Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-783-83
Eastern Provincial Airways Limited (Applicant) v.
Canada Labour Relations Board and Canadian Air Line Pilots Association (Respondents)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Mahoney J. and Cowan D.J.—Ottawa, August 23, 24, 25, 26 and October 5, 1983.
Labour relations — Application by Eastern Provincial Air ways Limited ("EPA") to review and set aside Canada Labour Relations Board order following findings of unfair labour practices — EPA conferring permanent status on replacement pilots hired during strike — Excess of jurisdiction and denial of natural justice alleged — Application allowed, Board deci sion quashed — Board finding hiring of replacement pilots based on individual contracts of employment — "Permanent" meant as antonym of "temporary" — Board exceeding juris diction — Parliament, not Board, vested with authority to mandate that only replacements struck employer may legally engage are strike-breakers — Board's policy not to allow verbatim transcription of proceedings well settled — Not procedurally unfair — EPA denied opportunity to lead evi dence on unfair labour practices though ready with witnesses — Proposed evidence neither repetitious nor abusive of Board's process — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, ss. 119 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1972, c. 18. s. 1), 122 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 43), 148(a) as added by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1), 184(1)(a) (as added idem), 184(3)(a)(vi) (as added idem), 184(3)(b) (as added idem), 184(3)(c) (as added idem), 186 (as added idem), 187 (as added idem), 188(1)(b)(as added idem), 189 (as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 68) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28(1)(a),(2),(5) — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 1.
Judicial review — Applications to review — Labour rela tions — Application by Eastern Provincial Airways Limited ("EPA") to review and set aside Canada Labour Relations Board order following findings of unfair labour practices — EPA conferring permanent status on replacement pilots hired during strike — EPA alleging excess of jurisdiction and denial of natural justice in Board's refusal to permit EPA to com plete evidence — Board having wide powers under s. 189 of Code to enforce, by order, compliance with Code provisions — Board exceeding jurisdiction when basing hiring of replace ment pilots on individual contracts of employment — Parlia ment, not Board, vested with authority to mandate that only replacements struck employer may legally engage are strike-
breakers — Implementation of Board's policy not to allow verbatim recording of proceedings not procedurally unfair — EPA denied opportunity to lead evidence as to unfair labour practices though ready with witnesses — Board's decision to rehear parties pursuant to Code s. 119 not precluding judicial review — Application allowed, Board's decision quashed — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, ss. 119 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1), 122 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 43), 148(a) (as added by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1), 184(1)(a) (as added idem), 184(3)(a)(vi) (as added idem), 184(3)(b) (as added idem), 184(3)(c) (as added idem), 186 (as added idem), 187 (as added idem), 188(1)(b) (as added idem), 189 (as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 68) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28(1)(a),(2),(5) — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 1.
In the course of a legal strike against the applicant, Eastern Provincial Airways Limited ("EPA") by its pilots, their bar gaining agent, the Canadian Air Line Pilots Association ("CALPA") filed complaints of unfair labour practices against EPA pursuant to sections 148(a), 184(1)(a) and 184(3)(a)(vi) of the Canada Labour Code. EPA also filed complaints under sections 148(a) and 186 of the Code. The Canada Labour Relations Board dismissed EPA's complaints and upheld CALPA's. EPA thereupon filed this section 28 application on the grounds that the Board exceeded its jurisdiction and violat ed principles of natural justice. After the filing of the section 28 application, the Board called the parties to a rehearing pursu ant to section 119 of the Code. The Board maintained its initial order. EPA alleges that: (1) the Board did not permit it to complete its evidence on one of the complaints and to present any evidence at all, beyond common evidence, with respect to the remaining complaints; (2) the Board admitted illegal evi dence; (3) the Board's decision is based on inferences unsup ported by any evidence and its conclusions are, in fact, wrong; (4) the Board did not permit the parties to make a verbatim record of the proceedings; (5) the Board's actions constitute bias. EPA also argues that the Board exceeded its jurisdiction when it found that EPA had committed an unfair labour practice when it conferred permanent status on the replacement pilots hired from outside the bargaining unit, and when the Board ordered EPA to extract from the collective agreement a new proposal introduced by EPA at a time when there were no more collective bargaining issues left outstanding between the parties. EPA contends that that order imposes on it a collective agreement subject only to ratification. EPA contends finally that its right to freedom of expression has been infringed.
