Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-3280-76
Sophia Marchak (Plaintiff) v.
Attorney General of Canada and L. W. Munro (Defendants)
T-2578-78
Lamberto Avillanoza (Plaintiff) v.
Attorney General of Canada and A. Evans (Defendants)
Trial Division, Smith D.J.—Winnipeg, March 13, and August 3, 1979.
Unemployment insurance — Unemployment Insurance Commission's notices of disqualification and disentitlement unanimously upheld by respective Board of Referees hearing plaintiffs' appeals — Chairman of Board of Referees refused leave to appeal required by s. 95(c)(ii) of Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 — Operative effect and validity of that section attacked — Did the fact that the Chairman, who denied leave to appeal, was a member of Board of Referees from which leave to appeal was sought, constitute bias? — Were plaintiffs denied equality before the law and natural justice since they could only appeal with leave because they were not trade union members? — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, s. 95 — Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 (R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III), ss. 1, 2.
Plaintiffs' appeals from the Unemployment Insurance Com mission's notices of disqualification and disentitlement were unanimously dismissed by the respective Boards of Referees hearing them. The only avenue of appeal from a unanimous decision was with leave of the Chairman of the Board of Referees under subparagraph 95(c)(ii) of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971. This leave was refused. The appeal in each case attacks the validity and operative effect of this subparagraph and argument revolved around two circum stances. Firstly, did the fact that the Chairman, who refused leave to appeal, had been in each case a member and Chairman of the Board of Referees from which plaintiff was asking leave to appeal constitute bias on the part of the Chairman such that his decision should be reversed? Secondly, what effect did the provisions of the Canadian Bill of Rights dealing with the right to equality before the law, and the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of natural justice, have on each of plaintiffs' positions, particularly with respect to making an appeal to the Umpire? Plaintiffs asserted that they suffered discrimination and inequality before the law by their not being members of a trade union.
Held, the appeals are dismissed. Parliament intended that the Chairman should not grant the application for leave to appeal, unless in his opinion, there was a principle of impor tance involved in the case or there were other special circum stances by reason of which leave to appeal ought to be granted. This provision was to expedite the disposition of appeals that would or might be thwarted. No evidence suggests that the Chairman of either Board did not act properly and in accord ance with the provisions of sections 95 and 96. It is to be assumed that neither Chairman decided that the case before him involved an important principle or other special circum stances by reason of which leave to appeal ought to be granted. The rules of natural justice concerning a fair hearing do not require that a person who has had a fair hearing at one appeal (where his appeal was unanimously dismissed) should have an inherent right to a further appeal. Plaintiffs complain that section 95 discriminates against them because neither of them is a member of an association of workers. That section, how ever, does not discriminate against anybody by reason of a form of discrimination mentioned in section 1 of the Canadian Bill of Rights. Section 95 does not abrogate, abridge or infringe the right of each plaintiff to equality before the law or deprive plaintiffs of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the rules of natural justice.
Bliss v. Attorney General of Canada [1979] 1 S.C.R. 183, applied. R. v. Burnshine [1975] 1 S.C.R. 693, applied. Curr v. The Queen [1972] S.C.R. 889, applied. Prata v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1976] 1 S.C.R. 376, applied. Attorney General of Canada v. Lavell [1974] S.C.R. 1349, applied. R. v. Drybones [1970] S.C.R. 282, distinguished.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
Charles G. Birks for plaintiffs. B. J. Meronek for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Charles G. Birks, Winnipeg, for plaintiffs.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendants.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
SMITH D.J.: The facts and circumstances and the prayer for relief in these two cases, except for names and dates, are the same, as were the counsel for the parties. Counsel consenting, I ordered that they be heard together.
The facts in each case are not in dispute and may be stated briefly, as follows.
The plaintiff's application for unemployment in surance benefit was not allowed and the plaintiff received from the Commission notices of dis qualification and disentitlement. The plaintiff appealed to the Board of Referees, which heard the appeal and in each case unanimously disal lowed it. In the Marchak case the Chairman of the Board of Referees was the defendant L. W. Munro. In the Avillanoza case the Chairman was the defendant A. Evans. In each case the plaintiff applied to the Chairman, pursuant to section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, for leave to appeal to the Umpire, and in each case was notified by letter that the Chairman did not approve the application for leave to appeal. These actions resulted from the refusal of leave to appeal.
