Date: 20120418
Docket: A-249-11
Citation: 2012 FCA 117
CORAM: BLAIS
C.J.
SHARLOW
J.A.
MAINVILLE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
ARTHUR KEITH
Appellant
and
CORRECTIONAL SERVICE OF CANADA
Respondent
AND BETWEEN:
ARTHUR KEITH
Appellant
and
CANADIAN FORCES
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
MAINVILLE J.A.
[1]
Dr. Arthur
Keith appeals a judgment of O’Reilly J. of the Federal Court (“application
judge”) cited as 2011 FC 690 (“Reasons”) dismissing two consolidated judicial
review applications challenging two separate decisions of the Canadian Human
Rights Commission (“Commission”). The first decision, dated February 3, 2010,
dismissed, pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Canadian Human
Rights Act, R.S.C 1985, c. H-6 (“Act”), the appellant’s complaint against
the Correctional Service of Canada following a refusal to consider him for a
senior position which required that the incumbent be a Fellow in psychiatry of
the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (“Royal College”). In
its second decision, dated July 20, 2010, the Commission refused, pursuant to
paragraph 41(1)(c) of the Act, to deal with a similar complaint
involving the Canadian Forces.
[2]
The
appellant, who was born and trained in the USA, alleges in his complaints that
the requirement of being a Fellow of the Royal College amounts to discrimination on the basis
of national origin by excluding from the positions psychiatrists with foreign
professional credentials. He adds age as a ground of discrimination in his
complaint against the Correctional Service, alleging that an older candidate is
less likely to succeed in the Royal College Fellowship accreditation process.
[3]
In
dismissing the complaint against the Correctional Service, the Commission found
that (a) Fellowship in the Royal College was required in order to carry out the
duties of the concerned position, and (b) that the Royal College Fellowship
hiring standard did not prima facie discriminate on a prohibited ground.
[4]
In
refusing to deal with the complaint against the Canadian Forces, the Commission
found that the substance of the complaint was against the Royal College over which it lacked
jurisdiction.
[5]
The
application judge agreed with the Commission and consequently dismissed both
judicial review applications.
Background and context
Recognition of medical
specialists
[6]
Since the
appellant’s complaints involve medical professional credentials, it is useful
to first set out the information contained in the record explaining the process
for the recognition of medical specialists in Ontario.
[7]
The College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario (“Ontario
College”) operates in accordance with
the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991, S.O. 1991, c. 18, and
the Medicine Act, 1991, S.O. 1991, c. 30. It regulates the practice of medicine
in Ontario in order to protect and serve
the public interest. It issues certificates of registration allowing medical
doctors to practise medicine in Ontario; it monitors and maintains standards of
practice through peer assessment and remediation; it investigates complaints
against medical doctors on behalf of the public; and it disciplines medical
doctors who may have committed an act of professional misconduct: see 2007
study by the Office of the Fairness Commissioner of Ontario (“2007 Fairness Study”)
(Appeal Book at pp. 212-213).
[8]
The 2007
Fairness Study indicates that the following requirements have been adopted by
the Ontario College in order for a candidate to
obtain an independent practice certificate as a medical doctor in Ontario (Appeal Book, pp. 216-217):
• A medical degree from an accredited
Canadian or US medical school or from an
acceptable medical school listed in the World Directory of Medical Schools
• A pass standing on Parts 1 and 2 of the
Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination . . .
• Certification by examination by either
the Royal College . . . or the College
of Family Physicians of Canada . . .
-
To become
eligible for [Royal College] certification exams,
applicants must first complete a residency program, usually in Canada.
. . .
• Completion in Canada of one year of postgraduate training or
active medical practice, or completion of a full clinical clerkship at an
accredited Canadian medical school
• Canadian citizenship or
permanent resident status or a work visa.
[9]
Medical
doctors in Ontario who seek recognition from the
Ontario College as medical specialists
must also be certified as specialists in their field by the Royal College. The Royal College is the national body that
certifies specialists across Canada in all branches of medicine
and surgery, except family medicine: see the introduction to the Royal College’s General Standards
Applicable to All Residency Programs, Appeal Book at p. 144.
[10]
The Royal College has developed a variety of
routes to certification so that qualified specialist physicians, including
international medical graduates, can attain full Royal College certification. These various routes are
described as follows in the 2007 Fairness Study, and they include measures to
take into account the international training of international medical graduates
(Appeal Book at pp. 220-221):
- Traditional (i.e. [Royal College] training plus examination).
- Academic certification (in Canada and
outside Canada): The academic route to [Royal College] certification helps
Canadian faculties of medicine recruit and retain internationally trained
specialists as full-time clinical faculty.
- Jurisdiction-approved training (for
[international medical graduates]): the [Royal College] has assessed 29 international
jurisdictions and deemed them as having met [Royal College] criteria. The [Royal College] will assess the individual
training of graduates of these particular jurisdictions to determine the extent
to which they have successfully met and completed the [Royal College] training requirements.
- Practice ready assessments for
[international medical graduates]: The PRA process . . . is intended for
[international medical graduates] in Canada
with certification from an international jurisdiction.
- Individual competency
assessments for [international medical graduates]: the [Royal College] Credentials Committee has
developed a set of criteria for the assessment of [international medical
graduates’] individual training.
. . .
[11]
Moreover,
one of the Royal College’s important responsibilities
is to accredit residency programs across Canada. Over 700 university-sponsored programs
are currently accredited by the Royal College,
which has adopted general and specific national standards for these purposes:
see the introduction to the Royal College’s General
Standards Applicable to All Residency Programs, Appeal Book at p. 144; see
also examples of such standards at pp. 132-161 of the Appeal Book.
[12]
However,
it is important to note for the purposes of this appeal that the Ontario College has recently adopted
a new policy under which physicians who hold an independent practice
certificate in Ontario, and who are practicing
medicine in a specialty without holding a Royal College certification, may apply for
recognition as a non-family medicine specialist. In order to be recognized as a
specialist under this new policy, the applicant must satisfactorily complete a
practice-based assessment of his or her current practice in Ontario organized by the Ontario College, and complete a one-year
cycle of continuing professional development: see Guide Sheet of the Ontario College, Appeal Book at pp.
203-204.
