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Citation:

Toronto Transit Commission v. Canada (National Revenue), 2010 FCA 33, [2011] 1 F.C.R. 478

A-203-09

A-203-09

2010 FCA 33

Toronto Transit Commission (Appellant)

v.

The Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)

Indexed as: Toronto Transit Commission v. Canada (National Revenue)

Federal Court of Appeal, Nadon, Evans and Stratas, JJ.A.—Toronto, January 18; Ottawa, January 28, 2010.

Pensions — Appeal from Tax Court of Canada decision dismissing appeal from determination that disability pay ments constituting remuneration for pensionable employment, subject to employer’s contribution under Canada Pension Plan (CPP) — Issues whether long-term disability pay ments under employer-funded benefits plan constituting “remuneration for the pensionable employment” within meaning of CPP, s. 9(1); whether employee on long-term disability in “employement” within meaning of CPP, s. 2(1) — Payments herein indemnity for wages lost by employees unable to perform services, not “remuneration” for purpose of CPP, s. 9(1) — Not “for” performance of services — Definition of “employment” under CPP, s. 2(1) reinforcing conclusion that CPP not including employees not actively employed — Employee not performing services not in “employment”, thus not in “pensionable employment” for purpose of s. 9(1) — “[E]mployment” involving activity, not just status of being employed — Appeal allowed.

Construction of Statutes — Appeal from Tax Court of Canada decision dismissing appeal from determination that disability payments constituting remuneration for pensionable employment — Use of “for” in Canada Pension Plan (CPP), s. 9(1) indicating remuneration connected to performance of services, different from use of “in respect of” in analogous Insurable Earnings and Collection of Premiums Regulations, s. 2(1) — When Parliament using different words in analogous provisions of related statutes, intending those words to have different meanings — Nothing in broader statutory context, CPP objectives to indicate that words in s. 9(1) not having most obvious meaning.

This was an appeal from a Tax Court of Canada decision dismissing the appellant’s appeal from a determination by the respondent that monthly disability payments constitute remuneration for pensionable employment and are subject to an employer’s contribution under the Canada Pension Plan (CPP).

Two of the appellant’s employees were in receipt of permanent disability benefits through the appellant’s plan. Although they were on personal leaves of absence and were transferred to “inactive” status, they remained employees of the appellant. In concluding that provisions of the CPP should be interpreted harmoniously with employment in surance and income tax statutory schemes, the Tax Court of Canada held that the employees were in “employment” during their leave of absence, and their disability benefits constituted “remuneration for the pensionable employment”.

At issue was (1) whether long-term disability payments under an employer-funded benefits plan constitute “remunera tion for the pensionable employment” within the meaning of subsection 9(1) of the CPP and (2) whether an employee on long-term disability is in “employment” within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the CPP.

Held, the appeal should be allowed.

(1) The Tax Court erred in its interpretation of the legislation. To qualify as “remuneration” for the purpose of subsection 9(1), disability payments must have been made to employees for the pensionable performance of services under a contract of service. The payments herein were in the nature of a partial indemnity for wages lost by the employees because they were unable to perform services under their contracts of service by reason of long-term disability. The payments were therefore not “for” the performance of services. The use of the word “for” in subsection 9(1) is different from the use of the broader expression “in respect of found in the analogous subsection 2(1) of the Insurable Earnings and Collection of Premiums Regulations, and indicates that the remuneration must be closely connected to the performance of services by employees. When Parliament uses different words in analogous provisions of related statutes, it intends the words to have different meanings. There is nothing in the broader statutory context or the objectives of the CPP to indicate that the words of subsec tion 9(1) do not have their most obvious meaning. It is for Parliament to decide whether the terms of the CPP should be amended to include employer-funded disability benefits within “remuneration”.

(2) The definition of “employment” under subsection 2(1) of the CPP reinforces the conclusion that the CPP does not include employees who are not actively employed. An employee who is not performing services is not in “employ ment”, and is thus not in “pensionable employment” for the purpose of subsection 9(1). In other words, “employment” involves an activity, and is not just the status of being employed under a contract of service. The respondent ar gued that paragraph 12(1)(b) of the CPP, which excludes from “pensionable salary and wages” income received by an employee from pensionable employment while in receipt of a disability pension, would not have been necessary if “employment” requires the performance of services. While there was some force in this argument, it was not sufficient to displace the most obvious meaning of the CPP’s definition of employment.

