions set out in an agreement negotiated several years earlier
which was supposed to run for only three years. The mechanisms meant to
safeguard working conditions could be applied only if the reality of the events
that had occurred and of the actual situation in the undertaking were ignored,
and would also result in safeguarding obsolete conditions that neither the
legislature nor the parties had intended to extend for such a long period.
Finally, where there is no collective agreement the employees are left without
any protection, not only for their working conditions, but for their employment
with the undertaking, and this is a barrier to achieving the purposes of
s. 45.
106
Being aware of the special problems that may be caused by transferring
certifications and collective agreements as a result of the alienation or
operation by another of an undertaking, the legislature gave the specialized
labour law decision-making authorities very broad power to develop appropriate
solutions for each case. In addition to giving the labour commissioner
exclusive jurisdiction to determine the applicability of s. 45, s. 46
of the Labour Code also grants the commissioner the power to “settle any
difficulty arising out of the application of that section”. That power, which
already existed before the 1990 amendments to s. 46, was described as
follows by Gagnon, supra, at p. 346:
[translation]
Section 46 confers almost limitless discretion on labour commissioners and
the Labour Court in selecting the solutions to be applied to difficulties
arising out of the application of section 45, in order to ensure industrial
peace while respecting the employees’ right of association, and within the
framework of coherent collective labour relations. That power may extend
as far as redefining or cancelling certifications and amending or
harmonizing collective agreements, for example by merging and rearranging
seniority lists. [Emphasis added.]
107
In Distribution Réal Chagnon inc. v. Prud’homme,
J.E. 90‑1027, the Quebec Court of Appeal recognized that under
s. 46, the labour commissioner had the power to integrate the former
employees of the transferred undertaking into the seniority list maintained by
the new employer. In Syndicat des employés de coopératives d’assurance‑vie
v. Les Coopérants, [1991] R.J.Q. 1248, the Court of Appeal also held
that under s. 46, the Labour Court could merge bargaining units and amend
the certifications accordingly. In that case, however, the Labour Court’s
decision had to be evoked because that issue was not before it, no appeal from
the commissioner’s decision having been filed in that regard.
108
For a number of years, the Labour Court has used the powers conferred on
it by s. 46 to settle the difficulties arising out of the application of
s. 45 in a realistic and appropriate manner. For example, a collective
agreement was amended to recognize the years of service of an employee of a non‑unionized
undertaking that had merged with a unionized undertaking, so that the employee
could apply, under the agreement, for the job he had already held for 20 years
(Emballages industriels Vulcan ltée v. Syndicat des
travailleurs de l’énergie et de la chimie, section locale 106, [1991] T.T.
29). Seniority lists under multiple collective agreements have also been
integrated by applying methods adapted to each specific fact situation (see Syndicat
des salariées et salariés cléricaux et techniques de l’amiante v. LAB,
société en commandite, D.T.E. 94T‑13 (L.C.), motion for evocation
dismissed, Sup. Ct. Quebec, No. 200‑05‑003286‑932,
February 23, 1994; Groupe des ex‑salariés de Transbéton v.
Groupe des ex‑salariés de Transmix, [1999] R.J.D.T. 513 (L.C.); Syndicat
des travailleurs de S.O.S. v. Syndicat international des
travailleurs et travailleuses unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section
locale 502, [1992] T.T. 109), and tests have been developed to determine which
employees would keep their jobs in the new undertaking resulting from the
merger of several establishments (Union internationale des travailleurs unis
de l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 301 W v. Brasserie
Molson‑O’Keefe, D.T.E. 91T‑914 (L.C.)).
109
The labour commissioners and the Labour Court have also had to decide,
in cases where more than one collective agreement was applicable, which ones
should be continued or cancelled (Syndicat national des employés de
l’alimentation en gros de Québec inc. v. Épiciers unis Métro‑Richelieu
inc., D.T.E. 85T‑114 (L.C.); Syndicat des employées et employés
professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v. Centre financier aux
entreprises du Sud‑Ouest de Montréal, D.T.E. 2000T‑113
(L.C.)). In addition, both the Superior Court (Metro Capital Group ltée
v. Hamelin, [2000] R.J.D.T. 491, at pp. 495‑96, on
appeal, C.A. Montréal, No. 500‑09‑009625‑005) and the
Tribunal d’arbitrage (Syndicat national des employés de l’alimentation en
gros de Québec inc. v. Épiciers unis Métro‑Richelieu inc.,
[1987] T.A. 333, at pp. 338‑39) have recognized the
exclusive jurisdiction of the commissioner to amend collective agreements in
order to settle difficulties arising out of the application of s. 45.
110
Furthermore, the Labour Court has frequently had to merge a number of
certifications under s. 46, whether or not they were held by different
unions. In such cases, the Labour Court had to choose which certification
would be preserved or specify the terms and conditions for a vote to enable the
employees in question to express their wishes in that regard (see Syndicat
des employés de la Commission scolaire des Deux‑Rives v. Commission
scolaire de la Jonquière, [1990] T.T. 419; Syndicat des professionnels
et des techniciens de la santé du Québec v. Syndicat des employés du
C.L.S.C. de la Guadeloupe, D.T.E. 86T‑759 (L.C.); Syndicat des
employés du Carrefour des jeunes de Montréal v. Union des employés de
service, section locale 298, [1990] T.T. 398; Centrale des unions
indépendantes de l’industrie de l’automobile v. Fraternité
canadienne des cheminots, employés du transport et autres ouvriers, section
locale 300, [1982] T.T. 340; Rothmans, Benson & Hedges inc. v.
Travailleurs unis de l’alimentation et du commerce, section locale 501,
D.T.E. 87T‑976 (L.C.); Syndicat québécois des employées et employés de
service, section locale 298 v. Syndicat des employées et employés
des services sociaux du Centre jeunesse Laval, [2001] R.J.D.T. 134.
111
As these examples illustrate, the need to amend or to refuse to transfer
collective agreements has arisen in various contexts, for example when the new
employer was already bound by a collective agreement and a seniority list; that
need does not arise solely as a result of the application of the theory of
retrocession, which is only one of the situations in which it may be necessary
to exercise the discretion conferred by s. 46. As a result and with
respect, I am unable to concur in the opinion of my colleague Bastarache J., at
para. 159, that the decision of the specialized decision-makers refusing to
transfer the collective agreements in this case demonstrates that the
retrocession argument is tenuous or that this is not in fact a “true”
successorship situation.
112
Thus, in a situation like the one in this case, where there are multiple
collective agreements, including one signed with a subcontractor and another
which had probably expired, that might govern the labour relations within the
undertaking and where, on the other hand, there are employees who might lose
any union protection if no agreement, even an amended one, were to apply to
them, the labour commissioner may choose from a range of solutions, and may
also create solutions, in order to settle the complex difficulties that arise
in the manner the commissioner considers most appropriate in the circumstances.
