Judgments

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Decision Content

A-57-80
Teamsters Union Local 938 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Ware- housemen and Helpers of America, and Fred Johnston (Applicants)
v.
Gerald M. Massicotte, Humes Transport Limited, and Canada Labour Relations Board (Respond- ents)
Court of Appeal, Heald and Urie JJ. and MacKay D.J.—Toronto, October 31, 1980; Ottawa, Decem- ber 15, 1980.
Judicial review — Labour relations — Application to review and set aside respondent Board's decision that Massicotte was a member of the bargaining unit covered by the collective agreement and as such had a right to grieve the termination of his employment pursuant to s. 155 of the Canada Labour Code and that the Union had violated s. 136.1 of the Code Massicotte, a part-time employee, filed a grievance against the Company alleging that his termination was unjust — Union refused to proceed on the ground that Massicotte was part- time help and therefore not covered by the collective agreement — Massicotte filed a complaint with the respondent Board — Whether Court has jurisdiction to review Board's decision — Whether Board has jurisdiction to determine whether Mas- sicotte was included in the bargaining unit — Whether Board exceeded its jurisdiction by suggesting an , interpretation of the collective agreement — Whether the Board had jurisdiction to determine that Massicotte could grieve against his termination — Application dismissed — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, as amended, ss. 136.1, 155(1), 187(1), 189 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
This is an application to review and set aside the decision of the respondent Board that the respondent Massicotte was a member of the bargaining unit covered by the collective agree ment in question, that Massicotte had a right to grieve his termination of employment by virtue of section 155 of the Canada Labour Code and that the Union had violated section 136.1 of the Code. Massicotte had been employed by the Company for two and a half years as part-time help when his employment was terminated. He filed a grievance against the Company but the Union refused to proceed on the ground that he was not covered by the collective agreement except for the wage rate and the payment of dues. Massicotte filed a com plaint with the Board alleging that the applicants had violated section 136.1 of the Code. Section 136.1 provides that where the trade union is the bargaining agent, it shall represent all employees in the bargaining unit. The Board ordered that the question of whether Massicotte's dismissal was unjust should proceed to arbitration. The questions are whether the Court has jurisdiction to entertain the application, whether the Board has jurisdiction to determine whether Massicotte is in the bargain ing unit, whether the Board exceeded its jurisdiction by sug-
gesting an interpretation of the collective agreement and whether the Board had the jurisdiction to determine that Massicotte could grieve against his termination.
Held, the application is dismissed. The respondent Mas- sicotte was entitled to make a written complaint to the Board pursuant to subsection 187(1) of the Canada Labour Code. The Board had "jurisdiction in the narrow sense of authority to enter upon an inquiry" pursuant to the authority given to it under subsection 187(1). With respect to the second question, the Board was not determining the appropriate bargaining unit, but was determining whether Massicotte was an employee within the bargaining unit. In making this determination the Board had regard to the evidence of the Union and employer representatives. Additionally however, it carefully considered the relevant provisions of the collective agreement as well as the actions of the parties. The Board's approach to this question was reasonable and its answer thereto was likewise reasonable. With respect to the third issue, in ordering arbitration the Board had the view that in this forum the merits of both Massicotte's and the employer's case could be heard. With respect to the last issue, subsection 155(1) of the Code requires a dispute resolution procedure "by arbitration or otherwise". The scope of subsection 155(1) is not confined to disputes between the parties. It extends also to "employees bound by the collective agreement". This would include Massicotte. Subsec tion (2) does not restrict the ambit of subsection (1). The broad remedial powers granted to the Board at the conclusion of section 189 of the Code are wide enough to permit of the directions which the Board gave in this case.
Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227, fol lowed. Service Employees' International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin District Staff Nurses Association [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
H. Caley and J. Nyman for applicants. B. Iter for respondent G. M. Massicotte.
J. C. Murray for respondent Humes Trans port Limited.
I. Scott, Q.C. for respondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
SOLICITORS:
Caley & Wray, Toronto, for applicants.
B. Iler, Toronto, for respondent G. M. Massicotte.
Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart Stolle, Toronto, for respondent Humes Transport Limited.