STATUTES AND REGULATIONS CITED

Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-8, ss. 2(1) “employer”, “employment”, 6(1) “pensionable employment”, 9(1) (as am. by S.C. 2004, c. 22, s. 15), 12(1) (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 30, s. 5; S.C. 2004, c. 22, s. 17(E)).

Employment Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23, s. 2(1) “employment”.

Income Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1, ss. 6(1)(f), 248(1) “employment”.

Insurable Earnings and Collection of Premiums Regulations, SOR/97-33, s. 2(1) (as am. by SOR/98-10, s. 1).

CASES CITED

distinguished:

Université Laval v. M.N.R., 2002 FCA 171, 300 N.R. 294; Bear v. Canada (Attorney General), 2003 FCA 40, [2003] 3 F.C. 456, [2003] 2 C.N.L.R. 21, 103 C.R.R. (2d) 1.

referred to:

Minister of National Revenue v. Visan, [1983] 1 F.C. 820, (1983), 144 D.L.R. (3d) 310, 83 CLLC 14,024 (C.A.); Canada (Attorney General) v. National Bank of Canada, 2003 FCA 242, [2004] CLLC 240-010.

    appeal from a Tax Court of Canada decision (2009 TCC 198) dismissing the appellant’s appeal from a determination by the respondent that monthly disability payments constitute remuneration for pensionable employment and are subject to an employer’s contri bution under the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-8. Appeal allowed.

APPEARANCES

Matthew G. Williams and Mark A. Barbour for appellant.

Laurent Bartleman and Donna A. Dorosh for respondent.

SOLICITORS OF RECORD

Thorsteinssons LLP, Toronto, for appellant.

Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.

    The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by

    Evans J.A.:

A.      INTRODUCTION

[1]     The question to be decided in this appeal is whether long-term disability benefits paid to employees of the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) under an employer-funded program are subject to an employer’s contribution under the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-8 (CPP). Liability to make an employer’s contribution is governed by subsection 9(1) [as am. by S.C. 2004, c. 22, s. 15] of the CPP. It provides that an employer must make an employer’s contribution for the year in which “remuneration for the pensionable employment is paid to the employee”. Two questions of interpretation arise from this provision.

[2]     First, do the disability benefits paid to the em ployees constitute “remuneration for the pensionable employment” within the meaning of subsection 9(1) of the CPP? Second, were the employees in question in “employment” as defined by subsection 2(1) of the CPP at a time when they were excused from performing services for the TTC because of their disabilities? Only if both questions are answered in the affirmative is the TTC liable to make an employer’s contribution.

[3]     This is an appeal by the TTC from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada: Toronto Transit Commission v. M.N.R., 2009 TCC 198. In this decision, Deputy Judge Weisman dismissed an appeal by the TTC from a determination by the Minister of National Revenue that the monthly disability payments constitute remuneration for pensionable employment and are subject to an employer’s contribution under the CPP.

[4]     The Judge concluded that provisions of the CPP should be interpreted harmoniously with those of related statutory schemes, namely, employment in surance and income tax. He held that, even though they were regarded as on a leave of absence and were not performing services because of their disability, the employees were in “employment” at that time, and the benefits paid to them constituted “remuneration for the pensionable employment”.

[5]     In my respectful opinion, the Judge erred in his interpretation of the legislation. Subsection 2(1) de fines “employment” as an activity: the performance of services under a contract of service. Subsection 9(1) provides that “remuneration” paid by an employer to an employee must be for the pensionable employment in order to require an employer’s contribution. The payments in this case were not for the pensionable performance of services but were, as the terms of the plans make clear, an indemnity for the wages lost by employees who could not work. I can find nothing in either the context of the provisions or the statutory ob jectives of the CPP to displace the most obvious meaning of its text. Accordingly, I would allow the appeal.