113
For example, the collective agreement signed with Moderne could have
been transferred to the new employers with a new expiry date established as the
date of the transfer, so that the jobs and working conditions could have been
safeguarded for the bargaining period only. Similarly, the expiry date of the
agreement signed with Ivanhoe could have been amended to safeguard the jobs during
the negotiations for the purpose of concluding a new agreement. Had he
considered it appropriate, the commissioner could also have made a ruling
providing for the transfer of only the part of either of the collective
agreements relating to job security for a limited period, so that the parties
could agree on a new collective agreement while the employees could not have
been dismissed with impunity. Lastly, it was also possible to decide as the
commissioner did in this case, that none of the agreements would be
transferred. That solution could also have been adopted in Sept‑Îles,
supra, where concerns were raised relating to the application of
municipal collective agreements to subcontractors.
114
In any event, the appropriate solution is a matter to be decided by the
specialized tribunals, on which the legislature has conferred broad discretion
to settle difficulties arising out of the application of s. 45.
Determining what arrangements will best preserve balance in collective labour
relations is within the special expertise of those decision-making bodies. As
LeBel J.A. said in the judgment a quo (at p. 75):
[translation]
The union then submits that the labour commissioner and the Labour Court had no
judicial discretion and had authority only to record the transfer of the
certification and of the collective agreement. That position overlooks the
nature of the collective agreement as an act of the transferee. It may also
underestimate the impact of the 1990 amendments, which extended the powers of
the labour commissioner to rule on both the applicability and the application
of section 45 L.C., and to prescribe the measures that may seem appropriate to
prevent consequences that might appear incompatible with proper arrangements
for collective labour relations in situations where the operation of an
undertaking is transferred. [Emphasis added.]
115
In the case at bar, the decision of the labour commissioner and of the
Labour Court is not patently unreasonable. It allows the new employers, which
are bound by the certification, to enter into negotiations with the association
of employees without being bound by an agreement signed by one of their
competitors, or by an agreement that has become obsolete. The solution adopted
undoubtedly had its disadvantages, the most important of which was the layoff
of the 80 full-time and 30 part‑time janitorial employees who had been
working in Ivanhoe’s buildings, but it still cannot be said that the Labour
Court did not have the necessary jurisdiction to decline to rule that an
agreement had to be transferred, with or without amendment.
116
The fact that there are other solutions that the commissioner could have
adopted in this case, some of which would have enabled the employees to keep
their jobs, is insufficient to justify judicial review. On the contrary, the
recognition by the legislature and the courts that there are many potential
solutions to a dispute is the very essence of the patent unreasonableness
standard of review, which would be meaningless if it was found that there is
only one acceptable solution. As L’Heureux‑Dubé J., for this Court,
wrote in Domtar, supra, at p. 771:
An initial conclusion that, for purposes of judicial review, the
legislature admits several possible and rational constructions of the same
legislative provision thus becomes of primary importance. This conclusion,
while constituting the necessary starting‑point of a discussion of the
powers of supervision and control of courts of law, is ultimately the guiding
principle for analyzing the appropriateness of judicial review. [Emphasis
added.]
117
The Quebec legislature has chosen to give the responsibility for
settling difficulties arising out of the application of s. 45 of the Labour
Code to labour commissioners and the Labour Court. Those authorities must
settle these issues, which are central to their specialized jurisdiction, on a
daily basis. Since the principles that are applied do not result in
absurdity, judicial review will be appropriate only where the results are
clearly irrational. In this case, both the Superior Court and the Court of
Appeal properly declined to intervene to alter the solution adopted by the
labour commissioner and the Labour Court.
D. The Petition for Cancellation of Certification
118
Following the transfer to the four new contractors of the operation of
the part of its undertaking that involved janitorial services, Ivanhoe sought
the cancellation of the certification that applied to it. At the time that
petition was made, the first two paragraphs of s. 41 of the Labour Code,
which permits the cancellation of a certification in certain circumstances,
read as follows :
41. A labour commissioner may, at the time fixed in paragraph c
or d of section 22 or, if such is the case, in section 111.3, cancel the
certification of an association that
(a) has ceased to exist, or
(b) no longer comprises the
absolute majority of the employees of the bargaining unit for which it was
certified.
Notwithstanding the third paragraph of section 32,
an employer may, within the delay provided for in the preceding paragraph,
request the labour commissioner to examine whether the association still exists
or whether it still represents the absolute majority of the employees belonging
to the bargaining unit for which it was certified.
119
Since it had had no employees for several years at that point, Ivanhoe
argued that the association could no longer have represented the majority of
the employees in the bargaining unit. However, the Labour Court took the view
that a party that has contracted out the operation of its undertaking on a
temporary basis cannot have the certification that applied to it cancelled
during the period covered by the transfer of operation. Otherwise, the
petition for cancellation of certification would allow the application of
s. 45 to successive transfers of the undertaking to be avoided, since when
the transfer expired, the party which had contracted out the work would no
longer be subject to a certification that might benefit its employees if it
took back the operation of its undertaking, or that might be transferred to
another employer if it opted to transfer the operation of the undertaking
afresh.
120
In Entreprises Rolland Bergeron inc. v. Geoffroy,
[1987] R.J.Q. 2331, the Quebec Court of Appeal held that it was unreasonable to
rule that an employer did not have a sufficient interest to present a petition
for cancellation of certification on the sole ground that it no longer had any
employees and accordingly was no longer an employer within the meaning of the Labour
Code. The fact that the employer’s name appears on the certificate of
certification, as Ivanhoe’s does in this case, is therefore sufficient to allow
it to present a petition for cancellation. Judge Prud’homme accepted that
principle in the instant case, at pp. 603-4, and expressly recognized that
Ivanhoe was entitled to submit its petition despite the fact that it had no
employees. However, the mere declaration that a party has the necessary
interest to present a petition does not mean that the petition must be granted
on the merits. Although the Court of Appeal has clearly held that having
no employees cannot disentitle an employer from presenting a petition, it has
never said that it must necessarily result in cancellation of the
certification.
121
Bergeron, supra, involved a preliminary objection, which
the commissioner allowed, asserting that because the employer had no employees
it was not entitled to present its petition for cancellation and to be heard.
The most that can be said about that decision is that it establishes that
having no employees cannot alone provide grounds for denying a petition for
cancellation. In this case, Judge Prud’homme stated, at p. 606, that it
would be impossible to grant Ivanhoe’s petition for cancellation, since given
that there were no employees, it was impossible to count them in order to
determine whether the union still represented a majority of the employees in
the bargaining unit. That approach appears to conflict with the principles
laid down in Bergeron, since it would allow petitions to be denied
solely on the basis that there were no employees. However, Judge
Prud’homme also based his decision on the fact that the reason there were no
employees in this case was that the operation of the undertaking had been
temporarily transferred, and he was therefore able to conclude, at pp. 605-6,
that it is preferable to ascertain the representativeness of the association of
employees in respect of the employer that is actually operating the undertaking
and not to allow the party that has contracted out the work to rid itself of a
certification permanently by transferring the operation of its undertaking
temporarily. In my opinion, that principle does not conflict with the
decisions of the Court of Appeal.
