Date: 20110128
Docket: T-1883-08
Citation: 2011 FC 103
Ottawa, Ontario, January 28,
2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
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ESTATE VIOLET STEVENS &
JUNE TAYLOR EXECUTOR
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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and
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OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER
OF REVIEW TRIBUNALS
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Intervener
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Applicant seeks judicial review of the decision of the Commissioner of Review
Tribunals (the Commissioner) to close their appeal file without convening a
hearing of a Review Tribunal to consider the appeal.
[2]
The
right of appeal to a Review Tribunal from decisions of the Minister of Human
Resources and Skills Development or his delegate (the Minister) is provided in
section 28 of the Old Age Security Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. O-9 (OAS) and
section 82 of the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-8 (CPP).
[3]
This
application, together with a companion file, Ingrid V. Lambie v Attorney
General of Canada and Office of the Commissioner of Review Tribunals,
T-686-09 (Lambie), were the subject of various motions which
resulted in orders of the Court firstly granting the Office of the Commissioner
of Review Tribunals status as an intervener and secondly, directing that the
two applications be consolidated to be heard consecutively by the same judge.
These two applications raise for the first time the issue whether the
Commissioner has the jurisdiction to refuse to convene a Review Tribunal to
hear an appeal under the OAS or the CPP.
[4]
Insomuch
as the evidence and submissions differ in the two applications, I will address
the question of a statutory basis for the Commissioner’s jurisdiction to close
an appeal in the present application and address the question of whether the
doctrine of necessary implication applies in the companion Lambie
application.
[5]
On
a preliminary point, the Applicant has submitted some additional material that was
not before the Commissioner when he made his decision. Some of that material
consists of new documents while other documents have handwritten notations on
them that were not on the documents before the Commissioner. The principle in
judicial review is that the material before the Court on judicial review should
be the documents that were before the decision maker at the time of decision.
Accordingly, I will consider the Applicant’s record as the originally filed and
not the new material.
[6]
For
reasons that follow, I am granting the judicial review in this application.
Background
[7]
The
Estate Violet Stevens and June Taylor Executor, Applicant, is self-represented
by Ms. June Taylor.
[8]
Ms.
Taylor is executor of the estate of her mother, Ms. Violet Stevens, who died in
March, 2007 at the age of 86 years. Ms. Taylor learned that her mother never
collected the OAS pension to which she would have been entitled after turning
65 years of age. Ms. Taylor made a claim on behalf of her late mother’s estate
and the estate received a retroactive payment of eleven months OAS pension
benefits for the period April 2006 to March 2007.
[9]
Ms.
Taylor sought retroactive payments of OAS benefits to August 1985, the date the
late Ms. Stevens turned 65, on the basis that Ms. Stevens did not know she was
entitled to a pension, had been a good citizen and had never collected an OAS
pension. Her request was denied because the Stevens estate had been paid the
maximum benefits allowed under the OAS. Ms. Taylor requested reconsideration
of the decision. The Minister’s delegate in the Department of Human Resources and
Social Development Canada (the Department) denied Ms. Taylor’s request for
reconsideration.
[10]
Ms.
Taylor appealed to a Review Tribunal by a letter dated January 16, 2008 to the
Office of the Commissioner of Review Tribunals (OCRT). She stated her grounds
in her letter of appeal as follows:
1)
Mother was
a good Canadian and contributed to society. Income Tax was always deducted from
her pay stubs. She had a below average job all her life and taxes were deducted
and other government programs were deducted also.
2)
While
working full time employment, Mother brought up two children on her own (she
was divorced from her 1st husband in 1948).
3)
Mother was
never a drain on the governments of Canada
or Quebec by means of health care,
welfare or unemployment insurance payments.
Ms. Taylor raised fairness as an issue in
her appeal for a further retroactive OAS payment back to August 1985 when her
mother turned 65 years of age and pointed to examples she believed to be
exceptions to the rules.
[11]
The
OCRT sent an interim letter acknowledging receipt of Ms. Taylor’s letter. It
advised it requested information from the Department. In other words, it
requested the documents specified under section 5 of the Review Tribunal
Rules of Procedure, SOR/92-19 (the Rules).
[12]
The
section 5 documents included Ms. Taylors’ original request, and the
Department’s response which considered not only the eleven month statutory
retroactivity period but also an “incapacity provision” which is an exception
for people who were physically or mentally unable to make the decision to apply
for a pension earlier. The Department’s response indicated Ms. Taylor could
request reconsideration. In requesting reconsideration, Ms. Taylor provided
further information about her late mother, stating, among other things:
My Mother was never “diagnosed” with
physical or mental incapacity. Mental incapacity or lack of knowledge of how
O.A.S. would benefit her is probably the only explanation of why she never
filed. (quotation marks in original)
The subsequent negative reconsideration
decision by the Minister’s delegate took Ms. Taylor’s above statement that her
late mother was never diagnosed with mental incapacity as determinative
stating: “Since documentation is required when applying the diagnosed mental
incapacity, it is unlikely that this provision could be considered.”
