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A-654-77
Jacqueline Duplessis, Noël Maheu and Léo Jodoin (Applicants)
v.
Public Service Commission Appeal Board (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Pratte and Le Dain JJ.—Ottawa, April 14 and 24, 1978.
Judicial review — Public Service — First appeal from competition considered only one of several grounds for appeal — Second selections made with initial evaluations and list identical to first list, with exception ordered by first Appeal Board — Second appeal made but Appeal Board decided it was not competent to hear appeal — Judicial review sought of second Appeal Board's decision — 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.
The Public Service Commission, following an Appeal Board's decision to declare one candidate in a competition ineligible, and to disallow the grounds of appeal involving the other successful candidates, requested the selection board to re-evalu ate all candidates. The normal course would have been to appoint the proposed candidates remaining. The selection board, exercising its option to use initial evaluations, produced an identical list except for the candidate declared ineligible. A second Appeal Board decided it was not competent to hear applicants' second appeal; this section 28 application concerns that decision.
Held, (Le Dain J. dissenting) the application is dismissed. The error committed by the Public Service Commission in acting in this manner rather than following the normal course, does not give applicants the right to appeal again. Applicants would not have had this right had the Commission acted as it should have done. The second Appeal Board was correct in holding that, following the first selection, applicants had already unsuccessfully exercised their right to appeal the pro posed appointments, other than the excluded candidate. Their first appeal, which was against all proposed appointments, had been allowed against the excluded candidate only, but dis missed with respect to the other appointments.
Per Le Dain J. dissenting: The first Appeal Board in dealing with only one ground of appeal did not impliedly reject the other grounds. The procedure adopted by the Commission induced the applicants to assume there would be a further right to appeal the grounds that had not been considered by the first Appeal Board. Inasmuch as the selection board did reconvene and did publish a new eligibility list based on its previous evaluations there was something against which the applicants had a right to appeal on the grounds they had previously asserted. If the second Appeal Board's decision is upheld the
result of the approach to the issues adopted by the first Appeal Board and Commission is that the applicants have been effec tively deprived of a right of appeal.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
John D. Richard, Q.C., for applicants. Paul Plourde for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for appli cants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment delivered orally by
PRATTE J.: This application, which is made pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act, is against the decision of a Board established by the Public Service Commission, which decided it did not have authority to rule on the appeal made by applicants under section 21 of the Public Service Employment Act'.
In the spring of 1977, applicants were unsuc cessful candidates in a competition held in accord ance with the provisions of the Public Service Employment Regulations to select persons quali fied for the position of Customs Superintendent (PM-2) in the Department of National Revenue (Customs and Excise) in Montreal. They subse quently appealed, under section 21 of the Public Service Employment Act, against all the proposed appointments resulting from the competition. The Appeal Board set up by the Public Service Com mission held that only one of the grounds of appeal put forward by applicants was valid, namely that one of the successful candidates, Serge Lafrance, was not entitled to participate in the competition. The Appeal Board therefore allowed the appeal:
[TRANSLATION] The Appeal Board therefore allows the appeals of Mrs. Jacqueline Duplessis, Mr. Noël Maheu and Mr. Léo Jodoin against the proposed appointment of candidate Serge Lafrance.
It should be pointed out that while the Board's decision mentions that applicants had appealed
' R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32.
against all the proposed appointments and had put forward several grounds of appeal, it discusses only that ground concerning the ineligibility of Serge Lafrance.
In my view the effect of this decision was simply to prevent the Public Service Commission from appointing Serge Lafrance. The decision did not relate to the other proposed appointments, and normally the Commission would have made them. However, rather than proceeding in this way, the Commission asked the selection board that had already evaluated the candidates to re-evaluate all of them except Lafrance. However, the Board was given the option of simply using its initial evalua tions. The Board chose to do this: it merely drew up a new eligible list identical to the first one except that Lafrance's name did not appear.