122
In the case at bar, the situation with which the commissioner and the
Labour Court were faced was quite different from the situation in Bergeron,
supra. In that case, two undertakings had been transferred to the
petitioning employer, which had also simultaneously inherited the
certifications. One year later, it presented a petition for cancellation
stating that the associations did not represent the majority of its employees,
since it had no employees. It was in that context that the Court of
Appeal concluded that the fact that an employer had no employees could not
prevent it from presenting its petition. Thus, in Bergeron, the fact
that the employer had no employees did not result from a transfer of the
operation of its undertaking by that employer. On the contrary, it was the
transferee in charge of operating the undertaking at the time the petition was
presented which no longer had any employees and was seeking cancellation of the
certifications that applied to it.
123
In addition, contrary to what Bastarache J. states at paras. 178-79, I
do not believe that recognizing that Ivanhoe has the necessary interest to
present a petition for cancellation means that Ivanhoe is being regarded as a
present employer. On the contrary, the Court of Appeal clearly held, in Bergeron,
supra, at p. 2334, that the mere fact that an employer’s name appears on
the certificate of certification is sufficient in itself to give the employer
the interest that is needed for seeking cancellation. In fact, in Bergeron,
the petitioning employer could not, on the facts, have been considered to be a
present employer at the time when it presented its petition, because it no
longer had any employees and there was nothing to suggest that this situation
might be temporary. What the Court of Appeal in fact decided, rightly, in my
opinion, was that whether an employer is a former employer or a present
employer, it may request cancellation of a certification if its name appears on
the certificate. It will then be up to the Labour Court to determine whether
cancellation should be granted, having regard, inter alia, to the
reasons why a former employer no longer has any employees. Accordingly,
because recognizing that an employer has the necessary interest to present a
petition for cancellation does not amount to finding that it is a present
employer, no inconsistency arises, in my opinion, when the Labour Court, in
disposing of the petition on the merits, has regard to the fact that a former
employer might take back control of its undertaking in the future.
124
In cases such as this one, where the fact that there are no employees
results from a temporary transfer of the operation of the undertaking, the
Labour Court has laid down principles for dealing with petitions for
cancellation of certification which take into account the situation within the
undertaking. Contrary to the position adopted by LeBel J.A. in the
judgment a quo (at p. 76), the Labour Court is of the view that an
employer which no longer has any employees will always have the necessary
interest to petition for cancellation of the certification, but that the
petition may be denied on the merits where the undertaking is in fact being
operated by another employer, in respect of which the certification temporarily
applies. In a case of that nature, the court takes the view that the
transferee which is in charge of operating the undertaking for the period in
question must be the one to present the petition for cancellation of
certification (see, for example, Ville de Brossard, supra).
125
Since it is reasonable to conclude that an employer cannot rid itself of
a certification by arranging for a temporary transfer of the operation of an
undertaking, it may be equally appropriate to deny it cancellation of the
certification during the period covered by the transfer, on the ground that the
fact that it has no employees results precisely from the temporary transfer of
the undertaking. Such an approach permits consistent application of
ss. 41 and 45 of the Labour Code to temporary transfer
situations.
126
The Labour Court could also have held that the certification had been
genuinely transferred to the subcontractors for the term of the transfer of
operation and did not remain with the employer that had contracted out the
work, and that the retrocession was in fact a fresh transfer for the purposes
of s. 45 to which the parties had agreed in advance, resulting in the
certification returning to Ivanhoe when the transfer expired. In cases where,
as in this case, a certification had originally been issued in respect of the
transferor, which therefore had an undertaking for the purposes of s. 45,
it is entirely conceivable that the certification could genuinely follow the
undertaking and that the retrocession could simply be a transfer of the
undertaking that the parties had planned in advance and that resulted in
s. 45 applying afresh just as it would apply to any other transfer of an
undertaking. In such cases, the Labour Court could decide that it would be
appropriate to cancel the certification in respect of the transferor during the
term of the transfer, because at the end of that period, that employer would
take back the undertaking by way of retrocession and thus acquire the
certification originally transferred to its subcontractor. However, it is up
to the labour commissioner and the Labour Court to determine the appropriate
solution, and the fact that there are alternative solutions cannot in itself
justify judicial review.
127
In this case, it cannot be said that the approach adopted by the labour
commissioner and the Labour Court was patently unreasonable or conflicted with
the decisions of the Quebec Court of Appeal. The Labour Court, acting
within its jurisdiction, has laid down rational tests for determining the
employer in respect of which, in the event of a temporary transfer of the
operation of an undertaking resulting in the application of s. 45, the
representativeness of the union should be verified for the purpose of
determining whether the certification should be cancelled. The employer that
contracted out the work will be free to seek cancellation if it takes back
control of its undertaking; for the term of the transfer, however, the
transferee to which the certification actually applies must present the
petition if it believes that the association no longer represents the majority
of the employees in the bargaining unit.
128
Furthermore, the commissioner and the Labour Court denied Ivanhoe’s
petition on the merits, and not because, as the union argued, it was presented
outside the relevant time period. Under. s. 41, a petition for
cancellation may be made “at the time fixed in paragraph c or d
of section 22”. In 1992, these paragraphs provided:
22. Certification may be applied for
. . .
(c) after six months from the
expiration of the delays provided in section 58, in the case of a group of
employees for whom a collective agreement has not been made or for whom a
dispute has not been submitted for arbitration or is not the object of a strike
or lock‑out permitted by this code;
(d) from the ninetieth to the sixtieth
day prior to the date of expiration of a collective agreement or of its renewal
or the expiration of an arbitration decision availing in lieu thereof.
Section 58
provided:
58. The right to strike or to a lock‑out shall
be acquired 90 days after reception by the Minister of a copy of the notice
sent to him in accordance with section 52.1 or that he is deemed to have
received in accordance with section 52.2, unless a collective agreement has
been reached between the parties or unless, by mutual consent, they decide to
submit their dispute to an arbitrator.
Under
s. 52.2, the Minister was deemed to have received a copy of the notice in
question on the day of the expiration of the collective agreement. It is
apparent from these provisions, taken together, that a petition for
cancellation may be made nine months or more after the expiration of a
collective agreement, provided that the parties have not made a new collective
agreement.
