Parry Sound (District) Social Services Administration Board v.
O.P.S.E.U., Local 324, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 157, 2003 SCC 42
District of Parry Sound Social Services Administration Board Appellant
v.
Ontario Public Service Employees Union, Local 324 Respondent
and
Ontario Human Rights Commission Intervener
Indexed as: Parry Sound (District) Social Services
Administration Board v. O.P.S.E.U., Local
324
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 42.
File No.: 28819.
2003: January 24; 2003: September 18.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour, LeBel and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Labour relations — Arbitration — Jurisdiction —
Human rights — Collective agreement providing that probationary employee may be
discharged at sole discretion of and for any reason satisfactory to employer
and such discharge not subject to grievance and arbitration procedures —
Probationary employee discharged shortly after return from maternity leave —
Employee filing grievance — Whether grievance arbitrable — Whether substantive
rights and obligations of Human Rights Code implicitly incorporated within all
collective agreements over which arbitrator has jurisdiction — Labour Relations
Act, 1995, S.O. 1995, c. 1, Sch. A, s. 48(1), (12)(j) — Human Rights
Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19, s. 5(1).
Labour relations — Collective agreement — Grievance
— Procedural requirements — Arbitration — Employment standards — Probationary
employee discharged shortly after return from maternity leave — Employee filing
grievance — Collective agreement providing that grievance must set out section
of agreement that is alleged to have been violated — Employment Standards Act
barring discrimination on basis of “pregnancy leave” explicitly incorporated
within all collective agreements — Employment Standards Act claim not raised by
Union at any stage of proceedings — Whether Union’s failure to raise Employment
Standards Act curable — Whether s. 64.5(4) of Employment Standards Act
binding Union to prior decision not to seek enforcement of the Act — Whether
Court of Appeal erred in raising and resolving appeal on basis of Employment
Standards Act — Employment Standards Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14, ss. 44,
64.5(1).
O was a probationary employee of the appellant
employer and a member of the respondent Union. Her terms of employment were
governed by a collective agreement which states that “a probationary employee
may be discharged at the sole discretion of and for any reason satisfactory to
the Employer and such action by the Employer is not subject to the grievance
and arbitration procedures and does not constitute a difference between the
parties”. Prior to the expiry of her probationary term, O went on maternity
leave. Within a few days of returning to work, the employer discharged her. O
filed a grievance.
The majority of the Board of Arbitration found that
s. 48(12)(j) of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, 1995 (“LRA”),
empowers a board of arbitration to interpret a collective agreement in a manner
consistent with the Human Rights Code and imports the substantive rights
of the Human Rights Code into a collective agreement over which an
arbitrator has jurisdiction. The Board ruled that it was entitled to consider
whether O had been a victim of discrimination under the Human Rights Code.
The Divisional Court granted the employer’s application for judicial review,
holding that s. 48(12)(j) confers power on a board of arbitration to
interpret and apply the Human Rights Code when and if it already has
jurisdiction to hear a grievance, but not otherwise. Because the grievance was
not a difference arising out of the collective agreement, the Board did not
have the jurisdiction to resolve the dispute. The Court of Appeal set aside
the decision. Although the court was inclined to the view that the Divisional
Court erred in its application of s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA, it
preferred not to express a concluded opinion on this question. The court
decided the matter with reference to the Employment Standards Act (“ESA”),
noting, first, that s. 44 of the ESA provides that an employer
shall not dismiss an employee because the employee takes “pregnancy leave” and,
second, that under s. 64.5(1) of the ESA, the terms and conditions
of the ESA are enforceable against the employer as if they were a part
of the collective agreement. The Court of Appeal concluded, therefore, that
the Board had jurisdiction to consider whether O’s dismissal was inconsistent
with s. 44.
Held (Major and LeBel
JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and Deschamps JJ.: The Board
was correct to conclude that the substantive rights and obligations of the Human
Rights Code are incorporated into each collective agreement over which an
arbitrator has jurisdiction. Under a collective agreement, the broad rights of
an employer to manage the enterprise and direct the work force are subject not
only to the express provisions of the collective agreement, but also to
statutory provisions of the Human Rights Code and other employment‑related
statutes. The absence of an express provision that prohibits the
violation of a particular statutory right is insufficient to conclude that a
violation of that right does not constitute a violation of the collective
agreement. Rather, human rights and other employment‑related statutes
establish a floor beneath which an employer and union cannot contract. The
plain and ordinary meaning of s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA, which provides
that an arbitrator has the power “to interpret and apply human rights and other
employment‑related statutes, despite any conflict between those statutes
and the terms of the collective agreement”, affirms that grievance arbitrators
have not only the power but also the responsibility to implement and enforce
the substantive rights and obligations of human rights and other employment‑related
statutes as if they were part of the collective agreement. Granting
arbitrators the authority to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of
human rights and other employment‑related statutes also advances the
stated purposes of the LRA, which include promoting the expeditious
resolution of workplace disputes, and has the additional advantage of
bolstering human rights protection. The fact that the Human Rights Commission
currently has greater expertise than the Board in respect of human rights
violations is an insufficient basis on which to conclude that a grievance
arbitrator ought not to have the power to enforce the rights and obligations of
the Human Rights Code. An alleged violation of the Human Rights Code
therefore constitutes an alleged violation of the collective agreement and
falls squarely within the Board’s jurisdiction. Accordingly, the Board’s
finding that the discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee is
arbitrable is not patently unreasonable and should be upheld.
Even if there was no basis on which to conclude that
the alleged violation of the Human Rights Code is arbitrable, the
application of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of the ESA leads to the
conclusion that the subject matter of O’s grievance is arbitrable. The joint
effect of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) is that each collective agreement is deemed
to contain a provision that prohibits the discharge of a probationary employee
because she took or intends to take pregnancy leave. Thus, the subject matter
of O’s grievance clearly constitutes a dispute that arises under a collective
agreement over which the Board has jurisdiction.
It was not improper for the Court of Appeal to take
into account the fact that the substantive rights and obligations of the ESA
are incorporated directly into each collective agreement. The finding
under review is not the Board’s finding that s. 5(1) of the Human
Rights Code is enforceable against the employer, but its finding that O’s
grievance is arbitrable. If the Court of Appeal had upheld the Divisional
Court’s decision to reverse the arbitration award without taking into account
the potential impact of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of the ESA, it would
arguably have committed an error of law.
The Union was not bound by its prior decision not to
seek enforcement of s. 44 of the ESA at the initial hearing. The
purpose of s. 64.5(4) of the ESA is not to bind a union to such a
prior decision, but, rather, to affirm the principle that an employee to whom a
collective agreement applies is not entitled to file or maintain a complaint
under the Act.
Lastly, the Union’s failure to comply with the
procedural requirements of the collective agreement, which demand that a
discharge grievance must set out the section of the collective agreement that
is alleged to have been violated, does not preclude the Union from subsequently
raising s. 44 of the ESA as a potential basis of liability.
Procedural requirements should not be stringently enforced in those instances
where, as here, the employer suffered no prejudice.
Per Major and LeBel JJ.
(dissenting): O’s Human Rights Code claim is not the subject of the
agreement between her employer and her Union, and is therefore not arbitrable.
Unless the legislature passes legislation incorporating the substance of its
statutes into collective agreements, it is to be assumed that unions and
employers may define which employees and disputes are covered by a collective
agreement and therefore have access to binding arbitration, as long as the
agreement does not conflict with statute or public policy. Absent legislative
action, courts should not on their own initiative interfere with the terms of a
collective agreement. Here, the Human Rights Code is not implicitly
incorporated into all collective agreements. To read into
s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA the extraordinary power to take jurisdiction
of any claim based on statute, despite the plain wishes of the parties to the
contract, is a subversion of the legislative intent. If the legislature wished
to thus expand the power of arbitrators, it would have signalled its intent
more clearly. O’s dismissal is not arbitrable because her Union and her
employer agreed not to cover the dismissal of probationary employees in their
collective agreement, and the legislature did not intend to require that they
do so.
It was improper for the Court of Appeal, sua sponte,
to ignore the procedural requirements negotiated by the parties and raise the ESA
argument. Article 8.06(a) of the collective agreement clearly required the
Union to state “the section or sections of the Agreement which are alleged to
have been violated”. The Union should therefore have raised s. 44 of the ESA,
barring employment discrimination on the basis of “pregnancy leave”, which the
legislature has explicitly incorporated into all collective agreements via
s. 64.5(1) of the ESA. This the Union chose not to do. Even if
the failure to raise the ESA might have been curable or seen as a simple
procedural defect, the Union would at the very least have had the obligation to
raise the matter at the arbitration stage. The Union and O should be bound by
the specific claims they made and the manner in which they presented them. The
Court of Appeal erred in raising this issue, not chosen by the parties.
O is not without a remedy. She may use the mechanisms
carefully set out by the legislature to vindicate her human rights, and may
bring her claim before the Human Rights Commission, as the employer urged and
as the legislature intended.
Cases Cited
By Iacobucci J.
Applied: McLeod v.
Egan, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 517; referred to: Volvo
Canada Ltd. v. U.A.W., Local 720, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 178; Douglas
Aircraft Co. of Canada v. McConnell, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 245; Dayco
(Canada) Ltd. v. CAW‑Canada, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 230; Toronto
(City) Board of Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997]
1 S.C.R. 487; Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v.
Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748; C.U.P.E. v. Ontario
(Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, 2003 SCC 29; Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations Board), [1995] 1 S.C.R. 157;
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 579 v. Bradco
Construction Ltd., [1993] 2 S.C.R. 316; Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co. of Canada v. T. Eaton Co., [1956] S.C.R. 610; Slaight
Communications Inc. v. Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038; Rizzo
& Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27; Heustis v.
New Brunswick Electric Power Commission, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 768; Blanchard
v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476; Suresh v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002]
1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1; Re Blouin Drywall Contractors Ltd. and
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 2486 (1975),
8 O.R. (2d) 103; Spruce Falls Inc. and I.W.A.‑Canada, Local 2995
(Trudel) (Re) (2002), 106 L.A.C. (4th) 41; Peel District School Board
and O.P.S.T.F., District 19 (Havery) (Re) (2000), 84 L.A.C. (4th) 289; Re
Harry Woods Transport Ltd. and Teamsters Union, Local 141 (1977), 15 L.A.C.
