Ajax (Town) v.
CAW, Local 222, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 538
The
Corporation of the Town of Ajax Appellant
v.
National
Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural
Implement
Workers Union of Canada (CAW-Canada)
and its
Local 222, Charterways Transportation Limited Respondent
and
Ontario Labour Relations Board Respondent
Indexed
as: Ajax (Town) v. CAW, Local 222
Neutral
citation: 2000 SCC 23.
File
No.: 26994.
2000: February 16; 2000: April 27.
Present: McLachlin C.J.
and L’Heureux‑Dubé, Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie,
Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from
the court of appeal for ontario
Labour relations -- Trade unions -- Successor rights -- Sale of a
business -- Town terminating contract with transportation company for operation
of town’s municipal transit system and commencing operation of system on its
own -- Company laying off workers involved in transit operations -- Town hiring
significant number of laid off workers -- Ontario Labour Relations Board
finding that sale of a business within meaning of successorship provision of
Labour Relations Act had taken place -- Whether Board’s interpretation of
successorship provision patently unreasonable -- Labour Relations Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. L.2, s. 64.
The appellant town entered into a contract with a transportation
company regarding the operation of the town’s municipal transit system. The
town owned and supplied the buses and virtually all other tangible assets used
to operate the system. It also controlled routes, schedules, rates and fare
collection. The company provided and coordinated the drivers, mechanics and
cleaners who operated the system. The respondent union was the certified
bargaining agent for the bus drivers, mechanics and cleaners employed by the
company in these transit operations. The town council voted to terminate its
contract with the company as of the end of 1992, and to commence the operation
of the system on its own as of 1993. The company laid off all of the drivers, mechanics
and cleaners involved in the transit operations. The town hired a number of
the company’s former employees, who formed a substantial proportion of the
town’s new transit staff. The Ontario Labour Relations Board concluded that
the sale of a business within the meaning of s. 64 of the Ontario Labour
Relations Act, concerning successor employers, had occurred. The
Divisional Court quashed the Board’s decision on the ground that it was
patently unreasonable. The Court of Appeal allowed the union’s appeal.
Held (L’Heureux‑Dubé, Bastarache
and Binnie JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Arbour and
LeBel JJ.: The Court of Appeal’s reasons were substantially agreed with. The
function of the reviewing court in this case is not to test the correctness of
the Board’s decision, but rather to decide whether the decision was patently
unreasonable. It was not patently unreasonable for the Board to find a nexus
between the transportation company and the town, as required for
successorship. Since the historical and functional connection between the
company and the town constitutes evidence upon which the Board would rationally
have based its conclusion of successorship, that conclusion was not “clearly
irrational”.
Per L’Heureux‑Dubé, Bastarache and Binnie JJ.
(dissenting): While the patently unreasonable test sets a high standard of
review, a decision is patently unreasonable if it gives to a section of an Act
a meaning which the words of the statute cannot reasonably bear. It was
patently unreasonable for the Board to decide that the termination of the
contractual relationship amounted to the sale of a business or part thereof
pursuant to s. 64 of the Labour Relations Act only because the town
had terminated the service contract, decided to perform the work itself and
hired some of the company’s former employees. There is no indication of a
sufficient nexus between the company and the town in the circumstances of this
case to support the Board’s conclusion that something passed from one to the
other after the termination of the service contract. Moreover, the Board’s
decision is patently unreasonable because it dispenses with the need for a
disposition in s. 64. However broadly the terms “sale”, “transfer” and
“disposition” may be interpreted, something must be relinquished by the
predecessor business on the one hand and obtained by the successor on the other
to bring a case within the section. The town’s unilateral decision to hire
some of the company’s former employees cannot reasonably be interpreted as a
deemed disposition by the company of part of its business. The Board’s
interpretation is also patently unreasonable in light of s. 64.2 of the
Act, which provides for the protection of specific bargaining rights by deeming
that the sale of a business has occurred where “substantially similar services
are subsequently provided at the premises under the direction of another
employer” with respect to certain building services. The interpretation given
by the Board to s. 64 makes s. 64.2 redundant.
Cases Cited
By McLachlin C.J.
Referred to: United Food and Commercial Workers
International Union v. Parnell Foods Ltd., [1992] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1164; Canada
(Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1993] 1 S.C.R.
941; Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc.,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 748.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting)
Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 941; Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations
Board), [1995] 1 S.C.R. 157; United Food and Commercial Workers
International Union v. Parnell Foods Ltd., [1992] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1164; Canadian
Union of Public Employees v. Metropolitan Parking Inc., [1979] O.L.R.B.
Rep. 1193; Lester (W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and
Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3
S.C.R. 644; U.E.S., Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990,
c. L.2, ss. 1(4), 64 [am. 1992, c. 21, s. 29], 64.2 [ad. idem,
s. 31].
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal (1998), 41 O.R.
(3d) 426, 166 D.L.R. (4th) 516, 113 O.A.C. 188, [1998] O.J. No. 3915 (QL),
reversing a decision of the Divisional Court (1995), 84 O.A.C. 281, 21 B.L.R.
(2d) 196, 95 C.L.L.C. ¶210-040, [1995] O.J. No. 1907 (QL), quashing a decision
of the Ontario Labour Relations Board, [1994] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1296, 24 C.L.R.B.R.
(2d) 280, declaring that the sale of a business had taken place. Appeal
dismissed, L’Heureux‑Dubé, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. dissenting.
Richard J. Charney and Damhnait Monaghan, for the
appellant.
Barrie Chercover, Julia McNally and L. N. Gottheil,
for the respondent National Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement
Workers Union of Canada (CAW - Canada).
Ronald N. Lebi, for the respondent Ontario Labour Relations
Board (CAW-Canada).
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Arbour
and LeBel JJ. was delivered by
1
The Chief Justice – I
would dismiss the appeal with costs to the respondent National Automobile,
Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers Union of Canada (CAW-Canada),
substantially for the reasons of Goudge J.A. in the Ontario Court of Appeal
(1998), 41 O.R. (3d) 426.
2
I have had an opportunity to read the reasons of Bastarache J. Our
disagreement is over whether it was patently unreasonable for the Board to find
a nexus between Charterways and Ajax, as required for successorship per United
Food and Commercial Workers International Union v. Parnell Foods Ltd.,
[1992] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1164. As stated by Cory J. in Canada (Attorney
General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 941, at p.
964, the function of the reviewing court in this case is not to test the
correctness of the Board’s decision, but rather to decide whether the decision
was patently unreasonable. See also Canada (Director of Investigation and
Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, per Iacobucci J.
In my view, the historical and functional connection between Charterways and
the Town of Ajax constitutes evidence upon which the Board would rationally
have based its conclusion of successorship. I would agree with Goudge J.A.
that the conclusion of the Board was not “clearly irrational”.
The reasons of L’Heureux-Dubé, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. were delivered
by
3
Bastarache J.
(dissenting) — This appeal concerns the application of the sale of business
provision, s. 64, of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, R.S.O. 1990,
c. L.2. The issue raised is whether the interpretation of this successorship
provision by the Ontario Labour Relations Board ([1994] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1296) was
patently unreasonable in the circumstances of this case. A unanimous bench of
the Divisional Court ((1995), 84 O.A.C. 281) found that the interpretation of
the Board was patently unreasonable, while a unanimous bench of the Court of
Appeal ((1998), 41 O.R. (3d) 426) found that it was not. For the reasons
hereafter, I find that the Board’s decision was patently unreasonable.
4
There is no controversy regarding the factual underpinnings of
this case. In brief, the Town of Ajax and Charterways
Transportation Limited entered into a contract regarding the operation of the
Town’s municipal transit system. At all relevant times, the Town owned and
supplied the buses and virtually all other tangible assets used to operate the
system. The Town also controlled routes, schedules, rates and fare
collection. For its part, Charterways provided and coordinated the drivers,
mechanics and cleaners who operated the system. In addition, Charterways was
responsible for licensing Handi-Trans vehicles, providing fuel, maintaining a
spare parts inventory, accounting, operating records, training employees,
maintaining a lost and found service, providing general information to callers
regarding services provided for disabled, and taking reservations. The
respondent Union was the certified bargaining agent for the bus drivers,
mechanics and cleaners employed by Charterways in its Ajax Transit operations.
