SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: Okwuobi v.
Lester B. Pearson School Board; Casimir v. Quebec (Attorney General);
Zorrilla v. Quebec (Attorney General), [2005] 1 S.C.R. 257,
2005 SCC 16
|
Date: 20050331
Docket: 29299
|
Between:
Ikechukwu
Okwuobi
Appellant
v.
Attorney
General of Quebec and François Legault, in his capacity
as
Minister of Education
Respondents
and between:
Edwidge
Casimir
Appellant
v.
Attorney
General of Quebec and François Legault, in his capacity
as
Minister of Education
Respondents
and between:
Consuelo
Zorrilla
Appellant
v.
Attorney General
of Quebec
Respondent
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps and Fish JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 56)
|
The Court
|
______________________________
Okwuobi v. Lester B. Pearson School Board; Casimir v.
Quebec (Attorney General); Zorrilla v. Quebec (Attorney General), [2005]
1 S.C.R. 257, 2005 SCC 16
Ikechukwu Okwuobi Appellant
v.
Attorney General of Quebec and François Legault, in his capacity
as Minister of Education Respondents
and between
Edwidge Casimir Appellant
v.
Attorney General of Quebec and François Legault, in his capacity
as Minister of Education Respondents
and between
Consuelo Zorrilla Appellant
v.
Attorney General of Quebec Respondent
Indexed as: Okwuobi v. Lester B. Pearson School
Board; Casimir v. Quebec (Attorney General); Zorrilla v. Quebec
(Attorney General)
Neutral citation: 2005 SCC 16.
File No.: 29299.
2004: March 22; 2005: March 31.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie,
LeBel, Deschamps and Fish JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Administrative law — Administrative Tribunal of
Québec — Jurisdiction in respect of minority language education claims —
Remedial powers — Eligibility for public instruction in English in Quebec —
Claimants bypassing administrative appeal process and seeking injunctive and
declaratory relief in Superior Court — Whether claimants must follow
administrative process — Whether Tribunal has exclusive jurisdiction to hear
appeals in respect of entitlement to minority language education — Whether
Tribunal can decide constitutional questions incidental to its determination of
entitlement to minority language education — Whether Tribunal’s decision
concerning entitlement binding on school board — Scope of residual jurisdiction
of Superior Court in respect of injunctive relief and direct constitutional
challenges.
The appellant parents are seeking access, for their
children, to public instruction in English in Quebec pursuant to s. 73 of
the Charter of the French language. They attempted to bypass the administrative
appeal process set out in that act by seeking injunctive and declaratory relief
in the Superior Court. In the cases of C and O, the Superior Court granted the
Attorney General of Quebec’s motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. In
Z’s case, the same motion was dismissed. The Court of Appeal affirmed the
Superior Court’s decisions in the cases of C and O, and set aside the decision
in the case of Z. The court concluded that the Administrative Tribunal of
Québec (“ATQ”) had jurisdiction to hear the claims for minority language
education and that the administrative appeal process could not be circumvented.
Held: The appeal
should be dismissed.
The appellants did not have the right to bypass the
ATQ since it has exclusive jurisdiction to hear appeals in respect of
entitlement to minority language education. The administrative process
requires that before turning to the Superior Court to gain access to minority
language education in Quebec, a claimant must first apply to a designated person
for a certificate of eligibility and, if necessary, appeal that decision to the
ATQ pursuant to s. 83.4 of the Charter of the French language.
According to s. 14 of the Act respecting administrative justice,
the ATQ has exclusive jurisdiction to make determinations in respect of
proceedings brought against an administrative authority. When s. 14 is
read in conjunction with s. 83.4, it is clear that the Quebec legislature
intended to confer on the ATQ exclusive jurisdiction over all disputes relating
to s. 73 of the Charter of the French language. Aside from certain
specific exceptions, courts should respect the clear intent of the legislature.
[19] [25] [38]
The ATQ has the capacity to consider and decide
constitutional questions, including the conformity of s. 73 of the Charter
of the French language with s. 23 of the Canadian Charter . The
ATQ has explicit jurisdiction, under s. 15 of the Act respecting
administrative justice, to decide questions of law, and there is no
indication that the legislature intended to exclude Canadian Charter
issues from the ATQ’s authority over questions of law. On the contrary, the
overall structure of the ATQ, that of a highly sophisticated, quasi-judicial
body, indicates that the legislature intended to have the ATQ deal with all
legal issues. [32-35] [37]
The ATQ has, under ss. 74 and 107 of the Act
respecting administrative justice, all the remedial powers necessary to
exercise its jurisdiction, and the absence of a particular remedy is not a
reason to circumvent the administrative process. Although the ATQ cannot issue
a formal declaration of invalidity, a claimant can nevertheless bring a case
involving a challenge to the constitutionality of a provision before the ATQ.
If the ATQ finds a violation of the Canadian Charter , it may disregard
the provision on constitutional grounds and rule on the claim as if the
impugned provision were not in force. Such a ruling would, however, be subject
to judicial review on a correctness standard, and the claimant could then seek
a formal declaration of invalidity. Similarly, although the ATQ cannot grant
injunctive relief, the broad wording of s. 74 indicates an intention on the
part of the Quebec legislature to grant the ATQ the remedial authority needed
to safeguard the rights of the parties. [43-46]
A decision of the ATQ concerning a child’s eligibility
for instruction in English is binding on a school board even if it is not a
party to the appeal. [47]
In light of the exclusive jurisdiction and broad
powers accorded to the ATQ, the Superior Court should exercise sparingly its
discretion to award injunctive relief in minority language education claims and
should only do so to complement, not to weaken, the administrative process.
Despite the conferral by the legislature on the ATQ of remedial power with
respect to constitutional rights, the residual, inherent jurisdiction of the
Superior Court to hear direct constitutional challenges to a legislative scheme
remains in place to provide the appropriate and just remedy where required.
