Date:
20081010
Docket:
A-53-08
Citation:
2008 FCA 305
CORAM: DÉCARY
J.A.
SEXTON
J.A.
SHARLOW
J.A.
BETWEEN:
CANADA POST CORPORATION
Appellant
and
CAROLYN POLLARD
Respondent
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
DÉCARY J.A.
[1]
This
appeal deals with the exercise by an employee of her right under section 128 of
the Canada Labour Code (the Code) to refuse unsafe work.
[2]
The
employee (the respondent) is a rural and suburban mail carrier (the “carrier”)
with Canada Post Corporation (Canada Post). Her duties include delivering mail
to rural mail boxes along the right side of the road on a delivery route in Brampton, Ontario.
The carriers had developed a practice of driving on the “wrong” (left) side of
the road on their routes, in order to enable them to deliver mail through their
driver’s side window. That practice was known to, and tolerated by, Canada
Post.
[3]
As
the practice violated the Ontario Highway Traffic Act, in June 2004,
Canada Post ordered its carriers to drive on the right side of the road. The
expectation was that carriers would have to reach across the passenger seat in
order to deliver mail out the right side window.
[4]
In
November 2004, the appellant, who for years had been following the practice of
delivering mail through the driver’s side window, was directed from that time
on, to drive on the right side of the road. She immediately refused to
work, alleging the ergonomic difficulties she would face by stretching and
twisting across the passenger seat, and by being forced to unfasten her
seatbelt to deliver mail. She also alleged that in some areas the road’s
shoulder was not wide enough to enable the carrier to pull her vehicle
completely off the road. In other areas some boxes were not compliant with
Canada Post Regulations, in that the boxes were further away from the passenger
window, thereby compounding the ergonomic hazard.
[5]
The
work refusal was investigated by a Health and Safety Officer, who found that
the ergonomic hazard posed no “danger” within the meaning of subsection 122 (1)
of the Code. The Officer did not consider any issues of traffic safety. He
ordered Canada Post to undertake a hazard assessment, to develop safe work
procedure, and to train employees regarding the same.
[6]
Canada
Post appealed the Officer’s decision to the Canada Appeals Office on
Occupational Health and Safety. At the hearing, there was clearly some dispute
about the scope of the Appeals Officer’s jurisdiction, in particular whether
the issue of traffic safety was properly before him. Throughout the hearing,
the respondent’s representative adduced evidence on the traffic safety issue.
Counsel for Canada Post repeatedly objected, on the basis that the issue was
not properly before the Appeals Officer, and did not adduce any of the
substantial evidence he said he had on the issue.
[7]
The
Appeals Officer overturned the Health and Safety Officer’s decision, concluding
that the appellant faced a danger due to both the ergonomic and traffic safety
hazards. Canada Post sought judicial review of the Appeals Officer’s decision.
[8]
Madam
Justice Dawson allowed the application for judicial review, in part; she held
that there was no reason to interfere with the decision that the ergonomic
hazard represented a danger, but she overturned the ruling on traffic safety as
Canada Post was denied procedural fairness. The traffic safety issue was
remitted to the Office for re-determination (2007 FC 1362). Canada Post
appealed the first part of the decision. The respondent cross-appealed the
second part.
The Appeal : the
“danger”
[9]
The
parties are in agreement that since Dawson J. applied the pre-Dunsmuir test
of patent unreasonableness, her use of that now outdated test requires this
Court to review de novo the decision of the Appeals Officer.
[10]
The
“reasonable standard’ set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9 is described as follows:
Reasonableness is a
deferential standard animated by the principle that underlies the development
of the two previous standards of reasonableness: certain questions that come
before administrative tribunals do not lend themselves to one specific,
particular result. Instead, they may give rise to a number of possible, reasonable
conclusions. Tribunals have a margin of appreciation within the range of
acceptable and rational solutions. A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable, referring
both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law. (para.47)
(my
emphasis)
The Court goes on, at para. 48, to say
… deference
imports respect for the decision-making process of adjudicative bodies with
regard to both the facts and the law. …
[11]
At
paragraphs 53 and 54, the Court finds guidance in the existing case law when it
sets out the following propositions:
Where the
question is one of fact, discretion or policy, deference will usually apply automatically
(Mossop, at pp. 599-600; Dr. Q, at para. 29; Suresh,
at paras. 29-30). We believe that the same standard must apply to the review of
questions where the legal and factual issues are intertwined with and cannot be
readily separated. (at 53)
… Deference will usually
result where a tribunal is interpreting its own statute or statutes closely
connected to its function, with which it will have particular familiarity: Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Labour Relations
Board),
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 157, at para. 48; Toronto (City) Board of
Education v. O.S.S.T.F., District 15, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 487,
at para. 39. Deference may also be warranted where an administrative
tribunal has developed particular expertise in the application of a general
common law or civil law rule in relation to a specific statutory context: Toronto (City) v.
