Date: 20111013
Docket: A-430-10
Citation: 2011 FCA 280
CORAM: SEXTON J.A.
STRATAS J.A.
MAINVILLE J.A.
BETWEEN:
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
Applicant
and
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKERS, LOCAL 2228
and
PUBLIC SERVICE ALLIANCE OF CANADA
Respondents
Heard at Ottawa, Ontario, on October
12, 2011.
Judgment delivered at Ottawa, Ontario,
on October 13, 2011.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY: SEXTON
J.A.
CONCURRED
IN BY: STRATAS
J.A.
MAINVILLE
J.A.
Date: 20111013
Docket: A-430-10
Citation: 2011 FCA 280
CORAM: SEXTON
J.A.
STRATAS J.A.
MAINVILLE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
Applicant
and
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKERS, LOCAL 2228
and
PUBLIC SERVICE ALLIANCE OF CANADA
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
SEXTON J.A.
[1]
The
Attorney General of Canada applies for judicial review from a decision dated
October 15, 2010 of the Public Service Labour Relations Board. The decision
arose out of an application to the Board made by the respondent International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 2228. It applied for an order under
section 58 of the Public Service Labour Relations Act that an incumbent in a
particular position in the employers’ Technical Services Group should be in the
bargaining unit that covers the employers’ Electronics Group. The Board granted
the order.
[2]
All
parties are agreed that the standard of review of the Board’s decision is
reasonableness. Therefore, our task is to determine whether the outcome reached
by the Board falls within a range of outcomes that is defensible and acceptable
on the facts and the law. This is a deferential standard.
[3]
In assessing
whether the Board’s decision is reasonable, we must bear in mind certain
features that make this case an unusual one. The application before the Board
was ill-worded: literally read, it asked that a certain position be included in
the employer’s Electronics Group. Of course, section 58 does not empower the
Board to place positions elsewhere in the employer’s job structure. But no
objection to the application was made, and the parties proceeded on the
understanding that the Board’s task was to assess to which bargaining unit a
particular incumbent in a position should belong. Another unusual feature is
that, as the Board noted at paragraph 64 of its decision, the incumbent in
issue in this application was not called as a witness. Therefore, the best
source of information concerning the duties and responsibilities of the
incumbent – namely, the incumbent himself – was not available to the Board.
[4]
In
paragraphs 62-63 and 75 of its decision, the Board charged itself as to the
appropriate legal principles to be applied in an application under section 85
of the Act. Before us, no objection was made to these aspects of the Board’s
decision.
[5]
However, before
this Court, objection was taken to the manner in which it applied these principles
to the facts before it. It is alleged that the Board disregarded evidence of
witnesses and fastened onto an expert witness’s analysis, which was said to be
inconsistent with the principles to be applied under section 85 of the Act.
[6]
In my
view, these objections are based on an overly fine and technical reading of the
Board’s decision. The Board’s decision was not worded as precisely as it might
have been. But, when viewed against the difficulties mentioned in paragraph 3,
above, and when the Board’s decision is read in its entirety, including the
lengthy passages setting out witnesses’ testimony which included the actual
duties and responsibilities of the incumbent, I cannot say that the Board’s
decision is unreasonable. In my view, the Board followed the appropriate
principles, ascribed weight to the various pieces of evidence before it, made
factual findings, and then reached overall conclusions based on those
principles and findings that are defensible and acceptable.
[7]
It is true
that the Board’s order is not worded as precisely as it might have been, in
that it speaks of positions rather than bargaining units. Perhaps this is
because the Board’s order followed the ill-wording of the relief sought in the
application. But the parties do understand what the Board’s order means.
Therefore, I see no reason to change the wording of the Board’s order.
[8]
Therefore,
I would dismiss the application with costs.
“J.
Edgar Sexton”
“I
agree
David Stratas J.A.”
“I
agree
Robert M. Mainville J.A.”
FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
NAMES OF COUNSEL AND
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: A-430-10
AN APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW OF THE
PUBLIC SERVICE LABOUR RELATIONS BOARD DATED OCTOBER 15, 2010, FILE NO.
547-02-14
STYLE OF CAUSE: Attorney
General of Canada v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local
2228 and Public Service Alliance of Canada
PLACE OF HEARING: Ottawa, Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: October 12, 2011
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY: Sexton J.A.
CONCURRED IN BY: Stratas J.A.
Mainville J.A.
DATED: October 13, 2011
APPEARANCES:
|
Christine Diguer
Richard
Fader
|
FOR
THE APPLICANT
|
|
James L. Shields
Jennifer
Duff
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT, INTERNATIONAL
BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL
WORKERS, LOCAL 2228
|
|
Andrew
Raven
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT, PUBLIC
SERVICE ALLIANCE OF CANADA
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
|
Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE APPELLANT
|
|
Shields & Hunt
Ottawa, Ontario
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT, INTERNATIONAL
BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL
WORKERS, LOCAL 2228
|
|
Raven,
Cameron, Ballantyne & Yazbeck LLP
Ottawa,
Ontario
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT, PUBLIC SERVICE ALLIANCE OF CANADA
|