Cameron, Brewin & Scott, Toronto, for re spondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the respondent Board dated January 25, 1980 wherein the Board held:
1. That the respondent Massicotte was a member of the bargaining unit covered by the collective agreement between the respondent Humes Transport Limited (the Company) and the applicant Union;
2. That the respondent Massicotte as a member of that bargaining unit had a right to grieve his termination of employment by virtue of section 155 of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, as amended; and
3. That the applicant Union had violated section 136.1 of the Canada Labour Code'.
Pursuant to these findings and as an integral part of the decision of January 25, 1980 herein im pugned, the Board made the following directions (Case, pages 134 and 135):
To these ends we direct as follows:
1. The question of whether Massicotte's dismissal was contrary to the collective agreement shall proceed to arbitration.
2. To allow this we exercise our authority under section 121 and 189 to relieve against any time limits in the collective agreement so the arbitration board may hear the merits of the case.
3. The arbitration board shall consist of three persons: one nominated by Massicotte, one nominated by the employer and a chairman chosen by these two. Failing their agreement this Board shall nominate the chairman.
4. Massicotte, of course, may be represented in all future proceedings arising out of this decision and at arbitration by counsel of his choice. The legal fees, disbursements and expenses shall be paid by the union. As well his reasonable disbursements and expenses shall be paid by the union. If there is any dispute, it shall be referred to this Board for final determination.
' Said section 136.1 reads as follows:
136.1 Where a trade union is the bargaining agent for a bargaining unit, the trade union and every representative of the trade union shall represent, fairly and without discrimi nation, all employees in the bargaining unit.
5. The union shall pay the reasonable fees, disbursements and expenses of Massicotte's nominee and one half of those of the chairman. If there is any dispute, it shall be referred to this Board for final determination.
6. Should the arbitration board determine Massicotte should be compensated with reinstatement or some lesser discipline than discharge, the union shall pay the amount of compensation from the date of discharge to the date of this decision, if any, and the employer shall pay the amount from the date of this decision, if any.
7. In calculating the amount of compensation from the date of discharge to the date of this decision, if any, and payable by the union, the amount shall not be decreased by any application against Massicotte of a duty to mitigate. (He was actively seeking redress before the Ontario Labour Relations Board and this Board).
The Board reserves jurisdiction pursuant to section 120.1 to issue a final decision after the conclusion of arbitration or any settlement by the parties. The Board will issue an interim order if necessary and will clarify any of its directions should a party request it.
The relevant facts in this matter are not in dispute and may be stated as follows: In 1949 the respond ent Company voluntarily recognized the applicant Union as the bargaining agent for certain of its employees. Since 1949 these parties have entered into a series of collective agreements, the most recent one being effective from October 1, 1977 until September 30, 1979. On August 15, 1979, the employment of the respondent Massicotte with the Company at their Toronto terminal was ter minated by the Company, he having been employed by the Company as part-time help since January 24, 1977. On August 16, 1979, the respondent Massicotte filed a grievance against the Company alleging that this termination was unjust. On August 17, 1979, Massicotte had a discussion with the applicant, Fred Johnston, a business agent for the applicant Union, wherein Johnston informed Massicotte that the Union could not proceed with his grievance for the reason that inasmuch as Massicotte was part-time help he was not covered by the collective agreement be tween the Company and the Union except for the wage rate and the payment of dues. In that discus sion Massicotte agreed that he was part-time help and that he did not work over 16 hours per week.
On September 20, 1979, the respondent Mas- sicotte filed a complaint with the respondent Board pursuant to subsection 187(1) of the Canada Labour Code 2 alleging that the applicant Union and the applicant Johnston had violated section 136.1 of the Code.
The Board held a hearing into this complaint and on January 25, 1980 made the decision herein impugned.
Counsel for the respondent Board as well as counsel for the respondent Massicotte challenged the jurisdiction of the Court in respect of this matter. They observed that this Court's jurisdic tion, in respect of a decision of the respondent Board may be exercised only where that Board failed to observe a principle of natural justice, or otherwise acted beyond or refused to exercise its jurisdiction 3 . As counsel for the Board put it ".. the Board may make errors of fact, and as well, errors of law which are beyond judicial review. The Board has the right to be wrong on matters of both fact and law." (See the respondent Board's memorandum of points to be argued—page 10.)