Events leading to the
complaints
[13]
Dr. Keith
was born in 1950 and was educated and trained in the USA as a physician and psychiatrist, and
certified as a specialist in psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and
Neurology. He eventually moved to Canada
and now has dual American and Canadian citizenship. In 1989, when he was aged
39 and still living in Tennessee, he sought recognition from the Royal College
as a specialist in psychiatry: see Exhibit D to the affidavit of Luz Sucilan
sworn April 5, 2010, Appeal Book at pp. 72-89.
[14]
The Royal College reviewed his credentials and
recognized most of his American training. Consequently, in order to meet the
Royal College requirements, Dr. Keith needed only to take and pass a written
examination, complete a six-month residency in child psychiatry, and pass an
oral examination in psychiatry: see Exhibit D to the affidavit of Luz Sucilan
sworn April 5, 2010, Appeal Book at pp. 72-89.
[15]
In 1990,
Dr. Keith failed the Royal College written examination.
He subsequently succeeded the written portion of the 1992 examination. He also
completed six months residency training in child and adolescent psychiatry at
the University of Manitoba. See Exhibit D to the affidavit of Luz
Sucilan sworn April 5, 2010, Appeal Book at pp. 72-89.
[16]
However,
in November of 1992, the Royal College’s Examination Board
in Psychiatry determined that he had failed the oral examination. After a
second oral examination in June 1993, the Examination Board again determined
that he had failed. Finally, after a third attempt at the oral examination, the
Royal College informed Dr. Keith on
November 26, 1993 that he had again failed to attain the passing standard, that
his eligibility for the examinations had expired, and that he had to apply to
the Credentials Committee for a renewal of eligibility. On December 10, 1993,
the Royal College indicated that he
would be required to provide supplementary information on his training and
experience and, if his eligibility were renewed, he would need to repeat the
written examination. Dr. Keith chose not to apply for renewed eligibility: see
Exhibit D to the affidavit of Luz Sucilan sworn April 5, 2010, Appeal Book at
pp. 72-89.
[17]
Dr. Keith
has practised medicine in Ontario for an undisclosed period of
time under an independent practice certificate issued by the Ontario College. Though nominally a
general practitioner, he appears to have maintained a practice largely
involving psychiatric skills. In 2007, he completed a specialist assessment by
the Ontario College pursuant to the newly
adopted policy of that College applicable to physicians who hold an independent
practice certificate in Ontario and are practising medicine
in a specialty without having Royal College certification.
Pursuant to that new policy, he is now recognized by the Ontario College as a specialist in
psychiatry. Dr. Keith asserts that his recent certification in Ontario as a
specialist under this new policy is the equivalent of Royal College certification and should be recognized
as such by his potential employers: see complaint of December 13, 2008, Appeal
Book at p. 47.
[18]
On April
15, 2008, Dr. Keith contacted Calian – which contracts with the Department of
National Defence to supply civilian physicians to the Canadian Forces –
concerning openings for civilian psychiatrists on Canadian Forces bases. He
applied for the two openings available at that time, one in Cold Lake, Alberta, and the other in Pembroke, Ontario, even though the description
of the qualifications for each position included being a Fellow in psychiatry
of the Royal College. His applications
were processed by Calian subject to verification that his professional credentials
would be acceptable to the Department of National Defence: see amended
complaint of February 13, 2009, Appeal Book at p. 516.
[19]
Furthermore,
after reading in the August 5, 2008 issue of The Medical Post that the
Correctional Service of Canada was seeking a director of psychiatry at its
Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston, Ontario, he applied for that position
even though the required qualifications included being a Fellow in psychiatry
of the Royal College: see complaint of December 13, 2008, Appeal Book at p. 46.
[20]
On August
29, 2008, Dr. Keith was informed by Calian that the requirement for Fellowship
in the Royal College was being maintained for
psychiatric positions on Canadian Forces bases. Dr. Keith filed with the
Commission a complaint dated October 20, 2008 against the Department of
National Defence alleging that he was being discriminated against on the basis
of national origin. This complaint was later amended to reflect the fact that
it was made against the Canadian Forces: see amended complaint, Appeal Book at
p. 516-517. The conclusions of his amended complaint read as follows:
The insistence by the Canadian Forces on
a Canadian specialty credential is discriminatory. According to Ontario, my
professional credentials are equivalent to those of a Fellow of the Royal College. Apparently the only reason
my eligibility for civilian Psychiatry positions with the Canadian Forces is
being denied is that my certification as a specialist is non-Canadian.
The requirement for Fellowship
from the Royal College amounts to unlawful
discrimination on the basis of national (non-Canadian) origin, excluding from
Canadian Forces positions physicians (including me) with equivalent credentials
from other countries. Health care is a provincial (rather than federal) matter.
My province recognizes my foreign professional credentials as equivalent to
Canadian professional credentials. In these circumstances, the decision that I
am ineligible for civilian positions practising military psychiatry amounts to
discrimination due to my national (non-Canadian) origin.
[21]
On
November 6, 2008, Dr. Keith was further informed that the requirement of
Fellowship in psychiatry in the Royal
College could not be waived by the Correctional Service of Canada, and that he
consequently did not qualify for the director of psychiatry position at the
Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston. On December 13, 2008, Dr.
Keith filed another complaint with the Commission, this time alleging
discrimination on the ground of national origin by the Correctional Service:
see amended complaint of December 13, 2008, Appeal Book at pp. 46-47.
Proceedings before the Commission and its
decisions
Complaint against the Correctional Service of
Canada
[22]
The
complaint against the Correctional Service was dealt with by the Commission
under sections 43 and 44 of the Act. Subsections 43(1), 44(1) and 44(3) read as
follows:
43. (1) The
Commission may designate a person, in this Part referred to as an
“investigator”, to investigate a complaint.
44. (1) An
investigator shall, as soon as possible after the conclusion of an
investigation, submit to the Commission a report of the findings of the
investigation.
…
(3) On receipt of a report referred to in
subsection (1), the Commission
(a) may request the Chairperson
of the Tribunal to institute an inquiry under section 49 into the complaint
to which the report relates if the Commission is satisfied
(i) that, having regard to all the
circumstances of the complaint, an inquiry into the complaint is warranted,
and
(ii) that the complaint to which the
report relates should not be referred pursuant to subsection (2) or dismissed
on any ground mentioned in paragraphs 41(c) to (e); or
(b) shall dismiss the complaint
to which the report relates if it is satisfied
(i) that, having regard to all the
circumstances of the complaint, an inquiry into the complaint is not
warranted, or
(ii) that the complaint should be
dismissed on any ground mentioned in paragraphs 41(c) to (e).