C.U.P.E.,
at para. 72. Adjudication in labour law remains a good example of the
relevance of this approach. … (at 54)
[12]
In
the case at bar, the very reasons that led Dawson J. to conclude that the
applicable standard was the now-defunct “patent unreasonableness”, lead me to
conclude that decisions of an Appeals Officer with respect to the definition
and application of the concept of “danger”, in subsection 122(1) of the Code
and of “normal condition of employment”, in paragraph 128(2)(b), - the two
provisions at issue in this appeal – are to be assessed with the deference
under the new “reasonableness standard”.
[13]
Dawson
J. having applied a test which has since been discarded by the Supreme Court,
my duty is to review, not the decision of the learned judge, but that of the
Appeals Officer, in light of the applicable standard, i.e. reasonableness. I do
not take that duty to mean, however, that I cannot rely on or refer to her
reasoning when it is persuasive independently of any standard of review.
The provisions at issue
CANADA LABOUR
CODE
PART II
Occupational Health
and Safety
Interpretation
Definitions
122.(1) In this
Part,
…
"danger"
«danger »
"danger"
means any existing or potential hazard or condition or any current or future
activity that could reasonably be expected to cause injury or illness to a
person exposed to it before the hazard or condition can be corrected, or the
activity altered, whether or not the injury or illness occurs immediately
after the exposure to the hazard, condition or activity, and includes any
exposure to a hazardous substance that is likely to result in a chronic
illness, in disease or in damage to the reproductive system;
No
refusal permitted in certain dangerous circumstances
128
(2) An employee may not, under this section, refuse to use or operate a
machine or thing, to work in a place or to perform an activity if
(a)
the refusal puts the life, health or safety of another person directly in
danger; or
(b)
the danger referred to in subsection (1) is a normal condition of employment.
CANADA POST
CORPORATION ACT
Mail Receptacles
Regulations
PART IV
Rural Mail Boxes
15. Mail may be delivered by means of deposit
in rural mail boxes and mailable matter may be collected from rural mail
boxes where the rural mail box is
(a) constructed in accordance with the
specifications set out in Schedule VI;
(b) placed outdoors at a location on a
rural mail route approved by the local postmaster; and
(c) located, erected and identified as
required by section 16.
16. A rural mail box
shall be
(a) located
along the right hand side of the road according to the courier’s line of
travel in a position where the courier can reach and service it from his
vehicle without impeding pedestrian or vehicular traffic;
(b) erected so
that
(i)
the box is securely attached to a fixed post or canti-lever arm,
(ii)
the bottom of the box is approximately 100 cm above the roadway,
(iii)
the box does not obstruct or obscure other boxes located nearby, and
(iv)
the box allows the ready delivery or collection of mail; and
(c) identified
by having the name of each boxholder printed in indelible lettering not less
than 2.5 cm high on the side of the box or on a name plate securely attached
to the box and facing towards the courier as he approaches the box in the
course of his usual travel route.
|
CODE CANADIEN DU
TRAVAIL
PARTIE II
Santé et sécurité au
travail
Définitions et
interprétation
Définitions
122. (1)
Les définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente partie.
(…)
danger »
"danger"
«danger
» Situation, tâche ou risque — existant ou éventuel — susceptible de causer
des blessures à une personne qui y est exposée, ou de la rendre malade — même
si ses effets sur l’intégrité physique ou la santé ne sont pas immédiats — ,
avant que, selon le cas, le risque soit écarté, la situation corrigée ou la
tâche modifiée. Est notamment visée toute exposition à une substance
dangereuse susceptible d’avoir des effets à long terme sur la santé ou le
système reproducteur.
