Docket: T-2049-09
Citation: 2012
FC 213
Ottawa, Ontario,
February 16, 2012
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Lemieux
BETWEEN:
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IRENE J. BREMSAK
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Applicant
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and
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PROFESSIONAL
INSTITUTE OF THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
Irene
Bremsak (the applicant), a federal public servant, a self-represented litigant
and a suspended member of The Professional Institute of the Public
Service of Canada (the Institute or PIPS) seeks a judgment of this Court
finding the Institute guilty of contempt for failing to implement an order
of the Public Service Staff Relations Board (the Board) dated August 26, 2009
(the Board Order or Reinstatement Order) which, pursuant to a decision of that
Board dated December 4, 2009, authorized the Board Order’s filing with
the Federal Court for enforcement purposes as provided for under Rule 424 of
the Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98-106) (the Rules). That filing was
effected on December 8, 2009.
[2]
The
Board Order’s central element is the reinstatement of the applicant’s status as
an elected official of the bargaining unit to all of her elected and appointed
positions subject to the normal operation of the constitution and by-laws of
the bargaining unit. It reads:
[145] The bargaining agent is directed to
restore the complainant’s status as an elected official of the bargaining unit
and to advise its members and officials, in the form described in paragraph 131
of this decision, that she has been reinstated to all of her elected and
appointed positions subject to the normal operation of the constitution and
by-laws of the bargaining agent.
[Emphasis added]
[3]
Irene
Bremsak was never reinstated to any of the elected or appointed positions, all
of whose terms of office have now expired and had so expired at the time of the
contempt proceeding before this Court.
[4]
The
Institute says that it acted properly in not reinstating Ms. Bremsak to office
because that obligation was, by the very terms of the Board Order itself,
subject to the normal operation of the Institute’s constitution and by-laws,
which provide that a holder of an office in the Institute must be a member in
good standing of that organization.
[5]
Irene
Bremsak no longer met the condition of being a member in good standing in the
Institute since October 15, 2009 when she was suspended for a period of
five years by the Executive Committee because two harassment complaints lodged
against her or her husband (who acts as her representative in this matter) by members
of the Institute were found substantiated after investigation by an outside
investigator appointed by the Institute.
[6]
Irene
Bremsak has challenged that decision. She did not avail herself of the avenues
of appeal available within the Institute. She filed two complaints with the
Board who has yet to decide the matter.
[7]
This
Court has always been concerned by the fact that it was called upon to rule on
the defence put forward by the Institute when the validity of the defence was
being considered by the Board. Upon reflection, this Court decided to delay
rendering judgment until the Board had ruled on the validity of the Executive
Committee’s decision to immediately suspend the applicant from membership. Ms.
Bremsak appealed my decision to the Federal Court of Appeal (FCA) and was supported
by the Counsel for the Institute. The FCA ruled that I had erred in deferring
my judgment (see Bremsak v The Professional Institute of the Public Service
of Canada, 2011 FCA 258).
II. Background
(a)
Prior Events
[8]
All
relevant events in this case gravitate around the Board’s August 26, 2009
decision (the Reinstatement Decision). Ms. Bremsak was successful in her
challenge to a new policy adopted by the Board of Directors of the Institute on
March 19, 2008 (the Policy).
[9]
The
Policy provided for the automatic temporary suspension from Institute positions
if an Institute member made an application or complaint about an Institute
internal matter, to an outside body such as the Board.
[10]
The
applicant had made such a complaint to the Board on November 16, 2007.
The Institute applied the Policy to the applicant; the result was that
effective April 7, 2008 she was suspended from four elected offices in
the Institute, one being President of the Greater Vancouver Branch Executive,
and her appointed position as Shop Steward.
[11]
On
July 7, 2008, Ms. Bremsak filed a complaint with the Board
submitting her suspension from office pursuant to the Policy violated paragraph
188(e)(ii) of the Public Service Labour Relations Act (SC 2003, c 22, s
2) (the Act). On August 26, 2009, the Board upheld her complaint making
the following remedial order:
[140] The bargaining agent’s preliminary
objection to the Board’s jurisdiction over its internal affairs is denied.
[141] The complaint dated November 16, 2007 is
denied.
[142] The complaint dated April 11, 2008
is allowed.
[143] The bargaining agent is directed to
rescind the application of its “Policy Relating to Members and Complaints
to Outside Bodies” to the complainant.
[144] The bargaining agent is directed to
amend its “Policy Relating to Members and Complaints to Outside Bodies” to ensure
that it complies with the Act.
[145] The bargaining agent is directed to
restore the complainant’s status as an elected official of the bargaining unit
and to advise its members and officials, in the form described in paragraph 131
of this decision, that she has been reinstated to all of her elected and
appointed positions subject to the normal operation of the constitution and by-laws
of the bargaining agent.
[Emphasis added]
[12]
Paragraphs
130, 131 and 132 express the view of Board member Steeves of the real harm to
the Applicant and why he made the order that he did. I reproduce those
paragraphs:
I agree with the complainant that [the Institute’s
Policy] is contrary to subparagraph 188(e)(ii) of the Act for the
bargaining agent to apply its policy against her and to suspend her from her
elected positions.
Therefore, I direct the bargaining agent to rescind the policy as it applies
to the complainant. As mentioned above, I have found that the policy is
consistent with the valid objective of protecting the bargaining agent from
real harm to its legitimate and important interests. For this reason, I
do not find that the policy as a whole is contrary to the Act. I
have also found that the policy is overreaching in scope, as
demonstrated by its application to the complainant in this case. The Board’s
previous decision in Veillette 2 reached the same conclusion and I
also adopt the conclusion in that decision that the bargaining agent is
directed to amend its policy to ensure it complies with the Act.
Finally, I consider that the real harm in this
case has to be the complainant’s suspension from her elected positions and that
the objective of any remedy must be, as much as practicable, to correct that
harm and to restore her to the situation she was in before her suspension.
Therefore, I direct that the suspensions of the complainant from elected and
appointed offices be rescinded. Furthermore, the fact that the membership
and officials of the bargaining agent were told of the complainant’s
suspension is significant, and I conclude that it is appropriate to direct
that the membership and officials be told the suspensions have been rescinded.
Unlike in Veillette 2, I find that I have the authority to intervene
in the bargaining agent’s internal affairs to fashion a remedy that relates to
the matters set out in subparagraph 188(e)(ii) of the Act. These
include penalties imposed by a bargaining agent because a person has made
an application to the Board and, in this case, the penalty was suspension
from office. This Order is not intended to override the normal
operation of the constitution and by-laws of the bargaining agent in matters
such as the usual expiry of the terms of elected or appointed offices.
For these reasons, I consider it necessary in the
circumstances of this case to direct the bargaining agent to publish the
following announcement in a prominent place in the next edition of one of
its regular and significant publications to the membership (this may be an
online announcement):
Announcement to all members and
officials of the Institute
On April 9, 2008, Ms. Irene
Bremsak was temporarily suspended from her positions of Member-at-Large,
SP Vancouver Sub-Group, President, Vancouver Branch; Member-at-Large,
B.C./Yukon Regional Executive; and Sub-Group Coordinator, SP Group Executive.
This suspension was a result of the Institute’s “Policy Relating to Members and
Complaints to Outside Bodies” and a complaint filed by Ms. Bremsak with the
Public Service Labour Relations Board.