Held (Cowan D.J. dissenting), the Board's decision is quashed.
Per Mahoney J.: The Board did not exceed its jurisdiction when it ordered EPA to delete its new proposal from the collective agreement. The Board finds its jurisdiction in section 189 of the Code which authorizes it to make orders to remedy any consequence of the failure to comply with, inter alia, sections 148 and 184. The Board's order had the effect not of imposing, but of reinstating, a complete collective agreement which had been negotiated between EPA and CALPA and required only ratification by CALPA's membership to become effective.
On the issue of the permanent status conferred on replace ment pilots: there is no reviewable error if the Board intended the word "permanent" to comprehend only the terms of the replacement pilots' employment that would give them prefer ence over the striking pilots after the strike. However, it appears that the Board had the intention of using the word "permanent" in its ordinary meaning, i.e. as the antonym of "temporary" when it stated in its reasons that the hiring of the replacement pilots was based upon the entering into of individual contracts of employment. In so doing, the Board exceeded its jurisdiction. It is for Parliament, not the Board, to mandate that the only replacements a struck employer can legally engage are strike-breakers.
There is no merit in any of the arguments based on the Charter. The exercise of one's entrenched right to freedom of expression may be found, in certain circumstances, an unfair labour practice just as it might be found, in other circum stances, defamation. Section 1 of the Charter does not preclude such a finding.
On the issue of denial of natural justice: as to the allegedly illegal evidence, the Board was entitled to receive evidence as to events after the date of CALPA's complaints. Review of the Board's findings of fact is excluded by subsection 122(1) of the Code, which limits judicial review to issues of natural justice and jurisdiction pursuant to paragraph 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act. As to the allegation of bias, a public statement by an employee of the Board as to the possible disposition of a complaint before it has been decided, is no basis for imputing bias or reasonable apprehension of bias to the Board itself.
The Board's policy with respect to the recording of its proceedings was explained in the Canadian Merchant Service Guild case, [1980] 3 Can LRBR 87. Verbatim transcription was seen as inhibiting the Board in its fulfilment of its mission as a forum for labour principals rather than one for lawyers. It is a fair conclusion to be drawn from the Board's reasons that it had determined that its mission could be better accomplished if the parties before it were discouraged from recourse to the Court. Parliament had already agreed to that: it had limited, in subsection 122(1) of the Code the grounds of judicial review to those set out in paragraph 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act. It follows that implementation of the policy cannot be found to have been procedurally unfair to EPA.
While the Board's decision is not subject to review on the basis of its findings of fact, those findings are to be considered in the context of whether EPA was denied natural justice. The nature of the arrangement made by EPA with the replacement pilots was an important issue before the Board, as were the provisions of the back-to-work agreement proposed by EPA, identified by the Board as an unfair labour practice. These issues were to have been addressed by two EPA witnesses. Nothing leads the Court to conclude that the proposed evidence of those two witnesses was repetitious or otherwise abusive of the Board's process. It is evident from the Board's own decision that on points it considered significant, EPA was denied a fair opportunity to make out its own case and to answer CALPA's by the refusal of the Board to receive evidence. It is also evident that EPA was, by the same refusal, denied the opportunity to lead evidence on subjects which the Board specifically found to have been unfair labour practices.
The action taken by the Board to review the decision under section 119 neither cured the defect, nor validated the decision, nor estopped EPA from pursuing its right to judicial review. While the Board's rescission of a decision might render a section 28 application moot, an offer to review the decision does not.
Per Thurlow C.J. (concurring in part with Mahoney J.): The exercise by the Board of its power under section 119 of the Code, without the concurrence and over the objections of the applicant, is evidence of the Board's failure to afford the applicant the opportunity to which it was entitled to present its evidence and as an attempt by the Board to alter the situation and forestall the review of its order by the Court.
The point relating to the hiring of replacement pilots on a permanent basis is not one which goes to the jurisdiction of the Board. It is simply a point of law which, if the Board's opinion is erroneous, it will be for Parliament to correct, but which is not open to review by this Court.