(2d) 140; Aro Canada Inc. and I.A.M., Re (1988), 34 L.A.C. (3d) 255; Liquid
Carbonic Inc. and U.S.W.A., Re (1992), 25 L.A.C. (4th) 144.
By Major J. (dissenting)
McLeod v. Egan, [1975]
1 S.C.R. 517; Bank of Toronto v. Perkins (1883), 8 S.C.R. 603.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Employment
Standards Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14, ss. 44,
64.5(1)‑(4) [ad. 1996, c. 23, s. 18].
Employment Standards Act, 1968, S.O.
1968, c. 35, s. 11(2).
Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19, s. 5(1) [am. 1999, c. 6,
s. 28(5)].
Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2, s. 45(8)3 [rep. & sub. 1992, c.
21, s. 23(3)].
Labour Relations Act, 1995, S.O. 1995, c. 1, Sch. A., s. 48(1), (12).
Authors Cited
Brown, Donald J. M., and David M.
Beatty. Canadian Labour Arbitration, 3rd ed. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law
Book (loose‑leaf updated April 2003, release 39).
Driedger, Elmer A. Construction
of Statutes, 2nd ed. Toronto: Butterworths, 1983.
Ontario. Ministry of Labour. Proposed
Reform of the Ontario Labour Relations Act. Toronto: Ministry of Labour,
1991.
Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., vol. I. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1989, “apply”.
Weiler, Paul. Reconcilable
Differences: New Directions in Canadian Labour Law. Toronto: Carswell,
1980.
Weiler, Paul. “The Remedial
Authority of the Labour Arbitrator: Revised Judicial Version” (1974), 52 Can.
Bar Rev. 29.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(2001), 54 O.R. (3d) 321, 147 O.A.C. 183, 10 C.C.E.L. (3d) 290, 40 C.H.R.R.
D/190, 2002 C.L.L.C. ¶210‑005, [2001] O.J. No. 2316 (QL), setting aside a
judgment of the Divisional Court (2000), 131 O.A.C. 122, 2000 C.L.L.C. ¶220‑336,
[2000] O.J. No. 475 (QL). Appeal dismissed, Major and LeBel JJ. dissenting.
William G. Horton, Cathy
Beagan Flood and Robert B. Budd, for the appellant.
Timothy G. M. Hadwen
and Peggy E. Smith, for the respondent.
Naomi Overend and Prabhu
Rajan, for the intervener.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier,
Iacobucci, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and Deschamps JJ. was delivered by
1
Iacobucci J. — This appeal
raises questions about the application of human rights and other
employment-related statutes in the context of a collective agreement. More
specifically, does a grievance arbitrator have the power to enforce the
substantive rights and obligations of human rights and other employment-related
statutes and, if so, under what circumstances? As I discuss in these reasons,
I conclude that a grievance arbitrator has the power and responsibility to
enforce the substantive rights and obligations of human rights and other
employment-related statutes as if they were part of the collective agreement.
Consequently, I would dismiss the appeal.
I. Background
2
Joanne O’Brien was a probationary employee of the appellant District of
Parry Sound Social Services Administration Board and a member of the respondent
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (the “Union”). Her terms of employment
were governed by a collective agreement negotiated between the parties. For
the purposes of this appeal, the most important provision of the collective
agreement is Article 5.01:
ARTICLE 5 – MANAGEMENT RIGHTS
5.01 The Union recognizes that the
management of the operations and the direction of the employees are fixed
exclusively in the Employer and shall remain solely with the Employer except as
expressly limited by the clear and explicit language of some other provision of
this Agreement and, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, the
Union acknowledges that it is the exclusive function of the Employer to:
.
. .
(b) hire, assign, retire, promote, demote,
classify, transfer, direct, lay off, recall and to suspend, discipline or
discharge employees who have successfully completed their probationary period
for just cause provided that a claim by an employee who has successfully
completed his/her probationary period that she/he has been disciplined,
suspended or discharged without just cause may be the subject of a grievance
and dealt with as hereinafter provided;
3
Under Article 5.01, the Union recognizes that management has the right
to manage the enterprise and direct the work force, subject only to express
provisions of the collective agreement that provide otherwise. On its face,
Article 5.01 is sufficiently broad to include the right of the employer to
discharge an employee. Under paragraph (b), a claim by an employee who has
successfully completed his or her probationary period that she or he has been
disciplined without just cause may be the subject of a grievance. The right of
the appellant to manage the enterprise is thus subject to the right of an
employee who has completed the probationary period not to be discharged without
just cause. There is no provision that limits the right of the employer to discharge
a probationary employee. To the contrary, Article 8.06(a), under the heading
“Grievance Procedure”, states that “a probationary employee may be discharged
at the sole discretion of and for any reason satisfactory to the Employer and
such action by the Employer is not subject to the grievance and arbitration
procedures and does not constitute a difference between the parties”.
4
Prior to the expiry of her probationary term, Ms. O’Brien went on
maternity leave. Within a few days of returning to work, the appellant
discharged her. On June 26, 1998, Ms. O’Brien filed a grievance with the
Union. The grievance alleged as follows:
I grieve that I have been discharged from my position without
justification and that this decision was arbitrary, discriminatory, in bad
faith and unfair.
At the
arbitration hearing, the appellant objected on the basis that the Board of
Arbitration (the “Board”) did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter of
the grievance. It was the appellant’s submission that the collective agreement
clearly expressed that it was the parties’ intention that the discharge of a
probationary employee was not arbitrable. The appellant submitted that the
parties have the right to make such a bargain and that it would be a jurisdictional
error for the Board to resolve the dispute.
II. Relevant
Legislative Provisions
5
Employment Standards Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14
44. An employer shall not intimidate,
discipline, suspend, lay off, dismiss or impose a penalty on an employee
because the employee is or will become eligible to take, intends to take or
takes pregnancy leave or parental leave.
64.5 (1) If an employer enters into a
collective agreement, the Act is enforceable against the employer with respect
to the following matters as if it were part of the collective agreement:
1. A contravention of or failure to comply with
the Act that occurs when the collective agreement is in force.
.
. .
(2) An employee to whom a collective agreement
applies (including an employee who is not a member of the trade union) is not
entitled to file or maintain a complaint under the Act.
(3) Despite subsection (2), the Director may permit
an employee to file or maintain a complaint under the Act if the Director
considers it appropriate in the circumstances.
(4) An employee to whom a collective agreement
applies (including an employee who is not a member of the trade union) is bound
by a decision of the trade union with respect to the enforcement of the Act
under the collective agreement, including a decision not to seek the
enforcement of the Act.
Labour
Relations Act, 1995, S.O. 1995, c. 1, Sch. A
48. (1) Every
collective agreement shall provide for the final and binding settlement by
arbitration, without stoppage of work, of all differences between the parties
arising from the interpretation, application, administration or alleged
violation of the agreement, including any question as to whether a matter is
arbitrable.
.
. .
(12) An arbitrator or the chair of an arbitration board,
as the case may be, has power,
(a) to
require any party to furnish particulars before or during a hearing;
(b) to
require any party to produce documents or things that may be relevant to the
matter and to do so before or during the hearing;
(c) to fix
dates for the commencement and continuation of hearings;
(d) to
summon and enforce the attendance of witnesses and to compel them to give oral
or written evidence on oath in the same manner as a court of record in civil
cases; and
(e) to
administer oaths and affirmations,
and an arbitrator or an arbitration
board, as the case may be, has power,
(f) to
accept the oral or written evidence as the arbitrator or the arbitration board,
as the case may be, in its discretion considers proper, whether admissible in a
court of law or not;
(g) to
enter any premises where work is being done or has been done by the employees
or in which the employer carries on business or where anything is taking place
or has taken place concerning any of the differences submitted to the
arbitrator or the arbitration board, and inspect and view any work, material,
machinery, appliance or article therein, and interrogate any person respecting
any such thing or any of such differences;
(h) to
authorize any person to do anything that the arbitrator or arbitration board
may do under clause (g) and to report to the arbitrator or the arbitration
board thereon;
(i) to
make interim orders concerning procedural matters;
(j) to
interpret and apply human rights and other employment-related statutes, despite
any conflict between those statutes and the terms of the collective agreement.
Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19
5.—(1)
Every person has a right to equal treatment with respect to employment without
discrimination because of race, ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic
origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation, age, record of offences,
marital status, same-sex partnership status, family status or handicap.
III. Judicial History
A. Arbitration Award (February 1, 1999)
6
The majority of the Board found that the collective agreement,
considered alone, imposed no restriction on the right of the employer to
discharge probationary employees. The language of the collective agreement
clearly indicated that it was not the parties’ intention that the discharge of
a probationary employee would be arbitrable.
7
The majority of the Board then considered the impact of s. 48(12)(j) of
the Labour Relations Act, 1995 (“LRA”). The Board found that s.
48(12)(j) obligates and empowers a board of arbitration to interpret a
collective agreement in a manner consistent with the Human Rights Code.
Section 48(12)(j), in other words, imports the substantive rights of the Human
Rights Code into a collective agreement over which an arbitrator has jurisdiction.
The majority of the Board thus determined that it had the power and
responsibility to hear and determine the narrow question of whether
discrimination was a factor in the discharge of Ms. O’Brien.
8
Board member O’Byrne dissented on the basis that s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA
can only be utilized if an arbitrator has jurisdiction in the first
instance. In his view, the fact that the difference did not arise out of the
express terms and conditions of the collective agreement should have been
sufficient to dispose of the matter. He concluded that the Board did not have
jurisdiction to resolve this dispute.
B. Ontario
Superior Court of Justice (Divisional Court) (2000), 131 O.A.C. 122
9
On an application for judicial review, O’Leary J. held that s. 48(12)(j)
of the LRA confers power on a board of arbitration to interpret and
apply the Human Rights Code when and if it already has jurisdiction to
hear a grievance, but not otherwise. On this view, the Board has jurisdiction
only over differences between the parties arising from the interpretation,
application, administration or alleged violation of the express terms and
conditions of the collective agreement. Because the grievance was not a
difference arising out of the collective agreement, O’Leary J. was of the view
that the Board did not have the jurisdiction to resolve the dispute. If there
is no difference arising out of the four corners of the collective agreement,
s. 48(12)(j) is of no application.
