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T-2327-76
The Queen in right of Canada (Plaintiff) v.
James M. Livingston and J. Michael Tonner (Defendants)
Trial Division, Addy J.—Ottawa, June 18 and 19, 1976.
Aeronautics—Jurisdiction—Injunction--Agreement ratified between Air Traffic Control Association and plaintiff Executive of Association purporting to declare ratification vote invalid Strike vote duly called Executive intending to call strike if vote favourable Plaintiff seeking to restrain defendants and controllers from striking—Federal Court Act, s. 17(4)—Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, ss. 18, 20-22, 92, 96(5), 98(1)(a),(2), 101-104.
An agreement was entered into between the Air Traffic Control Association and plaintiff, was executed and was rati fied, though defendants argued that there was not the confir mation in writing required by section 2 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act. Subsequently, the executive of the Asso ciation purported to declare the ratification vote invalid and to require another vote based solely on the resignation of the Commissioner appointed to inquire into bilingual air traffic control. A strike vote was duly and regularly called, and the executive intended to call a strike within 48 hours. Defendants claimed that there was every expectation of such a vote. Plaintiffs sought to restrain defendants and controllers employed by the Ministry of Transport from striking.
Held, an interlocutory injunction quia timet is granted until June 28, 1976. As to whether, by reason of powers given the Public Service Staff Relations Board, the Conciliation Board and the Chief Adjudicator under the Public Service Staff Relations Act, this Court has jurisdiction, if the allegations were established, and defendants were to strike, such action would be unlawful by virtue of section 101 of the Act, and in contravention of defendants' general duties as servants of the Crown. A right of action would lie against them for damages, and for that reason, injunction would lie. Where a superior court of legal and equitable jurisdiction has the right to award damages, it generally possesses the required corollary jurisdic tion to restrain the occurrence of the acts causing or likely to cause such damages.
The agreement was in effect from May 31, 1976; there was written ratification. Even if the executive were empowered to declare the vote invalid (which power, based solely on an ex post facto occurrence, totally unrelated to either the procedure or subject matter of the vote, would be strange and undemo cratic) it would be inoperative at law in so far as an employer is
concerned, in the face of a signed and ratified agreement, for, in effect it would be purporting to give the employees' associa tion the right to unilaterally rescind the contract without reference to its terms. Thus, the case falls within sections 101 and 102 of the Act. Grave and irreparable harm will be caused Canadian and foreign travellers and business, and possibly, Canada's reputation. Conversely, as defendants' reason for calling the strike was nothing more than concern for public safety, there is no evidence of any harm being caused them as controllers; the status quo from a safety standpoint will exist in any event until sometime after the end of the present agree ment. Should public safety be endangered, defendants could only be affected as members of the public. And, air traffic safety policy is a direct Government responsibility. Finally, the safety motive is undoubtedly an artificial one; the Association might well be attempting to do indirectly what it cannot do directly. Unfortunately for it the safety issue is the responsibili ty of government.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
A. M. Garneau, M. Kelen and P. Chodos for plaintiff.
J. P. Nelligan, Q.C., and J. Johnson for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
plaintiff.
Nelligan/Power, Ottawa, for defendants.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
ADDY J.: I have carefully reviewed the evidence presented on behalf of both parties and considered the law and the arguments submitted by counsel. I would like at this stage to deal with a preliminary matter before considering the evidence. This matter is a question of law which was not men tioned or argued by counsel before me yesterday and which nevertheless when I went into the con siderations affecting this case caused me some concern. Briefly put, it is whether by reason of the various powers given the Public Service Staff Relations Board, the Conciliation Board and the Chief Adjudicator under the Act, this Court might be deprived of any jurisdiction it might otherwise have in this matter—by reason of subsection (4), section 17 of the Federal Court Act or otherwise.
