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A-553-76
Mike Sheehan (Applicant) v.
Upper Lakes Shipping Ltd. and the Canada Labour Relations Board (Respondents)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Urie JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, September 27 and 28, 1977.
Judicial review — Labour relations — Unfair labour prac tices — Error on face of record of Canada Labour Relations Board decision — Respondent's refusal to hire applicant because of expulsion from Union — Board decided complaint untimely, and also not in violation of Canada Labour Code prohibition — Whether or not the Board erred — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, (as amended by S.C. 1972, c. 18), ss. 184(3)(a)(ii), 187(2), 188(3) — Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-23, s. 24(1) — Federal Court Act, s. 28.
This section 28 application seeks to set aside a decision of the Canada Labour Relations Board which dismissed applicant's complaint against Upper Lakes Shipping Ltd. The complaint alleged that the company refused to hire him because of his expulsion from the S.I.U. and later the C.M.U. — both in the 1960's—contrary to the prohibition in section 184(3)(a)(ii) of the Canada Labour Code. Although the Board determined that the complaint could not proceed because it was filed out of time, it expressed its views on the merits of the complaint and found no violation of the prohibition. Applicant submits firstly that the expulsions must only be motivating factors in refusing to hire, and not the raison d'être, and secondly, that the evidence need only disclose that the refusals were in whole or in part motivated by knowledge of such expulsions.
Held, the application is allowed. Each request for employ ment and refusal, if in breach of section 184, might have become the subject of a complaint if made after the coming into force of section 184 on March 1, 1973. The Board erred in finding the complaint untimely. Applicant's expulsion from the S.I.U. and the C.M.U. was a proximate cause of the refusal to employ. It does not matter that neither Union now represents the employees of the bargaining unit; each was a union within the meaning of section 184(3)(a)(ii). While the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers Union may not technically be the successor Union to the C.M.U. or have merged with it, that does not mean that the expulsions from the earlier unions render section 184(3)(a)(ii) inapplicable.
R. v. Bushnell Communications Ltd. (1974) 1 O.R. (2d) 442; and (1975) 4 O.R. (2d) 288, agreed with. Central Broadcasting Company Limited v. Canada Labour Rela tions Board [1977] 2 S.C.R. 112, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
D. Moore for applicant.
E. Rovet for respondent Upper Lakes Ship ping Ltd.
L. M. Huart for respondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
SOLICITORS:
Lockwood, Bellmore & Strachan, Toronto, for applicant.
Stikeman, Elliott, Robarts & Bowman, Toronto, for respondent Upper Lakes Ship ping Ltd.
Legal Adviser, Canada Labour Relations Board, Ottawa, for respondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This section 28 application seeks to set aside a decision of the Canada Labour Relations Board [(1977) 17 di 14] issued on July 27, 1976 which dismissed the applicant's complaint against the respondent, Upper Lakes Shipping Ltd., (here- inafter referred to as "the Company"), alleging a violation by the Company of section 184(3)(a)(ii) of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1 as amended by S.C. 1972, c. 18 (hereinafter some times referred to as "the Code"). That section reads as follows:
184....
(3) No employer and no person acting on behalf of an employer shall
(a) refuse to employ or to continue to employ any person or otherwise discriminate against any person in regard to employment or any term or condition of employment, because the person
(ii) has been expelled or suspended from membership in a trade union for a reason other than a failure to pay the periodic dues, assessments and initiation fees uniformly required to be paid by all members of the trade union as a condition of acquiring or retaining membership in the trade union,
By letter dated May 23, 1974 to the Canada Labour Relations Board, the applicant alleged, inter alia, that section 184(3)(a)(ii) had been violated by officers of the Company "by their
consistent refusal to register me for a job or to employ me allegedly because of my expulsion for [sic] the C.M.U." C.M.U. is the acronym used by the applicant in his complaint, for Canadian Mari time Union, Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers. The officers of the Company against whom he made the allega tions were B. Merrigan, the Vice-President Person nel of the Company and J. D. Leitch, the Compa- ny's President. The applicant stated that on April 26, 1974 and May 3, 1974, Merrigan and Leitch, respectively, had refused to employ him as an unlicensed seaman aboard vessels owned by the Company because he had been expelled from a trade union for reasons other than non-payment of dues contrary to section 184(3)(a)(ii) of the Act. References were made in the complaint to previous meetings between the applicant and Messrs. Mer- rigan and Leitch. Allegations of breaches of other sections of the Act by Local 401, Canadian Mari time Union, Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers Union were also included in the complaint.'
