SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Dennis
Manuge
Appellant
and
Her
Majesty The Queen
Respondent
Coram: Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and
Cromwell JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 24)
|
Abella J. (Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps,
Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ. concurring)
|
Manuge v. Canada, 2010 SCC 67,
[2010] 3 S.C.R. 672
Dennis Manuge Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: Manuge
v. Canada
2010 SCC 67
File No.: 33103.
2010: January 20, 21;
2010: December 23.
Present: Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron,
Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Courts
— Federal Court — Procedure — Plaintiff bringing action in Federal Court
against federal Crown for constitutional remedies, declaratory relief and
damages arising from establishment, modification and application of long‑term
disability benefits plan — Whether plaintiff entitled to proceed by way of
action without first proceeding by way of judicial review — Federal Courts Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7, ss. 17 , 18 .
In 2002, M was injured and was awarded a monthly
disability pension under the Pension Act in addition to his salary as a
member of the Canadian Forces. In 2003, he was given an involuntary,
medically required release and was approved to receive long‑term
disability benefits under the Canadian Forces’ disability plan. For 24 months following his release, M received
both a disability pension and long‑term disability benefits, but,
pursuant to s. 24(a)(iv) of the plan, the amount he received from his
disability pension was deducted monthly from the amount he received for long‑term
disability. M brought an action in the Federal Court seeking, among other relief,
constitutional remedies, declaratory relief and damages in relation to these
deductions. The Federal Court certified the proceeding as a class action. The Federal Court of Appeal allowed the
Crown’s appeal based on Canada v. Grenier, 2005 FCA 348, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 287, concluding that the lawfulness of a decision or
administrative activity like s. 24(a)(iv) of the plan can only be
challenged by judicial review.
Held:
The appeal should be allowed.
In accordance with Canada (Attorney
General) v. TeleZone Inc., 2010 SCC 62, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 585, the Federal
Court has jurisdiction to entertain the action. At their core, the pleadings
represent a claim for alleged breaches of s. 15(1) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the action need not, therefore, be
stayed in favour of an application for judicial review.
Cases Cited
Applied: Canada (Attorney General) v.
TeleZone Inc., 2010 SCC 62, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 585; overruled: Canada
v. Grenier, 2005 FCA 348, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 287; referred to: Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc., [1990] 2 S.C.R. 959; Canada (Attorney
General) v. McArthur, 2010 SCC 63, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 626; Nu‑Pharm
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 65, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 648.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act to amend the statute law in
relation to veterans’ benefits, S.C. 2000, c. 34.
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 15(1) , 24 .
Canadian Forces Members and Veterans Re‑establishment
and Compensation Act, S.C. 2005, c. 21 .
Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑50, s. 21 .
Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7, ss. 2 , 17(1) ,
18 , 18.1 , 18.4(2) .
Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, rr. 334.1, 334.12, 334.16.
National Defence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. N‑5, s. 39(1) .
Pension Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P‑6 .
Authors Cited
Canada. Department of National Defence and Canadian Forces.
Ombudsman. Unfair Deductions From SISIP Payments to Former CF Members.
Ottawa: The Department, 2003 (online: www.ombudsman.forces.gc.ca/rep-rap/sr-rs/sis-rar/doc/sis-rar-eng.pdf).
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal (Létourneau, Noël and Blais
JJ.A.), 2009 FCA 29, [2009] 4 F.C.R. 478, 384 N.R. 313, 73 C.C.P.B. 1, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 73 (QL), 2009 CarswellNat 160, setting aside a decision of
Barnes J., 2008 FC 624, [2009] 1 F.C.R. 416, 329 F.T.R. 167, 71 C.C.P.B. 112,
[2008] F.C.J. No. 787 (QL), 2008 CarswellNat 1495. Appeal allowed.
Peter J. Driscoll, Michael Sobkin, Ward K. Branch and Daniel F. Wallace, for the appellant.
Christopher M. Rupar, Alain Préfontaine and Bernard Letarte, for the respondent.
The judgment
of the Court was delivered by
[1]
Abella J. — For 24 months following his involuntary, medically required
release from the Canadian Forces, Dennis Manuge received both a disability
pension and long-term disability benefits. Pursuant to the terms of the
relevant policies, the amount Mr. Manuge received for his disability pension
was deducted monthly from the amount he received for long-term disability. Mr.
Manuge brought proceedings in the Federal Court seeking constitutional
remedies, damages, declarations and restitution in relation to these
deductions. His complaint is not with the deductions per se, but with
the fact that they have not been universally applied to everyone who received
Canadian Forces disability benefits.
