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A-289-77
Attorney General of Canada (Applicant)
v.
C. Gray (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Heald and Urie JJ.— Ottawa, October 3 and 7, 1977.
Judicial review — Public Service — Labour relations — Contract — "Lay-off' due to strike by other employees — Applicability of "severance pay" provisions of collective agree ment — 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.
29 — Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, s. 91 — Public Service Terms and Conditions of Employment Regulations, SOR/67-118, s. 2(j) — Postal Operations Group (non-supervisory), External Mail Collection and Delivery Ser vices, articles 30.01, 30.02, 30.03.
Respondent, a letter carrier, was "laid off" because of a strike of other post office employees. The Public Service Staff Relations Board upheld respondent's contention that he was entitled to "severance pay", provided for in the collective agreement. Applicant now makes a section 28 application directed against the Board's decision.
Held, the appeal is allowed.
Per Pratte J.: Although "lay-off' in common parlance does not necessarily imply a termination of employment, what is in issue is its meaning as used in the collective agreement. Legisla tion concerning the Public Service clearly indicates that a public servant cannot be said to be laid off if his employment has not been terminated. The parties to this collective agree ment must be deemed to have been familiar with the terminolo gy of the Public Service Employment Act. When the parties used the term "lay-off' in the collective agreement, the Court is entitled to presume in the absence of any indication of a contrary intention, that they intended to refer to a termination of employment.
Per Heald J.: "Lay-off' as used in article 30 must be considered in context of the collective agreement as a whole and more particularly having regard to the context of the article in the agreement of which it forms a part. An analysis of this article, under the heading "Severance Pay", clearly indi cates that the parties, when intending to confer certain sever ance pay benefits upon certain employees, intended further that eligibility for such benefits was to be restricted to those employees whose employment was "permanently ended".
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
Peter T. Melnenly for applicant.
Maurice W. Wright, Q.C., for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
Soloway, Wright, Houston, Greenberg, O'Grady & Morin, Ottawa, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J.: This section 28 application is direct ed against a decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board allowing a grievance which the respondent had referred to adjudication pursuant to section 91 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35.'
The respondent is an employee of the Post Office Department who works as a letter carrier in Toronto. On October 23, 1975, he and his fellow employees were informed by their superiors that, as a consequence of a strike of other employees of the Department, there was no longer any work available for them and that they would not be paid as long as that situation persisted. They were also told that they would hear from the employer "as to your return to work" and that, in the meantime, they could apply for unemployment insurance ben efits. The respondent remained out of work for some five weeks during which he collected unem ployment insurance; during that same time the employer ceased to pay the respondent's salary, but continued to pay contributions to the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, Canada Pension Plan and Public Service Superannuation. On December 3, 1975, the respondent resumed his normal duties as a letter carrier.
It is the contention of the respondent, which was upheld by the Board, that, as a consequence of his "lay-off", he was entitled to the "severance pay"
It should be made clear that the jurisdiction of the Board to make such a decision was not questioned and that, for that reason, I need not express any opinion on that question. How ever, I cannot help but observe that the Board does not seem, at first sight at least, to have the power to dispose of a grievance which has been referred to adjudication. Under section 94(2)(c) of the Act, when a grievance has been referred to adjudication, the Board must "refer the matter to an adjudica tor selected by [it]"; it is this adjudicator, and not the Board, who under section 96, must dispose of the grievance.
provided for in article 30 of the applicable collec tive agreement. That clause of the agreement reads in part as follows:
SEVERANCE PAY
30.01 Lay-Off
An employee who has one year or more of continuous employment and who is laid off is entitled to be paid severance pay at the time of lay-off.
30.02 In the case of an employee who is laid off for the first time after August 9, 1968, the amount of severance pay shall be two (2) weeks' pay for the first and one (1) week's pay for each succeeding completed year of continuous employment less any period in respect of which he was granted severance pay, retiring leave or a cash gratuity in lieu thereof by the Employ er, but the total amount of severance pay which may be paid under this clause shall not exceed twenty-eight (28) weeks' pay.
30.03 In the case of an employee who is laid off for a second or subsequent time after August 9, 1968, the amount of severance pay shall be one (1) week's pay for each completed year of continuous employment less any period in respect of which he was granted severance pay, retiring leave or a cash gratuity in lieu thereof by the Employer, but the total amount of severance pay which may be paid under this clause shall not exceed twenty-seven (27) weeks' pay.
Article 30 also provides for the payment of sever ance pay in case of resignation, retirement and death.
It must first be said that when it became appar ent that there was no work for the respondent, the employer could have terminated his employment under section 29 of the Public Service Employ ment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32. 2 If this had been done, no problem would have arisen since it is common ground that the respondent would have then been entitled to severance pay. However, section 29 was not resorted to by the employer in this case and the respondent's employment, according to the unchallenged finding of the Board, was not otherwise terminated. This is what created the problem that the Board's decision
2 That provision reads as follows:
Lay- Offs
29. (1) Where the services of an employee are no longer required because of lack of work or because of the discontinu ance of a function, the deputy head, in accordance with regula tions of the Commission, may lay off the employee.
(2) An employee ceases to be an employee when he is laid off pursuant to subsection (1).
resolved in the respondent's favour: was the respondent entitled to severance pay as a conse quence of his "lay-off" in spite of the fact that his employment was not terminated?
