Date: 20110120
Docket: T-149-10
Citation: 2011 FC 71
Montréal, Quebec, January 20, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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LORETTA BEST
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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]
The
applicant challenges the legality of the decision of the Canadian Human Rights
Commission (the Commission), dated December 23, 2009, to not deal with a
complaint of discrimination on the basis of disability, sex and family status
as per the Canadian Human Rights Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. H-6 (CHRA),
filed by the applicant, a former member of the Canadian Forces (CF).
[2]
The
applicant is a single mother of three. After taking a break from employment to
have her children, she re-enlisted with the CF in 1998. At the time of her
re-hiring, she was undergoing counselling with a civilian psychiatrist as a
result of her divorce. Although not noted in her file, the understanding was
that counselling was a temporary measure due to the stress of the divorce. The
applicant is also dyslexic, although this diagnosis was only made after her
dismissal and so was not brought to the attention of her immediate supervisor
during her employment with the CF.
[3]
The
applicant’s counselling proved to be permanent. The net result was frequent
absences from work which, because they were with a civilian psychiatrist, did
not come within the CF’s medical leave policy.
[4]
The
applicant had a recurring record of absenteeism because of her counselling, but
also due to other reasons, such as her court appointments, her physiotherapy
appointments, her children getting home from school and her children’s
illnesses. While the applicant’s absences were initially accommodated, the CF
was eventually forced to address the problem.
[5]
First,
as a result of the applicant’s continued need for counselling, the CF sought a
medical assessment of the applicant. The assessment confirmed the need for
ongoing treatment. The assessment was reviewed and confirmed on several
occasions.
[6]
Second,
attempts were also made to reduce the applicant’s absenteeism: she was asked to
make up the hours that were spent seeing to personal issues and her phone-in
sick leave privileges were withdrawn. The applicant was unable to work after 3
p.m., as she had to get home to supervise her children, so she worked the extra
hours on her lunch break. When the applicant surpassed her allotted sick leave,
her direct supervisor required the applicant to take annual leave.
[7]
Nonetheless,
the efforts were unsuccessful and the CF notified the applicant of her pending
release based on her need for ongoing specialist care in January 2004. The
applicant went on sick leave from February 20, 2004 to March 4, 2004 and from
March 23-31, 2004. During this period, the CF offered the applicant part time
employment, which was refused. The applicant’s medical release was approved by
the CF’s releasing authority on April 13, 2004 and became effective on October
14, 2004.
[8]
In
October 2005, the applicant filed a complaint with the Commission alleging
discrimination under sections 7, 8, 9 10 and 12 of the CHRA. After an
initial investigation, the investigator determined that only disability under
section 7 of the CHRA was relevant, specifically the allegation that the CF
terminated the applicant’s employment on the basis of disability.
[9]
In
a Report dated April 1, 2008 (Report #1), the investigator found that the CF
terminated the applicant’s employment pursuant to the CF’s policy of
Universality of Service. This policy found at section 33 of the National
Defense Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. N-5 states:
Liability
in case of regular force
33. (1) The
regular force, all units and other elements thereof and all officers and
non-commissioned members thereof are at all times liable to perform any
lawful duty.
Liability
in case of reserve force
(2) The
reserve force, all units and other elements thereof and all officers and
non-commissioned members thereof
(a) may be
ordered to train for such periods as are prescribed in regulations made by
the Governor in Council; and
(b) may be called out
on service to perform any lawful duty other than training at such times and
in such manner as by regulations or otherwise are prescribed by the Governor
in Council.
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Obligation
de la force régulière
33.
(1) La force régulière, ses unités et autres éléments, ainsi que tous ses
officiers et militaires du rang, sont en permanence soumis à l’obligation de
service légitime.
Obligation
de la force de réserve
(2)
La force de réserve, ses unités et autres éléments, ainsi que tous ses
officiers et militaires du rang, peuvent être :
a)
astreints à l’instruction pour les périodes fixées par règlement du
gouverneur en conseil;
b) soumis à
l’obligation de service légitime autre que l’instruction, aux époques et
selon les modalités fixées par le gouverneur en conseil par règlement ou
toute autre voie.
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[Emphasis added]
[10]
The
investigator concluded that the applicant’s medical condition did not permit
her to perform all military duties as required by the CF’s Universality of
Service policy. As such, the investigator recommended that the applicant’s
complaint be dismissed.
[11]
The
CF filed a response to Report #1. The applicant responded to Report #1, and
sought to have the complaint amended to add the grounds of sex and family
status. Following submissions on the request to amend from both parties, the
Commission agreed to deal with the amended complaint. The Commission requested
a further investigation and a supplementary investigator’s report.
