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A-690-76
Gilles Marchand and Stéphane Larocque (Applicants)
v.
Public Service Staff Relations Board and Patrice Garant (Respondents)
and
The Queen for the Treasury Board as represented by the Attorney General of Canada (Mis - en- cause)
Court of Appeal, Pratte and Le Dain JJ. and Hyde D.J.—Montreal, April 20, 1977.
Judicial review — Public Service — Interpretation of col lective agreement — Whether adjudicator erred in law in holding employees not entitled to reimbursement for meals — Adjudicator's decision set aside — Federal Court Act, s. 28.
A collective agreement between the applicant postal workers and their employer provided for reimbursement for meals when an employee was required to work more than two hours' overtime on a regular work day. The adjudicator rejected the applicants' claim for such payment on the ground that the overtime did not follow immediately on the regular day's work. It was also contended that the agreement only provided for payment where the sum had actually been disbursed.
Held, the decision of the adjudicator is set aside. The adjudicator erred in law in holding that the overtime must be continuous with the regular work day. He amended the terms of the agreement rather than interpreting it. And, the agree ment should be interpreted to mean that the employee has the right to be reimbursed whether or not he has actually disbursed the amount.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
Paul Lesage for applicants.
W. Nisbet and A. Bluteau for respondents and
mis -en-cause.
SOLICITORS:
Trudel, Nadeau, Létourneau, Lesage & Cleary, Montreal, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents and mis -en-cause.
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment of the Court delivered orally by
PRATTE J.: Applicants are two employees of the Post Office Department at Beauharnois. They are asking the Court to set aside, pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act, a decision by Mr. Patrice Garant on August 4, 1976, in his capacity of adjudicator and member of the Public Service Staff Relations Board. By this decision, the adjudicator dismissed the grievances submitted by applicants, who complained that on certain days when they had been required to work overtime they were not paid the meal allowance provided for under article 15.02(a) of the collective agree ment governing their working conditions.
Article 15.02(a) of the agreement reads as follows:
**15.02 Meal and Rest Periods
(a) Full-time employees required to work more than two (2) hours overtime in excess of his daily schedule or shift, shall be reimbursed for a meal allowance in the amount of two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50).
It is established that on each of the days referred to in their grievances, applicants were required to work more than two hours overtime in excess of their daily schedule. It is also established that more than one hour elapsed between the time applicants finished their regular daily schedule and the time they began the overtime in question.
The adjudicator dismissed the grievances solely because, in his view, the allowance provided under article 15.02(a) is due only if the overtime immediately follows the regular shift.
In our view, the adjudicator erred in law by interpreting the agreement thus. Article 15.02(a) does not stipulate that overtime must immediately follow the regular shift in order for the meal allowance to be payable. The Court considers that, by adding this requirement, the adjudicator amended the terms of the agreement rather than interpreting the agreement. Various benefits are provided under article 15.02 for employees work ing overtime. Some of these benefits, such as those
mentioned under paragraphs (b),(c) and (d), are payable only on the express condition that the overtime has taken place immediately prior to or immediately after the regularly scheduled shift'. This is not the case with the meal allowance provided under paragraph (a), and consequently, this allowance is due even if the overtime was not worked immediately after the regular work.
It was contended that the fact that the word "reimbursed" was used in article 15.02(a) indi cates that the meal allowance is due only if the employee has in fact spent such an amount on a meal. We find this argument groundless. The words "... employees ... shall be reimbursed for a meal allowance in the amount of two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50)", in article 15.02(a), signify in our view "employees ... are entitled to a meal allowance in the amount of two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50)".
For these reasons, the decision challenged shall be set aside and the matter referred back to the adjudicator, who in his decision shall take into account that during the days mentioned in their grievances applicants were entitled to the allow ance provided under article 15.02(a) of the agreement.
' These three paragraphs of article 15.02 read as follows: **15.02 Meal and Rest Periods
(a) . . .
(b) Full-time employees required to work overtime for a period of two (2) hours or more immediately prior to his regular shift will be given a ten (10) minute rest period before commencing his regular shift. If the overtime period is three (3) hours or more and he becomes entitled to meal breaks under 15.02(d), the rest period will not be given.
(c) Full-time employees required to work overtime for a known period of two (2) hours or more immediately follow ing his regular shift will be given a ten (10) minute rest period prior to termination of his regular shift.
(d) Full-time employees required to work overtime for a period of three (3) hours or more, immediately prior to, or immediately after, his regularly scheduled shift will be pro vided a meal period of one-half ('h) hour to be paid for at the rate of time and one-half (11/2).
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