(emphasis added)
[13]
The
documents from the Department were reviewed by a case management officer in the
OCRT who wrote:
The Appellant’s request for further
retroactivity was denied on ground that Appellant received the maximum amount
payable for Old Age Security for the late Violet Stevens.
The Late Violet Stevens attained the age
of 65 years in August 1985. She did not apply for OAS benefit as she was
unaware of such benefit. On March 18, 2007 the late Violet Stevens passed away.
Her estate applied for OAS and was approved with 11 month retroactivity for the
date of her death – April 2006 to March 2007.
The Appellant is appealing for further
retroactivity.
Not an arguable case.
The OCRT case management officer forwarded
her comments to the Commissioner.
[14]
On
June 5, 2008, the Commissioner of Review Tribunals advised Ms. Taylor that the
appeal file would be closed without convening a Review Tribunal. Ms. Taylor
requested the appeal be re-opened by a letter written on June 11, 2008 which
was relayed to the Commissioner by a Member of Parliament. The Commissioner
responded further on July 21, 2008 confirming his decision. He stated he was
not prepared to agree to her request to schedule a Review Tribunal for the
appeal, explaining that an appeal hearing “would be an exercise in futility as
the Review Tribunal would only be able to confirm that the maximum period of
retroactive benefits permitted by law has already been paid to the estate of
Ms. Stevens.”
[15]
Ms.
Taylor applied for judicial review of the Commissioner’s decision not to
convene a Review Tribunal to hear the appeal. She submits that the decision to
close the appeal was not justice. She reiterated her submission that her late
mother was entitled to OAS pension benefits and contended that the government
was aware Ms. Stevens was entitled to a pension since 1997. Although not
explicitly stated, Ms. Taylor seeks granting of judicial review.
[16]
The
Respondent supports granting judicial review. The Respondent takes the position
that the Commissioner was required by statute to choose three members to
constitute a Review Tribunal to hear the appeal made once the Minister has
refused a request on reconsideration. The Respondent submits the Commissioner exceeded
his jurisdiction by refusing to convene a Review Tribunal hearing and thereby
committed a reviewable error. The Respondent thus concurs with Ms. Taylor,
albeit on jurisdictional grounds.
[17]
The
Office of the Commissioner of Review Tribunals applied for intervener status in
this judicial review application. It contends that the Commissioner was
performing a case management function and acting within his jurisdiction when
he decided to close the Applicant’s appeal without convening a Review Tribunal
to hear the appeal.
Decision
Under Review
[18]
Ms.
Stevens received two letters from the Commissioner, Mr. Philippe Rabot: the
first on June 5, 2008 and the second on July 21, 2008. The first is the
substantive decision with respect to the Applicants’ case. The second
reaffirmed the Commissioner’s decision.
[19]
In
the June 5, 2008 letter, the Commissioner writes:
I have decided not to schedule a hearing
for this appeal, as a Review Tribunal would not have the jurisdiction to grant
the relief that you are seeking. The maximum period of retroactivity allowed by
the legislation has already been recognized by having payments effective from
2006.
[20]
The
Commissioner provides something akin to a finding where he writes:
I understand that the purpose of your
appeal is to have the Old Age Security pension payments made retroactive
to the date of Violet Stevens’ 65th birthday in August 1985, due to
the fact she had been unaware of her entitlement to apply for Old Age
Security benefits. However, the Government of Canada was under no legal
obligation to notify her that she could apply for this benefit. Hence, the
absence of such notice is not a factor that a Review Tribunal is entitled to
consider. As well, it would not be permitted to base its decision on
compassionate grounds.
[21]
The
Commissioner stated the Review Tribunal can only do what the law permits. He
expressed his regrets about the outcome and concludes by advising “Your appeal
file will be closed and we will be taking no further action with respect to
this matter.”
Legislation
[22]
The
Old Age Security Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. O-9 (OAS) provides:
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27.1 (1) A person who is
dissatisfied with a decision or determination made under this Act that no
benefit may be paid to the person, or respecting the amount of a benefit that
may be paid to the person, may, within ninety days after the day on
which the person is notified in writing of the decision or determination, or
within any longer period that the Minister may, either before or after the
expiration of those ninety days, allow, make a request to the Minister
in the prescribed form and manner for a reconsideration of that decision
or determination.
28. (1) a person who makes a
request under the subsection 27.1(1) or (1.1) and who is dissatisfied with
the decision or the Minister in respect of the request, or, subject to
the regulations, any person on their behalf, may appeal the decision to a
Review Tribunal under section 82 of the Canada Pension Plan.
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27.1 (1) La personne qui se croit lésée
par une décision de refus ou de liquidation de la prestation prise en
application de la présente loi peut, dans les quatre-vingt-dix jours suivant
la notification par écrit de la décision, ou dans le délai plus long que le
ministre peut accorder avant ou après l’expiration du délai de quatre-vingt-dix
jours, demander au ministre, selon les modalités réglementaires, de réviser
sa décision.