I reviewed the Public Service Staff Relations Act last evening albeit in a somewhat cursory fashion due to the urgency of this matter, with this particular problem in mind. The pertinent sections appear to be sections 18 and 103 as to the powers of the Board, sections 98(1)(a), 92 and 96(5) as to the powers of the Chief Adjudicator. These sec tions as well as the sections of the Federal Court Act granting general jurisdiction to this Court must of course be read in the light of the fact that this Court does not as in the case of superior courts of the provinces possess general common law supervisory powers or any powers that are not provided by statutes, or any jurisdiction that is not provided by statute.
Section 18 when taken by itself might appear to be broad enough to encompass powers of an injunctive nature but it is trite that a section in any statute must never be read by itself but in the context of the whole Act. When read with sections 20, 21 and 22 it cannot, in my view at least, be taken to encompass the present situation. As to section 103, although it gives the Board the power to make a declaratory order it does not give the right to make an executory order and neither in this section nor anywhere else in the Act could I find any power in the Board to enforce such an order by contempt proceedings or executory pro ceedings or otherwise.
The provisions of section 104 making a contra vention of both sections 101 and 102 an offence punishable on summary conviction by prison or fine are no substitute for nor can they be taken as ousting any civil injunctive jurisdiction which might exist otherwise, as criminal and civil pro ceedings are different in nature.
As to section 98(1)(a) and 98(2) it appears to me that any obligations of the defendants in the case at bar to refrain from striking, if such obliga tions do exist, would not arise out of the collective agreement as such in the sense that they are not directly or indirectly related to its specific provi sions, but are collateral thereto and would arise from the mere existence of the agreement irrespec tive of its terms.
As to the jurisdiction of this Court to hear the action as instituted by the plaintiff, I find that if the allegations of fact were established and if the defendants took a strike action as proposed, such actions would be unlawful by reason of section 101 and would be in contravention of their general duties as servants of the Crown and a legal right of action would lie against them for damages caused the Crown by reason thereof. For that reason the equitable remedy of injunction would lie to restrain such damages. Where a superior court of both legal and equitable jurisdiction, such as the Federal Court of Canada possesses the right to award damages, it generally speaking, possesses the required corollary jurisdiction of restraining the occurrence or recurrence of the acts causing or likely to cause such damages.
In saying this I do consider the fact that in so far as section 101 is concerned or in other words the second part of the injunction as claimed, the relief requested amounts in effect to a mandatory injunction, since an order to refrain from ceasing to work is in effect a positive mandatory order to work. As stated previously the above legal con siderations, although not argued, did give me some concern, but I did come to the conclusion that in the circumstances of this case the Court did have jurisdiction.
Dealing now with the questions of fact: except as may be required in order to understand my reasons, it is not my intention to review the facts which were ably and extensively referred to and argued yesterday by counsel. I make, however, the following findings of fact: an agreement was entered into between the duly authorized repre sentatives of the Air Traffic Control Association on behalf of the members thereof and the repre sentatives of the plaintiff. This agreement was in writing and was duly executed by the representa tives of both parties, subject only to a favourable ratification vote of the membership of the Associa tion. This evidence is in fact uncontradicted. The ratification vote took place and in fact favoured the ratification. This ratification is not only referred to in the affidavit submitted on behalf of the plaintiff, but is also confirmed in the affidavit
of Mr. Livingston, the President of the Association and one of the defendants herein, which was sworn to yesterday and filed at the hearing yesterday afternoon.
In paragraph 13 of this affidavit Mr. Livingston states and I quote:
Following the vote which was held on May 31st I made a statement to the press saying that the Canadian Air Traffic Control Association voted in favour of ratifying Treasury Board's revised offer of settlement of the contract dispute.
On examining the agreement itself I find at law that except as to ratification it complies in every way with the definition of a collective agreement as contained in section 2 of the Act.
Counsel for the defendants argued that although there was a vote in favour of the ratification, there was no confirmation in writing to the plaintiff of such ratification, and that such confirmation is required pursuant to the provisions of section 2. The agreement reads as follows and again I quote:
Subject to the ratification by the membership, the collective agreement between the parties dated August 22, 1974, subject to the express provisions set out below shall be deemed to have continued in force until May 31, 1976, and shall be renewed June 1, 1976, amended by substituting the clauses agreed upon between the parties as set out below:
And the clauses are set out below.
