Lester (W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and
Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3
S.C.R. 644
United Association of Journeymen
and Apprentices of the Plumbing
and Pipefitting
Industry, Local 740 Appellant
v.
W.W. Lester (1978) Ltd. and
Planet Development
Corporation Ltd. Respondents
and
The Labour Relations Board for
the Province of
Newfoundland Respondent
indexed as: lester (w.w.) (1978) ltd. v. united
association of journeymen and apprentices of the plumbing and pipefitting
industry, local 740
File
No.: 21239.
1990:
April 26; 1990: December 7.
Present: Dickson C.J.* and Lamer C.J.** and Wilson, La Forest,
L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier, Cory and McLachlin JJ.
on
appeal from the court of appeal for newfoundland
Administrative
law ‑‑ Judicial review ‑‑ Jurisdiction ‑‑
Labour Relations Board ‑‑ Board granting successorship declaration
where company carrying on business subject to union contract set up parallel
company operating without a union ‑‑ Whether the Board had
jurisdiction to enquire into whether or not successorship had occurred ‑‑
If so, whether the Board's exercise of its jurisdiction was patently
unreasonable ‑‑ The Labour Relations Act, 1877, S.N. 1977,
c. 64, s. 18.
Labour
relations ‑‑ Unions ‑‑ Successor rights ‑‑
Company carrying on business subject to union contract setting up parallel
company operating without a union ‑‑ Whether Labour Relations Board
may grant successorship declaration ‑‑ The Labour Relations Act,
1977, S.N. 1977, c. 64, s. 89(1).
The
respondent construction companies possessed similar share structures and
principals and operated side by side. They shared the same office, secretary,
telephone number and office expenses but had separate employees. While
they shared a minor amount of equipment by renting the equipment to each other,
each owned or leased its own equipment. The finances of the companies were
separate. One of the principals prepared bids on construction projects on
behalf of either company, depending on whether the job in question was a union
or non‑union construction site in accordance with the practice of
"double breasting" whereby one company, which continues to carry on
business subject to a union contract, sets up a second parallel company which
operates without a union.
The
appellant union, which represented Lester's employees, attempted to organize
the non‑unionized employees of Planet but withdrew its application for
certification before the hearing. In its place, the appellant deposed an
application alleging unfair labour practices on the part of the companies and
sought a declaration of successorship pursuant to s. 89 of The Labour
Relations Act, 1977. At the same time, the respondent companies laid a
complaint alleging unfair labour practices on the part of the union. The
Labour Relations Board granted the successorship declaration and found it
unnecessary to make findings on the other applications. The respondent
companies then applied, unsuccessfully, to the Trial Division of the
Newfoundland Supreme Court for an order of certiorari to
quash the Board's order. The Court of Appeal, in a unanimous decision, held
the Board's decision to be patently unreasonable and remitted the matter of the
unfair labour practices to the Board.
The
issues raised in this appeal are: (1) whether the Board had the jurisdiction
to enter into the inquiry as to whether or not successorship had occurred; and
(2) if so, whether the exercise of its jurisdiction was patently unreasonable.
Held
(Dickson C.J. and Wilson, L'Heureux‑Dubé and Cory JJ. dissenting): The
appeal should be dismissed.
Per Lamer
C.J. and La Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and McLachlin JJ.: Section 16.1 of The Labour
Relations Act, 1977 renders moot the question of whether the Labour
Relations Board has the power to determine whether an employer had disposed of
his business or a part of his business under s. 89(1) of the Act, except
for the determination of this case. It may be assumed for the purpose of this
judgment that the Board had the jurisdiction to consider whether or not there
was a sale, lease, transfer or other disposition.
Section
18 of the Act limits judicial review of the Board's decisions to error in
interpreting the jurisdictional provisions or excess of jurisdiction by reason
of a patently unreasonable error in the performance of its function. Curial
deference must extend both to the determination of the facts and the
interpretation of the law. The Court can interfere only where the evidence,
viewed reasonably, is incapable of supporting a tribunal's findings of fact, or
where the interpretation placed on the legislation is patently unreasonable.
Section
89(1) establishes the conditions in which the collective agreement between a
union and one employer may be imposed between the union and another employer.
The aim of the successorship provision is to protect employees from losing
union protection when a business is sold or transferred from one company to
another. A discernible part of the business ‑‑ a functional
economic vehicle ‑‑ must be transferred in order to establish
successorship under s. 89(1). It is not enough that a mere transfer of
assets occur because a business is not a mere collection of assets. A finding
of successorship, therefore, could not be based on common shareholdings and a
common business enterprise or on the fact that the same people owned or worked
for both companies. Corporate interrelationship, without some evidence of
disposition, would not be enough to trigger the successorship provisions.
The evidence as to anti‑union animus was weak and, even
if demonstrated, would not establish the necessary transfer.
The
absence of evidence establishing a disposition under s. 89 rendered the
Board's decision patently unreasonable and, therefore, subject to judicial
review. The Board's action in construing the successorship provisions as if
they were common employer provisions was contrary to precedent.
Per Dickson
C.J. and Wilson and Cory JJ. (dissenting): A court will not exercise judicial
review unless the tribunal's decision was patently unreasonable. It is
unrealistic given increasingly complex and highly specialized regulatory
regimes to expect the courts to have the requisite knowledge and skill to
adjudicate properly on some of those regimes.
The
test of patent unreasonableness is stringent. The administrative tribunal's
interpretation of the legislation will only be considered patently unreasonable
if it cannot be rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands
intervention by the court upon review. Judicial review is not available simply
because there is disagreement over the tribunal's decision on the basis of
conflicting interpretations of the relevant legislation. The privative clause
in s. 18 indicates further the limited nature of judicial review.
How
an asset is transferred depends on the nature of the asset. Here, the
expertise of the two principals and their ability to move between the two
companies lay at the very heart of the double breasting scheme. The Board
interpreted the phrase "otherwise disposes of" in s. 89(1) so as
to include this type of transfer. This interpretation, while broader than that
given in other jurisdictions, is consonant with the purpose and intent of the
overall legislative scheme, especially in light of the absence of a common
employer provision. The decision, therefore, was not patently unreasonable and
the Court had to defer to that decision.
Per
L'Heureux‑Dubé J. (dissenting): Agreed with Wilson J. on the issue of
reasonableness for the reasons she expressed, although the Board's decision
here was not patently unreasonable.
Cases
Cited
By
McLachlin J.
Considered: Canadian
Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation, [1979]
2 S.C.R. 227; CAIMAW v. Paccar of Canada Ltd., [1989]
2 S.C.R. 983; referred to: Pinsent Construction Ltd. v.
International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 904 (1985),
55 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 117; Blanchard v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984]
2 S.C.R. 476; National Bank of Canada v. Retail Clerks'
International Union, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 269; Service Employees'
International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin District Staff Nurses
Association, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382; Kelly Douglas &
Co. and W.H. Malkin Ltd., [1974] 1 CLRBR 77; United Steelworkers
of America v. Thorco Manufacturing Ltd. (1965), 65 CLLC
{PP} 16,052; Lyric Theater Ltd. v. International Alliance of
Theatrical Stage Employees, [1980] 2 Can LRBR 331; Canadian Union of
Public Employees v. Metropolitan Parking Inc., [1980] 1 Can LRBR
197; International Longshoremen's Assn. v. Terminus Maritime Inc. (1983),
83 CLLC {PP} 16,029; Gibraltar Development Corporation, BCLRB
12 29/82; Rivard Mechanical; Re Plumbers Union, Local 71, [1981]
OLRB Rep.May 550; Frank Browne Acoustics Kamloops (1982) Ltd. v. United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (1984), 6 CLRBR
(NS) 247; United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of
America v. Cana Construction Co. (1984), 9 CLRBR (NS) 175; Doran
Construction Ltd., Taggart Construction Ltd. and Taggart General Contractors
Ltd.; Re Carpenters Union, Local 93, [1984] OLRB
Rep.Aug. 1108; Viandes Seficlo Inc. v. Union des Employés de
Commerce (1984), 84 CLLC {PP} 14,047; International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers v. Minas Electric Co. (1976), 77 CLLC
{PP} 16,075; Labourers' International Union of North America v.
Elmont Construction Ltd., [1974] OLRB Rep.June 342; Re International
Association of Machinists v. Professional Personnel Services Ltd. and
C.P. Personnel Ltd. (Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported, Sept.
1985); United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners v. N. D. Dobin Ltd.
and Bradco Ltd. (Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported
without written reasons, March 1985); United Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners v. Robco Ltd. and Brookfield Investments Ltd.
(Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported, May 1985); Brant
Erecting and Hoisting; Re Iron Workers' Union, [1980] OLRB
Rep.July 945; Concerned Contractors Action Group v. British Columbia
and Yukon Territory Building and Construction Trades Council (1986),
13 CLRBR (NS) 121; Mackie Bros. Sand & Gravel Ltd. (1974),
BCLRB No. L107/81; International Association of Bridge, Structural and
Ornamental Iron Workers v. Empire Iron Works Ltd. (1986), 86 CLLC
{PP} 16,027; Tri Power Construction Ltd. v. United Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners of America (1984), 8 CLRBR (NS) 332; Re N
& L Construction Ltd. (1987), 64 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 271.
By
Wilson J. (dissenting)
National
Corn Growers Assn. v. Canada (Import Tribunal), [1990] 2 S.C.R.
1324; Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor
Corporation, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227; Blanchard v. Control
Data Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476; CAIMAW v. Paccar of
Canada Ltd., [1989] 2 S.C.R. 983; Teamsters Union,
Local 938 v. Massicotte, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 710.
By
L'Heureux‑Dubé J. (dissenting)
National
Corn Growers Assn. v. Canada (Import Tribunal), [1990] 2 S.C.R.
1324.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c.