[2]
The question in this appeal is whether Mr. Manuge,
before commencing the action, must first seek judicial review of the provision of the disability benefit
plan that authorized the deductions. Following Canada (Attorney General) v.
TeleZone Inc., 2010 SCC 62, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 585, heard with this appeal, it
is clear that the Federal Court has jurisdiction to entertain the action.
However, TeleZone also states that there is a residual
discretion to stay an action that is essentially a veiled application for
judicial review. The Crown suggests that the claim
in this case is such an application. With respect, given what I see as the
essential character of that claim, the discretion to grant a stay should not be
exercised.
Background
[3]
Dennis
Manuge is a former member of the Canadian Forces. He served from 1994 until 2003. In 2002, he was injured
to such an extent that he was unable to continue with his regular duties. Pursuant to the Pension
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-6 , Mr. Manuge was awarded a monthly disability pension
known as a “VAC benefit” — calculated in relation to his injury, not his
pre-disability earnings — in the amount of $386.28. He was awarded this benefit in addition to his monthly
Canadian Forces salary of $3,942. Mr. Manuge tried to continue his work, but in December 2003 was given
an involuntary, medically required release.
For 24 months following his release, Mr. Manuge
received benefits under both the Pension Act and the Canadian Forces’
Service Income Security Insurance Plan Long Term Disability Plan (“SISIP LTD
Plan”). Under s. 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP LTD Plan, however, each of the 24
monthly LTD benefit payments he received was reduced, from an amount equal to
75 percent of his pre-release monthly income, by the amount of the Pension
Act benefit he also received.
[4]
The SISIP LTD Plan was
issued in 1969, as part of a document entitled SISIP Policy 901102, pursuant to s.
39(1) of the National Defence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. N-5 . Section 39(1)
grants the Chief of the Defence Staff discretion to dispose of “[n]on-public
property acquired by contribution” for the benefit of members of the Canadian
Forces or their dependants.
[5]
In 1976, Part III(B) of
the SISIP Policy was amended to include s. 24 (a)(iv), which reduces monthly
benefits payable under the SISIP LTD Plan by the value of any monthly benefits
received under the Pension Act (like the VAC benefit that Mr. Manuge
received):
24. Other Relevant Sources of Income
a. The
monthly benefit payable at Section 23 shall be reduced by the sum of:
. . .
(iv) the
total monthly income benefits payable
to the member under the Pension Act . . . .
[6]
In 2000, the Act to
amend the statute law in relation to veterans’ benefits, S.C. 2000, c. 34,
came into force. This Act allows members who have suffered a disability during
service, but who can still work, to collect a Pension Act disability
benefit while also receiving their salaries. Mr. Manuge claims that because s. 24 (a)(iv) reduces only those payments made pursuant to the SISIP LTD Plan, those members who were able to continue their
service — and thus were not receiving SISIP LTD benefits — did not have their
primary source of income reduced by the value of the Pension Act
benefits they also received.
[7]
The Canadian Forces Members and Veterans
Re-establishment and Compensation Act, S.C. 2005, c. 21 (the “New Veterans
Charter”), came into force on April 1, 2006. That Act replaced monthly
benefits under the Pension Act with a one-time, lump sum payment. The
lump sum payment is not a “monthly benefit” within the meaning of s. 24(a)(iv)
of the SISIP LTD Plan, and is therefore not deducted from SISIP LTD benefits.
The effect of the enactment of the New Veterans Charter is that members injured
on or after April 1, 2006, and entitled to both a SISIP LTD benefit and a lump
sum payment, are not subject to a reduction of
their SISIP LTD benefits. Those, like Mr.
Manuge, who were subject to a reduction before the enactment of the New
Veterans Charter, are not entitled to compensation
for amounts previously deducted. Nor are
those injured before April 1, 2006 entitled to a lump sum payment. Instead, they continue
to receive monthly Pension Act benefits which, pursuant to s. 24 (a)(iv),
result in a reduction of their SISIP LTD benefits.
[8]
On March 15, 2007, Mr.
Manuge filed a statement of claim with the Federal Court, challenging the reduction
to his SISIP LTD benefits on a variety of grounds and seeking constitutional
remedies, damages, restitution and declarations. He later applied to the
Federal Court for the certification of his action as a class action pursuant to
rule 334.16 of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106. He purports to
represent approximately 4000 other former Canadian Forces members similarly
affected by s. 24 (a)(iv).