B.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND

[6]     The two TTC employees in question in this appeal, Hershell Green and Nancy Murphy, are in receipt of permanent disability benefits. Mr. Green, a unionized employee, commenced work for the TTC on October 18, 1979, and became disabled in 2005. His last day of work was June 18, 2005, and he qualified for long-term benefits under the union plan on April 14, 2006. Ms. Murphy started work with the TTC on April 20, 1986, and became disabled in 2003. Her last day of work was August 4, 2003. She is a non-unionized employee and qualified for long-term disability benefits under the staff plan on April 6, 2004.

[7]     The TTC fully funds both plans. The terms of the union plan are negotiated by the TTC and the em ployees’ bargaining agent, and form part of the collective agreement. The staff plan was put in place unilaterally by the TTC and is included in employees’ contracts of employment.

[8]     The TTC has contracted with Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (Sun Life) to administer the plans as agent of the TTC, not as an insurer. Under this agreement, Sun Life determines claimants’ eligibility and the amount of any payments, and makes the pay ments, for which the TTC reimburses it. The TTC retains ultimate control over the disability income plans and, when a dispute with an employee arises, makes the final decisions on such issues as employees’ eligibility, their right to receive benefits and the amount owing.

[9]     The terms of the plans relevant to this appeal are broadly similar. Both entitle employees to a percentage of their wages or salary after exhausting other prescribed benefits and vacation pay. Employees are only eligible for long-term disability after completing a specified period of time in active employment. Payments cease at age 65 or on retirement. Disability benefits are stated to be fully taxable.

[10]     Employees on long-term disability are transferred to “inactive” status and new employees may be hired to replace them. Nonetheless, they remain employees of the TTC, but on personal leaves of absence. They also retain certain benefits, including seniority, health and dental benefits, and transportation privileges. In addi tion, TTC disability benefits are subject to a cost of living adjustment.

C.    LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK

[11]     Subsection 2(1) of the CPP defines “employer” and “employment” for the purposes of the Act:

Definitions

  2. (1) ...

“employer” means a person liable to pay salary, wages or other remuneration for services performed in employment ...

“employment” means the performance of ser vices under an express or implied contract of service or apprenticeship, and includes the tenure of an office;

[12]     Subsection 6(1) defines categories of “pension able employment”, each of which involves “employment”:

Pensionable employment

6. (1) Pensionable employement is

(a) employment in Canada that is not excepted employment;

(b) employment in Canada under Her Majesty in right of Canada that is not excepted employment; or

(c) employment included in pensionable employment by a regulation made under section 7.

[13]     Subsection 9(1) is the “charging section” which imposes on employers a duty to make an employer’s contribution, and governs the calculation of the amount of the contribution. However, since the amount is not relevant to this appeal, I have not included those pro visions of the subsection:

Amount of employer’s contribution

    9. (1) Every employer shall, in respect of each employee employed by the employer in pen sionable employment, make an employer’s contribution for the year in which remuneration for the pensionable employment is paid to the employee ...

D.  ISSUES AND ANALYSIS

[14]     It is common ground that on an appeal from a decision of the Tax Court correctness is the standard of review of questions of law. This appeal turns exclusively on a question of law: the interpretation of the CPP. The standard of review is therefore correctness.

Issue 1: Do long-term disability payments under an employer-funded benefits plan constitute “remuneration for the pensionable employment” within the meaning of subsection 9(1)?

[15]     Statutes must be interpreted by reference to their text, context and purpose, and in a manner that strives for harmony among the constitutive elements of the scheme, and between those elements and the scheme as a whole. I turn first to the text of the CPP.

(i) statutory text

[16]     “Remuneration” is not defined in the CPP. The categories of “pensionable employment” are set out in subsection 6(1). The category relevant to the present case is found in paragraph 6(1)(a): “employment in Canada that is not excepted employment.” Since “pen sionable employment” is a subset of “employment” it is also necessary to determine the meaning of “employ ment”. This is defined in subsection 2(1), which for convenience I set out again:

    2. (1) ...

