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A-564-76
Attorney General of Canada (Applicant) v.
The Umpire constituted under section 92 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Urie and Ryan JJ.— Fredericton, April 29; Ottawa, May 6, 1977.
Judicial review — Entitlement to unemployment insurance benefits — Payment period 2 months after contract began to 2 months after contract expired — Umpire declared individual eligible — Whether Umpire erred in law — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, s. 21(1),(2) — Federal Court Act, s. 28 — Schools Act, R.S.N.B. 1973, c. S-5, ss. 1 and 41.
A teacher signed a contract for one year, beginning July 1, 1975, but was not to receive any salary for July and August. He would continue to receive his salary in July and August 1976, after the expiry of his contract. The teacher claimed to be entitled to unemployment insurance benefits for a week in July 1975. An Umpire declared him entitled. The application is to determine whether the Umpire erred in law in so deciding.
Held, the application is allowed. Section 21(2) of the Unem ployment Insurance Act, 1971 expressly provides that remuner ation may be paid, or payable, under a contract of employment in respect of a week during which the employee does not do any work. It cannot be said therefore that, within the meaning of section 21(2), the remuneration payable to the teacher under his contract of employment was entirely payable in respect of the "teaching year" because it was during that year that he was to perform his duties. Nor can it be said that the teacher's salary was to be paid to him in respect of the "pay year", from September to August. The teacher was hired for the school year, as contemplated by the Schools Act of New Brunswick, at a fixed annual salary, payable in 24 instalments. When a person is hired for a fixed term of one year at an annual fixed salary, his salary is payable in respect of the year that consti tutes the term of the contract, irrespective of the fact that it may be stipulated to be payable in whole or in part after the expiry of that term.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
E. A. Bowie for applicant.
Brian R. Warnock and Eugene J. Mockler for W. G. Kingston and the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
Hoyt, Mockler, Allen & Dixon, Fredericton, for W. G. Kingston and the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J.: This is an application, under section 28 of the Federal Court Act to review and set aside a decision of an Umpire under Part V of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, allowing an appeal from a decision of a Board of Referees. By that decision the Board of Referees had held that a Mr. William G. Kingston was not entitled to receive the benefits that he had claimed in July 1975 because he had not proved that he was then unemployed.
Mr. Kingston is a school teacher. On June 20, 1975, he was hired by the Board of School Trus tees of District No. 15 in New Brunswick for a period of one year commencing on July 1, 1975. However, like, all school teachers, it was under stood that Mr. Kingston was not to perform any services during the months of July and August. His contract of employment contained the follow ing stipulations:
1. The Teacher, for the consideration expressed in paragraph 2, agrees with the School Board to teach diligently and faithfully and to perform the duties related thereto in accordance with the SCHOOLS ACT of New Brunswick during the school year ending June 30, 1976, and from school year to school year thereafter until this contract is terminated as herein provided.
2. The School Board agrees to pay the Teacher in accordance with the salary scale and, where applicable, the responsibility allowance for such supervisory position as that Teacher holds, as set forth in -the current Collective Agreement between the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation—La Fédération des Enseignants du Nouveau-Brunswick and Treasury Board.
3. The School Board agrees to pay the Teacher in accordance with the Article "Method of Payment" as set forth in the current Collective Agreement between the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation—La Fédération des Enseignants du Nou- veau-Brunswick and Treasury Board.
' The Schools Act, R.S.N.B. 1973, c. S-5, of New Brunswick defines as follows the expression "school year":
"school year" means a year beginning on the first day of July and ending on the 30th day of June and consisting of two terms; the first to begin July 1 and end December 31, the second to begin January 1 and end June 30;
4. Where lost-time pay deductions are required, they will be deducted at the rate of 1/195 of the Teacher's annual rate of salary for each such day lost.
5. This contract shall continue in force from school year to school year unless terminated in accordance with the provisions of the Collective Agreement between the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation—La Fédération des Enseignants du Nou- veau-Brunswick and Treasury Board.