Per Cowan D.J. (dissenting): The Board acted within its jurisdiction when it found that EPA committed an unfair labour practice when, as reflected in the back-to-work agree ment, it conferred permanent status on the replacement pilots, with the discriminatory effect on the striking pilots flowing therefrom. The jurisdiction of the Board is founded on the complaints made by CALPA that EPA had committed unfair labour practices. Section 187 of the Code authorizes the making of such complaints and section 188 imposes on the Board the duty to hear and determine the complaints. Under section 189, the Board may, by order, require compliance with the relevant sections of the Code and the Board is given wide powers to make orders to enforce compliance. Even if it is assumed that the Board erred in making that finding, such an error would be an error in law in the course of making a decision which the Board had jurisdiction to make and, as such, is excluded from judicial review pursuant to section 122.
The allegation that EPA was denied the opportunity to complete its evidence is unsustainable. Counsel for EPA did not at any time during the public hearing object to the action of the Board in stating that it would hear no further oral evidence, nor did he state that EPA had additional witnesses which it was proposing to call to give evidence. The fact that EPA refused to participate in the rehearing and to adduce additional evidence, supports the conclusion that it had no additional evidence to adduce and was content to rely upon the possible weakness in law of CALPA's case and the absence of power in the Board to grant the relief sought by CALPA.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
CONSIDERED:
Canadian Merchant Service Guild v. Canadian Pacific Limited, [1980] 3 Can LRBR 87; St. Lawrence Seaway Authority et al. v. Canada Labour Relations Board et al., (1979), 31 N.R. 196 (F.C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Roy L. Heenan and Peter M. Blaikie for applicant.
Ian G. Scott, Q.C. for respondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
John T. Keenan, Lila Stermer and Luc Mar- tineau for respondent Canadian Air Line Pilots Association.
Eric Durnford for "New Pilots".
SOLICITORS:
Heenan, Blaikie, John, Potvin, Trépanier, Cobbett, Montreal, for applicant.
Gowling & Henderson, Toronto, for respond ent Canada Labour Relations Board.
John T. Keenan, Montreal, for respondent Canadian Air Line Pilots Association.
McInnes, Cooper & Robertson, Halifax, for "New Pilots".
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J.: (concurring in part with Mahoney J.): I have had an opportunity to read and consider the reasons for judgment prepared by Mr. Justice Mahoney. I share his opinion that the evidence establishes that the Canada Labour Rela tions Board failed to observe a principle of natural justice by denying the applicant a fair opportunity
to present its case and in particular in reaching conclusions on evidence which the applicant, though ready with witnesses, was not afforded an opportunity to refute. Nor am I persuaded that in the circumstances any inference should be drawn that the applicant's right to call witnesses to refute such evidence was waived.
Moreover, the Board's order having been made and having become effective immediately on May 27, 1983, the manoeuvre initiated on July 26, 1983, by the Board itself, without the concurrence and over the objections of the applicant, to exercise power under section 119 1 of the Canada Labour Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1)], after the applicant had applied to this Court for review of the Board's order and after the Court had given special directions for expediting the proceedings, should I think be viewed as evidence of the Board's failure to afford the applicant the opportunity to which it was entitled to present its evidence and as an attempt by the Board to alter the situation and forestall the review of its order by the Court. Under paragraph 188(1)(b) of the Code, at the stage which the proceedings had reached in the latter part of April, it was the duty of the Board to "hear and deter mine" the complaints before it. The applicant was entitled to a fair hearing of its case on the com plaints before the matter was decided. It was no substitute to offer the applicant afterwards an opportunity to dispel, if it could, conclusions already reached and cogently expressed by the Board.
With respect to the several points raised by the applicant alleging that the Board's order exceeds its jurisdiction, I agree with the opinion of Mr. Justice Mahoney save that I would regard the point relating to the holding by the Board that the hiring of replacement pilots on a permanent basis
119. The Board may review, rescind, amend, alter or vary any order or decision made by it, and may rehear any applica tion before making an order in respect of the application.
was, in the circumstances, unlawful not as one going to the jurisdiction of the Board but simply as a point of law which, if the Board's opinion is erroneous, it will be for Parliament to correct, but which is not open to review by this Court.