The duly executed contract itself provides in writing, as I have just read, only that it is subject to ratification by the membership and such ratifi cation has in fact occurred. The express condition outlined in the contract has been fulfilled and I am not of the view that in such circumstances, the law, and more particularly section 2 of the Act, requires in addition that the employer be advised in writing of the ratification.
In any event, even if the fact of ratification must be communicated in writing I experience no dif ficulty in finding that the letter of the 11th of June 1976 from the defendant Livingston as President of the Association to Mr. P. V. Dawson as repre sentative of the employees does constitute such written notification. The letter states in part and again I quote from the second paragraph:
Since the ratification vote announced on May 31, 1976 was based among other things on Mr. John Keenan's appointment
as the Commissioner of Inquiry, and Mr. Keenan has since resigned that appointment, the CATCA National Council has declared that vote invalid.
I can attribute no other reasonable interpretation to the meaning of that paragraph but that the ratification vote of the 31st of May 1976 in fact approved and ratified—did in fact approve and ratify the contract. In any event, both parties had apparently in their evidence supplied the same interpretation as Mr. Livingston himself in para graph 13 which I have just quoted stated and I repeat again that he made a statement to the press to the effect that the Association had, and I quote:
... voted in favour of ratifying the Treasury Board's revised offer of settlement.
It is to be noted also that the statement was made to the press and obviously for the purpose of publication not only to the plaintiff but to the public at large. Since the letter refers to the state ment made to the press on that day it incorporates the statement itself by reference. It is also interest ing to note that what the defendant Livingston referred to in yesterday's affidavit as the "Treas- ury Board's revised offer of settlement" was in fact the actual agreement executed on behalf of both parties and not a mere offer of settlement.
I therefore find that the agreement was in full force and effect from the 31st of May 1976.
The evidence also shows that, when the agree ment was executed and ratified, neither the ques tion of the existence of the special commission nor the nomination of Mr. Keenan was made a term or condition of either the agreement or of the ratifi cation vote. The executive of the Association after Mr. Keenan's resignation as Commissioner pur ported to declare the ratification vote invalid and to require another vote on the question of ratifica tion. Contrary to the argument advanced by coun sel for the defendants the grounds of such a decla ration of invalidity were not any irregularity in the voting or in any matter leading up to the vote itself, nor any alleged previous action or misrepre sentation of any representative of the plaintiff, but the sole grounds are clearly and simply and unequivocally stated as being the resignation of Mr. Keenan, an event which happened some seven days after ratification, i.e. after the ratification vote was announced. There is not the slightest
suggestion in the evidence that the plaintiff was in any way instrumental in bringing about this resignation.
As to the power of the National Council or executive of the Association to declare the vote invalid as it purported to do at its meeting of the 7th of June, no authority was quoted from the rules or by-laws of the Association purporting to grant such a power. In so far as the Association itself is concerned, it would be strange indeed if any such authority did exist which would allow its executive to declare a vote which is in all respects a proper one, as invalid on the sole basis of an occurrence ex post facto, totally unrelated to either the procedure at the time of the vote or the subject matter of the vote. However, if such a power did exist in the executive, and I would like to repeat that it would be a very strange and glaringly undemocratic one, by by-law or other wise, it would be completely inoperative at law in so far as an employer is concerned where, as in the present case, a collective agreement has been signed and duly ratified, for it would in effect be purporting to give the employees' association the right to unilaterally and without reference to the terms of a legal contract, rescind that contract. The case therefore falls squarely within the provi sions of sections 101 and 102 of the Act.
The following facts are also clear and undisput ed: one, a strike vote has been duly and regularly called and the results will be announced around noon today. Two, if the vote is favourable to a strike it is the firm intention of the executive to call a strike within 48 hours or possibly earlier. Three, according to the defendants there is every expectation that the vote will overwhelmingly favour a strike.