Exception
128
(2) L’employé ne peut invoquer le présent article pour refuser d’utiliser ou
de faire fonctionner une machine ou une chose, de travailler dans un lieu ou
d’accomplir une tâche lorsque, selon le cas :
a) son refus met directement en danger la vie,
la santé ou la sécurité d’une autre personne;
b) le danger visé au paragraphe (1) constitue
une condition normale de son emploi.
LOI SUR LA SOCIÉTÉ
CANADIENNE DES POSTES
Règlement sur les
boîtes aux lettres
PARTIE IV
Boîtes aux
lettres rurales
15.
Une boîte aux lettres rurales peut servir au dépôt ou à la levée du courrier
si
a) elle est conforme aux exigences de l’annexe
VI;
b) elle est placée à l’extérieur, le long d’une
route rurale approuvée par le maître de poste local; et
c) elle est installée et identifiée
conformément à l’article 16.
16.
La boîte aux lettres rurale doit :
a) être installée du côté droit du chemin,
selon la direction prise par le facteur rural, à un endroit où celui-ci peut
l’atteindre et y prendre ou y déposer le courrier sans avoir à descendre de
sa voiture et sans entraver la circulation des piétons ou des autres
véhicules;
b) être installée de manière
(i) à
être assujettie solidement à un poteau fixe ou à une potence,
(ii) que
sa partie inférieure se trouve à environ 100 cm du sol,
(iii)
qu’elle n’obstrue ni ne cache les autres boîtes situées à proximité, et
(iv)
qu’il soit facile d’y laisser ou d’y prendre le courrier; et
c) être identifiée par le nom du propriétaire,
inscrit en caractères indélébiles d’au moins 2,5 cm de hauteur sur le côté de
la boîte ou sur une plaque fixée solidement à celui des côtés de la boîte qui
fait face au facteur lorsque ce dernier vient déposer ou recueillir le
courrier.
|
whether there is
“danger”
[14]
The
appellant argues that failure to train an employee on the mechanics of
effecting delivery through the passenger-side window does not in itself
constitute a danger. Since the Appeals Officer does not conclude in his reasons
that failure to train constitutes a danger, this argument is without merit in
the circumstances.
[15]
The
appellant argues, also, that where the methodology of effecting passenger-side
mail delivery is solely within the control of the employee, there is no “danger”
within the meaning of the Code.
[16]
The
Appeals Officer, at paragraphs 71 to 78, reviewed the case law on the
concept of “danger”. Relying more particularly on the decision of this Court in
Martin v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FCA
156 and that of Madam Justice Gauthier in Verville v. Canada (Correctional
Service), 2004 FC 767, he stated that the hazard or condition can be
existing or potential and the activity, current or future; that in this case
the hazards were potential in nature; that for a finding of danger, one must
ascertain in what circumstances the potential hazard could reasonably be
expected to cause injury and to determine that such circumstances will occur in
the future as a reasonable possibility (as opposed to a mere possibility); that
for a finding of danger, the determination to be made is whether it is more
likely than not that what the complainant is asserting will take place in the
future; that the hazard must be reasonably expected to cause injury before the
hazard can be corrected; and that it is not necessary to establish the precise
time when the hazard will occur, or that it occurs every time.
[17]
This
statement of the law is beyond reproach or is, at the least, reasonable in the Dunsmuir
sense.
[18]
The
Appeals Officer then proceeded to apply the law to the facts of the case. He
examined the argument that because of her existing back injury any danger the
respondent would experience was due to her own health situation. Relying on the
“reliable and credible” testimony of the respondent that she had an arthritic
condition in her back, as opposed to an on-going back problem, and relying on
the ergonomic reports prepared by Canada Post itself, he found at para. 105
that “… it is reasonable in the aforementioned circumstances to expect that
the hazard related to stretching and twisting in order to deliver rural mail to
[mail boxes] through the front passenger window of her vehicle could reasonably
be expected to cause injury to C. Pollard”.
[19]
This
conclusion is reasonable. It is well-articulated. It results in an acceptable
outcome.