Section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48 reads as follows:
95. An appeal lies to an umpire in the manner prescribed from any decision of a board of referees as follows:
(a) at the instance of the Commission, in any case;
(b) subject to section 97, at the instance of an association of workers of which the claimant is a member or an association of employers of which an employer of the claimant is a member, in any case; or
(c) at the instance of the claimant or an employer of the claimant
(i) without leave, in any case in which the decision of the board of referees is not unanimous, and
(ii) with the leave of the chairman of the board of referees, in any other case.
In neither of these cases was the plaintiff a member of a trade union or association of workers at the relevant time, so section 95(b) has no application to them. Any appeal under the section must therefore be brought by the plaintiff (claim- ant) under section 95(c). If the decisions of the Boards of Referees had not been unanimous there would have been no problem, as the claimant would have had a clear right to appeal under section 95(c)(i). Since the decision was unanimous in each case, the applicable provision is section 95(c)(ii), which authorizes an appeal at the instance of the claimant with the leave of the chairman of the board of referees. This consent was refused.
It is obvious that if section 95(c)(ii) is valid and binding on the claimants these appeals must fail. The appeal in each case attacks the validity and operative effect of this subparagraph.
In passing I note an expression in paragraph (b) of the prayer for relief in the statement of claim in each case that is confusing. Each of these para graphs speaks of section 95 "providing that the Chairman must grant leave to appeal." The sec tion of course, does not, in subparagraph (c)(ii), require the chairman to do anything. It simply authorizes an appeal "with the leave of the chair man". So far as the section goes the chairman may grant leave or he may refuse to do so. Having regard to the statement of claim as a whole it is readily seen that the draftsman did not intend the words quoted supra from the prayer for relief to be accorded their most obvious direct meaning, but rather that obtaining the chairman's "leave" was a condition precedent to the claimant having a right of appeal. Nevertheless, taken by themselves they are confusing in that they seem to suggest a mis understanding by the draftsman of the meaning of subparagraph (c)(ii).
In each of these two cases the statement of claim asks for four declarations by the Court.
1. A declaration that section 95 of the Unemploy ment Insurance Act, 1971, quoted supra, requiring claimants who are not members of an association of workers to obtain leave to appeal to the Umpire, violates the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44 [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III] in that
(a) it is discriminatory and deprives those claimants of the right to equality before the law.
(b) it deprives those claimants of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
2. A declaration that the said section 95, which provides that leave to appeal to the Umpire must be obtained from the Chairman, who has himself participated in the decision of the Board of Referees from which the plaintiff (claimant) seeks to appeal, violates the Canadian Bill of Rights and/or the principles of natural justice in that it deprives a claimant of the right to a fair hearing for the determination of the claimant's rights and obligations.
3. A declaration that the said section 95 shall be construed and applied so that persons who are not members of an association of workers shall not
require leave prior to bringing an appeal before the Umpire.
4. A declaration that the plaintiff is entitled to have his case heard on appeal before the Umpire.
I note here that the prayer for relief is somewhat too broadly drawn. It is only where the decision of the Board of Referees has been unanimous that the section requires that the leave of the Chairman to appeal to the Umpire must be given prior to an appeal being made. In the argument of counsel for the defendants this distinction has significance.
In each case the plaintiff asks for the costs of the action.
The statement of defence in each case simply asserts that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief sought and asks that the action be dismissed with costs.
There being no dispute about facts the hearing consisted of the arguments of counsel on the law.
The argument revolved around two main circumstances:
1. The fact that the Chairman who refused leave to appeal had been in each case a member and Chairman of the Board of Referees which had made the decision from which the plaintiff (claim- ant) was asking leave to appeal. Did this circum stance constitute bias in law on the part of the Chairman such that his decision to refuse leave to appeal should be reversed? There was no claim that the Chairman was in fact actually biased against the plaintiff (claimant);
2. Certain provisions of the Canadian Bill of Rights. What effect did these provisions have on the position of the plaintiff, particularly with respect to making an appeal to the Umpire?