L-1, s. 144 [am. 1972, c. 18, s. 1].
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C., 1985,
c. L‑2, ss. 35 , 45 .
Industrial Relations Act, R.S.B.C. 1979,
c. 212, s. 37 [am. 1987, c. 24, s. 25].
Labour Relations Act, R.S.M. 1987,
c. L‑10, s. 59.
Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1980,
c. 228, ss. 1(4), 63.
Labour Relations Act, 1977, S.N. 1977,
c. 64, ss. 16.1, 17(k), 18(1), 24, 25, 28 and 89.
Labour Relations Code, S.A. 1988,
c. L‑1.2, s. 44.
Public Service Labour Relations Act,
R.S.N.B. 1973, c. P-25.
Trade Union Act, R.S.S. 1978,
c. T‑17, s. 37.
Trade Union
Act, S.N.S. 1972, c. 19, ss. 20, 29.
Authors
Cited
Adams, George W. Canadian Labour Law.
Aurora: Canada Law Book Inc., 1985.
Newfoundland. Construction Industry Advisory Committee. Report of
the Construction Industry Advisory Committee. (Gordon G.
Easton, Q.C., Chairperson, Gonzo Gillingham) St. John's, Nfld.: 1985.
Weiler,
Paul. Reconcilable Differences: New Directions in Canadian Labour Law.
Toronto: Carswells, 1980.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Newfoundland Court of Appeal (1988), 70 Nfld. &
P.E.I.R. 145, 215 A.P.R. 145, reversing the judgment of the Newfoundland
Supreme Court, Trial Division (1987), 67 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 185, 206 A.P.R.
185, denying the respondents' application for certiorari.
Appeal dismissed, Dickson C.J. and Wilson, L'Heureux‑Dubé and Cory JJ.
dissenting.
Randell
Earle, Q.C., and Stephanie Newell, for
the appellant.
Barrie
Heywood, for the respondents W.W. Lester (1978) Ltd. and Planet
Development Corporation Ltd.
Edward
M. Hearn, for the respondent The Labour Relations Board for the
Province of Newfoundland.
//Wilson J.//
The
reasons of Dickson C.J. and Wilson and Cory JJ. were delivered by
WILSON J.
(dissenting) -- I have had the benefit of reading the reasons prepared by my
colleague Madame Justice McLachlin and must, for the reason I gave in National
Corn Growers Assn. v. Canada (Import Tribunal), [1990] 2 S.C.R.
1324, respectfully dissent from her approach to the judicial review of the
Board's decision. There I sought to re-emphasize the importance of the
principle of curial deference to the decisions of administrative tribunals
which this Court adopted in Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New
Brunswick Liquor Corporation, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227. In my view,
the present case is one in which that principle ought to be applied.
The
principle of curial deference to decisions of administrative tribunals is
grounded not only on sound judicial policy but also on good common sense. It is
quite unrealistic in this age of increasingly complex and highly specialized
regulatory regimes to expect the courts to have the requisite knowledge and
skill to adjudicate properly on some of those regimes. As I noted in National
Corn Growers, supra, at p. 1335, if all branches of
government are to function effectively and efficiently we must recognize:
(1)
that their [the "tribunals'"] decisions are crafted by those with
specialized knowledge of the subject matter before them; and (2) that there is
value in limiting the extent to which their decisions may be frustrated through
an expansive judicial review.
Accordingly,
I expressed the view in that case that administrative tribunals must be given
the latitude by the courts to fulfil their legislative mandates.
What
constitutes the required degree of latitude was addressed by this Court in C.U.P.E., supra, and is
reflected in the test to be applied. It is a test which, as Dickson J. (as he
then was) noted at p. 237, is founded on the idea of patent unreasonableness.
The appropriate question to be asked is:
Did the
Board here so misinterpret the provisions of the Act as to embark on an inquiry
or answer a question not remitted to it? Put another way, was the Board's
interpretation so patently unreasonable that its construction cannot be
rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands intervention
by the court upon review? [Emphasis added.]
As I
mentioned in National Corn Growers, there has been a
tendency in the post-C.U.P.E. era to return to a less stringent
test for judicial review than the one established in C.U.P.E. This
backsliding has been largely predicated upon a rather Dicean view of the rule
of law and the role that the courts should play in the administration of
government. That approach to curial review in the administrative context is, in
my opinion, no longer appropriate given the sophisticated role that
administrative tribunals play in the modern Canadian state. I think we need to
return to C.U.P.E. and the spirit which C.U.P.E.
embodies.
Was the
Board's Decision Patently Unreasonable?
The
only issue that needs to be addressed on this appeal is whether the
Newfoundland Labour Relations Board's decision was patently unreasonable.
Since my colleague McLachlin J. has set out the relevant statutory provisions,
I shall not repeat them here. The key section is s. 89 of the Newfoundland Labour
Relations Act, 1977, S.N. 1977, c. 64, as amended. The issue is one of
interpretation, more specifically whether the words "Where an employer
sells, leases, transfers or otherwise disposes of, or agrees to sell, lease,
transfer or otherwise dispose of his business or the operations thereof or any
part of either of them..." cover the practice of "double
breasting".
Section
89 is designed to prevent the loss of union protection by employees whose
company's business is sold or transferred to another business concern. This
provision, known colloquially as a "successor provision" is found in
other labour relations statutes, cf., Alberta, Labour
Relations Code, S.A. 1988, c. L-1.2, s. 44; Manitoba, The Labour
Relations Act, R.S.M. 1987, c. L10, s. 59; Nova Scotia, Trade
Union Act, S.N.S 1972, c. 19, s. 29; Ontario, Labour
Relations Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 228, s. 63; Saskatchewan, The Trade
Union Act, R.S.S. 1978, c. T-17, s. 37; and Canada, Canada
Labour Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. L-2, s. 45 . The provisions exist to
protect collective bargaining agreements from becoming meaningless due to, inter alia, the
manipulation of the corporate form by employers. Such manipulation can be
accomplished by a variety of means and the appellant submitted that
"double breasting" was one of them. It was this situation the Board
had to address.
"Double
breasting" is apparently a common practice in the construction industry in
Newfoundland. One company, which continues to carry on business subject to a
union contract, creates a new parallel company which is non-union. In this way
the owners of the companies can bid on both union and non-union jobs and
utilize the skill and expertise of the key members of their staff on both. If
the practice falls outside s. 89 the new company is not bound by the existing
collective agreement. The Board found that "double breasting" fell
within s. 89.
McLachlin
J. characterizes the arrangement between the companies Lester and Planet as one
of co-operation, "a sharing of expertise", and not one in which any
disposition of work, assets or expertise had taken place under s. 89 of the
Act. She finds that, even if the expertise of the principals Brent and Wade
Lester was a corporate asset, it was equally the asset of both companies.
There was no transfer of it from one to the other. My colleague arrives at
this characterization despite the Board's factual finding that skills and
assets were shuttled back and forth between the two companies as particular
projects required. The Court of Appeal described the process as "mutual
back scratching".
With
respect, I ask: how do you transfer the skill and expertise of X from Company A
to Company B other than by making X available to Company B to work on Company B
projects? There is no other way. Mode of transfer must surely depend upon the
nature of the subject matter. While Brent and Wade Lester were applying their
skill and expertise on the non-union project of Planet, such skill and
expertise was not available for the union project of Lester and the mobility of
these two principals was at the very heart of the double breasting scheme.
My
colleague takes a narrow approach to the interpretation of the phrase
"otherwise disposes of". The Board gave the phrase a more liberal
interpretation in light of what it perceived to be the purpose of the
provision. I do not believe that just because the Board gave the phrase a
broader interpretation than that given to it in some other jurisdictions means
that its interpretation is patently unreasonable. It is clearly arguable that
the Board's interpretation is consonant with the purpose and intent of the
overall legislative scheme, i.e., to facilitate and preserve collective
bargaining regimes between unions and employers. It is, I believe, significant
in this connection that the labour relations statutes in some other
jurisdictions referred to by my colleague contain common employer provisions
which the Newfoundland statute does not. That being so, it is not at all
surprising to me that it has not been found necessary in these other
jurisdictions to construe a s. 89 type provision liberally as was done by the
Board here. The provision must, however, be construed in the context of this
statute and not of any other. In my view, the Board's interpretation of s. 89,
in the absence of a common employer provision, cannot be said to be patently
unreasonable.
In
applying the test of patent unreasonableness it is important to remember that
the test is a stringent one. As Lamer J. (as he then was) observed in Blanchard
v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476, at p. 493:
This is
a very severe test and signals a strict approach to the question of judicial
review. It is nevertheless the test which this Court has applied and continues
to apply.
In other
words, the test of patent unreasonableness establishes a very high threshold
which means that an administrative tribunal's interpretation of the legislation
in question will only be considered patently unreasonable if, as Dickson C.J.
stated in C.U.P.E. at p. 237, it "cannot be
rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands intervention by
the court upon review."
It
is a necessary corollary of the C.U.P.E. test that the
courts must "adopt a posture of deference to the decisions of the
tribunal": see CAIMAW v. Paccar of Canada Ltd., [1989]
2 S.C.R. 983, at p. 1003, per La Forest J. One of the implications of such deference
is that judicial review is not available simply because there is disagreement
over the tribunal's decision on the basis of conflicting interpretations of the
relevant legislation. In this regard, I agree with, and find appropriate, the
view expressed by Laskin C.J., in Teamsters Union, Local 938 v. Massicotte, [1982]
1 S.C.R. 710, at p. 724, that
. . .
mere doubt as to correctness of a labour board interpretation of its statutory
power is no ground for finding jurisdictional error, especially when the labour
board is exercising powers confided to it in wide terms to resolve competing
contentions.
