Docket: T-1263-10
Citation: 2011 FC 1355
[UNREVISED
ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa,
Ontario, November 24, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable
Madam Justice Bédard
BETWEEN:
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AIDA MARIÈME SECK
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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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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review in accordance with section 18.1 of the Federal
Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, of a decision by the Public Service Commission
(Commission) that Aida Marième Seck (applicant) committed fraud in the course
of an appointment process within the Public Service by submitting false
references.
[2]
For the
following reasons, the application for judicial review is dismissed.
I. Background and decision
[3]
In March
2008, the applicant participated in a competition to fill a management and
consular officer position within the Department of Foreign Affairs and
International Trade (Department). On February 16, 2009, the Commission was
informed that there was reason to believe that the applicant had committed
fraud in the course of the selection process. The Commission therefore started
an investigation pursuant to section 69 of the Public Service Employment Act,
SC 2003, c 22 (Act), which reads as follows:
69. If
it has reason to believe that fraud may have occurred in an appointment
process, the Commission may investigate the appointment process and, if it is
satisfied that fraud has occurred, the Commission may
(a) revoke
the appointment or not make the appointment, as the case may be; and
(b) take
any corrective action that it considers appropriate.
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69. La
Commission peut mener une enquête si elle a des motifs de croire qu’il
pourrait y avoir eu fraude dans le processus de nomination; si elle est
convaincue de l’existence de la fraude, elle peut :
a) révoquer la nomination ou ne
pas faire la nomination, selon le cas;
b) prendre les mesures
correctives qu’elle estime indiquées.
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[4]
The
background that gave rise to the investigation is as follows.
[5]
In the
course of the selection process in question, the candidates had to provide the
names of three people who could give them a reference. The applicant provided
three names as references, including that of Rose M’Kounga, who she said had
been her supervisor in 2003‑2004. When the Department contacted Ms.
M’Kounga to obtain information on the applicant, she indicated that she did not
have time to participate in a telephone interview, but offered to answer the
questions in writing. She then submitted the reference request form with her
answers to the various questions. The answers given by Ms. M’Kounga were exhaustive,
detailed and included very positive comments on the applicant’s competencies
and qualifications.
[6]
The
Commission had a suspicion that the references had been prepared not by Ms. M’Kounga,
but by the applicant and/or her mother, Gisèle Seck, in the following context. The
Department of Natural Resources Canada (DNR), where the applicant’s mother
worked, had carried out an investigation on Gisèle Seck’s use of the
departmental computer networks. In the course of that investigation, several emails
exchanged between the applicant, Ms. Seck and Ms. M’Kounga, related to the
references Ms. M’Kounga would provide for the applicant, were intercepted. A
DNR manager then sent these emails to the Commission.
[7]
In light
of these emails, the Commission started an investigation to verify whether the
applicant had committed fraud during the selection process. In a report dated
April 30, 2010, the person in charge of the investigation found that the
applicant had committed the fraud she was suspected of. She found that the
evidence demonstrated that Ms. M’Kounga and the applicant had never worked
together, that Ms. M’Kounga was therefore not entitled to give a reference for
the applicant and that the written reference had been compiled not by Ms.
M’Kounga, but by the applicant and/or her mother.
[8]
On July 5,
2010, the President of the Commission signed the record of decision, which
adopted the findings of the investigation report. The record of decision, which
orders three corrective actions, reads as follows:
[translation]
. . .
The
investigation found that fraud was committed in the appointment process by
Marième Seck, a candidate, and Rose M’Kounga, who gave a false reference for Ms.
Seck. Ms. Seck was not appointed to the management and consular officer
position. Ms. Seck and Ms. M’Kounga are employees at the Canada Revenue
Agency.
In
accordance with its authority set out in section 69 of the Public Service Employment Act (PSEA), the Commission hereby orders that:
·
for a period of three
years from the signing of this Record of Decision, Ms. Seck and Ms. M’Kounga obtain
written permission from the Commission before accepting a position within the
federal public service. If they accept a determinate or indeterminate
appointment within the federal public service without first obtaining such
permission, their appointment will be revoked;
·
a copy of
investigation report 2009-EXT-00049.7408, record of decision 10-06-ID-49 and
any other relevant information on Ms. Seck and Ms. M’Kounga be sent to the
Canada Revenue Agency;
·
a copy of
investigation report 2009-EXT-00049.7408 and any other relevant information be
sent to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for the purposes of section 133 of
the PSEA.