I would dispose of the matter as proposed by Mr. Justice Mahoney.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: In the course of a legal strike against the applicant, Eastern Provincial Airways Limited, hereinafter "EPA", by its pilots, their certified bargaining agent, the respondent, the Canadian Air Line Pilots Association, hereinafter "CALPA", made three complaints of unfair labour practices against EPA and EPA countered with two complaints against CALPA. CALPA's complaints alleged EPA's failure to bargain in good faith contrary to paragraph 148(a) of the Canada Labour Code; 2 interference in the administration of a trade union contrary to para graph 184(1)(a) and discriminating against, intimidating and threatening striking employees contrary to subparagraph 184(3)(a)(vi). EPA's complaints alleged CALPA's failure to bargain in good faith contrary to paragraph 148(a) and intimidation and coercion to compel persons to join and quit the union contrary to section 186. The conduct of the hearing on those complaints by the respondent, Canada Labour Relations Board, hereinafter "the Board", and the orders ensuing upon the hearing are subject of this section 28 application. EPA alleges that it was denied natural justice in the course of the proceeding and that the Board was without jurisdiction to make the orders it did.
The Board sat on March 28 and 29, 1983. It adjourned at the request of the parties. The hear ing was resumed at the request of CALPA. It
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1 (as am. by S.C. 1972, c. 18; 1977-78, c. 27).
continued on April 18, 19, 20 and 21. No verbatim transcript of the proceeding was kept. We have the documentary evidence received by the Board but, as to what transpired at the hearings, we have only the affidavit evidence submitted by EPA and CALPA. The undated and unverified "public hearing reports" (Case, pages 602 and 609 ff.), prepared in circumstances unknown to the Court, are of no evidentiary value. CALPA tendered the affidavit of Ronald Young. He was cross-exam ined on it. EPA tendered the affidavits of Ralph D. Farley (Case, pages 710-717), Danny J. Kaufer (pages 718-720), Genevieve Payne (pages 721- 722), William J. Verrier (pages 723-727), Chester Walker (pages 728-733), Eero O. Lahtinen (pages 734-737), Kevin C. Howlett (pages 738-740) and Peter D. Chalmers (pages 741 and 742). Farley and Kaufer were cross-examined. The Board's decision was rendered and order made May 27 (pages 615-707). It dismissed EPA's complaints and upheld CALPA's. This section 28 application was filed June 1. On June 29, the Court made an order of directions scheduling proceedings with a view to hearing this application as soon as possible after August 15. On July 26, after affidavits as to what had occurred at its hearings had been filed in this Court and their deponents cross-examined thereon, the Board called the parties to a rehearing of the complaints pursuant to section 119 of the Code. EPA attended but declined to participate in the rehearing. CALPA filed, inter alia, a copy of the Case prepared for this application including EPA's affidavits. The proceeding, which resulted in no change to the order, was held August 2 and
3. It was transcribed verbatim by the Board. On application by the Board, the record of the pro ceeding was added to the Case at the hearing of this application.
The violations of the principles of natural justice alleged by EPA are, briefly, as follows:
1. The Board heard EPA argue only an inscription in law in respect of the CALPA complaints yet it decided, on their merits, all five complaints.
2. The Board did not permit EPA to complete its evidence on CALPA's complaint under s. 184(1)(a) and, except to the extent
that the evidence as to that complaint pertained to them, had no evidence at all as to the other four.
3. Over objection, the Board admitted illegal evidence.
4. The decision is based, in part, on inferences unsupported by any evidence whatever and the conclusions are, in fact, wrong.
5. The Board neither provided for nor permitted the parties to make a verbatim record of the proceedings.
6. The Board's actions, before and during the hearings, taken as a whole, constituted bias.
The excesses of jurisdiction alleged are:
7. The orders made exceed the jurisdiction of the Board as defined by the Canada Labour Code.
8. The Board exceeded its jurisdiction by making findings so patently unreasonable that they cannot be rationally supported by the Code.
9. The Board exceeded its jurisdiction in that it infringed EPA'S right to freedom of expression guaranteed by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Canada Labour Code provides:
122. (1) Subject to this Part, every order or decision of the Board is final and shall not be questioned or reviewed in any court, except in accordance with paragraph 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act.
The Federal Court Act 3 provides:
28. (1) Notwithstanding section 18 or the provisions of any other Act, the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to hear and determine an application to review and set aside a decision or order, other than a decision or order of an administrative nature not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, made by or in the course of proceedings before a federal board, commission or other tribunal, upon the ground that the board, commission or tribunal
(a) failed to observe a principle of natural justice or other wise acted beyond or refused to exercise its jurisdiction;
(b) erred in law in making its decision or order, whether or not the error appears on the face of the record; or
(c) based its decision or order on an erroneous finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard for the material before it.
