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A-547-77
Dianne Gloin, James Brimbleby, Mernagh Kwia- toski, Richard Parney and Raymond Stewart (Applicants)
v.
Attorney General of Canada (Respondent)
and
Public Service Staff Relations Board (Tribunal)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Urie JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, November 25; Ottawa, December 20, 1977.
Judicial review — Public Service — Jurisdiction — Appli cants for Post Office positions dismissed on probation — Dismissals grieved by applicants — Adjudicator under s. 91 of Public Service Staff Relations Act claimed lack of jurisdiction to hear grievance — Whether or not Adjudicator had jurisdic tion to hear the matter — Whether or not sufficient evidence adduced for Adjudicator to determine issue of jurisdiction — Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, ss. 56(2), 90, 91 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Postal Operations Group (non supervisory) Inter nal Mail Processing and Complementary Postal Services Col lective Agreement, Article 29.
Applicants for Post Office positions were notified of their rejection on probation and of their right to grieve that decision. When applicants' grievances were referred to adjudication pur suant to section 91 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, the Adjudicator held that she lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter. That decision forms the subject matter of this section 28 application.
Held, the application is allowed. The Adjudicator's decision that she had no jurisdiction because the grievors were not employees at the time of reference to adjudication or at the time the grievances were filed is in error. The introductory words of section 90(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act include any person who feels himself to be aggrieved as an employee. The word "employee" in the introductory words of section 91(1) must be read in the same manner as that word is used in the introductory portion of section 90(1), irrespective of whether he seeks redress under paragraph (a) or (b). It is established that an adjudicator is entitled to inquire into the facts to ascertain whether he has jurisdiction under section 91(1)(b) notwithstanding the employer's characterizing its action as rejection for cause. It logically follows that the same principle must apply to a grievance with respect to an interpre tation or application of provisions of a collective agreement. The Adjudicator did not permit sufficient evidence to be adduced to make this determination.
R. v. Lavoie [1978] 1 F.C. 778, applied. Jacmain v. The Attorney General of Canada [1978] 2 S.C.R. 15, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
P. Cavalluzzo for applicants. P. Mclnenly for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Golden, Levinson, Toronto, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of G. Gail Brent, sitting as an Adjudicator pursuant to section 91(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, as amended'.
All five applicants were effectively employed by the Post Office at London, Ontario and placed on probation for a period of six months. Employment began on different dates for each of the applicants: July 12, 1976 for Miss Gloin; August 9, 1976 for Mrs. Kwiatoski; August 23, 1976 for Mr. Parney; August 23, 1976 for Mr. Stewart and June 7, 1976 for Mr. Brimbleby. Miss Gloin and Mr. Brimbleby were employed as Postal Clerks (PO4) and the three other applicants were employed as Coder/ Sweeper/Sorters (PO4). The three applicants Mrs. Kwiatoski, Mr. Parney and Mr. Stewart were advised that in the event they were unable to pass the mechanization training, they could be rejected during probation. Miss Gloin and Mr. Brimbleby were not so advised. All five applicants were
' 91. (1) Where an employee has presented a grievance up to and including the final level in the grievance process with respect to
(a) the interpretation or application in respect of him of a provision of a collective agreement or an arbitral award, or
(b) disciplinary action resulting in discharge, suspension or a financial penalty,
and his grievance has not been dealt with to his satisfaction, he may refer the grievance to adjudication.
informed that they were subject to the benefits and conditions of the collective agreement between the Treasury Board and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, their bargaining agent, pursuant to the collective agreement between that Union and the employer which became effective December 6, 1975.
All of the applicants, except Mr. Parney, received 80 hours training for their respective jobs and were then tested. Mr. Parney commenced employment on August 23, 1976 and voluntarily withdrew from the training school on September 3, 1976 without completing the required 80 hours of training. The other four applicants were not able to meet the required standard for the positions in question and each one was informed in writing at various times during August and September of 1976, of his or her rejection on probation to take effect on specific dates referred to in the individual letters, which dates varied according to the specific circumstances of each case. The letter to Mr. Parney advised him of his rejection on probation because of his voluntary withdrawal from the training school before completion of the course. As
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well, each applicant was informed of his or her right to g ieve the decision to reject within 25 days of the re 2 eipt of the notice to reject.
