Date: 20090520
Docket: T-791-06
Citation: 2009 FC 523
Ottawa, Ontario, May 20,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
DR.
ROBERT MANNING
Applicant
and
HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
CANADA, SERVICE CANADA and THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR CANADA
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review pursuant to section 18.1 of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.F-7. Dr. Robert Manning, the Applicant, seeks
judicial review of a decision dated April 5, 2006, of Katherine Hitchcock, the
Minister’s Delegate denying his application for retroactivity of disability
benefits to the time of his disablement in 1993.
BACKGROUND
[2]
Dr.
Robert Manning applied for disability benefits under the Canada Pension Plan
(CPP) in August 2005. The application was approved and he received the maximum
amount of retroactivity, 15 months as per s. 43(2) of the Canada Pension
Plan Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-8 (the Act). However, the Applicant believes
the retroactivity should be to the date of his disablement.
[3]
Dr. Manning was a
medical doctor practicing in the City of St. Catharines, Ontario. On or about
April 16, 1993, the Applicant suffered a stroke. As a result, he became
disabled and was unable to manage his own affairs. At the time of his stroke,
the Applicant was involved in a divorce proceeding and had no one to assist him
with his financial affairs. The Applicant remarried in April 1995. The
Applicant’s new spouse, Dr. Malaguti-Manning, also a medical doctor, has
assisted many of her patients in their application for disability benefits
under the Canada Pension Plan Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-8 (the Act).
[4]
In late April 1995, the
Applicant’s spouse telephoned the CPP’s toll free information line. She did
not ask for, nor document, the name of the call center representative who was
providing the information. Her recollection is that the Call Centre Agent had
the voice of a mature woman. The Applicant’s spouse claims that she was
advised by the representative that there was no point applying for the CPP
disability since any amounts received would have to be repaid to the
Applicant’s private insurance company whose disability policy payouts had been
used to pay for the Applicant’s living expenses since his 1993 stroke. The
Applicant’s spouse also claims that she was informed that the Applicant would
not receive any additional monies as that amount would be offset by the
Applicant’s private insurance plan.
[5]
The Applicant’s spouse
claims that she relied on the erroneous information provided to her, therefore
did not complete the application for disability benefits on behalf of her
husband. On July 25, 2005, Dr. Malaguti-Manning requested her accountant make
further inquires on the Applicant’s behalf. The accountant, who noted the
identification of the call centre agent, was informed that the Applicant should
have applied and received CPP disability benefits commencing in 1993. She was
further informed that if the application for benefits was made in 1995, Dr.
Manning’s benefits would not have “shrunk” due to having zero contributions
during the last 12 years of his disability.
[6]
Dr. Malaguti-Manning
then submitted an application for retroactive disability on behalf of the Applicant.
On October 24, 2005, Human Resources and Development Canada (HRDC) requested
further information regarding the Applicant’s claim that he was given erroneous
advice. On November 14, 2005, the Applicant responded by re-iterating her
initial claim.
[7]
On April 5, 2006,
Service Canada denied the Applicant’s claim for retroactive benefits.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[8]
The
decision under review includes:
i.
the
letter by the Minister’s Delegate dated April 5, 2006; and
ii.
the
erroneous advice investigation report (the Investigation Report)
The letter indicated that Mr. Manning was
not entitled to retroactive benefits to 1993; rather, he would be eligible for
benefits retroactive to May 2004. The Investigation was a standard form
report, documenting the investigation taken by the Minister’s Delegate.
[9]
The
Minister’s Delegate outlines the series of events to the date of the letter.
She restates the position and evidence of Dr. Malaguti-Manning that was
considered for her decision.
[10]
The
letter stated that an erroneous advice investigation was undertaken as a result
of Dr. Malaguti-Manning’s August 24, 2005 application for retroactive
benefits. During the investigation further information was requested from Dr.
Malaguti-Manning on October 25, 2005. The reply was received on November 21,
2005.
[11]
The
Minister’s Delegates stated:
Based on the information on file and
normal office procedures at the time, it has been determined that erroneous
advice from a departmental official has not occurred.
[12]
The
Minister’s Delegate then explains the next step in the application: the file
was to be forwarded for medical adjudication. The letter states that for
payment purposes benefits will only be available from May 2004; 15 months prior
to the application.
[13]
The
final paragraph is further information for the Applicant if he disagrees with
the decision, and steps for recourse.
[14]
The
Investigation Report outlines
the background of the case, an analysis of the evidence and the conclusion that
the Minister was not satisfied pursuant to subsection 66(4) of the Act that
erroneous advice had been given to the Applicant.