The Public Service Labour
Relations Board had recently directed, pursuant to subparagraph 188(e)(ii) and
section 192 of the Public
Service Labour Relations Act, that the Institute rescind this policy as it
applies to the circumstances of Ms. Bermsak and to amend the policy to ensure
that it complies with the Public Service Labour Relations Act. The
Board also concluded that there may be different circumstances when it is
appropriate to suspend a member from elected or appointed office. Finally,
the Board directed that this announcement be made to members and officials of
the Institute.
Therefore, Ms. Bremsak is
reinstated to all her elected and appointed positions effective immediately,
subject to the normal operation of the Institute’s by-laws.
[Emphasis added]
(b) Subsequent
Events
[13]
On
September 1, 2009, pursuant to section 52 of the Act and section
424 of the Rules the applicant requested the Board to certify its remedial
order of August 26, 2009 with the Federal Court in order that it may be
enforced. The Institute opposed the certification request.
[14]
On
September 2, 2009, the Institute sought judicial review of the Board’s
August 26, 2009 decision pursuant to section 28(1)(i) of the Federal Courts
Act (RSC, 1985, c F-7) which says that review is by the FCA.
[15]
On
September 3, 2009, the Institute sought to stay Board’s decision pending
the determination by the FCA in a parallel case know as the Veillette
case (Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada v Veillette, 2009 FCA 256).
[16]
On
September 21, 2009, the Institute filed another application to stay the
Board Order, this time until the FCA had made a decision on the Institute’s
challenge to the Board’s August 26, 2009 decision.
(c) Justice
Pelletier’s decision dismissing the Institute’s stay applications
[17]
On
October 28, 2009 Justice Pelletier of the FCA dismissed both stay
applications. I quote paragraph 10 of his reasons which were prophetic:
In any event, the balance of convenience strongly
favours Ms. Bremsak. In the interval since she was suspended, the term of a
number of posts to which she was elected has expired. If the order of the
Board is stayed until the matter is finally resolved, all them may expire
before she has the opportunity to resume them, assuming she is successful. At
that point, the issue would be moot from Ms. Bremsak’s point of view.
[Emphasis added]
(d) The
Institute’s decision to suspend the applicant from membership
[18]
As
previously noted, on October 15, 2009, the Institute’s Executive Committee
considered two investigation reports into harassment allegations made against
the applicant by five members of the Vancouver Branch Executive. Those reports
concluded the complaints made were well founded. The Executive Committee
sanctioned the applicant by suspending her immediately as a member of the
Institute for a period of five years. It was on October 20, 2009 that Irene
Bremsak was advised by the Institute’s Executive Committee:
a. That
on October 15, 2009 the Institute’s Executive Committee
considered the investigation reports of the outside investigator assigned by
it to review a total of 19 allegations of harassment made against her and her
husband by two groups of Institute members 16 of which were substantiated by
the investigations. He noted that she had been provided with opportunity
to participate in the investigations and had received a copy of the preliminary
reports upon which she could comment.
b. The
Executive Committee accepted the investigator’s conclusions, that on the first
set of complaints, her actions caused the complainants to feel bullied,
intimidated and threatened and, in respect of the second set of complaints,
that she was responsible for the unacceptable harassing behaviour of her spouse.
c. Her
behaviour represents a pattern of threats and intimidation of members.
It created a toxic environment and led otherwise committed members to question
their involvement in the Institute. He said “this behaviour will not be
condoned or tolerated by the Institute”.
d. As a
result, the Executive Committee decided she be suspended from membership in
the Institute for a period of five (5) years effective immediately. This meant
she could not be a candidate for office, to vote for officers or otherwise
participate in the affairs of the Institute.
e. She
could appeal by counter submission to the Board of Directors but the review of
the Board would be limited to determining whether the Executive Committee
had acted within its mandate in rendering its decision.
[19]
Irene
Bremsak made no appeal to the Board of Directors but challenged it before the
Board by filing two complaints which have yet to be decided.
(e) The
Board’s certification order
[20]
In
the meantime, Ms. Bremsak continued her efforts to persuade the Board to file a
certified copy of its August 26, 2009 Order with the Federal Court. As noted
her first request was opposed by the Institute’s outside counsel on September
22, 2009.
[21]
Immediately
after Justice Pelletier’s October 28, 2009 decision, the applicant reiterated
her certification request. It was again opposed by the Institute but on a new
ground, namely, her suspension from membership had the result the filing of the
Board’s remedial order would serve no useful purpose.
[22]
The
Board received submissions on the merits of the issue; it released its decision
on December 4, 2009. The Board’s decision was written by
Vice-Chairperson Marie-Josée Bédard, now a judge of this Court. She ordered the
filing of the Board’s Order. Her order reads:
Order
33
I
declare that the respondent has complied with paragraph 144 of the Board
decision in Bremsak v. Professional Institute of the Public Service of
Canada, 2009 PSLRB 103.
34
I
further declare that the respondent has not complied with paragraph 143 and 145
of the Board decision in Bremsak v. Professional Institute of the Public
Service of Canada, 2009 PSLRB 103.
35
The
Board will file its order in Bremsak v. Professional Institute of the Public
Service of Canada, 2009 PSLRB 103, in the Federal Court.
[Emphasis added]
[23]
In
her reasons dated December 4, 2009, reported as 2009 PSLRB 159, the
Vice-Chairperson indicated she had to answer two questions:
a. Has
the Institute complied with the Board’s decision which has four
requirements?
b. If
not, is there a good reason why the filing of the Board’s decision would serve
no useful purpose?
[24]
On
the first question, she found the Institute’s Revised Policy complied
with the PSLRB’s Order but there was no compliance as to her reinstatement
and announcement to the Membership.
[25]
On
the second question, Vice-Chairperson Bédard touched upon the Institute’s
argument the applicant’s suspension from membership rendered certification
without purpose. She wrote:
31 I will now turn to the third alleged reason put
forward by the respondent for suggesting that filing the Board’s decision in
Federal Court would serve no purpose: the suspension of the applicant’s
membership. Does the respondent’s decision to suspend the applicant’s
membership render the filing of the decision 2009 PSLRB 103 in the Federal
Court will serve a useful purpose.
32 Essentially, the respondent is asserting that,
given the suspension of the applicant’s membership, the Board’s decision
reinstating her in her elected positions is no longer enforceable
and that, therefore, there is no useful purpose in filing decision 2009 PSLRB
103 in the Federal Court.
33 The real question raised by the respondent’s
argument is whether the Board’s decision can still be enforced, and that
question, in my view, should be answered by the Federal Court.
34 Parliament, in section 52 of the Act, vested
the Board with the authority to determine whether parties comply with
its decisions, but it has not vested the Board with the authority to enforce a
decision once it has determined that its decision has not been complied with.
Parliament chose to vest the Federal Court with that authority and provided, in
section 52, a mechanism to file the Board’s decisions in the Federal Court.
Once a decision has been filed in the Federal Court, it becomes an order of
the Court and it may be enforced as such (subsection 52(2)). I consider that
the question of whether a Board decision is enforceable is quite different from
the question of whether a decision has been complied with: the former question
should be determined by the body vested with the authority to deal with the
matters related to the enforcement of an order. For the above reasons, I
therefore conclude that the respondent has not convinced me that filing
decision 2009 PSLRB 103 in Federal Court would surve [sic] no useful purpose.
[Emphasis added]
(f) The
Prothonotary’s show cause order
[26]
On
December 8, 2009, the Board filed its certified Order of August 26, 2009 with
the Federal Court. Irene Bremsak immediately initiated contempt proceedings
under the Rules. Ms. Bremsak moved quickly the Court on the first step in a
contempt proceeding under the Rules by filing an ex parte application
pursuant to Rule 467 of the Rules for an order that the Institute appear
before the Court for a contempt hearing. That application was
considered by Prothonotary Lafrenière. He ordered Ms. Bremsak to serve the
Institute with her application. He ordered written submissions and heard the
parties orally. Before setting out his decision, I should mention that he tried
very hard to mediate this matter but without success. This Court also tried to
mediate a settlement both prior and during the contempt hearing. A settlement
could not be reached.