These rejection letters were sent out by the superintendent or manager of the branch in ques tion and were said to be sent "Under the au thority delegated to me by the Deputy Postmaster General, pursuant to Section 28(3) of the Public Service Employment Act ...."
The applicants grieved the decisions to reject them for cause under the procedure provided by section 90 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act and their grievances were denied by the employer. The applicants then referred their griev ances to adjudication pursuant to section 91 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act (supra).
At the hearing before the Adjudicator, counsel for the employer made an objection on the basis that the Adjudicator lacked jurisdiction. The Adjudicator upheld the employer's objection to her jurisdiction and for that reason, rejected the appli cants' grievances. It is that decision by the
Adjudicator which forms the subject matter of this section 28 application.
The operative portion of the reasons for decision given by the Adjudicator appear on pages 6 and 7 of the decision and read as follows:
It is clear that s. 91 refers only to employees and that the definition of employee which must govern is that contained in s. 1 of the Act. That definition covers only certain people who have ceased to work. The grievors clearly did not cease to work as a result of a strike therefore if they are to be considered employees within the meaning of the Act they must assert that they were improperly discharged as set out in the definition.
Discharge is not defined in the Public Service Staff Rela tions Act, but in s. 7(1)(f) of the Financial Administration Act and in s. 106 of the Public Service Terms and Conditions of Employment Regulations one finds that the meaning of dis charge is restricted to the termination of employment "for breaches of discipline or misconduct". None of the grievors were discharged, all were rejected for cause, therefore none of them were employees within the meaning of the Public Service Staff Relations Act when the references to adjudication were made in April, 1977. There has been no allegation of discharge masquerading as some non-disciplinary separation and so no possibility of asserting jurisdiction under s. 91 as had been done in all the cases cited to me by counsel such as Lee (166-2-2637) and Dancey (166-2-2371).
Further, I would agree that since there is no jurisdiction to deal with the matter because the grievors were not employees at the time of the reference to adjudication, and in the absence of any allegation that the grievors were in fact discharged, no evidence beyond the rejection for cause during the probationary period can be admitted to ascertain my jurisdiction.
In the alternative, I would agree with counsel for the employ er that Article 29 of the collective agreement can not alter or amend any term or condition of employment established by the Public Service Employment Act. If that Article of the collec tive agreement were given the meaning which counsel for the grievors tried to press upon me, then it would mean that no probationary post office employee could be rejected for failure to learn how to perform up to the standards of the new mechanical operations. This would mean that failure to meet those standards would not be cause for rejection but rather cause for transfer to another job, or succession of jobs, until the probationary employee either mastered the tasks brought about by technological change, or had proven himself to be unable to perform a "pre-technological change" job. This would rob s. 28 of the Public Service Employment Act of all practical meaning since it would guarantee probationary employees an automatic appointment to another position upon rejection in the position for which they were hired.
Therefore for the reasons stated above, I find that I have no jurisdiction under the Public Service Staff Relations Act to hear this matter because the grievors were not employees at the
time of the reference to adjudication or at the time the griev ances were filed.
In concluding as she did, that she had no juris diction because the grievors were not employees at the time of the reference to adjudication or at the time the grievances were filed, the Adjudicator's decision is contrary to a recent decision of this Court in the case of The Queen v. Lavoie 2 where it was held that the introductory words of section 90(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Acta include any person who feels himself to be aggrieved as an employee. Counsel for the respondent attempted to distinguish the Lavoie case on the basis that its application was limited to the case of an employee seeking to show that a rejection was really a disciplinary discharge under section 91(1) (b) and did not apply to a person seeking redress under section 91(1) (a), as here. In my view there is no merit in this submission and the word "employee" as used in the introductory words of section 91(1) must also, of necessity, be read in the same manner as that word is used in the introductory portion of section 90(1) and includes any person who feels himself aggrieved as an employee irrespective of whether he seeks redress under paragraph (a) or (b) of section 91(1). Read in this fashion, the applicants in the case at bar are clearly included in the definition of employee as contained in sections 90(1) and 91(1). The Adjudicator erred, then, in finding that the applicants were not employees.