28. (1) L’auteur de la demande prévue
aux paragraphes 27.1(1) ou (1.1) qui se croit lésé par la décision révisée du
ministre — ou, sous réserve des règlements, quiconque pour son compte — peut
appeler de la décision devant un tribunal de révision constitué en
application de l’article 82 du Régime de pensions du Canada.
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(emphasis added)
[23]
Section
82 of the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-8, (CPP) provides:
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82. (1) A party who is dissatisfied
with a decision of the Minister made under section 81 or subsection 84(2), or
a person who is dissatisfied with a decision of the Minister made under
subsection 27.1(2) of the Old Age Security Act, or, subject to the
regulations, any person on their behalf, may appeal the decision to a
Review Tribunal in writing within 90 days, or any longer period that the
Commissioner of Review Tribunals may, either before or after the expiration
of those 90 days, allow, after the day on which the party was notified in the
prescribed manner of the decision or the person was notified in writing of
the Minister’s decision and of the reasons for it.
(2) A Review Tribunal shall be
constituted in accordance with this section.
…
(7) Each Review Tribunal shall
consist of three persons chosen by the Commissioner from among the members of
the panel referred to in subsection (3), subject to the following
requirements:
(a) the Commissioner must designate a
member of the bar of a province as the Chairman of the Review Tribunal; and
(b) where the appeal to be heard
involves a disability benefit, at least one member of the Review Tribunal
must be a person qualified to practise medicine or a prescribed related
profession in a province.
(8) An appeal to a Review Tribunal
shall be heard at such place in Canada as is fixed by the Commissioner,
having regard to the convenience of the appellant, the Minister, and any
other person added as a party to the appeal pursuant to subsection (10).
…
(11) A Review Tribunal may confirm
or vary a decision of the Minister made under section 81 or subsection
84(2) or under subsection 27.1(2) of the Old Age Security Act and may
take any action in relation to any of those decisions that might have been
taken by the Minister under that section or either of those subsections, and
the Commissioner of Review Tribunals shall thereupon notify the Minister and
the other parties to the appeal of the Review Tribunal’s decision and of the
reasons for its decision.
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82. (1) La personne qui se croit lésée
par une décision du ministre rendue en application de l’article 81 ou du
paragraphe 84(2) ou celle qui se croit lésée par une décision du ministre
rendue en application du paragraphe 27.1(2) de la Loi sur la sécurité de la
vieillesse ou, sous réserve des règlements, quiconque de sa part, peut
interjeter appel par écrit auprès d’un tribunal de révision de la décision du
ministre soit dans les quatre-vingt-dix jours suivant le jour où la première
personne est, de la manière prescrite, avisée de cette décision, ou, selon le
cas, suivant le jour où le ministre notifie à la deuxième personne sa
décision et ses motifs, soit dans le délai plus long autorisé par le
commissaire des tribunaux de révision avant ou après l’expiration des quatre-vingt-dix
jours.
(2) Un tribunal de révision est
constitué conformément au présent article.
…
(7) Un tribunal de révision se compose
de trois personnes qui, provenant de la liste visée au paragraphe (3), sont
choisies par le commissaire en fonction des exigences suivantes :
a) le commissaire doit désigner, comme
président du tribunal, un membre du barreau d’une province;
b) dans les cas où l’appel concerne une
question se rapportant à une prestation d’invalidité, au moins un membre du
tribunal doit être une personne habile à pratiquer la médecine ou une
profession connexe prescrite dans une province.
(8) Un appel auprès d’un tribunal de
révision est entendu à l’endroit du Canada
que fixe le commissaire, compte tenu de ce qui convient à l’appelant, au ministre
et aux mis en cause en application du paragraphe (10).
…
(11) Un tribunal de révision peut
confirmer ou modifier une décision du ministre prise en vertu de l’article 81
ou du paragraphe 84(2) ou en vertu du paragraphe 27.1(2) de la Loi sur la
sécurité de la vieillesse et il peut, à cet égard, prendre toute mesure que
le ministre aurait pu prendre en application de ces dispositions; le
commissaire des tribunaux de révision doit aussitôt donner un avis écrit de
la décision du tribunal et des motifs la justifiant au ministre ainsi qu’aux
parties à l’appel.
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(emphasis
added)
[24]
The
Review Tribunal Rules of Procedure, SOR/92-19 (the Rules) ,
provides:
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3. (1) An appeal to a Tribunal shall
be commenced by conveying to the Commissioner a notice of appeal in writing
setting out
…
(c) the grounds for the appeal
including, if applicable, the grounds that put at issue the constitutional
validity, applicability or operability of the Act or the Old Age Security Act
or regulations made thereunder, and a statement of the facts, issues,
statutory provisions, reasons and documentary evidence that the appellant
intends to rely on in support of the appeal;
…
(2) Notwithstanding subsection (1),
where it appears to the Commissioner that the appellant has failed to provide
information in accordance with any of the requirements of paragraphs (1)(a)
to (d), the Commissioner may take such steps to obtain the information as are
necessary to rectify the failure.
...
4. The Commissioner shall, on receipt
of the notice of appeal, convey a copy of the notice of appeal to the
Minister.