[27]
On
June 17, 2010 Prothonotary Lafrenière issued Reasons for Order
and Order (cited 2010 FC 661) finding Ms. Bremsak had made out a prima facie
case of contempt by the Institute. He made the following order:
1. A representative of the Institute shall appear
before a judge at a place and time to be fixed by the Court to hear proof of
the following acts, purportedly committed by the Institute, with which
it is charged herein, and to be prepared to present any defence that it may
have to the charges.
The acts with which the Institute is charged is that
the Institute breached the Order of this Court filed on December 8,
2009 by failing , in a timely manner, to restore the status of
the Applicant as shop steward, and member on the British Columbia Yukon
Regional Executive and SP Vancouver Sub-Group Executive, and to advise its
members and officials, in the form described in paragraph 131 of this decision,
that the Applicant has been reinstated to all of her elected and appointed
positions subject to the normal operation of the constitution and by-laws of
the bargaining agent.
2. Costs of the Applicant's motion are reserved to
the judge presiding at the contempt hearing.
[Emphasis added]
[28]
On
the issue of whether the Institute had complied with the Board’s Reinstatement
Order he and the impact of the positions having expired, he wrote:
It is not disputed that the Institute has not complied with
an order of the Public Service Labour Relations Board (Board) requiring the
Institute to reinstate Ms. Bremsak’s status as an elected official of the Institute.
The Institute claims, however, that it could not comply with the reinstatement
order because Ms. Bremsak’s membership was suspended after the issuance of the
Board order, thereby preventing Ms. Bremsak from holding any elected position
in the Institute.
[Emphasis added]
[29]
On
the reasons offered by the Institute for not having reinstated the applicant he
expressed this view:
The Institute offers two reasons for
not reinstating Ms. Bremsak to all her elected and
appointed positions, as directed by the Board decision dated August 26, 2009.
First, at the time of the Court’s Order, the terms of two of her positions had already expired. Secondly, at the time of the Court’s Order, Ms. Bremsak had been suspended for five
years from Institute membership as a result of her own misconduct in
relation to proven allegations of harassment. According
to the Institute, the suspension resulted from 16 well-founded complaints of harassment by Institute members against
Ms. Bremsak, imposed following an independent investigation, and took
effect on October 20, 2009. As a suspended member, Ms. Bremsak could not
be reinstated.
[Emphasis added]
[30]
On
the impact of term expiry he expressed this view:
There is no precedent for reinstating
a union officer into a position whose term has since
expired: Taylor
v. Atkinson, [1984] O.J. No. 399
(S.C.) at paras. 3 and 120. Moreover, the Board itself stated that
this was not required. In the circumstances, I conclude that a prima
facie case of contempt has not been made out with respect to
reinstatement of Ms. Bremsak to the two positions whose terms had expired
at the time the Board decision was filed with this Court.
The Institute points out that the Board
stated in its
decision that its direction in relation to reinstatement was not intended
to override the normal
operation of the Institute’s by-laws,
which in this case prevents a suspended member from
holding office within the Institute. The
Institute submits that any ambiguity in the Board’s Order should
be determined in its favour. It claims that it proceeded on a reasonable
interpretation of the order in question, which
constitutes a complete answer to charges of contempt.
According to the Institute, Ms. Bremsak’s suspension, imposed in good
faith, amounts to a lawful reason for not reinstating Ms. Bremsak. The Federal Court of Appeal itself, in dismissing
the Institute's motions for a stay of the Board proceedings, noted that
the Board's Order did not prevent the Institute from disciplining Ms. Bremsak should she subsequently engage in conduct
worthy of such discipline.
Although
Ms. Bremsak’s five year suspension may be viewed as a
subsequent and intervening
event which provided the Institute with a lawful excuse for not reinstating Ms. Bremsak,
that is not a matter to be determined at the first stage of the
contempt proceeding. An application for a contempt hearing is not the proper
forum to consider challenges to the particularity of the order or to decide the
merits of any defence available to the alleged contemnor.
On the basis of the material before me, I am
satisfied that a prima facie case that the Institute disobeyed this
Court’s order to reinstate Ms. Bremsak to her two positions whose terms had yet
to expire on December 8, 2009.
[Emphasis added]
[31]
On
the issue of the amendment to the Institute’s Policy he ruled:
In light of the finding by the Board on December 4, 2009, that the
revised Policy is satisfactory and complies with decision dated August 26,
2009, I conclude that a prima facie case of contempt has not been
made out as it relates to amendment of the Institute’s policy.
[Emphasis added]
[32]
On
the issue of the publication of the required announcement he wrote:
At paragraph 145 of the Board’s decision, the Institute was directed
to advise its members and officials, in the form described in paragraph 131 of
its decision, that Ms. Bremsak “has been reinstated
to all of her elected and appointed positions” subject to the normal
operation of the Institute's constitution and by-laws. At
paragraph 132, the Board directed the Institute to publish an announcement in a prominent place in the next edition of one of its
regular and significant publications to the membership.
The Institute clearly did not comply with the Board’s Order to
publish the announcement in a prominent place “in the next edition of one of
its regular and significant publications to the membership”. The requirement to
comply with the Board’s Order crystallized on December 8, 2009, when the Board
decision became a Court Order. Although an announcement was published by the
Institute on December 22, 2009, there was a two
week delay in doing so. The announcement was placed at the bottom of the
Institute website over the winter holiday period, when few members would be
accessing the site. It also included a disclaimer. On the evidence before
me, I conclude that the placement of the announcement and disclaimer,
combined with the unexplained delay in posting it on-line, did not comply
with the terms and intent of the Court Order.
The presence or absence of good faith on the part of the
alleged contemnor is not relevant in determining whether or not there is
a prima facie case of contempt. In the circumstances, I am satisfied
that a prima facie of contempt has been made out as it relates to
publication of the announcement.
[Emphasis added]
[33]
As
previously noted, neither party appealed the Prothonotary’s Order to the
Federal Court pursuant to section 51 of the Rules.
III. The
Statutory Scheme
[34]
As
noted by Vice-Chairperson Marie-Josée Bédard, now Justice Bédard, a colleague
of this Court, “Parliament by section 52 of the Act vested the Board with
the authority to determine whether the parties comply with its decisions but
has not vested the Board with authority to enforce a decision once it has been
determined that its decision has not been complied with.” [Emphasis added]
[35]
Vice-Chairperson
Bédard, as she then was, further noted for enforcement purposes, Parliament in
that section provided a mechanism to file the Board’s decision in the Federal
Court with effect that upon filing the Board’s order becomes an order of the
Court and may be enforced as such.
[36]
Supporting
section 52 of the Act is section 424 of the Rules, these two provisions
read:
Section 52 of the Act
reads:
Filing
of Board’s orders in Federal Court
52.
(1) The Board must, on the request in writing of any person or
organization affected by any order of the Board, file a certified copy of the
order, exclusive of the reasons for the order, in the Federal Court, unless,
in its opinion,
(a)
there is no indication of failure or likelihood of failure to comply with the
order; or
(b)
there is other good reason why the filing of the order in the Federal Court
would serve no useful purpose.
Effect
of filing
(2)
An order of the Board becomes an order of the Federal Court when a
certified copy of the order is filed in that court, and it may subsequently
be enforced as such.