5
The Town Council of Ajax voted to terminate its contract with
Charterways as of December 31, 1992, and to commence the operation of the system
on its own as of January 1, 1993. Charterways laid off all of the drivers,
mechanics and cleaners involved in the transit operations, not having enough
work to permit their transfer to other duties. The Town, in turn, hired a
number of Charterways’ former employees in its recruitment process. As a
result, former employees of Charterways formed a substantial proportion of the
Town’s new transit staff. None of Charterways’ managerial and a limited part
of its supervisory staff were hired by the Town. Of Charterways’ former
employees hired by the Town, only a small proportion were actually members of
the bargaining unit. Some of the former employees of Charterways who applied
for positions with the Town were not hired.
6
A majority of the Ontario Labour Relations Board found that part of the
business of Charterways was to provide a skilled workforce to the Town and that
this workforce constituted a distinguishing part of Charterways’ business. It
concluded that the hiring of a significant number of Charterways’ employees by
the Town constituted an “acquisition”
of part of a business pursuant to s. 64 of the Act. The Board was of the view
that continuity of the business was sufficient to make a finding of deemed
disposition under the terms of s. 64. Carruthers J., for the Divisional Court,
disagreed, noting that nothing occurred between the Town and Charterways which
could be reasonably said to have caused a sale, transfer or other disposition
of Charterways’ business or part thereof. He found that there was no nexus,
legal act or legal relation to support the finding of the Board. With respect
to whether part of a business had been transferred, Carruthers J. was of the
view that when the Town determined that it no longer required the services
offered by Charterways, that resulted in a loss of work for Charterways, not a
loss of part of its business in the sense of being a separate and identifiable
part of its operations.
7
Goudge J.A., for the Court of Appeal, decided that the terms “sale”, “transfer” and “other disposition” should be interpreted broadly and do not require that the
disposition or transfer take any particular legal form or occur by way of a
legal transaction. He found that the commercial history between the Town and
Charterways constituted a proper nexus and concluded that the decision of the
Board was not patently unreasonable.
8
There is no doubt that the patently unreasonable test sets a high
standard of review (Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of
Canada, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 941, at pp. 963-64). Nevertheless, a decision is
patently unreasonable if it gives to the section of an Act a meaning which the
words of the statute cannot reasonably bear (Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations Board), [1995] 1 S.C.R. 157,
at para. 62).
9
Even if one were to accept, for the purposes of argument, that the
instrumental approach was correctly applied by the Board and that it was not
patently unreasonable for it to have concluded that Charterways’ employees were
its most valuable asset and that they could constitute a business entity that
could be sold or transferred, I am nevertheless not satisfied with several
elements of the Board’s decision. First, I fail to see how there was any
organizational nexus between Charterways and the Town to support the Board’s
conclusion that something passed from one to the other after the termination of
the service contract. In United Food and Commercial
Workers International Union v. Parnell Foods Ltd.,
[1992] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1164, the Ontario Labour Relations Board held that, before
one employer can be declared the successor of another, there must be some
organizational nexus between the two employers, other than the fact that one
employed persons to do certain work that the other now does or will do (at
para. 205). The Court of Appeal in this case found that the commercial
relationship between the parties constituted the required nexus. However, I
disagree that commercial history on its own can constitute a sufficient nexus.
While the Board suggested in Canadian Union of Public
Employees v. Metropolitan Parking Inc., [1979] O.L.R.B. Rep. 1193, that a
previous corporate, commercial or familial relationship between the parties may
warrant a more careful consideration under s. 64, it does not follow from this
passage that a commercial relationship in itself creates a nexus. This
becomes clear from the following statement of the Board, at para. 35:
In assessing the facts from which
a transfer of a business may be inferred, the Board has always been especially
sensitive to any pre-existing corporate, commercial or familial relationship
between the predecessor and the alleged successor; or between the predecessor,
the alleged successor and a third party. Transactions in these
circumstances require a more careful examination of the business realities than
do transfers between two previously unrelated business entities. The presence
of a pre-existing relationship may suggests [sic] an artificial
transaction designed to avoid bargaining obligations; or (more commonly)
there may be a transaction in the nature of a business re-organization which
does not alter the essential attributes of the employer-employee relationship,
and which should not, having regard to the purpose of section 55, disturb the
collectively bargained framework for that relationship. . . . In
such circumstances it may be important to carefully examine the pre-existing
links or lines of common control to which the alleged predecessor and successor
are both subject. Such examination is precisely what is undertaken by the
Board on an application under section 1(4); but it is also relevant on section
55 applications, and it is for this reason that applicants commonly plead
section 1(4) in the alternative. It would be incorrect to make this
consideration a decisive “test” for successorship; but where there is a
pre-existing corporate connection between the predecessor and the successor the
Board has been disposed to infer a “transfer” if there is the slightest
evidence of such transaction. . . . As a practical matter, it is
much more difficult to sustain the contention that one has not acquired a
predecessor’s business but merely founded a new, independent, but similar,
business serving the same market. [Emphasis added.]