[51-55]
Cases Cited
Applied: Nova
Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003
SCC 54; Paul v. British Columbia (Forest Appeals Commission), [2003] 2
S.C.R. 585, 2003 SCC 55; Mills v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 863; referred
to: Gosselin (Tutor of) v. Quebec (Attorney General), [2005]
1 S.C.R. 238, 2005 SCC 15; Solski (Tutor of) v. Quebec (Attorney General),
[2005] 1 S.C.R. 201, 2005 SCC 14; Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty Assn. v. Douglas
College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570; R. v. 974649 Ontario Inc., [2001] 3
S.C.R. 575, 2001 SCC 81; Weber v. Ontario Hydro, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 929; Québec
(Procureure générale) v. Barreau de Montréal, [2001] R.J.Q. 2058; Cuddy
Chicks Ltd. v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 5; Tétreault-Gadoury
v. Canada (Employment and Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22; Cooper
v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 854.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act respecting administrative
justice, R.S.Q., c. J-3, ss. 14, 15, 24, 25,
38, 74, 82, 107, 112, Sch. I, s. 3.
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 23 , 24(1) .
Charter of the French language, R.S.Q., c. C-11, ss. 72, 73, 75, 76, 81, 82-83, 83.4, 85,
86.1.
Code of Civil Procedure, R.S.Q., c. C-25, arts. 31, 751.
Rules of procedure of the
Administrative Tribunal of Québec, (1999) 131 G.O.
II, 4122, s. 17.
Authors Cited
Brun, Henri, et Guy Tremblay. Droit
constitutionnel, 4e éd. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2002.
Ferland, Denis, et Benoît Emery. Précis
de procédure civile du Québec, vol. 2, 4e éd.
Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2003.
Gendreau, Paul-Arthur, et autres.
L’injonction. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 1998.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
(Gendreau, Mailhot and Forget JJ.A.), [2002] R.J.Q. 1278, [2002] Q.J. No.
1130 (QL), affirming a decision of Crôteau J., [2001] Q.J. No. 4191 (QL).
Appeal dismissed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
(Gendreau, Mailhot and Forget JJ.A.), [2002] Q.J. No. 1124 (QL), affirming
a decision of Viau J. Appeal dismissed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
(Gendreau, Mailhot and Forget JJ.A.), [2002] Q.J. No. 1129 (QL), setting
aside a decision of Bishop J., [2001] Q.J. No. 867 (QL). Appeal dismissed.
Brent D. Tyler and
Walter C. Elmore, for the appellants.
Benoît Belleau, for the
respondents.
The following is the judgment delivered by
The Court —
I. Introduction
1
This is one of three companion appeals about entitlement to minority
language education, the other two being Gosselin (Tutor of) v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [2005] 1 S.C.R. 238, 2005 SCC 15, and Solski
(Tutor of) v. Quebec (Attorney General), [2005] 1 S.C.R. 201,
2005 SCC 14. This appeal concerns the scope of the jurisdiction of
the Administrative Tribunal of Québec (“ATQ”), its ability to consider and
determine claims to constitutional entitlements, and the obligation of claimants
to follow the administrative appeal process. We are in agreement with the
Quebec Court of Appeal that the ATQ has this jurisdiction and that the
administrative appeal process may not be bypassed. We acknowledge, however,
that superior courts retain the residual jurisdiction to grant injunctive
relief in certain urgent situations and to consider, in appropriate
circumstances, a direct constitutional challenge to the law. For the reasons
that follow, we would dismiss the appeal.
II. Background and Judicial History
2
This appeal emerged out of several disputes about entitlement to
minority language education. In each case, the claimants attempted to bypass
the administrative process and move the dispute to the Superior Court of
Quebec. What follows is a brief review of the facts of each case and the
outcomes at the Superior Court, followed by a review of the outcome of the
joint appeal to the Quebec Court of Appeal.
A. The Casimir Case, Viau J. (Superior Court
of Quebec)
3
The appellant Edwidge Casimir, a Canadian citizen and mother of two,
registered her children with the English Montreal School Board. She also
applied to the Minister pursuant to s. 73(2) of the Charter of the French
language, R.S.Q., c. C‑11, for a certificate of eligibility for
her children. The application was denied by the Minister’s designated person
on the ground that the eldest child had not received the major part of her
instruction in English in Canada as required by s. 73(2). Instead of following
the regular administrative appeal process, Ms. Casimir filed an “application
for interlocutory and permanent declaratory and injunctive relief” in the
Superior Court, asking for, inter alia, an order that the school board
provide public instruction to her children in English and a declaration that
she was a “right-holder” under s. 23(2) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and had the right to send her children to an English public
school in Quebec.
4
On November 13, 2000, the Superior Court granted the Attorney General’s
motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. In brief reasons, Viau J. ruled
that the ATQ had jurisdiction to hear Ms. Casimir’s case.
B. The Zorrilla Case, Bishop J. (Superior
Court of Quebec)
5
The appellant Consuelo Zorrilla is a Canadian citizen. Her son, who was
born in 1990, attended an unsubsidized English private school in Quebec from
December 2000 to June 2001. Ms. Zorrilla filed an application for declaratory
relief in the Superior Court, seeking a declaration that ss. 72 and 73 of the Charter
of the French language are inconsistent with s. 23(2) of the Canadian
Charter and are invalid to the extent that s. 73(2), in granting the right
to receive instruction in English in Quebec, requires that the major part of
the child’s instruction in Canada be in English.
6
On March 7, 2001, the Superior Court dismissed the Attorney General’s
motion to dismiss the application on jurisdictional grounds ([2001] Q.J. No.
867 (QL)). Bishop J. held that proceeding directly to the Superior Court was
the appropriate recourse. One reason for his reaching this decision related to
practical issues of timing and cost. Bishop J. also found that the ATQ would
have had jurisdiction to hear the constitutional question only if the question
had already been heard by the review committee. Since no decision was sought
from the review committee, the ATQ did not have jurisdiction to hear the
constitutional challenge, whereas the Superior Court did. Finally, the trial
judge noted that the relief sought by Ms. Zorrilla was grounded in
s. 24(1) of the Canadian Charter . She was seeking a formal
declaration of invalidity, not only for her son, but also for other children in
similar situations. The ATQ could not grant this remedy.