[Emphasis added]
|
Dépôt
à la Cour fédérale
52.
(1) Sur demande écrite de la personne ou de l’organisation touchée, la
Commission dépose à la Cour fédérale une copie certifiée conforme du
dispositif de l’ordonnance sauf si, à son avis :
a)
soit rien ne laisse croire qu’elle n’a pas été exécutée ou ne le sera pas;
b)
soit, pour d’autres motifs valables, le dépôt ne serait d’aucune utilité.
Exécution
des ordonnances
(2)
En vue de son exécution, l’ordonnance rendue par la Commission, dès le
dépôt à la Cour fédérale de la copie certifiée conforme, est assimilée à une
ordonnance rendue par celle-ci.
[Notre soulignement]
|
Section 424 of the
Rules reads:
Enforcement of order of
tribunal
424. (1) Where under
an Act of Parliament the Court is authorized to enforce an order of a
tribunal and no other procedure is required by or under that Act, the order
may be enforced under this Part.
Filing of order
(2) An order referred to
in subsection (1) shall be filed together with a certificate from the
tribunal, or an affidavit of a person authorized to file such an order,
attesting to the authenticity of the order.
[Emphasis added]
|
Exécution de l’ordonnance d’un
office fédéral
424. (1) Lorsque la
Cour est autorisée, en vertu d’une loi fédérale, à poursuivre l’exécution
forcée de l’ordonnance d’un office fédéral et qu’aucune autre procédure n’est
prévue aux termes de cette loi ou de ses textes d’application, l’exécution
forcée de l’ordonnance est assujettie à la présente partie.
Dépôt de l’ordonnance
(2) L’ordonnance visée au
paragraphe (1) est déposée avec un certificat de l’office fédéral ou un
affidavit de la personne autorisée à la déposer, attestant l’authenticité de
l’ordonnance.
[Notre soulignement]
|
[37]
Part
12 of the Rules is entitled Enforcement of Orders. A review of that Part
reveals there are many different ways to enforce an order of an
administrative tribunal. The applicant chose one of the most difficult
paths – enforcement of the Board’s remedial order by contempt proceedings.
[38]
On
October 26, 2011 the FCA issued its decision in Canada (Human Rights Commission) v Warman, 2011 FCA 297 (Warman). The
context of that case is similar to what is before this Court: (1) a decision of
an administrative tribunal, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT), issuing
a cease and desist order against Mr. Tremaine; (2) a requirement for
enforcement purposes, the CHRT’s order be filed in the Federal Court (see
section 57 of the Canadian Human Rights Act (RSC, 1985, c H-6) (CHRA));
(3) a consideration of Rule 424 of the Rules; (4) an application by an
interested person for a contempt order to sanction an alleged breach of the
tribunal order. This Court alerted the parties to the Warman case and considered
their comments.
[39]
In
my view Warman is important to the case at hand for a number of
reasons. First, because section 57 of the CHRA is very similar
to section 52 of the Public Service Labour Relations Act (PSLRA).
Warman settled the issue whether the order being enforced by the Federal
Court under the authority of section 57 of the CHRA is the order
of the Tribunal or the Order of the Federal Court.
[40]
Justice
Marc Noël on behalf of the majority, ruled under the statutory scheme the only
order being enforced was the Tribunal’s order. He wrote the following:
It is now settled law that decisions of lower
Tribunals can be enforced on their own account through contempt proceedings
because they, like decisions of the superior Courts, are considered by the
legislator to be deserving of the respect which the contempt powers are
intended to impose. This is what section 57 achieves with respect to orders
made by the Tribunal under sections 53 and 54 of the Act.
It follows that in the present case, there is
only one order – the Tribunal order – which is enforced by the Federal Court
pursuant to section 57 as though it was an order of that Court. This intent is
best reflected by the French text according to which: “les ordonnances rendues
en vertu des articles 53 et 54 […] peuvent […] être assimilées aux
ordonnances rendues par celle-ci [i.e., la Cour fédérale] ”.
The Federal Court Judge therefore erred when he held
that the deliberate violation of the order of the Tribunal could not in itself
give rise to a finding of contempt (reasons, para. 28).
[Emphasis added]
[41]
Second,
Justice Noël tackled the issue whether the Federal Court judge could hold,
within the specific context where an order of the Tribunal has been filed with
the Federal Court for enforcement purposes, that the knowledge of the Tribunal
order (rather than knowledge of its registration) could not give rise to a
finding of contempt. In deciding this issue the FCA accepted the proposition a
person cannot knowingly disobey an order unless he or she has knowledge of it.
The Federal Court judge had held that knowledge of a “Court Order” was
required. The FCA ruled, at paragraph 53:
In my view, the only pre-requisite which can be
derived from the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence with respect to the second
component of the civil contempt test is that there must be actual knowledge
of a legally binding order such that it can be shown beyond a reasonable doubt
that the order is being disobeyed deliberately or willfully by the alleged
contemnor. This is what the evidence establishes in the present case.
[Emphasis added]
[42]
Thirdly, the
FCA commented on the first requirement of the test for a finding of civil
contempt, namely, the order that was breached must state clearly and
unequivocally what should or should not be done.
[43]
In
Warman, the Tribunal’s cease and desist order required Mr. Tremaine
“cease the discriminatory practice of communicating telephonically…..”. An
argument was raised by Mr. Tremaine that “communicating telephonically” without
further description was not sufficiently precise. The FCA rejected that
contention, writing at paragraph 57:
In this respect, I note, as the Federal Court Judge
did, that the Tribunal order itself cannot be dissociated from the reasons
given for its issuance (reasons, para 34). When regard is had to the reasons,
it is clear that the respondent was prohibited from communicating on the
Internet – (see for example, the decision of the Tribunal, para. 149).
[Emphasis added]
IV. The
Harassment Investigations
[44]
In
mid 2009,
Irene Bremsak was the subject of two group harassment complaints by substantially
the same people – five members of the Executive of the Vancouver Branch of
the Institute.
[45]
The
first group complaint was sent to the office of the President of the Institute
on April 2, 2009 pursuant to the Institute’s Harassment Policy. The
second complaint was filed on June 5, 2009 by a single Vancouver Branch
Executive member but was expanded into a group complaint when other
executive members raised similar complaints. The office of the President
decided both complaints of harassment should be investigated. On April 27,
2009 and in June, 2009, North Shore Investigation Services (North Shore) was appointed by the Institute to conduct an investigation into the complaints
in accordance with Terms and Reference which are in the record. I reproduce
two of the main provisions of those terms of reference:
“CONDUCT OF INVESTIGATION
The investigator will have the discretion to conduct
the investigation in such a manner as seems to the investigator to be
appropriate in the circumstances, but at no time in a manner that is arbitrary,
discriminatory or in bad faith. In addition, the investigator is expected to
investigate the facts of the complaints and is not expected to make any
recommendations.
INVESTIGATION REPORT
The investigator will submit a report
detailing his findings to the PIPSC Executive Secretary and the General
Counsel. A copy of the investigator’s report will be provided to the
Complainants and the Respondent, who are to be given the opportunity to comment
on the investigator’s reports.”
[46]
In
respect of the first complaint the investigation milestones were:
a. The
main allegations have at their source the applicant’s view that her suspension
was based on the illegal Policy and the members of the Vancouver Executive
should support her against the Institute in this matter. The complaints
against the applicant typically reached back to April 2008 shortly after Ms.