Counsel for the plaintiffs submitted with regard to 1 that at common law this circumstance would be held to constitute bias in law, because it would indicate a real likelihood that actual bias might exist. He cited R. v. Alberta Securities Commis sion, Ex Parte Albrecht 36 D.L.R. (2d) 199 in support of this position. He agreed, however, that an exception to this rule existed where, by legisla-
tion, the chairman is authorized to make the deci sion on an application for leave to appeal. For this he cited Riley J. in the same case, at the bottom of page 201. Section 95(c)(ii) gives such authoriza tion to the chairman in the circumstances with which we are concerned in these actions. In fact section 96 makes it clear by giving him certain directions, that the chairman's decision is not arbi
trary. It reads, in part:
96. (1) ... and an application for leave to appeal shall be granted by the chairman of the board of referees if it appears to him that there is a principle of importance involved in the case or there are other special circumstances by reason of which leave to appeal ought to be granted.
(2) Where the chairman of a board of referees grants leave to appeal to an umpire from the decision of the board of referees, the chairman of the board of referees shall include in the record a statement of the grounds on which leave to appeal is granted.
In my view the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius is applicable to what is said in section 96. It seems clear that Parliament's inten tion in enacting this section was that the Chairman should not grant the application for leave to appeal unless, in his opinion, there was a principle of importance involved in the case or there were other special circumstances by reason of which leave to appeal ought to be granted. In this connection see the judgment of Marceau J., sitting as Umpire in C.U.B. 4571, issued July 29, 1977, Pierre Bor- deleau, appellant.
While the grounds on which the Chairman, in these two cases, did not approve the applications for leave to appeal to the Umpire are not before the Court, there is no evidence and no submission in argument that the Chairman was not acting in accordance with the provisions of section 96.
My conclusion is that plaintiffs in these two cases cannot succeed on the basis of bias in law on the part of the Chairman against either of them in deciding not to approve applications for leave to appeal. I have read all the cases on the question of bias that were cited to me by counsel. They con firm me in my opinion just stated.
Determination of the effect of provisions of the Canadian Bill of Rights on the position of the plaintiffs in these two cases is more complex.
The submissions made by counsel for the plain tiffs rested upon portions of the provisions of sec tions 1 and 2 of the Canadian Bill of Rights. It will be convenient to quote these provisions now:
1. It is hereby recognized and declared that in Canada there have existed and shall continue to exist without discrimination by reason of race, national origin, colour, religion or sex, the following human rights and fundamental freedoms, namely,
(a) the right of the individual to life, liberty, security of the person and enjoyment of property, and the right not to be deprived thereof except by due process of law;
(b) the right of the individual to equality before the law and to the protection of the law;
Paragraphs (c),(d),(e) and (f) of section 1 were not referred to.
2. Every law of Canada shall, unless it is expressly declared by an Act of the Parliament of Canada that it shall operate notwithstanding the Canadian Bill of Rights, be so construed and applied as not to abrogate, abridge or infringe or to authorize the abrogation, abridgment or infringement of any of the rights or freedoms herein recognized and declared, and in particular, no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to
(e) deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in accord ance with the principles of fundamental justice for the deter mination of his rights and obligations;
Paragraphs (a),(b),(c),(d),(f) and (g) of section 2 were not referred to.
