Docket: T-329-17
Citation:
2017 FC 975
Ottawa, Ontario, November 1, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan
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BETWEEN:
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MAJOR (RET'D)
KENNETH KING
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Applicant
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and
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CANADA
(ATTORNEY GENERAL)
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This judicial review concerns a decision by the
Chief of the Defence Staff [CDS] dismissing the Applicant’s grievance.
The
grievance was over the funds paid by the military reimbursing the Applicant for
educational expenses incurred while on a posting to Wales, United Kingdom.
II.
Background
[2]
The facts are relatively straightforward. The
Applicant, a pilot, was posted to Wales for three years. His wife and children
accompanied him.
[3]
His children went to an English-speaking private
school, as instruction in the local schools was in Welsh. The annual tuition
was paid by the Applicant at the start of the school year and reimbursed by the
Canadian Armed Forces [CAF].
[4]
The educational entitlement above was provided
for in Chapter 10 of the Compensation and Benefits Instructions for the
Canadian Forces [CBI]. For the purposes of this litigation, a key provision
is CBI 10.12.03(1):
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10.12.03(1) (Education of dependent children) A member is entitled
to an education allowance, an allowance for education travel and a family
reunion travel allowance in accordance with the terms and conditions set out
in FSD 2, 30, 34, 35, 51 and 70, respectively, subject to MFSI 10.21.04 (Verification).
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10.12.03(1) (Éducation des enfants à charge) Un militaire a droit
à une indemnité scolaire, au remboursement des frais de déplacement à des
fins éducatives et à une indemnité de déplacement pour réunion de famille
conformément aux modalités et conditions que prévoient respectivement le DES
2, 30, 34, 35, 51 et 70, sous réserve de le DSME 10.12.04 (Vérification).
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[5]
The reference to FSD is to the Treasury Board
approved entitlements for Public Service employees set out in the Foreign
Service Directives, which are incorporated by reference into the military’s
CBI. FSD 34.1.6 is particularly relevant:
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34.1.6 Entitlements under this directive are available any time
after the date on which an employee is officially notified in writing of an
impending posting and continue to be available until the end of the last
academic year that commenced while the employee was stationed abroad, subject
to the provisions of Section 34.8 and to limitations specified in subsection
34.10.1.
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34.1.6 Les
indemnités prévues dans la présente directive peuvent être versées n'importe
quand après la date à laquelle le fonctionnaire est officiellement informé
par écrit de son affectation imminente à une mission, jusqu'à la fin de la
dernière année scolaire ayant commencé pendant son service à l'étranger, sous
réserve de l'article 34.8 et des restrictions du paragraphe 34.10.1.
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[6]
The Applicant gave notice on December 7, 2014,
approximately eight months before his service obligation was to terminate in
August 2015, that he intended to retire early from outside Canada.
[7]
He was notified shortly thereafter that the CAF
intended to recover “fees and funds paid to you for
your dependent children” and that he should pursue a refund for the next
term’s tuition fees.
[8]
When the Applicant informed the school on
January 9, 2015, of his intent to withdraw his children, he was informed that
there would be no refund of the summer term because the school required one
term’s advance notice. The winter term had already commenced by January 9,
2015.
[9]
The Applicant’s request that the CAF approve his
tuition entitlement until the end of the academic year was denied, and he was
told that as a result of CBI 10.2.07 and FSD 34, “[a]ll
Foreign Service entitlements . . . shall cease upon release and entitlements
will be reviewed, pro‑rated and/or recovered accordingly.” CBI
10.2.07 states as follows:
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10.2.07 – RELEASE OUTSIDE CANADA
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10.2.07 – LIBÉRATION À L'EXTÉRIEUR DU CANADA
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If a member elects to remain outside Canada on release, the
allowances and benefits in this chapter shall cease as of the last day of the
month in which the member begins retirement leave, under article 16.18 - Retirement
Leave of the QR&O or if the member takes a cash-out of leave, the day
of the member’s release.