2 [1978] 1 F.C. 778.
3 90. (1) Where any employee feels himself to be aggrieved
(a) by the interpretation or application in respect of him of
(i) a provision of a statute, or of a regulation, by-law, direction or other instrument made or issued by the employer, dealing with terms and conditions of employ ment, or
(ii) a provision of a collective agreement or an arbitral award; or
(b) as a result of any occurrence or matter affecting his terms and conditions of employment, other than a provision described in subparagraph (a)(i) or (ii),
in respect of which no administrative procedure for redress is provided in or under an Act of Parliament, he is entitled, subject to subsection (2), to present the grievance at each of the levels, up to and including the final level, in the grievance process provided for by this Act.
If this were the only reason upon which the Adjudicator declined jurisdiction the section 28 application would have to be granted because clearly the error to which reference has just been made is an error in law. However, it seems to me that, in the alternative, she may have, in effect, held that even if she was wrong in concluding that she had no jurisdiction because the applicants were no longer employees, she was entitled to decide whether or not she had jurisdiction, under section 91(1) (a), because it was necessary for her to inter pret or apply the provisions of a collective agree ment, and that, on that question, she could not adopt the interpretation of Article 29 of the collec tive agreement urged upon her by the applicants' counsel. In her view, Article 29 cannot alter or amend any term or condition of employment established by the Public Service Employment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32, a result which would be prohibited by section 56(2) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act 4 . Assuming therefore, that the Adjudicator disposed of the appeals on that basis (an assumption which is not made without some doubt in view of the last paragraph of her decision 5 ), it becomes necessary to determine whether or not the alternative disposition of the appeals is sustainable.
The relevant clauses of the collective agreement which was in force at the times of the respective appointments of the applicants, and to which each was made subject by the terms of their letters of appointment, are as follows:
29.01 Definitions
In this Article, "technological changes" means the introduc tion by the Post Office Department in the internal processing of
^56....
(2) No collective agreement shall provide, directly or in directly, for the alteration or elimination of any existing term or condition of employment or the establishment of any new term or condition of employment,
(a) the alteration or elimination of which or the establish ment of which, as the case may be, would require or have the effect of requiring the enactment or amendment of any legislation by Parliament, except for the purpose of appro priating moneys required for its implementation, or
(b) that has been or may be, as the case may be, established pursuant to any Act specified in Schedule III.
5 "Therefore for the reasons stated above, I find that I have no jurisdiction under the Public Service Staff Relations Act to hear this matter because the grievors were not employees at the time of the reference to adjudication or at the time the griev ances were filed."
mail, of equipment different in nature, type or quantity from that previously utilized by the Post Office Department, a change, related to the introduction of this equipment, in the manner in which the Post Office Department carries on the internal processing of mail and any change in work methods and postal services operations affecting one or more employees.
29.02 Adverse Effects to be Eliminated
In carrying out technological changes, the Employer agrees to eliminate all injustices to or adverse effects on employees and any denial of their contractual or legal rights which might result from such changes.
29.03 Notice
When the Employer is considering the introduction into any sector of the Canadian postal system of a technological change:
(a) the Employer agrees to notify the Union as far as possible in advance of his intention and to update the infor mation provided as new developments arise and modifica tions are made;
(b) the foregoing notwithstanding, the Employer shall pro vide the Union, at least ninety (90) days before the introduc tion of a technological change, with a detailed description of the project it intends to carry out, disclosing all forseeable effects and repercussions on employees.
It was the contention of applicants' counsel that this Article is applicable to all employees subject to the collective agreement irrespective of whether they are permanent or probationary employees. Moreover, he said, since technological changes had occurred and, in fact, were continuing after the employment of his clients, they were entitled to the protection of that Article. Furthermore, it was, in his view, impossible for the Adjudicator to have determined whether or not section 91(1)(a) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, conferred jurisdiction upon her on the basis that the interpre tation of a collective agreement was involved with out permitting the applicants to adduce relevant evidence for that purpose. The Adjudicator had, he said, refused to permit such evidence to be called and she had, thus, erred in law or had declined jurisdiction.