…
|
43. (1) La Commission
peut charger une personne, appelée, dans la présente loi,
« l’enquêteur », d’enquêter sur une plainte.
44. (1) L’enquêteur
présente son rapport à la Commission le plus tôt possible après la fin de
l’enquête.
[…]
(3) Sur réception du rapport d’enquête
prévu au paragraphe (1), la Commission :
a) peut
demander au président du Tribunal de désigner, en application de l’article
49, un membre pour instruire la plainte visée par le rapport, si elle est
convaincue :
(i) d’une part, que, compte tenu des
circonstances relatives à la plainte, l’examen de celle-ci est justifié,
(ii) d’autre part, qu’il n’y a pas lieu
de renvoyer la plainte en application du paragraphe (2) ni de la rejeter aux
termes des alinéas 41c) à e);
b) rejette
la plainte, si elle est convaincue :
(i) soit que, compte tenu des circonstances
relatives à la plainte, l’examen de celle-ci n’est pas justifié,
(ii) soit que la plainte doit être
rejetée pour l’un des motifs énoncés aux alinéas 41c) à e).
[…]
|
[23]
An
investigation was carried out by a senior member of the Commission’s staff, Bonnie
Rittersporn, who conducted telephone interviews with (a) Mr. Ron Stolz,
Coordinator, Anti-Harassment, Ontario, for the Correctional Service of Canada
(June 15, 2009), (b) Ms. Josée Lavergne, Administrative Assistant, Membership
Services, at the Royal College (June 15, 2009), (c) Ms. Emily Stevenson,
Manager, Credentials, at the Royal College (June 15, 2009) and (d) Dr. Keith
(July 13, 2009).
[24]
Following
these interviews Ms. Rittersporn recommended the dismissal of the complaint
pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act because “the evidence gathered
during this assessment does not support that the complainant was denied a job
opportunity because of one or more prohibited grounds of discrimination”:
Assessment Report of July, 2009, Appeal Book at p. 40.
[25]
She
concluded in particular that:
a. Royal College Fellowship and Ontario College recognition as a
specialist are two different matters, one having to do with national standards,
the other with licensing in order to practise in Ontario: Assessment Report at paras. 23, 26, 27,
and 34, Appeal Book at pp. 39-40;
b. the Royal College certification process does take into
account foreign training and qualifications in recognizing Fellows: Assessment
Report at paras. 28, 29, 31, 32, and 35, Appeal Book at pp. 39-40;
c. the director of psychiatry
position at the Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston requires Royal College Fellowship
credentials in light of the requirements of the medical training program the
Centre supports: Assessment Report at paras. 37-38, Appeal Book at p. 40;
d. the Royal College falls under provincial jurisdiction, and
since the Commission has no legislative authority over it, the issue of whether
or not its certification process is discriminatory will not be examined: Appeal
Book at p. 40.
[26]
The
Assessment Report was submitted to Dr. Keith for comment. Counsel for Dr. Keith
forwarded numerous comments alleging various errors in the report, notably
challenging the requirement of Royal College Fellowship for the requirements of
the medical training program the Centre supports. Dr. Keith also sought to add
age as a new ground of discrimination in support of his complaint. Dr. Keith
alleged in particular that medical doctors of foreign origin tend to write the Royal College examinations later in their
careers and are therefore older when they take these examinations. It was
further alleged that older candidates are more likely to fail an examination
than younger colleagues: Complainant’s Submissions on the Preliminary
Assessment, Appeal Book at pp. 62-71.
[27]
In light
of these representations, Ms. Rittersporn carried out an additional
investigation, resulting in a Supplementary Assessment Report dated October 28,
2009. In that report, she implicitly rejected Dr. Keith’s contention that
Fellowship was not necessary in order to meet the requirements of the medical
training program supported by the Centre: Supplementary Assessment Report at
paras. 20-22, Appeal Book at pp. 43-44. As in the first Assessment Report, she
also noted that “[a]s the [Royal College]
falls under the ambit of provincial jurisdiction and the Commission has no
legislative authority over the Royal College, the issue of whether
or not its certification process is discriminatory will not be examined in this
report”: Supplementary Assessment Report at para. 14, Appeal Book at p. 43.
Moreover, she also explicitly rejected the allegation of discrimination on the
basis of age, finding that no prima facie discrimination had been
demonstrated (Supplementary Assessment Report at paras. 29-31, Appeal Book at
p. 45):
29. The complainant initially wrote his
exams in 1990 at the age of 40. He passed the written exams in 1992 at the age
of 42. Between November 1992 and November 1993, the complainant attempted the
oral exams three times but each time, he was unsuccessful. He attributes his
failure to pass the tests to the age at which he took the tests. Sixteen years
later, in 2008, the complainant applied for a position with the respondent. As
one of the requirements of the job was a [Royal College] Fellowship and the complainant did not
possess this qualification, he alleges that the test he wrote some 16 years
prior, is a discriminatory one and the respondent’s reliance on having a
Fellowship is also discriminatory.
30. The respondent has provided
legitimate non-discriminatory reasons for requiring [Royal College] Fellowship.
31. The complainant’s evidence
does not link the alleged discriminatory conduct to a prohibited ground and the
assessment has not found any such nexus. On the evidence, the fact that the
complainant did not receive the job opportunity was not linked to any
prohibited ground.
[28]
Again, the
appellant was given an opportunity to comment on the Supplementary Assessment
Report, and he again made submissions through his counsel disputing these
findings and recommendations: Complainant’s Submissions on the Supplementary
Preliminary Assessment, Appeal Book at pp. 99-108.
[29]
The
Commission reviewed both reports and the extensive submissions of Dr. Keith in
response to these reports and decided, pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b) of
the Act, to dismiss the complaint because “the evidence gathered during the
assessment does not support that the complainant was denied a job opportunity
because of one or more prohibited grounds of discrimination”: Commission’s
letter of February 3, 2010, Appeal Book at p. 35.
