Docket:
A-402-03
OTTAWA, ONTARIO, OCTOBER 31, 2005
CORAM: DÉCARY J.A.
LÉTOURNEAU
J.A.
NOËL J.A.
BETWEEN:
UASHAT
MAK MANI-UTENAM BAND COUNCIL
Appellant
and
SOLANGE
FONTAINE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
The appeal is allowed in part, the judgment of the Federal Court is
reversed and the respondent’s application for judicial review is allowed to
quash in part the decision of the adjudicator and refer the matter back to him
for him to proceed to the third stage of the procedure set out in paragraph 49
of Toronto (City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997]
1 S.C.R. 487, and if he comes to the conclusion that the dismissal without
compensation was not an appropriate measure in the circumstances, to determine
what that measure should be.
The respondent
will be entitled to her costs in the Federal Court and in this Court.
Certified
true translation
François Brunet, LLB, BCL
Date:
20051031
Docket:
A-402-03
Citation:
2005 FCA 357
CORAM: DÉCARY J.A.
LÉTOURNEAU
J.A.
NOËL J.A.
BETWEEN:
UASHAT
MAK MANI-UTENAM BAND COUNCIL
Appellant
and
SOLANGE
FONTAINE
Respondent
Hearing
held at Québec, Quebec on October 19, 2005
Judgment
rendered at Ottawa, Ontario on October 31, 2005
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: DÉCARY
J.A.
CONCURRED IN BY: LÉTOURNEAU
J.A.
NOËL
J.A.
Date:
20051031
Docket:
A-402-03
Citation:
2005 FCA 357
CORAM : DÉCARY J.A.
LÉTOURNEAU
J.A.
NOËL J.A.
BETWEEN:
UASHAT
MAK MANI-UTENAM BAND COUNCIL
Appellant
and
SOLANGE
FONTAINE
Respondent
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
DÉCARY J.A.
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a judgment by a Federal
Court judge dated July 9, 2003 (2003 FC 853) which reversed the
decision dated November 30 2001, rendered by André Truchon, an adjudicator
appointed pursuant to Part III, Division XIV of the Canada Labour Code,
R.S.C. 1985, c. L-2 (the Code). The adjudicator dismissed the unjust dismissal
grievance filed by the respondent Solange Fontaine. The judge ordered that the
respondent be reinstated and referred the matter back to the adjudicator on the
question of the quantum of financial compensation to be paid by the employer,
the appellant Band Council.
[2]
Essentially, the appellant argued that the judge erred in
applying reasonableness simpliciter as the standard of review and
substituting his own opinion for that of the adjudicator. It further argued
that the judge did not have jurisdiction to order directly
that the respondent be reinstated.
[3]
On this latter point, the respondent agreed with the appellant. Once the
judge came to the conclusion that the dismissal was unjust, he was bound to
refer the matter back to the adjudicator !
who of course had not had to consider this point !
for the latter to decide on the advisability of ordering the respondent’s
reinstatement pursuant to paragraphs 242(3)(a) and (4)(b) of the Canada
Labour Code. What is more, in any case the judge could not have ordered
reinstatement without giving reasons for his decision in this regard and
without undertaking a review of the favourable and unfavourable factors (see Abénakis
de Wôlinak Band Council v. Bernard, Federal Court, March 13, 2000,
T-594-99). In the case at bar, the judge did not offer any reasons in support
of his reinstatement order. It follows that if this Court decides the dismissal
was unjust the appeal should nonetheless be allowed, if only to refer the
matter back to the adjudicator on the question of reinstatement.
[4]
As to the standard of review applicable to the findings of fact and
inferences drawn from them by the adjudicator, the parties have agreed ! and I agree with them ! that the applicable standard is that of
the patently unreasonable decision, as the Supreme Court of Canada held in Toronto
(City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487,
indeed, in issue was an arbitral award in relation to a dismissal without just
cause. (See also Defence Construction Canada Ltd. v. Girard, 2005 FC
1177, per de Montigny J.).