The Company, through its solicitors, on June 13, 1974 filed a reply to the complaint with the Board denying the allegations contained therein. In it, particulars of all meetings between the applicant and Messrs. Merrigan and Leitch were requested and it was submitted that the complaint was untimely because it was in violation of section 187(2) of the Code. The applicable subsections of section 187 read as follows:
187. (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (5), any person or organization may make a complaint in writing to the Board that an employer, a person acting on behalf of an employer, a trade union, a person acting on behalf of a trade union or an employee has failed to comply with section 148, 184 or 185.
(2) Subject to this section, a complaint pursuant to subsec tion (1) shall be made to the Board not later than ninety days from the date on which the complainant knew, or in the opinion of the Board ought to have known, of the action or circum stances giving rise to the complaint.
' The Board's decision dismissing the complaint as against the Union was the subject of another section 28 application, see page 847 infra, which was heard following the completion of argument on this application.
To appreciate the basis for this submission it is necessary to refer briefly to the history of the relations between the applicant, the Company and the unions which have been involved from time to time.
The testimony reveals that the applicant has been a seaman since the age of 14, both in the United Kingdom and Canada. He has sailed on trawlers, deep sea passenger and salvage vessels, naval ships and Great Lakes vessels. Shortly after his discharge from the Royal Canadian Navy after World War II, he became involved in the Canadi- an trade union movement as an official in the Seafarers International Union (hereinafter referred to as the "S.I.U.").
In or about 1961, the applicant was expelled from the S.I.U. due to his involvement in the formation of the Canadian Maritime Union (here- inafter referred to as the "C.M.U.") of which the applicant was its first president. The C.M.U. became the bargaining agent representing unli censed seamen employed by the respondent Com pany. In 1964 the applicant was expelled from the C.M.U. Prior thereto he had become well acquainted with J. D. Leitch during the period when C.M.U. was endeavouring to represent the Company's employees and, of course, Mr. Leitch became aware of the applicant's expulsions from both Unions. The evidence also discloses that these facts were well known to Mr. Merrigan.
During the late 1960's and early 1970's the applicant unsuccessfully attempted, from time to time, to obtain employment as an unlicensed seaman with the Company and a number of other ship owners. Also in an amended complaint, in which the applicant gave a number of particulars in respect of his allegations, he stated that he had met with Mr. Leitch on six occasions prior to 1974 and had always been told by him that the Com pany would not hire him under any circumstances.
On May 3, 1974 the applicant, having made an appointment to do so, met with Mr. Leitch in his room in a Toronto hotel. In his complaint he comments as follows concerning that meeting:
,On May 3, 1974, I met with him in the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, I had phoned him about a week before and asked for a meeting with him because I told him I could not get anywhere with his "Personnel" department. He agreed to meet me and he did meet me. At the meeting he passed the usual compliments regarding how fit I looked. He said, "what are you doing?". I replied "nothing, that is why I want to see you, I want to get back on board a ship, that is where I belong. I feel you owe me something, after all, it was me who really got your ships sailing and broke the S.I.U. strangle hold on your company. I only have about five years to go to get my Canada Pension Plan, and I want the opportunity to go back to my industry, sailing". He replied, "if you got back on our ships you would be after the Union, we do not want you rocking the boat, therefore we will keep you off our ships at any cost. I will use all my resources to keep you off, but apart from that if there is anything else I can do I will be prepared to help you".