129
Once again, the transfers of operation of the undertaking that occurred
in this case have the effect of modifying what would be the usual situation,
since the agreement that the time period must be calculated under must first be
determined in order to decide whether the petition for cancellation could have
been presented by Ivanhoe on January 14, 1992. The last collective
agreement signed with Moderne on August 29, 1991, was to expire on
May 22, 1994. If that agreement were to be the basis for calculating
the waiting period, the petition clearly could not have been made in January
1992, since the collective agreement was still in force. However, as we know,
the labour commissioner and the Labour Court held that this collective
agreement had lapsed on the date when Moderne’s contract expired, on
August 31, 1991. If that date were to be used as the expiry date of
the last collective agreement, the petition would still not have been made
within the prescribed time period, since only four months would have passed.
As well, if the calculation were instead based on the collective agreement
signed by Moderne on May 22, 1989, and effective until
May 22, 1991, it would then have been necessary to wait until at
least February 22, 1992, in order to present the petition. On the
other hand, if only the last collective agreement signed by Ivanhoe were to be
regarded as relevant in calculating the time period, the petition would have
been properly made, since that agreement expired on May 22, 1989,
more than two years earlier.
130
In this case, the commissioner rejected the union’s argument on the
question of failure to comply with the time period prescribed. He therefore
implicitly accepted Ivanhoe’s position that the calculation of the time period
must be based on the last collective agreement that applied to it rather than
on the agreements that its transferees might have made. In so doing, the
commissioner and subsequently the Labour Court made a decision that was
entirely within their jurisdiction to make. Their approach was also consistent
with the principles laid down by the Labour Court, which provide that
collective agreements negotiated by subcontractors cannot be binding on the
party that contracted out the work. That approach might also enable an
employer that had permanently alienated its undertaking to have the
certification that applied to it cancelled without taking into account the acts
that its transferee could have signed, if the commissioner considered it
appropriate. However, although Ivanhoe presented its petition at the proper
time, the commissioner had the authority to deny it on the merits because the
certification was in effect in respect of another employer, Ivanhoe’s
transferee, on a temporary basis.
131
Hence, with respect to both the cancellation of the certification and
the application of s. 45, the Labour Court has laid down principles that
allow for the reasonable application of the Labour Code and do not
create absurd results. In the circumstances, the courts should not intervene
to vary the conclusions reached by the specialized decision-makers, and the
dismissal of the petition for cancellation should be affirmed.
VI. Disposition
132
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeals with costs.
The following are the reasons delivered by
133
Bastarache J. (dissenting
in part) — In Ajax (Town) v. CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538, 2000
SCC 23, this Court recently dealt with the topic of successor rights provisions
in the province of Ontario. Disagreeing with the majority that on its own a
commercial history between successive employers was sufficient to establish the
“organizational nexus” required in order to trigger successorship provisions, I
found that an application of the successorship provisions in that case was
patently unreasonable.
134
Ajax marks an important evolution in this Court’s approach to
successorship provisions, not least because that case shows that the Court has
moved away from its earlier attitude towards such provisions 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 U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048. It may be helpful for me to
state the way in which I see the majority opinion in Ajax as having
changed the law as it was articulated in Lester and Bibeault.
135
In Lester, McLachlin J. (as she then was) stated that “while the
existence of related companies may justify a less restrictive approach to the
question of whether or not successorship has occurred, the fact remains that
corporate interrelationship without some evidence of disposition will
not be sufficient to trigger the successorship provisions” (p. 681 (emphasis in
original)). There, the “mere existence of related companies” (p. 683) was
insufficient to trigger successorship provisions. However, in Ajax,
commercial history on its own was taken to constitute a sufficient nexus.
136
As I noted in Ajax, at para. 10, in Bibeault, Beetz
J. said of “alienation and operation by another” in s. 45 of the Quebec Labour Code, R.S.Q., c. C-27, “[these concepts]
are based on an intentional transfer of a right: it is
therefore necessary to determine between whom this mutual intent must exist” (Bibeault,
at p. 1117). In other words, a consensual as opposed to an inferred
or implied legal relation between the two employers was required. By
holding that a sufficient nexus can be established through commercial history
alone, the majority decision in Ajax has overruled the requirement of a
strict intentional and mutual legal relation as it was formulated in Bibeault.
It seems clear that a much looser inferential or implied approach has now been
accepted, in part in order to capture the concern that pre-existing commercial
relationships between successive employers may indicate the existence of
an “artificial transaction” designed to avoid bargaining obligations. In Ajax,
while there was no indication of such a transaction, it was the opinion of the
majority that commercial history alone could be taken to establish a sufficient
organizational nexus. In the present case, not only do I find no evidence of
an artificial transaction, I find no indication of any transaction whatsoever.
137
Here, the original contract between the
appellant employer Ivanhoe and its first contractor Moderne ended in 1991.
Ivanhoe then entered into a different contractual relationship with the four
new contractors. There is no history of a connection or evidence of any kind
of relationship between the party who would be “[t]he new employer” under s. 45
of the Quebec Labour Code, i.e., the four contractors, and the party who
is “the former employer” under that provision, i.e., Moderne. There is no
“pre-existing corporate connection” between Moderne and the four contractors,
or any “commercial history”. As Beetz J. put it in Bibeault, this is a
situation in which “one contractor loses his contract to another with whom he
has no connection” (p. 1061). Hence, on the law as it has been modified by Ajax,
i.e., that the legal relation between successive employers can be based on a
mere historical connection and there need not be a strict mutual, intentional,
or consensual transfer, this is not a situation in which successorship
provisions should be triggered. The understanding of the legal relation
required in order to establish a sufficient organizational nexus is not
satisfied in the present circumstances. There simply is no relation between
the two employers here.
138
Ajax made the
requirement of the legal relation between successive employers significantly
less onerous, but the requirement of a legal relation continued to exist.
Here, even though there is no relation or connection between Moderne and the
four contractors, the majority finds that the successorship provision applies.
I do not agree that there is the required degree of “connection” or “nexus” in
this situation. Furthermore, it is not possible, in my view, to continue to
refer to this as a “requirement” when in fact nothing is required.
139
Ajax did not affect two other issues that are raised here in the
context of what is and what is not a patently unreasonable interpretation of s.
45: (i) the definition of “undertaking” in s. 45; and (ii) the use of the
concepts of “potential employer” and retrocession. It is to these I now turn.
I. The
Definition of “Undertaking” (entreprise) in Section 45
140
The definition of “undertaking” in s. 45 as this was articulated in Bibeault
remains unchanged by the majority’s approach in Ajax. The holding in Bibeault
on this issue is clear: 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.
141
As Beetz J. put it, at p. 1101:
Each undertaking consists of a series of different
components which together constitute an operational entity. It goes without
saying that one of these components is the work done in the undertaking; but
the specific identity of the undertaking is also determined by its particular
physical, intellectual, human, technical and legal components.