II. Issues
[9]
This
application for judicial review raises the following issues:
A. Did the Commission err by launching an investigation
under section 69 of the Act when the applicant was not the successful candidate
or appointed at the end of the selection process?
B. Did the Commission breach the rules of natural justice or
procedural fairness?
C. Did the Commission err in its assessment of the evidence?
III. Standard of review
[10]
I am of
the opinion that the first issue must be analyzed on the standard of
reasonableness. In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paragraph 54,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, the Supreme Court stated that a decision by a tribunal
interpreting its own statute or statues closely related to its function is usually
entitled to deference. In this case, the interpretation and application of
section 69 of the Act are at the heart of the Commission’s mandate and
expertise.
[11]
The second
issue concerns the Commission’s duty to act fairly and this issue must be
reviewed on the standard of correctness (Belzile v Canada (Attorney General),
2006 FC 983 at paragraph 33, 306 FTR 39).
[12]
The third
issue, which raises a question of fact, will be subject to the standard of
reasonableness (Challal v Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FC 1251 (available
on CanLII)).
IV. Analysis
A. Did the Commission err by launching an investigation
under section 69 of the Act when the applicant was not the successful candidate
or appointed at the end of the selection process?
[13]
The applicant
submits that the jurisdiction of the Commission, by virtue of section 69 of the
Act, is limited to situations where the person being investigated is the person
to be appointed or the person who was appointed at the end of the process and
that the corrective action mentioned in paragraph (b) is incidental to
the principal action which is to not make the appointment or to revoke the
appointment if already made.
[14]
The
respondent maintains that the Act must be broad in scope. He relies on the
preamble to the Act and on the wording of section 69, which confer on the Commission
an investigative authority over “an appointment process”.
[15]
I share
the respondent’s opinion. First, it is clear in the preamble to the Act and in
the Act in its entirety that Parliament conferred on the Commission the
responsibility to protect the integrity and impartiality of appointment
processes and to support the merit principle. Second, it seems evident in
reading section 69 that the Commission’s mandate relates to any fraud that may
have been committed in the course of an appointment process instead of
only when a person suspected of fraud is the successful candidate. Furthermore,
there is no reason to conclude that the possibility for the Commission to “take
any corrective action that it considers appropriate” applies only when it first
decides to revoke or to not make an appointment. I see nothing to suggest that
this authority is dependent on and secondary to an order rendered in accordance
with paragraph (a). Instead, I understand from section 69 of the Act
that the Commission may not make or revoke an appointment if the person
suspected of fraud is the person chosen at the end of the appointment process. If
so, the Commission may also take other additional actions that it considers
appropriate. When the person concerned is not the successful candidate, the
Commission may still investigate and take any corrective action that it
considers appropriate. The authority conferred on the Commission is very broad
and gives it the flexibility to adapt the corrective action to the
circumstances specific to each file.
[16]
I
therefore find that the applicant’s argument has no merit and that the Commission
had the authority to investigate whether the applicant had committed fraud.
B. Did the Commission breach the rules of natural justice
or procedural fairness?
[17]
The
applicant submits that the Commission breached its duty of procedural fairness
in several respects, namely:
- She criticizes the investigator for
prejudging her guilt from the start and being biased during the entire
investigation;
- She criticizes the investigator for
refusing to disclose the names of the people at the DNR who sent
information to the Commission;
- She criticizes the investigator for not
disclosing certain elements and documents before the meeting on December 1,
2009. It should be noted that counsel for the applicant was unable to
specify to the Court the nature of the elements and documents that the
investigator apparently refused to disclose to the applicant;
- She criticizes the investigator for creating
confusion during the meeting of December 1, 2009, which was in
regard to two different promotion processes.
[18]
After
reviewing all of the meeting notes, all of the documents and correspondence
exchanged, and the investigation report, I am of the view that there is no
basis for the applicant’s allegations and that the Commission respected its
duty to act fairly.
[19]
First, the
Commission clearly informed the applicant of the nature of the investigation
and of the allegations against her at each step of the investigation. Second, at
each step of the investigation, the Commission informed the applicant of the
elements available to her, and the applicant received, at each step, the
opportunity to submit her version of events and to give her point of view. Third,
the applicant was represented by counsel during the investigation. However,
counsel for the applicant never indicated that the Commission had refused to
send his client any document whatsoever or that the investigator had created
confusion during the meeting of September 1, 2009. Furthermore, no confusion is
apparent in the notes from that meeting.
