Date: 20070926
Docket: T-1485-06
Citation: 2007 FC 966
[ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, September 26, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Orville Frenette
BETWEEN:
PIERRE GIRARD
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Pierre Girard (the applicant) filed an
application for judicial review, pursuant to section 18.1 of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7 (FCA), of a decision by Clovis Dorval (the
decision-maker), Assistant Director, Audit Division, Eastern Quebec Tax
Services Office of the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). In a letter dated July 14,
2006, the decision-maker dismissed the applicant’s application for review on
the grounds that he was not treated arbitrarily during selection process
#2005-3745-QUÉ-1206-1002 in regard to his competencies in Teamwork and
Cooperation (TEC).
THE FACTS
[2]
As a long-time CRA employee, the applicant applied
to an AU-03 competition for a Tax Auditor position, in selection process
#2005-3745-QUÉ-1206-1002, on July 14, 2006.
[3]
On October 28, 2005, the applicant filed his Portfolio
of Competencies with the names of three references, naming Roger Doucet as a validator.
Bernard Lamy (the evaluator) reviewed the applicant’s competencies and then, at
random, chose to contact Roger Doucet, one of three references proposed by the
applicant, in order to validate the information in his Portfolio of
Competencies.
[4]
Mr. Doucet refused to validate the applicant’s
comments with respect to his Teamwork and Cooperation competencies. In
his affidavit, solemnly affirmed on November 6, 2006, Mr. Doucet states the
following at paragraph 4:
[translation]
As it appears from
these comments, I refused to validate the Teamwork and Cooperation competency
for Mr. Girard for the following reasons:
a.
The method described by Mr. Girard originated in
policy 83-19 issued on September 30, 1983, by the Policy and
Systems Branch and was therefore not at all innovative;
b. Since the summer of 2003, a directive allowed its use under
exceptional conditions;
c. Mr. Girard did not propose to me that he would formally present this
“method” to the other team members;
d. I asked him several times to present a topic at annual meetings, and
he always refused, saying that he was not comfortable;
e. Mr. Girard did not recommend that team members be referred to him
who would face a situation where the “method” could be used. Rather, it was me who
encouraged him to share his knowledge during the technical meeting;
f.
There was no comment noted regarding his
contribution to the team during the performance assessment and the previous assessments
except in 2002, when he was paired with another employee.
[5]
Faced with this refusal to confirm, Mr. Lamy wrote
in his report dated November 14, 2005, that the TAC competency was [translation] “not demonstrated”. Accordingly,
the applicant did not meet one of the necessary conditions for the position and
his application was excluded from the competition.
[6]
Dissatisfied with the results of this assessment,
the applicant, alleging that the decision was arbitrary, first requested
individual feedback, then a review of the decision, which both resulted in the
original decision being upheld. Having exhausted all of the internal recourse, the
applicant filed this application for judicial review and alleges that the
decision-maker made an arbitrary assessment of his competencies. He requests
that his request for a review be referred to a different manager to be
reassessed.
ISSUE
[7]
The points raised by the applicant can be
summarized as follows:
1. Were the
decision-maker’s reasons adequate?
2. Was
the decision of decision-maker Clovis Dorval arbitrary and therefore
unreasonable?
[8]
For the following reason, both of these
questions are answered in the negative; this application will therefore be
dismissed.
ANALYSIS
I - Preliminary issue: The admissibility of decision-maker Clovis
Dorval’s affidavit
[9]
Before addressing the substantive issue, the
Court will examine the applicant’s preliminary issue according to which the
decision-maker Clovis Dorval’s affidavit, filed by the respondent is inadmissible.
[10]
According to the jurisprudence, decision-makers
or tribunal members have a duty of impartiality and should not go down into the
partisan arena by filing affidavits in support of one party or another in the
context of an application for judicial review (see Graphic Communications
Union, Local 41M v. Ottawa Citizen, a Division of Southam Inc., [1999] O.J.