5. The Minister shall, within 20 days
after receipt of the copy of the notice of appeal from the Commissioner,
convey to the Commissioner copies of the following documents relating to the
appeal, where applicable:
(a) the application filed by the
applicant;
(b) such information relating to the
marriage as is required pursuant to subsection 54(2) of the Canada Pension
Plan Regulations;
(c) the notification sent in accordance
with section 46 or 46.1 of the Canada Pension Plan Regulations;
(d) the notification sent in accordance
with subsection 60(7) of the Act or section 16 or 24 of the Old Age Security
Act;
(e) the request made to the Minister
for a reconsideration under subsection 81(1) of the Act or under subsection
27.1(1) of the Old Age Security Act; and
(f) the decision made by the Minister
as a result of the operation of subsection 81(2) or 84(2) of the Act or
subsection 27.1(2) of the Old Age Security Act, the reasons therefor and any
documents that are relevant to that decision.
…
7. The Commissioner shall, on
receipt of the documents referred to in section 5,
(a) select the members to hear the
appeal in accordance with subsection 82(7) of the Act; and
(b) fix the place, in accordance
with subsection 82(8) of the Act, and the time for the hearing of the
appeal.
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3. (1) Un appel auprès d’un tribunal
est interjeté par la transmission d’un avis d’appel au commissaire; cet avis
écrit indique :
…
c) les motifs de l’appel, y compris,
s’il y a lieu, les motifs qui mettent en cause la validité, l’applicabilité
ou l’effet, sur le plan constitutionnel, de la Loi ou de la Loi sur la
sécurité de la vieillesse ou de leurs règlements, ainsi qu’un exposé des
faits, points, dispositions législatives, raisons et preuves documentaires
que l’appelant entend invoquer à l’appui de son appel;
…
(2) Malgré le paragraphe (1), lorsqu’il
appert au commissaire que l’appelant a omis de fournir certains des
renseignements visés aux alinéas (1)a) à d), le commissaire peut prendre les
mesures nécessaires pour obtenir les renseignements manquants et ainsi
corriger l’omission.
…
4. Sur réception de l’avis d’appel, le
commissaire en transmet une copie au ministre.
DORS/96-523, art. 4.
5. Dans les 20 jours qui suivent la
réception de l’avis d’appel envoyé par le commissaire, le ministre transmet à
celui-ci une copie des documents suivants relatifs à l’appel :
a) la demande déposée par le requérant;
b) les renseignements concernant le
mariage exigés en vertu du paragraphe 54(2) du Règlement sur le Régime de
pensions du Canada;
c) l’avis donné conformément aux
articles 46 ou 46.1 du Règlement sur le Régime de pensions du Canada;
d) l’avis donné conformément au
paragraphe 60(7) de la Loi ou la notification donnée conformément aux articles
16 ou 24 de la Loi sur la sécurité de la vieillesse;
e) la demande de révision présentée au
ministre conformément au paragraphe 81(1) de la Loi ou au paragraphe 27.1(1)
de la Loi sur la sécurité de la vieillesse;
f) la décision prise par le ministre en
application des paragraphes 81(2) ou 84(2) de la Loi ou du paragraphe 27.1(2)
de la Loi sur la sécurité de la vieillesse, les motifs de cette décision et
tout document s’y rapportant.
…
7. Le commissaire, sur réception des
documents visés à l’article 5 :
a) choisit conformément au paragraphe
82(7) de la Loi les membres qui entendront l’appel;
b) fixe l’endroit, conformément au
paragraphe 82(8) de la Loi, ainsi que la date et l’heure où l’appel sera
entendu.
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(emphasis
added)
Issues
[25]
In
this matter, the relevant question is not whether a Review Tribunal had the
jurisdiction to hear the matters raised by the Applicant, but whether the
Commissioner has the jurisdiction to refuse to convene a Review Tribunal to
hear the Applicant’s appeal.
[26]
Accordingly,
I consider the issues to be:
a)
Does the
Commissioner of Review Tribunals have the jurisdiction to refuse to convene a
Review Tribunal to hear an appeal?
And alternatively,
b)
Did the
Commissioner fail to observe a principle of procedural fairness by refusing to
convene a Review Tribunal to hear an appeal?
Standard
of Review
[27]
The
Applicant does not make any submissions with respect to the standard of review.
[28]
The
Respondent submits the appropriate standard is correctness with respect to the
issue of the Commissioner’s jurisdiction to decide not to convene a review
Tribunal hearing. The Respondent also submits that the issue of procedural
fairness attracts a correctness standard.
[29]
The
Intervener agrees with the Respondent that the standard of review with respect
to each issue is that of correctness.
[30]
The
Supreme Court of Canada determined in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9 (Dunsmuir) at paras 32-34 that there are only two standards of review
at common law in Canada: reasonableness and correctness. Questions of fact and
mixed questions of fact and law are decided on the reasonableness standard.
Questions of law are determined on the correctness standard.