In support of this submission, reliance is placed upon the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corporation [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227. The centre of the controversy in that case was the interpretation of paragraph 102(3)(a) of the Public Service Labour Relations Act, R.S.N.B. 1973, c. P-25, of New Brunswick which prohibited an employer from replacing striking employees with any other employee. In dealing with this matter, Dickson J. who delivered the judgment of the Court stated at
2 Said subsection 187(1) reads as follows:
187. (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (5), any person or organization may make a complaint in writing to the Board that
(a) 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 subsection 124(4) or section 136.1, 148, 161.1, 184 or 185; or
(b) any person has failed to comply with section 186.
3 See subsection 122(1) of the Canada Labour Code and paragraph 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10.
pages 232-235:
Before entering upon a discussion of the conflicting interpre tations of s. 102(3)(a) found in the judgments in the Court of Appeal, there is the critical characterization of the interpreta tion of s. 102(3) as a "preliminary or collateral matter" by that court, in the reasons of Mr. Justice Limerick:
The Board is empowered to inquire into a complaint that the employer has failed to observe a prohibition in the Act and not to determine what is prohibited by the Act or to interpret it except as necessary to determine its jurisdiction.
Two questions are therefore raised by the complaint,
1. Does the Act prohibit management personnel replacing striking employees? and if so
2. Did management personnel replace employees?
It is the latter question which is the subject matter of the complaint and the primary matter for enquiry by the Board. The first question is a condition precedent to and collateral to determining the second.
It is true the Board must determine the first question to vest itself with the jurisdiction to enquire into the second, but it is equally true the Board cannot by wrongly deciding the first question confer a jurisdiction on itself it cannot other wise acquire. See judgment of Pigeon J. in Roland Jacmain v. The Attorney General of Canada et al., 30th September, 1977 (S.C.C.) [[1978] 2 S.C.R. 15]. See also Jarvis v. Associated Medical Services Ltd. et al. (1964), 44 D.L.R. (2d) 407 et seq. (S.C.C.), and Parkhill Bedding & Furni ture Ltd. v. International Molders & Foundry Workers Union of North America, Local 174 and Manitoba Labour Board (1961) 26 D.L.R. (2d) 589 at 593.
With respect, I do not think that the language of "prelimi- nary or collateral matter" assists in the inquiry into the Board's jurisdiction. One can, I suppose, in most circumstances subdi vide the matter before an administrative tribunal into a series of tasks or questions and, without too much difficulty, charac terize one of those questions as a "preliminary or collateral matter". As Wade suggests in his Administrative Law (4th ed., 1977) at p. 245, questions of fact will naturally be regarded as "the primary and central questions for decision", whereas the "prescribed statutory ingredients will be more readily found to be collateral". This is precisely what has occurred in this case, the existence of the prohibition described in the statute becoming the `collateral matter", and the facts possibly con stituting breach of the prohibition, however interpreted, the "primary matter for enquiry". Underlying this sort of language is, however, another and, in my opinion, a preferable approach to jurisdictional problems, namely, that jurisdiction is typically to be determined at the outset of the inquiry.
The question of what is and is not jurisdictional is often very difficult to determine. The courts, in my view, should not be alert to brand as jurisdictional, and therefore subject to broader curial review, that which may be doubtfully so.
Broadly speaking, the Public Service Labour Relations Board acquires its jurisdiction to consider a complaint of violation of the Act under s. 19(1)(a):
19(1) The Board shall examine and inquire into any com plaint made to it that the employer, or any person acting on its behalf, or that an employee organization, or any person acting on its behalf, or any other person, has failed
(a) to observe any prohibition or to give effect to any provision contained in this Act or the regulations under this Act.