No. 4712 (Ont. Div. Ct.) at paragraph 13 and Maurice v. Canada (Treasury
Board), [2004] F.C.J. No. 1165 at paragraph 17).
[11]
However, as the applicant points out, there are
many exceptions to this general rule, including when the decision-maker’s
affidavit would be desirable. For example: the decision-maker’s affidavit would
be considered indispensable to clarify procedural aspects; the reasons for the
decision are in note form, or the decision-maker’s jurisdiction is at issue. The
applicant submits that none of these exceptions to the rule applies in this
case.
[12]
Having reviewed the decision-maker’s affidavit, it
is my opinion that the affidavit is admissible since it was properly made. Moreover,
the affidavit is consistent with the exception intended to clarify procedural
aspects. In the third and fourth paragraphs of his affidavit, Mr. Dorval set
out facts that gave an overview of the procedure followed during the review of
the original decision. In fact, the affidavit informs us that, first, he
arranged a meeting with the applicant. Then, he listened to the recordings of
the interview between the applicant and Mr. Lamy. Finally, he proceeded to
review all of the relevant document before making the decision contained in the
letter dated July 14, 2006. Here are paragraphs 3 and 4 of that affidavit:
[translation]
3. In the
context of the review, I met with Mr. Girard on June 15, 2006, in order to find
out the grounds that support, in his opinion, a finding to the effect that the
process was conducted in an arbitrary manner.
4. After
listening to the recordings of Pierre Girard’s interview with Mr. Lamy, meeting
Mr. Girard, and examining all of the relevant documents, I found, in a letter
addressed to Mr. Girard dated July 14, 2006, that nothing in the proceeding
supported Mr. Girard’s allegations to the effect that he was subject to
arbitrary treatment.
[13]
The Court therefore accepts Mr. Dorval’s affidavit
since it clarifies the procedural aspects that the parties were not aware of. It
should be noted that the letter dated July 14, 2006, and the spirit of that
affidavit indicate a concern for transparency rather than partisan support to
show that the decision-maker was correct on the merits.
THE STANDARD OF
REVIEW
[14]
The pragmatic and functional approach requires
that Parliament’s intent is assessed through the four contextual factors identified
by the Supreme Court in the following decisions: Pushpanathan v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982; Dr. Q. v. College
of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, [2003] S.C.R. 226. These
factors are: the presence or absence of a privative clause or statutory right
of appeal; the expertise of the tribunal or the decision-maker in regard to the
issue and the nature of the issue raised. In Anderson v. Canada (Customs and
Revenue Agency), [2003] F.C.J. No. 924, my colleague Dawson J. chose the
standard of the patently unreasonable decision with regard to the application
for judicial review of a long-time employee of the Customs and Revenue Agency (CCRA),
who had sought, unsuccessfully, a Team Leader position.
II- Collections (PM-04)
[15]
Dawson J. dismissed the application for
judicial review, deciding that the employee had been treated fairly. In a more
recent decision, Beaulieu v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 FC 1308, de
Montigny J. opted for the reasonableness simpliciter standard in a dispute that
involved the CCRA, regarding the applicant’s application for an AU-2
Auditor/Inspector position. The application for judicial review was dismissed
for the sole reason that the selection board’s decision, rejecting Mr. Beaulieu’s
application, was not arbitrary.
ARE THE DECISION-MAKER’S
REASONS ADEQUATE IN THIS CASE?
[16]
The applicant alleges that the review confirming
the original decision is only two pages long and its content is limited to a
definition of the word [translation]
“arbitrary” while remaining silent on the reasons and even the review process
itself. He also submits that these reasons are inadequate and violate the
principle of procedural fairness and warrant the intervention of this Court.