Counsel referred first to two passages in the judgment of Laskin J., as he then was, in the Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Curr v. The Queen [1972] S.C.R. 889. At page 893 Laskin J. said:
In view of the course of the argument, I deem it prudent to put at the forefront of these reasons two rather obvious proposi tions; first, the Canadian Bill of Rights did not freeze the federal statute book as of its effective date, which was August 10, 1960; and, second, federal law enacted after the date of the Canadian Bill of Rights as well as pre-existing federal law may be found to run foul of the prescriptions of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
These two propositions are certainly true. The first has been adopted in several decisions since the Curr case and the second is expressly stated in section 5(2) of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
At page 896 Laskin J. referring to section 1(a) and (b), said:
In considering the reach of s. 1(a) and s. 1(b), and, indeed, of s. 1 as a whole, I would observe, first, that the section is given its controlling force over federal law by its referential incorpo ration into s. 2; and, second, that I do not read it as making the existence of any of the forms of prohibited discrimination a sine qua non of its operation. Rather, the prohibited discrimination is an additional lever to which federal legislation must respond. Putting the matter another way, federal legislation which does not offend s. 1 in respect of any of the prohibited kinds of discrimination may nonetheless be offensive to s. 1 if it is violative of what is specified in any of the clauses (a) to (/) of s. 1. It is, a fortiori, offensive if there is discrimination by reason of race so as to deny equality before the law. That is what this Court decided in Regina v. Drybones and I need say no more on this point.
Six of the other Supreme Court justices con curred with Laskin J.'s reasons for judgment. Rit- chie J., with whom Fauteux C.J.C. agreed, came to the same conclusion as to the disposition of the appeal, (it was dismissed unanimously), but for other reasons.
Applying to the two cases before me the opinion expressed by Laskin J. in the foregoing quotation I note first that section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, does not discriminate against anybody by reason of race, national origin, colour, religion or sex. What the plaintiffs complain of is that the section discriminates against both of them by reason of the fact that neither of them is a member of an association of workers, which is not one of the forms of discrimination mentioned in the opening lines of section 1 of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
The claim of the plaintiffs does not, however, stop with an assertion of discrimination, but goes on to state that as a result of that discrimination each of the plaintiffs has been deprived of the right to equality before the law, contrary to section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights. It further claims that by section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, each of the plaintiffs has been deprived of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the deter mination of his (her) rights and obligations, con trary to section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights. There are therefore two questions that remain to be answered:
1. Can section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 be construed and applied in the circum stances of these two cases without abrogating, abridging or infringing the right of each of the plaintiffs to equality before the law under section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights?
2. Can the said section 95 be construed and applied in the circumstances of these two cases without depriving each of them of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of his (her) rights and obligations, contrary to section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights?
Counsel for the plaintiffs submits that both of these questions should be answered in the negative.
With regard to question 1, his submission is that under section 95 the Commission, an association of workers of which the claimant (plaintiff) is a member, and an association of employers of which an employer of the claimant (plaintiff) is a member all have a right of appeal to the umpire from a decision of a board of referees in any case, regardless of whether the board's decision was unanimous, but that a claimant who is not a member of an association of workers has no right of appeal to the Umpire if the decision of the board was unanimous, unless the chairman of the board grants leave to appeal, and that the leave to appeal may only be granted if there appears to the chairman to be a principle of importance involved or other special circumstances by reason of which leave to appeal ought to be granted. In his view this clearly puts a claimant who is in the situation of the plaintiffs in these two cases in a position of inequality and inferiority before the law relative to that of the other parties mentioned. Employers who are non members of an association of employ ers are of course in the same position of inequality before the law.
Counsel submits that it is the non-union member who is most in need of the protection afforded by appeal. He has no union to support him and thus no experienced union representative to speak for him before the Board of Referees. Counsel also stated that one member of a Board of Referees is a union representative. As a practical
matter this may well be commonly true, but it is not necessarily so, as section 91 of the Unemploy ment Insurance Act, 1971 simply enacts, in part:
91. (1) There shall be boards of referees, consisting of a chairman and one or more members chosen from employers or representatives of employers and an equal number of members chosen from insured persons or representatives of insured persons.
(3) Panels of employers and representatives of employers and insured persons and representatives of insured persons shall be established by the Commission, and the members of the boards of referees shall be selected from those panels in the manner prescribed.