C. Ontario
Court of Appeal (2001), 54 O.R. (3d) 321
10
According to Morden J.A., the approach adopted by the Divisional Court
gives too narrow a meaning to s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA. In his view, s.
48(12)(j) requires arbitrators to interpret the collective agreement in the
context of the relevant statutory provisions. The collective agreement must be
read in light of human rights and other employment-related statutes. If the
terms of the collective agreement are in conflict with the Human Rights Code,
the Human Rights Code will prevail. Applying this reasoning to the
facts of this case, Morden J.A. found that the right of the employer under the
collective agreement to discharge a probationary employee “for any reason
satisfactory to the employer” is in direct conflict with s. 5(1) of the Human
Rights Code. He concluded that Article 8.06 should be read down not to
include the power to discharge for discriminatory reasons.
11
In the end, however, Morden J.A. chose not to rely on the preceding
analysis for the purpose of disposing of the appeal. His reasoning was that he
felt that the requirement of an express conflict between the statute and the
collective agreement could involve some incongruity. In his view, the
requirement of a direct conflict between the statute and the agreement would
have the incongruous result that an arbitrator will find the dispute arbitrable
and resolve it on the basis of the external statute where the parties have said
something inconsistent with the statute, but not where they have said nothing
at all on the matter. Noting that this feature of s. 48(12)(j) results in some
uncertainty regarding the scope of its application, Morden J.A. chose not to
resolve the matter on this basis.
12
Instead, Morden J.A. decided the matter with reference to the Employment
Standards Act (“ESA”), which he considered to be a much firmer
ground. Morden J.A. first noted that s. 44 of the ESA provides that an
employer shall not dismiss an employee because the employee takes pregnancy
leave or parental leave. He then noted that under s. 64.5(1) of the ESA
the terms and conditions of the Act are enforceable against the employer as if
they were a part of the collective agreement. In view of the direct incorporation
of the ESA into the collective agreement, Morden J.A. found that the
Board had jurisdiction to consider whether the dismissal of Ms. O’Brien was
inconsistent with s. 44 of the ESA.
13
Morden J.A. rejected the appellant’s submission that the court should
not resolve the matter with reference to the ESA because the statute was
not raised before the Board; he did so on the basis that the appellant would
suffer no prejudice if the matter was resolved in this manner. Having
concluded that the Board had jurisdiction to resolve the grievance, Morden J.A.
allowed the appeal and made an order dismissing the application for judicial
review.
IV. Issues
14
The principal question in this appeal concerns the Board’s finding that
Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is arbitrable. In reviewing this finding, the primary
substantive question to be answered is whether the substantive rights and
obligations of the Human Rights Code are incorporated into a collective
agreement over which the Board has jurisdiction. A second question that arises
is whether it was appropriate for the Court of Appeal to determine that the
subject matter of the grievance is arbitrable on the basis that the substantive
rights and obligations of the ESA are incorporated into the collective
agreement.
15
I also note that the Ontario Human Rights Commission has intervened in
this appeal for the purpose of ensuring that its jurisdiction is not ousted
because the aggrieved employee is a party to a collective agreement over which
the Board has jurisdiction. The Commission submits that if the Court finds
that the grievance is arbitrable, the Board and the Commission have concurrent
jurisdiction. In my view, it is unnecessary to determine this matter at the
present time. Consequently, in concluding that a grievance arbitrator has the
power and responsibility to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of
the Human Rights Code in this case, I make no holding on whether the
jurisdiction of the Human Rights Commission is ousted by that of the Board.
V. Analysis
A. What is
the Appropriate Standard of Review?
16
Where an arbitration board is called upon to determine whether a matter
is arbitrable, it is well-established that a reviewing court can only intervene
in the case of a patently unreasonable error. See for example Volvo Canada
Ltd. v. U.A.W., Local 720, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 178; Douglas Aircraft Co. of
Canada v. McConnell, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 245; Dayco (Canada) Ltd. v.
CAW-Canada, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 230; and Toronto (City) Board of Education
v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487.
17
This high degree of curial deference to the decisions of arbitration
boards is necessary to maintain the integrity of the grievance arbitration
process. As Cory J. wrote in Toronto Board of Education, supra,
at para. 36, “the whole purpose of a system of grievance arbitration is to
secure prompt, final and binding settlement of disputes arising out of the
interpretation or application of collective agreements and the disciplinary
actions taken by an employer”. This is a basic requirement for peace and
harmony in industrial relations, which is important both to the parties and to
society as a whole. The protective clause found in s. 48(1) of the LRA is
the legislative recognition that the basic nature of labour disputes requires
their prompt and final resolution by expert tribunals.
18
The patent unreasonableness standard is a very high standard that will
not easily be met. In Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v.
Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, at para. 57, the Court described the
difference between an unreasonable and patently unreasonable decision in the
following terms:
The difference . . . lies in the immediacy or
obviousness of the defect. If the defect is apparent on the face of the
tribunal’s reasons, then the tribunal’s decision is patently unreasonable. But
if it takes some significant searching or testing to find the defect, then the
decision is unreasonable but not patently unreasonable. As Cory J. observed in
Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1993] 1
S.C.R. 941, at p. 963, “[i]n the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary ‘patently’,
an adverb, is defined as ‘openly, evidently, clearly’”. This is not to say, of
course, that judges reviewing a decision on the standard of patent
unreasonableness may not examine the record. If the decision under review is
sufficiently difficult, then perhaps a great deal of reading and thinking will
be required before the judge will be able to grasp the dimensions of the
problem. . . . But once the lines of the problem have come into focus, if
the decision is patently unreasonable, then the unreasonableness will be
evident. [Emphasis added.]
See also C.U.P.E.
v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, 2003 SCC 29.
B. Was the
Arbitration Award Patently Unreasonable?
19
As La Forest J. noted in Dayco, supra, at p. 251, the
collective agreement is the “foundation” of a grievance arbitrator’s
jurisdiction. Absent a violation of the collective agreement, a grievance
arbitrator has no jurisdiction over a dispute; if the alleged misconduct does
not constitute a violation of the collective agreement, there is no basis on
which to conclude that a dispute is arbitrable.
20
In the present case, the parties are in agreement that the express
provisions of the collective agreement in question impose no fetters on the
employer’s right to discharge a probationary employee. The Union, however,
submits that s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code is implicit in the
collective agreement between the parties. If this is the case, there is no
doubt that the discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee is
arbitrable. Under s. 5(1), every person has a right to equal treatment with
respect to employment without discrimination. Ms. O’Brien’s grievance — that
she was discharged for discriminatory reasons — falls squarely within s. 5(1)
of the Human Rights Code. If s. 5(1) is implicit in the collective
agreement between the parties, the grievance falls squarely within the ambit of
the collective agreement as well. But if s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code is
not incorporated into the collective agreement between the parties, it
is equally obvious that the discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee
is not arbitrable.
21
Consequently, the critical issue to be determined at the arbitration
hearing was whether or not the substantive rights and obligations of the Human
Rights Code are incorporated into each collective agreement over which the
Board has jurisdiction. Put a different way, it is only once this issue has
been resolved that the lines of the problem come into focus. This, in my
opinion, is an issue that the Board must resolve correctly. As the Court
concluded in Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations Board),
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 157, at para. 49, there may be instances in which the
reasonableness of a tribunal’s decision is dependent on it having correctly
answered a question of law in the course of reaching that decision. If the
critical question that the tribunal must answer is a question of law that is
outside its area of expertise and that the legislature did not intend to leave
to the tribunal, the tribunal must answer that question correctly.
22
The question of whether the substantive rights and obligations of the Human
Rights Code are incorporated into each collective agreement over which the
Board has jurisdiction is not, in my view, a question that the legislature
intended to leave to the Board. The Board’s expertise does not lie in
answering legal questions of general applicability, but, rather, in the
interpretation of collective agreements and the resolution of factual disputes
related to those agreements. See for example Dayco, supra, at p.
266, and United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 579
v. Bradco Construction Ltd., [1993] 2 S.C.R. 316, at p. 336. Determining
whether the substantive rights and obligations of an external statute are
incorporated into a collective agreement is a legal question of broad
applicability that does not fall within an arbitrator’s core area of
expertise. Although the Board has the power to determine whether the
substantive rights and obligations of the Human Rights Code are
incorporated into the collective agreement, the Court has the power to
interfere if the Board resolved the issue incorrectly.
23
For the reasons that follow, it is my conclusion that the Board was
correct to conclude that the substantive rights and obligations of the Human
Rights Code are incorporated into each collective agreement over which the
Board has jurisdiction. Under a collective agreement, the broad rights of an
employer to manage the enterprise and direct the work force are subject not
only to the express provisions of the collective agreement, but also to
statutory provisions of the Human Rights Code and other
employment-related statutes.
(1) The Case Law
24
The leading case regarding the effect of employment-related
statutes on the content of collective agreements is McLeod v. Egan,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 517. Prior to McLeod, the
prevailing view was that an arbitrator was not authorized to apply statutes in
the course of grievance arbitration other than as an aid to interpreting a
collective agreement: D. J. M. Brown and D. M. Beatty, Canadian Labour Arbitration (loose-leaf ed.), at p.
2-60. On this view, an arbitrator had no alternative but to construe and apply
a collective agreement in accordance with its express terms and conditions. If
the alleged misconduct did not constitute a violation of an express provision
of the collective agreement, the subject matter of the dispute was not
arbitrable. In McLeod, however, the Court established that it is
necessary to look outside the collective agreement in order to ascertain the
substantive rights and obligations of the parties to that agreement.