In
applying these principles in the instant case, I am of the view that the
stringent test in C.U.P.E. has not been met. While my colleague
supports one interpretation of the section, it is by no means the only
interpretation the provision can reasonably bear. Indeed, the broad
interpretation given to it by the Board has the merit of advancing the clear
purpose of the Act. It is, in other words, an interpretation "rationally
supported by the relevant legislation" and deserving, in my view, of the
deference mandated by C.U.P.E. I am mindful of La Forest J.'s
observation in CAIMAW, supra, at p.
1003, that a
. . .
tribunal has the right to make errors, even serious ones, provided it does not
act in a manner "so patently unreasonable that its construction cannot be
rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands intervention by
the court upon review".
The
limited nature of judicial review is supported, in my view, by the presence in
the Act of a privative clause, s. 18. The existence of such a clause is, as I
observed in National Corn Growers, a clear
indication from the legislature that the ordinary courts are not the
appropriate forums for review of the decisions of specialized tribunals. It is
not appropriate for courts to undertake a meticulous analysis of the tribunal's
reasoning as my colleague has done here. To do so sets at naught both the
privative clause in the legislation and the judicial restraint advocated in C.U.P.E.
In
my view, the application of the principle in C.U.P.E. to the
instant case requires this Court to defer to the decision of the Board. The
Board's interpretation of s. 89 is not patently unreasonable in the context of
the Act and ought to stand. While much of the evidence was equivocal regarding
the specifics of the relationship between Lester and Planet, there was
certainly evidence upon which the Board could reasonably conclude, as it did,
that the skill and expertise of the principals Brent and Wade Lester were
transferred back and forth between the two companies in order to enable them to
bid on both union and non-union jobs and to carry these jobs to completion.
I
would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Newfoundland Court of
Appeal and restore the decision of Russell J. I would award the respondents
their costs both here and in the court below.
//McLachlin
J.//
The
judgment of Lamer C.J. and La Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and McLachlin JJ. was
delivered by
MCLACHLIN J. --
This case involves the application of successorship provisions of the Newfoundland Labour
Relations Act, 1977, S.N. 1977, c. 64, as amended, to two construction
companies possessing similar share ownership and principals and operating side
by side. One company was bound by a collective agreement, the other not. The
question is whether under the Act the collective agreement is deemed to apply
to the second company under the Act.
The
Facts
W.W.
Lester (1978) Ltd., incorporated in 1978, is primarily engaged in the business
of installing plumbing and heating systems, with limited involvement in other
areas, such as mechanical work, construction work and real estate. The
principals in Lester are Walter Lester, the majority shareholder who controls
the voting preferred shares, and his two sons, Brent and Wade, who hold the
common shares. Lester's employees are represented by the appellant union
"United" which has a collective agreement with Lester.
In
1981, the Lester brothers decided that they wanted more control over their
affairs, and wished to avoid the real estate and other construction work which
Lester carried out, concentrating solely on mechanical work. Accordingly, the
Lesters incorporated a second company, Planet Development Corporation Ltd., in
which father and the two sons each hold one third of the shares.
The
two companies, along with two other companies owned by the family, work out of
the same office and share the same secretary, telephone number and office
expenses. Apart from the secretary, the companies have separate employees.
While a minor amount of equipment is shared between the two companies by
renting the equipment to each other, Planet and Lester each own or lease their
own equipment. The finances of the companies are separate but when Planet is
required to provide a performance bond, a guarantee may be provided by Brent,
Wade and Walter Lester and the associated companies. Wade Lester acts as an
estimator for both companies. Brent Lester prepares bids for both companies.
In most instances general contractors invite Brent Lester to prepare bids by
either Lester or Planet, depending on whether the job in question is a union or
non-union construction site.
Planet
successfully bid on several projects including Burin Hospital, Fisheries
College, School of Nursing and a Fishery Products Plant. These projects were
not available to Lester. Conversely, Lester bid on projects that were not
available to Planet. For example, Lester obtained a hospital contract
(Clarenville) which was not available to Planet as the Clarenville hospital
site was a union project.
Prior
to the hearing of this matter, the community of Marystown was awaiting the
construction of another hospital, the Burin Hospital. Brent Lester was asked
to bid the Burin project with Planet and Planet obtained the mechanical
subcontract. The Burin project was the catalyst that resulted in the labour
hearing in question.
The
union began by attempting to organize the employees working at the Burin site
and brought an application for certification. It appears that the workers at
the Burin site did not favour certification, and the union withdrew the
application shortly before the hearing. In its place the union deposed an
application alleging unfair labour practices. Its complaint alleged that
Lester had violated ss. 24 and 25 of The Labour Relations
Act, 1977 by informing union members that the only way they could
work at the Burin site would be to drop out of the union. The union also
sought a declaration of successorship pursuant to s. 89 of the Act for an
order that Planet be bound by the collective agreement in existence between the
union and the Newfoundland Construction Labour Relations Association, the
accredited bargaining agent of Lester. At the same time, the companies laid a
complaint alleging that union harassment of the employees working at the Burin
site violated s. 28 of the Act.
All
of the applications were heard at the same time. The Board granted the
successorship declaration (one board member dissenting) and found it
unnecessary to make findings on the other applications.
The
companies applied to the Trial Division of the Newfoundland Supreme Court for
an order of certiorari to quash the Board order. Before the
Trial Division the companies argued that the Board had no jurisdiction to make
such a declaration and, in the alternative, if it had jurisdiction that it had
exercised its jurisdiction in a manner that was patently unreasonable. Russell
J. denied the application. On further appeal the Court of Appeal in a
unanimous decision held that the Board's decision was patently unreasonable.
The Court remitted the matter of the unfair labour practices to the Board.
Leave to appeal to this Court on the successorship issue was granted on June 8,
1989.
The
Legislation
The
Newfoundland Labour Relations Act, 1977, ss. 16.1(2),
17(k), 18(1) and 89:
16.1 . . .
(2) A trade union, council of trade unions, employer
or employer's organization may apply to the Board for a determination of any
matter referred to in paragraph (k) of section 17.
17. In relation to any
proceeding before it, or to determine any matter referred to it by the
Minister, or pursuant to an application made to it, the Board may
.
. .
(k)decide for all of the purposes of this Act any
question that may arise in a proceeding, or pursuant to an application made to
it, or referred to it by the Minister, including, without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, any question as to whether
...
(vii)any person or organization is a party to or
bound by a collective agreement,
(viii)a collective agreement is in operation...
18. (1) No decision, order, direction,
declaration or ruling of the Board shall be questioned or reviewed in any
court, and no order shall be made or process entered or proceedings taken in
any court, whether by way of injunction, declaratory judgment, certiorari,
mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto, or otherwise, to question, review,
prohibit or restrain the Board or any of its proceedings.
89. (1) Where an employer sells, leases,
transfers or otherwise disposes of, or agrees to sell, lease, transfer or
otherwise dispose of his business or the operations thereof or any part of
either of them, and
(a)the employer or the purchaser, lessee, transferee or
person otherwise acquiring the business is a party to or is bound by a
collective agreement with a bargaining agent on behalf of any employees
affected by the sale, lease, transfer, disposition by other means or contract;
(b)one or more bargaining agents have been certified as
bargaining agent for any such employees;
(c)one or more trade unions or a council of trade unions
has applied to be certified as bargaining agent for any such employees; or
(d)one or more bargaining agents have given or are
entitled to give notice under either section 72 or section 73 with respect to
any such employees,
then, unless the Board otherwise directs, the collective
agreement, certification, application, notice or entitlement to give notice
continues in force and is binding upon the purchaser, lessee, transferee or
person otherwise acquiring the business.
(2) Any employer, purchaser, lessee, transferee or
any bargaining agent, trade union or council of trade unions or other person
referred to in subsection (1) may apply to the Board for the resolution of any
question or problem that as a result of such sale, lease, transfer or
disposition has arisen or may arise with respect to any collective agreement,
certification, application, notice or entitlement to give notice.
(3) Where an application is made under subsection
(2), the Board shall, by order, make whatever award, give whatever direction,
or take any other action that in its discretion the Board deems appropriate, to
resolve any relevant question or problem and in particular, but without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, may in that or a subsequent order
(a)modify or rescind to the extent that the Board deems
necessary or appropriate any collective agreement;
(b)amend or revoke any certification or amend any
application for certification;
(c)modify or restrict the operation of any notice or
entitlement to give notice;
(d)determine whether employees affected constitute one
or more appropriate bargaining units;
(e)if more than one collective agreement is to continue
in force, designate the employees that are to be covered by each agreement;
(f)modify or restrict the operation or effect of any
provision of any collective agreement and define the rights with respect
thereto of any employees affected by the sale, lease, transfer or disposition
by other means;
(g)declare which trade union, trade unions or council of
trade unions shall be the bargaining agent or agents for the employees; and
(h)interpret any provision of any collective agreement.
(4) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
this Act, a purchaser, lessee, transferee or person otherwise acquiring the
business shall not be required to bargain with any bargaining agent with
respect to employees to whom an application made under subsection (2) relates,
until the Board has disposed of that application.
(5)
Where an application is made under subsection (2), the Board may make or cause
to be made any examination of records or other inquiries, and may hold any
hearings and take any representation votes, that it deems necessary and
prescribe the nature of evidence to be furnished by the Board.
The
Judgments
Newfoundland
Labour Relations Board
The
majority reviewed the evidence and then referred to one of its earlier
decisions in Pinsent Construction Ltd. v. International Union of
Operating Engineers, Local 904 (1985), 55 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 117,
in which a successorship application was successful in the construction
context. The majority then went on to determine whether or not there had been
a disposition in this case.