Complaint against the Canadian
Forces
[30]
The
Commission took a different path in its treatment of the complaint against the
Canadian Forces. The Canadian Forces had submitted that the complaint should be
against Calian within the framework of a provincial human rights investigation,
since Calian was the firm which supplied it with civilian physicians: letter
dated May 15, 2009 from National Defence, Appeal Book at pp. 532-535.
[31]
Consequently,
the Commission did not investigate the complaint under sections 43 and 44 of
the Act, but rather proceeded to determine, as a preliminary matter, whether it
had jurisdiction to deal with the complaint. Paragraph 41(1)(c) of the
Act reads as follows:
41. (1) Subject to section 40, the Commission shall deal
with any complaint filed with it unless in respect of that complaint it
appears to the Commission that
. . .
(c) the complaint is
beyond the jurisdiction of the Commission;
|
41. (1) Sous réserve de l’article 40, la Commission statue
sur toute plainte dont elle est saisie à moins qu’elle estime celle-ci
irrecevable pour un des motifs suivants :
[…]
c) la plainte n’est pas
de sa compétence;
|
[32]
In order
to assist it in deciding this preliminary issue, the Commission requested one
of its staff members, Mr. Dean Steacy, to prepare a report on the Calian
jurisdictional issue. For this purpose, Mr. Steacy requested and received
detailed submissions from the parties.
[33]
A “Section
40/41 Report” was issued March 31, 2010 in which Mr. Steacy recommended the
rejection of the contention that the Canadian Forces were not the employer for
the purposes of the complaint under the Act. Consequently, Mr. Steacy concluded
that the Commission should exercise its discretion to deal with the complaint
under the Act: Section 40/41 Report at para. 28, Appeal Book at p. 512.
[34]
Without
the benefit of a section 43 investigation, Mr. Steacy proceeded to analyze the
complaint on its merits, using for this purpose the submissions received on the
Calian jurisdictional issue. He concluded that the Royal College Fellowship
requirement appeared to be neutral and that, consequently, the fact that Dr.
Keith had been screened out of the competition had nothing to do with his
national origin: Section 40/41 Report at para. 49, Appeal Book at p. 515. Mr.
Steacy also reviewed the Royal College Policies and Procedures for
Certification and Fellowship and found them not to be prima facie
discriminatory: Section 40/41 Report at para. 47, Appeal Book at pp. 514-515.
As for Dr. Keith’s allegation that the Royal College's testing procedures and exams
were themselves discriminatory, Mr. Steacy noted that since the Royal College is under provincial
jurisdiction, that allegation would be better dealt with through a complaint
with a provincial human rights commission: Section 40/41 Report at para. 48,
Appeal Book at p. 515.
[35]
Following
the Section 40/41 Report, the Commission decided, under paragraph 41(1)(c)
of the Act, not to deal with the complaint, adopting for that purpose the
following analysis set out in the report (Appeal Book at pp. 505-506):
In reviewing the documents provided by
the parties, it is clear that the [Canadian Forces have] mandated the
employment requirement of [Royal College] Fellowship as a job
qualification and requirement for the position of psychiatrist. As well, it is
clear that Calian was required to hold all applicants to the same standard,
that is, requiring all candidates to be a Fellow of the [Royal College].
…
Dr. Keith maintains the position that the
[Royal College] testing procedure
and the exams themselves discriminate. However, since the [Royal College] falls
under provincial jurisdiction and as the [Commission] has no legislative
authority over the Royal College, Dr. Keith’s allegation that the certification
process is discriminatory, would be better dealt `with in a complaint to a
provincial human rights commission.
…
In reviewing the documents
provided by both parties, it appears that the [Canadian Forces] provided Calian
with the qualifications and requirements for the position of psychiatrist,
which [were] applied to all applicants, and that the job qualification
requirement of [Royal College] Fellowship appeared to be neutral. In
this regard, while it is correct that foreign educated physicians must have their
credentials assessed and certified as equivalent to that of “Fellow” by the
[Royal College], so must Canadian physicians
who have been educated outside of Canada.
Furthermore, any individual, regardless of their national or ethnic origin,
educated as a psychiatrist in Canada and certified to practice as a
psychiatrist in a Province in Canada must also have their
education and qualifications assessed and be recognized as a fellow by the [Royal College] in order to be screened in
within this competition process. In as much as Calian’s decision not to employ
Dr. Keith was based on criteria set out by the [Canadian Forces], Dr. Keith’s
qualifications were subjected to the same scrutiny as were all applicants. The
fact that Dr. Keith’s application was screened out of the competition had no
bearing on Dr. Keith’s national or ethnic origin, rather the decision was based
on the fact that Dr. Keith did not have the qualification of fellow from the [Royal College].
Reasons of the application judge
[36]
The
application judge reviewed on a standard of reasonableness the decision of the
Commission dismissing the complaint against the Correctional Service pursuant
to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act, while he reviewed on a standard of
correctness its decision not to deal with the complaint against the Canadian
Forces on jurisdictional grounds pursuant to paragraph 41(1)(c) of the
Act: Reasons at paras. 16, 19, 23 and 28.
[37]
He found
that the dismissal of the complaint against the Correctional Service was
reasonable since “[i]n the absence of evidence that the standard was
discriminatory on its face or that the CSC [Correctional Service] was imposing
the standard for a discriminatory purpose, it was clear that Dr. Keith’s
complaint was really directed at the [Royal College], not CSC. Therefore, the
CSC’s [sic] conclusion that a hearing was not warranted was not
unreasonable”: Reasons at para. 19.
[38]
As for the
complaint against the Canadian Forces, the application judge found that the
Commission was correct in concluding that Dr. Keith’s complaint was really
directed against the Royal College, and that it
consequently had no jurisdiction to investigate this complaint: Reasons at
para. 29.
[39]
The
application judge further found that the Commission’s investigations related to
both complaints had been sufficiently thorough in the circumstances: Reasons at
paras. 20-23 and 30-31.
Issues
[40]
This
appeal raises the following issues:
a. The applicable standard of
review.
b. The application of the Act to
provincially regulated professional qualifications adopted as hiring standards
by a federally regulated employer.
c. Whether the Commission erred
in dismissing the complaint against the Correctional Service of Canada pursuant
to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act.
d. Whether the Commission erred
in declining to deal with the complaint against the Canadian Forces on
jurisdictional grounds pursuant to paragraph 41(1)(c) of the Act.