The parties before the Board, a separate employer identified in the Act, and a bargaining agent duly certified under the Act, were certainly those entitled to initiate the inquiry according to s. 19(1), and to be parties to that inquiry. The general subject- matter of the dispute between the parties unquestionably fell within the confines of the Act, that is, the situation of a strike by employees which is considered lawful by the very provisions of the Act. The Board was asked by the parties to determine whether certain activities of the Union and of the employer during that lawful strike were in violation of a prohibition in the Act, i.e. s. 102(3). The Union took no jurisdictional objec tion to the ban on picketing contrary to s.102(3)(b), nor did the employer. The employer, in its reply to the Union complaint of violation of s. 102(3)(a), only contended that the Liquor Cor poration "has not in any way violated" that provision. One cannot therefore suggest that the Board did not have "jurisdic- tion in the narrow sense of authority to enter upon an inquiry": Service Employees' International Union v. Nipawin Union Hospital ([1975] 1 S.C.R. 382), at p. 389.
On this view of the matters before the Board, it is difficult to conceive how the existence of the prohibition, can be a question "preliminary" to the Board's jurisdiction, in the sense of deter mining the scope of the Board's capacity to hear and decide the issues before them. Thus, the cases cited by the Court of Appeal in support of their view do not have any application in the case at bar. In Jacmain v. Attorney General of Canada ([1978] 2 S.C.R. 15), the adjudicator's characterization of the employer's action as a disciplinary dismissal, or a rejection for unsuitability, could be seen as crucial to his ability even to enter upon a consideration of the grievance. In Parkhill Bed ding and Furniture, supra, the issue was whether the Board could hear the Union's application under the successor rights provisions of the Manitoba Labour Relations Act and, there fore, rule the purchaser of the defunct company's assets bound by the existing agreement. Had the Board not found the purchaser to be a "successor" employer, then the Union would have had to apply anew for certification under the normal certification procedures. In the Jarvis case, the interpretation given to the Ontario Labour Relations Act by this Court was that the unfair practice provisions of that Act were only intended to benefit persons who were "employees" as defined by the Act. In this context, the Board's finding that Mrs. Jarvis was not an "employee" left the Board without jurisdiction to inquire into whether she was dismissed contrary to the Act, or to exercise its remedial powers of reinstatement. In each of these cases, at the threshold of the inquiry, the Board or the adjudicator had to determine whether the case before them was one of the kind upon which the empowering statute permitted
entering an inquiry.
In my opinion, the situation in the case at bar is quite similar to that dealt with by Dickson J. supra in the New Brunswick Liquor case. In the present case, the Canada Labour Relations Board acquires its jurisdiction to consider subject com plaint under section 136.1 from the provisions of subsection 187(1) of the Canada Labour Code (supra). The latter section is, in my view, compa rable to subsection 19(1) of the New Brunswick Act dealt with by Mr. Justice Dickson in the passage quoted supra.
As in that case, the respondent Massicotte was certainly entitled to make a written complaint to the Board pursuant to subsection 187(1). Likewise he and the applicant Union and the applicant Johnston are proper parties to the investigation of that complaint. I am also satisfied that the general subject-matter of the complaint, i.e., the question of fair representation by a trade union of all employees in a bargaining unit, is one falling within the "confines" of the Canada Labour Code and one in respect of which the Board is permitted to enter upon an inquiry. I have accordingly con cluded that the Board in this case had ". .. juris diction in the narrow sense of authority to enter upon an inquiry ..."' pursuant to the authority given to it under the provisions of subsection 187 (1) supra. Put another way, and in the lan guage used by Mr. Justice Dickson in the New Brunswick Liquor case (supra): "... the Board decided a matter which was plainly confided to it, for it alone to decide within its jurisdiction" 5 .
The applicants submit further, however, that even assuming "jurisdiction in the narrow sense of authority to enter upon an inquiry", where a statu tory tribunal asks itself the wrong question or places an interpretation on its enabling legislation which is so patently unreasonable that its construc tion cannot be rationally supported by its enabling
4 See: Service Employees' International Union, Local No. 333 v. Nipawin District Staff Nurses Association [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382 at page 389.
5 See: The New Brunswick Liquor case at page 237.
legislation, the statutory tribunal exceeds its jurisdiction 6 .
