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77-T-610
Régis Tardif (Applicant) (Complainant)
v.
Verreault Navigation Inc. (Respondent)
Trial Division, Marceau J.—Montreal, August 15; Ottawa, August 23, 1977.
Practice — Application to file order of Canada Labour Relations Board pursuant to Canada Labour Code, s. 123 — Supporting affidavit not clearly and directly establishing respondent's failure or refusal to comply with order — Order too vague and imprecise for enforcement — Requirements of Rule 332 not met — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, s. 123 — Federal Court Rule 332.
This is an application to obtain permission to file an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board in the Court, pursuant to section 123 of the Canada Labour Code.
Held, the application is dismissed. The supporting affidavit does not meet the requirements of Rule 332. It does not clearly and directly establish the failure or refusal of the respondent to comply with the content of the order which applicant wishes to have filed. The Board's order is too vague, uncertain, imprecise and ambiguous to be capable of enforcement. This order, to have the force and scope of judgment of the Court, must be supplemented, made more specific, and expressed in unques tionable and unequivocal terms.
International Association of Longshoremen, Local 375 v. Association of Maritime Employers (1975) 52 D.L.R. (3d) 293, followed. International Brotherhood of Electri cal Workers, Local Union No. 529 v. Central Broadcasting Co. Ltd. [1977] 2 F.C. 78, followed.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
J. Déry for complainant. R. Chartier for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Ahern, Nuss & Drymer, Montreal, for complainant.
Langlois, Drouin, Roy, Fréchette & Gau- dreau, Quebec, for respondent.
The following is the English version of the reasons for order rendered by
MARCEAU J.: This is an application to obtain permission to file in this Court, for registration herein, an order of the Canada Labour Relations
Board made on July 15, 1977. The application is made pursuant to the provisions of section 123 of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, as amended by S.C. 1972, c. 18, which states:
123. (1) Where a person, employer, employers' organiza tion, trade union, council of trade unions or employee has failed to comply with any order or decision of the Board, any person or organization affected thereby may, after fourteen days from the date on which the order or decision is made or the date provided in it for compliance, whichever is the later date, file in the Federal Court of Canada a copy of the order or decision, exclusive of the reasons therefor.
(2) On filing in the Federal Court of Canada under subsec tion (1), an order or decision of the Board shall be registered in the Court and, when registered, has the same force and effect, and, subject to section 28 of the Federal Court Act, all proceed ings may be taken thereon as if the order or decision were a judgment obtained in that Court.
Filed in support of the application is the affida vit of one of the counsel for the applicant (who is described in the heading as the "complainant", no doubt because that was his title before the Canada Labour Relations Board). A reading of the allega tions of fact in the said affidavit will allow the Court to immediately place certain facts in their context and will also facilitate the discussion I intend to pursue. Counsel for the complainant stated in the affidavit:
[TRANSLATION] (1) I am one of the counsel for the complainant;
(2) Complainant filed a complaint with the Canada Labour Relations Board pursuant to section 187(1) of the Canada Labour Code (Part V—Industrial Relations), alleging a breach of the provisions of section 184(3)(a)(î) of the same Code, namely that the employer-respondent refused to employ com plainant because the latter became a member of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada;
(3) Further to a hearing which took place from June 21 to 23, 1977, the Canada Labour Relations Board handed down a decision on July 15, 1977, ordering inter alia that complainant be immediately reinstated in the position he occupied at the end of the 1976 shipping season; a copy of the order is appended hereto as Exhibit P-1;
(4) We are informed by Mr. André Bansept, an officer of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada, and we believe, that the employer-respondent persists in his refusal to rehire com plainant, contrary to the provisions of the said decision;
(5) This decision should be filed and registered in the Federal Court so that, when registered, it may have the same force and effect, and all proceedings may be taken thereon, as if the order or decision were a judgment obtained in that Court.