“employment” means the performance of services under an express or implied contract of service or apprenticeship, and includes the tenure of an office;

[17]     Thus, to qualify as “remuneration” for the purpose of subsection 9(1), disability payments must have been made to employees for the pensionable performance of services under a contract of service. In my view, the payments by the TTC were in the nature of a partial indemnity for wages or salary lost by the employees because they were unable to perform services under their contracts of service by reason of long-term disability: see Minister of National Revenue v. Visan, [1983] 1 F.C. 820 (C.A.), at page 829. The benefits payments were therefore not “for” the performance of services. I would only add by way of parenthesis that in reaching this conclusion I have attached no significance to the fact that the payments to the employees were made by Sun Life because they were made on behalf of, and reimbursed by, the TTC.

[18]     In my opinion, the word “for” in subsection 9(1) indicates that the remuneration must be closely con nected to the performance of services by employees. It is not enough that either the payments were made only to employees who had performed services at one time under their contracts, or the TTC’s duty to pay benefits arose out of a contract of employment.

[19]     On the other hand, I have little doubt that a bonus paid in one year in respect of services rendered in the previous year would constitute “remuneration” in the year of payment, in respect of which an employer’s contribution would be payable. I would also expect vacation pay to be treated as part of an employee’s “remuneration” for the performance of services. For instance, an employee is normally entitled on termination to pay in lieu of vacation not taken, and the number of weeks of vacation pay is also commonly linked to the length of an employee’s employment. A short vacation break from work does not mean that an employee ceases to be an active employee.

[20]     The wording of subsection 9(1) of the CPP is different from the analogous subsection 2(1) [as am. by SOR/98-10, s. 1] of the Insurable Earnings and Collection of Premiums Regulations, SOR/97-33, issued in connection with the Employment Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23. It provides:

    2. (1) For the purposes of the definition “insurable earnings” in subsection 2(1) of the Act and for the purposes of these Regulations, the total amount of earnings that an insured person has from insurable employment is

(a) the total of all amounts, whether wholly or partly pecuniary, received or enjoyed by the insured person that are paid to the person by the person’s employer in respect of that employment ... [Emphasis added.]

[21]     This provision has been considered in several cases decided by this Court where payments have been made to employees at a time when they were not per forming services. It has been held that benefits paid by an employer under a wage loss indemnity plan may constitute “insurable earnings” for employment insur ance purposes, even though no services were being performed.

[22]     Thus, for example, in Université Laval v. M.N.R., 2002 FCA 171, 300 N.R. 294, the Court concluded that payments made to employees under a short term, employer-funded wage loss indemnity plan constituted “insurable earnings”. However, writing for the Court, Décary J.A. noted (at paragraph 15) that he had under scored the words “in respect of such employment” when reproducing the text of subsection 2(1) of the Regulations, in order “to point out that the courts have consistently held that the expression “‘in respect of’”, “à l’égard de”, is particularly broad.” See also Canada (Attorney General) v. National Bank of Canada, 2003 FCA 242, [2004] CLLC 240-010, at paragraph 3.

[23]     Consequently, in my opinion, this decision is of limited assistance to the Minister in the present case, where Parliament has indicated through its use of the word “for”, rather than “in respect of”, that a close connection must exist between the payment and the performance of services.

(ii) context

[24]     The Minister argues that the employment insur ance scheme and the CPP are related and that provisions of one should be interpreted similarly to correspond ing provisions of the other. And, as noted above, since disability payments made by employers to indemnify employees unable to work have been found to be “in surable earnings” for employment insurance purposes, similar payments should be found to be “remuneration” for the purpose of the CPP.

[25]     I do not agree. It is difficult to avoid the con clusion that, when Parliament uses different words in analogous provisions of related statutes, it intends the words to have different meanings. Indeed, to the extent that the contextual argument is based on the related nature of the two schemes, the different wording of the relevant provisions seems to me to reinforce the argu ment based on the text of subsection 9(1) of the CPP.

(iii) statutory purpose

[26]     Counsel for the Minister also argued that it would be inconsistent with the purpose of the CPP to inter pret subsection 9(1) so narrowly as to exclude from “remuneration” the disability benefits paid in this case. He relied on the following statement by Strayer J.A. when writing for the Court in Bear v. Canada (Attorney General), 2003 FCA 40, [2003] 3 F.C. 456 [Bear], at paragraph 7:

It is equally useful to note that the CPP was deliberately designed as a universal, mandatory, pension scheme to which, with few exceptions, anyone 18 years of age or over would have to contribute if they had taxable income.