Bremsak had been automatically suspended from her elected position as
President of the Vancouver Branch aggravated by an e-mail sent by Ms. Bremsak
on March 22, 2009 which added a warning about individual complainants
being named in a new complaint against each of them if they failed to support
her nomination as a delegate to the 2009 Regional Council.
b. Interviews
were completed by June 16, 2009. A draft investigation report was
prepared and is dated September 9, 2009 and was circulated for comment.
c. A
final investigation report was prepared by North Shore and is dated October
13, 2009. Approximately 12 out of 15 allegations were found to have
substantiated. It is to be noted by this Court a majority of the allegations
were substantially similar and the finding of harassment based on the opinion
of North Shore’s opinion “that sufficient written evidence exists to suggest
Irene J. Bremsak’s action placed each complainant in an unwarranted position
and one in which he felt bullied, intimidated and threatened”.
[47]
The
second complaint investigated by North Shore involves the single event which
occurred in a restaurant in Vancouver on June 3, 2009, at a joint
meeting between the Vancouver Branch and the Canada Revenue Agency Branch. The
common allegation is that of harassment by Ms. Bremsak’s husband, John Lee (her
representative) who threatened legal action if his wife was not immediately
reinstated as President of the Vancouver Branch, a proposition in support of
which Mr. Lee distributed the recent Veillette decision of the PSLRB,
which he viewed as invalidating the Policy under which his wife had been
suspended.
[48]
The
major milestones of this second investigation by North Shore are the following:
a. The appointment
of North Shore in June 2009 to investigate the second complaint.
b. Interviews
conducted in June 2009; telephone interviews completed last week of July
and August 2, 2009. Difficulties in scheduling an interview with Ms. Bremsak;
one fixed for August 19, 2009 cancelled by John Lee on August 17, 2009, in a
dispute about reimbursement of lost time and expenses. Investigator advises
the applicant on August 18, 2009 he has an obligation to all parties to
complete the investigation on a timely basis and the interview scheduled
for the 19th would not be rescheduled if she decided not to
participate which was the case. Subsequent efforts on the Institute’s part
failed.
c. Draft
investigative report without participation from Irene J. Bremsak is dated September
9, 2009. It contains no findings.
d. Final
investigation report is dated October 14, 2009. Its principal considerations
are:
i.
The
burden of proof rests with the complainants to demonstrate that harassment
occurred. Although the evidence is not balanced by Irene J. Bremsak’s response
to the allegations, I am of the opinion that the complainants and witnesses
have demonstrated John Lee’s comments and actions at the joint Vancouver Branch
and CRA Branch Executive meeting on June 3, 2009 were unwanted, uncalled for
and inappropriate. More simply stated:
I am of the opinion it was not reasonable for John
Lee, who was neither a member, nor an invited guest, to disrupt the meeting by
demanding and threatening the complainants. Thus, I believe John Lee’s
behaviour was totally inappropriate, threatening and offensive to each of the complainants.
The harassment policy clearly states its
applicability to both members and employees of PIPSC. As John Lee is neither a
member, nor an employee, the matter of whether or not his behaviour falls
within the purview of the Harassment Policy is left to the Institute to decide.
The investigator said he was of the opinion, “when
considering the recent history of the Respondent and the Vancouver Branch
Executive, the balance of probability would strongly suggest the disruption of
the joint Vancouver Branch and CRA Branch Executive meeting on June 3, 2009 was
planned and orchestrated by both Irene Bremsak and John Lee. However, despite
the strong speculation that Irene Bremsak was involved behind the scenes, the
fact of the matter is that the Respondent (Irene Bremsak) was not outwardly
involved in the incident. Irene Bremsak did nothing, said nothing, nor directed
John Lee in any manner during the incident at the restaurant”.
V. The
position of the parties
[49]
Each
party’s position is drawn from their written closing arguments filed after the
contempt hearing.
(a) The
Institute’s position
[50]
First, the
Institute submits the contempt hearing before this Court raises the following
issues:
a. Has
Ms. Bremsak demonstrated beyond a reasonable doubt that the Institute is in
contempt of the Court’s Order dated December 8, 2009 by:
i.
Failing
to reinstate her into those positions whose term had not expired by the date of
the Court’s Order (December 8, 2009); and
ii.
Failing
to comply with the Court’s Order in relation to the publication of the Board’s
prescribed announcement?
[51]
According
to the Institute, the contempt clock only began to tick when the Board’s Order
of August 26, 2009 was filed with the Federal Court on December 8, 2009 to
become an Order of this Court.
[52]
In
support of this proposition, the Institute relies upon: (1) Rule 466(b) of the
Rules which provides a party is guilty of contempt who “disobeys a process or
order of the Court”; (2) the statement in the Prothonotary’s reasons at the prima
facie stage where he stated” based on Rule 466(b), “lack of compliance with
the Board’s Order is not the issue before the Court on this motion” adding,
“the proper focus in the context of this motion for a contempt hearing is
whether the Institute disobeyed the Court’s Order rather than the Board’s
Order”; (3) jurisprudence to the effect that “in matters relating to
labour board orders contempt cannot occur prior to the filing of the labour
relations board decision with the Court.” [Emphasis added]
[53]
In
summary on this point the Institute’s counsel writes:
In summary, before a finding of contempt can
be made in the case at bar, there must be proof beyond a reasonable doubt that
the Institute breached the Court’s Order filed on December 8th.
The need to prove a breach of the Court’s December 8th Order,
rather than the Board’s Order of August 26, 2009, is therefore fundamental to
the contempt jurisdiction of this Court.
[Emphasis added]
[54]
Second, the
Institute took issue with the Prothonotary’s statement in this reasons “It was not
disputed that the Institute has not complied with an order of the Board
requiring the Institute to reinstate Ms. Bremsak’s status as an elected
official of the Institute.” Counsel for the Institute submitted “This,
however, was an incorrect starting point.” He wrote the following:
While the Institute admits that it has not
reinstated Ms. Bremsak, it has taken the position throughout the contempt
proceedings that its conduct has been in accordance with the Court’s order,
which expressly noted that the reinstatement order was “subject to the normal
operation of the constitution and by-laws of the bargaining agent”, which in
turn, prevented the reinstatement of Ms. Bremsak following her five year
suspension from membership in the Institute.
[Emphasis added]
[55]
Third, the
Institute admits that on December 15, 2009, its Executive Committee met to
determine how to comply with the Court Order (e.g. the Board’s reinstatement
order filed in the Federal Court on December 8, 2009). Institute’s counsel
writes:
This was the first Executive Committee meeting
following the December 8th Order of the Court. The Executive
Committee determined that Ms. Bremsak could not be reinstated, as she had
subsequently been suspended from Institute membership for five years
commending October 20, 2009. The suspension resulted from numerous
well-founded complaints of harassment that had been initiated by Institute
members against Ms. Bremsak well before the Board’s decision overturning Ms.
Bremsak’s suspension. An external investigator appointed by the Institute
had himself recommended that these allegations be considered to be substantiated.
[Emphasis added]
[56]
Fourth,
this Court can only look to the Prothonotary’s show cause order to determine
the parameters of this contempt hearing because it is this decision which sets
out the precise charges against the Institute. The Institute’s counsel wrote
that according to the Prothonotary’s show cause order there are only two
charges that the Institute is required to defend itself against. He submitted
this Court had no jurisdiction beyond the show cause order. Counsel for the
Institute put it this way:
The first charge is that, subsequent to December
8, 209, the Institute failed, in a timely manner, to restore the status
of Ms. Bremsak as steward and member of the B.C. Yukon Regional Executive
and SP Vancouver Sub-Group Executive.