I then told him I was applying to the Canada Labour Relations Board to review my case because it was outright discrimination. He said "you may have a 50-50 chance of winning", I replied "I think I have a 100% chance." We then parted in a friendly manner.
The applicant also stated in his complaint that since 1963 he had met on many occasions with Mr. Merrigan and had always been told that there was absolutely no chance of his ever sailing on any of the Company's vessels.
At the commencement of the proceedings before the Board both the Company and the Union sub mitted that because the alleged violation had occurred initially as early as 1963, before the enactment of the Canada Labour Code, which came into force on March 1, 1973, it could not be the subject of a complaint under section 184(3)(a)(ii). Even if that submission was not accepted, it was said that the complaint was made later than ninety days from the date on which the applicant knew or ought to have known the acts or circumstances giving rise to the complaint. Coun sel for the Company took the position that since the requests for employment commencing in 1963 through to May 1974 and the refusals to employ made on each occasion were substantially the same, the applicant knew of the acts complained of long before he filed his complaint of an unfair labour practice. The Board deferred its decision on this submission until after the completion of the hearing on the merits of the complaint. In its reasons for judgment dated July 27, 1976 [(1977)
17 di 14 at pp. 20-21], the Board dealt with the issue of timeliness as follows:
]. Timeliness
In its interim decision the Board ruled that the preliminary objections raised by the respondent-employer be held in abey ance until after the hearing had been completed and the Board had been apprised of the facts underlying the complaint. This ruling reflected the Board's determination to allow a complai nant an opportunity to present his case to the Board unless it was clearly established that his complaint was totally without merit or was otherwise barred by the provisions of the Canada Labour Code (Part V—Industrial Relations).
Having now heard the evidence, the Board is satisfied that the complaint of Mr. Sheehan is indeed untimely in that the incidents complained of cannot, in the circumstances, be con sidered separately and are no more than the continuation of a situation which had arisen in the early 1960's and which has remained substantially unchanged.
Although the Board is also of the opinion that paragraph 118(m) of the Code does empower it to enlarge the time for filing complaints, this paragraph cannot be read as allowing the Board to accept complaints based on a situation which arose before the coming into effect of the relevant sections of the Code, i.e., prior to March 1, 1973.
With great respect, I am of the opinion that the Board was in error in so finding. In the first place since the prohibitions embodied in section 184 did not come into force until March 1973, there could not have been an offence committed contrary thereto until after that date. Thus, in my view, what had happened before that date could have no possible bearing on a violation of the prohibition committed thereafter. If what was done after the enactment of the statute was an offence the fact that exactly the same thing could have been done before its enactment with impunity, does not make it any less a violation of the statute. Moreover, clearly, in my view, each request for employment and refusal, if in breach of section 184 might have become the subject of a complaint. Since, in this case, the complaint was made on May 23, 1974 in respect of the alleged refusals to employ the appli cant on April 26, 1974 and May 3, 1974, it was not untimely and the Board erred in finding that it was.
Notwithstanding the Board's determination that the complaint could not proceed because it was filed out of time, it chose to express its views on the merits of the unfair labour practices complaint and found that the Company had not by its actions
violated the prohibition contained in section 184(3)(a)(ii) of the Code. It was stated on page 21 of the reasons:
After reviewing the evidence, the Board is satisfied that Mr. Leitch and Mr. Merrigan did not, at the meetings held in April and May 1974, refuse to employ Mr. Sheehan because he had been expelled from the S.I.U. or the C.M.U. for a reason other than the non-payment of the regular dues. Therefore, the Board finds that the respondent-employer has not failed to comply with the provisions of subparagraph 184(3)(a)((ii) of the Canada Labour Code (Part V—Industrial Relations).