C. The Okwuobi Case, Crôteau J. (Superior
Court of Quebec)
7
The appellant Ikechukwu Okwuobi is a Canadian citizen and a father of
two. He applied pursuant to s. 73(2) of the Charter of the French language
for a certificate of eligibility to permit his children to attend schools in
the Lester B. Pearson School Board. His application was denied by the
designated person on the ground that his eldest son had not received the major
part of his instruction in English in Canada. Mr. Okwuobi appealed the
decision to the review committee and filed an “application for interlocutory
and permanent declaratory and injunctive relief” in the Superior Court. He
asked the court to declare ss. 72 and 73 of the Charter of the French
language invalid on the ground that they are inconsistent with s. 23(2) of
the Canadian Charter . On September 10, 2001, the Superior Court granted
the respondents’ motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds ([2001] Q.J. No.
4191 (QL)). On the same day, the review committee dismissed Mr. Okwuobi’s
appeal of the administrative decision. He then appealed to the ATQ which, on
December 19, 2001, reversed the review committee’s decision and
declared the children eligible for public instruction in English in Quebec.
8
As mentioned above, the Superior Court granted the respondents’ motion
to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds on September 10, 2001. Crôteau J. held
that the ATQ had exclusive jurisdiction with respect to all the questions
raised in Mr. Okwuobi’s application. He ruled that the administrative
process had not yet been exhausted and that he should therefore decline to hear
Mr. Okwuobi’s application. That decision was appealed to the Court of Appeal.
D. Joined Appeal to the Quebec Court of
Appeal
9
The Quebec Court of Appeal heard the Casimir, Zorrilla and
Okwuobi cases together, affirming the decisions in Casimir
([2002] Q.J. No. 1124 (QL)) and Okwuobi ([2002] R.J.Q. 1278) and
reversing the decision in Zorrilla ([2002] Q.J. No. 1129 (QL)). The
Court of Appeal’s reasons for decision are found in Okwuobi.
10
The Court of Appeal considered the case law of this Court, and took the
decisions in Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty Assn. v. Douglas College, [1990] 3
S.C.R. 570, and R. v. 974649 Ontario Inc., [2001] 3 S.C.R. 575, 2001 SCC
81, as authorities for the proposition that where an administrative tribunal is
given the power to hear questions of law, this includes the power to interpret
and apply the Canadian Charter . Citing Weber v. Ontario Hydro,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 929, the Court of Appeal concluded that a model of exclusive
jurisdiction was to be preferred to one of concurrent or overlapping
jurisdiction. On the basis of Weber and 974649 Ontario, the
Court of Appeal concluded that a “court of competent jurisdiction” is one that
has jurisdiction over the parties, the subject matter of the litigation and the
remedy being sought.
11
The Court of Appeal was convinced that the ATQ had jurisdiction both
over the parties and over the subject matter of the litigation, in that the
litigation related to the application of the Charter of the French language.
The court thus turned to whether the ATQ could grant the remedy being sought by
Mr. Okwuobi. It adopted the approach of McLachlin C.J. in 974649 Ontario,
where she developed a functional and structural approach to deciding whether a
tribunal may grant the remedy being sought. In particular, McLachlin C.J. stated
the following, at para. 45:
The question, in essence, is whether the legislature or Parliament has
furnished the court or tribunal with the tools necessary to fashion the remedy
sought under s. 24 in a just, fair and consistent manner without impeding its
ability to perform its intended function.
The Court of
Appeal also referred to the statement in 974649 Ontario, that the
“history and accepted practice of the institution” must be considered in
determining whether the tribunal may grant the remedy being sought (para. 46).
12
As a result, the Court of Appeal concluded, based in particular on
s. 83.4 of the Charter of the French language and s. 14 of the Act
respecting administrative justice, R.S.Q., c. J-3, that the legislature
intended to confer on the ATQ the power to deal with all litigation relating to
the application of s. 73 of the Charter of the French language. The
Court of Appeal found that the ATQ has exclusive jurisdiction to interpret any
law necessary for the exercise of its jurisdiction. Moreover, s. 74 of the Act
respecting administrative justice provides that the ATQ may make decisions
of an interlocutory nature in order to safeguard the rights of the parties.
Finally, the Court of Appeal, referring to one of its earlier decisions, Québec
(Procureure générale) v. Barreau de Montréal, [2001] R.J.Q. 2058, at p.
2090, pointed out that the structure of the ATQ was similar in many ways to
that of a court of law.
13
The Court of Appeal accordingly held that the function and structure of
the ATQ conferred exclusive jurisdiction over this matter on the ATQ and gave
it the authority to grant a remedy pursuant to s. 24 of the Canadian Charter .
The Superior Court’s judgments in Okwuobi and Casimir were
affirmed, while its judgment in Zorrilla was set aside.
III. Relevant Legislative Provisions
14
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
23. (1)Citizens of Canada
(a) whose first language learned and still understood is that
of the English or French linguistic minority population of the province in
which they reside, or
(b) who have received their primary school
instruction in Canada in English or French and reside in a province where the
language in which they received that instruction is the language of the English
or French linguistic minority population of the province,
have the right to have their children receive primary
and secondary school instruction in that language in that province.
(2) Citizens of Canada of whom
any child has received or is receiving primary or secondary school instruction
in English or French in Canada, have the right to have all their children
receive primary and secondary school instruction in the same language.
Charter of the French language, R.S.Q.,
c. C‑11
72. Instruction in the
kindergarten classes and in the elementary and secondary schools shall be in
French, except where this chapter allows otherwise.
. . .
73. The following
children, at the request of one of their parents, may receive instruction in
English:
(1) a child whose father or
mother is a Canadian citizen and received elementary instruction in English in
Canada, provided that that instruction constitutes the major part of the
elementary instruction he or she received in Canada;
(2) a child whose father or
mother is a Canadian citizen and who has received or is receiving elementary or
secondary instruction in English in Canada, and the brothers and sisters of
that child, provided that that instruction constitutes the major part of the
elementary or secondary instruction received by the child in Canada;
(3) a child whose father and
mother are not Canadian citizens, but whose father or mother received
elementary instruction in English in Québec, provided that that instruction
constitutes the major part of the elementary instruction he or she received in
Québec;
(4) a child who, in his last year
in school in Québec before 26 August 1977, was receiving instruction in English
in a public kindergarten class or in an elementary or secondary school, and the
brothers and sisters of that child;
(5) a child whose father or
mother was residing in Québec on 26 August 1977 and had received elementary
instruction in English outside Québec, provided that that instruction
constitutes the major part of the elementary instruction he or she received
outside Québec.