[15]
In her analysis, The
Minister’s Delegate determined that there were no records of the alleged
telephone call made on behalf of the Applicant in 1995. She also reviewed the
training manuals and guidelines for the time period in question and determined
that there was nothing to suggest that Call Centre Agents would have been
trained to provide the type of advice the Applicant’s spouse had allegedly
received. The Minister’s Delegate held that on the contrary, Call Centre
Agents were told to inform callers that they should be contacting their own
insurer.
ISSUES
[16]
The
issues under review are:
i.
Was
the decision of the Minister’s Delegate that no erroneous advice was given
reasonable?
ii.
Did
the Minister’s Delegate breach the procedural fairness rights of the Applicant
by not providing sufficient reasons in her decision?
[17]
Two
further interrelated issues, submitted by the Applicant, which this court does
not have the jurisdiction to adjudicate:
i.
Did
the Respondents and their agents provide erroneous information or advice to the
Applicant’s spouse to his detriment; and
ii.
If
erroneous information and/or advice was provided to the Applicant’s spouse, is
the Applicant entitled to receive disability benefits dating back to April
1995?
[18]
In
my view, the issue in this case is:
a. Did the
Minister commit a reviewable error in determining that no erroneous
advice/administrative error had occurred?
LEGISLATION
[19]
Subsection
66(4) of the Act provides:
Where person denied benefit due to departmental error, etc.
66.(4) Where the Minister is satisfied that, as a
result of erroneous advice or administrative error in the administration
of this Act, any person has been denied
(a)
a benefit, or portion thereof, to which that person would have been
entitled under this Act,
(b)
a division of unadjusted pensionable earnings under section 55 or 55.1, or
(c)
an assignment of a retirement pension under section 65.1,
the Minister shall take such remedial action as the
Minister considers appropriate to place the person in the position that the
person would be in under this Act had the erroneous advice not been
given or the administrative error not been made.
|
Refus d’une prestation en raison d’une
erreur administrative
66.(4) Dans le cas où le ministre est convaincu qu’un
avis erroné ou une erreur administrative survenus dans le cadre de
l’application de la présente loi a eu pour résultat que soit refusé à
cette personne, selon le cas :
a) en tout ou en partie, une prestation à laquelle elle
aurait eu droit en vertu de la présente loi,
b) le partage des gains non ajustés ouvrant droit à
pension en application de l’article 55 ou 55.1,
c) la cession d’une pension de retraite conformément à
l’article 65.1,
le ministre prend les mesures
correctives qu’il estime indiquées pour placer la personne en question dans
la situation où cette dernière se retrouverait
sous l’autorité de la présente loi s’il n’y avait pas eu avis erroné
ou erreur administrative.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[20]
In
Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, at para.
62, the Supreme Court of Canada stated that the first of two steps in
conducting an analysis for standard of review is to “ascertain whether the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
[21]
In
Lee v. Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC
758, Madam Justice Hansen found that the applicable standard of review for a
finding that there was no erroneous advice given or administrative error was
patent unreasonableness.
[22]
Madam
Justice Snider, in Kissoon v. Canada (Minister of Human Development),
2004 FC 24, found that in making a ruling under subsection 66(4) of the Act,
the Minister is making a discretionary decision, and as such the standard of
review is patent unreasonableness. Furthermore, she states at para. 5:
A finding of erroneous advice or
administrative error is one of fact, which also signals to a court that
deference should be accorded to the Minister. Evidence should not be reweighed
nor findings tampered with merely because this Court would have come to a
different conclusion. (Suresh, supra at 24-25)
[23]
In
Dunsmuir the SCC found that there are only two standards of review:
correctness and reasonableness. As such, I find that the existing
jurisprudence has already determined the appropriate standard of review. The
decision was a discretionary decision, based on facts and therefore is
reviewable on a reasonableness standard.
[24]
The
second issue is the right to procedural fairness. If the conduct
challenged involves a breach of procedural fairness, then no assessment of an
appropriate standard of review is required: Moreau-Bérubé
v.
New
Brunswick (Judicial Council), 2002 SCC 11, at para.
74. A breach of procedural fairness will result in setting aside of the
administrative decision makers decision.
ANALYSIS
[25]
The initial call was made in April
1995. Dr. Malaguti-Manning does not recall the exact date, nor the name of the
agent she spoke with, the region to which the call was made or the Call Centre
to which the call was routed. The Minister’s Delegate, in arriving at her
decision, checked the CPP mainframe to attempt to identify the date the call
came in and where it was routed but was unable to make such a determination.
Although not contacting all of the possible Call Centers where a call could
have been routed, she did review all of the policy and training manuals and
determined based on such material that Call Centre Agents were instructed to
inform callers with requests like those of the Applicant that they should
contact their private insurer.