[5]
In Toronto Board of Education, Cory J. said that this standard
was a “very strict test”, which he described at paragraph 46 of his reasons as
follows:
. .
. it is apparent that if the decision the Board reached, acting within its
jurisdiction, is not clearly irrational, that is to say evidently not in
accordance with reason, then it cannot be said that there was a loss of
jurisdiction.
At paragraphs 47 and 48, he added:
47 In
order to decide whether a decision of an administrative tribunal is patently
unreasonable, a court may examine a record to determine the basis for the
challenged findings of fact or law made by the tribunal . . .
48
Therefore, in those circumstances where the arbitral findings in issue are
based upon inferences made from the evidence, it is necessary for a reviewing
court to examine the evidence that formed the basis for the inference. I would
stress that this is not to say that a court should weigh the evidence as
if the matter were before it for the first time. It must be remembered that
even if a court disagrees with the way in which the tribunal has weighed the
evidence and reached its conclusions, it can only substitute its opinion
for that of the tribunal where the evidence viewed reasonably is incapable of
supporting the tribunal's findings.
[6]
In the case at bar, the judge dealt with the question of the
applicable standard of review at the very end of his reasons. At paragraph 75,
he said he agreed with counsel for the appellant [translation] “that it is well settled that this Court should
not intervene to review an administrative tribunal’s findings of fact unless it
is apparent that the adjudicator made an error in interpreting the facts
revealed by the evidence”. At paragraph 76, he quoted [translation] “in this respect” the Supreme Court of
Canada decision in Director of Investigation and Research v. Southam Inc.,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, where the standard of reasonableness simpliciter is
indeed defined. At paragraph 77, he concluded that the adjudicator’s decision
was [translation] ] “unreasonable” because his reasons [translation] “cannot stand up to careful analysis”, the
same words used by the Supreme Court to describe the standard of reasonableness
simpliciter. Although at paragraph 78 he said he relied [translation] “also on the tests set out by the Supreme Court regarding the
‘patently unreasonable’ standard of review”, he did not explain in what respect
the decision was patently unreasonable, which leads me to conclude, like the
appellant, that it is the standard of reasonableness simpliciter which
the judge wrongly said he applied; and here again I am not sure that the judge
did not substitute his own opinion for that of the adjudicator without
explaining in what respect the latter was unreasonable.
[7]
As the judge applied the wrong standard, this Court must review the case
in light of the applicable standard, namely that of the patently unreasonable
decision (Dr. Q. v. College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 226, at paragraph 43).
THE LAW
[8]
First, a word on certain applicable rules of law.
[9]
As Cory J. pointed out at paragraph 49 of his reasons in Toronto
Board of Education:
The first step in any inquiry as to whether an employee
has been dismissed for “just cause” is to ask whether the employee is actually
responsible for the misconduct alleged by the employer. The second step is to
assess whether the misconduct gives rise to just cause for discipline. The
final step is to determine whether the disciplinary measures selected by the
employer are appropriate in light of the misconduct and the other relevant
circumstances.
The Canada Labour Relations Board
followed this approach, for all practical purposes, in a case which involved a
British Columbia statute (Wm Scott & Company Ltd., [1977] 1 Can.
L.R.B.R. 1 (Can. L.R.B.), and the Federal Court in Kelowna Flightcraft Air
Charter Ltd. v. Kmet (1998), 149 F.T.R. 246 (T.D.), held that this approach
should also be applied in cases falling under section 242 of the Canada
Labour Code.
[10]
It goes without saying that the adjudicator has control over his
procedure and the manner in which he arrives at his conclusion. Ultimately,
what matters is that, in his own words, he must have asked the right questions
and answered them in a way that is not clearly irrational.