However, instruction in English
received in Québec in a private educational institution not accredited for the
purposes of subsidies by the child for whom the request is made, or by a
brother or sister of the child, shall be disregarded. The same applies to
instruction in English received in Québec in such an institution after 1
October 2002 by the father or mother of the child.
Instruction in English received
pursuant to a special authorization under section 81, 85 or 85.1 shall also be
disregarded.
75. The Minister of
Education may empower such persons as he may designate to verify and decide on
children’s eligibility for instruction in English under any of sections 73, 81,
85 and 86.1.
83.4. Any decision
concerning a child’s eligibility for instruction in English made pursuant to
section 73, 76, 81, 85 or 86.1 by a designated person may, within 60 days of
notification of the decision, be contested before the Administrative Tribunal
of Québec.
Act respecting administrative justice,
R.S.Q., c. J‑3
14. The Administrative
Tribunal of Québec is hereby instituted.
The function of the Tribunal, in
the cases provided for by law, is to make determinations in respect of
proceedings brought against an administrative authority or a decentralized
authority.
Except where otherwise provided by
law, the Tribunal shall exercise its jurisdiction to the exclusion of any other
tribunal or adjucative body.
15. The Tribunal has
the power to decide any question of law or fact necessary for the exercise of
its jurisdiction.
In the case of the contestation of
a decision, the Tribunal may confirm, vary or quash the contested decision and,
if appropriate, make the decision which, in its opinion, should have been made
initially.
24. In matters of
health services and social services, education and road safety, the social
affairs division is charged with making determinations in respect of the
proceedings referred to in section 3 of Schedule I pertaining in particular, as
regards health services and social services matters, to decisions relating to
access to documents or information concerning a beneficiary, a person’s
eligibility for a health insurance program, the identification of a handicapped
person, the evacuation and relocation of certain persons, a permit issued to a
health services or social services institution, to an organ and tissue bank, to
a laboratory or to other services or an adapted work centre certificate, or
decisions concerning a health professional or the members of the board of
directors of an institution.
25. . . .
Proceedings referred to in
paragraphs 2.1 and 5.1 of section 3 of Schedule I shall be heard and determined
by a panel of two members, one of whom shall be an advocate or notary and the
other, a person well-acquainted with the field of education.
. . .
38. The Tribunal shall
be composed of members who are independent and impartial, appointed by the
Government in the number determined by the Government.
74. The Tribunal and
its members are vested with the powers and immunity of commissioners appointed
under the Act respecting public inquiry commissions (chapter C‑37),
except the power to order imprisonment.
They are also vested with all the
powers necessary for the performance of their duties; they may, in particular,
make any order they consider appropriate to safeguard the rights of the
parties.
. . .
82. The president, the
vice-president responsible for the division or any member designated by either
shall determine which members are to take part in each sitting.
The president may, where he
considers it expedient in view of the complexity of a case or importance of a
matter, form a panel comprising a greater number of members than that provided
for in Chapter II, but not exceeding five.
. . .
107. A proceeding
before the Tribunal does not suspend the execution of the contested decision,
unless a provision of law provides otherwise or, upon a motion heard and judged
by preference, a member of the Tribunal orders otherwise by reason of urgency
or of the risk of serious and irreparable harm.
If the law provides that the
proceeding suspends the execution of the decision, or if the Tribunal issues
such an order, the proceeding shall be heard and judged by preference.
SCHEDULE I
3. In matters of
health services and social services, education and road safety, the social
affairs division hears and determines
. . .
(2.1) proceedings under section
83.4 of the Charter of the French language (chapter C-11);
Rules of procedure of the Administrative Tribunal of Québec, (1999) 131 G.O. II, 4122
17. Any party to a
recourse may, with the authorization of the Tribunal and on the conditions it
determines, implead a third party whose presence is necessary to resolve the
dispute completely.
The Tribunal may, ex officio,
order the impleading of any person whose interests could be affected by its
decision.
Code of Civil Procedure, R.S.Q., c. C-25
31. The Superior Court
is the court of original general jurisdiction; it hears in first instance every
suit not assigned exclusively to another court by a specific provision of law.
751. An
injunction is an order of the Superior Court or of a judge thereof, enjoining a
person, his senior officers, agents or employees, not to do or to cease doing,
or, in cases which admit of it, to perform a particular act or operation, under
pain of all legal penalties.
IV. Issues
15
Three related issues are raised in this appeal. The first concerns the
scope of the ATQ’s jurisdiction and whether the ATQ may deal with
constitutional questions incidental to its determination of entitlement to
minority language education. The second issue relates to the ATQ’s remedial
powers and whether its decisions concerning entitlement are binding on school
boards. The third issue concerns the scope of the residual jurisdiction of
superior courts in respect of injunctive relief and direct constitutional
challenges.
V. Analysis
16
These three related issues will be dealt with as follows. First, we
will review the decision-making process in respect of claims for minority
language education, including the administrative appeal process. We will also
review the nature and organization of the ATQ, and this review will be followed
by an outline of the jurisdiction of the ATQ in respect of language matters.
This review will show that the legislature has granted the ATQ the power to
consider and decide legal issues, including constitutional questions, and that
the ATQ cannot therefore be bypassed in favour of the Superior Court. Second,
we will consider the extent to which the ATQ has the necessary remedial
authority to deal with incidental constitutional questions, and will discuss
whether its decisions are binding on school boards. We will end our analysis
by briefly discussing the residual authority of superior courts to issue
injunctive relief in urgent situations and to rule on direct constitutional
challenges to a legislative scheme.
A. The Decision-Making Process for Minority
Language Education Claims
17
Section 72 of the Charter of the French language requires that
instruction in kindergarten classes and in elementary and secondary schools, in
public and subsidized private institutions, be in French. Exceptions to this
rule exist, most notably for our purposes in s. 73 of the same statute. The
parents of a child who seek to avail themselves of these exceptions must apply
to persons designated by the Minister of Education under s. 75 of the Charter
of the French language. These designated persons decide on eligibility for
instruction in English.