The applicants' submissions of "patently unrea sonable error" may be summarized as follows:
First Submission: Subsection 107(1) of the Code defines a "bargaining unit" as either a unit deter mined by the Board to be appropriate for collective bargaining or a unit to which a collective agree ment applies. Only on an application for certifica tion does the Board have imposed on it a duty to determine the appropriate bargaining unit'. Accordingly, there is no obligation imposed upon the Board to include part-time employees in any bargaining unit. In cases such as this where the collective agreement describes the bargaining unit, the Board has no right or duty to determine the appropriate bargaining unit and since this is entirely a matter between the parties to the agree ment, the Board cannot ignore the decision of the parties as to what is included in the bargaining unit. Accordingly, in this case the Board had no jurisdiction to determine whether the respondent Massicotte was included in the bargaining unit.
Second Submission: The Board has no jurisdiction to interpret the provisions of the collective agree ment nor to direct that the board of arbitration interpret the agreement in a particular way. The Code and the collective agreement give exclusive jurisdiction to interpret the collective agreement to a board of arbitration appointed pursuant to the terms of the agreement. (See, section 155 of the Code.) Thus even if the Board could order the
6 This submission refers to the test set out by Dickson J. in the New Brunswick Liquor case where he said at page 237:
Did the Board here so misinterpret the provisions of the Act as to embark on an inquiry or answer a question not remitted to it? Put another way, was the Board's interpretation so patently unreasonable that its construction cannot be ration ally supported by the relevant legislation and demands inter vention by the court upon review?
7 Applicants' authority for this statement is said to be subsec tion 125(1) of the Code which reads as follows:
125. (1) Where a trade union applies under section 124 for certification as the bargaining agent for a unit that the trade union considers appropriate for collective bargaining, the Board shall determine the unit that, in the opinion of the Board, is appropriate for collective bargaining.
arbitration of the Massicotte grievance, it exceeds its jurisdiction by ordering or directing a particu lar interpretation.
Third Submission: In the alternative to the first submission (supra), even if the respondent Mas- sicotte was in the bargaining unit, the Board had no jurisdiction to determine that he could grieve against his termination. This would amount to an amendment of the collective agreement, which the Board has no jurisdiction to do.
In order to deal with these submissions it is necessary, in my view, to examine the reasons for decision of the Board. The Board addresses itself to the question raised in applicants' first submis sion (supra) as follows (Case, page 126):
The question to be answered by the Board is whether Mas- sicotte, as a part-time employee, is in the bargaining unit and represented by the union. If he is not then the union owes him no duty. If he is then there can be no question that he was not represented fairly and without discrimination because the union refused to represent him when he was discharged.
Then at pages 129 to 131 of the Case, it gives its reasons for concluding that the respondent Mas- sicotte as a part-time employee is in the bargaining unit and that the union must represent him in accordance with section 136.1 of the Code. Those reasons read as follows:
In the testimony before the Board both the union and employer representatives said part-time employees were not intended to be covered by the collective agreement and they had behaved as if they did not. This is strong evidence, but we do not accept this as conclusive. It may merely camouflage a union violation of section 136.1 in Massicotte's case or a larger collaborative discrimination against part-time employees generally.
Let us see what the collective agreement says. First the general scope clause in section 1.2 does not exclude part-time employees. But this language cannot be relied upon to say it includes part-time employees because it would also cover main tenance employees who are excluded. There is no reference to their rates of pay, etc. and there is a separate collective agreement covering them. Section 29.1(e) sets a rate of pay for part-time employees and says they "... are not otherwise covered by the terms of this Agreement". But they are. Section 29.1(a) provides for dues deduction. Section 29.1(b) provides when they may be "used", as do sections 29.1(f) and (g). Section 29.1(i) says they must punch a time card.
The union and employer have established the price of their labour, and in Massicotte's case, reduced that price drastically without asking him. They have agreed when he can work and for how long. They have agreed he must punch a time clock. They have agreed he must pay money to the union and the employer deducted that from his pay.
It is a hard fought for and established right in our country that an employer may only deduct money from an employee's wages in certain well defined situations. The history of labour standards legislation shows the progression to a state today where payment of wages legislation, truck legislation, garnishee legislation, room and board legislation, like section 38 of the Canada Labour Code (Part III), restraints on deductions from pay for sale of shares in a company, restraints on chasing of miners' and others' cheques in taverns, and other forms of legislation were enacted to ensure the wage earner received his full pay and was only required to give his labour and not also his business in exchange for that pay. Part V of the Code is a piece of that history. Section 162 specifically addresses when money payable to a union may be deducted from an employee's wages by an employer.