[31]
The
Supreme Court found determining the appropriate standard of review in a given
case requires two steps. The first step is to look at jurisprudence and see if
the applicable standard has been previously determined in a satisfactory
manner. If not, then a court is to conduct a standard of review analysis:
Dunsmuir at para. 62. This and the companion proceeding are the first
applications before this Court involving a review of the Commissioner’s refusal
to schedule a Review Tribunal hearing.
[32]
Generally,
the jurisdiction of an administrative decision-maker is a question of statutory
interpretation. In Dunsmuir, the Supreme Court writes at para. 29:
Administrative powers are exercised by
decision makers according to statutory regimes that are themselves confined. A
decision maker may not exercise authority not specifically assigned to him or
her. By acting in the absence of legal authority, the decision maker
transgresses the principle of the rule of law. Thus, when a reviewing court
considers the scope of a decision-making power or the jurisdiction conferred by
a statute, the standard of review analysis strives to determine what authority
was intended to be given to the body in relation to the subject matter. This is
done within the context of the courts' constitutional duty to ensure that
public authorities do not overreach their lawful powers: Crevier v. Attorney General
of Quebec, [1981] 2 S.C.R. 220, at p. 234; also Dr. Q v. College of
Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 226, 2003 SCC 19, at para.
21.
[33]
The
Supreme Court characterized true jurisdiction as a question of law requiring a
standard or correctness in Dunsmuir at para. 59:
Administrative bodies must
also be correct in their determinations of true questions of jurisdiction or vires. We
mention true questions of vires to distance ourselves from
the extended definitions adopted before CUPE. It is
important here to take a robust view of jurisdiction. …
"Jurisdiction" is intended in the narrow sense of whether or not the
tribunal had the authority to make the inquiry. In other words, true
jurisdiction questions arise where the tribunal must explicitly determine
whether its statutory grant of power gives it the authority to decide a
particular matter. The tribunal must interpret the grant of authority correctly
or its action will be found to be ultra vires or to
constitute a wrongful decline of jurisdiction: D. J. M.
Brown and J. M. Evans, Judicial Review of Administrative Action
in Canada
(loose-leaf), at pp. 14-3 to 14-6. (emphasis added)
[34]
The
above Supreme Court pronouncement points to correctness as the standard of
review.
[35]
However,
the Supreme Court was careful to emphasize questions of “true” jurisdiction
will be narrow. It had earlier in the judgment acknowledged that deference
would arise “where a tribunal is interpreting its own statute or statutes
closely connected to its function, with which it will have particular
familiarity.
[36]
Here,
the Intervener submits the Commissioner was acting in accordance with the case
management system developed to address the challenges of administering OAS and
CPP appeals. Arguably, the Commissioner is interpreting its own statute or statutes
closely connected to its function with which it has familiarity.
[37]
This
application and the companion application raise for the first time the
jurisdiction for the Commissioner to close an appeal without convening a Review
Tribunal. It therefore invites a standard of review analysis as being a case of
first impression.
[38]
The
standard of review analysis as considered in Baker v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at paras 58-62 (Baker)
and Dunsmuir at para. 64, involves consideration of the following
factors:
1.
The
presence or absence of a privative clause;
2.
The
expertise of the decision-maker;
3.
The
purpose of the provision in particular and the act as a whole; and
4.
The nature
of the problem.
[39]
This
application involves the refusal by the Commissioner to schedule an appeal
hearing before a Review Tribunal. An appeal decision by a Review Tribunal
pursuant to section 28 of the OAS has a privative clause and is subject to
limited review in that it is only reviewable before the Federal Court.
However, there is no restriction or privative clause concerning a decision by
the Commissioner in the exercise of his functions. Accordingly, this factor
tends toward less deference for the Commissioner’s decisions.
[40]
While
the CPP provides that the pool of Review Tribunal members must include a
percentage of members of the bar of a province, paragraph 82.(3)(a), and that
the chairperson of a Review Tribunal must be a member of the bar, paragraph
82.(7), these requirements do not apply to the position of Commissioner or
Deputy Commissioner. The Commissioner may have administrative experience and
expertise arising from performing the Commissioner’s role and may well have
legal training but that is not a requirement for the position for Commissioner.
This points to a less deferential approach in review.
[41]
The
OAS provides pensions and supplements to individuals who meet the eligibility
requirements. That benefit extends to the estates of such individuals. Those
individuals have a statutory right of appeal when dissatisfied with a
reconsideration decision by the Minister. Given the importance of the right of
appeal to the individual, or the individual’s estate, less deference is given
to a decision restricting or denying that right.
[42]
Lastly,
the nature of the decision under review involves an assessment of jurisdiction
rather than an exercise of discretion. In this regard, no deference is to be
given by a Court to an administrative body’s determination of jurisdiction.
[43]
I
find the above analysis indicates that the appropriate standard of review of
the Commissioner’s decision not to convene a Review Tribunal in respect of an
OAS appeal is one of correctness. The Commissioner will be afforded no
deference with respect to his determination he has jurisdiction to refuse to
convene a Review Tribunal.
[44]
On
questions of procedural fairness, the standard or review is the same as that of
correctness which attracts no deference from a
reviewing court: Sketchley v Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FCA 404
at para. 46.