18
The initial decision of the designated person is subject to review. At
the time relevant to these cases, the initial appeal from a decision of a
designated person was to a review committee under ss. 82 and 83 of the Charter
of the French language, and then to the ATQ under s. 83.4. However, ss. 82
and 83 were repealed effective October 1, 2002, meaning that now any decision
concerning a child’s eligibility for instruction in English made by a
designated person pursuant to ss. 73, 76, 81, 85 or 86.1 may, within 60 days of
notification of the decision, be appealed directly to the ATQ (see s. 83.4 of
the Charter of the French language).
19
The administrative process thus requires that before turning to the
Superior Court to gain access to minority language education in Quebec, a
claimant must first apply to a designated person for a certificate of
eligibility and, if necessary, appeal that decision to the ATQ. Following a
determination by the ATQ, it is possible for the claimant to seek relief from
the Superior Court.
B. The Nature and Organization of the ATQ
20
The ATQ was instituted by the Act respecting administrative justice
which states that the function of the ATQ is, where provided by law, to make
determinations in respect of proceedings brought against an administrative or
decentralized authority.
21
The Tribunal consists of four divisions: (1) the social affairs
division, (2) the immovable property division, (3) the territory and
environment division, and (4) the economic affairs division. As will be shown
below, the ATQ’s jurisdiction in respect of minority language education is the
responsibility of the social affairs division.
22
Proceedings are heard by a panel whose members are selected based on the
nature of the appeal. Proceedings in respect of minority language education
claims are heard by a two-member panel, one of whose members is to be an
advocate or notary and the other a person well acquainted with the field of
education (s. 25). The Act also allows for the formation of a panel of up to
five members where a case is particularly complex or important (s. 82).
Section 38 requires that the ATQ be composed of members who are independent and
impartial. The ATQ also has its own rules of evidence and procedure (Chapter
VI).
23
All told, the ATQ is a highly sophisticated tribunal, similar in many
ways to Canadian courts of law. The following comment by Dussault J.A. of the
Quebec Court of Appeal in Québec (Procureure générale) v. Barreau de
Montréal, at p. 2090, speaks to this high degree of sophistication:
[translation] . . . the ATQ fulfils an exclusively jurisdictional function that,
despite the stated objectives of promptness and accessibility, requires the
implementation of procedures similar to the procedures of courts of law. Next,
the ATQ has powers ordinarily conferred on courts of
law, such as the powers to decide constitutional questions and to assess the
grounds for an application for administrative secrecy. Finally, and most
importantly, the ATQ is required to decide a very large
number of cases involving the financial or political interests of the state as
a party to the case. Taken as a whole, these factors seem to me to justify
placing the ATQ on the spectrum of administrative tribunals,
at a higher level as regards the requirement of judicial independence of its
members.
C. Jurisdiction of the ATQ
in Respect of Minority Language Education
24
We turn now to the jurisdiction of the ATQ in respect of minority
language education claims. Jurisdiction over claims of this type is
essentially derived from the interplay between s. 14 of the Act respecting
administrative justice and s. 83.4 of the Charter of the French
language.
25
Section 14 of the Act respecting administrative justice sets out
the scope and the exclusive nature of the jurisdiction of the ATQ:
14. The Administrative Tribunal of Québec is
hereby instituted.
The function of the Tribunal, in the cases provided
for by law, is to make determinations in respect of proceedings brought against
an administrative authority or a decentralized authority.
Except where otherwise provided by law, the Tribunal
shall exercise its jurisdiction to the exclusion of any other tribunal or
adjudicative body.
According to
s. 14, the ATQ has exclusive jurisdiction to make determinations in respect of
proceedings brought against an administrative authority. The term “administrative
authority” includes the designated person in matters relating to entitlement to
minority language education. When s. 14 of the Act respecting
administrative justice is read in conjunction with s. 83.4 of the Charter
of the French language, it is clear that the Quebec legislature intended to
confer on the ATQ exclusive jurisdiction over all disputes relating to s. 73 of
the Charter of the French language. Section 83.4 reads as follows:
83.4. Any decision concerning a child’s eligibility for
instruction in English made pursuant to section 73 . . . by a
designated person may, within 60 days of notification of the decision, be
contested before the Administrative Tribunal of Québec.
26
The respondents correctly note that s. 14 of the Act respecting
administrative justice and s. 83.4 of the Charter of the French language
effectively round out, or complete, the jurisdiction the ATQ possesses under s.
24 of the Act respecting administrative justice in combination with s.
3, para. 2.1 of Schedule I to that Act. Section 24 states that in matters
relating to education, inter alia, the social affairs division of the
ATQ is charged with making determinations in respect of the proceedings
referred to in s. 3 of Schedule I. Section 3, para. 2.1 of Schedule I
states that in matters relating to education, the social affairs division hears
and determines “proceedings under section 83.4 of the Charter of the French
language”.
27
The Act respecting administrative justice also speaks directly to
the powers the ATQ is meant to possess, in these cases, when adjudicating on
minority language education claims. Most importantly, for our purposes, the
ATQ has the power, under s. 15, to decide any question of law or fact necessary
for the exercise of its jurisdiction. It “may confirm, vary or quash the
contested decision and, if appropriate, make the decision which, in its
opinion, should have been made initially” (s. 15). It is also significant that
under s. 74, the ATQ and its members “are . . . vested with all the powers
necessary for the performance of their duties”, including the power to “make
any order they consider appropriate to safeguard the rights of the parties”.
The Quebec legislature has granted a broad range of remedial powers to the ATQ.
Moreover, based on the explicit wording of s. 14, the Quebec legislature
intended the Tribunal’s jurisdiction to be exclusive (“the Tribunal shall
exercise its jurisdiction to the exclusion of any other tribunal or
adjudicative body”).