Initially,
the Board examined the relationship between the two companies and noted that in
making a determination of whether or not there has been a sale, transfer or
disposition, boards are not overly concerned with the "technical, legal
form of the business disposition", particularly in the construction
industry where the only assets required to carry on a business may be the skill
and expertise of the principals. The Board summarized the evidence as follows:
It
seems clear to us that there is a discernable continuity in the business or a
part of it, and that Planet does not represent a new or different operation
totally unconnected with the old. Lester came into being in 1978 and Planet
came into being in 1981. The nature of the work carried on by both is the
same. For example, Lester built the hospital at Clarenville and Planet built
an identical hospital in Burin. The tools of the trade are the same, the skills
of the workers are the same, the types of projects on which they bid are the
same, the planning, engineering, technical and estimating skills are the same.
The one significant difference is that one project is bid using union labour
rates, while another is bid using non-union labour rates. The only conclusion
we can come to is that the controlling forces (the Lesters) wish to be able to
operate without the constraints and obligations of a collective agreement whenever
it is economically convenient for them to do so. The danger is of course that
in adopting this method of operation one may run afoul of the provisions of
Section 89 of our Act. In the Pinsent case, board member McDonald observed in
his addendum that "uncontradicted evidence in the Pinsent case clearly
established that the only reason for the establishment of N. & L.
Construction was to secure business that Pinsent was unable to secure through
the advantage of non-union wage rates". He went on to empathize with the
plight of private sector operators and this Board shares these views. However,
almost all of the factors which persuaded the Board in the Pinsent case are
present here. We have already discussed the "winding down" factor
and have found that not to be determinative of the issue. The one factor which
was stressed by counsel for the companies in this case was that no employees of
Lester went to the Burin job. While in some cases this may be very persuasive,
in the construction industry, it is of little or no weight. If this were to be
a determining factor, all one would have to do is lay off employees when one
project is finished, and then take on another project under a non-union bid,
and hire new employees to do the new work.
The
majority went on to find that successorship had occurred and ordered that
Planet is bound by the collective agreement. Having reached this finding the
Board found it unnecessary to deal with the unfair labour practice complaints.
J.
V. McDonald in his minority decision strongly disagreed with the findings of
the majority. In his view, before a successorship declaration can be made the
union must establish that there has been a disposition of some identifiable
and severable part of the predecessor's operation. Mr. McDonald stated
that on the facts of this case he was unable to determine what distinct part of
Lester's business had been transferred or otherwise disposed of to Planet. He
noted that the majority in their decision did not identify what had been transferred
or otherwise disposed of. It appeared to him that the majority was more
concerned with establishing that Lester and Planet were one and the same, with
the rationale being that if it could be found that the differences between the
two were merely either superficial or imaginary, then one must be a successor
to the other. Thus, in his view, the majority erroneously concluded that
because of an apparently close relationship between the two companies in terms
of ownership and control, one must by necessity be a successor of the other.
Board member McDonald found that the evidence failed to establish that any
coherent or severable part of Lester's business had been transferred to Planet
and accordingly found that no disposition had occurred. He concluded:
I am
left to wonder how the majority can so easily have disregarded the fact that
Lester and Planet are two separate, active companies, and it is unclear to me,
to say the least, how there can be any disposition such as the board describes
when this is the case. I believe that the underlying rationale of the
majority's decision is one that can only lead to awkward and unjust results,
both in the present case and in others that may come before the Board in the
future and, most importantly, is one which brings about a result which I
believe was clearly not contemplated by the existing provisions of the Act.
Mr.
McDonald also noted that the decision of the majority represented a dramatic
alteration to the law and implied that in his view the majority decision was
beyond the jurisdiction of the Board. He stated:
In my
opinion, what the Board majority have ruled in the present case represents a
significant departure from previous thinking and labour board jurisprudence.
Indeed, with respect, I would go further and suggest that the majority have
reached a conclusion which is inconsistent with both the relevant provisions of
our Act and the evidence which was adduced before the Board during its hearings
on this matter.
Newfoundland Supreme Court, Trial Division (Russell J.)
(1987), 67 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 185
Two
issues were put before Russell J.: (1) that the Board had no jurisdiction to
determine whether or not a disposition had occurred and, (2) alternatively,
if the Board had jurisdiction, that its decision was not rationally supported
by the Act.
Russell
J. held that the Board had jurisdiction under s. 17(k) of the Act.
On
the merits, Russell J., after observing that the Board had considered the
evidence and the representations of the parties and had based its conclusion
that a transfer had occurred under the Act on a construction which the
legislation might reasonably bear, denied Lester's application for certiorari.
Newfoundland Court of Appeal (Goodridge C.J.N.,
for the Court) (1988), 70 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 145
The Court of Appeal held that the while the language of ss. 89(1) and
17(k) left some doubt as to whether the Board technically had the jurisdiction
claimed by it, s. 16.1(2) removed any such doubt.
Having concluded that the Board had the initial jurisdiction to consider the
issue, the court went on to consider the scope of s. 89. In its view, at p.
149, it was confined to cases of a clear transfer:
The
matter of double breasting has been a controversial one in the construction
industry in recent years. Section 89 was not enacted with a view to dealing
with it. It is quite clear from a reading of the section that the
Legislature was thinking in terms of a transfer about whose existence there
would be no controversy. It was contemplating a situation where the
business or operations of one person would move in whole or in part to another
person. It originally made no express provision for the determination of
whether or not a transfer had taken place but, assuming it to have taken place,
stated the consequences. The significant consequence in this case is that the
collective agreement would be binding upon the transferee. [Emphasis added.]
The
court stated that its task was to determine whether or not the Board made an
error of law in its interpretation of the words "transfer or other
disposition" or whether it made an error of fact in concluding that what
transpired was a "transfer or other disposition". However, following
this Court's decision in Blanchard v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984]
2 S.C.R. 476, it was unnecessary to make a distinction because in either event
the test is one of reasonableness. The court then reviewed the evidence
presented before the Board and concluded that the evidence did not support the
conclusion stated by the Board and therefore the decision was patently
unreasonable. It stated the following conclusions, at p. 153:
[1.]Lester did not transfer to Planet the expertise and
knowledge of Brent and Wade Lester. Brent and Wade Lester were two of the
three owners of both companies. It was their decision and not the decision of
Lester as to how their talents should be applied.
[2.]Lester and Planet and two other companies occupied
the same building and all shared the cost of occupation.
[3.]There was no intermingling of employees of Planet
and Lester. The only intermingling of which there was evidence consisted of
the lady who answers the phone. The Board was told that she works for Lester.
Inasmuch as Planet has the same telephone number she would also answer the
phone for Planet. In addition she did the payroll for Planet for a period but
this was subsequently taken over by a chartered accountant.
[4.]Planet has its own equipment and tools. However,
either company might lease equipment to the other and in such a case a rent
would be set up.
[5.]With
respect to financial acumen and financial responsibility the only evidence of
this was that where Planet was required to provide a performance bond Lester
might provide a personal guarantee.
The
Court of Appeal concluded, at p. 153, that the overall picture revealed that
while there may have been some "mutual backscratching" between Lester
and Planet, there was no transfer of business or operation; indeed, the
contrary conclusion was supported by the evidence. The business that Planet
did as a non-unionized company was not and would never have been available to
Lester. It followed that the Board's conclusion that there had been a
disposition of business within the meaning of s. 89 was not supportable by the
evidence and thus was patently unreasonable.
The
Court of Appeal allowed the appeal and held that Russell J. had erred in
denying the application to quash the Board's determination that Planet was a
successor to a part of the business of Lester within s. 89 of the Act.
The
Issues
Two
issues are raised before us:
I.Whether the Board had the jurisdiction, to enter into
the inquiry as to whether or not successorship had occurred;
II.If the Board had the jurisdiction, whether the
exercise of its jurisdiction was patently unreasonable.
Analysis
I. Jurisdiction of the Board
Section
89 provides that if there is a sale, lease, transfer or other disposition from
one employer to another, the collective agreement of the transferring employer
is imposed on the second employer. Because there was no acknowledgement that a
disposition of any kind had occurred in this case, the Board was required to
make a preliminary determination as to whether or not a disposition had taken
place. The question was whether the Act gave the Board the power to determine
whether an employer had disposed of his business or a part of his business
under s. 89(1).
The
problem arises because none of the provisions of the Act, as it stood at the
relevant time, empowered the Board to enquire into whether a transfer had
occurred. Section 89(1) does not expressly give the Board the jurisdiction to
determine whether or not there has been such a transfer, providing only that
the collective agreement will automatically attach to the purchaser if there
has been a transfer. Section 89(2) similarly offers no assistance on the
question of jurisdiction. While s. 17(k)(vii) gives the Board
jurisdiction to answer questions as to whether any person or organization is a
party to or bound by a collective agreement, it only applies where the
determination is in relation to a proceeding before it. In National
Bank of Canada v. Retail Clerks' International Union, [1984]
1 S.C.R. 269, this Court held that a labour board had jurisdiction to make a
preliminary inquiry as to transfer. The section there in question, however,
was s. 144 of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c.
L-1, which provides that "Where any question arises under this section as
to whether or not a business has been sold or as to the identity of the
purchaser of a business, the Board shall determine the question". In the
absence of a counterpart in the Newfoundland Act, there was arguably no matter
before the Board for which s. 17 could have been relied on to impose a
collective agreement.
This
apparent oversight in the Act has been resolved by virtue of s. 16.1 of the Act
which allows a union to apply to the Board for a determination of any matter
referred to in s. 17. The Court of Appeal in the present case held that any
doubt about the Board's jurisdiction is resolved by s. 16.1. However, this is
inaccurate with respect to this case as s. 16.1 was not in force at the time
that the Board heard this application.
Because
the enactment of s. 16.1 renders this issue a moot question except for the
determination of this case, and in view of my conclusion on the substantive
issue before the Court, I am prepared to assume for the purpose of this
judgment that the labour board had jurisdiction to consider whether or not
there had been a sale, lease, transfer or other disposition.