[12]
Following
further investigation, the investigator filed a Supplementary Investigator’s
Report on September 23, 2009 (Report #2). Report #2 concluded that the evidence
did not establish that there were disadvantages or burdens imposed on the
applicant, either directly or indirectly, due to her sex or family status.
[13]
Both
parties filed responses to Report #2. After consideration of all of the reports
and submissions, the Commission concluded that the evidence supported that the
applicant’s medical condition did not permit her to perform all military duties
and that her termination was pursuant to its Universality of Service policy.
The Commission also concluded that the evidence did not support the assertion
that the respondent discriminated against the applicant, directly or
indirectly, due to her sex or family status. Consequently, the Commission
exercised its discretion to dismiss the complaint on the basis that no further
inquiry was warranted.
[14]
The
applicant now criticizes the Commission for having breached procedural fairness
and for having made an unreasonable decision by refusing to deal with the
complaint in question. The Attorney General of Canada (the respondent), submits
that the decision was reasonable and that there was no breach of procedural fairness
by the Commission.
[15]
The
applicable standard of review to a decision of the Commission dismissing a
complaint is that of reasonableness (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC
9; Deschênes v Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FC 1126 at paragraph 9).
In the context of judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process. It is also concerned with whether the decision falls
within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect
of the facts and the law (Dunsmuir, above, at paragraph 47).
[16]
Questions
of procedural fairness are, however, reviewable on a standard of correctness (Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at paragraph 43; Bateman v Canada (Attorney
General),
2008 FC 393 at paragraph 20). Procedural fairness dictates that parties be
informed of the substance of the evidence obtained by the investigator which
will be put before the Commission and that parties be given the chance to
respond to the evidence (Deschênes, above, at paragraph 10).
[17]
For
the following reasons, the application for judicial review must fail.
[18]
The
applicant’s claim that the Commission violated her right to procedural fairness
must fail.
[19]
The
duty of fairness owed to the applicant by the Commission requires that the
investigation be neutral and thorough (Slattery v Canada (Human Rights
Commission), [1994] 2 F.C. 574 at paragraph 49, affirmed (1996), 205 N.R.
383 (C.A.) and that the parties be informed of the substance of the evidence
obtained by the investigator to be put before the Commission, as well as given
the chance to respond to this evidence and make all relevant representations
thereto (Syndicat des employés de production du Québec et de l’Acadie v
Canada (C.H.R.C.), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 879 at 902; Deschênes v Canada
(Attorney General), 2009 FC 1126 at paragraph 10).
[20]
The
applicant makes no allegation of impartiality against the investigator. Rather,
she argues that the investigation was not thorough, as the investigator failed
to interview both her and her proposed witness, her partner Warrant Officer
Doug McQueen, also a member of the CF.
[21]
The
practical effect of the duty of thoroughness is canvassed by Justice Nadon in Slattery,
above, at paras 56 and 57:
Deference
must be given to administrative decision-makers to assess the probative value
of evidence and to decide to further investigate or not to further investigate
accordingly. It should only be where unreasonable omissions are made, for
example where an investigator failed to investigate obviously crucial evidence,
that judicial review is warranted. Such an approach is consistent with the
deference allotted to fact-finding activities of the Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal by the Supreme Court in the case of Canada (Attorney General) v.
Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 554.
In contexts where parties have the legal right to make submissions
in response to an investigator's report, such as in the case at bar, parties
may be able to compensate for more minor omissions by bringing such omissions
to the attention of the decision-maker. Therefore, it should be only where
complainants are unable to rectify such omissions that judicial review would be
warranted.
Although this is by no means an exhaustive list, it would seem to me that
circumstances where further submissions cannot compensate for an investigator's
omissions would include: (1) where the omission is of such a fundamental nature
that merely drawing the decision-maker's attention to the omission cannot
compensate for it; or (2) where fundamental evidence is inaccessible to the
decision-maker by virtue of the protected nature of the information or where
the decision-maker explicitly disregards it.
[Emphasis added]
[22]
The
investigator’s duty of thoroughness clearly does not require the investigator
to interview every person proposed by the applicant (Miller v Canada (CHRC),
[1996] F.C.J. No. 735 (QL), at paragraph 10). Rather, the investigator must
simply ensure that all of the fundamental issues raised in the complaint were
all dealt with in the report (Bateman, above, at paragraph 29).
[23]
The
applicant submitted her disability complaint and responded to Report #1. She
thus had ample opportunity to both make her primary case and respond to the investigator’s
understanding of her situation. No argument is made as to any specific
information that she was unable to communicate to the investigator as a result
of her not being interviewed. The investigator’s decision to not interview the
applicant thus does not reflect on the thoroughness of the investigation.