Although there can be no doubt that both Mr. Leitch and Mr. Merrigan knew Mr. Sheehan very well and were fully aware of his past involvement with the Canadian Maritime Union, the Board is nonetheless satisfied that their decision to refuse to employ Mr. Sheehan as a sailor on board the respond- ent-employer's ships does not turn on Mr. Sheehan's expulsion from the C.M.U. and from the S.I.U.
The applicant's submission is based on two propositions.
First, the proper question to be put to determine whether or not the refusals of Mr. Merrigan or Mr. Leitch, acting in their capacities as senior officers of the Company, to employ the applicant constitute breaches of section 184(3)(a)(ii) is not whether such refusals were because the applicant had been expelled, but is whether the expulsions from the Unions were motivating factors in the determination not to employ him.
Second, if it is accepted that the latter is the proper question, then the question to be asked is, does the evidence disclose, in this case, that the refusals were, in whole or in part, motivated by the knowledge of such expulsions?
In respect of the first proposition, it seems to me that regard should be had to the decision of Hughes J. of the High Court of Justice of Ontario in R. v. Bushnell Communications Ltd. (1974) 1 O.R. (2d) 442. In that case the accused had been charged under section 110(3) of the Code as it read in February 1973. Its wording, so far as is necessary for these reasons, is as follows:
110. ...
(3) No employer, and no person acting on behalf of an
employer, shall
(a) refuse to employ or to continue to employ any person, or
otherwise discriminate against any person in regard to
employment or any term or condition of employment because
the person is a member of a trade union, or .... [The underlining is mine.]
It will be seen that this wording is identical to the wording of section 184(3)(a) up to and includ ing the word "because". That being so, it would appear that the reasoning of Hughes J. is appli cable to the case at bar, notwithstanding that the Bushnell case deals with a charge laid against the Company with the permission of the Minister of Labour, as then permitted in the predecessor sec tion to section 184, rather than with a complaint of an unfair labour practice made to the Board. At page 447 of the report he made the following finding:
In considering an enactment devoid of the words "sole rea son" or "for the reason only" applied to the act of dismissal and resting only on the word "because", the Court must take an expanded view of its application. If the evidence satisfies it beyond a reasonable doubt that membership in a trade union was present to the mind of the employer in his decision to dismiss, either as a main reason or one incidental to it, or as one of many reasons regardless of priority, s. 110(3) of the Canada Labour Code has been transgressed.
I agree with Mr. Justice Hughes' opinion of the meaning of the section and I do not think that his reasoning is inapplicable to the case at bar because of his comment on the burden of proof arising from the quasi-criminal nature of the charge in the Bushnell case.
Mr. Justice Hughes' decision was upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal, the judgment of which is reported in (1975) 4 O.R. (2d) 288 where at page 290, Evans J.A., as he then was, had this to say:
We agree in substance with the result at which Hughes, J., arrived and in our view the question which the Court must determine is "What motivated the employer to take the action which he in fact took with respect to the employee?" If it is found that union membership is a ground for the action taken then a conviction should be made. Otherwise an acquittal. It is entirely a question of fact in each case for the trial Judge to determine, after assessing the credibility of the various wit nesses, whether union membership was a cause of the action taken.
In our view, to create an offence under s. 110(3) of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, union membership must be a proximate cause for dismissal, but it may be present with other proximate causes.
In the result, the appeal will be dismissed with costs.
It is very clear from the evidence in this case that one of the factors taken into account by the officers of the Company in refusing to employ the applicant was the expulsion of the applicant from the S.I.U. and later from the C.M.U. The expul sions were proximate causes of the refusal to employ. It matters not, in my view, that neither Union now represents the employees of the bar gaining unit. Each was "a union" within the mean ing of section 184(3)(a)(ii) and while the Canadi- an Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers Union may not technically be the successor Union to the C.M.U. or have merged with it (and on that there is no direct evidence) that does not mean that the expulsions from the earlier Unions render inapplicable subparagraph (a)(ii) of section 184(3).