[20]
Counsel
for Canada Post argued at the hearing that if training would have been suitable
to correct the hazard before an injury could occur, there cannot be a finding
of “danger” within the meaning of the Code. I can see no merit in this argument
in the circumstances of this case. Ms. Pollard had been pressing
Canada Post ever since she had been informed that she would have to revise her
method of delivery. She went through internal mechanisms in an attempt to
resolve her health and safety concerns. She was given no training at all. She
was informed that she would have to pay for a helper out of her own pocket. So
when, on November 24, 2004, she was instructed to make her mail deliveries from
the right shoulder of the roadway through the front passenger side window of
her vehicle, she immediately refused to work (see para. 3 to 12 of the Appeals
Officer’s reasons).
[21]
The
risk of danger became reality at that very moment. She did not have to face
that risk. An immediate recourse open to her at that time was to refuse to
work. Waiting for training was just too late.
whether a “normal
condition of employment”
[22]
Paragraph
128(2)(b) of the Code provides that no refusal to work is permitted if
the danger is a “normal condition of employment”. Canada Post submits that
delivery of mail to rural mail boxes through the passenger-side window is a
“normal condition of employment”.
[23]
The
Appeals Officer disposed of this argument at paragraph 113 of his reasons.
Relying on the decision of the Federal Court in Verville, which has
stated that a “normal” danger does not include “the method used to perform a
job”, he concluded that the danger which Ms. Pollard was facing did not result
from an essential characteristic of the job but from the methodology used.
[24]
Dawson J. expanded
on the Appeals Officer’s reasons:
[98] Canada
Post has not argued that Justice Gauthier was in error when she interpreted
paragraph 128(2)(b) to exclude from the concept of “normal condition of
employment” a risk that is not inherent, but rather depends upon the method
used to perform a job. I find no error in the appeals officer’s interpretation
of Justice Gauthier’s decision in Verville, cited above.
[99] Turning to
the application of that principle to the evidence before the appeals officer,
Ms. Marsh testified that, after she filed her injury report, Canada Post
provided her with a helper who sat in the passenger seat of her vehicle and
delivered mail out the front passenger-side window. This avoided all ergonomic
concerns raised by Ms. Pollard. There was also evidence that the use of
community mailboxes or right-hand drive delivery vehicles were alternate
methods of mail delivery that would avoid the ergonomic hazards.
[100] In
light of that evidence, it was not, in my view, patently unreasonable for the
appeals officer to find that the “danger” was not an essential characteristic
of rural mail delivery and therefore paragraph 128(2)(b) of the Code did
not apply. The “danger” arose from the methodology of requiring RSMCs to drive
on the right-hand side of the road, delivering mail through the front
passenger-side window without a helper.
[101]
Moreover, the evidence before the appeals officer established that, even
following Ms. Pollard’s refusal to work, her delivery route continued to
include a number of mailboxes that did not meet Canada Post’s specifications. I
have difficulty accepting that delivery to mailboxes that do not comply with
Canada Post’s own policies is a normal condition of a RSMC’s employment.
[25]
I
find that reasoning persuasive, independently of the standard of review applied
by Dawson J.
[26]
In
its factum and at the hearing, counsel for Canada Post relied on the Mail
Receptacles Regulations enacted under the Canada Post Corporation Act
(SOR/83-743). Neither the Appeals Officer nor Dawson J. referred to the
Regulations and I found nothing in the transcripts that alluded to them.
[27]
As
the argument goes, the mode of delivery having been prescribed by the Governor
in Council, that mode is a normal condition of employment.
[28]
I
see little merit in this argument.
[29]
The
argument supposes that sections 15 and 16 prescribe a method of delivery. They
do not. Section 15 only says that mail may be delivered by means of deposit in
rural mail boxes. Section 16 (a) only says where the boxes are to be
located, i.e. on the right-hand side of the road according to the courier’s
line of travel; it does not say how the courier is to access the boxes. For
Canada Post to argue that under section 16 delivery is to be made through the
passenger-side window, means that from the date of the Regulations (1983) to
the date (2004) when the “long standing practice” (Appeals Officer, para. 4) of
making delivery through the driver-side window was stopped, a “normal condition
of employment” was consistently ignored by Canada Post.