[17]
In support of this proposition, the applicant refers
the Court to the decision of our colleague Mr. Justice Simon Noël in Vennat
v. Canada (Attorney General), [2006] F.C.J. No. 1251 at paragraphs 90 and 93,
which read as follows:
90
The courts tend to consider that such reasons are insufficient. Referring to
several decisions, Professor Garant aptly summarizes the evolution of the
requirement for reasons in his book Droit administratif, 5th ed.,
Cowansville, Éditions Yvon Blais, 2004, at pages 825 to 832. He explains
certain principles for assessing the sufficiency of reasons, at pages 829 and
830:
The
Federal Court of Appeal confirms that this obligation does not suggest that the
decision be disclosed in minute detail.
.
. .
This
reasoning can be expressed in general terms in accordance with the administrative
nature of the decisions and the extent of the decision‑maker’s
discretionary power. It can be brief without being incomplete or capricious;
the decision may be “brief and technical”. . . without being ‘bereft
of reasons’”.
Nevertheless,
an administrative tribunal cannot simply write that the evidence is
insufficient. . . . The reasoning must be “sufficient and
intelligible”, even if it is somewhat convoluted and if the decision must be
considered as a whole; “a decision will be considered intelligible if the
decision maker, considering all of the evidence in assessing the facts,
develops a logical reasoning using the facts at issue”.
.
. .
A
decision that does not involve any analysis of the evidence will be considered
as being without reasons.
.
. .
When
a court dismisses inconsistent evidence outright, it must “give at least some
reasons for that choice”. [References omitted.]
93 In fact, there is
nothing in the dismissal order or in the letter which could be characterized as
analysis or reasoning, and the reasons do not make any mention of the position
submitted by the applicant. The reader sees nothing other than findings in the
Order in Council and the letter, namely the loss of confidence and the
determination that the applicant’s conduct is incompatible with his continued
appointment. There should have been at least some degree of reasoning or
analysis. The applicant was not informed of the reasons for dismissing the
written and oral arguments submitted.
[18]
Although I entirely agree with these paragraphs,
they must be read in the context of the Vennat decision, the
circumstances of which are clearly distinguished from the facts in this case. First,
Noël J. was called to decide the content of a letter of dismissal from the
President of a public institution who bestowed on himself the authority of holding
office with good behaviour without adequate explanation. It was therefore indispensable
to provide in-depth explanations. On the other hand, this case does not involve
the termination of an employee but rather this employee’s ineligibility for the
selection process.
[19]
Then, in the Vennat decision, as
my colleague Noël J. points out, the decision-maker was the Governor in
Council, who holds executive power. This is not judicial or quasi-judicial. This
case involves the review of a decision made in the context of a selection process
that is subject to specific procedural guidelines.
[20]
Finally, the applicant invites the Court to
consider paragraphs 90 and 93 of the Vennat judgment, while in the
current circumstances, paragraphs 91 and 92 instruct us as follows:
91 Even though
useful for clarification, these guidelines need not necessarily be strictly
applied to the Governor in Council when she decides to dismiss a public office
holder appointed during good behaviour. The respondent directed the Court’s
attention to the following passage from the decision in Knight v.
Indian Head School Div. No. 19, above, at page 685:
In the same vein, the
duty to give reasons need not involve a full and complete disclosure by the
administrative body of all of its reasons for dismissing the employee, but
rather the communication of the broad grounds revealing the general substance
of the reason for dismissal. [Reference omitted.]
[92]
The Governor in Council’s obligation to give reasons should not be the same as
the obligation imposed on judicial or quasi‑judicial tribunals. That
said, there is nevertheless an obligation to give reasons, namely, the
obligation to inform the affected individual of the reasons for the removal
while considering the position that this person submitted. In this case, the
reasons given to the applicant by the Governor in Council do not appear to me
to fulfil that obligation to adequately inform the applicant of the reasons for
the decisions. I have no other choice, under such circumstances, but to find
that the Governor in Council’s obligation to give reasons for the decision was
breached in this case.
[21]
In this case, the nature of the Decision Review simply
required the decision-maker to respect the directives in Annex “L” of CRA’s Directive
on Recourse for Assessment and Staffing, which, as the respondent points
out, establishes and governs the review of staffing decisions.