[20]
The
applicant also criticizes the Commission for concluding its investigation
without questioning Ms. Seck, who was an important witness. The Court notes
that the investigation report indicates that Ms. Seck had not been questioned
because it was impossible to reach or locate her. It is also noted that the
applicant apparently indicated that Ms. Seck had been in Africa, where she had had
to take care of family business. It would have been relevant for the
applicant to try to contact her if she found it important that her mother give
testimony in the course of the investigation. However, nothing in the file
indicates that the applicant had been unable to contact her mother while she
was in Africa or that she tried to contact her.
C. Did the Commission err in its assessment of the
evidence?
[21]
I believe
that the Commission’s decision is reasonable and that it is based on the
evidence gathered during the investigation. It was entirely reasonable for the Commission
to find that the evidence did not demonstrate that the applicant and Ms. M’Kounga
had worked together during the 2003-2004 period and that, as a result, Ms. M’Kounga
was not entitled to give a reference for the applicant. The versions given by
the applicant and Ms. M’Kounga contained numerous contradictions and
inconsistencies.
[22]
First, the
applicant indicated that Ms. M’Kounga had been her supervisor in 2003-2004. She
then indicated that she had made a mistake in indicating that Ms. M’Kounga had
been her supervisor. Second, the written reference given by Ms. M’Kounga was
detailed and very specific with respect to the applicant’s qualifications and
tasks. However, when questioned by the investigator, Ms. M’Kounga was very
vague regarding the work the applicant had performed for her. She did not seem
to specifically recall when and where the applicant had worked under her
supervision. She stated that she believed that it was in 2003-2004 at the
Correctional Service of Canada. These answers are completely inconsistent with
the level of detail contained in the reference given by Ms. M’Kounga. The
applicant was just as vague. She indicated that she thought she had worked for
Ms. M’Kounga for a few months at the Treasury Board Secretariat. However, Ms.
M’Kounga’s curriculum vitae indicates that she was working at Agriculture
Canada in 2003‑2004 and that she had never worked for the Treasury Board
Secretariat. Faced with such inconsistencies, it was completely reasonable for
the Commission to find that Ms. M’Kounga was not the applicant’s supervisor in
the 2003-2004 period.
[23]
It was
also reasonable, in light of the evidence, to find that Ms. M’Kounga had not herself
prepared the written reference that she submitted with respect to the applicant
and that it was instead prepared by the applicant and her mother. The
investigation report contains the following table showing email exchanges
between the applicant, Ms. Seck, Ms. M’Kounga and Nancy Doyle, who
the reference was sent to:
[translation]
Date\time
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From
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To
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Subject
line
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Content
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Email
#1
08/12/2008
3:45
p.m.
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Marième
Seck
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Rose
M’Kounga
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Info
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[translation] “Has DFAIT contacted you
regarding my references for the MCO-AS-04 by any chance? Someone named Lydia
Camille.”
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Email
#2
08/13/2008
3:51
p.m.
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N.
M-Doyle
(DFAIT)
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Rose
M’Kounga
(CRA)
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Reference
Materials-Management and Consular Affairs Officer (MCO)-AS-04
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[translation] “Hello Rose: As per our
discussion, please find attached the questions concerning Aïda Seck. Attachments:
AS-04 Reference CheckGuide for Referee.doc.”
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Email
#3
08/13/2008
3:59
p.m.
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Rose
M’Kounga
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Marième
Seck
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Re:
Info
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[translation] “Here you go. Work on it
and send it back to me. Attachments: AS-04 Reference CheckGuide for Referee.doc.”
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Email
#4
08/18/2008
10:50
a.m.
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Marième
Seck
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Rose
M’Kounga
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Attachments:
AS-04 Reference CheckGuide for Referee(2).doc-MCO-DOC.
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Email
#5
08/18/2008
11:57
a.m.
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Marième
Seck
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Rose
M’Kounga
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[translation] The final thing
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Attachments:
AS-04 Reference CheckGuide for Referee-MCO fin.doc.
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Email
#6
08/19/2008
8:32
a.m.
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Marième
Seck (CRA)
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Gisèle
Seck (NRCan)
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[translation] Questions for review
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Email
#7
08/19/2008
11:18
a.m.
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Gisèle
Seck
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Marième
Seck
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[translation] Re: Questions for review
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[translation] “Hello my dear, here you
go. GS. Att: Revised AS-04 Reference CheckGuide for Referee-MCO fin.doc”
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Email
#8
08/19/2008
1:28
p.m.
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Rose
M’Kounga
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N.