A. Standard of review
[41]
On an
appeal of a judgment concerning a judicial review application, the role of this
Court is to determine whether the application judge identified and applied the
correct standard of review, and in the event he did not, to assess the impugned
decision in light of the correct standard; the application judge’s selection of
the appropriate standard of review is itself a question of law subject to
review on the standard of correctness: Dr. Q. v. College of Physicians and
Surgeons of British Columbia, 2003 SCC 19, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 226 at para. 43;
Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
2005 SCC 40, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100 at para. 35; Prairie Acid Rain Coalition v.
Canada (Minister of Fisheries and
Oceans), 2006
FCA 31, [2006] 3 F.C.R. 610 at paras. 13-14; Yu v. Canada (Attorney General), 2011 FCA 42 at para. 19.
Standard of review applicable to the
decision to dismiss the complaint against the Correctional Service of Canada pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b)
of the Act
[42]
After the
conclusion of an investigation of a complaint pursuant to subsection 43(1) of
the Act, and upon receipt of the investigation report pursuant to subsection
44(1), the Commission must either request that the Chairperson of the Canadian
Human Rights Tribunal (“Tribunal”) institute an inquiry into the complaint if
it is satisfied, having regard to all the circumstances, that the complaint is
warranted, or, alternatively, dismiss the complaint if it is satisfied, having
regard to all the circumstances, that such an inquiry into the complaint is not
warranted: subsection 44(3) of the Act.
[43]
When
deciding whether a complaint should proceed or not to an inquiry by the
Tribunal, the Commission performs a screening analysis somewhat analogous to
that by a judge at a preliminary inquiry in that it must decide if an inquiry
by the Tribunal is warranted having regard to all the facts before it. The central
component of the Commission’s role is thus assessing the sufficiency of the
evidence before it: i.e., it must determine whether there is a reasonable basis
in the evidence for proceeding to the next stage. Moreover, the Commission’s
decision is a discretionary one: Halifax (Regional Municipality) v. Nova Scotia (Human Rights Commission), 2012 SCC 10 (“Halifax”)
at paras. 23 to 25; Cooper v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 854 at para.
53; Syndicat des employés de production du Québec et de l’Acadie v. Canada (Canadian Human Rights
Commission),
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 879 at pp. 898-899.
[44]
It is well
settled that a decision of the Commission to refer a complaint to the Tribunal
is subject to judicial review on a reasonableness standard: Halifax at paras. 27, 40 and 44 to 53; Bell Canada v. Communications, Energy and
Paperworkers Union of Canada, [1999] 1 F.C. 113 (C.A.) at
para. 38. In Halifax, Cromwell J. recently considered the
standard of review which applies in such circumstances, and he concluded that
“the reviewing court should ask itself whether there is any reasonable basis in
law or on the evidence to support that decision”: Halifax at para. 53. Though Halifax dealt with the screening functions of the
Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission, its conclusions also apply to the
screening functions of the Commission: Halifax at para. 52.
[45]
In this
case, we are not reviewing a decision to refer a complaint to the Tribunal.
Rather, the Commission’s decision was to dismiss the complaint. In my view,
where the Commission dismisses a complaint under paragraph 43(3)(b) of
the Act, a more probing review should be carried out.
[46]
Cromwell
J. was careful to point out that the conclusion reached in Halifax only extends to cases where
the complaint is referred for further inquiry. In such cases, any interested
party may raise any arguments and submit any appropriate evidence at the second
stage of the process; consequently, no final determination of the complaint is
reached by referring it to further inquiry. As noted at paragraph 15 of Halifax,
“[a]ll the Commission had done was to refer the complaint to a board of
inquiry; the Commission had not decided any issue on its merits” (see also
paras. 23 and 50 of Halifax). In the case of a dismissal
under paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act, however, any further investigation
or inquiry into the complaint by the Commission or the Tribunal is precluded.
[47]
The
decision of the Commission to dismiss a complaint under paragraph 44(3)(b)
of the Act is a final decision made at an early stage, but in such case –
contrary to a decision refusing to deal with a complaint under section 41 – the
decision is made with the benefit and in the light of an investigation pursuant
to section 43. Such a decision should be reviewed on a reasonableness standard,
but as was said in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009
SCC 12, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339 at paragraph 59, and recently reiterated in Halifax
at paragraph 44, reasonableness is a single concept that “takes it colour” from
the particular context. In this case, the nature of the Commission’s role and
the place of the paragraph 44(3)(b) decision in the process contemplated
by the Act are important aspects of that context, and must be taken into
account in applying the reasonableness standard.
[48]
In my
view, a reviewing court should defer to the Commission’s findings of fact
resulting from the section 43 investigation, and to its findings of law falling
within its mandate. Should these findings be found to be reasonable, a
reviewing court should then consider whether the dismissal of the complaint at
an early stage pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act was a
reasonable conclusion to draw having regard to these findings and taking into
account that the decision to dismiss is a final decision precluding further
investigation or inquiry under the Act.
[49]
This
formulation ensures that both the decision of the Commission and the process
contemplated by the Act are treated with appropriate judicial deference having
regard to the nature of a dismissal under paragraph 44(3)(b). The pre-Dunsmuir
jurisprudence of this Court dealing with judicial review of Commission
decisions dismissing complaints pursuant to paragraph 44(3)(b) of the
Act supports such a formulation: Sketchley v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FCA 404, [2006] 3
F.C.R. 392.
Standard of review applicable to the
decision of the Commission declining to deal with the complaint against the
Canadian Forces on jurisdictional grounds pursuant to paragraph 41(1)(c)
of the Act.
[50]
The
Commission may decline to deal with a complaint under paragraph 41(1)(c)
of the Act when the complaint is beyond its jurisdiction. Such a decision may
be made prior to or after an investigation carried out pursuant to section 43
of the Act. In this case, the Commission reached its decision without the
benefit of such an investigation. The jurisprudence of the Federal Court
provides that in such circumstances the Commission should only decline to deal
with a complaint in plain and obvious cases. This is so since the decision of
the Commission pursuant to section 41 is a final decision made at a preliminary
stage without the benefit of an investigation under section 43 of the Act: Canada
Post Corp. v. Canadian Human Rights Commission et al. (1997), 130 F.T.R.