Analysis
[45]
The Applicant submits that the Commissioner’s
decision to close the appeal was not justice. The Applicant reiterates that
Mrs. Stevens had been a good citizen and did not receive the OAS benefits she
was entitled to. The Applicant strongly protests the eleven month limit to the
retroactive payment. The Applicant does not make any
representation on the jurisdictional issue.
[46]
The
Respondent submits that a de novo right of appeal exists before the
Review Tribunal with respect to reconsideration decisions by the Minister
regarding prescribed matters under the OAS. The Respondent submits that once
the statutory requirements for an appeal are satisfied, the Commissioner is
required by statute to choose three Review Tribunal members to hear the Applicant’s
appeal. By refusing to convene a hearing, the Respondent submits the
Commissioner exceeded his jurisdiction and, as well, breached the natural
justice principle of a right to be heard.
[47]
The
Intervener submits the Commissioner has the jurisdiction to close an appeal
file where a Review Tribunal does not have the jurisdiction to decide the
appeal. This jurisdiction arises by consideration of the relevant statutory
provisions. Central to the Intervener’s submission is the case management
system the OCRT has implemented for OAS Review Tribunal appeals.
[48]
I
note that the Intervener also argues the Commissioner’s jurisdiction arises by
necessary implication in oral and written argument in relation to the companion
case, Lambie. Since the Intervener did not advance this argument in its
written submission in this case, I will address the question of jurisdiction by
necessary implication in my decision in Lambie.
The Case Management
System
[49]
The
Intervener has led evidence about its case management system. The Intervener
explains that, in an attempt to provide service appropriate to the appellant
populations who are predominantly self-represented senior citizens with a
diversity of needs and backgrounds, the OCRT implemented a pre-hearing case
management system. This case management system was initially delivered by the
legal unit in 1998 but later was transferred to an administrative unit in 2002.
The Intervener states that the development of the case management process can be
generally summarized as relating to fairness and efficiency considerations.
[50]
The
OCRT receives almost two hundred OAS Notices of Appeal each year. A
considerable number of those appeals raise issues that are not within a Review
Tribunal’s jurisdiction to decide including:
Determination of income: subsection 28(2) of the OAS requires such
determination to be referred to the Tax Court of Canada;
Erroneous Advice/Administrative Error: a Review Tribunal does not have
jurisdiction to review determinations under section 32 of the OAS, the
erroneous advice/administrative error section; the proper remedy of a
Minister’s section 32 determination is an application to the Federal Court for
judicial review;
Remission of Overpayment: a Review Tribunal does not have the authority to
entertain an appeal of the Minister’s decision made under paragraph 37(4)(d) of
the OAS; and
Compassionate grounds/special circumstances: a Review Tribunal, as a creature of
statute, has no equitable jurisdiction and cannot use the principle of fairness
to grant retroactive benefits in excess of statutory grounds.
[51]
The
Intervener states that the very high number of OAS appellants raising issues
that are not within a Review Tribunal’s jurisdiction has been a challenge for
the OCRT since the late 1990’s. These members include appellants requesting
relief from the statutory limit on retroactive OAS pension payments.
[52]
For
instance, the Intervener reports that OAS Notices of Appeal received in the
month of May 2009 is illustrative of the OAS case management challenge. Of the
22 OAS Notices of Appeal:
a)
5 (22%)
raised as the sole ground of appeal compassionate circumstances or allegations
that the Department provided erroneous advice;
b)
3 (18.1%)
raised no ground of appeal or at all;
c)
7(31.8%)
required clarification before grounds of appeal, if any, could be identified;
d)
6 (27.2%)
provided adequate information to ascertain grounds of appeal, but varied
widely.
[53]
The
Intervener estimates the average direct cost of a Review Tribunal hearing is
$1,747 and the average indirect cost is $1,719. For the same year as the
present matter, 2007-08, a total of 69 appeals were closed by the Commissioner
because they were considered to either fail to raise an issue that a Review
Tribunal is authorized to decide or failed to raise a statutory ground of
appeal. The estimated cost of sending these 69 appeals to a review Tribunal
would had totalled approximately $239, 154.
[54]
The
Intervener submits that its case management process attempts to balance the
fairness with efficiency concerns of a modern, high volume administrative
tribunal and reduces hearing wait times for those whose notices of appeal meet
the requirements of section 3(1) of the Rules as well as freeing up
resources for improved client service at the pre-hearing stage.
Statutory Authority
[55]
The
Intervener submits the Commissioner’s jurisdiction may be derived from
statutory interpretation of the legislative framework within which the
Commissioner operates. There is nothing in the OAS, the CPP or the Rules that
prohibit establishment of a case management process for the Review Tribunals.
The legislation and the regulations do not answer every procedural question and
there is no general procedure statute to guide federal administrative tribunals
such as the Review Tribunals. In such circumstances, the Intervener submits
tribunals are entitled to establish their own procedure subject to the duty to
act fairly.