D. The Power to Consider and Decide
Constitutional Questions — The Principles Laid Down in Martin and in Paul
28
As will become clear, the fact that the ATQ is vested with the ability
to decide questions of law is crucial, and is determinative of its jurisdiction
to apply the Canadian Charter in this appeal. The quasi-judicial
structure of the ATQ, discussed briefly above, may be indicative of a
legislative intention that constitutional questions be considered and decided
by the ATQ, but the structure of the ATQ is not determinative. This is
evidenced by the recent decisions of this Court in Nova Scotia (Workers’
Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003 SCC 54, and Paul
v. British Columbia (Forest Appeals Commission), [2003] 2 S.C.R. 585, 2003
SCC 55. These cases provide a more direct route to the result reached in the
instant cases by the Court of Appeal and two of the three trial judges.
29
In Martin, the question was whether the Nova Scotia
Workers’ Compensation Appeals Tribunal (“Appeals Tribunal”), an administrative
tribunal set up to hear appeals from decisions of the Workers’ Compensation
Board of Nova Scotia, had jurisdiction to decline to apply certain legislative
provisions to the appellants on the ground that the provisions violated the Canadian
Charter . This Court held that the Appeals Tribunal did have
jurisdiction to consider the constitutionality of the impugned provisions. In
so holding, Gonthier J. “reappraised and restated” (at para. 3) the rules
concerning the jurisdiction of administrative tribunals to apply the Canadian
Charter that had previously been established by this Court in Douglas/Kwantlen
Faculty Assn., Cuddy Chicks Ltd. v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board),
[1991] 2 S.C.R. 5, and Tétreault-Gadoury v. Canada (Employment and
Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22.
30
Gonthier J. stated, at para. 3, that where an administrative tribunal
has either explicit or implied jurisdiction to decide questions of law arising
under a legislative provision, it is presumed that the tribunal also has
concomitant jurisdiction to decide on the constitutional validity of that
provision. The only way to rebut this presumption is to show that the
legislature clearly intended to exclude Charter issues from the
tribunal’s authority over questions of law. Gonthier J. discussed at length
the policy reasons for allowing administrative tribunals to deal with
constitutional matters (see paras. 27-32 of Martin). We will not
reiterate them here.
31
In Martin, the Court created a general standard for determining
whether a particular administrative tribunal can decline to apply a provision
of its enabling statute on the ground that the provision violates the Canadian
Charter . First of all, it must be determined whether the administrative
tribunal has jurisdiction, express or implied, to decide questions of law
arising under an impugned provision (para. 35). Furthermore, as this Court noted
in Martin, at para. 35, “[t]he question is not whether Parliament or the
legislature intended the tribunal to apply the Charter .” The only
question is whether the tribunal can decide any question of law (para.
36).
32
In the cases at bar, the ATQ has explicit jurisdiction, under s. 15 of
the Act respecting administrative justice, to decide questions of law.
This is a clear, unequivocal and express grant of jurisdiction to decide
questions of law. If, as here, there is explicit jurisdiction to determine
questions of law, a court need not go on to consider whether such jurisdiction
is to be implied from the legislative scheme as a whole (Martin, at
para. 51). As a result, the presumption from this point on is that the ATQ can
consider and decide constitutional questions.
33
Once a presumption has been raised that the tribunal can decide
questions of law, the burden falls on the party who alleges that the
administrative body lacks jurisdiction to apply the Canadian Charter to
rebut the presumption (Martin, at para. 42). Gonthier J. laid out
certain ways in which this presumption can be rebutted. He suggested that
nothing less than an explicit withdrawal of authority to decide constitutional
questions, or a clear implication of such intent, would suffice (at
para. 42):
In general terms, the presumption may only be rebutted by an explicit
withdrawal of authority to decide constitutional questions or by a clear
implication to the same effect, arising from the statute itself rather than
from external considerations. The question to be asked is whether an
examination of the statutory provisions clearly leads to the conclusion that
the legislature intended to exclude the Charter , or more broadly, a
category of questions of law encompassing the Charter , from the scope of
the questions of law to be addressed by the tribunal. For instance, an express
conferral of jurisdiction to another administrative body to consider Charter
issues or certain complex questions of law deemed too difficult or time-consuming
for the initial decision maker, along with a procedure allowing such issues to
be efficiently redirected to such body, could give rise to a clear implication
that the initial decision maker was not intended to decide constitutional
questions.
34
No such express conferral of jurisdiction on another administrative
body, or on a court for that matter, can be found in the relevant legislation
in this appeal. In fact, the explicit wording of s. 14 of the Act
respecting administrative justice, the ATQ’s constituting statute, confers
exclusive jurisdiction on the ATQ to decide on minority language education
claims brought before it on appeal. This was made clear above and need not be
addressed again. Nor does the legislative scheme give rise to an implication
to the effect that more complex issues, such as Charter issues, should
be decided by a different adjudicative body, such as the Superior Court. The
implication is to the contrary. Section 82 authorizes the ATQ to create panels
of up to five members in order to deal with more complex issues. This implies
that even complex questions of law were meant to be dealt with by the ATQ.
Even more revealing in this respect, the overall structure of the ATQ, that of
a highly sophisticated, quasi-judicial body, indicates that the legislature
intended to have the ATQ deal with all legal issues, big and small. Finally,
s. 112 explicitly provides for the proper procedure to follow when raising a
constitutional ground before the ATQ. Based on the revised approach from Martin,
the only conclusion that can be drawn is that the ATQ has the capacity to
consider and decide constitutional questions, including the conformity of s. 73
of the Charter of the French language with s. 23 of the Canadian
Charter .
35
The appellants put forth a further argument. They argue that, owing to
the special nature of the rights conferred by s. 23 of the Canadian Charter ,
an ordinary provincial statute like the Charter of the French language cannot
confer jurisdiction over the determination of the status of s. 23
rights-holders on an administrative tribunal to the exclusion of the Superior
Court. Again, the recent case law of this Court, this time in Paul,
puts to rest this portion of the appellants’ submissions.