[26]
In Law Society of New Brunswick
v. Ryan, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 247 at para. 52, the Supreme Court of Canada
described a patently unreasonable error as follows:
Another way to say this is that a patently unreasonable
defect, once identified, can be explained simply and easily, leaving no real
possibility of doubting that the decision is defective. A patently unreasonable
decision has been described as "clearly irrational" or
"evidently not in accordance with reason" (Canada
(Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 941, at pp. 963-64, per Cory J.; Centre communautaire juridique de l'Estrie v. Sherbrooke (City),
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 84,
at paras. 9-12, per Gonthier J.). A decision that is
patently unreasonable is so flawed [page270] that no amount of curial deference
can justify letting it stand.
[27]
In Leskiw v. Canada (Attorney General), 2003 FCT 582 at para. 23, this Court held that given that the applicant in
that case did not identify who gave him the allegedly erroneous advice, other
than to say it was two different female client services agents of the HRDC
office, as well as the contradiction in the applicant’s recollection of the
advice that he allegedly received, it was not patently unreasonable for the
Minister’s delegate to conclude that the applicant did not receive erroneous
advice.
[28]
In Kissoon v. Canada
(Minister of Human Development Resources), 2004 FC 24, at para. 10; aff’d 2004 FCA 384), Justice Snider held:
The
Respondent would have made a reviewable error if the decision was made without
regard to the evidence before it or on the basis of evidence that was not
before it. In this case, I can see not such error [sic]. The Minister
considered all of the evidence before her and found that it did not establish that
an error had been made. In other words, after weighing all of the evidence,
the Minister found that it did not establish, on a balance of probabilities,
that Mr. Kissoon had submitted an application for children’s benefits prior to
November 29, 2001.
Was the
decision of the Minister’s Delegate that no erroneous advice was given
reasonable?
[29]
The
Applicant submits that the decision of the Minister’s Delegate is not
reasonable because there is little or no justification for the outcome of the
decision. The decision lacks analysis of the relevant facts, evidence or law,
and there is no transparency in the decision making process.
[30]
The
Applicant asserts that the fact that the Respondent’s agents were cognizant of
the private insurance companies. This could have affected the information they
provided to the Applicant’s spouse, namely, the information that any monies
received by CPP would be deducted from the amounts being paid by the private
insurance company.
[31]
The
Applicant believes that the Minister’s Delegate committed a reviewable error by
not conducting a complete and full investigation of the other CPP offices in Ontario. The
Minister’s Delegate investigated the Chatham office, where she was
employed and had trained telephone agents during the time in question.
[32]
The
Applicant submits that a number of factors must be considered:
a. Dr.
Malaguti-Manning received erroneous advice with respect to Dr. Manning’s
disability entitlement
b. There was no
evidence on record that could lead to a finding that Dr. Malaguti-Manning was
not provided with erroneous advice.
c. The
Respondent believes that it is unlikely that Dr. Malaguti-Manning received
erroneous advice.
d. It is
possible that an agent would advise Dr. Malaguti-Manning not to apply for the
disability benefit because the agents were advised of private insurance
policies and the agreements with the Government.
e. There was
more than one call centre that the Minister’s Delegate did not investigate.
f.
There
is information in the tip sheets and the manuals that refer to an agreement
between private insurance companies and the Government.
[33]
The
Applicant asserts that based on the above noted points, the agents may have
told Dr. Malaguti-Manning that there was no point in applying because that
amount would be deducted from the amount paid by the private insurance
company. The points referred to above were iterated by Mr. Justice Campbell in
Barnes v. Canada (Minister of Human Resources Development), 2004 FC
985, at para. 8; he listed the
essential features in reviewing the decision for error.
[34]
The
Respondent submits that the decision of the Minister’s Delegate was
reasonable. The Applicant did not establish that the Respondent gave erroneous
advice. The decision was based on the available evidence from the
investigation undertaken by the Minister’s Delegate and the information
provided by the Applicant. The Applicant was not able to provide a specific
date of the phone call, the CPP agent’s name, nor the office Dr.
Malaguti-Manning called.
[35]
The
Minister’s Delegate was unable to find any record of the phone call, and her
review of the materials and training in place at that time indicated that it
was highly unlikely that the alleged advice would have been given. In
cross-examination the Minister’s Delegate stated: if that type of information
was given it “would contravene all of the instructions … that our agents
receive.”
[36]
The
Respondent submits that based on the following factors the decision of the
Minister’s Delegate is clearly reasonable:
a. there were no
particulars given regarding the agent’s name who allegedly gave the erroneous
advice;
b. there was no
written evidence to support the Applicant’s allegation that advice was given;
c. Dr.