II.Whether the
Board's Exercise of its Jurisdiction was Patently Unreasonable
Assuming
that the tribunal had the initial jurisdiction to determine whether or not a
sale, lease, transfer or other disposition occurred, the next question is
whether its determination that a disposition in fact occurred was patently
unreasonable and thereby constitutes an excess of jurisdiction. This governing
principle was explained by this Court by Dickson J. (as he then was) in Service
Employees' International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin District Staff Nurses
Association, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382, at p. 389:
A
tribunal may, on the one hand, have jurisdiction in the narrow sense of
authority to enter upon an inquiry but, in the course of that inquiry, do
something which takes the exercise of its powers outside the protection of the
privative or preclusive clause. Examples of this type of error would include
acting in bad faith, basing the decision on extraneous matters, failing to take
relevant factors into account, breaching the provisions of natural justice or
misinterpreting provisions of the Act so as to embark on an inquiry or answer a
question not remitted to it.
In
the final analysis, the question in cases of alleged misapplication of
statutory provisions, as set out by this Court in Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation, [1979]
2 S.C.R. 227, at p. 237, is the following:
...was
the Board's interpretation so patently unreasonable that its construction
cannot be rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands
intervention by the court upon review?
The test
for review is a "severe test": Blanchard v. Control
Data Canada Ltd., supra, at p. 493.
Section
18 of the Newfoundland Act contains a privative clause limiting the Court's
jurisdiction to engage in judicial review to error in interpreting the
provisions conferring jurisdiction on it, or excess of jurisdiction by reason
of a patently unreasonable error in the performance of its function: CAIMAW v.
Paccar of Canada Ltd., [1989] 2 S.C.R. 983.
Courts
should exercise caution and deference in reviewing the decisions of specialized
administrative tribunals, such as the Labour Board in this case. This
deference extends both to the determination of the facts and the interpretation
of the law. Only where the evidence, viewed
reasonably,
is incapable of supporting a tribunal's findings of fact, or where the
interpretation placed on the legislation is patently unreasonable, can the
court interfere. As Dickson J. (as he then was) put it in Canadian
Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation, supra, at pp.
235-36, referring to the privative clause in the Public Service Labour
Relations Act, R.S.N.B. 1973, c. P-25:
[the
clause] constitutes a clear statutory direction on the part of the Legislature
that public sector labour matters be promptly and finally decided by the
Board. Privative clauses of this type are typically found in labour relations
legislation. The rationale for protection of a labour board's decisions within
jurisdiction is straightforward and compelling. The labour board is a
specialized tribunal which administers a comprehensive statute regulating
labour relations. In the administration of that regime, a board is called upon
not only to find facts and decide questions of law, but also to exercise its
understanding of the body of jurisprudence that has developed around the
collective bargaining system, as understood in Canada, and its labour relations
sense acquired from accumulated experience in the area.
At
the same time, the court cannot defer to decisions which are patently
unreasonable. As Wilson J. recently noted in Paccar at p.
1021:
...if it
were simply a question of whether the Board's interpretation of the Code was
the correct one, or even whether it was a reasonable one, there would be no
issue for the courts. In such circumstances the principle of curial deference
would require that the Board's decision be respected. But the courts must
not defer to decisions that are patently unreasonable. Such decisions
cannot be passed off as the product of special expertise or, as the appellant
submits, "policy choices" which are not subject to review by the
courts. They can only be treated as decisions which the Board had no
jurisdiction to make. [Emphasis added.]
The
question, then, is whether there are errors which establish that the Labour
Board in this case was acting beyond its jurisdiction. Bad faith on the part
of the Labour Board is not alleged, nor breach of the procedural rules of
natural justice. Rather the attack is on the basis of the Labour Board's
decision. First, it is submitted that the Board misconstrued the provisions of
the Act. Second, it is suggested that there was no evidence capable of
supporting the Board's conclusion that a transfer took place. The two points
are related. The first question must be how s. 89 should be construed. What
arrangements and relationships does it cover? The answer to that question
determines what sort of evidence is required to bring the section into play.
A. The
Interpretation of s. 89
Section
89(1) of the Act establishes the conditions in which the collective agreement
between a union and one employer may be imposed between the union and another
employer. That occurs "Where an employer sells, leases, transfers or
otherwise disposes of, or agrees to sell, lease, transfer or otherwise dispose
of his business or the operations thereof or any part of either of
them...."
The
question is whether these words extend to parallel companies operating side by
side in an independent although not unrelated manner, or whether, on the
contrary, they are confined to true transfer situations.
(1) The
Problem
In
order to understand s. 89(1) it is necessary to examine the problem to which it
and similar provisions across the country are addressed.
The
basic aim of such provisions is to prevent employees from losing union
protection when a business is sold or transferred or when changes are made to
the corporate structure of a business. The problem may arise in two ways.
The
classic situation, and the first to be addressed in most provinces, arises when
a business or part of a business is transferred from one company to another.
The transfer may be activated by legitimate motives or as a device to oust a
union and may be made between unrelated companies or arise through corporate
reorganization. The effect is the same. Absent legislation, the effect of the
transfer is to terminate the relationship between the union and the employer,
with the result that the employees would lose their bargaining rights. To meet
this problem, successorship provisions, like s. 89 of the Newfoundland Labour Relations
Act, 1977, have been passed.
The
second situation in which the problem arises does not, at first glance, involve
a transfer of the business or part of the business from one company to
another. It arises where one company, which continues to carry on business
subject to a union contract, sets up a second parallel company which operates
without a union. This practice, known as "double breasting", is a
device readily available in the construction industry, where workers tend to be
hired for particular jobs. By having a new non-union company take on a new
job, the employer can avoid the union contract. The workers for the first
company, if they want work, may be compelled to work in a non-union shop for
the second company. If work or employees are transferred to the non-union
company, successorship provisions may render assistance to the affected
employees. However, in the absence of some type of disposition, successorship
provisions will not prevent double breasting.
Because
related corporate structures will not in the absence of disposition trigger
successorship provisions, five provinces and Parliament have enacted common or
related employer provisions: Alberta, Labour Relations
Code, S.A. 1988, c. L-1.2, s. 45; British Columbia, Industrial
Relations Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 212, s. 37, as amended, S.B.C. 1987,
c. 24, s. 25; Manitoba, The Labour Relations Act, R.S.M. 1987, c.
L10, s. 59; Nova Scotia, Trade Union Act, S.N.S. 1972, c.
19, s. 20; Ontario, Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1980,
c. 228, s. 1(4); Canada, Canada Labour Code,
R.S.C., 1985, c. L-2, s. 35 . In the construction industry context,
common employer provisions allow labour boards to impose a collective agreement
in cases of double breasting where doing so serves a labour relations purpose.
Newfoundland
has not enacted common employer provisions. The Advisory Committee to the
Minister of Labour for the Province of Newfoundland, in a report on the
construction industry, considered and rejected the adoption of common employer
provisions. After hearing from unions and construction employers and taking
into account both the need to allow corporations to remain competitive and the
interests of unions, the Committee concluded that the existing provisions
offered sufficient protections.
The
situation in the case at bar is not one of successorship in the classic sense
of a business or part of a business being transferred from one company to
another. It falls rather into the second category of a collateral, connected
company. The question is whether, given the absence of common employer
provisions in Newfoundland, the successorship provisions of s. 89 of the Act
can be read as extending to this case.
(2) Legal
Remedies for the Problem of Double Breasting
(a)
The Use and Limitations of Successorship Provisions
Successorship
provisions similar to s. 89 of the Act exist in all provincial labour acts and
in the Canada Labour Code . While there are slight variations in
the wording, the purpose attributed to successorship provisions is consistent.
One of the oft-cited quotes explaining the underlying rationale for
successorship provisions is found in a decision of the British Columbia Labour
Relations Board in Kelly Douglas & Co. and W.H. Malkin Ltd., [1974]
1 CLRBR 77, at pp. 81-82:
When an employer exercises this legal freedom to
dispose of its business, this can have serious consequences for the situation
of its employees. They may have struggled to become organized and achieve
collective bargaining and then to arrive at a collective agreement. Once that
agreement is finally settled, the employees naturally expect that its terms
will be fulfilled in the conduct of the enterprise. The trouble is that these
expectations could be set at naught by a simple change in corporate ownership.
The employees may find themselves still working at the same plant, at the same
machine, under the same working conditions, under the same supervision, doing
exactly the same job as before, but for a different employer. The result of
the sale of a business of which the employees may not even be aware is that the
collective bargaining rights of the employees may have disappeared.
Realistically, one cannot expect these interests of
the employees and their union to be at the forefront of the business negotiations
which employers are free to engage in. Accordingly, the legislature adopted a
very straight-forward protection. Certification and other orders under the
Code follow the business into the hands of the transferee. The legislature
went even further to impose the collective agreement on a person who didn't
sign it. It is up to the prospective purchaser to investigate the terms of the
bargain which its predecessor has made with the trade union and see that this
is taken account of in the purchase price of the takeover before it steps into
the shoes of the old employer.
Within
that framework, it is important that the Board give a full and liberal
interpretation to the concept of successorship. In particular, little reliance
should be placed on the technical legal form which a business disposition
happens to take as between the old employer and its successor. The significant
factor as far as collective bargaining law is concerned in [sic] the
relationship between the successor, the employees, and the undertaking.
Ten
of the labour acts have provisions similarly worded to s. 89 of the
Newfoundland Act, referring to transactions such as sale, lease, transfer or
disposition, (The Quebec Act also contains a successorship provision but the
section uses the phrase "alienation or operation".) Although the
terms "sale" and "lease" may have restricted meanings, the
words "transfer" and "other disposition" have been broadly
interpreted to include several types of transactions, including exchange, gift,
trust, take overs, mergers, and amalgamation.