25
In McLeod, the appellant employee alleged that he had been
disciplined for refusing to work beyond 48 hours in a week. The collective
agreement between the parties contained a broad management rights clause that
expressly stated that the control of all operations and working forces,
including the right to discipline employees and to schedule operations, is
vested solely in the employer, subject only to the express provisions of the
collective agreement. There were no provisions of the collective agreement
that limited the right of an employer to require an employee to work overtime
beyond 48 hours a week. In the absence of language limiting the broad power
vested in the employer, the arbitrator concluded that insofar as the collective
agreement was concerned the employer was entitled to discipline an employee who
refused to work in excess of 48 hours a week.
26
The Court, however, concluded that an arbitrator must look beyond
the four corners of the collective agreement in order to determine the limits
on an employer’s right to manage operations. Under a collective agreement,
this right is subject not only to the express provisions of the agreement, but
also to statutory provisions such as s. 11(2) of the Employment Standards
Act, 1968, S.O. 1968, c. 35 (the “ESA, 1968”). Martland J.
held as follows, at p. 523:
The basic
provision of the Act is that which places a maximum limit upon the working
hours of an employee of eight in the day and forty-eight in the week. Any
provision of an agreement which purported to give to an employer an unqualified
right to require working hours in excess of those limits would be illegal, and
the provisions of art. 2.01 of the collective agreement, which provided that
certain management rights should remain vested in the Company, could not, in so
far as they preserved the Company’s
right to require overtime work by its employees, enable the Company to require
overtime work in excess of those limits.
Put another way, the absence of a provision that
expressly prohibits an employer from requiring an employee to work in excess of
48 hours a week does not mean that the right to manage operations includes the
right to violate s. 11(2) of the ESA, 1968. Management rights must be
exercised not only in accordance with the express provisions of the collective
agreement, but also in accordance with the employee’s statutory rights. As Martland J. concluded, at p.
524, “[b]y the operation of the
statute, the right to require overtime beyond 48 hours per week from any
individual employee had been taken away from the employer and became subject to
the rights of the employee under s. 11(2)”.
27
Major J. states that this case stands for the proposition that a
union and employer are restricted from making an agreement contrary to law.
This rule, he states, is no more than a modern application of a long-standing
rule that courts will not enforce contracts that are illegal or against public
policy. This may be true, but I believe it important to consider carefully
what it was that made the collective agreement in McLeod objectionable.
In McLeod, the collective agreement did not expressly state that the
employer was authorized to require overtime beyond 48 hours a week. It did,
however, contain a broad management rights clause that recognized the
employer’s right to control all operations and working forces, including the
right to discipline employees and to schedule operations. The collective
agreement was objectionable because the powers it extended to the employer were
sufficiently broad to include the power to violate its employees’ rights under
s. 11(2) of the ESA, 1968.
28
As a practical matter, this means that the substantive rights and
obligations of employment-related statutes are implicit in each collective
agreement over which an arbitrator has jurisdiction. A collective agreement
might extend to an employer a broad right to manage the enterprise as it sees
fit, but this right is circumscribed by the
employee’s statutory rights. The
absence of an express provision that prohibits the violation of a particular
statutory right is insufficient to conclude that a violation of that right does
not constitute a violation of the collective agreement. Rather, human rights and other employment-related statutes establish
a floor beneath which an employer and union cannot contract.
29
As a result, the substantive rights and obligations of the parties to a
collective agreement cannot be determined solely by reference to the mutual
intentions of the contracting parties as expressed in that agreement. Under McLeod,
there are certain terms and conditions that are implicit in the agreement,
irrespective of the mutual intentions of the contracting parties. More
specifically, a collective agreement cannot be used to reserve the right of an
employer to manage operations and direct the work force otherwise than in
accordance with its employees’ statutory rights, either expressly or by failing
to stipulate constraints on what some arbitrators regard as management’s
inherent right to manage the enterprise as it sees fit. The statutory rights
of employees constitute a bundle of rights to which the parties can add but
from which they cannot derogate.
30
In some sense, McLeod is inconsistent with the traditional view
that a collective agreement is a private contract between equal parties, and
that the parties to the agreement are free to determine what does or does not
constitute an arbitrable difference. But this willingness to consider factors
other than the parties’ expressed intention is consistent with the fact that
collective bargaining and grievance arbitration has both a private and
public function. The collective agreement is a private contract, but a
contract that serves a public function: the peaceful resolution of labour
disputes. See for example Professor P. Weiler, “The Remedial Authority of the
Labour Arbitrator: Revised Judicial Version” (1974), 52 Can. Bar Rev.
29, at p. 31. This dual purpose is reflected in the fact that the content of a
collective agreement is, in part, fixed by external statutes. Section 48(1) of
the LRA, for example, dictates that every collective agreement must
provide for final and binding settlement by arbitration of all differences
arising under a collective agreement. Section 64.5(1) of the ESA
provides that the Act is enforceable against an employer as if it was part of
the collective agreement. In each collective agreement, certain procedural
requirements and substantive rights and obligations are mandatory. In McLeod,
the Court determined that these include the obligation of an employer to
exercise its management rights in accordance with the statutory rights of its
employees.
(2) Application of the Case Law
31
As in McLeod, the
collective agreement at issue in this appeal expressly recognizes the employer’s broad right to manage the enterprise and direct
the work force as it sees fit, subject only to express terms providing
otherwise. Article 5.01, under the heading “Management Rights”, provides as
follows:
5.01 The Union recognizes that the management of the operations and
the direction of the employees are fixed exclusively in the Employer and shall
remain solely with the Employer except as expressly limited by the clear and
explicit language of some other provision of this Agreement . . .
Under the traditional view, the management rights recognized therein
are unlimited, except to the extent that the express provisions of the
collective agreement provide otherwise. In the absence of a provision in the
collective agreement that limits the right of the employer to discharge a
probationary employee for discriminatory reasons, Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is
non-arbitrable.
32
Under McLeod, a collective agreement cannot extend to an employer
the right to violate the statutory rights of its employees. On the contrary,
the broad power of the appellant to manage operations and direct employees is
subject not only to the express provisions of the agreement, but also to the
statutory rights of its employees. Just as the collective agreement in McLeod
could not extend to the employer the right to require overtime in excess of
48 hours, the collective agreement in the current appeal cannot extend to the
appellant the right to discharge an employee for discriminatory reasons. Under
a collective agreement, as under laws of general application, the right to
direct the work force does not include the right to discharge a probationary
employee for discriminatory reasons. The obligation of an employer to manage
the enterprise and direct the work force is subject not only to express
provisions of the collective agreement, but also to the statutory rights of its
employees, including the right to equal treatment in employment without
discrimination.
33
The one factor that distinguishes this case from McLeod is the
fact that there is more evidence that the parties to the agreement specifically
turned their minds to the subject matter of the grievance and agreed that it
was not arbitrable. In McLeod, the collective agreement contained a
broad management rights clause, but did not directly address the right of the
employer to require overtime beyond 48 hours a week. Thus, it is difficult to
prove with any degree of certainty that it was the mutual intention of the
parties that the collective agreement extend to the employer the right to
require overtime in violation of s. 11(2) of the ESA, 1968. In
this case, the collective agreement contains both a broad management rights
clause and an express statement that “[n]otwithstanding anything in this
Agreement, a probationary employee may be discharged at the sole discretion of
and for any reason satisfactory to the Employer and such action by the Employer
is not subject to the grievance and arbitration procedures and does not
constitute a difference between the parties”. Article 8.06(a) might be
understood as an explicit expression of the parties’ mutual intention that the
discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee is not arbitrable.
34
In response to this line of argument, I should state that I am
not entirely comfortable attributing this intention to the parties. Although
the language of Article 8.06(a) is broad, it cannot be established, as a matter
of fact, that the parties reached a common understanding that the
discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee is non-arbitrable. It is
more likely, in my view, that the mutual intention was to affirm the right of
the employer to discharge a probationary employee who did not perform his or
her tasks to the employer’s satisfaction. As O’Leary J. rightly observed, it
is sometimes difficult for an employer to assess a candidate without hiring
that employee for a probationary period; it is not unreasonable that the
employer would have the right to assess whether the probationary employee has
adequately satisfied the requirements of the post. I find it unlikely,
however, that it was the parties’ mutual intention to affirm the right of the
employer to discharge a probationary employee on the basis of human rights grounds, namely, race, ancestry, place
of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation,
age, record of offences, marital status, same-sex partnership status, family
status or handicap.
35
But even if Article 8.06(a) does, in fact, reflect a common intention
that the discriminatory discharge of a probationary employee is not an
arbitrable dispute, I remain of the view that Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is arbitrable.
One reason I say this is that s. 48(1) of the LRA states that every
collective agreement shall provide for the final and binding settlement by
arbitration of all differences between the parties arising under the collective
agreement. Section 48(1) prohibits the parties from enacting provisions
stating that a violation of the collective agreement is non‑arbitrable.
By the operation of s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code, the
right of probationary employees to equal treatment without discrimination is
implicit in the collective agreement, and thus the discriminatory discharge of
a probationary employee constitutes a violation of that agreement. To the
extent that Article 8.06(a) establishes that an allegation that the
discriminatory discharge of a probationary employer is non‑arbitrable, it
is void as contrary to s. 48(1) of the LRA.
36
More fundamentally, the interpretation of Article 8.06(a) that it
reflects a common intention is inconsistent with the principle that under a
collective agreement an employer’s right to manage operations and direct the
work force is subject not only to the express provisions of the collective
agreement but also to the employees’ statutory rights, irrespective of the
parties’ subjective intentions. In McLeod, the Court stated that any
provision that purports to give to an employer the right to require working
hours in excess of 48 hours a week is void. The same logic applies to a
provision that purports to give to an employer the right to discharge a
probationary employee for discriminatory reasons. Even if the parties to the
agreement had enacted a substantive provision that clearly expressed that,
insofar as the collective agreement is concerned, the employer possessed the
right to discharge a probationary employee for discriminatory reasons, that
provision would be void. Put simply, there are certain rights and obligations
that arise irrespective of the parties’ subjective intentions. These include
the right of an employee to equal treatment without discrimination and the
corresponding obligation of an employer not to discharge an employee for
discriminatory reasons. To hold otherwise would lessen human rights protection
in the unionized workplace by allowing employers and unions to treat such
protections as optional, thereby leaving recourse only to the human rights
procedure.