[56]
The
language of subsection 3(1) of the Rules specifically requires an
appellant to provide, inter alia, the grounds for the appeal and a
statement of the facts, issues, statutory provisions, reasons and documentary
evidence the appellant intends to rely on. The Intervener emphasises that
subsection 3(2) of the Rules authorizes the Commissioner may do what is
necessary to obtain the information that will rectify any failure by an
appellant to comply with subsection 3(1).
[57]
The
Intervener says that the mandatory provisions of the Rules, section 4
and subsequent procedural provisions make sense only after the requirements of
subsection 3(1) are met. The Intervener submits that the language of section 3
makes it clear that it is the Commissioner’s responsibility, not a Review
Tribunal’s, to decide when a notice of appeal satisfies those requirements.
[58]
The
Intervener therefore submits the Commissioner may close an appeal file where it
is unlikely that a notice of appeal can be made to meet the requirements of
section 3 either because the proffered reason for the appeal is precluded by
statute or by binding jurisprudence. The Intervener submits the Commissioner is
not assessing an arguable case; he is determining whether an appellant has
raised grounds within a Review Tribunal’s jurisdiction to decide.
[59]
The
Intervener concludes this line of argument by contending that sending every
appeal to a Review Tribunal regardless of the governing legislation would
defeat the purpose of section 3 of the Rules.
[60]
The
first difficulty with the Intervener’s submission that the Commissioner has a
statutory ground for asserting jurisdiction to close an appeal is that the
Commissioner’s powers are circumscribed by the statutory provisions. The
Commissioner is responsible for overseeing the convening of Review Tribunals
and providing administrative services for Review Tribunals. Subsections 82(7),
82(8) and 82(11) all employ mandatory language “must” or “shall” in setting out
the Commissioner’s duties.
[61]
An ordinary reading of section 82 of the CPP
reveals that a Review Tribunal hearing must be scheduled. The use of the word
“shall” indicates the requirement is mandatory. There is no ambiguity in
the statutory language to displace the ordinary meaning of the mandatory
language in section 82: Ruth Sullivan, Driedger on the Construction of
Statutes, 3rd ed. (Toronto and Vancouver: Butterworths, 1994), pp.
369-370.
[62]
Similarly,
section 7 of the Rules also employs the same mandatory language: “The
Commissioner shall, on receipt of the documents referred to in section 5...select
the members to hear the appeal in accordance with subsection 82(7) of the Act;
and... fix the place, in accordance with subsection 82(8) of the Act, and time
for the hearing of the appeal.”
[63]
The
only provision that provides the Commissioner with discretionary authority is
subsection 3(2) of the Rules which provides that the Commissioner may
take steps to obtain information an applicant failed to provide in order to
rectify the failure to comply with section 3(1) of the Rules. In my
view this discretionary authority to take steps to remedy subsection 3(1)
deficiencies does not displace the mandatory requirements of section 82 of the
CPP and the Rules.
[64]
More
importantly, I would hold that the discretionary provision in subsection 3(2)
of the Rules, which is merely a procedural regulation, cannot be
interpreted to defeat a right of appeal given to a person by express statutory
language in section 28 of the OAS and subsection 82(1) of the CPP.
[65]
I
also come to my conclusion that the Commissioner does not have the jurisdiction
to close an appeal file, not only because of the greater import of statutory
language, but also because of the de novo nature of the Review Tribunal
hearing.
De Novo
Hearing
[66]
In
its submissions, the Respondent asserts that an appellant has a de novo
right of appeal from reconsideration decisions by the Minister before the
Review Tribunal. Although the Respondent does not cite any support for this in
its overview, I believe the Respondent is correct.
[67]
None
of the provisions in the OAS, CPP or the Rules expressly specify a
Review Tribunal hearing is a de novo hearing. However, the statutory
provisions leave little doubt the hearing is to be conducted de novo.
[68]
Subsection
28(1) of the OAS indicates that a person may appeal the decision to a Review
Tribunal established under section 82 of the CPP. The right to appeal by right
is reiterated in section 82 of the latter act. A Review Tribunal may exercise
all the powers the Minister has. These powers are set out in section 11:
(11) A Review
Tribunal may confirm or vary a decision of the Minister made under section 81
or subsection 84(2) or under subsection 27.1(2) of the Old Age Security Act and
may take any action in relation to any of those decisions that might have been
taken by the Minister under that section or either of those subsections, and
the Commissioner of Review Tribunals shall thereupon notify the Minister and
the other parties to the appeal of the Review Tribunal’s decision and of the
reasons for its decision.
[69]
Subsection
84(1) provides that a Review Tribunal may decide questions of law or fact,
based on the evidence and, significantly, subsection 84(2) provides that a
Review Tribunal may make findings based on new evidence in a subsequent
rehearing:
84. (1) A
Review Tribunal and the Pension Appeals Board have authority to determine any
question of law or fact …
(2) The
Minister, a Review Tribunal or the Pension Appeals Board may, notwithstanding
subsection (1), on new facts, rescind or amend a decision under this Act
given by him, the Tribunal or the Board, as the case may be.