This concern with pre-existing commercial relationships is not
related to nexus. Rather it seems to be related to the willingness to
“capture” artificial transactions designed to avoid bargaining obligations.
There is no indication of an artificial transaction in the present case. Thus,
in my opinion, the commercial relationship between the Town and Charterways is
an insufficient nexus and there is no indication of any other sufficient nexus
in the circumstances of this case so as to support the Board’s finding that a
sale of business had occurred pursuant to s. 64 of the Act.
10
Second, the decision of the Board is patently unreasonable
because it dispenses with the need for a disposition in s. 64. However broadly
the terms “sale”, “transfer” and “disposition” may be interpreted, “something must be
relinquished by the predecessor business on the one hand and obtained by the
successor on the other to bring a case within the section” (Lester
(W.W.) (1978) Ltd. v. United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the
Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry, Local 740, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 644, at p.
675). I fail to see how there was any disposition in the present
circumstances. It is clear to me that a sale or a transfer
implies a nexus, an agreement or transaction of some sort between the
predecessor and successor employers. After all, it is a sale, transfer or
disposition to a successor employer. There must be, in my view,
a mutual intent to transfer part of the business. As
professed by Beetz J. in U.E.S., Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R.
1048, at p. 1117:
The concepts of alienation and
operation by another are based on an intentional transfer of a right: it is
therefore necessary to determine between whom this mutual intent must exist.
I cannot
accept that the unilateral decision of the Town to hire some of Charterways’
former employees can reasonably be interpreted as a deemed disposition by
Charterways of part of its business. In this case, Charterways simply
terminated employees it no longer needed. It did not transfer its employees to
the Town. Its employees applied for positions, as did others, and underwent
interviews. Some of Charterways’ employees were hired and some were not. The
same service continued for the customers of Ajax Transit, but this is only
because the same work was performed by a new organization.
11
In its decision, the Board commented on “control” and
“direction” within the context of a s. 64 analysis. In so doing, the Board
conflated the test for common or related employer within the meaning of
s. 1(4) of the Act with the analysis required in a sale of
business proceeding. Since Charterways was held to be a federal undertaking,
the common employer provision was unavailable to the Union and the Board.
In Lester, supra, at pp. 693-94, this Court held that construing
successorship provisions as common employer provisions was patently
unreasonable.
12
I also note that the interpretation of the Board is patently
unreasonable in light of s. 64.2 of the Act, which provides for the protection
of specific bargaining rights by deeming that the sale of a business has
occurred where “substantially similar services are
subsequently provided at the premises under the direction of another employer” with respect to certain building services. Where the
Legislature did not require a transfer or disposition, or a nexus as earlier
discussed, it explicitly provided that such were not required. The
interpretation given by the Board to s. 64 makes s. 64.2 redundant.
13
I conclude by saying that it was patently unreasonable for the Board to
decide that the termination of the contractual relationship amounted to the
sale of a business or part thereof pursuant to s. 64 only because the Town had
terminated the service contract, decided to perform the work itself and hired
some of Charterways’ former employees. The concept adopted by the Board
according to which the Town could “transfer to itself” an essential element of Charterways’ business, by
cancelling its contract, is not one that the words of the Act can reasonably
bear. I would therefore allow the appeal and quash the decision of the Board,
with costs throughout.
Appeal dismissed with costs to the respondent Union, L’Heureux‑Dubé, Bastarache and
Binnie JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Heenan Blaikie, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondent National Automobile, Aerospace and
Agricultural Implement Workers Union of Canada (CAW - Canada): Green
& Chercover, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent Ontario Labour Relations Board: Ronald
N. Lebi, Toronto.