[22]
In fact, Annex “L” of CRA’s Directive on
Recourse for Assessment and Staffing is a detailed document that gives
directives for the review of a decision, including the delay and the content of
the written reasons. The relevant passages of this Directive read as follows:
(b)
Procedure for the review of decisions
The person
responsible for rendering a review decision:
. . .
Issue the
decision in writing with 20 working days of the receipt of the request for
Decision Review, subject to operational requirements in the preferred
official language of the employee. The written decision is not a record of
everything that was said and done during the review, but rather a record of
the findings.
. . .
|
b)
Processus de révision de la décision
La personne
autorisée responsable de l’activité de dotation:
[. . .]
Rendra la
décision dans les 20 jours ouvrables suivant la réception de la demande de
révision, dans la langue officielle choisie par l’employé, compte tenu des
besoins opérationnels. La décision écrite n’est pas une transcription de tout
ce qui s’est dit ou fait durant la révision, mais plutôt un compte-rendu des
conclusions. [. . .]
|
[23]
For all of these reasons, I note that the
decision-maker did not breach his duty in his written decision dated July 14,
2006.
WAS THE DECISION-MAKER’S
DECISION REASONABLE?
III- The standard of review
[24]
The detailed review of the four factors of the
pragmatic and functional analysis referred to by the parties’ counsel was used
to determine the standard of review that applies in this case. Since it is a
question of mixed fact and law, the standard of review of reasonableness was
adopted.
[25]
This is the standard of review that was adopted
under identical circumstances, by my colleague Mr. Justice Yves de Montigny in Beaulieu
v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 FC 1308. After analyzing the four
factors, de Montigny J. states this at paragraph 36:
Having weighed these
various factors, I have come to the conclusion that the standard of review
applicable to the decision made by Mr. Paquin is that of
reasonableness simpliciter. This means that the Court must not interfere
unless the decision for review is not supported by any reasons which can stand
up to a somewhat probing examination. As Iacobucci J. stated in Law Society
of New Brunswick v. Ryan, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 247, at paragraphs 55 and
56:
55 A decision will be unreasonable
only if there is no line of analysis within the given reasons that could
reasonably lead the tribunal from the evidence before it to the conclusion at
which it arrived. If any of the reasons that are sufficient to support the conclusion
are tenable in the sense that they can stand up to a somewhat probing
examination, then the decision will not be unreasonable and a reviewing court
must not interfere (see Southam, at para. 56). This means that
a decision may satisfy the reasonableness standard if it is supported by a
tenable explanation even if this explanation is not one that the reviewing
court finds compelling (see Southam, at para. 79).
56
This does not mean that every element of the
reasoning given must independently pass a test for reasonableness. The
question is rather whether the reasons, taken as a whole, are tenable as
support for the decision. At all times, a court applying a standard of
reasonableness must assess the basic adequacy of a reasoned decision
remembering that the issue under review does not compel one specific
result. Moreover, a reviewing court should not seize on one or more
mistakes or elements of the decision which do not affect the decision as a
whole.
[26]
The applicant argues that the debate should be
based on the standard of correctness, relying on the following decisions: Canada
(Attorney General) v. Boucher, 2005 FCA 77; Sketchley v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2005 FCA 404, paragraphs 90 and 91. The facts of these cases are
not akin to those of this case.
[27]
The standard to apply here is that of
reasonableness simpliciter, as established above in Beaulieu.
[28]
The applicant alleges that the decision-maker did
not respect a number of his rights. First, the applicant alleges that the decision-maker
arbitrarily chose a reference. The decision-maker simply chose one reference of
the three individuals proposed by the applicant in his Portfolio of Competency.
The respondent dismisses this argument on the basis that the evaluator, Mr.
Lamy, had full discretion to choose a reference. He did not have a particular
reason for choosing Mr. Doucet as a reference to verify the competencies
declared by the applicant.