[11]
Dealing more specifically with the appropriateness of the sanction in
cases involving “forms of dishonesty that . . . bordered on theft,
misappropriation, forgery or a fraudulent sham” (McKinley v. B.C. Tel,
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 161, at para. 46), the Supreme Court of Canada in McKinley
rejected the absolute and unconditional approach that allowed an employer to
dismiss an employee for a single dishonest act, however negligible, and adopted
an approach based on the principle of proportionality, which Iacobucci J.
described at paragraph 57 of his reasons as follows:
57 . . . I favour
an analytical framework that examines each case on its own particular facts and
circumstances, and considers the nature and seriousness of the dishonesty in
order to assess whether it is reconcilable with sustaining the employment
relationship. Such an approach mitigates the possibility that an employee will
be unduly punished by the strict application of an unequivocal rule that
equates all forms of dishonest behaviour with just cause for dismissal. At the
same time, it would properly emphasize that dishonesty going to the core of the
employment relationship carries the potential to warrant dismissal for just
cause.
[12]
The Court thus rejected the absolute and unconditional approach as a
general rule to ensure that dishonesty does not entail the same consequences
“irrespective of whether the impugned behaviour was sufficiently egregious to
violate or undermine the obligations and faith inherent to the employment
relationship” (at para. 55). So as to avoid “results that are both unreasonable
and unjust”, it required “an analysis of the surrounding circumstances of the
alleged misconduct, its level of seriousness and the extent to which it
impacted upon the employment relationship” (at para. 56).
THE FACTS
[13]
At the time of her dismissal, the respondent, who had 25 years’
continuous service with the Band, was a managerial employee who, since 1986,
had managed the finance and administration section, consisting of nine
employees. This section was the most important in the Band and it was the one
controlling income and expenditures. All Band monies passed through it (a.b.
vol. 1, at p. 61). The branch director, here the respondent, had the primary
duty of managing [translation] “the
establishment and evaluation of the inventory, finance and general
administration services to adequately meet the requirements of Band
administration” (ibid., at p. 65). It sent periodic balance sheets
to each sector and monitored their budgets. It took part in the preparation of
annual budgets (ibid., at p. 73), which were on the order of some
$34,000,000 (ibid., at p. 59). According to the Band chief, the
respondent was the person with the greatest influence on the Council. It was
she who signed all cheques, but she always had to have them counter-signed (ibid.,
at p. 84). She was authorized by the Council to sign requisitions, purchase
orders, over-the-counter withdrawals and bank transfers.
[14]
The respondent’s salary was the second largest of all the salaries paid
by the Band, $79,986, to which should be added indemnities amounting to $10,000
(ibid., at p. 103). Her contract provided that she could be dismissed
without compensation in the event of serious fault.
[15]
On August 24, 1998, Chief Elie-Jacques Jourdain, whom the respondent
supported, was defeated in a general election. Chief Rosario Pinette and his
team of nine councillors succeeded him. A period of unrest and grumbling
followed in the community, which culminated in December 1998 when a general
meeting demanded a public inquiry relating to the preceding administration. The
new Council then consulted lawyers as to how such an inquiry should be
conducted, after which it hired a firm of auditors, investigators and experts
to fine-tooth-comb the documents, records and books of the Jourdain
administration (a.b. vol. 3, at p. 468).
[16]
The inquiry was conducted between June and September 1999. Progress
reports were sent to the Council, which led the latter to suspend the
respondent with pay on July 10, 1999, in particular because of problems
relating to the signature of certain contracts and double invoicing (a.b. vol.
3, at p. 470). Eventually, on September 27, 1999, after receiving further progress
reports, the Council dismissed the respondent as follows:
[translation]
As
you know, since last December the Band Council has been conducting an inquiry
into the administration and management of its affairs.
As
a result of disturbing and troubling information concerning inter alia
certain matters for which you were responsible and actions taken by you, you
were suspended with pay on July 10 last so the ongoing inquiry could proceed.
The
part of the inquiry regarding you was concerned in particular, but not
exclusively, with the unauthorized and backdated signature, unknown to the
Council, of a number of contracts of employment (including your own) the day
after or in the next few days following the elections of August 24, 1998.