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Si un militaire choisit de rester à l'extérieur du Canada au
moment de sa libération, les indemnités et avantages auxquels il a droit en
vertu du présent chapitre cessent le dernier jour du mois au cours duquel le
militaire commence son congé de fin de service en vertu de l’article 16.18 - Congé
de fin de service des ORFC ou si le militaire choisit une indemnité
forfaitaire de congé, le jour de sa libération.
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[10]
The Applicant was released from the CAF in Wales,
as requested, in March 2015. The CAF then recovered from the Applicant the tuition
for the remaining school year, from April to July, that it had earlier
reimbursed to the Applicant. This recovery occurred through a deduction of the
Applicant’s severance payments.
[11]
The Applicant grieved this recovery. The final
stage of the grievance was to the CDS.
[12]
The CDS rejected the grievance noting that the
Applicant’s retirement was his choice, that as of March 2015 he ceased to be a
CAF member, and his educational entitlement had ceased at the end of March. As
he had retired, the Applicant no longer met the FSD criteria for entitlement of
being an “employee serving abroad”. Therefore,
it was appropriate to recover the remaining education reimbursement.
III.
Analysis
[13]
The Applicant has argued that the standard of
review is correctness, in part because the decision required an interpretation
of a provision of the FSD, which is a Treasury Board approved policy produced
by the National Joint Council, not by the CAF.
[14]
The Supreme Court of Canada, in Alberta
(Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association,
2011 SCC 61 at para 30, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654, held that review of a decision based on
a decision maker’s “home statute” is presumptively
subject to the reasonableness standard of review.
[15]
In the present case, this reasonableness
standard is even clearer. The CDS was dealing with the CAF’s own policy,
including provisions of the FSD, incorporated by reference.
[16]
Justice Gascon in François v Canada (Attorney
General), 2017 FC 154 at para 33, 277 ACWS (3d) 96, made it clear that the
application of CAF policy fell squarely within the CDS’ area of expertise and
is therefore governed by the reasonableness standard. Justice Boswell found
similarly in MacPhail v Canada (Attorney General), 2016 FC 153 at para 8,
264 ACWS (3d) 117.
I
see no good reason to depart from this jurisprudence. The applicable standard
of review is reasonableness.
[17]
The Applicant bases his challenge on the grounds
that there is a conflict between FSD 34.1.6 which, when read in conjunction
with CBI 10.12.03(1), gives an entitlement to an education allowance, and CBI
10.2.07, which cuts off entitlements upon release outside Canada.
[18]
Given this so-called conflict, the Applicant
argues that conflicts of laws principles such as the “limited
exception” rule and the “contra proferentem”
rule along with notions of prejudice and unfairness should be used to resolve
the conflict in favour of the Applicant.
[19]
Legislation and near legislation must be read
harmoniously, in context with the whole. Principles of statutory interpretation
require that “[t]he words of an Act are to be read in
their entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously
with the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament”
(Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27 at 41, quoting E
Driedger, Construction of Statutes (2nd ed 1983) at 87).
[20]
In my view, there is no conflict to be resolved.
CBI 10.12.03(1) grants an education allowance in accordance with FSD 34. FSD
34.1.6 provides that such an allowance is available and continues until the
last academic year “while the employee was stationed
abroad”.
[21]
CBI 10.2.07 rounds out the entitlement scheme by
specifically addressing the situation of a member who chooses to retire and
remain abroad. The entitlement ceases at the end of the month the retirement
begins.
[22]
In terms of structure, CBI 10.2.07, directed at
a retiring CAF member outside Canada, is more specific than the FSD 34, which
is an entitlement that applies generally to all Crown employees.
[23]
The CDS reasonably concluded that according to
CBI 10.2.07, the Applicant ceased to be entitled to the education allowance at
the end of the month in which he retired.
[24]
That decision was a reasonable interpretation of
the entitlement scheme and fell within a range of acceptance outcomes.
IV.
Conclusion
[25]
For these reasons, I would dismiss this judicial
review. In view of the amount involved and that there appeared to be no
precedent for this interpretation of the CBI, no costs will be awarded.