The Second charge is that the Institute failed to advise
its members and officials, in the form described at paragraph 31 of the
Board’s decision, that Ms. Bremsak had been reinstated subject to the
normal operation of the constitution and by-laws of the bargaining agent.
[Emphasis added]
[57]
Fifth, it
was important, in reviewing the Prothonotary’s show cause order to identify
those aspects where he found no ground to refer to a contempt hearing namely:
(1) that the Institute failed to amend its policy in accordance with the Court
Order; (2) Ms. Bremsak was entitled to reinstatement of two elected positions which
had expired by the time of the Court’s December 8th Order, the
Prothonotary finding, as a matter of law, there was not precedent for
reinstating a union officer into a position whose term had since expired, noting
the Board itself stated in its August 26, 2009 decision it was not intended to
override the ordinary expiry of the terms Mr. Bremsak had held. In other
words, according to Institute’s counsel, the Prothonotary ruled that applicant
had not made out a prima facie case of contempt on this point with
respect to her reinstatement into the two expired positions at the time the
Board’s decision was filed in the Federal Court.
[58]
Sixth, the
Institute addressed the required elements which must be established before a
finding of contempt can be made. Institute counsel set out the following
propositions:
a. In a
contempt proceeding, the moving party must demonstrate, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that:
i.
The
terms of the Court’s order in question are clear and unambiguous;
ii.
The
alleged contemnor had proper notice of the terms of the order; and
iii.
There
is clear proof that the terms of the order have been broken by the alleged
contemnor.
b. In
order to support a finding of contempt, the court must be satisfied beyond a
reasonable doubt that the breach was deliberate, wilful and contumacious
(a stubborn refusal to obey or comply).
c. Where
a party takes a reasonable amount of time to determine “how to comply”,
rather than “whether to comply”, there will be no contempt of court.
d. Evidence
of impossibility to comply or due diligence may constitute a legitimate excuse for
not complying with the terms of a Court’s order. Where events have made it
impossible to comply with the Court’s Order, no contempt will be found,
unless there is evidence that the party alleged to be in contempt manipulated
those events for the purpose of avoiding the Court’s Order.
e. Where
the Court’s Order is unclear or ambiguous any ambiguities must be resolved in
favour of the alleged contemnor.
f. If
the alleged contemnor has proceeded on a reasonable interpretation of the Order
in question this constitutes a complete answer to charges of contempt.
g. Even
if the party seeking contempt proposes an interpretation of the Court’s Order
that is equally supportable, this is not sufficient to warrant a finding of
contempt. The alleged contemnor is to be provided the benefit of the doubt as
to the question of proper interpretation of the Order, and if the Order is open
to the interpretation proposed by the contemnor, then contempt cannot issue.
[59]
Seventh, the
Institute responded to the allegations made by Ms. Bremsak concerning the time
period prior to the filing of the Board’s Oder with the Court on December 8,
2009 “even though this period of time is irrelevant to the allegations of
contempt of court.” The Institute said it was obliged to address this period
of time because the applicant attempted to rely on this period as evidence of
the Institute’s bad faith.
[60]
Eight, he
referred extensively to the transcript to demonstrate the Institute had
complied with the Court Order on publication of the announcement.
(b) The
applicant’s position
[61]
The
applicant filed post-hearing written submissions and replied to those of counsel
for the Institute. The following are the main points she advanced.
[62]
First, she
submitted, in civil contempt cases, it is sufficient to show the Court’s
intention was clear and the contemnor knowingly committed the prohibited act.
It is not necessary to show the person charged with contempt was intentionally
contumacious.
[63]
Second, the
time line on how the Orders were to be implemented is clear and unambiguous pointing
to the prescribed announcement to the Institute’s membership “Ms. Bremsak is
reinstated to all her elected and appointed positions effective immediately.”
Her immediate reinstatement was clearly intended by the Board member in order
to eliminate the real harm he perceived Ms. Bremsak suffered.
[64]
Third, she
submits the Institute attempted to avoid complying with the Court orders by
imposing a five (5) year membership suspension. She argues this suspension is
a self-imposed restriction (which is being challenged before the Board) and
does not meet the requirement for the defence of impossibility since the
Institute, at all times, had the authority and power to comply.
[65]
Fourth, the
Institute acted in bad faith since her 2008 suspension from elected and
appointed offices, a suspension which was made pursuant to an illegal policy as
so found by the Board in August 2009, a decision no longer under review by the
FCA since the Institute discontinued its judicial review application. The
elements of bad faith advanced by Irene Bremsak are: (1) failure to comply with
the Board’s Reinstatement Order after it lost the two stay applications before
Justice Pelletier, particularly in the context that Justice Trudel of the FCA
had, on September 3, 2009, dismissed a stay application in the Veillette
case; (2) failure to purge itself of contempt after Vice-Chairman Bédard’s
December 4, 2009 and the filing of the Board’s remedial order; (3) opposing the
filing of the Board’s remedial order and failing to comply with the relevant
orders which resulted in the expiry of the offices she had been elected to; and
(4) issuing a disclaimer in the prescribed announcement by the Board which was,
in fact, contrary to what the Board, in its remedial order, had stated should
be done.
[66]
Fifth, she
invokes the following other legal principles applicable to contempt
proceedings:
a. An
order of the Court is considered valid until set aside by legal process
and the ultimate invalidity of the order is no defence to a contempt
citation relying on the Supreme Court of Canada in Canada (Human Rights Commission)
v Taylor, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 892 at pages 87 and 88, as well as Canada (Human
Rights Commission) v Canadian Liberty Net, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 626 at para 51.
Other cases were also cited.
b. A
party that finds itself unable to comply with an order or direction of the
Court must act in advance to seek relief or must comply, relying on the Alberta
Court of Queen's Bench decision in point in the Point on the Bow Development
Ltd. v William Kelly & Sons Plumbing Contractors Ltd., 2006 ABQB 775.
c. It is
the duty of a person who received a Court order telling that person to do
something to obey it and if in some doubt about what it means, that person must
take steps to clarify it citing the Alberta Court of Appeal's decision in Ouellet
v B.M., 2010 ABCA 240 at para 14.
d. Impossibility
of compliance is not a defence to a charge of contempt if everything possible
that could be done was not done citing Canadian Private Copying Collective v
Fuzion Technology Corp., 2009 FC 800 at paras 73 and 74.
[67]
Sixth, she
argues that the Prothonotary erred by not making a ruling on whether the
Institute had complied with the Board’s remedial order to rescind the
application of its Policy to her.
[68]
Seventh,
she challenged the reliance the Prothonotary placed on the Taylor v
Atkinson case for the proposition that the Court could not reinstate a person
to a term which had expired. She pointed to the fact Mr. Taylor was restored
to his union memberships and to his office as President and to Justice Trudel’s
decision in the Veillette case cited at 2009 FCA 256, a view endorsed by
Justice Pelletier in this case.
VI. Analysis
and conclusions
[69]
The
starting point for the analysis in this case is the Act because the
triggering event from which all subsequent events relevant to this contempt
hearing flow is the Board’s decision of August 26, 2009, finding the
Institute’s 2008 temporary suspension of the applicant from elected or appointed
offices within the Institute violated paragraph 188(e)(ii) of the Act.