More
specifically, the Council has now determined, and obtained evidence to this
effect, that you came to the premises of the Board on August 25, 1998, the day
the chief was on leave, to take draft contracts out of the computer and quickly
have them signed by the persons concerned, including yourself, being careful to
indicate an earlier date.
Although
the inquiry is proceeding as to other disturbing and troubling actions
involving your conduct in the position of trust which you have held for over
25 years with this Council, these acts as such constitute extremely
serious and unacceptable conduct, even fraudulent manoeuvers, with respect to
your employer.
In
view of the facts set out above, the importance of the position which you have
held, the duties entrusted to you and the seriousness of the wrongful acts
committed, the Council has no alternative but to conclude that you have
seriously failed to abide by your duties of honesty, thereby irreparably
damaging the relationship of trust which is essential to the continuance of
your employment relationship.
In
view of the foregoing, Innu-Takuaikan Uashat mak Mani-Utenam has resolved to
dismiss you as of this date (a.b. vol. 1, at p. 58).
[17]
The inquiry report was completed on January 22, 2000. The report blamed
the section headed by the respondent in 13 respects:
- a
lack of control in requisitioning certain cheques;
-
some invoices were paid twice;
-
adjusting entries;
-
the management of the complainant’s expense and petty cash accounts;
-
missing invoices;
-
payments on submission;
-
advances to supplier;
-
overpayments in the Innu L’Autobus contract;
-
payment of tax-free salaries to administrative employees;
- defying the authority of the
complainant;
- privileges, passes and
exchanges of favours;
- signature of administrative
employee contracts;
- cheque No. 61490 in the
amount of $9,880.
(a.b. vol. 3, at p. 414).
[18]
The adjudicator’s decision was given on November 30, 2001 after 24 days
of hearing (a.b. vol. 6, at p. 57). It fills 450 pages.
THE
ADJUDICATOR’S DECISION
[19]
The adjudicator painstakingly analysed each of the blames made against
the respondent or her section. He found that the first 11 were unfounded, but
that the last two were justified; they related to the backdated signature of
administrative employee contracts (already mentioned in the letter of
dismissal), and to the issuance of a cheque for $9,880 to the respondent.
[20]
First, as regards the cheque for $9,880, the adjudicator undertook from
pages 482 to 492 (a.b. vol. 3) to unravel complex and disjointed evidence
showing that the cheque in question was actually intended for one Jenny Rock;
that its purpose was to allow the latter, a student, to open a travel agency,
allegedly as part of an authorized program; and that the money received by the
respondent herself in rather suspicious circumstances was handed over in cash
by her to Jenny Rock in seven unequal payments from December 5, 1996 to
January 31, 1997.
[21]
The adjudicator came to the following conclusion:
[translation]
The Jenny Rock
project episode is not clear: did she really intend to open a travel agency and
what degree of seriousness should be attached to this undertaking, to this
project?
Bernadette Michel’s
note on the fact that “the complainant always says yes to Jenny Rock”
leads us to conclude that the complainant wished to help Jenny Rock but, to do
this, she deliberately shut her eyes, she did not act as a sound, competent
administrator when she paid out money in the light of the circumstances that
were known.
Although the
complainant’s explanation may seem lacking in credibility in another context,
in this matter things must be viewed in their context and in a situation where
the administration was evolving at the time, a period when controls were not
very effective and in some cases completely non-existent.
After hearing the
evidence, we must conclude that the complainant gave Jenny Rock the money.
The complainant
acted in an unacceptable way, she paid out money belonging to the employer
without authorization under the guise of programs she was managing at the time,
but which did not pertain to Jenny Rock.
The project, as set
up by Jenny Rock, was not a serious one and no consciencious administrator
would have agreed to spend this money in the absence of supporting
documentation, for a project that, in view of the circumstances and Jenny
Rock’s experience, was so vague and impractical.
