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T-1958-76
B. Keith Penner, Norman Cafik, Harry Assad and the Northwestern Ontario Municipal Association (Applicants)
v.
The Representation Commissioner for Canada (Respondent)
Trial Division, Thurlow A.C.J.—Ottawa, May 27 and 28, 1976.
Jurisdiction—Injunction—Applicants seeking to restrain respondent from preparing and transmitting draft representa tion order to Secretary of State until their objections to the Commission's report have been dealt with, and its legal effect determined in the Court of Appeal Electoral Boundaries Readjustment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-2, ss. 22, 23 Federal Court Act, ss. 2, 18, 28(3).
Applicants sought to restrain respondent from preparing, transmitting or otherwise dealing with a draft representation order, as defined under section 22 of the Electoral Boundaries Readjustment Act, until a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the Electoral Boundaries Commission for Ontario had been heard and disposed of.
Held, the application is dismissed; it is not directed against the report, but against an act to be done by respondent. But applicants' whole case depends entirely on the legal effect and validity of the decision of the Commission which is the subject of the section 28 application. Here, if this application is to succeed, it must involve at least some consideration of, as well as interference with, the validity of the Commission's decision. Thus, the application is in substance and fact a proceeding "in respect of" the decision within the meaning of section 28(3) of the Federal Court Act, and this Court is without jurisdiction. The effect of section 28(3) is that the Trial Division does not have jurisdiction to grant interlocutory relief, injunctive or otherwise, in situations where the jurisdiction to do so is invoked in aid or as an adjunct of a section 28 proceeding in the Court of Appeal. Even if the view of the effect of section 28(3) is broader than the provision warrants, it seems to apply where, as here, the only basis put forward for such interlocutory relief is the alleged invalidity of the order which is the subject of the section 28 application. The Trial Division lacks jurisdiction, and, further, assuming that an interlocutory injunction would not be an inappropriate form of relief to grant at the suit of members of the public in such a matter, to direct respondent not to do until some future time what he is directed by statute to do "forthwith" would be to substitute a different prescription created by the Court for that prescribed by statute, and the Court has no such authority.
MOTION.
COUNSEL:
John D. Richard, Q.C., and G. Fisk for
applicants.
J. Nesbitt and C. P. Hughes for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW A.C.J.: This is an application brought on what appears to be an originating notice of motion in the Trial Division for:
an Interlocutory Injunction restraining the Representation Commissioner for Canada from preparing, transmitting, or otherwise dealing with a draft Representation Order as defined under Section 22 of the Electoral Boundaries Readjustment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-2, until an Application made to The Federal Court of Appeal of even date herewith under the provisions of Section 28 of the Federal Court Act for review and setting aside of a decision or order of the Electoral Boundaries Commission for the Province of Ontario, is heard and disposed of.
An application by the first three named appli cants for prohibition directed to the respondent prohibiting him inter alia from "preparing and transmitting to the Secretary of State for Canada a representation order with respect to the said report", file T-1708-76, was dismissed on May 11th, 1976'. At that time the objections raised in the House of Commons to the report of the Elec toral Boundaries Commission for the Province of Ontario, which had been tabled in the House of Commons on February 27th, 1976, had not been disposed of by the Commission under section 21(1) of the Act. Since then the objections have been disposed of and a certified copy of the report as amended has been returned by the respondent to the Speaker of the House of Commons. Under section 22 it is now the duty of the respondent to "forthwith" prepare and transmit to the Secretary of State for Canada a draft representation order and, when this has been done, section 23, as
1 [1976] 2 F.C. 614.
amended by Statutes of Canada 1973-74, c. 23, s. 8, prescribes that:
23. Within five days after the receipt by the Secretary of State of the draft representation order, the Governor in Council shall by proclamation declare the draft representation order to be in force, effective upon the first dissolution of Parliament that occurs at least one year after the day on which that proclamation was issued; and upon the issue of the proclama tion the order has the force of law accordingly.
By the present application the applicants seek to restrain the respondent by injunction from carry ing out the duty imposed on him by section 22 until their objections to the Commission's report have been considered and its legal effect deter mined by the Court of Appeal.
Section 18 of the Federal Court Act provides that:
18. The Trial Division has exclusive original jurisdiction
(a) to issue an injunction, writ of certiorari, writ of prohibi tion, writ of mandamus or writ of quo warranto, or grant declaratory relief, against any federal board, commission or other tribunal; and
(b) to hear and determine any application or other proceed ing for relief in the nature of relief contemplated by para graph (a), including any proceeding brought against the Attorney General of Canada, to obtain relief against a federal board, commission or other tribunal.
The expression "federal board, commission or other tribunal" is defined in section 2 as meaning:
.. any body or any person or persons having, exercising or purporting to exercise jurisdiction or powers conferred by or under an Act of the Parliament of Canada, other than any such body constituted or established by or under a law of a province or any such person or persons appointed under or in accordance with a law of a province or under section 96 of The British North America Act, .867;
But by subsection 28(3);
28. (3) Where the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction under this section to hear and determine an application to review and set aside a decision or order, the Trial Division has no jurisdic tion to entertain any proceeding in respect of that decision or order.
The application in the Court of Appeal under section 28, referred to in the originating notice of the present application, is said to be directed against a decision or order of the Electoral Bound aries Commission for the Province of Ontario and the affidavit filed in support of the application
indicates that what is attacked is the report of the Commission. In the reasons for judgment on the prohibition application I expressed the view, to which I adhere, that the validity of the report could be the subject of a review under section 28.
On its face however the present application is not directed against the report. It is directed against an act to be done by the respondent. But the question whether that act must be carried out, and, indeed, the whole case of the applicants as well, are entirely dependent on the legal effect or validity of the decision of the Commission which is the subject of the application under section 28. In the circumstances the application for an order enjoining the Commission from carrying out the duty to follow or act upon the Commission's deci sion, if it is to succeed, appears to me to involve at least some consideration of the validity of the Commission's decision and to involve as well inter ference with the decision's effect. It seems to me, therefore, that the present application is in sub stance and in fact a proceeding "in respect of" the Commission's decision within the meaning of sub section 28(3) and that this division has no jurisdic tion to entertain it.
In my view the effect of subsection 28(3) is that the Trial Division does not have jurisdiction to give interlocutory relief by way of injunction or other wise in situations where the jurisdiction to grant such interlocutory relief is invoked in aid or as an adjunct of a proceeding in the Court of Appeal to review and set aside a decision or order under section 28. But even if this view of the effect of subsection 28(3) is broader than the provision warrants the subsection seems to me to apply where, as in the present instance, the only basis put forward for such interlocutory relief is the alleged invalidity of the order which is the subject of the section 28 application.
It was submitted in the course of argument that this question had already been resolved contrary to this view by the decision of Addy J. in C.ITR Radio Trois-Rivières Limitée v. Canada Labour
Relations Board (File No. T-965-75, unreported) 2 , but it does not appear to me that the particular point was raised or decided in that case.
I am accordingly of the opinion that the applica tion must fail for lack of jurisdiction in the Trial Division.
There is however a further point upon which the application appears to me to fail. Assuming that an interlocutory injunction would not be an inap propriate form of relief to grant at the suit of members of the public in a matter of this kind, I am of the opinion that in the present situation to direct the respondent not to do until some future time what the statute directs him to do "forth- with" would be to substitute for the statutory prescription a different prescription created by the Court. That, in my opinion, as I indicated in the decision in the earlier application, the Court has no authority to do.
The application is dismissed.
z [No written reasons for judgment distributed—Ed.]
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