These
components are meant to include “all the means available to an employer to
obtain his objective” (p. 1105). Beetz J. therefore chose to adopt a broad
definition of undertaking as [translation]
“an organization of resources that together suffice for the pursuit, in whole
or in part, of specific activities” or “a going concern” (from Mode Amazone
v. Comité conjoint de Montréal de l’Union internationale des ouvriers du
vêtement pour dames, [1983] T.T. 227, at p. 231). An undertaking may
indeed include the work done and hence could apply to a situation of
sub-contracting if enough other elements of the business are included; however,
it cannot consist merely of a transfer of work, functions or tasks.
142
It is the majority’s opinion that in cases like the present, where all
that is available to be transferred is work, functions or tasks, such a
transfer should be included in the definition of “undertaking”. In the Court
of Appeal judgment in this case ([1999] R.J.Q. 32), LeBel J.A. (as he then was)
found that the definition of undertaking adopted by Beetz J. from Mode
Amazone included the possibility of different undertakings admitting of
different degrees of the components referred to (p. 54). The passage cited
from Mode Amazone in Bibeault includes, at p. 1106, the following
comment: “It is not always necessary for the moveable and immovable property
to be transferred, . . . for inventory and know-how to be included in
the transaction.” From the idea that it is possible for the elements
sufficient to trigger s. 45 to be different in different cases, LeBel J.A.
concluded that, where the transfer is the provision of janitorial services and
where those services are the only thing available to be transferred (i.e., the
work), then that is all that needs to be transferred in order to satisfy Beetz
J.’s wider “organic” approach.
143
With great respect, I cannot agree with this interpretation of Bibeault.
First, it is unclear how an interpretation based on something like the
intrinsic limitations posed by the nature of janitorial services can be relied
on when Bibeault also dealt with the provision of janitorial services.
I agree with the majority that Bibeault certainly did not preclude
the application of s. 45 in the case of such services. Indeed, I cannot see
why it is impossible to transfer “something more” than work alone in this
context. One could imagine the transfer of such things as the name of the
company, its office, its staff (both cleaning and administrative), its “ways of
doing things” (i.e., its internal structure and organization), its inventory
and equipment (which might consist of specialized cleaning products or
machines), its established relationships with suppliers (i.e., a component of
its “good will”), its work contracts in the case where there is more than one
client, and so on. I see no reason why a business that provides janitorial
services should not be treated like any other business, with the possibility of
having all of the attributes or indicia of a “going concern”. However,
the point is not that these are also janitorial services and Bibeault
left open the possibility that s. 45 would apply; the point is that in the
present case, as in Bibeault, there is nothing else but the work that
passes. This is precisely the situation in which Beetz J. said that “the
functional approach” was impermissible, and I cannot agree that this is
consistent with a finding of successoral rights in a situation where functions
alone pass. Beetz J. held that the successorship provision should not be
triggered in such a situation. In my opinion, the interpretation of that case
adopted by the majority in the present instance inverts that central point.
144
As I see it, Bibeault’s prohibition of a purely functional
definition of “undertaking” has effectively been removed if, as the majority
here maintains, mere functions can constitute an undertaking in situations
where there is nothing else but functions. Rather than precluding the use of
the successorship provision, a purely functional situation does the opposite,
triggering it.
145
Like Zerbisias J. (ad hoc) in Syndicat des
employées et employés professionnels et de bureau, section locale 57 v.
Commission scolaire Laurenval, [1999] R.J.D.T. 1
(C.A.), and Université McGill v. St-Georges, [1999] R.J.D.T. 9 (C.A.),
I am troubled by the majority’s position that the “organic” rather than
“functional” approach is being used when the former can simply amount to the
latter. My view is that Bibeault should not effectively be overruled
and the decisions in the present case should be declared patently unreasonable
for the way that they misinterpret Bibeault.
146
The majority here argues that we are in a very different situation with
respect to s. 45 than we were in when Bibeault was decided – the Labour
Court has nearly unanimously settled on a political interpretation of s. 45.
It is certainly true that the situation is not one of controversy or paralysis
now, as it was then. However, in my view, an agreement to ignore Bibeault
or to undermine the organic definition in Bibeault should not acquire
the force of law simply because the Labour Court has agreed to do it and has
more or less consistently taken that approach. This is a basis for finding the
approach “patently unreasonable” rather than a justification for deference.
147
I cannot agree with deference on this matter in particular
because when the Legislature amended the Quebec Labour Code to adopt the
present text of s. 46, a move to better insulate decisions of the Labour Court,
it was well aware of the interpretation given to s. 45 in Bibeault and
chose to retain it. Deference to the Labour Court should not now be used to
justify an interpretation of s. 45 that is inconsistent with Bibeault.
148
Both the majority and the Court of Appeal judgment by LeBel J.A.
maintain that the definition of “undertaking” should be subservient to the
nature of the legal relation and that Bibeault should be distinguished
on its facts from the present decision because the Schoolboard in that case was
never bound by the certification and did not use its employees to do the work
there, whereas, in this case, Ivanhoe did do the work with its employees prior
to its contract with Moderne. I do not think that the factual distinction
between that case and this case is material to that case’s prohibition of the
functional definition of an undertaking.
II. The
Use of the Concepts of “Potential Employer” and Retrocession
149
The patently unreasonable nature of the “potential employer” and
retrocession argument used in the courts below does not relate to the issue of
whether or not Bibeault was being properly followed. This way of
reactivating “the former employer” status under s. 45 was not at issue in Bibeault.
Hence, whether or not its use in the present case is patently unreasonable
depends not on Bibeault but on how it sits in relation to the text of s.
45.
150
The “potential employer” or retrocession
argument here works in the following way: because the original employer, the
appellant Ivanhoe, handled the janitorial services in the buildings it managed
prior to its contract with Moderne, the termination of this contract creates a
situation in which the undertaking transferred to Moderne returns to Ivanhoe in
order to be re-transferred to the four new contractors; see pp. 68-72 of the
Court of Appeal judgment. This means that under s. 45, the appellant Ivanhoe
is the “potential” “new employer”, because it has control over the
activity and may decide to carry it on itself. With regard to the transaction
between Ivanhoe and the four new contractors, however, Ivanhoe is “the former
employer” and the four contractors are “[t]he new employer” even though it is
Moderne who was the last business to carry on the work and to have had actual
employees to that end. Hence, the concept of “potential
employer” and the possibility of retrocession are used to keep Ivanhoe in the
position of “the former employer” under s. 45.
151
This interpretation is in no way supported by
the text of s. 45 and, in my opinion, is a patently unreasonable interpretation
of that provision. There is no reason to think that “the former employer”
referred to in the provision is meant to reach back in time in this way and to
infer an intention to carry on an undertaking when there is no indication of
that intention. This is particularly troubling in light of the fact that no
employees are being transferred and “the potential employer” has no employees
to receive the benefit of the transferred certification. In other words, the
provision itself gives no indication that it is meant to apply to more than the
last two actual employers in a line of successive employers. Hence, the
creation of this new category, “potential employer”, is nowhere supported by the
text.