[9]
In his statement of
claim, Mr. Manuge alleges that
(i) section 24 (a)(iv) is unlawful, ultra vires
and contrary to the Pension Act ;
(ii) the Crown has breached
the public law obligations owed to Mr. Manuge and the class under the Pension
Act ;
(iii) section 24 (a)(iv) infringes s. 15(1) of the
Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and is not
saved by s. 1 ;
(iv) the Crown has been
unjustly enriched;
(v) the Crown is a fiduciary
and has breached the fiduciary duties owed to Mr. Manuge and the class; and
that
(vi) The
Crown has acted in bad faith.
[10]
Mr. Manuge seeks
declaratory relief and, pursuant to s. 24 of the Charter , damages equal
to the amount “unlawfully and wrongfully deducted” pursuant to s. 24 (a)(iv)
from the SISIP LTD benefits paid to the class. In the alternative, he seeks
damages in that amount. In the further alternative, he seeks an order for
restitution. Finally, Mr. Manuge claims “liability and general damages” for
discrimination, breach of fiduciary duties and bad faith, and seeks punitive,
exemplary and aggravated damages, interest, and costs of the action.
[11]
Mr. Manuge
relies on various government documents to support his contention that the
scheme as a whole operates unfairly and that the amendments to the SISIP LTD
Plan were made in bad faith. Among those documents is a special report
prepared by the Ombudsman for the Department of National Defence and Canadian
Forces in October 2003 entitled Unfair Deductions From SISIP Payments to
Former CF Members. In that report, the Ombudsman highlighted the disparate
treatment experienced by serving Canadian Forces members and those released for
medical reasons as follows:
Serving CF members receiving disability pensions through VAC under the Pension
Act do not have their income reduced because of the pension they receive to
compensate them for their disability. It simply does not seem fair that injured
and ill members who are released from the CF for medical reasons should have
their disability insurance benefit paid, which is intended to replace their
income as CF members, reduced because of the same pension benefits. [p. 14]
The
Ombudsman sent follow-up letters to the Minister of National Defence in 2005
and 2007, stating that the deduction of benefits under the Pension Act from
SISIP LTD Plan benefits was unfair to former members like Mr. Manuge.
[12]
The Crown opposed
certification of Mr. Manuge’s claim as a class action. Relying on Canada v.
Grenier, 2005 FCA 348, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 287, the Crown argued
that an action was not the appropriate procedure for attacking the validity or
lawfulness of a federal administrative decision, which can only be done by way
of an application for judicial review. In the Crown’s view, in establishing
and modifying the SISIP LTD Plan, the Chief of the Defence Staff was acting as
a “federal board, commission or other tribunal” within the meaning of s. 2 of
the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 . The Crown took the position
that each of the claims pleaded in the statement of claim would have to be
determined based on the validity of the decision to include Pension Act
benefits in the list of SISIP LTD Plan deductions
in s. 24 (a)(iv).
[13]
On Mr. Manuge’s motion for certification in the Federal Court, Barnes J. noted that the
decision to include s. 24 (a)(iv) in the SISIP LTD Plan was made years ago by
the Chief of the Defence Staff, and that what Mr. Manuge was challenging was
the lawfulness of the policy as reflected in s. 24 (a)(iv) and the corresponding
action to reduce his monthly income under the Plan (2008 FC 624, [2009] 1
F.C.R. 416). Barnes J. accepted that, “on its face” (para. 15), Mr. Manuge’s
claim falls within s. 18(3) of the Federal Courts Act , and that “each
and every occasion that Mr. Manuge and the other proposed class members are
subject to the offset of VAC benefits from their SISIP income, they have a
fresh claim to relief and a corresponding right to judicially attack the
lawfulness of the policy giving rise to the reduction in benefits” (para. 18).
However, he found that this case is unlike Grenier for two reasons: the
decision at issue is not discrete in a temporal sense; and the action cannot be
seen as a true collateral attack aimed at avoiding the short time bar on
judicial review (paras. 15 and 18). As such, he concluded that the concerns
about collateral attack, finality, and deference to the administrative decision
maker animating Grenier did not “obviously apply” in this case (para.
21).
[14]
He went on to hold that
“the strictness of the ratio in Grenier can be mitigated in
appropriate cases by the authority to convert an application for judicial
review into an action” pursuant to s. 18.4(2) of the Federal Courts Act
(para. 21). He concluded, applying the test in Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc.,
[1990] 2 S.C.R. 959, that the pleadings disclosed a reasonable cause of action,
and certified the action as a class action.
[15]
The Federal Court of
Appeal, applying Grenier, allowed the Crown’s appeal. It concluded that the
lawfulness of a decision or administrative activity like s. 24(a)(iv) of the
SISIP LTD Plan could only be challenged in judicial
review proceedings (2009 FCA 29, [2009] 4 F.C.R.