As to the balance of convenience, which is a matter which must also be considered even at this stage of the proceedings, grave and irreparable harm will be caused the members of the general public in Canada and to many businesses who rely on air transport as well as to foreigners travelling in Canada and foreign businesses dealing with Canadians. Harm will also be caused to the repu tation of Canada, or might possibly be caused to the reputation of Canada in the field of air trans portation due to these factors and due also, among
other things, to the responsibility assumed by this country in the control of the air traffic in the Western Atlantic air space.
On the other hand, since the only reason for the intended strike has been repeatedly declared to be a concern for public safety and nothing else, according to the evidence before me, should such a situation in fact exist there is no evidence whatso ever of any harm being caused the defendants in their capacity or employment as air traffic con trollers. There is also uncontradicted evidence that the status quo from a safety standpoint will exist in any event, or might very well exist in any event until sometime after the term of the present collec tive agreement has expired. It seems very clear that even should their worst fears be realized and the safety of the public in fact be endangered, they could not be affected except as members of the general public. The policy regarding general safety in air traffic in this country is the direct responsi bility of government.
It is therefore clear on the evidence submitted before me that the plaintiff has on the facts and the law established a prima facie right to the relief claimed in the notice of motion.
Injunction, however, being a discretionary power and equitable remedy, it has often been stated that a party seeking this remedy must come into the Court with its hands clean. Such is undoubtedly the case here in so far as the evidence before me is concerned. But in deciding on the equities between the parties and in coming to the conclusion wheth er the jurisdiction which I now feel I have, should in fact be exercised, the question of the motives and the true intentions of both parties might be of some relevance, including to some extent the motives and intentions of the defendants. Safety for the public has been announced as the sole reason for the proposed strike, all other factors having been settled satisfactorily. When one con siders the bald fact of the status quo undertaking on behalf of Government which exists at the present time, it is very difficult, to say the least, for me to accept that the sole motive of all of the members of the Association favouring this strike vote at the present time and risking the possible loss of employment and of regular pay for what
might turn out to be an extended period, that the sole motive is their altruistic concern for the safety of the public who might be landing in Quebec some one year hence.
This is without the slightest doubt in my mind an artificial motive as it would be completely illogical to act in this manner for the very obvious reason I have given. When one considers the vital position of Quebec in the manner of trans-Canada as well as intercontinental air traffic, it is evident that a much more logical and cogent motive would be the fear of loss of opportunities for advance ment for unilingual controllers. It seems equally obvious that the Official Languages Act would prove an insurmountable obstacle for any such motive to be invoked, and that the Association might well be attempting to do indirectly what it cannot do directly, but unfortunately for it the question of safety, as I stated before, that is, the policy regarding public safety as such is not their responsibility, but the responsibility of Govern ment.
It is obvious from my remarks that I am grant ing the injunction and its duration will be con sidered in view of what Mr. Nelligan stated yester day, the fact that he wanted further opportunity to present other evidence at a later date to prepare his case more fully and to argue his points. I will, of course, treat this order as an interim one and give the defendants the right to cross-examine, if they so desire, under the affidavits submitted by the plaintiff or to offer or submit other evidence at another time before this Tribunal.
There is one more matter I would like to deal with and it was also of concern to me, but I overcame that concern in reading the statement, the undertaking submitted by counsel on behalf of the Crown. It has been, unfortunately, in this country for some years the habit of government, and I am not only referring to the federal govern ment, but the municipal governments and the pro vincial governments, to constantly and perhaps without thinking too much of the consequences, rush to the tribunals for relief by injunctive proce dures and then if the injunction is disregarded to do nothing about it. That accomplishes absolutely nothing but to bring into disrepute the courts and tribunals concerned and make members of the
general public believe that a court order is some thing that as a matter of course can be disregard ed. Fortunately it seems that this particular trend has been and is being stopped, both by executive action and by repeated admonitions of the courts. As a result of certain decisions and I believe to some extent as a result of one from my brother, Mr. Justice Cattanach, counsel representing gov ernments have, in certain cases, furnished under takings. I read the following undertaking which I did take into consideration because in granting an injunction a court must always consider whether its order will be futile or whether it will be used by the person requesting it.