37
The effect of my analysis is to modify Article 8.06(a). Under this
analysis, it is only a probationary employee being discharged “at the sole lawful
discretion of and for any lawful reason satisfactory to the Employer”
that does not constitute a difference between the parties. Any exercise of
this discretion otherwise than in accordance with a probationary employee’s
rights under the Human Rights Code and other employment-related statutes
is an arbitrable difference under the collective agreement.
(3) Section 48(12)(j) of the LRA
38
Having determined that McLeod established that an employer’s
right to manage the operations and direct the work force is subject not only to
the express provisions of the collective agreement but also to the right of
each employee to equal treatment without discrimination, the question that
arises is whether this principle applies under s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA.
Put directly, did the enactment of s. 48(12)(j) displace or otherwise restrict
the principles established in McLeod? If it did not, the Board was
correct to conclude that the substantive rights and obligations of the Human
Rights Code are implicit in a collective agreement over which an arbitrator
has jurisdiction.
39
To begin with, I think it useful to stress the presumption that the
legislature does not intend to change existing law or to depart from
established principles, policies or practices. In Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co. of Canada v. T. Eaton Co., [1956] S.C.R. 610, at p. 614, for
example, Fauteux J. (as he then was) wrote that “a Legislature is not presumed
to depart from the general system of the law without expressing its intentions
to do so with irresistible clearness, failing which the law remains
undisturbed”. In Slaight Communications Inc. v. Davidson, [1989] 1
S.C.R. 1038, at p. 1077, Lamer J. (as he then was) wrote that “in the absence
of a clear provision to the contrary, the legislator should not be assumed to
have intended to alter the pre‑existing ordinary rules of common law”.
40
In my view, s. 48(12)(j) does not clearly indicate that it was the
legislature’s intention to alter the principles described above. Quite the
opposite. I believe that the amendments to the legislation affirm that
grievance arbitrators have not only the power but also the responsibility to
implement and enforce the substantive rights and obligations of human rights
and other employment-related statutes as if they were part of the collective
agreement. If the right of an employer to manage operations and direct the
work force is subject to both the express provisions of the collective
agreement and the employee’s statutory rights, then it follows that a grievance
arbitrator must have the power to implement and enforce those rights.
41
This conclusion is consistent with the modern approach to statutory
interpretation. As this Court has repeatedly stated, the proper approach to
statutory interpretation is that endorsed by the noted author E. A. Driedger,
in Construction of Statutes (2nd ed. 1983), at p. 87: “the words of an
Act are to be read in their entire context and in their grammatical and
ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act,
and the intention of Parliament”. See for example Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes
Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27, at para. 21. A consideration of these
factors supports the proposition that under s. 48(12)(j) of the LRA an
arbitrator has the power to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of
human rights and other employment-related statutes that are, under the legal
principles established in McLeod, part of the collective agreement.
(i) The Plain and Ordinary Meaning of Section 48(12)(j) of the LRA
42
The primary factor that supports this conclusion is the very
language of s. 48(12)(j), which provides that an arbitrator has the power “to interpret and apply human rights and other
employment-related statutes, despite any conflict between those statutes and
the terms of the collective agreement”.
43
The power to interpret and apply a particular statute would, in
my view, ordinarily be understood to include
the power to implement and enforce the substantive rights and obligations
contained therein. The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.
1989), vol. I, at p. 577, states that to “apply” means to “bring
(a law, rule, test, principle, etc.) into contact with facts, to bring to bear
practically, to put into practical operation”. Major J. suggests that my reasons do not
respect the intention of the legislature.
In my view, the use of the phrase “to
interpret and apply human rights and other employment-related statutes” indicates that it was the legislature’s intention that an arbitrator would have the power
not only to enforce those rights and obligations that are expressly provided
for in the collective agreement, but those that are
provided for in human rights and employment-related statutes as well. My
colleague’s reasons leave unanswered the question of what result the
legislature intended when it specifically incorporated the power of an
arbitrator to interpret and apply human rights and other employment-related
statutes into the LRA.
44
The appellant submits that the power to interpret and apply human rights
and other employment-related statutes arises only when there is a direct
conflict between the collective agreement and the statute. Read grammatically,
s. 48(12)(j) supports precisely the opposite conclusion. Section 48(12)(j) does
not state that the power arises if, and only if, there is a conflict between
the collective agreement and the employment-related statute, but that it arises
even if there is a conflict between the agreement and the statute. The
obvious implication is that a conflict between the collective agreement and an
employment-related statute is not a condition precedent of the power to bring
that statute into practical operation.
45
Considered alone, the language of s. 48(12)(j) reinforces the principles
discussed above, namely, that the right of an employer to manage operations and
direct the work force is subject not only to the express provisions of the
collective agreement, but also to its employees’ statutory rights. For this to
be the case, an arbitrator must have the power to implement and enforce the
substantive rights and obligations of human rights and other employment-related
statutes. Section 48(12)(j) does not displace or otherwise restrict the
principles discussed above, but, rather, affirms that an arbitrator does, in
fact, have the power to bring human rights and other employment-related
statutes into practical operation. In any event, I am of the view that the
inclusion of a management rights clause that is sufficiently broad to include
the right of management to discharge a probationary employee for discriminatory
reasons gives rise to a conflict between the statute and the collective
agreement.
(ii) The Scheme of the Act
46
The appellant’s primary submission is that an arbitrator has the power
to interpret and apply human rights and other employment-related statutes if,
and only if, it already has been determined that the arbitrator has
jurisdiction over the subject matter of the grievance. According to the
appellant, an arbitrator’s primary source of jurisdiction is s. 48(1), which
states that each collective agreement shall provide for final and binding
settlement by arbitration of a difference arising out of that agreement.
Section 48(12)(j), on the other hand, sets out the powers that an arbitrator
possesses once it already has been determined that a grievance is arbitrable.
On this view, the power to interpret and apply other statutes is merely one
among nine other incidental powers that an arbitrator may exercise for the
purpose of resolving a difference over which she or he already has
jurisdiction.
47
To a certain extent, I would agree. Indeed, the structure of s. 48 does
seem to suggest that an arbitrator is intended to interpret and apply human
rights and other employment-related statutes for the purpose of resolving a
dispute that is arbitrable. This understanding of s. 48(12)(j) is consistent
with the language of its predecessor, s. 45(8)3 of the Labour Relations Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. L.2, which provided as follows:
45. . . .
(8) An arbitrator or arbitration board shall make
a final and conclusive settlement of the differences between the parties and, for
that purpose, has the following powers:
.
. .
3. To interpret and apply the requirements of
human rights and other employment-related statutes, despite any conflict
between those requirements and the terms of the collective agreement. [Emphasis
added.]
The inclusion
of the phrase “for that purpose” provides support for the proposition that the
legislature envisioned that a dispute must be arbitrable before an arbitrator
obtains the power to interpret and apply human rights and other
employment-related statutes.
48
But even if it is true that a dispute must be arbitrable before an
arbitrator obtains the power to interpret and apply the Human Rights Code,
it does not thereby follow that an alleged contravention of an express
provision of a collective agreement is a condition precedent of an arbitrator’s
authority to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of
employment-related statutes. Under McLeod, the broad right of an
employer to manage operations and direct the work force is subject not only to
the express provisions of the collective agreement but also to the statutory
rights of its employees. This means that the right of a probationary employee
to equal treatment without discrimination is implicit in each collective
agreement. This, in turn, means that the dismissal of an employee for
discriminatory reasons is, in fact, an arbitrable difference, and that the
arbitrator has the power to interpret and apply the substantive rights and
obligations of the Human Rights Code for the purpose of resolving that
difference.
49
Consequently, it cannot be inferred from the scheme of the LRA
that it was the legislature’s intention to displace or otherwise restrict the
legal principles enunciated in McLeod. The appellant’s submissions in
respect of the structure of s. 48 are consistent with the conclusion that the
substantive rights and obligations of the Human Rights Code are implicit
in each collective agreement over which an arbitrator has jurisdiction. If an
arbitrator is to enforce an employer’s obligation to exercise its management
rights in accordance with the statutory provisions that are implicit in each
collective agreement, the arbitrator must have the power to interpret and apply
human rights and other employment-related statutes. Section 48(12)(j) confirms
that an arbitrator does, in fact, have this right.
(iii) Policy Considerations
50
In respect of policy considerations, I first note that granting
arbitrators the authority to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of
human rights and other employment-related statutes advances the stated purposes
of the LRA, which include promoting the expeditious resolution of
workplace disputes. As this Court has repeatedly recognized, the prompt, final
and binding resolution of workplace disputes is of fundamental importance, both
to the parties and to society as a whole. See for example Heustis v. New
Brunswick Electric Power Commission, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 768, at p. 781; Blanchard
v. Control Data Canada Ltd., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 476, at p. 489; and Toronto
Board of Education, supra, at para. 36. It is essential that there
exist a means of providing speedy decisions by experts in the field who are
sensitive to the workplace environment, and which can be considered by both
sides to be final and binding.
51
The grievance arbitration process is the means by which provincial
governments have chosen to achieve this objective. As Professor P. Weiler puts
it, grievance arbitration is both “an antidote to industrial unrest and . . .
an instrument of employment justice”: Reconcilable Differences: New
Directions in Canadian Labour Law (1980), at pp. 91-92. The primary
advantage of the grievance arbitration process is that it provides for the
prompt, informal and inexpensive resolution of workplace disputes by a tribunal
that has substantial expertise in the resolution of such disputes. It has the
advantage of both accessibility and expertise, each of which increases the
likelihood that a just result will be obtained with minimal disruption to the
employer-employee relationship. Recognizing the authority of arbitrators to
enforce an employee’s statutory rights substantially advances the dual
objectives of: (i) ensuring peace in industrial relations; and (ii) protecting
employees from the misuse of managerial power.