478). In such proceedings, the monthly
decision to reduce the benefits could be declared invalid or unlawful.
Liability stemming from an unlawful decision could
be assessed separately in a legal action for damages. The court further held that Barnes J.
could not notionally use s. 18.4(2) of the Federal Courts Act to convert
the proceedings into an action.
[16]
The Federal Court of
Appeal gave Mr. Manuge 30 days to serve and file an application for judicial
review and suspended his action until a final
decision had been made on that application. The court noted that Mr. Manuge could
apply, should he wish to do so, for certification of his application for
judicial review as a class proceeding (see rules 334.1 and 334.12 of the Federal
Courts Rules). Mr. Manuge applied for judicial review on March 4,
2009. He also appealed the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal to this
Court.
Analysis
[17]
Following TeleZone,
there is no question that the Federal Court has jurisdiction to entertain Mr.
Manuge’s claim as an action for damages: Federal Courts Act, s. 17(1) ; Crown
Liability and Proceedings Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-50, s. 21 ; TeleZone, at
paras. 19-23 and 43-46; Canada (Attorney General) v. McArthur, 2010 SCC 63,
[2010] 3 S.C.R. 626, at para. 17; Nu-Pharm
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 65, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 648, at
para. 16. Mr. Manuge’s
pleadings disclose claims against the Crown seeking remedies that the Federal
Court has authority to grant in an action.
[18]
But under TeleZone,
there is a residual discretion
to stay an action if it is premised on public
law considerations to such a degree that, in Binnie J.’s words, “in its
essential character, it is a claim for judicial review with only a thin
pretence to a private wrong” (para. 78). The Crown’s argument, in essence, is that Mr. Manuge’s
action should be stayed on that basis.
[19]
The exercise of the discretion to stay
an action in this context is dependent on an identification of the essential
character of the claim as an assertion of either private law or public law
rights. I agree with the Crown that some of Mr.
Manuge’s claims raise issues that are amenable to judicial review. However,
the question is not just whether some aspects of Mr. Manuge’s pleadings could
be addressed under ss. 18 and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act , but what,
in their essential character, his claims are for.
[20]
In my view,
with respect, the discretion to grant a stay should not be exercised in this
case. In the context of
deciding the certification motion, Barnes J. has already addressed the question
of whether the claims alleged reasonable
causes of action (paras. 39-41). He concluded that the “allegations of
unlawfulness, ultra vires and a breach of subsection 15(1) of the
Charter easily meet the legal threshold of a reasonable cause of action” (para.
39). Further, he was not prepared to find that it was plain and obvious that
Mr. Manuge could not succeed in his “rather sparse” allegations of breach of
fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment (paras. 40-41). The Crown does not ask us
to interfere with these findings. Assuming
that such reasonable causes of action exist, their presence rebuts the Crown’s
suggestion that Mr. Manuge’s
claims for damages disclose “only a thin pretence to a private wrong” (TeleZone,
at para. 78).
[21]
At their core, Mr.
Manuge’s claims are less about assessing the
exercise of delegated statutory authority or the decision-making process that
led to the promulgation or “monthly application” of s. 24 (a)(iv), and more about s. 15(1) of the Charter . He
pleads that the scheme violates s. 15(1) of the Charter because it draws
a distinction, based on the degree and extent of disability, between the claimants
who are allegedly adversely affected because they are unable to
continue to serve and are thus subject to the s. 24 (a)(iv) deduction — and
those who are able to continue to serve and who are not subject to the
deduction. He also alleges that the scheme violates s. 15(1) by subjecting
those injured prior to April 1, 2006, to less advantageous treatment than those
injured on or after April 1, 2006. It is essentially for these alleged
breaches that Mr. Manuge seeks constitutional remedies and damages. As TeleZone states, “[i]f the plaintiff has a
valid cause of action for damages, he or she is normally entitled to pursue it”
(para. 76).
[22]
In my view,
therefore, the residual discretion
should not be exercised to stay Mr. Manuge’s
class action in the Federal Court.
[23]
It is worth noting that
the
pleadings are far from models of legal clarity. I would, accordingly,
emphasize that nothing in these reasons should be read as precluding the Crown
from challenging any of them in the usual manner by
seeking, for example, particulars or other clarifications.
[24]
I would allow the appeal and
reinstate the order of Barnes J. certifying Mr. Manuge’s class action.
Appeal
allowed.
Solicitors for the
appellant: McInnes Cooper, Halifax.
Solicitor for the
respondent: Department of Justice, Ottawa.