[29]
Having carefully reviewed all of the documents,
I note that the process was not arbitrary. In fact, in the Notice of Job
Opportunity in the Applicant’s Record, vol. 1 tab A, we can read, among other things,
the following with regard to the candidates’ experience, at page 3 of 8:
[translation]
In your
application, please provide the contact information (name and telephone number)
of an individual who is able to corroborate your experience.
(Emphasis in
original.)
[30]
The same request is made on page 6 of 8, just
before the section entitled [translation]
ASSESSMENT STANDARDS, namely:
[translation]
In your application,
please provide the contact information (name and telephone number) of an
individual who is able to corroborate your experience.
(Emphasis in
original.)
[31]
It is apparent from this information that the
candidates were invited on two occasions to provide the contact information of
one person and not of three individuals as the applicant suggests. The fact
that the applicant submitted the names of three individuals instead of just one
who is able to corroborate his experience gave the decision-maker unfettered
choice, which is not at all arbitrary.
[32]
In fact, what is arbitrary about Mr. Lamy’s
choice? According to the documents in the record, Mr. Lamy chose Mr. Doucet to “validate”
the experience offered by the applicant. Mr. Doucet’s name was provided by the
applicant. Moreover, Mr. Doucet, the person responsible for the applicant’s validation,
had done positive assessments for the applicant in the past; there was
therefore no reason to believe that Mr. Doucet would refuse to validate Mr.
Girard’s statements. It does not state anywhere in the Directive that the
applicant was required to name more than one individual to validate the
assessment.
[33]
Yet, it appears from the documents that Mr.
Doucet, whose position is described as [translation]
“Team Coordinator”, was able to determine the TAC and the experience described
by the applicant in his Portfolio of Competency in this specific area, in this
case, teamwork and cooperation. In these circumstances, I can only find that it
was reasonable that the decision-maker did not see anything arbitrary in the
original decision. In arriving at the finding in the Review, the procedure described
in the decision-maker’s affidavit was not arbitrary or unreasonable.
THE DECISION-MAKER
FAILED TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE REASONS TO SUPPORT HIS DECISION
[34]
Bear in mind that the CCRA directives regarding
the selection process for this position are elaborated in #2005-3745-QUÉ-1206-1002.
They set out the various selection criteria for advertised positions and the
selection process for the choice of eligible and qualified candidates. For the
desired position, the selection process directives, are at page 6, as follows:
[translation]
ASSESSMENT
STANDARD
Different methods
could be used to assess your application, including:
•
Standardized test(s)
•
Written exam(s)
•
Interview(s)
•
Verification of references
•
Performance management report for the employee
(Emphasis in
original.)
On Page 7 of
these Directives, the specific competencies are listed, namely:
[translation]
BEHAVIOURAL COMPETENCIES
Teamwork and
Cooperation- Level 2 -3 (TBI tool)
Effective Interactive
Communication - Level 2 -3 (TBI tool)
(Emphasis in
original.)
[35]
The decision-maker did not recommend the
applicant for the requirement “Teamwork and Cooperation” and the reasons for this
assessment are elaborated in detail by Roger Doucet. The validator Clovis
Dorval, in his decision dated July 14, 2007 (the subject of this application
for judicial review), rendered his decision in a two-page letter dated July 14,
2006, addressed to Mr. Girard. He wrote:
[translation]
In order to render an
informed decision, I reviewed all of the relevant documentation, I listened to
the recording of the parties from the targeted behavioural interview related to
the competency in question and I met with you on July 15, 2006, so that you
could share your comments.
After all of that, I
had no reason to believe that you were subjected to arbitrary treatment and,
consequently, I do not recommend any corrective action.
Mr. Dorval signed the letter as Assistant Director, Audit Division,
Eastern Quebec Tax Services Office. Based on this, I find that he had adequate authority
to act as decision-maker in this matter.
SHOULD HE HAVE
ESTABLISHED MORE CONCRETE REASONS AS THE APPLICANT ALLEGES?