241 at para. 3 (Rothstein J.), conf. 169 F.T.R. 138, affirmed 245 N.R. 397
(F.C.A.); Michon-Hamelin v. Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC 1258 at para. 16 (Mactavish J.,
citing Rothstein J. in Canada Post Corp., above); Hicks v. Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 1059 at para. 22
(Snider J.); Canada (Attorney General) v. Maracle, 2012 FC 105 at paras. 39-40
(Bédard J.).
[51]
Moreover,
since the Commission decided the jurisdictional question without the benefit of
a section 43 investigation, the allegations of fact contained in the complaint
must be taken as true: Michon-Hamelin v. Canada (Attorney General),
above, at paras. 23-24; Hicks v. Canada (Attorney General), above, at para. 6.
[52]
The
Commission declined to deal with the complaint on the basis that, in pith and
substance, it concerned the testing procedure and exams of the Royal College, a matter over which the
Commission found it had no authority under the Act and that would be better
dealt with in a complaint to a provincial human rights commission.
[53]
Questions
regarding the division of powers between Parliament and the provinces, as well
as other constitutional questions, are necessarily subject to correctness
review, as are questions regarding the jurisdictional lines between two or more
competing specialized tribunals: Canada (Canadian Human Rights Commission)
v. Canada (Attorney General), 2011 SCC 53, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 471 at para. 18,
citing Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paras. 58 and 61. The decision of the
Commission refusing to deal with the complaint against the Canadian Forces
falls within these parameters and must therefore be reviewed on a standard of
correctness.
B.
The application of the Act to provincially regulated professional
qualifications adopted as hiring standards by a federally regulated employer
[54]
Dr.
Keith’s complaint pertains to a hiring standard adopted by federally regulated
employers based on professional certification by a provincially regulated
professional association. The question which must therefore be first determined
is whether the Commission’s powers to investigate complaints extend to
provincially regulated professional standards.
[55]
Once a
federally regulated employer adopts a hiring standard, whether that standard is
developed by the employer itself or is based, as is the case here, on an
external provincially regulated professional qualification, that hiring
standard is subject to scrutiny under the Act. A federally regulated employer
cannot escape scrutiny by simply adopting a provincially regulated professional
qualification as its own hiring standard and then claim immunity from review on
constitutional grounds. This does not mean that the review of the hiring
standard by the Commission extends beyond the jurisdictional bounds of the Act,
since not all hiring standards are subject to scrutiny under the Act, only
those that prima facie discriminate on the basis of one or more of the
prohibited grounds.
[56]
However,
there are constitutional limits which must be respected. Thus, if a federally
regulated employer adopts membership in a provincially regulated professional
organization as a hiring standard for a position, the review under the Act will
be focused on determining if such membership is a true requirement for the
position or rather a means of excluding candidates on prohibited grounds. The
Commission may not however use its investigation powers in order to extend its
authority over the certification requirements of the professional association
itself, since the regulation of professions and trades falls under provincial
jurisdiction: Peter W. Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada, v. 1, 5th ed.
(Toronto: Carswell, 2007) at sec. 21.7.
[57]
Using a
hypothetical situation to illustrate the point, if a federally regulated
employer adopted membership in a professional association as a hiring standard
for computer programmers, and it could be demonstrated prima facie that
the concerned association chose its membership on the basis of race, there
would be a heavy burden on the federally regulated employer to show a bona
fide occupational requirement. If, on the other hand, there is no prima
facie evidence of direct or adverse effect discrimination by the
association, the matter need not be investigated further.
C.
Did the Commission err in dismissing the complaint against the Correctional
Service of Canada pursuant to paragraph
44(3)(b) of the Act?
[58]
Dr.
Keith’s contention is that, in light of the specialist recognition he has
recently obtained from the Ontario College,
the requirement of Royal College Fellowship for the position of director of
psychiatry at the Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston is discriminatory because it has the
effect of screening out qualified candidates on the prohibited grounds of
national origin and age.
[59]
In both
direct discrimination and adverse effect discrimination complaints concerning
an impugned hiring standard, the complainant must first establish that the
standard is prima facie discriminatory: British Columbia (Public Service Employee
Relations Commission) v. BCGSEU, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 3 (“Meiorin”) at paras. 2, 3 and
13. A prima facie case of discrimination “is one which covers the
allegations made and which, if they are believed, is complete and sufficient to
justify a verdict in the complainant’s favour in the absence of an answer from
the respondent-employer”: Ont. Human Rights Comm. v. Simpsons-Sears,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 536 at p. 558.
[60]
What was
at issue in Meiorin was the use of physical fitness tests to determine
suitability for continued employment as a forest firefighter. The use of such
tests had led to the layoff of Ms. Meiorin from her position as a forest
firefighter with the British Columbia Ministry of Forests after three years of
satisfactory service. The tests were found to be a prima facie discriminatory
employment standard on the following grounds: (a) evidence demonstrated that,
owing to physiological differences, most women have lower aerobic capacity than
most men and that, even with training, most women cannot increase their aerobic
capacity to the level required by the aerobic standard established by the
impugned tests, although training could allow most men to meet it: Meiorin at
para. 11; and (b) no evidence showed that the prescribed aerobic capacity was
necessary for either men or women to perform the work of a forest firefighter
safely and efficiently: Meiorin at paras. 12 and 18.
[61]
Once a
hiring standard is found to be prima facie discriminatory, an employer
must justify the standard by establishing, on a balance of probabilities, that
it is a bona fide occupational requirement. For this purpose, a
three-step test was developed in Meiorin at paragraph 54. Under this
test, the employer must show:
a. that the standard was adopted
for a purpose rationally connected to the performance of the job;
b. that the standard was adopted
in an honest and good faith belief that it was necessary for the fulfillment of
that legitimate work-related purpose; and
c. that the standard is
reasonably necessary to the accomplishment of that legitimate work-related
purpose. To show that the standard is reasonably necessary, the employer must
demonstrate that it is impossible to accommodate individual employees sharing
the characteristics of the claimant without imposing undue hardship upon
itself.
[62]
In this
case, the Commission found, based on the information submitted by Mr. Ron Stolz
on behalf of the Correctional Service, that the requirement of Royal College
Fellowship was necessary for performing the work related to the position of
director of psychiatry at the Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston. The Assessment Report noted
the role of the Centre in training medical students (Assessment Report at
paras. 37-38, reproduced at p. 40 of the Appeal Book):
37. Mr. Stolz explained that without [Royal College] certification and Fellowship,
the Director would not be able to carry out the expectations of the position.