[70]
Member
Steeves in reaching his decision reviewed the purpose of section 188 of the Act
“a relatively recent addition to the Act introducing a new level of
jurisdiction for the Board”. He found at paragraph 60 examining a similar
provision in the Canada Labour Code, RSC 1985, c L-2, the section was
intended “to protect and advance individual rights against the previously
unfettered authority of the union organization”. This statement must be
balanced with the legislative recognition that the provisions do not abolish
the right of a union to expel, suspend or discipline members. He wrote at page
61 of his decision:
I also agree with another decision under the Code that pointed out the
existence of section 185 of the Code does not mean
that the CLRB is a final appeal for the internal decisions made by a
bargaining agent (James Carbin v. International Association
of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (1984)59 di 109). In my view, that
proposition applies to section 188 of the Act as
well. That is, the Board's role under paragraph 188(c)
is to ensure that the bargaining agent's standards of discipline are free
from discriminatory action. Similarly, the role of the Board under
paragraph 188(e) is twofold. First, it is to ensure
that there is no discrimination against an employee with respect to
membership in an employee organization and, second, to enforce the
prohibition against intimidation, coercion or the imposition of a financial
"or other penalty" because a person has filed an application or
complaint under Part 1 of the Act or a grievance
under Part 2 of the Act.
[Emphasis added]
[71]
At
paragraph 62, he concluded:
Those provisions raise specific issues under the Act and they do not authorize the Board to act as the
final arbitrator of all internal disputes within a bargaining agent. They
do not, for example, authorize the Board to decide the scope of offences
that may be the subject of discipline within the bargaining agent or that may
deny membership in the bargaining agent (Fred J. Solly;
cited in Beaudet-Fortin v. Canadian Union of Postal Workers
(1997) 105 di 98, at para 86). Simply put, it is not for the Board to say what
is a legitimate internal policy or rule or by-law of a bargaining agent except
in narrow circumstances. These circumstances include where the policy, rule
or by-law is itself discriminatory or its application has discriminatory
consequences. Further, the Act
prohibitsintimidation or coercion because a person has made an application,
complaint or grievance under Parts 1 and 2 of the Act.
[Emphasis added]
[72]
Having
found a violation of paragraph 188(e)(ii) of the Act when it suspended
the applicant in 2008, Member Steeves searched to craft an appropriate remedy.
He wrote at paragraph 125 of his reasons:
With regards to remedy I note that paragraph
192(1)(f) of the Act is applicable. It is as follows:
192.(1)
If the Board determines that a complaint referred to in subsection 190(1) is
well founded, the Board may make any order that it considers necessary in the
circumstances against the party complained of, including any of the following
orders:
…
(f)
if an employee organization has failed to comply with paragraph 188(c), (d) or
(e), an order requiring the employee organization to rescind any disciplinary
action taken in respect of any em`loyee affected by the failure and pay
compensation in an amount that is not more than, in the Board's opinion, any
financial or other penalty imposed on the employee by the employee
organization.
[Emphasis added]
[73]
As noted, he identified the real harm which Ms.
Bremsak had suffered from her illegal suspension from office. I repeat his
findings at paragraph 131 and 132 of his decision.
Finally, I consider that the real harm in this
case has to be the complainant's suspension from her elected positions and that
the objective of any remedy must be, as much as practicable, to correct that
harm and to restore her to the situation she was in before her suspension.
Therefore, I direct that the suspensions of the complainant from elected and
appointed offices be rescinded. Furthermore, the fact that the membership and
officials of the bargaining agent were told of the complainant's suspension is
significant, and I conclude that it is appropriate to direct that the
membership and officials be told the suspensions have been rescinded. Unlike in
Veillette 2, I find that I have the authority to intervene in the
bargaining agent's internal affairs to fashion a remedy that relates to the
matters set out in subparagraph 188(e)(ii) of the Act. These
include penalties imposed by a bargaining agent because a person has made an
application to the Board and, in this case, the penalty was suspension from
office. This Order is not intended to override the normal operation of the
constitution and by-laws of the bargaining agent in matters such as the usual
expiry of the terms of elected or appointed offices.
For these reasons, I consider it necessary in
the circumstances of this case to direct the bargaining agent to publish the
following announcement in a prominent place in the next edition of one of its
regular and significant publications to the membership (this may be an online
announcement):
Announcement to all members and officials of
the Institute
On April 9, 2008, Ms. Irene Bremsak was
temporarily suspended from her positions of Member-at-Large, SP Vancouver
Sub-Group, President, Vancouver Branch; Member-at-Large, B.C./Yukon Regional
Executive; and Sub-Group Coordinator, SP Group Executive. This suspension was a
result of the Institute's "Policy Relating to Members and Complaints to
Outside Bodies" and a complaint filed by Ms. Bremsak with the Public
Service Labour Relations Board.
The Public Service Labour Relations Board has
recently directed, pursuant to subparagraph 188(e)(ii) and section 192 of the Public
Service Labour Relations Act, that the Institute rescind this policy as it
applies to the circumstances of Ms. Bremsak and to amend the policy to ensure
that it complies with the Public Service Labour Relations Act. The Board
also concluded that there may be different circumstances when it is appropriate
to suspend a member from elected or appointed office. Finally, the Board
directed that this announcement be made to members and officials of the
Institute.
Therefore, Ms. Bremsak is reinstated to all her
elected and appointed positions effective immediately, subject to the normal
operation of the Institute's by-laws.
[74]
The facts in this case are not in dispute. The
applicant has not to this day been reinstated to the offices she previously
held and the terms of those offices have now expired. The Institute does not
challenge this fact, it pleads justification or impossibility to comply for the
reason that, it itself, decided to immediately suspend the applicant from
membership at a time when two stay applications it had made were yet to be
decided by the Federal Court of Appeal. A short period of time after her
suspension from membership Justice Pelletier dismissed both stay applications
and signaled to the Institute that the balance of convenience greatly favoured the
applicant. He signaled the fact that since her suspension the term of a number
of her offices had expired. The reason he refused the stay, in part, was his
view “if the order the Board is stayed until the matter is finally resolved all
of them may expire before she has an opportunity to resume them assuming she is
successful and at that point the issue would be moot from her point of view.
In short Justice Pelletier told the Institute to comply with the Board order.
The Institute failed to do so; it takes the position before this Court that it
did not breach the order because the reinstatement order was conditional – it
was subject to the normal operations of the Institute’s by-laws which permitted
it to discipline the applicant which is what happened.
[75]
I do not accept the Institute’s position. The
Board order, read in the context of the member’s reasons, is clear and
unambiguous. It ordered that the applicant be reinstated to the offices she
held and this notwithstanding a finding in the same decision that her first
complaint should be dismissed. Member Steeves wrote the following at
paragraph 121 and 122 on that point:
One aspect
of the facts is nonetheless troubling in the context of this issue. The
complainant attended meetings after she was suspended from office under the
policy described above. She was able to speak at those meetings as a member,
but she was not attending in the capacity of any of her elected offices.
Unfortunately, her conduct at those meetings was disruptive to the point that other
people had to intervene to maintain order. The complainant disputes that she
was disruptive at these meetings but I prefer the evidence from the bargaining
agent's witnesses on this point. The complainant also believe that she should
have been treated the same as other delegates to these meetings in terms of
reimbursement for expenses and she objects to being excluded from some parts of
those meetings. I appreciate that she was angry and upset that she had been
suspended from her elected positions. But suspended she was, and I can only
conclude that her insistence on being treated as if she had not been suspended
was unreasonable and disruptive behaviour.
Despite
finding that the complainant's behaviour was disruptive at the April 2008
meetings, I do not find that her behaviour created real harm to the bargaining
agent. In the end, the meetings proceeded, the business of the meetings was
completed and the affairs of the bargaining agent continued. It should not come
as a surprise to members of the labour relations community that meetings of
bargaining agents can sometimes be raucous and acrimonious. In this regards, I
paraphrase as follows a finding in Veillette 2:
"... the complainant's behaviour was certainly annoying and created
discomfort for all but it did not put the organization at risk."