36
In Paul, the B.C. Ministry of Forests seized four logs in the
possession of Mr. Paul, a registered Indian. Paul intended to use the wood to
build a deck for his home, and he asserted that he had an aboriginal right to
cut timber for house modification. He thus argued that s. 96 of the Forest
Practices Code, a general prohibition against cutting Crown timber, did not
apply to him. The Forest Appeals Commission decided that it had jurisdiction
to hear and determine aboriginal rights issues. The British Columbia Supreme
Court agreed, but its decision was reversed by a majority of the Court of
Appeal. In this Court, Bastarache J. applied the same reasoning as in Martin
and ruled that since the Forest Appeals Commission was empowered to hear
questions of law, it could hear and decide constitutional questions (paras. 39
and 41). He further reasoned that questions relating to s. 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 are not distinct from other constitutional matters in this
respect. Quoting McLachlin J. (as she then was) in Cooper v. Canada (Human
Rights Commission), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 854, Bastarache J. stated the
following, at para. 36: “Section 35 is not, any more than the Charter ,
‘some holy grail which only judicial initiates of the superior courts may
touch’.”
37
The same legal reasoning can be applied to the cases at bar. Section 23
is not within the exclusive province of the courts. The ATQ is empowered to
decide questions of law. It is therefore empowered to consider and decide
constitutional questions. This includes the power to consider s. 23 , and to
decide whether s. 73 of the Charter of the French language restricts the
scope of s. 23 rights. The Forest Appeals Commission could rule on s. 35
matters in Paul. Here, the ATQ may rule on s. 23 matters that come
before it.
E. The Appellants Could Not Bypass the ATQ
in Favour of the Superior Court
38
We are therefore of the view that the appellants did not have the right
to bypass the ATQ by seeking injunctive and declaratory relief in the Superior
Court. The ATQ clearly has jurisdiction to hear appeals from decisions of the
designated person and, in the instant cases, from the review committee in
respect of entitlement to minority language education. Moreover, the Quebec
legislature intended this jurisdiction to be exclusive. Aside from certain
specific exceptions to be discussed below, this Court, and all courts, should
respect the clear intent of the legislature.
39
The exclusive jurisdiction of the ATQ in this respect is further
confirmed by art. 31 of the Code of Civil Procedure, R.S.Q., c. C-25,
which states that the Superior Court is the court of original jurisdiction,
except in matters in which original jurisdiction is assigned exclusively to
another court by a specific provision of law. That is in fact the situation in
the cases at bar, as the Quebec legislature has specifically assigned the
jurisdiction in issue to the ATQ. Article 31 reads as follows:
31. The Superior Court is the court of
original general jurisdiction; it hears in first instance every suit not
assigned exclusively to another court by a specific provision of law.
40
The ATQ has been granted exclusive jurisdiction to hear appeals in
respect of entitlement to minority language education. The administrative
appeal process should be respected.
F. Remedial Authority of the ATQ, and the
Binding Effect of Its Decisions on School Boards
41
The appellants argue that even if the ATQ has jurisdiction over the
subject matter at hand, namely the rights of claimants under s. 23 , it still
does not have the ability to provide the remedies being sought by the
appellants, nor does it have jurisdiction over the English school boards in
question. The ATQ lacks the power, say the appellants, to grant the remedies
being sought. First, it cannot issue a formal declaration of invalidity.
Second, it lacks jurisdiction to grant injunctive relief, although the
appellants acknowledge that the ATQ may issue a safeguard order under s. 74 of
the Act respecting administrative justice.
42
As for the English school boards, the appellants argue that it is evident
from the provisions of the Charter of the French language that they are
not parties before the ATQ. Only the parents and the Minister of Education are
parties. The appellants thus argue that in circumstances where rights-holders
seek to enforce their right to have their children receive public instruction
in English by way of an order against an English school board, the ATQ is
powerless to issue such an order.
43
The respondents counter that the ATQ has all the remedial powers necessary
to exercise its jurisdiction. Section 74 vests the Tribunal and its members
with “all the powers necessary for the performance of their duties; they may,
in particular, make any order they consider appropriate to safeguard the rights
of the parties”. The respondents cite, as one particular manifestation of this
broad remedial power, the power granted under s. 107 of the Act respecting
administrative justice to make a motion before a member of the Tribunal to
suspend the execution of a contested decision by reason of urgency or serious
and irreparable harm:
107. A proceeding before the Tribunal does not suspend the
execution of the contested decision, unless a provision of law provides
otherwise or, upon a motion heard and judged by preference, a member of the
Tribunal orders otherwise by reason of urgency or of the risk of serious and
irreparable harm.
If the law provides that the proceeding suspends the
execution of the decision, or if the Tribunal issues such an order, the
proceeding shall be heard and judged by preference.
44
We are in substantial agreement with the respondents. On the question
of remedies, the appellants correctly point out that the ATQ cannot issue a
formal declaration of invalidity. This is not, in our opinion, a reason to
bypass the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tribunal. As this Court stated in Martin,
the constitutional remedies available to administrative tribunals are indeed
limited and do not include general declarations of invalidity (para. 31). Nor
is a determination by a tribunal that a particular provision is invalid
pursuant to the Canadian Charter binding on future decision makers. As
Gonthier J. noted, at para. 31: “Only by obtaining a formal declaration of
invalidity by a court can a litigant establish the general invalidity of a
legislative provision for all future cases.”
45
That said, a claimant can nevertheless bring a case involving a
challenge to the constitutionality of a provision before the ATQ. If the ATQ
finds a breach of the Canadian Charter and concludes that the provision
in question is not saved under s. 1 , it may disregard the provision on
constitutional grounds and rule on the claim as if the impugned provision were
not in force (Martin, at para. 33). Such a ruling would, however, be
subject to judicial review on a correctness standard, meaning that the Superior
Court could fully review any error in interpretation and application of the Canadian
Charter . In addition, the remedy of a formal declaration of invalidity
could be sought by the claimant at this stage of the proceedings.
46
It should also be noted on the topic of remedies that, while it is true
that only the Superior Court or a judge thereof may issue an injunction (this
will be discussed further below), the ATQ has nevertheless been granted a broad
remedial power under ss. 74 and 107 of the Act respecting administrative
justice. The broad wording of s. 74 indicates an intention on the part of
the Quebec legislature to grant the ATQ the remedial authority needed to
safeguard the rights of the parties. The appellants, or any other claimants
before the ATQ, should attempt to exhaust the remedies available from the ATQ
rather than arguing that the absence of a particular remedy requires them to
circumvent the administrative process entirely.