As an example, Mr. Stolz said that Queens University in Kingston is the educational component and their
trainees have co-op placements at the treatment centre. Mr. Stolz said that
only [Royal College] programs with [Royal College] accredited components can
graduate trainees and the Kingston treatment facility, which has
a residence training program, must meet the requirements for the [Royal College] program in order to graduate
the trainees. Therefore, its Director must be a [Royal College] Fellow.
38. He also said that the
Director has linkages with community resources and the community hospitals
require Fellowship for granting practising privileges for research or training
purposes and patient (inmate) care. A Director without [Royal College] certification would not be
allowed access to such resources.
The Supplementary Assessment
Report confirmed and reiterated these findings of fact in its para. 20,
reproduced at p. 43 of the Appeal Book.
[63]
The
Commission also had access to documentary evidence concerning the Canadian
medical training system, including evidence pertaining to the role of the Royal College in this system, notably the Royal College General Standards
Applicable to All Residency Programs: see affidavit of Luz Sucilan sworn
April 5, 2010, at para. 8, reproduced at pp. 49-50 of the Appeal Book. These General
Standards provide that there must be an appropriate administrative
structure for each residency program, and in particular, “[t]here must be
a program director, with qualifications that are acceptable to the [Royal]
College”: Appeal Book at p. 145 (emphasis in original).
[64]
Dr. Keith
challenged before the Commission the requirement of Royal College Fellowship in
order for a person to be able to provide Royal College training programs by referring to a
telephone conversation he had with a Royal
College official concerning the matter. However, Dr. Keith submitted no
evidence as to the requirements for the medical training programs offered in Kingston.
[65]
Dr. Keith
also alleged before the Commission that there was no general requirement of
Fellowship in the Royal College in order for one to
obtain hospital privileges, and he gave as an example his own privileges at the
North Bay Psychiatric Hospital. However, no evidence was
provided by Dr. Keith as to privilege requirements in hospitals linked to
universities providing medical training–such as Queen’s University–or in
hospitals providing Royal College residencies in the Kingston area and linked
to the university medical community in that area. Dr. Keith recognized these
lacunae in his submissions and concluded that a Royal College Fellowship
requirement at any hospital would also amount to discrimination [Complainant’s
Submissions on the Preliminary Assessment, para. 39, Appeal Book at p. 68]:
Even if [Royal College] Fellowship were a requirement
for hospital privileges, a Respondent cannot rely upon the discrimination by
others to justify its own discrimination. If the Respondent’s requirement of [Royal College] Fellowship is prima facie
discriminatory, any hospital requiring it for privileges is also discriminating
and therefore cannot be relied upon as a justification.
[66]
The
Commission considered Dr. Keith’s submissions on these matters, but was
obviously not persuaded. It rather found that a Royal College Fellowship was an
essential qualification in order to carry out the functions of the position:
Supplementary Assessment Report at paras. 20-22, Appeal Book at pp. 43-44.
[67]
In light
of all the above, the Commission’s conclusion that Royal College Fellowship was
necessary for performing the work related to the position of director of
psychiatry at the Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston was a reasonable
conclusion to draw from the evidence before it.
[68]
Furthermore,
the Commission also found as a matter of fact that the certification process
for obtaining Fellowship in psychiatry in the Royal College was not prima
facie discriminatory on the basis of national origin. The Commission
interviewed the personnel of the Royal
College responsible for the accreditation process and had access to various
documents setting out that process. This allowed the Commission to conclude not
only that that process was not prima facie discriminatory, but also that
it took into account foreign training and qualifications in recognizing
Fellows: Assessment Report at paras. 28, 29, 31, 32 and 35, Appeal Book at pp.
39-40.
[69]
Dr. Keith
failed to submit any evidence to show that the Royal College certification process discriminated on
the basis of national origin. The evidence in the record showed that the Royal College had recognized his American
training for the purpose of certifying him as a Fellow in psychiatry.
Furthermore, the evidence also showed that Dr. Keith had successfully passed
the written examination for Fellowship. However, he thrice failed the oral
examination. He now claims, many years after the fact, that his failure to
achieve Fellowship must have been due to some adverse effect discrimination
resulting from his national origin. Yet no evidence has been submitted to
support this allegation. Dr. Keith’s submission is rather that his allegation
of discrimination on the basis of national origin should be taken at face
value. This, however, is not what an investigation under section 43 of the Act
is about. The Commission, based on the evidence gathered during its
investigation, reached its own conclusion as to the allegation of
discrimination on the ground of national origin. The Commission’s conclusion
derived from that investigation is reasonable in the light of the evidence (or
lack thereof) before it.
[70]
Dr. Keith
did however attempt to provide some evidence of age discrimination by referring
the Commission to an American study dating from 1991 which showed that being
both younger than 30 years of age and a native English speaker were the
strongest factors predicting full pass rates in the 1984 to 1987 Foreign
Medical Graduate Examinations in the Medical Sciences administered by the US
Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates: Appeal Book at pp. 111 to
124. However that study did not assert, nor did it demonstrate prima facie,
that such pass rates were the result of discriminatory practices based on age.
Nor was any explanation provided by Dr. Keith as to how this study had any
direct bearing on the Royal
College certification process. Dr.
Keith also referred to other foreign studies concerning age and examinations
which had similar limitations.
[71]
During the
hearing of this appeal, Dr. Keith’s counsel was asked what evidence existed in
the record to support the submission that age discrimination was involved in
the Royal College certification
process. He acknowledged that no such evidence was to be found in the record,
insisting that the allegation was self-evident and based on the common sense
proposition that the older an individual is, the more difficult it is for that
individual to pass an examination. I cannot accept such a proposition as a
substitute for prima facie evidence of age discrimination. Such a
proposition leads to the absurd conclusion that all school, college, university
and professional entrance exams, as well as all ongoing examination processes
in such institutions, discriminate on the basis of age. Similar conclusions
would need to be drawn concerning all personnel recruitment examinations
administered by public sector as well as private sector employers. That is
asking this Court to find that the human condition is, in and of itself, a prima
facie basis for establishing discrimination on the ground of age. I do not
believe this is what the Act provides for.
