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A-553-84
Ronald Sorobey and Saul Popoch (Applicants) v.
Public Service Commission Appeal Board (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: SOROBEY v. CANADA (PUBLIC SERVICE COM MISSION APPEAL BOARD)
Court of Appeal, Hugessen, MacGuigan and Lacombe JJ.—Ottawa, October 1, 1986
Judicial review — Applications to review — Application to set aside Board's decision — Unsuccessful candidates for positions of senior program officer alleging some successful candidates having prior knowledge of general nature of ques tions — Successful candidates intervening, giving their version of facts at Appeal Board hearing — Becoming witnesses — Applicants seeking to cross-examine — Board asking interve- nants if prepared to answer questions — Intervenants refusing — Fairness requiring opportunity to test evidence by cross- examination — By inviting witnesses to decline to submit to cross-examination, Board failing to give applicants fair hear ing — Court unprepared to assess consequence of breach — Application allowed — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Public Service Employment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32, s. 21.
Public Service — Appeals — Unsuccessful candidates in closed competition appealing to Public Service Commission Appeal Board — Board hearing evidence from successful candidates — Cross-examination not permitted — Denial of fairness — Board's decision set aside — Public Service Employment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32 s. 21.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Cardinal et al. v. Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 643.
DISTINGUISHED AND DOUBTED:
Schaaf v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1984] 2 F.C. 334; (1984), 52 N.R. 54 (CA.).
REFERRED TO:
Perry v. Public Service Commission Appeal Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 316; Schwartz v. R., [1982] 1 F.C. 386 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Andrew J. Raven for applicants. Dogan Akman for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Soloway, Wright, Houston, Greenberg, O'Grady, Morin, Ottawa, for applicants. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment of the Court delivered orally in English by
HUGESSEN J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of an appeal board constituted under section 21 of the Public Service Employment Act (R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32). The applicants had been unsuccessful candidates in a closed competition held to establish an eligible list for appointment to a number of new positions of senior program officer in the Department of Na tional Revenue, Customs and Excise.
The Appeal Board hearing, together with two related matters heard at the same time, extended over ten days. One of the applicants' allegations before the Board was that some of the successful candidates had had an unfair advantage in the selection process through having had prior knowl edge of the general nature, if not necessarily of the details, of the questions to be asked and that this had resulted in the applicants' being excluded through failure to obtain a sufficiently high mark in the written examination. On the seventh day of the hearing, four of the successful candidates appeared and intervened. They did not, as they might have, limit themselves to simple commentar ies or representations with regard to the appli cants' case but also gave their own versions of the facts. In a word, they became witnesses. The appli cants' representative sought to cross-examine them but, before he could do so, the Appeal Board asked each intervenant if he would be prepared to answer questions. Each refused and was then excused by the Board.
It is settled law that fairness required that the successful candidates be given notice of the Appeal Board hearing and an opportunity to intervene therein if they so wished.' The opposite side of that coin must surely be that, if such intervention takes the form, as it did here, of the successful candidates offering their own evidence on some of the questions in issue, the applicants must be given the opportunity to test that evidence in the usual way, that is by cross-examination. The question is not to know whether the Appeal Board could oblige the intervenants, or anyone else, to testify; they chose to do so voluntarily. Nor is it to know whether the Appeal Board could force them to answer questions to which they objected; the appli cants were never given the opportunity to put any questions. They were foreclosed from doing so by what may fairly be interpreted as an invitation from the Appeal Board to the witnesses to decline to submit themselves to cross-examination. If, as the Board seemed to think, it did not have the power to oblige the witnesses to submit to cross- examination on matters which were relevant to the enquiry, then it should have advised them that their evidence-in-chief would be regarded as having little or no weight and acted accordingly. By acting as it did, the Appeal Board failed to give the applicants the fair hearing to which they were entitled.
Nor are we prepared to say, as invited by the respondent, that this breach is of no consequence. The evidence offered by the intervenants, as we have said, bore, at least in part, upon questions which were in issue before the Appeal Board. It is simply impossible to say what might have come out if they had been cross-examined on those questions. As has recently been stated by high authority,
... the denial of a right to a fair hearing must always render a decision invalid, whether or not it may appear to a reviewing court that the hearing would likely have resulted in a different decision.
(Cardinal et al. v. Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 643, at page 661).
' See Perry v. Public Service Commission Appeal Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 316; Schwartz v. R., [1982] 1 F.C. 386 (C.A.).
Whether or not the decision of this Court in Schaaf v. Minister of Employment and Immigra tion, [1984] 2 F.C. 334; (1984), 52 N.R. 54 (C.A.), can survive the Cardinal decision, it is clear that Schaaf is limited to a situation where the alleged errors [at pages 341 F.C.; 58 N.R.]
... could not and did not have any effect upon the outcome of the inquiry
and were therefore not errors committed "in mak ing" the decision within the meaning of paragraph 28(1)(b) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10]. That is a far cry from the present case.
The section 28 application must be allowed, the impugned decision set aside, and the matter referred back to the Commission for it to establish a new appeal board pursuant to section 21 of the Public Service Employment Act.
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