The undertaking reads as follows:
An application is to be made on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen on June 18, 1976, under Rule 469 of the Federal Court Rules and General Orders to obtain an interlocutory injunction to restrain the above-named Defendants and Air Traffic Con trollers employed with the Ministry of Transport from with drawing their services in contravention of section 101(2)(a) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35.
This will serve as a formal undertaking that, should the Court see fit to grant the requested interlocutory injunction, that the Deputy Attorney General of Canada on behalf of Her Majesty will take all necessary steps to facilitate the enforce ment of the said injunctive order.
With those considerations in mind I grant the substantive portion of the motion. I will, however, amend the substantive part of a motion to include—I see it has been included. Now, I have a suggestion to make to counsel and since this matter seems to be of great importance and great urgency I am suggesting to Mr. Nelligan and I don't know whether it meets with his approval or not, but instead of having another hearing on this matter within 10 days, that we have the trial within 10 days. We can set June 28th for the trial of this action and we can, if counsel consent, consider the affidavits submitted as the pleadings, make an order dispensing with examination for discovery or other discovery and get on with the case. Otherwise, of course, if this injunction is adjourned to a further hearing of an interlocutory motion to continue it until trial, it will mean an extra proceeding and I don't think from what has been stated to me so far that the facts would be so difficult. It will be mostly a question of law that will be argued, I believe.
Do you wish some time to consider that?
MR. NELLIGAN: I suggested that very same thing and I have a statement of defence here and I can serve it and the pleadings are then complete and I am prepared to go forward on the 28th of June.
HIS LORDSHIP: That is fine. Do you consent to that, Mr. Garneau?
MR. GARNEAU: Yes, I would, My Lord.
HIS LORDSHIP: Then this injunction which I will read in open court to make sure that there is no misunderstanding as to its terms shall be in full force and effect subject to any further order of this Court until 10:30 a.m. on the 28th of June. That is not this coming Monday but is a week from Monday.
The operative parts of the injunction which takes effect immediately is as follows:
THIS COURT DOTH GRANT AN INTERLOCUTO RY INJUNCTION quia timet enjoining and restraining the defendants and each of them and their agents, servants and representatives or any person or persons acting under their instructions or any of them or anyone having knowledge of this order from the date of this order until the trial of this action from instructing, counselling ..
and I wonder about the trial of this action, and perhaps I should take that out, Mr. Nelligan. It will be until a further order—until 10:30 a.m. on the 28th or any further order of this Court.
MR. NELLIGAN: Very well, My Lord.
HIS LORDSHIP: ... counselling or advising Air Traffic Controllers employed with the Ministry of Transport who are subject to a collective agree ment dated May 28, 1976, from withdrawing their services in contravention of section 101(2)(a) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35.
AND THIS COURT DOTH GRANT AN INTER LOCUTORY INJUNCTION quia timet enjoining and restraining the defendants and any Air Traffic Controllers employed with the Ministry of Trans port who are subject to a collective agreement dated May 28, 1976, and who have knowledge of this Order from withdrawing their services in con-
travention of section 101(2)(a) of the Public Ser vice Staff Relations Act.
Is there any question about the text of this, Mr. Nelligan?
MR. NELLIGAN: In view of the fact that my friend has given me the advance draft copy, My Lord, I have made the amendment with regard to the date, and I can assure Your Lordship that we have the text and we can obtain the formal text in due course from the Registrar and it is not neces sary to serve it on anyone here today.
HIS LORDSHIP: Then at the suggestion of coun sel for the defendants, who is showing his usual co-operation with the Court, there will be an order exempting service of this order on both defendants; is that correct?
MR. NELLIGAN: Yes, My Lord, they are both in Court.
HIS LORDSHIP: Thank you. —Adjournment.
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