"162. (1) Any employee who is represented by a bargaining agent may authorize his employer in writing, at any time after the date on which the bargaining agent becomes en titled to represent him, to deduct from his wages the amount of the regular monthly membership or union dues payable by him to the bargaining agent and to remit that amount to the bargaining agent, and the employer shall deduct and remit that amount in accordance with the authorization.
(2) An employee may, by notice in writing to his employer, revoke an authorization given by him pursuant to subsection (1), and that revocation shall have effect thirty days from the date upon which it is received by the employer.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to an employee who is bound by a collective agreement entered into between an employer and a bargaining agent that contains a provision requiring
(a) the employer to deduct from the wages of the employee the membership or union dues or amounts of money in lieu of such dues payable by the employee to the bargaining agent; or
(b) the employee to pay membership or union dues or amounts of money in lieu of such dues to the bargaining agent."
There was no authorization under subsection (1) by Mas- sicotte and no evidence any is required from any part-time employee. There is no reference to an authorization or its revocation in section 29 of the collective agreement. Subsection (3) applies regardless of an authorization but it only relates to "an employee bound by a collective agreement". By section 154 a collective agreement is binding upon "every employee in the bargaining unit."
Where does this lead us? The general scope clause is of no assistance. Section 29.1(e) does not say part-time employees
are not covered by the agreement it only says they are "not otherwise covered by the terms of the Agreement". Yet other terms do apply to part-time employees. Finally, the union and employer agree to and do deduct money from wages in a situation only authorized at law where the employee is in the bargaining unit and bound by the collective agreement. We can only conclude Massicotte as a part-time employee is in the bargaining unit and the union must represent him in accord ance with section 136.1. The implications of concluding other wise for the union and employer are far too serious. The language of the agreement and actions of the parties speak louder and clearer in law than do their testimony or perhaps misunderstanding of their acts.
From the above quotations it will be seen that the Board was not in fact determining the appro priate bargaining unit as alleged by the applicants but was, rather, determining whether Massicotte was an employee within the bargaining unit. In making this determination the Board had regard to the evidence of the Union and employer repre sentatives. Additionally however, it carefully con sidered the relevant provisions of the collective agreement as well as the actions of the parties (including the agreement between the employer and the Union to deduct union dues in a situation only authorized at law where the employee is in the bargaining unit and bound by the collective agreement). In my view the Board's approach to this question was reasonable and its answer thereto was likewise reasonable. In any event, its conclu sion was certainly not "patently unreasonable". The fatal defect, as it seems to me, in this submis sion by the applicant, is the presumption or prem ise upon which it is based, namely that there is no ambiguity as to the scope of the bargaining unit. As pointed out by the Board, the evidence of the parties is only one facet of the total picture; it is also necessary to examine the terms of the agree ment as well as the conduct of the parties. This the Board did in reaching its final conclusion and in my view, that conclusion is a reasonable one, having regard both to the facts and the relevant jurisprudence.
Referring now to applicants' second submission (supra), the basis for this submission appears to be in that portion of the Board's reasons which appear at pages 133 and 134 of the Case and read as follows:
Our intention is to place Massicotte in the position he should have been in had he been represented. But because of the attitude of the union and employer to part-time employees we do not think we can do it by simply issuing a remedy in the fashion described in paragraph 189(a). Rather this is a case that should bypass the grievance procedure and proceed direct ly to arbitration. Further it is one in which the individual unrepresented for so long should have full control over the process. We also have decided to allow processes of arbitration to be the avenue of redress for Massicotte. In this forum the merits of the employer's case can be heard (see Vincent Maffei, supra). It is conceivable on reading the collective agreement that the employer may adopt the position that a part-time employee does not have protection against unjust dismissal. It may be, as we noted earlier, that Massicotte passed from part-time to regular status at some time. We have not found it necessary to examine this question. Assuming Massicotte is part-time, as we have, we find it inconceivable that an arbitra tor would find that an employee in a bargaining unit with Massicotte's length of employment does not have the protection against unjust dismissal he would have if he were not "subject to a collective agreement". That protection is Parliament's enacted public policy in favour of recourse against unjust dismissal expressed in section 61.5 of the Canada Labour Code (Part III). In the resolution of any ambiguity or argument against Massicotte having recourse to arbitration for unjust dismissal, we expect arbitrators will be guided by the interpre tive approach of the Supreme Court of Canada in Bradburn et al. v. Wentworth Arms Hotel Limited et al (1978), 79 CLLC 14,189 [[1979] 1 S.C.R. 846] and the clear policy expressed in section 61.5.