[30]
There
is no suggestion in the evidence that delivery from the passenger-side window
was considered by Canada Post at the time as a condition of employment, let
alone a normal condition of employment. Driving on the left shoulder is described
merely as a method used to deliver mail and no reference is ever made to
section 16 of the Regulations. In a letter sent to Ms. Pollard on June 20,
2004, Canada Post refers to driving on the wrong side of the road as an
“operating issue” (A.B. vol. 1, p. 201). To illustrate why the within matter
should be considered solely within the parameters of the circumstances as they
existed at the time Canada Post ceased to tolerate the driving on the wrong
side of the road, I note that as a footnote to paragraph 4 of his reasons, the
Appeals Officer defines the terms “deliver” or “delivery” in the context of
this case” (my emphasis) as including “placing mail … into mail boxes;
picking up mail in the box for delivery; and raising the flag on the mail box
…”. In another context, perhaps, delivering from the passenger-side window
might be described as being an essential characteristic of rural mail delivery
akin to placing and picking mail and raising the flag.
[31]
Under
these circumstances, it was reasonable for the Appeals Officer to conclude that
delivery from the passenger-side window was a method used to perform a job
within the meaning of the test, unchallenged by Canada Post, as set out in Verville.
His finding is an acceptable outcome which is defensible with regard to
both the circumstances of this case and the law.
Movement “solely within
the control of the employee”
[32]
The
appellant argues that the ergonomic movement necessary
to effect passenger-side mail delivery is solely within the carrier's control.
In its submission, there can be no "danger" because the respondent
can avoid any risk of injury by altering her own movements, which the appellant
suggests is a matter of "common sense". Accordingly, the appellant
also argues that there is no obligation to train an employee on
"common-sense" ergonomic movements, and that any such training would
have to be customized to each carrier's body type and particular
vehicle.
[33]
There
is no authority standing for the proposition that there
is no obligation to train employees on "common sense" ergonomic
movements. Canadian Railway Co. and
Tetley, [2001] C.L.C.A.O.D. No. 21 was cited by the appellant in
this regard. However, the decision in that case did not consider the issue of
training, since the Appeals Officer concluded that the hazard complained of
would be resolved in a very short time, before there was any reasonable chance
that an injury would materialize. Further, Canada Post's own internal study
recommended that the employer develop best ergonomic practices for delivering
mail to rural mail boxes, and should inform carriers of vehicle configurations
that would be more ergonomical. In light of these factors, the Appeals
Officer's conclusion that a danger existed despite the respondent's ability to
alter her movements was open to him as a matter of fact and law. The conclusion
was reasonable.
[34]
For
these reasons I would dismiss the appeal.
The Cross-Appeal :
procedural fairness
[35]
The
cross-appeal deals with the procedural fairness argument raised by Canada Post.
It is well-established that the content of procedural fairness is determined by
the courts in the circumstances of a given case. Principles developed with
respect to the standard of review apply to the end product, i.e. the decision
of the tribunal; they do not apply to the manner in which a tribunal
goes about making its decisions (see C.U.P.E. v. Ontario (Minister of
Labour),
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, at para. 102). It follows, as noted by my colleague John
M. Evans, The Role of Appellate Courts in Administrative Law, (2007) 20 Can. J. Admin. L.
& Prac. 1 at page 25, that
… an appeal court may only
intervene if satisfied that the reviewing judge had made a palpable and
overriding error in applying the duty of fairness to the particular facts, or
that some more general question of law was involved. …
[36]
Madam
Justice Dawson, after reciting various extracts of the transcripts, concluded
as follows:
With the
benefit of hindsight, it would have been prudent for Canada Post to adduce at
least some evidence about traffic safety. Nevertheless, by concluding only in
his final decision that the issue of traffic safety was properly before him,
without advising Canada Post of that conclusion and allowing it to adduce
evidence as to traffic safety, the appeals officer deprived Canada Post of the
opportunity to present its case fully and fairly. In so doing, the officer
breached the duty of procedural fairness that he owed to Canada Post.
[37]
I
find no palpable and overriding error in her conclusion. It was open to her, on
the evidence, to find that Canada Post had been denied the opportunity to
address the safety issue. It was within her discretion, having found that
procedural fairness had been breached, to order a redetermination of the issue.
(see Uniboard Surfaces Inc. v. Kronotex Fussboden GmbH, 2006
FCA 398)
[38]
I
would dismiss the cross-appeal.
Costs
[39]
In
view of the divided success, I would make no order as to costs.
“Robert Décary”
“I
agree.
J. Edgar Sexton J.A.”
“I
agree.
Karen Sharlow J.A.”