52
Granting arbitrators the authority to enforce the substantive rights and
obligations of human rights and other employment-related statutes has the
additional advantage of bolstering human rights protection. Major J. correctly
observes that if the dispute is non-arbitrable, aggrieved employees have
available the same mechanism for enforcing fundamental human rights as any
other member of society: they may file a complaint before the Human Rights
Commission. But the fact that there already exists a forum for the resolution
of human rights disputes does not mean that granting arbitrators the authority
to enforce the substantive rights and obligations of the Human Rights Code does
not further bolster human rights protection. As discussed above, grievance arbitration
has the advantage of both accessibility and expertise. It is a reasonable
assumption that the availability of an accessible and inexpensive forum for the
resolution of human rights disputes will increase the ability of aggrieved
employees to assert their right to equal treatment without discrimination, and
that this, in turn, will encourage compliance with the Human Rights Code.
53
A countervailing consideration is the fact that the Human Rights
Commission has greater expertise than grievance arbitrators in the resolution
of human rights violations. In my view, any concerns in respect of this matter
are outweighed by the significant benefits associated with the availability of
an accessible and informal forum for the prompt resolution of allegations of
human rights violations in the workplace. It is of great importance that such
disputes are resolved quickly and in a manner that allows for a continuing
relationship between the parties. Moreover, expertise is not static, but,
rather, is something that develops as a tribunal grapples with issues on a
repeated basis. The fact that the Human Rights Commission currently has
greater expertise than the Board in respect of human rights violations is an
insufficient basis on which to conclude that a grievance arbitrator ought not
to have the power to enforce the rights and obligations of the Human Rights
Code.
54
Support for this conclusion can be found in the Ministry of Labour’s
1991 discussion paper, Proposed Reform of the Ontario Labour Relations Act,
in which the Minister proposed that all collective agreements should be deemed
to include the employment-related prohibitions of the Human Rights Code
(p. 42). This indicates that it is the government’s view that grievance
arbitrators already possess sufficient expertise to address allegations that an
employer contravened the right of each employee to equal treatment without
discrimination. Similarly, in its submissions before this Court, the
intervener, Human Rights Commission, stated that it believes that the grievance
arbitration process has an important role to play in the resolution of human
rights issues. It did not intervene on the basis that arbitrators should not
have the power to resolve human rights issues, but on the basis that arbitrators
and the Board should have concurrent jurisdiction. This suggests that the
Commission also is of the view that grievance arbitrators have sufficient
expertise to hear alleged violations of the Human Rights Code.
(4) Conclusion
55
For the foregoing reasons, the Board was correct to conclude that the
substantive rights and obligations of the Human Rights Code are
incorporated into each collective agreement over which an arbitrator has
jurisdiction. Because of this interpretation, an alleged violation of the Human
Rights Code constitutes an alleged violation of the collective agreement,
and falls squarely within the Board’s jurisdiction. Accordingly, there is no
reason to interfere with the Board’s finding that the subject matter of Ms. O’Brien’s
grievance is arbitrable. The Board’s finding that the discriminatory discharge
of a probationary employee is arbitrable is not patently unreasonable.
C. The
Court of Appeal’s Application of the ESA
56
The foregoing analysis is sufficient to dispose of the appeal. The
Board’s finding that the subject matter of Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is
arbitrable was not patently unreasonable and should be upheld. However, even
if there was no basis on which to conclude that the alleged violation of the Human
Rights Code is arbitrable, I would still be of the opinion that the
analysis furnished by the Court of Appeal would provide sufficient grounds to
conclude that Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is a proper subject of the arbitration
process.
57
In substantive terms, there is no doubt but that the application of ss.
44 and 64.5(1) of the ESA leads to the conclusion that the subject
matter of Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is arbitrable. Under s. 64.5(1), the terms
and conditions of the ESA are enforceable against an employer as if they
were part of the collective agreement. Under s. 44, an employer is prohibited
from dismissing an employee because the employee intends to take or takes
pregnancy leave. The joint effect of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) is that each
collective agreement is deemed to contain a provision that prohibits the
discharge of a probationary employee because she took or intends to take
pregnancy leave. Thus, the subject matter of Ms. O’Brien’s grievance clearly
constitutes a dispute that arises under a collective agreement over which the
Board has jurisdiction.
58
However, the appellant raised a number of objections to the Court of
Appeal’s decision to resolve the matter with reference to ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of
the ESA. For the reasons that follow, it is my view that these
objections are insufficient to preclude the resolution of the dispute on this
basis.
(1) Limitations on the Scope of Judicial Review
59
The appellant’s first objection is that the Court of Appeal exceeded its
jurisdiction by considering an issue that was not raised at the initial
hearing. According to the appellant, the finding that currently is under
review is the Board’s finding that s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code is
enforceable against the employer as if it was part of the collective
agreement. On this view, the Court of Appeal had the authority to review the
Board’s finding that s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code is enforceable
against the employer, but did not have the authority to consider whether s. 44
of the ESA is enforceable against the employer. Although I do not
disagree with the general principle that on judicial review a court is limited
to reviewing the tribunal’s decision, I do not agree with the appellant’s
characterization of the finding that currently is under review. As above, the
finding under review is not the Board’s finding that s. 5(1) of the Human
Rights Code is enforceable against the employer, but its finding that Ms.
O’Brien’s grievance is arbitrable.
60
In reviewing a decision on a standard of patent unreasonableness, the
reviewing court must consider the decision-making process in its entirety,
including the failure of the tribunal to consider all of the relevant factors
and legal principles. This reflects the fact that a decision will be patently
unreasonable if the tribunal reaches a particular conclusion on account of its
failure to take into account legal principles or statutory provisions that
clearly are relevant to the issue that must be resolved: Suresh v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1,
at para. 29. Consequently, the mere fact that a board of arbitration has
determined that a grievance is arbitrable on grounds that have no basis in law
will not lead inexorably to the conclusion that the arbitration award must be
quashed. If there are alternative and legally correct grounds that lead to the
conclusion that the grievance is arbitrable, quashing the award without
considering those grounds would be perverse.
61
In this instance, once the Board concluded that the subject matter of
the grievance was arbitrable on the basis that s. 5(1) of the Human Rights
Code is incorporated into the collective agreement, it was, in effect,
unnecessary for the Board to consider the possible impact of ss. 44 and 64.5(1)
of the ESA. But if there had been no basis on which to conclude that s.
5(1) of the Human Rights Code is enforceable against the employer, the
Board could not properly have concluded that the subject matter of Ms.
O’Brien’s grievance was non-arbitrable without first considering the possible
impact of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of the ESA. Thus, it was not improper for
the Court of Appeal to take into account the fact that the substantive rights
and obligations of the ESA are incorporated directly into each
collective agreement. If the Court of Appeal had upheld the Divisional Court’s
decision to reverse the arbitration award without taking into account the
potential impact of ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of the ESA, it would arguably
have committed an error of law.
62
However, even if the Court of Appeal could, in theory, resolve the
matter on this basis, the appellant nonetheless submits that the ESA and
the collective agreement contain procedural provisions that prevent the Union
from litigating the matter on the basis that the alleged misconduct constitutes
a violation of s. 44 of the ESA.
(2) Procedural Considerations
63
The appellant’s primary submission in respect of this argument is that
the Union is statute-barred from relying on the ESA. Section 64.5(4) of
the ESA states that:
An employee to whom a collective agreement applies
(including an employee who is not a member of the trade union) is bound by a
decision of the trade union with respect to the enforcement of the Act under
the collective agreement, including a decision not to seek the enforcement of
the Act.
According to
the appellant, s. 64.5(4) binds a union to a prior decision not to seek enforcement
of the ESA. Under this view, the respondent Union is bound by its prior
decision not to seek enforcement of s. 44 of the ESA at the initial
hearing. However, this interpretation of s. 64.5(4) is inconsistent with both
its words and its fundamental purpose.
64
First, s. 64.5(4) clearly states that an employee is bound by a
decision of the trade union with respect to the enforcement of the Act under
the collective agreement. It does not, however, provide that the union
is bound by a decision not to seek enforcement of the ESA. If the
purpose of s. 64.5(4) was to bind a trade union to its prior decision not to
seek enforcement of the ESA, one would have expected the legislature to
have used language indicating as much. On its face, s. 64.5(4) is directed not
at the Union, but rather at the individual employee; it has no bearing on the
circumstances in which a union is permitted to seek enforcement of the Act.
65
This interpretation of s. 64.5(4) is consistent not only with its words
but also with its basic purpose, namely, to ensure that the union has sole
carriage over employment standards issues that arise during the currency of a
collective agreement. This accords with established principles governing
labour-management relations. Section 64.5(2), for example, provides that an
employee to whom a collective agreement applies is not entitled to file or
maintain a complaint under the ESA. Section 64.5(3), in turn, provides
that notwithstanding subs. (2) the Director of Employment Standards may permit
an employee to file or maintain a complaint under the Act if the Director
considers it appropriate in the circumstances. Each subsection suggests that
the default presumption is that the union must decide whether or not to pursue
a particular grievance. Section 64.5(4) reinforces this principle by binding
an employee to the decision of a union not to seek enforcement of the ESA.
The purpose of the provision is not to bind a union to a prior decision not to
pursue an ESA complaint, but, rather, to affirm the principle that an
employee to whom a collective agreement applies is not entitled to file or
maintain a complaint under the Act.
66
Consequently, s. 64.5(4) has no effect in this appeal. This case
does not involve an individual employee who seeks to file or to maintain a
complaint under the ESA despite the fact that the Union has decided not
to seek enforcement of her rights under the Act. As a result, it is not
necessary to consider the possibility that the Union has made a “decision”, as
the word is used in s. 64.5(4), not to seek enforcement of the ESA.
67
In the alternative, the appellant submits that the Union’s failure to
comply with the procedural requirements of the collective agreement precludes
it from seeking enforcement of s. 44 of the ESA. Under Article 8.06(a)
of the agreement, a discharge grievance must set out the section of the
collective agreement that is alleged to have been violated. Ms. O’Brien’s
initial grievance, however, alleged only that she had been discharged from her
position “without justification” and that the decision was “arbitrary,
discriminatory, in bad faith and unfair”. The grievance did not allege that
the employer had violated s. 44 of the ESA, or even that she had been
discharged because she took pregnancy leave. In the appellant’s submission,
the Union’s failure to allege that s. 44 of the ESA had been violated
precludes it from subsequently raising s. 44 as a potential basis of liability.