As I read this portion of the reasons I do not agree that the respondent Board is ordering an arbitra tion board to interpret the provisions of the collec tive agreement in a particular way or is prejudging the result of the arbitration. The above quotation makes it clear that, in ordering arbitration, the respondent Board has the view that in this forum, the merits of both Massicotte's and the employer's case can be heard. It is noted that the respondent Board gives its opinion as to what the outcome might well be, while at the same time, anticipating a contrary position being taken by the employer. Counsel for the Board has agreed that in so far as this portion of the reasons strongly suggests what the result is likely to be, it is perhaps an imprudent statement by the Board. However, I would not characterize this frank expression of opinion by the Board as being an attempt to influence the outcome of the arbitration. It is merely a gratui tous expression of opinion which is not in any way binding on the arbitration board. I certainly would not describe it as an error entitling the Court to quash the Board's order on this basis.
Dealing now with the applicants' third submis sion (supra), the basis upon which the Board assumed jurisdiction to determine that Massicotte could grieve against his termination, having previ ously determined that he was included in the bargaining unit, is to be found in the reasons of the Board at pages 131 and 132 of the Case and reading as follows:
But that does not conclude the matter. Can Massicotte be in the unit, represented by the union and not entitled to access to some dispute resolution procedure for his grievances, which under this collective agreement is a grievance and arbitration procedure? The answer is no. Section 155 of the Code man dates a dispute resolution procedure and makes it automatic if one is missing from the agreement.
From the above quotation it is clear that the respondent Board was relying on section 155 of the Codes.
8 155. (1) Every collective agreement shall contain a provi sion for final settlement without stoppage of work, by arbitra tion or otherwise, of all differences between the parties to or employees bound by the collective agreement, concerning its interpretation, application, administration or alleged violation.
(2) Where any difference arises between parties to a collec tive agreement and
(a) the collective agreement does not contain a provision for final settlement of the difference as required by subsection (1), or
(b) the collective agreement contains a provision for final settlement of the difference by an arbitration board and either party fails to name its nominee to the board in accordance with the collective agreement,
the difference shall, notwithstanding any provision of the col lective agreement, be submitted by the parties for final settlement
(c) to an arbitrator selected by the parties, or
(d) where the parties are unable to agree on the selection of an arbitrator and either party makes a written request to the Minister to appoint an arbitrator, to an arbitrator appointed by the Minister after such inquiry, if any, as the Minister considers necessary.
(3) Where a collective agreement provides for final settle ment, without stoppage of work, of differences described in subsection (1) by an arbitrator or arbitration board and the parties or their nominees are unable to agree on the selection of an arbitrator or a chairman of the arbitration board, as the case may be, either party or its nominee may, notwithstanding anything in the collective agreement, make a written request to the Minister to appoint an arbitrator or a chairman of the arbitration board, as the case may be, and, upon receipt of such written request, the Minister shall, after such inquiry, if any, as he considers necessary, appoint the arbitrator or chairman of the arbitration board, as the case may be.
(4) Any person appointed or selected pursuant to subsection (2) or (3) as an arbitrator or arbitration board chairman shall be deemed, for all purposes of this Part, to have been appointed pursuant to the collective agreement between the parties.