6. Both parties to this contract shall be in all respects subject to the provisions of the current Collective Agreement between the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation—La Fédération des Enseignants du Nouveau-Brunswick and Treasury Board, and the SCHOOLS ACT and Regulations.
The record does not disclose the terms of the collective agreement referred to in the contract of employment. However, we were told at the hearing that it had been agreed before the Umpire that the school teachers were entitled, under the collective agreement to an annual salary payable in 24 semi monthly instalments spread over a period of 12 months commencing on the first day of September of every year. Therefore, Mr. Kingston, under his contract of employment, was not to receive any salary during the months of July and August, 1975, the first two months of the term of his employment; however he was to continue to receive his salary during the months of July and August 1976, after the expiry of the term of his employment.
In July 1975, at a time when he had not yet received his salary, Mr. Kingston claimed to be entitled to receive benefits under the Unemploy ment Insurance Act, 1971. His application for benefits was first rejected on the ground that he had not proved that he was unemployed at that time. The Umpire held otherwise and the sole question raised by this application is whether he erred in law in so deciding.
Section 21 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 reads as follows:
21. (1) A week of unemployment for a claimant is a week in which he does not work a full working week.
(2) A week during which a claimant's contract of service continues and in respect of which he receives or will receive his usual remuneration for a full working week, is not a week of unemployment, notwithstanding that the claimant may be excused from the performance of his normal duties or does not in fact have any duties to perform at that time.
It is common ground that Mr. Kingston did not work during the week, in July 1975, for which he claimed benefits; it is also common ground that during that week his contract of employment as a teacher "continued"; lastly, it is common ground that he did not, during that week, receive his usual remuneration. What is in issue is whether he was, when he presented his claim, entitled to receive, at some time in the future, his usual remuneration in respect of that week.
Counsel for Mr. Kingston argued that the remu neration paid under the contract was paid either in respect of the teaching year (which extended from the commencement of September 1975 to the end of June 1976) or in respect of what he called the "pay year" (which extended from September 1, 1975, to August 31, 1976). In either case, said he, no remuneration was to be paid to Mr. Kingston in respect of the months of July and August 1975.
This contention is, in my view, unfounded.
In a certain sense, it may be true that the remuneration payable under an employment con tract is entirely payable in respect of the time during which the employee will perform his duties. However, section 21(2) expressly provides that, within the meaning of that section, remuneration may be paid, or payable, under a contract of employment in respect of a week during which the employee does not do any work. It cannot be said therefore that, within the meaning of section 21(2), the remuneration payable to Mr. Kingston under his contract of employment was entirely payable in respect of the "teaching year" because it was during that period that he was to perform his duties. Nor can it be said, in my view, that Mr. Kingston's salary was to be paid to him in respect of what counsel called the "pay year", from Sep- tember 1975 to the end of August 1976. Mr. Kingston had been hired for the school year, as contemplated by the Schools Act 2 , at a fixed annual salary, payable in 24 instalments. When a person is thus hired for a fixed term of one year at an annual fixed salary, his salary, in my view, is
2 Section 41 of the Act provides that:
41 Any contract for the employment of a teacher, to which this Act extends, shall continue in force from school year to school year ... .
payable in respect of the year that constitutes the term of the contract, irrespective of the fact that it may be stipulated to be payable in whole or in part after the expiry of that term.
I am therefore of the view that when Mr. Kings- ton submitted his claim in July 1975, he claimed benefits for a week which was not, for him, a week of unemployment because it could not be said that he would not receive his usual remuneration for that week.
For these reasons, I would set aside the Umpire's decision and refer the matter back to him for determination without any further hear ing, on the basis that Mr. Kingston did not prove that the week for which he claimed benefit, was, for him, a week of unemployment.
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URIE J.: I concur.
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RYAN J.: I concur.
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