Without authority
or right to do so, the complainant disposed of a sum of $9,880 belonging to her
employer which will never be recovered by the latter, and in so doing the
complainant committed a most serious fault, necessarily affecting the
relationship of trust between her and her employer (a.b. vol. 3, at pp.
491-492).
[22]
Then, from pages 479 to 482, he discussed the execution of
administrative employee contracts, which was done after the date of the
election and unbeknownst to the new Council, and he came to the conclusion
that, although it was not possible, on account of the contradictory evidence to
determine with certainty the date of execution or the events that occurred, [translation]
“one thing is certain: contracts were executed after June 1999 even though a
June date was staked bearing a date ” (a.b. vol. 3, at p. 480). He thus said
that, in his opinion, this blame was justified:
[translation]
This operation of
having contracts signed was not conducted with the propriety and openness which
an employer is entitled to expect from senior management, such as
the complainant, on
a matter which was so important and which had significant financial
implications for the employer . . .
There are many
contradictions in the testimony of the director general, the complainant and
the signatories of the contract.
We have to put
ourselves in the employer’s position and assess this matter, this episode of
the signing of the contract. Judging from the events indicated by the evidence,
it was right to doubt – to lose confidence – in the interveners in general and
the complainant in particular.
The employer was
right to regard the complainant’s performance in this matter as inadequate . .
.
No employer can
tolerate and accept situations in which it cannot with certainty distinguish
the true role of employees in a particular situation, and this will have a
clear effect on the relationship of trust.
In the
administration of this matter, the complainant did not act according to
accepted practice and also did not behave with sufficient propriety, nor did
she show all the loyalty the employer could expect from her in administering
this matter. The employer was justified in blaming the complainant for this
conduct (a.b. vol. 3, at pp. 480, 481).
[23]
These findings to the effect that bank accounts had been manipulated and
employment contracts antedated are findings of fact which are supported by the
evidence and do not give rise to judicial review. It is true, as the respondent
noted, that the adjudicator did not formally characterize her conduct as
fraudulent or dishonest, but the language he used is still revealing:
unacceptable behaviour, spending the employer’s monies without authorization,
under the guise of certain programs, acting without authority or right, absence
of propriety, lack of loyalty . . . in short, all elements which led the
adjudicator to conclude that serious faults had been committed that should be
sanctioned.
[24]
The respondent argued that the sum of $9,880 which she diverted is only
a drop in the bucket in an annual budget of some $34 million. That may be so,
although we do not know what
part of the budget was allocated to
the administration of current affairs. However, it was not so much the amount
which drew the adjudicator’s attention as the way in which the respondent
manipulated the Band’s bank account, and he found this was unacceptable
behaviour on the part of a director of a financial section.
[25]
The respondent further pointed to the fact that there was no specific
conclusion drawn regarding forgery of the employment contract of the respondent
herself. This is not really relevant at the second stage. Here again, it is the
very fact that employee contracts were forged which led the adjudicator to
conclude that there had been serious misconduct.
[26]
Finally, the respondent argued that the adjudicator stopped at the
second stage and did not ascertain whether the measure – dismissal without
compensation – was disproportionate in view of all the circumstances, including
the respondent’s 25 years of employment, the summary nature of the controls
traditionally applied by the Band, the fact that only two of the 13 blames
mentioned in the inquiry report were proved and the fact that only the
respondent was dismissed by the new Council.
[27]
On this point, I agree with the respondent. The adjudicator went through
the third stage somewhat too rapidly, if he went through it at all, and I am
not persuaded that he properly understood his function when he concluded as
follows, in three short paragraphs:
[translation]
The adjudicator’s function under Part III of the Canada
Labour Code is to determine whether the complainant was unjustly dismissed.
To do this, it must be determined whether the employer had grounds for
proceeding with dismissal and whether those grounds warranted dismissal.