In order to complete the statement of facts, I need only reproduce the order, exclusive of the reasons therefor, that complainant is seeking to have filed and registered. It reads as follows:
NOW, THEREFORE, the Canada Labour Relations Board hereby:
(1) orders, pursuant to Section 189 of the Canada Labour Code, the respondent, Verreault Navigation Inc., to reinstate forthwith Régis Tardif in the same position he occupied at the end of the 1976 shipping season, without loss of the wages which he would have received or of the rights and privileges which he would have enjoyed, had the respondent not failed to comply with the provisions of the Canada Labour Code, (Part V—Industrial Relations); and
(2) reserves, with the consent of the parties, its jurisdiction to determine the amount of compensation payable pursuant to the provisions of Section 189(b)(ii) of the Canada Labour Code, in the event that the parties are unable to come to an agreement thereon.
ISSUED at Vancouver this 15th day of July 1977 by the Canada Labour Relations Board.
(sgd)
Chairman
(Marc Lapointe, Q.C.)
The facts of the situation are now clear, and the situation must be analyzed. The first step which must be taken is to consider the nature of the application, in order to be able to define the role which the Court is called upon to play with respect to it. Two recent decisions of this Court, supported by long and carefully prepared reasons, are very precise in this respect and must, in my view, be followed. They are a decision of my brother Walsh J. in International Association of Longshoremen, Local 375 v. Association of Maritime Employers, reported in (1975) 52 D.L.R. (3d) 293, and another subsequent decision of my brother Cat- tanach J. in International Brotherhood of Electri cal Workers, Local Union No. 529 v. Central Broadcasting Company Ltd. [ 1977] 2 F.C. 78.
The first conclusion to be drawn from these decisions is that an application of the type in the case at bar cannot be considered an incidental or routine application made solely as a formality. The consequences which the Act attaches to the filing and registration of an order, namely giving the order "the same force and effect ... as if the order or decision were a judgment obtained in that Court", are too serious and fundamental for that to be the case. The application is one of an intro ductory nature, which must be made and support-
ed in accordance with the rules of practice of this Court, one of which is Rule 332 which requires that the facts attested by affidavit be limited to those of which the deponent has had personal knowledge.
The second conclusion which emerges from the aforementioned decisions is that the Court is required to play a specific role when faced with an application of the type involved in the case at bar. It is not, of course, the responsibility of the Court to verify the validity of the order or to amend or supplement the terms. Its primary responsibility is to ensure that all the prior conditions required by the Act for filing and registration are present, and especially that the person concerned failed or refu sed to comply with the content of the order. It must then check whether the order, as formulated, is liable to have the same effect as a judgment obtained in this Court, and consequently to give rise to enforceable and coercive measures to which any judgment of this Court may give rise.
These conclusions, which I said I drew from the decisions of my brother Judges and which seem to me quite rational and obvious, oblige me to rule that the application before me at present is not admissible. It is clear that the affidavit filed in support of it does not meet the requirements of Rule 332 of the Federal Court Rules, and in particular does not establish clearly and directly the failure or refusal of respondent to comply with the content of the order which applicant wishes to have filed. In my view, it is also equally clear that the order of the Board—which does not specify, as regards its actual implementation, the time limit within which the employee must be reinstated, and contains a "rider" (the second part of the conclu sions) which remains conditional on an agreement and open to re-examination—is too vague, uncer tain, imprecise and ambiguous to be capable of enforcement. It will be noted that I have repro duced the very words used by Cattanach J. in the aforementioned decision, in which the order that applicant wished to have filed was worded in the same way as the one in the case at bar. I do not see how this order of the Canada Labour Relations Board can have the force and scope of a judgment
obtained in this Court without first being supple mented, made more specific, and expressed in unquestionable and unequivocal terms.
I have no choice but to refuse this application for filing and registration. The application will therefore be dismissed. However, in view of the circumstances, it will be dismissed without costs.
ORDER
The application is dismissed without costs.
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