[72]
Having
found that the Commission’s findings of fact and of law were reasonable, I also
conclude that the Commission’s decision dismissing the complaint pursuant to
paragraph 44(3)(b) of the Act was a reasonable conclusion to draw having
regard to those findings and taking into account that the decision to dismiss
is a final decision precluding further investigation or inquiry under the Act.
[73]
The
Commission found that the Royal College Fellowship requirement is necessary for
the performance of the work required of the incumbent in the position. The
Commission found that the Regional Treatment Centre in Kingston is part of the Royal College medical training network and
that the director of psychiatry at this Centre should be a Fellow for that and
other purposes. Based on the evidence before it, the Commission further found
no prima facie discrimination in the Royal College Fellowship
accreditation process on the ground of either age or national origin. In light
of the evidentiary findings of the Commission, Dr. Keith has not established
that the impugned hiring standard is prima facie discriminatory.
[74]
Furthermore,
I cannot accept Dr. Keith’s submission that the Commission’s investigation was
not thorough enough. The comments of Nadon J. (as he then was) in Slattery
v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), [1994] 2 F.C. 574 at pp.
600-601 are apposite here:
In contexts where
parties have the legal right to make submissions in response to an investigator's
report, such as in the case at bar, parties may be able to compensate for more
minor omissions by bringing such omissions to the attention of the
decision-maker. Therefore, it should be only where complainants are unable to
rectify such omissions that judicial review would be warranted. Although this
is by no means an exhaustive list, it would seem to me that circumstances where
further submissions cannot compensate for an investigator's omissions would
include: (1) where the omission is of such a fundamental nature that merely
drawing the decision-maker's attention to the omission cannot compensate for
it; or (2) where fundamental evidence is inaccessible to the decision-maker by
virtue of the protected nature of the information or where the decision-maker
explicitly disregards it.
The appellant has not shown
that the Commission’s investigation was so fundamentally flawed as to warrant
intervention by this Court. On the contrary, the investigation was rather
thorough: it comprised not just one, but two reports; the appellant had ample
opportunity to make all the submissions he wished, and indeed he amply availed
himself of his opportunities. The appellant also made reference in his
submissions to a large number of documents in order to support his complaint.
[75]
Given the
finding that Fellowship was required in order to carry out the duties of the
director's position and that the Royal College Fellowship accreditation process
did not prima facie discriminate on a prohibited ground, the only
remaining aspect of Dr. Keith’s complaint concerns his claim of equivalency
between his Ontario
College certification and Royal
College Fellowship. This last aspect of the complaint has nothing to do with
discrimination but has to do rather with professional qualifications
equivalence. The Commission has no authority or expertise to perform
professional qualifications equivalence assessments, and rightfully declined to
do so.
D.
Did the Commission err in declining to deal with the complaint against the
Canadian Forces on jurisdictional grounds pursuant to paragraph 41(1)(c) of the
Act?
[76]
The
Commission rejected the Canadian Forces’ jurisdictional argument concerning
Calian. However, instead of proceeding with an investigation under section 43
and issuing a decision pursuant to section 44 of the Act, as would have been
the normal course of action in such circumstances, the Commission rather
refused to deal with the complaint, finding that it was in pith and substance a
challenge to the Royal College Fellowship certification process, a matter over
which the Commission found it had no jurisdiction.
[77]
Though Dr.
Keith’s complaint certainly raises issues related to the Royal College certification process, it is
nevertheless a complaint directed against the Canadian Forces’ use of a hiring
standard which is alleged to be discriminatory in its effect. The Commission
was bound by the Act to investigate whether the hiring standard adopted by the
Canadian Forces, e.g. Fellowship in the Royal College, resulted in discrimination within the
Canadian Forces on a ground prohibited by the Act. The Commission was also
required to make a decision on this issue pursuant to subsection 44(3) of the
Act.
[78]
As already
noted above, once a federal employer, such as the Canadian Forces, adopts as a
hiring standard a provincially regulated professional qualification, that
hiring standard is subject to scrutiny under the Act. In this process, the
Commission must determine – as it did with Dr. Keith’s complaint concerning the
Correctional Service – whether a prima facie case of discrimination has
been established, and if so, whether the concerned hiring standard is a bona
fide occupational requirement. Though the Commission must not exceed its
authority by investigating the provincially regulated professional body, it
does have authority to investigate the federal employer which adopted the
standard as its own, and in so doing, it may consider how that standard could
lead to discrimination under the Act with regard to that federal employer.
[79]
In this case,
the Canadian Forces have adopted a hiring standard based on Fellowship in the Royal College. The Commission is entitled to
review this hiring standard in order to ascertain if it has the effect of
excluding candidates on grounds prohibited under the Act. In so doing, the
Commission is not assuming jurisdiction over the Royal College, but is rather exercising its
jurisdiction over the Canadian Forces. In carrying out its investigation under
the Act, the Commission must be careful not to encroach upon the activities of
the Royal College itself, which fall
outside its jurisdiction.
[80]
In this
case, the Commission declined jurisdiction without carrying out an
investigation into the complaint against the Canadian Forces. This it could not
do.
[81]
I am
however well aware that in light of the findings of the Commission leading to
the dismissal of the complaint against the Correctional Service, the
investigation of the complaint against the Canadian Forces may be somewhat
supererogatory. However, the Commission must be held to its very conscious
choice of treating both complaints separately under distinct statutory
processes. The Commission was well aware that both complaints were pending
before it, but chose to treat them separately. For some unknown reason, it did not
rely on the evidence gathered in its investigation of the complaint against the
Correctional Service for the purpose of deciding the complaint against the
Canadian Forces.
Conclusions
[82]
For the
reasons set out above, I would (a) dismiss the appeal from the judgment in
Federal Court docket T-356-10 which dismissed a judicial review proceeding
concerning a decision of the Commission dismissing the appellant’s complaint
against the Correctional Service of Canada, and (b) allow the appeal from the
judgment in Federal Court docket T-1326-10 and return the
appellant’s complaint concerning the Canadian Forces to the
Commission for investigation pursuant to section 43, and decision pursuant to
section 44, of the Act. In light of the mixed result, I would not award any
costs in this appeal.
"Robert
M. Mainville"
“I
agree.
Pierre
Blais C.J.”
“I
agree.
K.
Sharlow J.A.”