It is clear that under section 91, one member of a Board of Referees may be an insured person who is not a union member or union representative. What we are concerned with here is the right of an individual employee to appeal to the Umpire from the decision of a Board of Referees and the only circumstance in which the right of an employee to make such an appeal is in any doubt is where the Board's decision has been unanimous. I see no ground for assuming that an insured person who is not a union member or union representative would be more likely, as a member of a Board of Referees, to dissent from the decision of the other two members of the Board, thereby ensuring that there would be no doubt about the claimant's right of appeal to the Umpire, than would a union member or union representative sitting on a Board of Referees. Consequently I fail to comprehend how the two claimants (plaintiffs) would be placed at a disadvantage with respect to the right of appeal by reason of one member of each of the Boards from whose decisions they seek to appeal, being a union representative rather than an insured person who is not a union representative.
The words "equality before the law" in section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights as well as the words of section 1(a), the due process clause, have been discussed by Canadian Courts, including the Supreme Court, on a number of occasions. In the Curr case (supra), Laskin J., referring to section 1(a) said, at pages 899-900:
Assuming that "except by due process of law" provides a means of controlling substantive federal legislation—a point that did not directly arise in Regina v. Drybones—compelling reasons ought to be advanced to justify the Court in this case to employ a statutory (as contrasted with a constitutional) jurisdiction to
deny operative effect to a substantive measure duly enacted by a Parliament constitutionally competent to do so, and exercis ing its powers in accordance with the tenets of responsible government, which underlie the discharge of legislative author ity under the British North America Act. Those reasons must relate to objective and manageable standards by which a Court should be guided if scope is to be found in s. 1(a) due process to silence otherwise competent federal legislation.
In my view these words are equally applicable in considering section 1(b). Nor do I consider them any the less applicable because of the fact that the Curr case was one of a criminal charge for refus ing to give a breath sample to assist in determining the alcoholic content thereof, while ours arises from a refusal to approve an appeal in a civil matter.
In The Queen v. Burnshine [1975] 1 S.C.R. 693, section 150 of the Prisons and Reformatories Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-21 was under attack. The section provided for a system of definite and indetermi nate sentences for young offenders in British Columbia only. It was possible for the indetermi nate term to be greater than the maximum pre scribed for the particular offence. It was claimed that the legislation was discriminatory as it applied only to young offenders and to one province only. It was also claimed that it involved inequality before the law, as the total term of incarceration imposed on a young offender might exceed the maximum that could be imposed upon any other class of offender for the same offence. Martland J., in giving the reasons for the decision of the majority of the Supreme Court, considered at some length the question of equality before the law. He pointed out [at page 705] that the Canadian Bill of Rights did not purport to create new rights. "By its express wording it declared and continued existing rights and freedoms" and "It was those existing rights and freedoms which were not to be infringed by any federal statute".
Referring to The Queen v. Drybones [1970] S.C.R. 282 which was an appeal by an Indian from a conviction of being intoxicated off a reserve, contrary to section 94(b) of the Indian Act, and which he said was the only case "to date in which this Court has held a section of a federal
statute to be inoperative because it infringed the Bill of Rights," Martland J. indicated the limited scope of that judgment by quoting the following passage found at page 298 from the judgment of Ritchie J., who delivered the majority reasons in that case:
It appears to me to be desirable to make it plain that these reasons for judgment are limited to a situation in which, under the laws of Canada, it is made an offence punishable at law on account of race, for a person to do something which all Canadians who are not members of that race may do with impunity; in my opinion the same considerations do not by any means apply to all the provisions of the Indian Act.
Martland J. then said, at page 707:
The legislative purpose of s. 150 was not to impose harsher punishment upon offenders in British Columbia in a particular age group than upon others. The purpose of the indeterminate sentence was to seek to reform and benefit persons within the younger age group. It was made applicable in British Columbia because that Province was equipped with the necessary institu tions and staff for that purpose.
He concluded by saying at pages 707-708:
In my opinion, in order to succeed in the present case, it would be necessary for the respondent, at least, to satisfy this Court that, in enacting s. 150, Parliament was not seeking to achieve a valid federal objective. This was not established or sought to be established.