68
As a general rule, of course, it is important that the parties to a
collective agreement comply with the procedural requirements set out therein.
If a union intends to plead that the employer has breached the employee’s
statutory rights, it should, as a matter of general practice, specify the
statutory provision that the employer is alleged to have breached. That said,
it is important to acknowledge the general consensus among arbitrators that, to
the greatest extent possible, a grievance should not be won or lost on the
technicality of form, but on its merits. In Re Blouin Drywall Contractors
Ltd. and United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 2486
(1975), 8 O.R. (2d) 103 (C.A.), at p. 108, for example, Brooke J.A. wrote as
follows:
Certainly, the board is bound by the grievance before it but the
grievance should be liberally construed so that the real complaint is dealt
with and the appropriate remedy provided to give effect to the agreement
provisions and this whether by way of declaration of rights or duties, in order
to provide benefits or performance of obligations or a monetary award required
to restore one to the proper position he would have been in had the agreement
been performed.
69
This approach has been adopted by numerous arbitrators. In Spruce
Falls Inc. and I.W.A.-Canada, Local 2995 (Trudel) (Re) (2002), 106 L.A.C.
(4th) 41, at p. 61, the arbitrator observed that a “grievance must be construed
so that the ‘real complaint’ is dealt with and an appropriate remedy is
provided to bring resolution to the matters which have given rise to the
grievance”. In Peel District School Board and O.P.S.T.F., District 19
(Havery) (Re) (2000), 84 L.A.C. (4th) 289, the arbitrator rejected the
employer’s motion to dismiss on the basis that the employer suffered no
prejudice as a consequence of the union’s failure to specify the section of the
collective agreement that was alleged to have been breached. See also Re
Harry Woods Transport Ltd. and Teamsters Union, Local 141 (1977), 15 L.A.C.
(2d) 140; Aro Canada Inc. and I.A.M., Re (1988), 34 L.A.C. (3d) 255; and
Liquid Carbonic Inc. and U.S.W.A., Re (1992), 25 L.A.C. (4th) 144.
These cases reflect the view that procedural requirements should not be
stringently enforced in those instances in which the employer suffers no
prejudice. It is more important to resolve the factual dispute that gives rise
to the grievance.
70
In this case, the employer was aware from the outset that the essence of
the grievance was that Ms. O’Brien was discharged as a consequence of taking
maternity leave. Although the written grievance did not specify that Ms.
O’Brien believed that she had been discharged because she took maternity leave,
or that the alleged misconduct constituted a violation of s. 44 of the ESA,
the employer was fully apprised that this was the factual basis of the
grievance. Further, the appellant was provided with a fair opportunity to
prepare and make submissions in respect of this matter prior to the Court of
Appeal’s determination that the Board was authorized to resolve the dispute
with reference to s. 44 of the ESA. Considered against this backdrop, I
agree with Morden J.A. that the employer suffered no prejudice as a consequence
of the Court of Appeal’s decision to resolve the matter with reference to s. 44
of the ESA.
71
Thus, if it had been patently unreasonable for the Board of Arbitration
to conclude that the grievance was arbitrable because it had the authority to
enforce s. 5(1) of the Human Rights Code as if it were part of the
collective agreement, I do not believe that it would have been improper for the
Court of Appeal to conclude that the grievance was arbitrable on the basis that
the alleged misconduct constituted a violation of s. 44 of the ESA.
Construing Ms. O’Brien’s allegation that the decision to discharge her was
“arbitrary, discriminatory, in bad faith and unfair” as sufficiently broad to
encompass the allegation that she was discharged because she took maternity
leave ensures that the “real complaint” is dealt with and that the matter that
gave rise to the grievance is adequately addressed.
VI. Disposition
72
For the foregoing reasons, Ms. O’Brien’s grievance is arbitrable. I
would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
The reasons of Major and LeBel JJ. were delivered by
73
Major J. (dissenting) — I
respectfully disagree with the reasons of Iacobucci J.
74
Are all employment and human rights statutes incorporated into every
collective bargaining agreement? Collective agreements occupy an important
role in Canadian management-union relations. As both parties are experienced
in various components of labour law including grievance procedures, the courts
should reluctantly interfere and only when necessary. In this case, there were
alternatives available to the parties. They, having chosen one, should not
have had it usurped by the Court of Appeal on its own initiative. Because I
believe that courts should assume that parties may set out the limits of their
agreements absent express or implied legislative override, and because the
parties should be bound by the form and substance of the grievance they chose, I
would allow the appeal.
75
I agree with Iacobucci J.’s characterization of the factual background
of this appeal. However, a brief review of some of the procedural history may
help put these reasons in context.
I. Procedural
Background
76
In June 1998, Joanne O’Brien, a “counsellor/casual field worker” who had
probationary employment status, was dismissed by the Parry Sound Social
Services Administration Board. She grieved, making a generalized claim of
discrimination under a collective bargaining agreement between Parry Sound and
her Union, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, Local 324 (“OPSEU”).
Parry Sound argued that O’Brien was not entitled to arbitration because the
collective agreement explicitly did not cover the dismissal of probationary
employees. It also claimed that O’Brien, who had never mentioned the Employment
Standards Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.14, in her grievance, had not met the
procedural requirements set out by Article 8.06(a) of the collective agreement,
which required her to state “the section or sections of the Agreement which are
alleged to have been violated”. Since s. 64.5(1) of that Act specifies that it
is to be treated as part of the collective agreement, Parry Sound argued that
the Act should have been raised. The Union replied that the grievance’s broad
reference to discrimination sufficed, since O’Brien was not relying upon any
explicit section of the collective agreement, but was rather relying upon an
implicit incorporation of the Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19.
77
In February 1999, a board of arbitrators ruled that it was entitled to
consider whether O’Brien had been a victim of discrimination under the Human
Rights Code. In January 2000, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice
(Divisional Court) granted Parry Sound’s application for judicial review,
ruling that since the agreement did not cover the dismissal of probationary
employees, the board of arbitrators had no jurisdiction to arbitrate the
dispute. The Union appealed to the Ontario Court of Appeal.
78
Several months after the hearing, and years after the Union had first
brought the grievance on its chosen grounds, the Court of Appeal, sua sponte,
sought submissions from the parties on a new issue: the applicability of the Employment
Standards Act. In June 2001, the Court of Appeal held, on the basis of
this novel argument, that the board of arbitration had jurisdiction over the
grievance. In obiter dicta, it also hinted that it believed that the
arbitrator may have also had jurisdiction through an implied incorporation of
the Human Rights Code.
II. Issues
79
Two issues arise in this dispute. Is the Human Rights Code
incorporated by implication into all collective agreements entered into under
the Ontario Labour Relations Act, 1995, S.O. 1995, c. 1, Sch. A? Was it
proper for the Court of Appeal, sua sponte, to ignore the procedural
requirements negotiated by the parties and raise the Employment Standards
Act argument? I disagree with Iacobucci J.’s reasons, and would answer
both questions in the negative.
80
His reasons conclude that the Human Rights Code is implicitly
incorporated into all collective agreements. I respectfully disagree. Unless
the legislature passes legislation incorporating the substance of its statutes
into collective agreements, it is to be assumed that unions and employers may
define which employees and disputes are covered by a collective agreement and
therefore have access to binding arbitration, as long as the agreement does not
conflict with statute or public policy. Absent legislative action, courts
should not on their own initiative interfere with the terms of a collective
agreement.
81
Iacobucci J.’s reasons also conclude that the Employment Standards
Act may be applied against Parry Sound years after the initial grievance,
the process of which had been negotiated and agreed to by the parties, because
Parry Sound would suffer no prejudice. I respectfully disagree. Where the
parties have negotiated procedural guarantees relating to the timeliness, form and
specificity of grievances, courts should not interfere. OPSEU is a
sophisticated party, and should be bound by its decision not to pursue an Employment
Standards Act claim.
82
O’Brien is not without a remedy. She may use the mechanisms carefully
set out by the legislature to vindicate her human rights, and may bring her
claim before the Human Rights Commission. This appeal is not one about public
policy and human rights. It is about discerning the intent of the parties and
the legislature on the appropriate forum for vindicating those rights.
III. Standard
of Review
83
I agree with Iacobucci J.’s treatment of the standard of review: on the
question of whether the Human Rights Code is incorporated into each
labour agreement, the arbitrator must be correct. But if the arbitrator is
correct on this issue, then his overall decision is subject to reversal only if
it is patently unreasonable.
IV. Is the
Human Rights Code Incorporated Into All Collective Agreements?
A. Intention
of the Parties
84
Some disputes between an employer and an employee are not subject to
arbitration; the Labour Relations Act, 1995, s. 48(1), states that all
differences between the parties in the interpretation of a collective agreement
are to be arbitrated, “including any question as to whether a matter is
arbitrable”. It is permissible for a bargaining agreement simply to not cover
certain decisions on matters such as worker training or pensions, or to restrict
the scope of the working conditions applicable to some employees, such as
temporary workers. An arbitrator would be obligated to conclude that such a
dispute is not arbitrable.
85
In the present appeal, the collective agreement does not extend to the
grievances of probationary employees over discharge. As with all employees,
the rights of probationary employees are determined by the collective
agreement. One of the provisions of that agreement states that the right to
grieve does not extend to probationary employees grieving discharge during the
probationary period. Article 8.06(a) of the collective agreement states:
Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement, a probationary employee may
be discharged at the sole discretion of and for any reason satisfactory to the
Employer and such action by the Employer is not subject to the grievance and
arbitration procedures and does not constitute a difference between the
parties.
This language,
“difference between the parties”, is a reference to the language in s. 48(1) of
the Labour Relations Act, 1995, specifying that differences between the
parties are to be arbitrated. The intention of the parties is clear: Parry
Sound and OPSEU explicitly chose not to bring the discharge of probationary
employees under the grievance procedures in their collective agreement. The
contract is silent as to other rights the employee or the Union might invoke in
order to challenge or remedy a discharge.
B. Intention
of the Legislature
86
Does the Human Rights Code give probationary employees grievance
rights under the collective agreement despite the intention of the
parties not to cover them? The heart of the answer to this issue lies in the
correct interpretation of the short judgment in McLeod v. Egan, [1975] 1
S.C.R. 517.