[24]
The
same reasoning applies to the investigator’s decision to not interview Warrant
Office McQueen. Warrant Officer McQueen was proposed as a witness primarily on
the CF’s rules and policies. These topics were addressed in Report #2, and thus
the failure to interview him had no impact on the thoroughness of the
investigation.
[25]
Addressing
now the reasonability of the Commission’s decision to reject the applicant’s
complaint based on disability on the basis that no further inquiry was
warranted, it is uncontested that the applicant suffers from a chronic medical
condition requiring ongoing treatment. The evidence on record clearly shows
that the applicant was not capable of being deployed to combat and therefore
did not meet the CF’s Universality of Service policy.
[26]
Furthermore,
notwithstanding the applicant’s assertion that the Commission failed to review bona
fide occupational requirements, as set out in British Columbia (Public
Service Employee Relations Commission) v B.C.G.E.U. (“Meiorin”), [1999] 3
S.C.R. 3 at paras 71 and 72, subsection 15(9) of the CHRA provides that
the Universality of Service policy is a bona fide occupational
requirement and is thus an exception to the requirement under subsection 15(2) CHRA
to establish that accommodation would result in undue hardship:
15.
(9) Subsection (2) is subject to the principle of universality of service
under which members of the Canadian Forces must at all times and under any
circumstances perform any functions that they may be required to perform.
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15.
(9) Le paragraphe (2) s’applique sous réserve de l’obligation de service
imposée aux membres des Forces canadiennes, c’est-à-dire celle d’accomplir en
permanence et en toutes circonstances les fonctions auxquelles ils peuvent être
tenus.
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[27]
The
above provision means that the policy itself cannot be challenged as
discriminatory. However, the application of the policy can be. To this end, the
investigator confirmed that the policy was adopted for a purpose rationally
connected to the performance of the job, that the policy is based on an honest
and good faith belief that is necessary for fulfillment of that legitimate
work-related purpose, and that the policy is necessary to achieve the
legitimate work-related purpose.
[28]
The
investigator then analyzed what efforts were taken to accommodate the applicant
and whether the evidence showed that it was impossible to accommodate the
applicant without undue hardship. The investigator’s review was extensive, and
the numerous medical reports figured centrally in the analysis. The applicant
was individually assessed on several occasions by CF doctors who consulted with
the applicant’s treating psychiatrist. The assessment that the applicant
required continued treatment was supported by the applicant’s doctor at the
time and subsequently.
[29]
In
the case of a judicial review of an application of the Universality of Service
policy, the Court is not entitled to reassess the medical reports and reach its
own conclusions. The Court must simply determine that a fair assessment of all
the available medical evidence was undertaken (Irvine v Canada (Canadian
Armed Forces), 2005 FCA 432 at paras 2 to 5). The
applicant’s medical reports demonstrate a clear consensus that she would
require continued therapy and the Court finds no reason to conclude that the
investigator did not undertake a fair assessment of all available medical
evidence.
[30]
Thus,
given the concerted opinion of the medical experts that the applicant would
continue to require therapy and the investigator’s thorough analysis of the
application of the policy, the Court concludes that Report #1’s conclusion that
there was no discrimination based on disability was justifiable and the
Commission’s decision to not proceed with the disability complaint reasonable.
[31]
As
for Report #2, the applicant’s allegation that the Commission erred in law in
concluding that the applicant did not make out a prima facie case of
discrimination based on sex and family status is wholly unfounded. The
investigator undertook a thorough analysis of all the evidence submitted, even
interviewing the applicant and hearing witnesses from the CF. The investigator
noted several factual discrepancies between the two parties and found the CF to
be more credible. The applicant’s allegations are general in nature and are not
supported by any documentary evidence. In light thereof, the investigator’s
recommendation and the Commission’s subsequent decision not to proceed with the
sex and family status complaint is reasonable.
[32]
Despite
the suggestion made by the applicant that the complaint is without merit and
that she should be allowed to proceed to the Tribunal of Human Rights, on the
whole I am satisfied that the Commission’s decision to dismiss the complaint on
the basis that no further inquiry was warranted, constitutes an acceptable
outcome which is defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[33]
Consequently,
while the applicant may not agree with the final decision reached by the
Commission, the impugned decision is reasonable and there is no lack of
procedural fairness in the process by which this decision was made.
[34]
The
application for judicial review is thus rejected. In view of the result, costs
are awarded in favour of the respondent.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that the application for judicial review be dismissed with costs
in favour of the respondent.
“Luc Martineau”