In Prata v. Minister of Manpower and Immi gration [1976] 1 S.C.R. 376, a deportation order had been made against the appellant. He appealed to the Immigration Appeal Board under section 15 of the Immigration Appeal Board Act, which gave the Board discretionary power, in certain circum stances, to order that a deportation order be stayed or quashed. Unfortunately for him section 21 of the Act provided that the Board could not exercise this discretionary power if a certificate signed by the Minister and the Solicitor General was filed with the Board stating that in their opinion, based upon security or criminal intelligence reports received and considered by them, it would be contrary to the national interest for the Board to take such action. Such a certificate was filed. The Board held that by section 21 it had been stripped of jurisdiction to consider his appeal under section 15.
The case ended in the Supreme Court of Canada, where one of the appellant's submissions was that the Canadian Bill of Rights prevented
section 21 from being applied to preclude Prata from seeking to obtain the exercise by the Board of its discretionary powers under section 15. It was contended that the application of section 21 deprived the appellant of the right to "equality before the law" declared by section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
Martland J., delivering the unanimous judgment of the Court, said, at page 382:
The purpose of enacting s. 21 is clear and it seeks to achieve a valid federal objective. This Court has held that s. 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights does not require that all federal statutes must apply to all individuals in the same manner. Legislation dealing with a particular class of people is valid if it is enacted for the purpose of achieving a valid federal objective (R. v. Burnshine) ((1974), 44 D.L.R. (3d) 584).
The appeal was dismissed.
The most recent Supreme Court decision of which I am aware, in which reference was made to a "valid federal purpose" resulting in a federal statute not being violative of the Canadian Bill of Rights, is Bliss v. Attorney General of Canada [1979] 1 S.C.R. 183. In that case the provisions under review were sections 30(1) and 46 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971. Section 30 of that Act provides for pregnant women being en titled to insurance benefits during a maximum period of 15 weeks commencing eight weeks before the week in which her confinement is expected, if she has had 10 or more weeks of insurable employ ment in the 20 weeks that immediately precede the 30th week before her expected date of confine ment. No further conditions need to be complied with. The basic qualifications for receiving benefits for all other persons are 8 weeks of insurable employment in the applicant's qualifying period, an interruption of earnings, and not being disquali fied under any of a number of conditions, of which two had some relevance to that case, viz.: failure to prove that he was either
a) capable of and available for work and unable to obtain suitable employment, or
b) incapable of work by reason of any prescribed illness, injury or quarantine.
Section 46 provides that, subject to section 30, a pregnant woman is not entitled to benefit during the said period.
In the Bliss case the claimant could not qualify for pregnancy benefit because she had not had 10 weeks of insurable employment during the period prescribed by section 30, and because of section 46 she could not qualify under the general basic qualifications. Apart from section 46 she could have so qualified.
The case went to the Supreme Court, where Ritchie J. delivered the unanimous judgment of the Court. The contention of the appellant was that section 46 denied "equality before the law" for the period specified in section 30 to pregnant and childbearing women who failed to fulfill the conditions required by section 30(1) because it denied them the benefits available to all other claimants, both male and female, who had 8 weeks of insurable employment and were capable of and available for work.
At page 191 Ritchie J. said, in part:
As I have indicated s. 46 constitutes a limitation on the entitlement to benefits of a specific group of individuals and as such was part of a valid federal scheme.
Continuing, he drew a wide distinction between legislation like that in The Queen v. Drybones and the case before him, saying [at pages 191-192]:
The one case involves the imposition of a penalty on a racial group to which other citizens are not subjected; the other involves a definition of the qualifications required for entitle ment to benefits, and in my view the enforcement of the limitation provided by s. 46 does not involve denial of equality of treatment in the administration and enforcement of the law before the ordinary courts of the land as was the case in Drybones.
In the light of the foregoing judgments I now consider whether in the present case Parliament was seeking to achieve a valid federal purpose.
Plaintiffs' counsel contended that there is no ground for argument that section 95(c)(ii) of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 is based on a valid legal objective, but he advanced little by way of argument to support that contention.