M. Doyle (DFAIT)
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FW:
Reference Materials-Management and Consular Affairs Officer (MCO)-AS-04
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[translation] “Hello Nancy, I apologize
for the delay, but like I told you, I was working on an urgent project that I
was only able to deliver about 2 hours ago. . . . I hope this is OK and
that it will help you make the right decision with respect to Ms. Seck. She
is a very efficient person and I am sure that no one in our team at that time
could forget that young woman. She was enthusiastic at work, had a sense of
humour and would often make us laugh with her absolutely unbelievable jokes.”
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[24]
The
applicant argues that the investigator failed to consider the email Ms. M’Kounga
sent to Ms. Seck on June 23, 2008, and another email that she herself sent to
Ms. M’Kounga on November 22, 2007. In her opinion, these emails show that
Ms. M’Kounga did not ask for the references to be prepared in her place, but
wanted inspiration from a prior reference that she gave regarding the applicant.
The following is the content of those emails.
Email sent by Ms. M’Kounga to Gisèle Seck
on June 23, 2008:
[translation]
Hello my dear,
Listen, I replied to the reference
questions for Marième for that ES‑05 competition and they seemed to be OK.
At the time, I sent her the email with a copy of what I sent the woman doing
the hiring. I am waiting for them to call me for her AS-04. I asked her to find
me that document so that I can use the same answers that I had already much improved.
. . . I know that you must have it in your system at home. Please, if you have
time, could you find it and send it to me? Thank you. . . .
Email sent by the applicant to Ms. M’Kounga on
November 22, 2007:
[translation]
Hello Auntie Rose,
Here is what you wrote for my competition
last time. You can maybe use it as a basis for answering the questions this
time.
I will call you tomorrow morning at the
office.
Thank you.
[25]
With
respect, I do not see how these emails render the findings made by the
investigator unreasonable. First, these emails change nothing with respect to
the logical inferences the Commission drew from the emails mentioned in the
table reproduced above.
[26]
Furthermore,
the investigation report contains, at paragraph 9, examples that illustrate the
evolution of the written answers to the reference questions that were drafted
and then sent by Ms. M’Kounga:
Question 2: How does the candidate act under pressure?
/ Comment le candidat agit-il lorsqu’il est sous pression?
Email #2 (N. Mastalerz-Dole to Rose
M’Kounga)
Blank
Email#3 (Rose M’Kounga to Marième Seck)
Blank
Emails #4 and #5 (Marième Seck to Rose
M’Kounga)
[translation]
“When under pressure, Ms. Seck demonstrates creativity and uses her
organizational skills. She prepares the documents required for accomplishing
the work in record time.”
Email # 7 (Gisèle Seck to Marième Seck)
[translation]
“When under pressure, Ms. Seck demonstrates creativity and uses her
organizational skills. She remains calm and patient and never loses sight of
the objective. For example, she manages to prepare the documents required for
accomplishing the work in record time.”
Email #8 (Rose M’Kounga to N.
Mastalerz-Dole)
[translation]
“When under pressure, Ms. Seck demonstrates creativity and uses her
organizational skills. She remains calm and patient and never loses sight of
the objective. She establishes her priorities in order of importance and
executes her work without panicking. For example, she always manages to prepare
the documents required for accomplishing the work in the desired time. Otherwise
and when necessary, she asks for help from her colleagues, with whom she always
gets along well.”
[27]
It is not
unreasonable to infer from these emails that the answers evolved and that the
applicant and her mother participated in preparing the answers. Ms. M’Kounga also
gave different versions of the circumstances in which she said she prepared the
reference. In the first version, she stated that she relied on the reference
she gave for a prior process. The investigator did not accept this explanation
because the questions asked in the prior selection process were different and
did not measure the same competencies, and the answers given by Ms. M’Kounga
were themselves different. In
the second version, Ms. M’Kounga admitted that she had received [translation] “input” from someone, but
indicated that she had adopted this reference as her own.
[28]
I feel
that, in light of the evidence as a whole, it was reasonable for the Commission
to find that Ms. M’Kounga had never been the applicant’s supervisor and that
the reference submitted by Ms. M’Kounga had been written by the applicant
and her mother. The Commission’s decision is reasonably supported by the
evidence, and the investigation report is intelligible and well articulated. There
is therefore no basis for the Court to intervene.
[29]
The
respondent sought costs and submitted a bill of costs in the amount of $3,150.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that
the
application for judicial review is dismissed and costs in the amount of $3,150
are awarded to the respondent.
“Marie-Josée Bédard”
Certified
true translation
Janine
Anderson, Translator