[36]
The record demonstrates that the applicant was
perfectly aware of the developments in this case and the reasons why he did not
qualify under the “Teamwork and Cooperation” requirement. He exhausted all of
his internal grievance recourse. He had the opportunity to argue all of his
grievances at the interview with decision-maker Clovis Dorval. The fact that
the same decision-maker Roger Doucet, had already validated him in the past in
another selection process, has no bearing on the case at bar.
[37]
In administrative law, it is well established today
that decision-makers must identify the reasons underlying their decisions. This
is necessary in particular for appeal and judicial review purposes. The reasons
must be intelligible and sufficient, and assess the arguments of the parties to
the dispute, see: Administrative Law, 3rd ed., Professor David Mullan,
Carswell, at pages 282 to 287; Droit administrative, Professor Patrice
Garant, 5th ed., Édition Blais Inc. Cowansville, 2004, at pages 825to 832.
[38]
The adequacy of the reasons is assessed based on
the circumstances of each case, see: Via Rail Canada Inc. v. National
Transport Agency, [2001] 2 FC 25 (FCA); Baker v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817. The decision Kindler
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [1987] 2 F.C. 145, affirmed at [1999] 2 S.C.R.
779 (Supreme Court of Canada). Kindler was an application for judicial
review from a decision by the Minister of Justice ordering the removal of a
defendant to the United States, pursuant to the Extradition Act between Canada
and the United States, as an individual convicted of murder.
[39]
Inter alia, the
applicant-appellant argued that the Minister had not elaborated the reasons for
his unfavourable decision. Rouleau J. of the Federal Court had held that the decision-maker’s
duty was to provide adequate reasons to justify his decision. Indeed, he
recognized that the Minister was not required to give reasons for every “conceivable
factor” and that the failure to state all of the reasons does not mean that they
were not considered.
ANALYSE
[40]
In this case, the applicant benefitted from a
first decision and an internal review of his application during which the
reasons for the refusal to validate the event submitted for the competency “Teamwork
and Cooperation” were clearly explained to him.
[41]
Decision-maker Clovis Dorval’s decision echoed
the same theme and the applicant was interviewed by the decision-maker and had
the opportunity to share his complaints. The decision rendered was brief but
covered all of the issues raised. It satisfied the Directive for the reviewer
in staffing matters. See page 9 of Annex L, where it is stated:
. . . The written
decision is not a record of everything that was said or done during the review,
but rather a record of the findings. (Emphasis added.)
[42]
Finally, the applicant raised the fact that the reviewer
chose to verify just one reference instead of three. It could have been argued
that he should have consulted all three references but, in my opinion, the
failure to do so is not a breach that is serious enough to warrant a judicial
intervention. When we consider all of the facts in this case and the decision-maker’s
reasons, it must be concluded that he gave reasons for his decision that were
adequate to satisfy his duty of fairness. He was not required to explain in
detail all of the considerations that led to his decision. See Ozdemir v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] F.C.J. No. 1646; Kindler
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [1987] 2 F.C. 154 and [1989] FC 492,
affirmed at [1991] 2 S.C.R. 779. To summarize, the applicant was not treated
arbitrarily and his grievances are without merit.
[43]
Although I am sympathetic to the applicant’s
other grievances, he has not persuaded me that the decision or the way it was
made is unreasonable.
[44]
The applicant wanted costs in any event. I
cannot allow his request in the circumstances.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
[1] The application for judicial review be dismissed;
[2] Each party assume its own costs.
“Orville Frenette”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1485-06
STYLE OF CAUSE: PIERRE GIRARD v.
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
PLACE OF HEARING: Ottawa, Ontario
DATE OF HEARING September 17, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT BY: The Honourable Orville Frenette
DATED: September 26, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Sean T. McGee FOR
THE APPLICANT
Julie C. Skinner
Philippe Lacasse
FOR THE RESPONDENT
Yannick Landry
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Nelligan O’Brien
Payne LLP FOR THE APPLICANT
Ottawa, Ontario
John Sims, Q.C.
Deputy Attorney
General of Canada FOR THE RESPONDENT
Department of
Justice Canada
Ottawa, Ontario