Counsel for the defendants sought to draw an analogy between this case and the Bliss case, supra referring to page 186 of the Supreme Court judgment, where Ritchie J. said:
It was, in my view, necessary for the effective exercise of the authority conferred by s. 91(2A) of the British North America
Act that Parliament should prescribe conditions of entitlement to the benefits for which the Act provides. The establishment of such conditions was an integral part of a legislative scheme enacted by Parliament for a valid federal purpose in the discharge of the constitutional authority entrusted to it under s. 91(2A) and the fact that this involved treating claimants who fulfil the conditions differently from those who do not, cannot, in my opinion, be said to invalidate such legislation.
Counsel then submitted that the federal purpose was to control the number of appeals that might be brought before the Umpire. He said that in condi tions of high unemployment such as have existed in Canada for a period of years the Commission was concerned about its heavy responsibility. This submission means, as I see it, that in conditions of high unemployment there is a danger that the Umpires might be overwhelmed with the number of appeals they would have to deal with and that this danger justified limiting the circumstances in which appeals may be made to the Umpire.
I have left to the end of this discussion of "equality before the law" the consideration of what is meant by that term as it is used in section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, feeling that after some review of the way in which the courts have dealt with it such a discussion might more readily point to the right conclusion about the application of section 1(b) to this case.
In Attorney General of Canada v. Lave11 [1974] S.C.R. 1349 in the Supreme Court, Ritchie J., with whom Fauteux C.J.C., Martland and Judson JJ. concurred, expressed very definite views about the meaning of "equality before the law". The case was that of an Indian woman who married a non-Indian, with the result that her name was deleted by the Registrar from the Indian Register pursuant to section 12(1)(b) of the Indian Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-6.
Ritchie J. began by stating that in his opinion the words in question, as they occur in section 1(b), do not have the same meaning as that which the Courts of the United States have interpreted them to have in the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. He adopted Professor Dicey's view that "equality before the law" was one of three meanings of the great principle of the English Constitution, viz.: "The Rule of Law".
At pages 1366-67, he said, in part:
... "equality before the law" as recognized by Dicey as a segment of the rule of law, carries the meaning of equal subjection of all classes to the ordinary law of the land as administered by the ordinary courts, and in my opinion the phrase "equality before the law" as employed in s. 1(b) of the Bill of Rights is to be treated as meaning equality in the administration or application of the law by the law enforcement authorities and the ordinary courts of the land. This construc tion is, in my view, supported by the provisions of subsections (a) to (g) of s. 2 of the Bill which clearly indicate to me that it was equality in the administration and enforcement of the law with which Parliament was concerned when it guaranteed the continued existence of "equality before the law". (Emphasis added.)
I note here that Ritchie J. in giving the forego ing opinion, was not speaking for the majority of
the Court. Four judges dissented, and Pigeon J., while agreeing with Ritchie J. in the result, did not express an opinion on this point.
In the Bliss case (supra), when it was before the Federal Court of Appeal, where it is reported sub nom. Attorney General of Canada v. Bliss [1978]
1 F.C. 208 Pratte J., delivering the judgment of the Court, gave expression to a wider meaning for the phrase "equality before the law" than that adopted by Ritchie J. in the Lavell case. At page 214 he said:
... one could conceive "the right ... to equality before the law" as the right of an individual to be treated by the law in the same way as other individuals in the same situation. However, such a definition would be incomplete since no two individuals can be said to be in exactly the same situation. It is always possible to make distinctions between individuals. When a statute distinguishes between persons so as to treat them differ ently, the distinctions may be either relevant or irrelevant. The distinction is relevant when there is a logical connection be tween the basis for the distinction and the consequences that flow from it; the distinction is irrelevant when that logical connection is missing. In the light of those considerations, the right to equality before the law could be defined as the right of an individual to be treated as well by the legislation as others who, if only relevant facts were taken into consideration, would be judged to be in the same situation. According to that definition, which, I think, counsel for the respondent would not repudiate, a person would be deprived of his right to equality before the law if he were treated more harshly than others by reason of an irrelevant distinction made between himself and those other persons. If, however, the difference of treatment were based on a relevant distinction (or, even on a distinction that could be conceived as possibly relevant) the right to equality before the law would not be offended.