(emphasis
added)
[70]
Further,
the Rules provide for witnesses to be examined orally, as would be
expected in de novo hearings:
11.1 Witnesses
shall be examined orally under oath at the hearing of an appeal, but, before
the hearing or at any time during the hearing, any party to the appeal may
apply to the Tribunal for an order permitting that all facts or any particular
fact or facts may be proven other than by oral evidence and the Tribunal may
make any order that in its opinion the circumstances of the case require.
[71]
In
Canada (Minister of
Human Resources) v Chhabu, 2005 FC 1277 at para. 17 the Court refers to
and accepts a Review Tribunal hearing as a hearing de novo: “The parties agree
that the appeal before the Review Tribunal is a de novo hearing.”
Similarly, other cases dealing with Review Tribunal hearings treat Review
Tribunal appeals as de novo hearings: Khota v Canada (Minister of
Human Resources and Skills Development), 2007 FC 805 and McDonald v
Canada (Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development), 2009 FC 1074.
[72]
I
conclude that a Review Tribunal hearing on an OAS reconsideration appeal is a de
novo hearing. Accordingly, an appellant may introduce new issues in the
Review Tribunal appeal hearing.
[73]
In
turning to the facts of this application, neither the case management officer
nor the Commissioner made reference to an exception to the statutory limit on
retroactive OAS payments, the incapacity provision, notwithstanding the
Minister’s delegate’s consideration of that issue. Given the de novo nature
of the appeal, it would be open for the Applicants to revisit that issue.
[74]
Because
an appellant has a right to introduce a new issue in a de novo at Review
Tribunal hearing, the Commissioner is in no position to conclusively determine beforehand
an appeal is not within the Review Tribunal’s purview.
[75]
The
Commissioner may not close an appeal file and deny an appellant’s opportunity
to a de novo hearing. Indeed, it is my view the purpose of subsection
3(2) is to enable the Commissioner to facilitate the preparation of a proper appeal
for the Review Tribunal’s consideration. This may involve inquiry to identify
proper grounds and factual evidence required for a Review Tribunal if an
appellant does not articulate as such.
Procedural Fairness
[76]
The
Respondent further submitted that the Commissioner’s refusal to convene a
Review Tribunal’s hearing constituted a breach of procedural fairness because
the Applicant’s had a statutory right to a Review Tribunal hearing.
[77]
In
Baker, the Supreme Court of Canada underlined the key values relating to
procedural fairness at para. 28:
The values underlying the duty of
procedural fairness relate to the principle that the individual or individuals
affected should have the opportunity to present their case fully and fairly,
and have decisions affecting their rights, interests, or privileges made using
a fair, impartial, and open process, appropriate to the statutory,
institutional, and social context of the decision.
[78]
The
Supreme Court set out a non-exhaustive list of factors to consider in
determining the degree of procedural fairness:
a)
The nature
of the decision;
b)
The nature
of the statutory scheme;
c)
The
importance of the decision to the individuals affected;
d)
The
legitimate expectations of the person challenging the provision, and
e)
The choice
of procedure made by the agency itself.
[79]
The
OAS/CPP statutory scheme provides individuals with a means of appealing a
reconsideration decision by the Minister or his delegate. This right of appeal
is significant. It provides for a hearing that allows for submission of
evidence, receipt of relevant materials beforehand and a panel of three
decision makers who would provide reasons along with their decision. Clearly, a
person would have a legitimate expectation of a receiving full hearing upon
filing an appeal.
[80]
It
is also apparent that the OAS appeal process is available to self-represented
applicants and, in fact, a significant number of such appeals are made by
self-represented parties who are uninformed about the requirements about the
requirements of subsection 3(1) of the Rules. This is the very reason
given for the introduction for the case management process adopted by the OCRT.
[81]
Subsection
3(2) of the Rules provides that the Commissioner “may take such steps to
obtain the information as are necessary to rectify the failure.” The
Commissioner did not make any effort to address the perceived deficiency in the
Applicant’s appeal before the June 5, 2008 decision or the July 11, 2008 reconfirmation
closing the Applicant’s appeal file.
[82]
I
find that by deciding on June 5, 2008 not to convene a Review Tribunal hearing
without first alerting the Applicant to any perceived deficiency in its Notice
of Appeal, the Commissioner denied the Applicant access to a Review Tribunal
hearing.
[83]
It
is no answer for the Commissioner to point to his reconsideration decision on
July 11, 2008 since there was no offer to reconsider. Instead it was merely a
confirmation of a previously made decision in response to the Applicant’s
relayed request to reopen its appeal.
[84]
I
find the Commissioner breached procedural fairness in closing the appeal
without affording the Applicant’s the right to be heard by a Review Tribunal.
Conclusion
[85]
I
conclude the Commissioner does not have the jurisdiction to close the Applicant’s
OAS appeal file without convening a Review Tribunal to hear the appeal.
[86]
The
application for judicial review is granted.
[87]
I
make no order for costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1. The
application for judicial review is granted.
2. The matter is
remitted to the Commissioner to re-determine this matter in accordance with
these reasons.
3. No order for
costs is made.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”