It seems to me that what the Board is saying here is that, where in cases such as this, the collective agreement may not provide a dispute resolution procedure for certain employees in the bargaining unit, such an omission is remedied by the mandatory provisions of subsection 155(1) supra. The applicants dispute this interpretation and submit rather that section 155, and, in par ticular subsection 155(2) of the Code applies only where there exists a difference between the parties to an agreement and, therefore, cannot be used to create in an employee in the position of Massicotte a right to grieve and arbitrate which is denied to him in the collective agreement where, as here, no difference exists between the parties to the collec tive agreement. I do not so interpret the provisions of subsections 155(1) and 155(2) of the Code. Subsection (1) requires a dispute resolution proce dure "by arbitration or otherwise" [emphasis added]. Thus subsection (1) does not restrict that resolution procedure to arbitration. Furthermore, the scope of subsection (1) is not confined to disputes between the parties. It extends also to "employees bound by the collective agreement". This would, in my view, include the respondent Massicotte.
Then, coming to subsection (2) of section 155, the provisions of that subsection appear to be restricted to resolution of disputes between the parties but I do not read that subsection as restricting the ambit of subsection (1). I accord ingly do not agree that the respondent Board's decision on this aspect of the matter was "patently unreasonable".
The applicants also question the Board's direc tions numbering 1 to 7 (Case, pages 134 and 135). It is said that the Board does not have the power to make the directions specified in numbers 3, 4 and 7 thereof. The Board's perception of its specif ic remedial authority with respect to violations of section 136.1 is contained in the following passage from its reasons (Case, pages 132 and 133):
Section 189 sets out the Board's specific remedial authority with respect to a violation of section 136.1 and some of its more general remedial authority.
"189. Where, under section 188, the Board determines that a party to a complaint has failed to comply with subsection 124(4) or section 136.1, 148, 161.1, 184, 185, or 186, the
Board may, by order, require the party to comply with that subsection or section and may
(a) in respect of a failure to comply with section 136.1, require a trade union to take and carry on on behalf of any employee affected by the failure or to assist any such employee to take and carry on such action or proceeding as the Board considers that the union ought to have taken and carried on on the employee's behalf or ought to have assisted the employee to take and carry on;
and, for the purpose of ensuring the fulfilment of the objec tives of this Part, the Board may, in respect of any failure to comply with any provision to which this section applies and in addition to or in lieu of any other order that the Board is authorized to make under this section, by order, require an employer or a trade union to do or refrain from doing any thing that it is equitable to require the employer or trade union to do or refrain from doing in order to remedy or counteract any consequence of such failure to comply that is adverse to the fulfilment of those objectives."
The Board also has authority under section 121. Clearly the authority in section 189(a) is not the only remedial authority the Board has. This is clear from the general language at the conclusion of section 189 and the fact the duty in section 136.1 arises in more circumstances than those referred to in para graph (a).
It is my view that the Board's opinion that its remedial powers were wide enough to encompass the directions which it gave is a correct view of those powers. The factual situation in the case at bar is, to say the least, unusual. There is no dispute between the Company and the Union as to the meaning of the collective agreement and as to the non-applicability of the grievance and arbitration procedure set out therein to the respondent Mas- sicotte. To order the Union to go to arbitration on behalf of Massicotte with a Union representative on the Board might well be a meaningless exercise given the Union's firm view both before the Board and before this Court that Massicotte had no right to grieve or to arbitrate. In my view, the Board's opinion that section 189 when read with section 121 9 vested it with authority to make these direc tions is a correct view to take of the Board's powers in these rather unusual circumstances.
9 Section 121 reads as follows:
121. The Board shall exercise such powers and perform such duties as are conferred or imposed upon it by, or as may be incidental to the attainment of the objects of, this Part including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, the making of orders requiring compliance with the provi sions of this Part, with any regulation made under this Part or with any decision made in respect of a matter before the Board.
The general powers granted to the Board at the conclusion of section 189 includes the right to ".. . require an employer or a trade union to do or refrain from doing any thing that it is equitable to require ... in order to remedy ... any consequence of such failure to comply" (with the named provi sions of the Code). These broad remedial powers are wide enough, in my view, to permit of the directions which the Board gave in this case.
Accordingly, and for the above reasons, I would dismiss the section 28 application.
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URIE J.: I agree.
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MACKAY D.J.: I agree.
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