The expression "lay-off', in common parlance, does not necessarily imply a termination of employment. However, what is here in issue is not the usual or even the dictionary meaning of the expression but its meaning as used in the collective agreement. There is no doubt that, for one who is conversant with the legislation applicable to the Public Service, a public servant cannot be said to be laid off if his employment has not been terminated. 3 I consider that the parties to the. collective agreement here in question, which relates to the condition of work of public servants, must be deemed to have been familiar with the terminology of the Public Service Employment Act. Therefore, in my opinion, when they used the expression "lay-off' in the collective agreement, one is entitled to presume, in the absence of any indication of a contrary intention, that they intended to refer to a termination of employment. Contrary to what was argued by counsel for the respondent, I do not think that any conclusion adverse to that opinion may be drawn from the fact that the meaning of other words, used else where in the agreement, is elucidated by express references to the Public Service Employment Act. 4
(3) Notwithstanding anything in this Act, the Commission shall, within such period and in such order as it may determine, consider a lay-off for appointment, without competition and, subject to sections 30 and 37, in priority to all other persons, to any position in the Public Service for which in the opinion of the Commission he is qualified.
(4) Notwithstanding subsection (2), a lay-off is entitled, during such period as the Commission may determine for any case or class of cases, to enter any competition for which he would have been eligible had he not been laid off.
3 See section 29 of the Public Service Employment Act and section 2(j) of the Public Service Terms and Conditions of Employment Regulations, SOR/67-118.
° For instance, article 10.08 reads in part as follows:
10.08 A break in service shall be deemed to have occurred and seniority shall be forfeited in cases of
(c) abandonment of position as defined in section 27 of the Public Service Employment Act.
It was also argued by counsel for the respondent that the reference, in articles 30.02 and 30.03, to a lay-off as something which may occur "[a] first time" or "a second or subsequent time" indicates that the parties did not use the phrase "lay-off" as necessarily implying a termination of employment. I must confess that I do not understand that argument because, in my view, an employee may be laid off more than once even if the expression "laid off" is used as connoting a termination of employment. In my view, when the whole of article 30 is considered, it becomes clear that the parties did not use the phrase "lay-off" in the general sense proposed by counsel for the respondent. First, the heading of article 30 is "Severance Pay", a phrase which, in my opinion, connotes a termina tion of employment; second, the other instances in which severance pay is payable under article 30 (resignation, retirement, death) are clearly cases of termination of employment.
For those reasons, I would grant the application and set aside the decision of the Board.
* * *
URIE J.: I concur.
• • *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: I have read the reasons for judgment of my brother Pratte J. and agree both with those reasons and with the conclusion he has reached that subject decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board dated April 19, 1977, must be set aside.
I have, likewise, reached the conclusion that, in the circumstances of this case, article 30 does not operate so as to entitle the respondent and the other grievors to receive the severance pay pro vided therein. The generally accepted definition of "lay-off" when used as a labour term is: "Tempo- rary, prolonged, or final separation from employ-
ment as a result of lack of work" 5 . Thus, if the term "lay-off" could be taken in isolation and without reference to the context of article 30, one might well conclude that the circumstances of this case are encompassed within that definition. How ever, it is not, in my view, possible to adopt that approach. "Lay-off" as used in article 30, must be considered in the context of the collective agree ment as a whole, and more particularly having regard to the context of the article in the agree ment of which it forms a part. The index to the collective agreement describes the subject of article 30 as "Severance Pay" and the heading under article 30 is "Severance Pay". The designa tion "lay-off" is one of three subheadings under "Severance Pay". Thus, the generally accepted meaning of "severance pay" must be considered in order to determine to what extent, if any, the term "lay-off" is qualified by the term "severance pay". That term, when used as a labour term, appears to mean: "A lump-sum payment by an employer to a worker whose employment is permanently ended, usually for causes beyond the worker's control." 6 [The underlining is mine.] It is accordingly clear, in my opinion, that the parties, when intending to confer certain severance pay benefits upon certain employees, intended further that eligibility for such benefits was to be restricted to those employees whose employment was "permanently ended". The authorities establish that, in statutory construction, headings have a higher status than marginal notes, they constitute an important part of the Act itself and may be looked at as explain ing the sections which immediately follow them. Headings are always considered a useful pointer as to the intention of Parliament in enacting the immediately following sections'. I have no hesita tion in applying those rules of statutory construc tion to the construction of the provisions of a collective agreement.
5 C.C.H. Canadian Limited, Canadian Labour Terms, 1975, 6th ed., (Don Mills, 1975), p. 44.
6 C.C.H. Canadian Limited, Canadian Labour Terms, 1975, 6th ed., (Don Mills, 1975), p. 69.
' See: E. A. Driedger, The Construction of Statutes, (Toronto, 1974), pp. 112-116.
For the foregoing reasons, I have concluded that the term "lay-off" as used in article 30 must be interpreted in such a way as to mean a final separation from employment. Applying that defi nition to the facts here present, it is clear from the record that the employment of the respondent and the other grievors was never terminated. While they were away from work, they continued to receive vacation and sick leave credits, OHIP cov erage and other benefits. To me this is a clear indication that the relationship of employer and employee continued to subsist. (See Case Book, pages 41-42, 48, 59, 60, 65.)
Accordingly, on the facts here present, a "lay- off" within the meaning of article 30 has not occurred, and, thus, the respondent and the other grievors have not established their entitlement to the severance pay provided in article 30. I there fore agree that the section 28 application should be granted and that the decision of the Board should be set aside.
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