152
Moreover, retrocession is an entirely fictional
operation. While it is true, as the majority points out, that the law admits
of instances of “legal fiction”, I cannot accept that in this context. Labour
legislation is specific and technical; it reflects social policy and is not
suited to additions by way of judicial constructs. Employment is a real thing,
not a fiction, and certification exists for the benefit of actual employees.
Ivanhoe ceased being the employer of the janitorial staff in 1989 when it
transferred all of those employees to Moderne. At that time, for the purposes
of that transfer of successoral rights, it was “the former employer” as per
s. 45. Indeed, the transfer of these rights from Ivanhoe to Moderne went uncontested
at that time. Moderne became the new employer of these former employees of
Ivanhoe and the collective agreement that had bound Ivanhoe was then
transferred to Moderne. These employees worked for Moderne. And when the
contract between Ivanhoe and Moderne came to an end in 1991, these employees
were dismissed by Moderne. Ivanhoe could not be said to have become their
employer again in any way. First, Ivanhoe did not re-enter the business of
performing these janitorial services, thereby reactivating its status as an
employer in any real way. Ivanhoe did not hire any employees to perform
janitorial services, whether from Moderne or any other source. Second, the new
companies performing the work did not include any of these Moderne/former-Ivanhoe
employees. Indeed, in addition to the services performed, the only thing that
has been kept constant in these various configurations of employer and
employees is in fact the union certification. It is, in my opinion, patently
unreasonable to keep this certification alive through an artificial
interpretation of s. 45.
153
It is true, as the majority points out at para. 88, that it is Ivanhoe
who retains the power to consign the undertaking at the end of the contract.
In the case of short-term or temporary contracts, it is also true that the
termination of the contract will result in a failure to carry over the
collective agreement and a failure to re-visit the certification upon Ivanhoe,
absent retrocession or some such operation. This creates the possibility of
using short-term or temporary contracts to evade collective agreements and in
effect “oust” a union by failing to re-visit certification upon the original
“potential employer” (or what we might think of as the potential “re-employer”)
under s. 45. However, this is how s. 45 is written. It is not ambiguous. Its
scope is well defined. When the legislature amended s. 46, it did not amend s.
45 to add the concept of “potential employer” to “former employer”, nor did it
stipulate the possibility of fictitious relations between the original employer
and successive employers. Inaction by the Legislature should not be held to be
equivalent to legislative ratification of Labour Court decisions; otherwise,
judicial review itself is threatened. This is, in my opinion, a forced and
artificial interpretation that the words in the text of the provision cannot
reasonably bear.
154
Indeed, the forced or artificial nature of the
interpretation in my view can be seen in the difficulties raised by two other
issues in this case: (a) the issue of why the certification passes but the
collective agreement does not; and (b) what I call here, for the sake of
brevity, “the s. 41 incongruity”.
A. What
Prevents the Collective Agreement from Passing?
155
In addition to the certification, s. 45 stipulates that the alienation
or operation by another of the undertaking shall not invalidate any collective
agreement. Indeed, when Ivanhoe transferred the undertaking and its employees
to Moderne in 1989 in that uncontested proceeding, the collective agreement
followed the undertaking without comment. One of the collective agreements
between Moderne and the Union expired prior to the end of Ivanhoe’s contract
with Moderne – the collective agreement expired on May 22, 1991, and the
contract between Ivanhoe and Moderne came to an end on August 31, 1991.
However, Moderne and the Union entered into a second collective agreement that
was to commence August 29, 1991. Hence, that second collective agreement was
in force just prior to the end of the contract between Ivanhoe and Moderne and
is certainly capable of being transferred with the certification.
156
Yet, every decision-maker in this case has held
that the collective agreement entered into by Moderne and the Union could not
be transferred back to Ivanhoe in order to be re-transferred to the four new
employers along with the certification. In other words, they found that the
retrocession argument could not be applied to the collective agreement. It is
important to consider why this was so. More precisely, if the retrocession
argument is sound, why would it not be applied to the collective agreement?
Why stop with the certification? The new employers were not involved in
negotiations or discussions dealing with either the certification or the
collective agreement. In my opinion, this refusal indicates a problem with the
retrocession approach. In short, if that approach was perfectly valid and
legitimate, the collective agreement would have been included with the
certification. The fact that it was not indicates that something is wrong with
the retrocession argument.
157
As the majority
points out, the Labour Court recognizes the need to modify collective
agreements or refuse their transfer in a variety of situations. However,
normally, in cases where the successorship provision applies, the
collective agreement passes automatically with the certification. Section 45
treats both together. This makes sense, since the collective agreement is
required in order to fully protect employees against the new employer who may
alter working conditions or engage in behaviour detrimental to the union in the
time it takes to arrive at a new collective agreement. Certification is one
battle on the road to a unionized workplace; arriving at a collective agreement
is another. It is a recognition of the vulnerability of the union at the stage
when it has no collective agreement that explains why in the case of a true
successorship situation, the collective agreement follows the certification.
In order for the operation of the successorship provision to be meaningful, one
must follow the other.
158
The majority here argues that the Labour Court was entitled to refuse
the transfer of the collective agreement by exercising its discretion under s.
46 of the Quebec Labour Code. However, neither the labour commissioner
nor the Labour Court purported to exercise their discretion under s. 46. I
find it difficult to accept that this is what occurred, in fact.
159
The consensus amongst all decision-makers in this case that the
collective agreement should not follow the certification indicates to me that
there is a kind of tacit acknowledgment that this is not in fact a “true”
successorship situation. There is, in other words, a recognition that
extending the certification to the four new contractors via the
retrocession argument is tenuous at best, and it is simply too much of a reach
to include the collective agreement. Not only are the contractors strangers to
this agreement (as is the case in the transfer of a collective agreement in any
successorship situation), but so are all of the people working for the new
contractors. These are not the Moderne/former-Ivanhoe employees. Those
employees would have some kind of redress if the second collective agreement
were allowed to pass, but passing the certification without the collective agreement
is a hollow victory for the union-side in this case – the original employees
certainly do not win. The creation of this odd “half-way house” position,
allowing the certification to pass but not the collective agreement, indicates
to me that this is not a situation in which the successorship provision should
apply at all. If it were, then the collective agreement should also pass.
Indeed, given the fact that the original employees are not protected by the
decision in this case, one must ask what the point of this “compromise” is.
160
It is my view that neither the collective agreement nor the
certification should pass in these circumstances. This is simply not a true
successorship situation that should trigger s. 45. In other words, the
retrocession argument forces us into a patently unreasonable interpretation of
this provision that consensus on the collective agreement issue shows we are
not really willing to live with.