47
As for the question of the binding effect of a ruling by the ATQ on the
English school boards, we would reiterate that the Quebec legislature has
chosen to grant the ATQ exclusive jurisdiction to hear appeals concerning
access to minority language education. On appeal, the ATQ will decide whether
the claimant’s child should be admitted to an English school board. That
decision is binding on the school board even if it is not a party to the
appeal. The appellants raise the hypothetical possibility that a school board
not directly involved as a party to an appeal before the ATQ might refuse to
obey an order of the ATQ. This is a hypothetical situation, and this Court
must operate on the assumption that citizens, including those on school boards,
are law-abiding and will comply with the order of a properly constituted
administrative tribunal that has jurisdiction over entitlement to minority
language education.
48
If, however, the hypothetical situation raised by the appellants should
occur, we have already shown that the ATQ has broad remedial powers under its
enabling statute. Moreover, under s. 17 of the Rules of procedure of the
Administrative Tribunal of Québec, (1999) 131 G.O. II, 4122, the ATQ may
implead a third party whose presence is necessary to resolve the dispute
completely:
17. Any party to a recourse may, with the authorization of
the Tribunal and on the conditions it determines, implead a third party whose
presence is necessary to resolve the dispute completely.
The Tribunal may, ex officio, order the
impleading of any person whose interests could be affected by its decision.
Conceivably,
the ATQ could apply this provision at the request of a claimant to acquire
jurisdiction over a school board that the claimant has grounds to believe will
be uncooperative. The ATQ could then make creative use of its broad remedial
powers under s. 74 of the Act respecting administrative justice to
ensure that justice is done.
49
In the event that such a solution is not feasible, the Superior Court
does have residual jurisdiction to grant injunctive relief in urgent
situations. We turn now to a discussion of the residual jurisdiction of the
Superior Court.
G. The Residual Jurisdiction of the Superior
Court
50
The thrust of our judgment to this point has been to emphasize the
exclusive nature of the ATQ’s jurisdiction to hear appeals in respect of
entitlement to minority language education. We feel it necessary, however, to
mention the following two caveats relating to the Superior Court’s residual
jurisdiction to grant injunctive relief in urgent situations and, potentially,
to hear direct constitutional challenges to a legislative scheme.
(1) Injunctive Relief in Urgent Situations
51
The legislature’s intention to confer exclusive jurisdiction over the
matter in issue on the ATQ should be respected to the greatest extent
possible. However, the fact remains that an injunction is defined in art. 751
of the Code of Civil Procedure as “an order of the Superior Court or of
a judge thereof”. Thus, the Superior Court has exclusive jurisdiction to grant
an injunction, in the strict sense of the word.
52
That said, an injunction is a discretionary remedy that courts have on
many occasions declined to grant where other avenues of recourse were available
(see D. Ferland and B. Emery, Précis de procédure civile du Québec
(4th ed. 2003), vol. 2, at p. 435). We have accordingly been at pains in
this judgment to emphasize the exclusive jurisdiction and broad remedial powers
accorded to the ATQ. As a result, the Superior Court should exercise sparingly
its discretion to award injunctive relief in minority language education
claims. Such injunctive relief should be granted only to fill in the cracks in
the administrative process, so to speak. In this way, injunctive relief can
complement the administrative process rather than serving to weaken it.
53
As a result, recourse to urgent injunctive relief remains possible in
certain circumstances, but it should remain the rare exception, rather than the
rule. Seeking injunctive relief should not be allowed to develop into a means
of bypassing the judicial process, or as P.-A. Gendreau et al. note in L’injonction
(1998), at p. 201: [translation]
“. . . neither the injunction nor any other procedure may be
used to short-circuit an administrative tribunal’s exercise of its exclusive
jurisdiction or to obtain a review of its decision . . .”.
(2) Direct Constitutional
Challenges to the Legislative Scheme
54
Superior courts may also retain residual jurisdiction to hear direct
constitutional challenges to a legislative scheme, should the proper
circumstances arise. Such a challenge would have to be distinguishable from
the facts of the cases at bar in which the appellants have, in effect,
attempted to obtain relief (the right to minority language education) by
circumventing the administrative process and bringing their claims directly to
the Superior Court. That said, the residual jurisdiction of superior courts
cannot be entirely ousted by the legislature, in particular where recourse to
such courts is necessary to obtain an appropriate and just remedy. As Lamer J.
noted in Mills v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 863, at p. 882:
. . . a person whose Canadian Charter rights have been
infringed or denied has the right to obtain the appropriate and just remedy
under the circumstances. A corollary which flows from this is the fundamental
principle that there must always be a court available to grant, not only a
remedy, but the remedy which is the appropriate and just one
under the circumstances. [Emphasis in original.]
Lamer J. went
on to recognize the unique nature of constitutional remedies. He noted, at p.
893, that where inferior courts are endowed by the legislature with the power
to grant constitutional remedies, this delegation of remedial power cannot
completely oust the jurisdiction of superior courts:
. . . a “special law” is not sufficient to oust the
jurisdiction of the superior courts, for a constitutional remedy and its
accessibility should not in principle be open to statutory limitation. While
limitation of the remedial power to inferior courts may well be permissible,
this, in my view, can only be possible if the superior court is available to
fill the remedial vacuum that would result.
As H. Brun and
G. Tremblay note in Droit constitutionnel (4th ed. 2002), at p. 187,
superior courts [translation] “theoretically
have the power to review the constitutionality of legislation”. This inherent power to ensure that the Constitution is adhered to
necessarily requires that superior courts retain jurisdiction, where the
circumstances are appropriate, to “fill the remedial vacuum” mentioned by Lamer
J. in Mills.
55
Lamer J.’s words in Mills are equally applicable in a situation
like the one in the cases at bar, in which remedial powers with respect to
constitutional rights have been conferred by the legislature on an
administrative body. Despite this conferral of remedial power, the residual,
inherent jurisdiction of superior courts remains in place to provide the
appropriate and just remedy where required.
VI. Disposition
56
For the above reasons, the appeal is dismissed. The Court makes no
order with respect to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellants: Brent D. Tyler,
Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondents: Bernard, Roy &
Associés, Montréal; Department of Justice, Montréal.