87
Iacobucci J. states that McLeod, supra, stands for the
proposition that all employment-related statutes, including the Human Rights
Code, are implicitly incorporated into every collective bargaining
agreement, and that s. 48(12)(j) of the Labour Relations Act, 1995
codified this common law understanding. Although I agree that the structure
and language of s. 48(12)(j) suggest no legislative intent to alter the common
law rule from McLeod, I take a different view as to what that rule is.
88
McLeod involved a conflict between an earlier version of the Employment
Standards Act and a collective agreement (Employment Standards Act, 1968,
S.O. 1968, c. 35). The earlier Act required that an employee consent to
overtime hours, but the collective agreement in McLeod gave the company
the sole authority over operations generally, including the right to “schedule
its operations or to extend, limit, curtail or reschedule its operations when
in its sole discretion it may deem it advisable to do so” (p. 521). This Court
held, at p. 523:
Any provision of an agreement which purported to give to an employer an
unqualified right to require working hours in excess of those [overtime] limits
would be illegal, and the provisions . . . of the collective agreement, which
provided that certain management rights should remain vested in the Company,
could not . . . enable the Company to require overtime work in excess of those
limits.
89
Iacobucci J. derives from this case the proposition that “[a]s a
practical matter, this means that the substantive rights and obligations of
employment-related statutes are implicit in each collective agreement over
which an arbitrator has jurisdiction” (para. 28). He later states that “a
conflict between the collective agreement and an employment-related statute is
not a condition precedent of the power to bring that statute into practical
operation” (para. 44), and concludes, therefore, that all statutory protections
are arbitrable under any collective agreement, even if the agreement purports
not to cover the dispute in question.
90
I come to a different conclusion. In McLeod, the employer was
relying upon the explicit language of the collective agreement, which gave it
the sole discretion to set overtime hours. This discretion was in clear and
direct opposition to the Employment Standards Act of the time. The McLeod
proposition is more limited than suggested: McLeod concludes only that
a union and an employer are restricted from making an agreement contrary to law.
This rule is no more than a modern application of a long-standing rule of the
common law of contracts: courts will not enforce contracts that are illegal or
against public policy. See Bank of Toronto v. Perkins (1883), 8 S.C.R.
603, in which the Court refused to enforce a secured loan made in contravention
of the Banking Act. Labour contracts are not exempt from this rule.
91
Iacobucci J.’s reasons too broadly apply McLeod to the facts of
this case. In McLeod, there was a broad management rights clause that
was held to be in violation of employee statutory rights granted by the Employment
Standards Act. Iacobucci J.’s reasons conclude that “[j]ust as the
collective agreement in McLeod could not extend to the employer the
right to require overtime in excess of 48 hours, the collective agreement in
the current appeal cannot extend to the appellant the right to discharge an
employee for discriminatory reasons” (para. 32).
92
But here, the appellant does not point to Article 5.01, which
purports to give management the power to discharge probationary employees for
any reason. It points to Article 8.06(a), stating that such discharges are not
covered by the agreement at all, that they are not “differences” as defined by
the Labour Relations Act, 1995, and implying that they are therefore
inarbitrable.
93
This distinction is crucial. Under McLeod, the parties attempted
to explicitly “contract around” the protections conferred by statute, which is
clearly impermissible. Here, the parties simply chose not to come to agreement
on certain kinds of disagreements, explicitly choosing to remove the
arbitrator’s jurisdiction. The common law rule that parties may not contract
in contravention of public policy does not require parties to agree to
arbitrate violations of statutory rights.
94
Under this more restrained reading of McLeod, supra,
explicit statutory directions override conflicting provisions of collective
agreements, but they do not affect the parties’ ability to define the limits of
their agreement. Parties remain free to exclude certain classes of employees,
such as probationary, part-time, or temporary employees, from some of the
provisions of the agreement, just as they remain free to exclude certain kinds
of disputes from the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. They do this by limiting
the scope of the grievance procedure on some matters or acknowledging that a
party retains the right to make a unilateral final decision on certain
questions.
95
Although these labour agreements are entered into under the collective
bargaining framework established by the Labour Relations Act, 1995, they
are essentially private contracts of significant public importance. The
decision to inject legislative protections into these private contracts is a
serious one, though clearly one within the powers of a legislature. A court
should not lightly infer such intent. When the Ontario legislature wishes to
insert such protections directly into collective bargaining agreements, it
knows how to do so explicitly and clearly. For example, s. 64.5(1) of the Employment
Standards Act reads:
If an employer enters into a collective agreement,
the Act is enforceable against the employer with respect to the following
matters as if it were part of the collective agreement:
1. A contravention of or failure to comply with
the Act that occurs when the collective agreement is in force.
There is no
equivalent provision in the Human Rights Code.
96
Iacobucci J.’s reasons state that the legislature must have intended
that s. 48(12)(j) grant arbitrators jurisdiction over claims based on statutory
protections. But I believe that this provision, coming as it does at the end
of a long list of uncontroversial arbitrator’s powers (the power to compel
document production, the power to fix dates for hearings, the power to summon
witnesses, the power to administer oaths, the power to accept oral or written
evidence, etc.), does no more than confirm the rule from McLeod.
Arbitrators may not enforce any contract that violates public policy by
“contracting around” the protections of statute. To read into this innocuous
provision the extraordinary power to take jurisdiction of any claim based on
statute, despite the plain wishes of the parties to the contract, is a
subversion of the legislative intent. If the legislature wished to thus expand
the power of arbitrators, it surely would have signalled its intent more
clearly.
97
It is not for the court but rather the legislature to decide that
particular statutory protections are so important that they must be injected
into every collective agreement. Iacobucci J.’s rather expansive holding
stands upon an extension of a 30-year-old case and an inexplicable notion of
public policy. It does not respect the intention of the parties and the
legislature, and is inconsistent with the court leaving to the legislature the
duty of implementing what I take to be new policy.
98
A more focussed reading of McLeod, supra, serves the
public interest. It allows employers and unions to craft the mutually
beneficial agreements most appropriate to their circumstances, subject to
explicit legislative direction. In this appeal, it gives Parry Sound the
flexibility to hire probationary employees, allowing it to reserve the full
panoply of employment benefits and guarantees for employees who have
demonstrated their value.
99
Human rights abuses will not go unchecked. Aggrieved employees will
have available the same mechanisms for enforcing their human rights as any
other member of society: they may file a complaint before the Human Rights
Commission, as the employer urged and as the legislature intended.
100
Collective agreements reflect the outcome of a sometimes difficult
process of negotiation. The content of the agreement may reflect the
acknowledgment of the union that it should not be called upon to deal with
matters it is not equipped to deal with or that might cause conflicts within its
membership. Where remedies are available elsewhere, the silence of the
agreement may reflect the wishes of the union that those remedies be used in
preference to the remedies available under the agreement. Silence in the
agreement does not indicate a denial of a right or its remedies. On the other
hand, overloading the grievance and arbitration procedure with issues the
parties neither intended nor contemplated channelling there, may make labour
arbitration anything but expeditious and cost-effective. The present case
speaks for itself in this respect.
101
O’Brien’s dismissal is not arbitrable because her Union and her employer
agreed not to cover the dismissal of probationary employees in their collective
agreement, and the legislature did not intend to require that they do so. She
must seek the vindication of her rights before the Human Rights Commission, as
would any employee not covered by a collective agreement.
V. The
Tardy Employment Standards Act Argument
102
As Iacobucci J. notes, there is little question that had OPSEU, Local
324, brought a claim in the original instance under ss. 44 and 64.5(1) of the Employment
Standards Act, the claim would have been arbitrable. However, Article
8.06(a) of the collective agreement clearly required the Union to state “the
section or sections of the Agreement which are alleged to have been violated”.
OPSEU should therefore have raised s. 44 of the Employment Standards Act,
barring employment discrimination on the basis of “pregnancy leave”, which the
legislature has explicitly incorporated into all collective agreements via s.
64.5(1). This OPSEU chose not to do. Even if the failure to raise the Employment
Standards Act might have been curable or seen as a simple procedural
defect, the Union would at the very least have had the obligation to raise the
matter at the arbitration stage.
103
The Union chose not to raise the Employment Standards Act claim
at four different stages:
(i) when it grieved in June 1998,
(ii) at arbitration in February 1999,
(iii) at its first appeal before the
Ontario Superior Court of Justice (Divisional Court) in January 2000, and
(iv) at its second appeal before the
Ontario Court of Appeal.
This clearly
was a decision by the Union not to raise the Employment Standards Act.
This decision rests with the Union and the employee. In the Court of Appeal,
the employer should have been entitled to rely on this decision of the Union.
In spite of the Union decision, the Court of Appeal raised the issue sua
sponte months after the hearing, sought briefing, and decided the case
based upon grounds never advanced in the grievance.
104
OPSEU and Parry Sound, both sophisticated entities, negotiated an
agreement calling for certain procedural formalities — among them, that any
grievance identify with specificity the section of the collective agreement
alleged to have been violated. Furthermore, the Employment Standards Act
makes clear that it is the union and not the individual who is to control the
course of a grievance under the Act.
105
Section 64.5(2) reads:
An employee to whom a collective agreement applies
. . . is not entitled to file or maintain a complaint under the Act.
106
Section 64.5(4) reads:
An employee to whom a collective agreement applies
. . . is bound by a decision of the trade union with respect to the enforcement
of the Act under the collective agreement, including a decision not to seek the
enforcement of the Act.
107
The Union and O’Brien should be bound by the specific claims they made
and the manner in which they presented them. The Court of Appeal erred in
raising this issue, not chosen by the parties.
VI. Conclusion
108
O’Brien’s Human Rights Code claim is not the subject of the
agreement between her employer and her Union, and is therefore not arbitrable.
To vindicate these rights, she must proceed before the Human Rights Commission.
109
I would allow the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs, Major
and LeBel JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Blake, Cassels & Graydon,
Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: Ontario Public Service Employees
Union, North York.
Solicitor for the intervener: Ontario Human Rights Commission,
Toronto.