B. The
Section 41 Incongruity
161
A further indication that there is a problem with the interpretation of
s. 45 in this case may be seen in the issue of what I call “the s. 41
incongruity”. The focus here is on the difficulty created by allowing Ivanhoe
to make a s. 41 request because of its status as employer, but borrowing the
“former employer” analysis from the retrocession interpretation of s. 45 to
deny the request. In other words, why is Ivanhoe considered the employer for
the purposes of making the request, but is then denied the request on the
grounds that it is a previous employer and that representation must be verified
by looking at the present temporary employers? Why is its status as employer
sufficient at one level but not at the next?
162
Section 41 concerns an employer’s ability to ask for a tallying of support
for the union amongst the group of employees the union purports to represent
and, where there is a lack of support, to ask for a cancellation of the
certification. However, s. 41 requires that a certain amount of time pass
before the employer is allowed to make this request.
163
The relevant provisions, as they existed in 1992, read:
22. Certification may be applied for
. . .
(c) after six months from the expiration of
the delays provided in section 58, in the case of a group of employees for whom
a collective agreement has not been made or for whom a dispute has not been
submitted for arbitration or is not the object of a strike or lock-out
permitted by this code;
.
. .
41. A labour commissioner may, at the time fixed in paragraph c
. . . of section 22 . . . cancel the certification of an
association that
(a) has ceased to exist, or
(b) no longer comprises the absolute majority
of the employees of the bargaining unit for which it was certified.
. . .
58. The right to strike or to a lock-out shall be acquired 90
days after reception by the Minister of a copy of the notice sent to him in
accordance with section 52.1 or that he is deemed to have received in
accordance with section 52.2, unless a collective agreement has been reached
between the parties or unless, by mutual consent, they decide to submit their
dispute to an arbitrator.
Section 52.2
deems notice to have been given on the day of the expiration of the collective
agreement.
164
Ivanhoe made its request for cancellation of the certification on
January 14, 1992, arguing (i) that it no longer employed the janitorial staff
who had been transferred to Moderne in the May 22, 1991 transfer of
certification; and (ii) its collective agreement with the Union ended on May
22, 1989, respecting the nine-month waiting period.
165
Here, s. 52.2 would deem notice to have been given May 22, 1989, the
date of the expiration of the collective agreement between Ivanhoe and the
Union. The 90 days required under s. 58, added to the six months in s. 22(c),
make for a total of nine months. This means that Ivanhoe was required to wait
until at least February 22, 1990 to make the s. 41 request. By this
calculation, the January 14, 1992 request is well past the required waiting
period.
166
The Union argued before labour commissioner Boily that (i) Ivanhoe did
not have the legal interest required to make the request; (ii) the request had
not respected the required waiting period; and (iii) revoking Ivanhoe’s certification
would have consequences on the certification that was transferred to Moderne.
167
Labour commissioner Boily rejected Ivanhoe’s January 14, 1992 request.
He said that, given the May 22, 1991 transfer of the certification to Moderne,
Ivanhoe’s request had no object. However, as the majority points out, he
implicitly accepted Ivanhoe’s position that the May 22, 1989 date should be
used to calculate the waiting period.
168
Judge Prud’homme of the Labour Court may be similarly said to have accepted
the use of the 1989 date for the purpose of calculating the delay: [1993] T.T.
600. He found that the problem with Ivanhoe’s request was not that Ivanhoe
lacked the interest to ask for a cancellation of the certification under s.
41. Citing Entreprises Rolland Bergeron inc. v. Geoffroy, [1987] R.J.Q. 2331 (C.A.), he
said that Ivanhoe did have a sufficient interest. However, he denied the
request, rejecting the argument that Ivanhoe had the right to cancellation of
the certification due to the absence of employees, because Ivanhoe should not
be allowed, at the end of its contract, to resume its position as employer
without the certification or to pass the work on by awarding a new contract
without the certification, thereby effectively “ousting” the Union. In other
words, he found that Ivanhoe had the right to ask for cancellation of the
certification, but it must listen to the response – no.
169
At the Court of Appeal, LeBel J.A. did two things. First, he revived
the timeliness issue. Choosing the date of the expiration of the collective
agreement between Moderne and the Union (May 22, 1991), rather than the date of
the expiration of the collective agreement between Ivanhoe and the Union (May
22, 1989), he found that only eight months had passed between the expiration of
the collective agreement and the s. 41 request. Secondly, he disagreed with
Judge Prud’homme’s ruling that Ivanhoe had a sufficient interest to bring the
request but should be denied cancellation under s. 41 in the circumstances, finding
instead that Ivanhoe lacked the interest to make the request. With respect, I
cannot agree with LeBel J.A. on either of these issues.
170
It is true that using the date of the expiration of the collective
agreement between Moderne and the Union (May 22, 1991), only eight months
separate that date and the date of the s. 41 request (January 14, 1992).
However, the collective agreement in question is the agreement between Ivanhoe
and the Union, not Moderne and the Union – it is Ivanhoe who is making
the request. That agreement expired on May 22, 1989. LeBel J.A. does not
explain why the labour commissioner and the Labour Court were wrong to have
chosen the Ivanhoe collective agreement and why it is appropriate to use the
Moderne collective agreement here. It might be that the May 22, 1991 transfer
of the certification to Moderne justifies a refusal of the request made by
Ivanhoe. However, I cannot see why the Ivanhoe collective agreement should not
be used for the purpose of calculating the waiting period required in order to
simply make the request when both the labour commissioner and the Labour Court
agreed that it should be used.
171
With respect to the second issue, the assessment of the
merits of the application, LeBel J.A. upholds both the labour commissioner and
the Labour Court in effect, i.e., Ivanhoe is denied the request for
cancellation. But it is important to note that, unlike Judge Prud’homme who
said that Ivanhoe did have sufficient interest to make the request, LeBel J.A.
said: [translation] “Ivanhoe did
not have the necessary interest to obtain cancellation of the certification,
since it no longer had any employees in its employ and since its accreditation
was still in existence and active, but transferred to the assignees” (p. 76).
This is another reversal of the Labour Court.
172
As the majority’s position here indicates, the
failure to defer to the decisions of the labour commissioner and the Labour
Court on both of these issues is not necessarily connected to the Court of
Appeal’s commitment to the Labour Court’s interpretation of s. 45. The
majority agrees with this interpretation of s. 45 but also finds that the
Labour Court was within its jurisdiction when interpreting and applying s. 41.
I believe it is important to see how commitment to the retrocession
interpretation of s. 45 can create difficulty in the application of s. 41.
173
At the Labour Court, Judge Prud’homme found that if Ivanhoe had no
employees, it was impossible to assess them to see whether under s. 41(b)
the Union represented the absolute majority of the employees – [translation] “How can one speak of a
majority if there are not even any ‘heads’ to count” (p. 606). The problem
with this reasoning is that if s. 41 requires that an absolute majority of the
employees support the union, it implies that (i) there must be employees, and
(ii) having no employees is surely a satisfaction of the requirement that an
absolute majority does not support the union. This logic is inescapable.