[76]
Not only did the Board order state she should
be reinstated, member Steeves prescribed the wording of the announcement which
he directed should be published in a prominent place in the next edition
of one of its regular and significant publications to the membership which may
be an online announcement. The announcement member Steeves presented was:
Therefore, Ms. Bremsak is reinstated to all
her elected and appointed positions effective immediately, subject
to the normal operation of the Institute’s by-law.
[77]
Member
Steeves was also clear about the scope of the reinstatement order he made: it
was not intended to overide the normal operation of the Institute’s
by-law in such matters at the usual expiry of the terms elected
offices.
[78]
In
short, member Steeves’ order is clear: reinstate Ms. Bremsak immediately
in order that her term of offices not expire and the real harm she suffered not
be repaired.
[79]
The
Institute was well aware of its obligations under the Board’s order. That is
why it sought to stay the operation of the Board’s order at a time when its
harassment investigation was well advanced; indeed draft reports were in
circulation.
[80]
In
this context, it is unreasonable for the Institute to interpret the Board order
as permitting a subsequent event such as a suspension of membership which would
nullify the reinstatement. The terms of this order were clear. Reinstate now!
If disciplinary issues arose later to warrant action, the Institute could do so
at that time.
[81]
I
deal briefly with the suspension of membership justification. That matter is
before the Board. At this stage of the process, am I obligated to assume
without further inquiry, the validity of the decision as a block to a contempt
finding. In my view, I am not and was so directed by the FCA; moreover both
the Vice-Chairperson of the Board and the Prothonotary did not decide the issue
but stated the question whether the suspension meant the Board’s order could
not be enforced was mine to decide. My view is that it can.
[82]
These
are serious questions raised about the validity of the suspension. I list the
most evident ones:
1. the fact the
suspension from membership was to take place immediately;
2. the fact that no
hearing or submissions were received by the Executive Committee before the
sanction was imposed;
3. the question
whether the Executive Committee had the authority to suspend the membership of
a member rather than the Board of Director’s has been raised;
4. the substantive
question as to the scope of the concept of harassment in the particular context
of the facts alleged is in issue;
5. the
proportionality of the sanction when it is considered that the allegations
which were found well founded, were similar and made by five members of the
VancouverBranch is a question mark;
6. the fact the
applicant was not able to comment on the final investigation reports before
decision was made is an issue.
[83]
By
raising these questions, I must not be taken as having decided the merits of
the Institute’s decision. The Institute had the right to investigate and to discipline
Ms. Bremsak. The allegations against her and her husband were serious. The
question is whether they amounted to harassment, and whether the penalty and
its timing were reasonable and proportioned.
[84]
In
the circumstances on the evidence before me, I am not satisfied the Institute
met its evidentiary burden of establishing lawful excuse.
[85]
I
make another point. A critical part of the Institute’s case is when the
contempt clock started ticking. Its view is that I only started ticking on December
8, 2009, when the Board’s order was filed with the Federal Court. In my
view, the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Warman is contrary to
this submission. There is only one order to be enforced here and that is the
Board’s order of August 26, 2009. It is true the Board’s order was only filed
on December 8, 2009. Its filing was twice opposed by the Institute; once after
the Federal Court of Appeal had denied the stay of the Board’s order. In my
view, the FCA did not hold that, in appropriate circumstances, a contempt
finding could not be based on events prior to the filing. It depends on the
circumstances one of which is the knowledge the Institute had of the Board order
and its terms. I am satisfied the Institute well knew what the Board had
ordered immediate reinstatement. In the circumstances of this case, I am of
the view the facts giving rise to a contempt finding can be based on the terms
of the very Board order which is sought to be enforced – immediate
reinstatement.
[86]
I
am aware the Institute had the right to challenge the Board’s decision, it
latter discontinued the judicial review application. I do not question the
reason’s why I choose to do so. The fact remains that today the applicant is
without a remedy and there is no legal challenge to the validity of the Board’s
decision and remedy.
[87]
On
the issue of the announcement, it is clear the Institute did not comply with
the prescribed announcement. It had to change it to recognize the fact the
applicant was never reinstated.
[88]
One
issue which caused this Court to pause is the fact the Prothonotary ruled the
relevant order was the Court order which emanated from the Board order. The
Prothonotary did not have the benefit of the FCA’s decision in Warman.
The Court, as previously noted, canvassed the parties on the point. The issue
is a question of law which the Court can decide notwithstanding the terms of
the Prothonotary’s show cause order. I take the same view of his view that
there was not precendent to reinstate an expired term. That may be so at
common law but does not seem to be supported by Taylor v Atkinson
on the facts. Reinstatement is a statutory remedy (see paragraph 192(1)(e) of
the Act.
[89]
The
question of the appropriate penalty arises. Rule 472 of the Rules reads:
Where
a person is found to be in contempt, a judge may order that
(a)
the person be imprisoned for a period of less than five years or until the
person complies with the order;
(b)
the person be imprisoned for a period of less than five years if the person
fails to comply with the order;
(c)
the person pay a fine;
(d)
the person do or refrain from doing any act;
(e) in
respect of a person referred to in rule 429, the person's property be
sequestered; and
(f)
the person pay costs.
|
Lorsqu’une
personne est reconnue coupable d’outrage au tribunal, le juge peut ordonner :
a)
qu’elle soit incarcérée pour une période de moins de cinq ans ou jusqu’à ce
qu’elle se conforme à l’ordonnance;
b)
qu’elle soit incarcérée pour une période de moins de cinq ans si elle ne se
conforme pas à l’ordonnance;
c)
qu’elle paie une amende;
d)
qu’elle accomplisse un acte ou s’abstienne de l’accomplir;
e)
que les biens de la personne soient mis sous séquestre, dans le cas visé à la
règle 429;
f)
qu’elle soit condamnée aux dépens.
|
[90]
The
Court is of the view that it has jurisdiction to order that the applicant be
reinstated into the positions she held when originally suspended. As Justice
Trudel states in Veillette, above, reinstatement is a normal remedy in
cases such as this one. That is the relief ordered by the Board. The
Institute was aware of the expiry issue; it has some responsibility in
non-compliance with the fact the terms expired and the applicant has not yet
been reinstated to date.
[91]
I
am very hesitant to order reinstatement as a remedy. The issue of her
suspension from membership is still outstanding. I have found the allegations
of harassment serous. In this context, reinstatement is not an appropriate
remedy.
[92]
I
have always though the parties should resolve the matter between themselves
particularly in the context I have described settlement is an option; it was
achieved by the parties in the Veillette case and the settlement was
sanctioned by Justice Mainville. This is not to suggest that the settlement in
this case should be the case.
[93]
If
settlement is not achieved within six (6) weeks, the Court will ask the parties
for submissions on an appropriate remedy. This Court remains seized of the
matter.
[94]
The
facts of this case are not contested based on the evidence, I find that the
Institute has not complied with the Board’s remedial order. The three
conditions for a finding of contempt are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt.
For the test of reasonable doubt I apply the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision
in R v Lifchus, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 320 at page 335 and R v W (D) [DW],
[1991] 1 S.C.R. 742.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the Professional Institute of the
Public Service of Canada is guilty of contempt of an Order of the Public Service
Labour Relations Board dated August 26, 2009. The Court orders that the
parties attempt to resolve the appropriate remedy to the contempt finding
between themselves within six (6) weeks of this date, such settlement to be
approved by this Court, failing which this Court, who remains seized of the
matter, will call on the parties for submissions on the appropriate remedy.
Costs reserved for later determination.
“François Lemieux”