Applying his wider definition, Pratte J. came to the conclusion that Parliament's decision to make
the employment qualification period for pregnancy benefits longer than the basic qualification period required in other cases (10 weeks instead of 8) could not be said to be founded on irrelevant considerations. Consequently the legislation adopt ed to implement that decision was "enacted for the purpose of achieving a valid federal objective".
When the Bliss case came before the Supreme Court, Ritchie J., as we have seen in the paragraph quoted supra, from page 191, applying the defini tion he had pronounced in the Lavell case, held that enforcement of the limitations provided by section 46 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 did not involve denial of equality of treat ment in the administration and enforcement of the law before the ordinary courts of the land. He then referred to Pratte J.'s definition and, in effect, applying it, said, at page 193:
Whatever may be thought of the wisdom of this latter provision, there can, in my view, with all respect, be no doubt that the period mentioned in s. 46 is a relevant one for consideration in determining the conditions entitling pregnant women to benefits under a scheme of unemployment insurance enacted to achieve the valid federal objective of discharging the responsibility imposed by Parliament by s. 91(2A) of the British North America Act.
With the foregoing judicial definitions of "equality before the law", and discussions of its application and of "valid federal objective" in mind, I return to a final consideration of their application to the two cases that are before me.
In my view, Parliament may reasonably have thought that there would be a much greater number of appeals if every individual employee and employer had a right of appeal to the Umpire unrestricted by a requirement that leave to appeal be obtained from the chairman of the board of referees in cases where the board's decision was unanimous, than would be the case under a provi sion requiring such leave. Parliament may well have believed the right to appeal without leave in such cases would lead to a great many appeals that had no hope of success, with the result that expedi tious disposition of appeals would or might be thwarted. That claims for benefits under the Act, both at first instance and on appeal should be disposed of expeditiously is important to achieving the purpose of the legislation.
On this basis it may be concluded that section 95, enacted in pursuance of its constitutional re sponsibility for unemployment insurance under section 91(2A) of The British North America Act, 1867, had a valid federal purpose. In reaching this conclusion I am adopting the definition of "equal- ity before the law" enunciated by Ritchie J. in the Lavell case and in the unanimous decision of the Supreme Court in the Bliss case (supra).
My final conclusion is that section 95 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, more particu larly subparagraph (c)(ii) thereof is applicable in the circumstances of these two cases and does not abrogate, abridge or infringe the right to equality before the law declared by section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
The question whether section 95 can be con strued and applied in the circumstances of these two cases without depriving each of them of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determi nation of his (her) rights and obligations, contrary to section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights can, in my opinion, be answered much more briefly than the question about equality before the law.
These two plaintiffs have each had an appeal hearing before the Board of Referees. There is no suggestion that those hearings were not fair hear ings. What is being claimed is that the failure of the Chairman of the Board to grant leave to appeal has deprived each of the plaintiffs of the right to a fair hearing at an appeal to the Umpire.
In view of my finding that section 95 was enact ed for a valid federal purpose and pursuant to its constitutional power under section 91(2A) of The B.N.A. Act to enact legislation in relation to unemployment insurance and that this finding included the limitation on appeals contained in subparagraph (c)(ii) of section 95, I have difficul ty in agreeing with this claim. There is nothing before me that suggests that the Chairman of either Board did not act properly and in accord ance with the provisions of section 95 and section 96. I therefore assume that neither Chairman formed an opinion that the case before him involved an important principle or other special circumstances by reason of which leave to appeal
ought to be granted. In these circumstances I find it difficult to conceive that the rules of natural justice concerning a fair hearing require that a person who has had a fair hearing at one appeal (where his appeal was unanimously dismissed) should have an inherent right to a further appeal.
From a practical point of view, my limited experience with cases of this kind, together with my reading of many decisions of Umpires, and more especially the tripartite composition of boards of referees, lead me to believe that relative ly very few meritorious appeals to the Board of Referees result in unanimous decisions adverse to the claimant and that most of those are open to appeal under the important principle or other spe cial circumstances rule in section 96.
In my view this claim must also be rejected.,
In the final result both appeals will be dismissed.
There will be no order as to costs.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.