Counsel for the respondent, on the other hand, said there had been sufficient evidence adduced or agreed upon, to enable the Adjudicator to make a decision. He pointed out that in the material filed were the letters of appointment of each of the applicants, the letters of rejection sent to each as well as the grievances, and the employees' replies thereto. In addition he referred to the decision of the Adjudicator where at pages 4 and 5 she made
reference to what, in counsel's submission, amounted to an agreed statement of facts. The passage to which he referred is as follows:
Counsel for the Union then outlined for me the evidence which he wished to adduce. The evidence was that the London Post Office began mechanization in late 1975 or early 1976, that the tests the grievors took were designed for employees to see if they could operate the new machines and the tests were initiated in London in March, 1976, that the grievors took the test and were all unable to meet the required standard. He also asked me to take notice of the facts concerning technological change in the London Post Office dealt with by the Chief Adjudicator in 169-2-81 and 169-2-83.
Counsel for the employer agreed that, if I could hear any evidence beyond that which he asserted I could hear, the facts as outlined above were accurate. He requested though that I record clearly that he was at no time abandoning his original position as to the inadmissibility of such evidence.
Applicants' counsel disagreed with the submis sion that there was sufficient evidence adduced to enable the Adjudicator to determine whether or not she had jurisdiction under section 91(1)(a) to hear the appeal and asserted that there was much additional evidence needed for her to make such a determination. When pressed by the Court to indi cate the nature of the evidence that would have been adduced beyond that already referred to, he was able only to refer to certain essential differ ences in the letters of engagement of two of the five applicants, the lack of information as to the dates of introduction of the new equipment at the London Post Office and whether or not the Chief Adjudicator's decision concerning technological changes at London was, in fact, before her.
These omissions, or at least the lack of certainty that the evidence was before her, leaves me with considerable doubt as to whether the Adjudicator had before her sufficient "jurisdictional facts" to enable her to make a proper determination of her jurisdiction under section 91(1) (a). There is no question that the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Jracmain v. The Attorney General of Canada [1978] 2 S.C.R. 15, establishes that an adjudicator is entitled to inquire into the facts to ascertain whether he has jurisdiction under section 91(1)(b) notwithstanding the fact that the employ er has characterized its action as a rejection for
cause. I am of the opinion that it logically follows that the same principle must apply when it is alleged that the grievance is with respect to
the interpretation or application in respect of him of a provision of a collective agreement....
under section 91(1) (a).
As I read the record before us the Adjudicator did not permit sufficient evidence to be adduced before her to make this determination. In my view, not only the deficiencies referred to by applicants' counsel exist, but reference to other clauses of Article 29 indicate the kinds of evidence which are material to her decision on jurisdiction and upon which apparently no evidence was given.
For example, clauses 29.03 and 29.04 require that notice in writing be given by the employer to the union at least 90 days in advance before technological changes be introduced. The notice, inter alia, must specify the nature of the change, the date upon which it is proposed that the changes be effected, and, most importantly, under clause 29.04(c) "the approximate number, type and location of the employees likely to be affected by the change." The parties to the agreement, in the whole context of Article 29, are entitled to know the problem areas and who will be affected by the proposed changes before they are, in fact, made, as well, of course, the dates the changes are to be implemented. This information, it seems to me, is of vital importance for the Adjudicator to determine whether or not Article 29 applies to the applicants. So far as the record discloses, by refus ing to permit evidence to be adduced other than that to which I have previously referred, at least some of the facts upon which she could determine whether or not she had jurisdiction were not before her. Her assumption of jurisdiction on the alterna tive basis, under section 91(1)(a), therefore, seems to lack evidentiary support.
Accordingly, for all of the above reasons, which are, of course, confined to the particular circum stances surrounding the conduct of the adjudica tion in issue, it is my opinion that the section 28 application should be granted, the decision of the
Adjudicator should be set aside and the matter should be remitted to the Adjudicator for the purpose of determining, on proper evidence, whether or not she had jurisdiction to hear the appeals of the applicants from the disposition of their grievances, and on the basis of such determi nation, the proper disposition of the appeals.
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HEALD J.: I concur.
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MACKAY D.J.: I concur.
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