Applicants again appealed against the proposed appointments, claiming that their knowledge and abilities had not been properly evaluated by the selection board. A second Appeal Board was set up, but it decided that it was not competent to hear the case. The main points of this decision were expressed as follows:
[TRANSLATION] Having examined both the Department's and appellants' arguments, it is my view that appellants were not entitled to appeal and that I am not competent to hear their case on its merits. The facts indicate that appellants had already exercised their right of appeal against the proposed appointments under section 21 of the Act and that after an appeal against Mr. Lafrance's appointment had been upheld, a repeat selection process had produced the same results, that is, the staffing officer had issued the same eligible list minus only Mr. Lafrance's name.
It would therefore appear that appellants have already exer cised their right of appeal against the same proposed appoint ments and that it is not for me to interfere in a decision already rendered, which limited the confirmation of the appeal to only one proposed appointment, although appellants had appealed against all of them. I therefore find that appellants were not entitled to appeal and that I am, therefore not competent to hear them.
No decision on the merits will be rendered in this case.
Applicants are seeking to have this decision of the second Appeal Board set aside. They maintain
that it deprives them of the right of appeal granted in section 21.
In my opinion, applicants' claim cannot be considered.
Following the decision of the first Appeal Board, the Commission, under section 21(d), would nor mally have made the proposed appointments, with the exception of Lafrance, without consulting the selection board a second time. No doubt by mis take, the Commission did not proceed in this manner: it consulted the selection board again, and the latter decided to stand by its original decisions regarding the candidates other than Lafrance. I do not think that the error committed by acting in this manner gives applicants the right to appeal again; they would not have had this right had the Commission proceeded as it should have.
I would have concluded in the same way if this were a case in which the Commission,?ather than repeating a selection process that an Appeal Board had found irregular, decided to repeat only those phases of the process in which the Board had found defects. In a case of this type, candidates who are eliminated after the second selection pro cess and who want to complain about an irregularity in a phase of the process that was not repeated do not always have the right to appeal under section 21. In my opinion, such candidates do not have the right to appeal if they have already exercised this right unsuccessfully after the first selection process, or if they waive this right either implicitly or explicitly. In the case at bar I think that the second Appeal Board was correct in hold ing that, following the first selection, applicants had already unsuccessfully exercised their right to appeal against the proposed appointments other than that of Lafrance. The fact is that their first appeal, which was against all the proposed appointments, had been allowed against the appointment of Lafrance only. In other words, the appeal was dismissed with respect to the other appointments.
For these reasons, I would dismiss the application.
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JACKETT C.J. concurred.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
LE DAIN J. (dissenting): With respect, I am unable to agree with the disposition of the present section 28 application proposed by my brother Pratte. In my opinion the case is indistinguishable in principle from that of Boucher v. Public Service Commission Appeal Board [1978] 2 F.C. 204. I cannot agree that the first Appeal Board impliedly rejected the other grounds of appeal. In my opin ion it dealt with only one ground of appeal—that affecting the candidacy or prospective appoint ment of Lafrance—and only with the consequence of that ground. In this respect I distinguish its decision from the commentary on its decision (Case, p. 18). This understanding of the scope and effect of the first Appeal Board's decision is re flected by the Commission's decision to reconvene the selection board [TRANSLATION] "to re-evalu ate all candidates except Mr. Serge Lafrance". The applicants were induced by the procedure adopted by the Commission, including the instruc tion to the selection board to publish a new list of eligibility and its assumption that there would be a further right of appeal, to assume that there would be an opportunity on the second appeal to assert the grounds of appeal that had not been considered by the first Appeal Board. It is asking too much of the applicants, I think, to conclude in effect that they should have "second-guessed" the Commis sion and chosen to attack the decision of the first Appeal Board, which was in some measure favour able to them, on the ground that it did not deal with the other grounds of appeal. Inasmuch as the selection board did reconvene and did publish a new list of eligibility based upon its previous evaluations there was something against which the applicants had a right to appeal on the grounds they had previously asserted. If the decision of the second Appeal Board is upheld the result of the approach to the issues adopted by the first Appeal Board and the Commission is that the applicants have been effectively deprived of a right of appeal.
For these reasons I would allow the section 28 application and refer the matter back to the Appeal Board for determination of the applicants' appeals.
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