In
keeping with the purpose of successorship provisions -- to protect the
permanence of bargaining rights -- labour boards have interpreted
"disposition" broadly to include almost any mode of transfer and have
not relied on technical legal forms of business transactions. As explained by
the Ontario Board in United Steelworkers of America v. Thorco Manufacturing
Ltd. (1965), 65 CLLC {PP} 16,052, an expansive definition
accords with the purpose of the section -- to preserve bargaining rights
regardless of the legal form of the transaction which puts bargaining rights in
jeopardy.
This
Court in National Bank of Canada v. Retail Clerks' International
Union, supra, affirmed that the technical legal
form of a disposition will not be determinative and upheld a finding by the
Federal Court of Appeal that a labour board's interpretation of disposition to
include amalgamation was not patently unreasonable.
Notwithstanding
the broad discretion in labour boards to determine whether or not the mode
of disposition constitutes successorship, the fact remains that in virtually
all jurisdictions something must be relinquished by the predecessor business on
the one hand and obtained by the successor on the other to bring a case within
the section.
The
appellant union urged on us the following definitions of
"disposition":
... to `alienate or direct the ownership of property as
disposition by will; to exercise finally, in any manner, ones power of control
over; to pass into control of someone else; to alienate, relinquish, part
with, or get rid of; to put out of the way; to finish with; to bargain away;
to transfer into new hands or to the control of someone else (as by selling or
bargaining away); relinquish the whole; (dispose of some property to a man all
too anxious to buy)'.
By any
of these definitions it is clear that disposition must mean that in some way
the first company no longer has the business or part of the business, which has
been conveyed to the second company.
Case
law from jurisdictions across Canada is to the same effect. While there are
slight variations from province to province in terms of scope (i.e., some Acts
speak only of disposition of a business whereas other Acts provide for
disposition of a part of a business) a common theme throughout the
jurisdictions is that something must be relinquished from the first business
and obtained by the second.
If
the particular section in question allows for successorship upon disposition of
part of a business (as the Newfoundland Act does) there is more latitude to
find successorship, since successorship may occur, where, for example, a
business transfers only a portion of its operation. However, even where the
Act provides for disposition of part of a business, transfer of assets alone
may be insufficient to establish successorship. Rather, a discernable part of
the business must be disposed of. As Adams, in his text, Canadian
Labour Law (1985), at p. 414, states in concluding a review of
the law from various jurisdictions: "In virtually all cases where a sale
of part of a business has been found, a separate and identifiable part of the
predecessor's operations has been transferred". Adams continues at p.
415:
What is
clear from all these cases is that what must be transferred is a portion of the
business capable of being defined and identified as a functioning entity that
is viable in itself or sufficiently distinguishable to be severable from the
whole.
To
determine whether or not the business or part of the business has been disposed
of, most boards examine the nature of the predecessor business, and the nature
of the successor business determines if the business of the predecessor is
being performed by the successor. Most boards approach the issue by examining
factors like the work covered by the terms of the collective agreement, the
type of assets that have been transferred, whether goodwill has been
transferred, whether employees are transferred, whether the business is
operating in the same location, whether there is continuity of management, and
whether there is continuity of the work performed: Lyric Theater Ltd. v.
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, [1980]
2 Can LRBR 331 (B.C.); Canadian Union of Public Employees v. Metropolitan
Parking Inc., [1980] 1 Can LRBR 197 (Ont.). No single factor is
determinative, since factors which are sufficient to support a successorship
finding in one type of industry may be insufficient in another:
International Longshoremen's Assn. v. Terminus Maritime Inc.
(1983), 83 CLLC {PP} 16,029. In each case the Board must determine if,
within the business context in which the transaction occurred, it can
reasonably be said on the factors present that the business or part of the
business has been transferred from the predecessor to the successor. Because a
business is not merely a collection of assets, the vital consideration "is
whether the transferee has acquired from the transferrer a functional economic
vehicle": Metropolitan Parking Inc., supra, at p.
209.
Having
reviewed the general principles governing the construction of successorship
provisions, I turn to their interpretation in the context of the construction
industry. Due to its peculiar nature, many of the factors examined in other
contexts to determine if successorship has occurred may not be relevant. As
Paul Weiler, Reconcilable Differences: New Directions in Canadian
Labour Law (1980), explains at p. 183:
The character of the employment relationship in the
construction industry is very different from what it is in the typical plant.
There is no footing for the kind of tenured status which employees now enjoy
under most collective agreements. As well, there is no basis for the kind of
enduring association which a group of employees can develop in an industrial
bargaining unit. Any one job for the construction worker is short and
fleeting, and he must be prepared to be highly mobile, shifting from project to
project across a wide geographic area.
It
is the construction union which fills the vacuum, which provides the continuity
and structure in a tradesman's working career.
In
short, application of traditional factors to the construction industry may
render it easy for a contractor to erode the protection which successorship
provisions are meant to provide for bargaining rights. Construction companies,
which often have very few tangible assets, could avoid union obligations by the
simple technique of starting a new company to bid on a new project.
In
response to this type of tactic, labour boards began to apply different tests
when examining successorship in the construction context. The different
treatment of successorship in the construction industry is explained in Gibraltar
Development Corporation and Construction and General Labourers Union, BCLRB
12 29/82, at p. 607:
While the concept of the transfer of a business by
means of the transfer of assets may be a valid concept in many contexts, it may
be totally inapplicable in some situations in the construction industry. In
the construction industry, the sole "assets" required to carry on a
business may well be the skill and expertise of its principals as well as their
resulting reputation and credibility. The movement of that expertise and
reputation by "winding up" one business and "Starting
up" another is not the same as the transfer of the tangible assets of
a business.
In
cases where few, if any tangible assets are required to carry on a business,
the principals may be the only significant "feature" of a business.
It is more meaningful then to speak of them as being or constituting the
business itself rather than as being "assets" of the business.
[Emphasis added.]
Thus,
some boards dealing with this issue in the construction industry developed what
has sometimes been referred to as a "key-man" concept. Successorship
applications have sometimes succeeded where a principal in a small unionized
construction company had left that company and formed a non-union company,
provided that the individual involved was really the key-person or the crucial
asset of the first business: see for example: Rivard Mechanical; Re
Plumbers Union, Local 71, [1981] OLRB Rep.May 550; Frank Browne
Acoustics Kamloops (1982) Ltd. v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (1984),
6 CLRBR (NS) 247 (B.C.). In the present case none of the principals in question
have left the union company. Both companies continue to operate in a classic
"double breasting" situation.
Successorship
applications have also succeeded where it is established that because of the
presence of the non-union company the union company is losing work, or the
union company is wound down: see for example United Brotherhood of
Carpenters & Joiners of America v. Cana Construction Co. (1984),
9 CLRBR (NS) 175 (Sask.); Doran Construction Ltd., Taggart Construction Ltd. and
Taggart General Contractors Ltd.; Re Carpenters Union, Local 93, [1984]
OLRB Rep.Aug. 1108 (Ont.); Gibraltar Development, supra, at p.
1108; Pinsent Construction Ltd. v. International Union of Operating
Engineers, Local 904, supra.
Review
of numerous decisions in the construction industry makes it clear that in all
cases where successorship was established either a central principal left the
first company (such that even if the first company remains operational a part
of the business may have been disposed of) or the first company is wound down
or at least has suffered a decline in business because of the presence of the
non-union company. However, where both companies remain fully operational and
where principals continue to work for both companies, boards have not found
successorship as there is no identifiable disposition: see, for example, Viandes
Seficlo Inc. v. Union des Employés de Commerce (1984), 84 CLLC
{PP} 14,047 (Que.); International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v.
Minas Electric Co. (1976), 77 CLLC {PP} 16,075 (N.S.); Labourers'
International Union of North America v. Elmont Construction Ltd., [1974]
OLRB Rep.June 342. To put it another way, there is nothing within the
successorship provisions to bar an individual from owning or working for more
than one company or to bar a company from operating union and non-union
branches.
This
is not to suggest that in the absence of a common employer provision common
ownership is always irrelevant. A close corporate connection may sometimes
support the inference that a transaction was designed to circumvent bargaining
rights and thus be contrary to the purpose attributed to successorship
provisions. As the Ontario Board stated in Metropolitan Parking
Inc., supra, at pp. 211-12:
In
assessing the facts from which a transfer of a business may be inferred, the
Board has always been especially sensitive to any pre-existing corporate,
commercial or familial relationship between the predecessor and the alleged
successor....If both businesses are also "in the same business",
(i.e., supply the same product in approximately the same way and potentially to
the same market or customers) a transfer of a business may have occurred but
may be very difficult to detect. In such circumstances it may be important to
carefully examine the pre-existing links or lines of common control to which
the alleged predecessor and successor are both subject. Such examination is
precisely what is undertaken by the Board on an application under section 1(4)
[the Ontario common employer provision]; but it is also relevant on section 55
applicants, and it is for this reason that applications commonly plead section
1(4) in the alternative. It would be incorrect to make this consideration a
decisive "test" for successorship; but where there is a pre-existing
corporate connection between the predecessor and the successor the Board has
been disposed to infer a "transfer" if there is the slightest
evidence of such transaction. [Emphasis added.]
See
also: United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America v. Cana
Construction Co., supra.
But
while the existence of related companies may justify a less restrictive
approach to the question of whether or not successorship has occurred, the fact
remains that corporate interrelationship without some evidence of
disposition will not be sufficient to trigger the successorship provisions.
The
Newfoundland Labour Relations Board has until this case followed the same
approach as other boards when addressing successorship in the construction
industry. For example, in Re International Association of Machinists v.
Professional Personnel Services Ltd. and C.P. Personnel Ltd.
(Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported, Sept. 1985) a unionized
company had an airport security contract and later a non-unionized company was
given the contract. Both companies were controlled and run by the same
individual. The Board held that a disposition had not occurred and denied the
successor rights application. The fact of common majority shareholdings and a
possible relationship between the two companies was considered insufficient to
invoke s. 89 because there must still be in fact a sale or other disposition.
In United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners v. N. D. Dobin Ltd. and Bradco Ltd.
(Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported without written reasons, March
1985 -- cited in dissenting opinion of the Board), a unionized and a
non-unionized company were owned and run by the same principals, shared office
space, personnel and expenses. The companies also shared equipment through
inter-company rentals. The Board denied the union's s. 89 application because
it found there was no disposition. One of the reasons for this finding was the
fact that both companies were still active and ongoing enterprises.
Conversely,
in United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners v. Robco Ltd. and
Brookfield Investments Ltd. (Newfoundland Labour Relations Board, unreported, May
1985) and in Pinsent, supra,
successorship declarations were granted where the original company ceased to
exist and the second company increased its operations.
These
cases reveal that, until this decision, the Newfoundland Board has followed
traditionally accepted jurisprudence with respect to successorship provisions
in the construction industry. If a principal has left the union company, or if
the first company has lost work or is wound down, successorship may succeed. If
none of these factors is present the mere practice of double breasting will not
be sufficient to establish successorship as nothing has been transferred, in
the classic sense of a loss to the union company accompanied by a corresponding
gain to the non-union company.
I
cannot leave consideration of the scope of s. 89(2) of the Act without
reference to three cases relied on by the appellant for the contention that the
section could extend to circumstances short of a clear conveyance from one
company to another. The appellant cited Kelly Douglas &
Co., supra; Frank Browne
Acoustics, supra; and Pinsent Construction
Ltd. v. International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 904, supra, in
support of its contention that the relationship between Lester and Planet and
the presence of the Lesters performing bids for both companies could properly
fall within the meaning of "other disposition". While it is true
that in these cases the labour boards in question determined that simple legal
configurations such as incorporation cannot be used in derogation of hard-won
bargaining rights, they are distinguishable from the present case. In all of
these cases the evidence in favour of successorship went well beyond the mere
existence of related companies.
In Kelly
Douglas & Co., there had been a corporate reorganization, which
resulted in work previously performed by some branches of the company being
transferred to other branches, with the result that some outlets were closed.
In effect, work was transferred. In Frank Browne
Accoustics, one of the two principals had left the union company.
Thus the asset (the principal's expertise, knowledge etc.) was transferred. In Pinsent, there
was evidence that the union companies had lost work because of the creation of
the non-union double breasted company. Again, work was transferred.
In
summary, in none of these cases was the mere presence of two companies
operating side by side sufficient to trigger successorship. There must be more
to indicate a transfer or disposition. In Re N & L
Construction Ltd. (1987), 64 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 271, the Newfoundland
Court of Appeal was again faced with the question of whether there was a
transfer of business within s. 89 of the Act. The evidence had established
that there had been very little new work performed or bid on by the union
company once the non-union company was set up. Gushue J.A. therefore upheld a
trial division judgment affirming the original ruling of the Board. In doing
so, he stressed the importance of that additional element. At page 275, he
stated:
Having
accepted that the board's decision should stand, I would add that I do so based
on the strong facts of this case in support of such transfer or disposal. I
do not agree with the board that s. 89 is a suitable vehicle, generally
speaking, for dealing with "double-breasting" situations and I
certainly do not accept the proposition that persons holding controlling
shareholdings in companies which happen to be unionized, may never engage in other
nonunionized endeavours, incorporated or otherwise. [Emphasis added.]
I
conclude that a finding of successorship based on common shareholdings and a
common business enterprise is clearly insufficient on the established
jurisprudence to bring the case within s. 89 of the Act. Nor is it sufficient
to show that the same people own or work for both companies. What must be
established is that the first company must have conveyed some aspect of the
business to the second company.
(b) The
Advent of Common Employer Provisions
The
obligation on the Union to establish the transfer required by successorship
provisions may be difficult to discharge in the construction context. As the
Ontario Board explained in Brant Erecting and Hoisting; Re Iron Workers' Union, [1980]
OLRB Rep.July 945, at pp. 948-49:
A single
principal may have several companies which are used, more or less
interchangeably, so that bidding is done and work performed through whichever
company is convenient. In such circumstances there may be an effective
transfer of business between related businesses without any apparent
disposition of assets, inventory, trade names, goodwill, employees, etc.
Similarly, where capital requirements are minimal and business relationships transitory,
it is relatively easy to wind up one business, and create another one which
carries on essentially the same business as before. Indeed there will often be
good commercial reasons for doing so unrelated to any express desire to
undermine the union's bargaining rights.... Again, it is quite possible to do
this without a clear and concrete disposition between the two firms so as to
call section 55 [the successor provisions] into play.
For
this reason, unions have long sought stronger protection than is provided under
successorship provisions. Contractors have also sought changes, arguing that,
especially in a poor economy, they can not be competitive if unable to bid on
projects at non-union prices. (For a good summary of the various arguments raised
in respect of double breasting see Concerned Contractors Action Group v.
British Columbia and Yukon Territory Building and Construction Trades Council (1986),
13 CLRBR (NS) 121 (B.C.)).
Different
provincial legislatures have responded to these respective demands of unions
and contractors in different ways. For example, in British Columbia recent
amendments to successorship provisions provide that the transfer of a principal
alone is not sufficient to finding successorship. Thus in the context of the
construction industry the movement of a key figure would no longer alone be
sufficient to establish successorship. However, the British Columbia Act, like
the federal and many of the provincial Acts, also contains what is known as a
"common employer" provision, the most common response to concerns
raised in the construction industry.
As
noted earlier, common or related employer provisions presently exist in the
federal, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Ontario and
Saskatchewan Labour Acts. Such provisions allow boards to address double
breasting (where appropriate to do so) by giving the board the ability to
declare that two employers are common employers and to treat them as one
employer for the purpose of the Act. This permits the board to impose the
collective agreement of a union company on the non-union company and thus to
control the practice of double breasting. However, unlike the successor
provisions which, in most jurisdictions operate automatically (if disposition
is found the collective agreement shall be imposed) common employer provisions
are discretionary. A declaration will succeed only if there is a valid labour
relations purpose to be achieved: Mackie Bros. Sand & Gravel Ltd. (1974),
BCLRB No. L107/81; International Association of Bridge, Structural and
Ornamental Iron Workers v. Empire Iron Works Ltd. (1986), 86 CLLC
{PP} 16,027 (Alta.). Moreover, labour boards have noted that they will not
grant such a declaration where it is clear that a union is attempting to use a
common declaration in circumstances where they are unable to achieve
certification: Tri Power Construction Ltd. v. United Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners of America (1984), 8 CLRBR (NS) 332 (B.C.);
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v. Minas Electric Co., supra;
International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers v.
Empire Iron Works Ltd., supra.
Newfoundland
is no exception to the demands for stronger protection against double breasting
than traditionally provided by successorship provisions. Newfoundland
construction unions have argued for change, pointing out that s. 89, as it now
exists in the Act, does not address the issue of double breasting. Companies
have countered by voicing their concern to remain competitive. The
Construction Industry Advisory Committee in Newfoundland recommended against
change: Report of the Construction Industry Advisory Committee. The
Committee observed as follows:
The
union representatives that the committee heard from were adamant that the
present Section 89 as it now exists in the Labour Relations Act is inadequate
to protect the rights of the unions and their members. They claim that it is
only in the most blatant cases that the Labour Relations Board is able to find
the evidence that one company has indeed "transferred...sold or
otherwise disposed of its business" to another. Compounding the
situation is the fact that the onus of proof rests in these cases on the unions
and our present Act has no common employer provision. Also, in this
Province we have no provision similar to that found in the Ontario Labour
Relations Act where a respondent to an application made by a union under their
equivalent of our Section 89, has to adduce all facts within its knowledge that
are material or may be unavailable to the applicant.
To date,
common employer provisions have not been adopted in Newfoundland.
(c) Summary
of Legal Remedies for Double Breasting
The
foregoing review establishes that successorship provisions such as s. 89(1)
permit a representation order to meet the problem of double breasting only
where a transfer can be established. If no transfer can be established, the
Union may succeed under common employer provisions, where these exist. In
practice, in jurisdictions where both successor and common employer provisions
exist, unions will often bring applications under both sections.
The absence of common employer provisions in Newfoundland leaves only one
question: was there any evidence upon which the majority at the Labour Board
could have found that a transfer, lease, sale or other disposition occurred in
the sense of an identifiable conveyance of assets, work or other aspects of the
business of the unionized company, Lester, to the non-unionized company,
Planet?
B.Whether
There was any Evidence to Substantiate the Finding of the Majority?
As
stated at the outset, the Court in reviewing labour decisions is not concerned
with whether or not the decision is "correct" but rather is concerned
with whether or not the decision is "patently unreasonable". If
there is any evidence capable of supporting a finding of successorship, the
Court will defer to the Board's finding even though it may not have reached the
same conclusion. However, absent such evidence, the decision must fall.
Although
the testimony before the Board was sometimes contradictory, my review of the
transcript reveals that there was no evidence to support the Board's conclusion
that a transfer or "other disposition" had taken place.
1. Transfer
of Employees
There
was no evidence that any employees were transferred from Lester to Planet.
There was contradicted evidence that a transfer had been considered. Dan
Whalen and Ben McCann testified that Brent Lester told them that he expected to
transfer certain employees -- Dave Goodyear, Wally Coady, and Joe Fitzpatrick
-- from the Clarenville job (Lester's job site) job to the Burin job if they
agreed to quit the union. This evidence was contradicted by other testimony:
(a) Brent Lester denied making this statement;
(b) In cross examination McCann admitted that no Lester
Ltd. employees were hired by Planet;
(c) While Wally Coady did not testify as to whether or
not he had previously worked for Lester he did testify that he had not joined
the union until just before the Burin job, so it would have been difficult for
him to have worked for Lester, a unionized contractor.