Once the employer has established sufficient grounds
for relying on a breach of the relationship of trust, its reaction – the
selection of the appropriate penalty – is for it to decide. A judgment of the
Supreme Court in this area has held:
“The sole issue in this case was whether the three
employees left their jobs to work for someone else and whether this fact was a
proper cause for discipline. Once the board had found that there were facts
justifying discipline, the particular form chosen was not subject to review on
arbitration.”
The adjudicator cannot intervene in this matter. The
relationship of trust between the employer and employee is the basis of the
employment contract concluded between the two parties (a.b. vol. 3, at p.
506).
[28]
In my opinion, the adjudicator made two errors of law when he
said that [translation] “Once the employer has established sufficient grounds for
relying on a breach of the relationship of trust, its reaction – the selection
of the appropriate penalty – is for it to decide”.
[29]
He confused the fault committed, which warranted a penalty (the first
and second stages), with the breach of the relationship of trust, which may
justify the nature of the penalty applied (the third stage).
[30]
In particular, he relied – and this is what has sown the
confusion to which I have just referred – on an old decision of the Supreme
Court of Canada, Port Arthur Shipbuilding Company v. Arthurs, [1969]
S.C.R. 85, which is obsolete. The Supreme Court itself narrowed the scope of
that case in Heustis v. New Brunswick Electric Power Commission, [1972]
2 S.C.R. 768, and it is at variance with Toronto Board of Education.
Moreover, in 1978, the Supreme Court stated in Newfoundland Assn. of Public
Employees v. Newfoundland (Attorney General), [1978] 1 S.C.R. 524, that it
was prepared to revisit Port Arthur Shipbuilding. (See
also Dairy Producers Co-Operative Ltd. v. Lyons, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 338,
and Alberta Union of Provincial Employees v. Lethbridge Community College,
[2004] 1 S.C.R. 727.) In my opinion, it is significant that, in McKinley,
at paragraph 32, the Supreme Court cited with approval the reasons of Laskin
J.A. of the Ontario Court of Appeal, as he then was, whose decision was
reversed by the Supreme Court in Port Arthur Shipbuilding, and that the
Canada Labour Relations Board did likewise in Wm Scott (supra, at
p. 3).
[31]
The adjudicator misdirected himself in law, and since it is not possible
for this Court even to know whether he raised the right question, I can only
hold that the matter should be referred back to him for him to decide, based on
all the circumstances and applying the relevant principles, whether dismissal
without compensation was an appropriate measure. In all fairness to the
parties, I feel the adjudicator should give them an opportunity to present
their views on this point, in writing or orally, based on the record as it
stands.
[32]
I would allow the appeal in part, reverse the judgment of the Federal
Court and, making the decision which should have been made, I would allow the
application for judicial review to quash the adjudicator’s decision in part and
refer the matter back to him, so that he can proceed to the third stage of the
procedure set out in paragraph 49 of Toronto (City) Board of Education v.
O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487, should he come to the
conclusion that, in the circumstances, dismissal without compensation was not
an appropriate measure, so that he can determine what that measure should be.
[33]
I would award the respondent her costs in the Federal Court and in this
Court.
I concur.
Gilles
Létourneau J.A.
I concur.
Marc Noël J.A.
Certified true translation
François Brunet, LLB, BCL
FEDERAL
COURT OF APPEAL
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET: A-402-03
STYLE OF CAUSE: UASHAT
MAK MANI-UTENAM BAND COUNCIL v. SOLANGE FONTAINE
PLACE OF HEARING: Québec, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING: October 19, 2005
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY: Décary J.A.
CONCURRED IN BY: Létourneau J.A.
Noël J.A.
DATE OF REASONS: October 31, 2005
APPEARANCES:
Jean-François Bertrand FOR
THE APPELLANT
Gilles Grenier FOR
THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Bertrand, Poulin FOR
THE APPELLANT
Sainte-Foy, Quebec
Joli-Coeur, Lacasse FOR
THE RESPONDENT
Québec, Quebec