[27]     It is agreed that the disability benefits paid to employees by the TTC are taxable in the hands of the recipients, apparently as employment income under paragraph 6(1)(f) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1. However, the issue in Bear was very different from that in the present case. It concerned a challenge to the constitutional validity of a statutory amendment which removed the former exclusion from the CPP of Indians whose income arose from employ ment on a reserve and was therefore non-taxable. The Court rejected the argument that the amendment was unconstitutional because it was not retroactive.

[28]     In these circumstances, I cannot regard Strayer J.A.’s explanation of the purpose of the CPP as having much bearing on the particular issue before us. The question in the present case is whether the purpose of the CPP is to provide a regular pension to “inactive” employees in receipt of long-term disability benefits from their employer, as well as to those actively engaged in the workforce, and thus to require an employer’s contribution in respect of employees providing no services to the employer because of their disability.

[29]     The CPP contains no objectives clause, and its long title, included below, provides little guidance:

An Act to establish a comprehensive program of old age pensions and supplementary benefits in Canada payable to and in respect of contributors

(iv) conclusion

[30]     I can find nothing in either the broader statutory context or the objectives of the CPP to indicate that the words of subsection 9(1) do not have their most obvious, or “plain and ordinary” meaning. It is for Parliament to decide whether the terms of the CPP, as inter preted, should be amended to include employer-funded disability benefits within “remuneration” and thus to require an employer to pay an employer’s contribution on them.

Issue 2: Is an employee on long-term disability in “employment” within the meaning of subsection 2(1) of the CPP?

[31]     My determination of the first issue is sufficient to dispose of this appeal. Nonetheless, the definition of “employment” reinforces the conclusion that the CPP does not include employees who are not actively employed. Subsection 2(1) provides:

    2. (1) ...

“employment” means the performance of services under an express or implied contract of service or apprenticeship, and includes the tenure of an office;

[32]     The most obvious meaning of this provision is that an employee who is not performing services (because of a long-term disability, for example) is not in “employment”, and is thus not in “pensionable employ ment” for the purpose of subsection 9(1).

[33]     In other words, “employment” involves an activity, not just the status or position of being employed under a contract of service. In this respect, the contrast with the definition of “employment” in the Income Tax Act [in subsection 248(1)] is striking. It provides:

Definitions

248. (1) ...

“employment” means the position of an indi vidual in the service of some other person (including Her Majesty or a foreign state or sovereign) ...

[34]     The definition of “employment” in the Employment Insurance Act [in subsection 2(1)] is in similar vein:

Definitions

2. (1) ...

employment” means the act of employing or the state of being employed; [Emphasis added.]

[35]     Counsel for the Minister argued that subsection 12(1) [as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 30, s. 5; S.C. 2004, c. 22, s. 17(E)] of the CPP indicates that “employment” is not limited to employees’ active per formance of services. Paragraph 12(1)(b) excludes from “pensionable salary and wages” income received by an employee from pensionable employment while in receipt of a disability pension under the CPP or a pro vincial plan. It is unlikely, he said, that such employees would be performing services under their contracts of employment. If “employment” requires the performance of services, he submitted, paragraph 12(1)(b) would not have been necessary. Statutory provisions are presumed not to be redundant.

[36]     While there is some force in this argument, I do not regard it as sufficient to displace the most obvious meaning of the CPP’s definition of employment. For example, some provincial plans may provide pensions to persons who are not totally prevented by their dis ability from being actively engaged in employment. Statutory provisions may also be included in a complex statutory scheme to remove doubt on a particular issue.

[37]     As for the argument that subsection 12(1) incorporates the Income Tax Act and its definitions into the Plan, I would note that this is only for the purpose of computing a person’s income for the year from pensionable employment. The Income Tax Act does not determine whether the person was in pension able employment; this is a matter for the CPP itself.

E.    CONCLUSIONS

[38]     For these reasons, I would allow the appeal with costs in this Court.

    Nadon J.A.: I agree.

    Stratas J.A.: I agree.

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