(d) According to Brent Lester, Joe Fitzpatrick was
never hired on the Burin job.
(e) There is no other evidence as to the identity and
activities of the employee Dave Goodyear.
The
majority of the Board appears to have accepted that there was no evidence that
employees were transferred, but discounted the significance of this on the
ground that "in the construction industry, it is of little or no
weight".
2.
Intermingling of Equipment and Finances
Jimmy
Cheeseman testified that Brent Lester had told him to take a welding machine
from the Burin site to use at Cow Head. His testimony was contradicted by
Brent Lester, who explained that this was not possible as an electric welding
machine would not work at Cow Head because there was no electrical source
there. As to other matters, Brent Lester testified that:
(a) items shipped by suppliers to the Burin site might
have been accidently addressed to Lester Ltd. instead of Planet but that this
error would have been due to the supplier and the items were purchased on
Planet purchase orders;
(b) Brent Lester had on at least one occasion provided
advances to Planet employees using Lester Ltd. cheques when the Planet payroll
system had broken down;
(c) Planet's bonding line was supported by guarantees
from the Lester Family, Regent Enterprises Ltd. and Lester Holdings Ltd.;
(d) Planet and Lester owned or rented their own
equipment but, on occasion, the companies would rent equipment to each other.
While
this evidence would be relevant if the application brought was a common or
related employer application, it provides no evidence of a transfer or
disposition of business. In particular, there is no evidence that any
equipment, money or finances were relinquished by Lester and subsequently
obtained by Planet.
3. Anti-union animus
The
evidence on this point is of little assistance, since even if anti-union animus were
established, that would not establish that a transfer occurred under s. 89 of
the Act on the legal criteria set out earlier.
However,
since the Board referred to this issue in reaching its decision, a brief review
of the evidence on it may not be amiss. At best, the evidence as to anti-union animus must be
regarded as weak.
Dan
Whalen, business agent for the union, and Ben McCann, business manager for the
union, testified that Brent Lester told them he was doing the Burin job with
Planet in order to avoid the union. Bill Cheeseman, a member of the
union, testified that when he visited the Burin site he was told by Keating, an
employee at the site, that if he wanted to work on the Burin Hospital
"you'll have to tear up your union card like we had to do". Cheeseman
also testified that Brent Lester had offered him a union job at non-union
wages.
This
evidence is refuted by the following evidence:
(a) There was no evidence to substantiate the claims of
Whalen and McCann that Brent bid the Burin project with Planet in order to
avoid the union;
(b) Brent Lester testified that Cheeseman was not hired
because he lacked the necessary ticket. The person who was hired to perform the
work that Cheeseman claims he was initially offered by Brent Lester at lower
than union rate was in fact paid the union rate;
(c) Brent Lester testified that he would have preferred
to use Lester to do the Burin job as Lester employees had gained experience
working on a similar hospital project at Clarenville such that it would have
been easier to perform the work through Lester than through Planet;
(d) Keith Keating and Wally Coady were hired to work at
the Burin site. Coady testified that he was not told he would have to tear up
his card before working at the site. Both were card carrying union members,
and Brent Lester was aware of their union status. Keith Keating denies being
told that he would have to give up his union status in order to work at the
site. Keith Keating also denies telling Cheeseman that he would have to tear
up his card to work at the site. Rather, he testified that when Whalen (the
business agent) and Cheeseman came to the site they threatened to "shut it
down", and Keating then told Whalen that if Whalen wanted his card he
would tear it up in front of him.
4.
Principals/Expertise
This
is the crucial element in this case. Evidence before the Board clearly
established that Brent and Wade Lester performed work for both companies and
that Brent Lester performed bidding on behalf of both companies. The Court of
Appeal discounted this factor on the ground that Lester did not transfer the
expertise to Planet, but rather, that it was the decision of Brent and Wade
Lester operating in the course of their duties with the respective companies as
to how their talents should be applied. The appellant submits that this
interpretation fundamentally misconstrues the position of
employees/managers/directors in relation to the companies for which they work.
Given
the interrelationship between the two companies in question, I agree that it
may not be appropriate to distinguish between the principals of the company and
the company itself, as did the Court of Appeal. Nevertheless, it remains
difficult to see on what basis a transfer or disposition of expertise can be
said to have occurred. Both companies are entitled to use the expertise of the
Lester brothers. The fact that Planet did so cannot be construed as a question
of Lester's having relinquished the services of Brent and Wade. The evidence
shows that the two companies, through their common employees, assisted each
other -- "mutual back scratching", as the Court of Appeal graphically
put it. For example, in relation to the Cow Head job, Lester received from
Planet the information and prices which enabled Lester to obtain the contract.
Conversely, when working at the Burin site Planet benefited from previous
knowledge attained by Lester at the Clarenville site. The relationship is
better described as a sharing of expertise than as a disposition from Lester to
Planet.
Moreover,
the expertise of Brent and Wade cannot be said to be expertise belonging to
Lester. As the respondent argued, the word "expertise" is defined as
an overall grasp of a subject process, etc. produced by ability, experience and
skill. A person's expertise is something which has been built up or acquired
over time. Lester was incorporated in 1978 and Planet in 1981. At the time of
the hearing the expertise of Brent and Wade was expertise acquired over a
period of years while working for both companies. Assuming that their
expertise was a corporate asset, it is equally the asset of both Lester and
Planet.
Finally,
it is clear that the presence of Brent Lester in both companies did not result
in a loss of work for Lester. The work which was available to Planet because
of its non-union status was simply not available to the unionized company,
Lester. The unrefuted evidence given at the hearing was that the presence of
Planet has not resulted in any loss of work for Lester. Had Brent Lester been
working for an unrelated company under the same circumstances, a successorship
application would not have succeeded. The fact that Brent Lester has ownership
in both companies cannot alter the fact that there is no evidence of
disposition.
5. Summary
of Evidence
I
conclude that, while the evidence demonstrates a certain level of cooperation
between the two companies, there is no evidence of any disposition by Lester to
Planet, either of work, assets, or expertise. The evidence is incapable of
supporting the Board's conclusion that there had been a disposition under s. 89
of the Act.
Both
companies were operating out of the same office with essentially the same
principals. One of the principals bid union jobs for one of the companies and
non-union jobs for the other. However, both companies continued to operate
independently and there was no evidence that work which would have gone to the
union company was passed through to the non-union company. In fact there was
evidence to the contrary. Had the union company ceased to operate (or had its
operation been significantly curtailed), the Board might have been correct in
finding successorship. However, since both companies continued to operate,
there was no identifiable disposition and thus no successorship. The only asset
that could have been "sold, leased, transferred or otherwise disposed
of" within s. 89 was the expertise of the principals who were bidding on
projects, since the businesses were otherwise run as separate operations. But
this expertise was clearly not "sold" or "leased". Nor was
it "transferred", since the first company continued to operate and to
retain the services of the principals in question. The same logic must apply
to the phrase "otherwise disposes of"; whatever the scope of the
phrase, it must denote that in some way the first company no longer has an
asset because it has disposed of it to the second.
C. Was
the Board's Decision Patently Unreasonable?
The
absence of evidence establishing a transfer or disposition under s. 89 of that
Act renders the Board's decision patently unreasonable. The Board was able to
arrive at its conclusion only by construing the Act in an unprecedented and
unjustified manner.
On
the facts of this case, where the two companies were operating side by side,
the normal route would be to apply for a common employer declaration. In the
absence of a common employer provision in the Newfoundland Labour
Relations Act, 1977, the majority of the Board appears to have attempted to
interpret the successorship provision as if it included such a provision. The
Newfoundland Legislature has, for whatever reason, chosen not to enact such a
provision (although clearly lobbied for). Achieving the opposite result by
construing the Newfoundland successorship provisions as if they were common
employer provisions is contrary to the weight of precedent and is patently
unreasonable. Such a construction quite simply cannot be rationally supported
by the relevant legislation.
Having
concluded that there is no evidence of transfer or disposition sufficient to
satisfy s. 89 of the Act and that the decision of the majority of the Board was
by consequence patently unreasonable, I find it is unnecessary to consider the
additional argument that no employees were affected by the alleged disposition.
Disposition
I
conclude that the Newfoundland Court of Appeal correctly held that the decision
of the majority of the Newfoundland Labour Relations Board was patently
unreasonable. Accordingly, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
//L'Heureux-Dubé//
The
following are the reasons delivered by
L'HEUREUX-DUBÉ J.
(dissenting) -- With the benefit of both Justice Wilson's and Justice
McLachlin's reasons, and although I agreed with my colleague Justice Gonthier's
approach on curial deference in National Corn Growers Assn. v. Canada
(Import Tribunal), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 1324, and still hold the same view, I
join my colleague Wilson J. in the present appeal on the issue of the
reasonableness of the Newfoundland Labour Relations Board's decision. As she
does, and for the reasons she expresses, I find that the Board's decision was
not patently unreasonable in the context of the Act.
I
would therefore allow the appeal and dispose of the matter as suggested by my
colleague Wilson J.
Appeal
dismissed with costs, DICKSON C.J. and WILSON, L'HEUREUX‑DUBÉ and CORY JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors
for the appellant: O'Dea, Strong, Earle, St. John's.
Solicitors
for the respondents W.W. Lester (1978) Ltd. and Planet Development Corporation
Ltd.: Heywood, Parsons, Mount Pearl, Newfoundland.
Solicitors
for the respondent The Labour Relations Board for the Province of
Newfoundland: Miller & Hearn, Labrador City, Newfoundland.