Having reached this conclusion, the second proposition can, in my opinion, be readily disposed of. The applicant made allegations in his com plaint concerning refusal of employment with the Company by Messrs. Merrigan and Leitch. Both the applicant and Mr. Merrigan testified at length in the hearing before the Board. Mr. Leitch did not testify at all so that none of the allegations made by the applicant in respect of his meeting with Mr. Leitch was rebutted. The complaint clearly spelled out the applicant's contention that he was unable to register at the hiring hall, which is a condition of employment, and that this was due to his expulsion from both the S.I.U. and the C.M.U. Clearly then, this was at least "a reason" that the Company would not hire him.
The applicant's testimony affirmed the com plaint and provided some details of his contention. That contention, at least in respect of Mr. Leitch's position in the matter, remains unchallenged and uncontradicted.
Section 188(3) of the Code reads as follows:
188. ...
(3) A complaint in writing made pursuant to section 187 in respect of an alleged failure by an employer or any person acting on behalf of an employer to comply with paragraph 184(3)(a) is evidence that the employer or person has failed to comply with that paragraph.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that this section must be read with section 24(1) of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I - 23:
24. (1) Where an enactment provides that a document is evidence of a fact without anything in the context to indicate that the document is conclusive evidence, then, in any judicial proceedings, the document is admissible in evidence and the fact shall be deemed to be established in the absence of any evidence to the contrary.
The Supreme Court of Canada was required to examine this contention, in another context, in Central Broadcasting Co. Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board [1977] 2 S.C.R. 112. Mr. Justice de Grandpré for the Court held at pages 117-118 of his reasons that:
The complaint is admissible in evidence and, if it stands alone, the fact therein alleged "shall be deemed to be established". 1 other evidence is adduced, then the Board has the duty to look at all the evidence and to weigh both the complaint and all the other material, written or oral.
Then at pages 118-119 in discussing a submis sion as to whether or not there was a presumption that the facts in the complaint were to be accepted if, on the balance, they were not rebutted, he had this to say:
Reading together s. 188(3) of the Canada Labour Code and s. 24(1) of the Interpretation Act, I am satisfied that there is no onus against the employer whenever some evidence is adduced in addition to the complaint; in that situation, to reach a conclusion the Board must weigh the whole of the evidence taking all the circumstances into account. The statute simply enacts that the fact mentioned in the complaint "shall be deemed to be established in the absence of any evidence to the contrary". If evidence to the contrary is presented by any of the parties, there is no justification for the Board to conclude that, should on all of the evidence the scale be evenly balanced, the complaint must be considered as having been established. Such a conclusion would amount to a statement that an onus exists against the employer and the Code does not permit of such a conclusion.
No question of onus was raised in this case nor were the allegations in respect of Mr. Leitch's part in the proceedings challenged in the only way really possible, viz. by calling Mr. Leitch as a witness. Thus, there was no contrary evidence for the Board to weigh before reaching its decision and, by virtue of the sections of the two statutes above referred to, the facts mentioned in the com plaint, as they relate to Mr. Leitch, must be
deemed to have been established. Since these facts reveal that one of the motivating factors in the refusal of the Company to employ the applicant was his expulsion from the S.I.U. and later from the C.M.U. this motivating factor must be deemed to have been established and the Company was thus guilty of an unfair labour practice under section 184(3)(a)(ii).
Because of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to examine and to comment upon the remainder of the errors which the applicant contended were committed by the Board.
Accordingly, the section 28 application should be allowed, the Order of the Board issued on July 27, 1976, in so far as it pertains to the respondent Company, should be set aside and the matter should be referred back to the Board for disposi tion pursuant to section 189 of the Code on the ground that the Company has failed to comply with section 184(3)(a)(ii) of the Code.
* * *
HEALD J.: I concur.
* * *
MACKAY D.J.: I agree.
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