Malaguti-Manning is a medical doctor with experience in assisting patients with
applications for disability benefits, yet made no record of the conversation
and took no additional steps to confirm the advice given;
d. there was no
electronic record of the telephone call;
e. the checklist
states that an application kit is sent to a client if they do not have one;
f.
the
training material instructs agents to provide information but to leave the
decision as to whether or not to apply to the client;
g. the material
instructs agents to refer questions regarding private insurance schemes to
those companies;
h. the existing practice
is that no agent is to provide advice regarding private insurance schemes; and
i.
the
advice allegedly given to the Applicant would have gone against the specific
instructions given to the agents.
[37]
The
burden of proof is on the Applicant. The Applicant asserts that information in
the form of advice was given, and was relied upon to his detriment. In
asserting that erroneous advice was given the Applicant is required to prove on
a balance of probabilities that the advice was given: Graceffa v. Canada (Minister of
Social Development), 2006 FC 1513, at para. 1
[38]
Subsection
66(4) of the Act states that the Minister ought to be satisfied that a certain
state of facts exists. The section gives the Minister wide discretion with
regard to any remedial action and to an informal determination of the facts.
[39]
Dr.
Malaguti-Manning has provided affidavit evidence that is very general
evidence. There was no evidence of the telephone call; no receiving agent
identified; no date of the call; no phone number called; and no specific
details of the advice she received. The evidence, the telephone agent’s advice,
as to why the Applicant did not apply in 1995 for the disability benefits is
not the most definitive although there is some support in that the information
was relied upon since the Applicant’s wife did not apply for the benefit.
[40]
The
investigation revealed that there were no records of calls that long ago. The
Minister’s Delegate provided evidence including: the tip sheets; counselling
checklist; procedures in place at that time; and manuals that telephone agents
were provided with.
[41]
All
the evidence the Investigator produced was balanced against the evidence
provided by Dr. Malaguti-Manning; then the Minister must determine on a balance
of probabilities whether erroneous advice was given. The Minister concluded
that balance weighed in the Respondent’s favour. The Minister found that it
was more likely that no erroneous advice was given.
[42]
I
find that the Minister’s decision is reasonable given that it is one of the
justifiable findings based on the evidence.
Did
the Minister’s Delegate breach the procedural fairness rights of the Applicant
by not providing sufficient reasons in her decision?
[43]
The
Applicant argues that the Minister’s Delegate did not provide adequate reasons
because she did not provide an analysis of the facts or the evidence.
Furthermore, the Applicant argues that the Minister’s Delegate did not explain
how she arrived at her decision, and the legal grounds upon which her decision
was based.
[44]
The
Respondent submits that the letter dated April 5, 2006 and the Investigation
Report are adequate reasons for the decision. The letter explained that the
investigation was conducted; the policy, procedures and training material were
reviewed, and based on the file and normal office procedures at that time, the
alleged erroneous advice had not occurred.
[45]
In
Baker v. Canada (M.C.I.), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at para. 44, the Supreme
Court of Canada explained that the sufficiency of reasons needs to be necessarily
flexible. Furthermore, it noted that the courts must consider the day-to-day
realities of the administrative agencies and the ways in which the principles
of procedural fairness can be assured.
[46]
Similarly,
recently Justice Lemieux, in Canada (Attorney General) v. Pentney, 2008
FC 96, held that even though a letter did not contain reasons, the
corresponding record contained reasons for the decision which fulfilled the
reasons requirement.
[47]
The
Applicant’s procedural fairness rights were not breached. Although the letter
and Investigator’s Report were extensive, I find that together, they serve as
sufficient reasons to satisfy the requirement.
CONCLUSION
[48]
The Applicant has mis-framed his
analysis. The issue is not whether it was possible that erroneous advice had
been given. Rather, did the facts satisfy the Minister that erroneous advice
had been given.
[49]
Dr. Malaguti-Manning
has claimed on behalf of the Applicant that she received erroneous advice from
the CPP Department. There is no evidence of the telephone call: no receiving
agent; no date of the call; no phone number called; and no specific details of
the advice given. The Minister’s Delegate investigated and, in the absence of
any record of telephone calls, decided on the basis of the evidence available including:
the tip sheets; counselling checklist; procedures in place at that time; and
telephone agents’ manuals.
[50]
The investigation occurred eleven
years after the alleged dissemination of information. In my opinion, the Minister’s
Delegate took all reasonable steps to conduct her investigation. Her decision
is supported by the evidence and is in accordance with reason. The Minister’s
letter and the investigation report provide adequate, if sparse, reasons given
the paucity of information available due to the significant passage of time.
[51]
This application for
judicial review does not succeed.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that:
1. The application for
judicial review is dismissed.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”