Hence, the fact that Ivanhoe no longer has any of these employees (since they
were transferred to Moderne in 1989) should not prevent it from having the
certification canceled. If the certification should be canceled where there is
not a majority, it should not be maintained where there is not one member. In
other words, we are faced with a situation in which the union [translation] “no longer comprises the
absolute majority of the employees of the bargaining unit for which it was
certified” (p. 606). It is, in my opinion, a patently
unreasonable interpretation of s. 41 to accept that an employer who has three
employees in a bargaining unit can ask whether there is majority support for
the union and if there is not to have the union certification cancelled, but an
employer who has no employees cannot ask (according to LeBel J.A.) or can ask
but will be refused (according to Judge Prud’homme).
174
As the majority points out, Judge Prud’homme also based his refusal of
Ivanhoe’s request on the temporary nature of the operation of the undertaking
by another. He was of the view that the giver of work should not be allowed to
rid itself of the certification and then either take back the work or give it
to someone else by awarding new temporary contracts. Adding that he saw no
harm in forcing the giver of work to wait until it was in the situation of
being the actual employer again, he refused the request. His decision was, in
effect, based on the consequences of accepting the revocation request of an
employer like Ivanhoe and is the reflection of a policy choice.
175
The majority’s view is that Judge Prud’homme’s approach to this issue
was not unreasonable. This approach is not inconsistent with Bergeron because
the denial of the s. 41 request was not based solely on the absence of
employees. However, as the majority points out, the Labour Court has also said
that where the absence of employees results from the temporary consignment of
an undertaking, it is the temporary employer who must bring the s. 41 request.
In other words, an employer like Ivanhoe has a sufficient interest to make the
s. 41 request, but it must be denied on the merits because the undertaking is
being temporarily exploited by another at the time of the request.
176
In my view, none of these ways of dealing with s. 41 work very well.
Indeed, the Court of Appeal’s preference for dealing with Ivanhoe’s s. 41
request on a preliminary procedural basis, i.e., with regard to the calculation
of the waiting period and the denial that Ivanhoe had a sufficient interest,
may well illustrate the various weaknesses in denying the request on a
substantive basis.
177
On the one hand, Judge Prud’homme’s refusal of the request on the
grounds that there are no employees to count suffers from the problem indicated
above: if the certification must be revoked in the situation where a majority
of the employees in the bargaining unit do not support it, it should not be maintained
where there is not one member. As the majority points out, this approach would
contradict Bergeron where it was said that the request cannot be refused
because of an absence of employees. On the other hand, while Judge
Prud’homme’s temporary contract reasoning may well be another ground for
refusing the request, I think it is, along with the Labour Court’s approach,
patently unreasonable.
178
In my view, once it is acknowledged that Ivanhoe has sufficient interest
to make the s. 41 request and that its request cannot be refused on the grounds
of an absence of employees, as dictated by Bergeron, it has in fact been
conceded that Ivanhoe makes the s. 41 request because it has the status of present
employer, regardless of the fact that the work has been temporarily given
over to another. However, both Judge Prud’homme’s position that Ivanhoe must
wait until it re-activates its status as an active employer in order to succeed
in its request and the Labour Court policy that only the temporary employer can
succeed in having a determination of the representative nature of the
association verified for its employees use the s. 45 understanding of “former
employer” as potential employer. In other words, its status as the one who
was once doing the work and who can take back the work and do it itself or the
one who can pass it on by awarding another contract justifies the refusal of
Ivanhoe’s request for the cancellation of the certification.
179
I do not see how Ivanhoe can be considered the present employer
(i.e., the potential employer) for the purposes of making the s. 41 request but
is considered a previous employer in the rationale for the denial of the
request. If it is the present employer, it should be given the right to obtain
verification of the certification based on the employees it has -- in this case
none. Using its status as the previous employer when it has already been
attributed the role of present employer in the analysis does not seem logical
to me. It cannot be both one and the other for the purposes of the same
analysis.
180
The Labour Court’s interpretations of ss. 45 and 41 prevent Ivanhoe from
canceling the union certification and later resuming janitorial service with
its own employees in a non-unionized context or passing the work on by awarding
new contracts. This is why Ivanhoe is read in as the “potential employer”
under s. 45 but is denied a determination of union support under s. 41. While
preventing the “ousting” of a union from a unionized workplace may be a
laudable social policy goal, it must operate within the framework provided by
the Legislature. It must be related to a legislative goal and be a response to
a situation that requires government action in order to protect actual
employees. It cannot be an artifice. In my opinion, the furtherance of this
goal in the present case is not something that the text of these two provisions
can reasonably bear.
181
As the above analysis indicates, enlisting these
provisions in support of this goal does not work very well. In my view, the
fact that this is not a true successorship situation explains why no one has
said that the collective agreement should pass with the certification under the
retrocession argument. I believe that the successorship provision in s. 45
should be reserved for true successorship situations. Commitment to an artificial
interpretation of s. 45 leads to an illogical position with respect to s. 41 in
which the giver of work is treated both as the present employer (i.e.,
potential employer) for the purposes of making the request and as the former
employer in the decision to determine union support in relation to the
temporary employer. This approach to s. 41 is dictated by the need to avoid
defeating the initial purpose of the retrocession interpretation of s. 45.
182
It is my opinion that we should not let
commitment to a forced interpretation of s. 45 produce this kind of ripple
effect. If the Legislature wishes to extend the protection offered by s. 45 to
situations that are not contemplated under the Bibeault interpretation,
it is empowered to do so. However, it is not the function of the Labour Court
or of this Court to rewrite s. 45. It is my view that even as the law has been
changed by Ajax, a legal relation between successive employers is
required in order to trigger the successorship provision.
183
With all due respect to those who disagree, I believe that it is
patently unreasonable: (i) to use an approach to the definition of an
undertaking that is inconsistent with Bibeault; and (ii) to adopt an
interpretation of s. 45 that is not supported by the text of that provision and
that results in the other difficulties I have indicated above. I would,
therefore, allow the appeal of Ivanhoe and the contractors. Consequently, the
Union’s appeal must be dismissed.
Appeals dismissed with costs, Bastarache J. dissenting
in part.
Solicitors for the appellants/respondents/mis en
cause Ivanhoe inc., Service d’entretien Empro inc. and la Compagnie d’entretien
d’édifice Arcade Ltée: Lavery, de Billy, Laval.
Solicitors for the appellant/respondent/mis en
cause Distinction Service d’entretien inc.: Loranger, Marcoux, Montréal.
Solicitor for the respondent/appellant United Food
and Commercial Workers, Local 500: Robert Laurin, Sainte-Julie, Québec.
Solicitors for the respondent Labour Court:
Bernard, Roy & Associés, Montréal.