Exclusion of judicial review under paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection 28 (1) was effected by Parlia ment in the 1977-78 amendment to the Code [c. 27, s. 43].
3 R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10.
There are serious issues raised in this applica tion with which this Court has jurisdiction to deal. Those unsupported by the evidence or which, how ever serious, are beyond our jurisdiction to deal with, are numbers 3, 4, 6, 7 and 9. As to number 3, the Board was entitled to receive evidence as to events after the date of CALPA's complaints. Review of number 4 is excluded by subsection 122(1). As to number 6, a public statement by an employee of the Board, not a member, as to the possible disposition of a complaint before it has even been received, however ill-advised and improper and whatever its actual impact on the patently sensitive status quo of a bitter strike, is no basis for imputing bias or a reasonable apprehen sion of bias to the Board itself. As to number 9, I see no merit at all in any of the arguments based on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)]. Having regard to section 1 of the Chart er, I see no bar in the Charter to an exercise of one's entrenched right to freedom of expression being found, in certain circumstances, an unfair labour practice just as, in other circumstances, it might be found defamation.
As to number 7, the particulars set forth in each of the CALPA complaints are apparently identi cal. Among the things which the Board found to have been unfair labour practices was EPA's addi tion to the proposed collective agreement, on April 4, 1983, of a new proposal for a third year at 5% when, theretofore, a 2-year term had been the basis of negotiation. The CALPA complaints were dated March 7, a month before the introduction of the third year by EPA. It is, nevertheless, a manifestation of the alleged failure to bargain in good faith as required by section 148. The preamble to the Canada Labour Code [S.C. 1972, c. 18] recites Parliament's intention.
And Whereas the Parliament of Canada desires to continue and extend its support to labour and management in their
cooperative efforts to develop good relations and constructive collective bargaining practices, and deems the development of good industrial relations to be in the best interests of Canada in ensuring a just share of the fruits of progress to all;
That intention to develop good relations between labour and management would not be served by limiting the Board, once seized of a complaint, to consideration of incidents recited in the complaint or antedating it when its subject-matter is, by its nature, ongoing, as here. I find no support for EPA's position in the requirement, by subsection 187(5), of Ministerial consent nor in the consent itself (Case, page 217).
The Board found that EPA had presented CALPA with a collective agreement, dated April 4, executed by EPA, reflecting in its terms every thing the parties had agreed upon and a single item, provision for a third year at a 5% pay increase, which had not been agreed to by CALPA. The introduction of that item at that stage of negotiations was held to be an unfair labour practice. The Board ordered (Case, page 6,18) as follows:
i) the employer to cease and desist from negotiating in bad faith and not making every reasonable effort to enter into a collective agreement and, to that end, the Board directs Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd. to extract from the collective agree ment it has proposed to the Canadian Air Line Pilots' Associa tion the clause extending said collective agreement's duration to a three year [sic] period.
The Board further directs the Canadian Air Line Pilots' Asso ciation to examine the text of the proposed collective agree ment, submitted by Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd. on April 4, 1983, taking into account the fact that any reference to a third year to the duration of the proposed collective agreement has been deleted by the Board and then to submit said text to the ratification of its Local pilot membership within three (3) working days of the issuance of the present Order.
Within 24 hours from said ratification, if it is attained, the Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association is directed to make a declaration by telex to this Board whether or not, on the basis of said ratification, it is ready to sign this agreement.
In the event of the Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association confirming ratification, as stipulated in the preceding para graph, a collective agreement between the parties shall be deemed to be in effect for all the purposes of the Canada Labour Code (Part V—Industrial Relations).
EPA argues that the order to extract and what follows effectively imposes on it a collective agree ment subject only to the ratification.
Section 189 of the Code enumerates a number of particular orders the Board may make if it finds particular unfair labour practices. None of those is apt. The section concludes:
189... .
and, for the purpose of ensuring the fulfilment of the objectives 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.
Section 189 applies, inter alia, to sections 148 and 184. The Board finds its jurisdiction in those words. In the circumstances, I think the Board is correct. The Board having found, as facts, that "as at April 4, 1983, there were no more collective bargaining issues left outstanding between the two parties" (Case, page 656) and that the introduc tion of the third year in April was an unfair labour practice, the order to cease and desist that practice had the effect not of imposing, but of reinstating, a complete collective agreement which had been negotiated between EPA and CALPA and required only ratification by CALPA's member ship to become effective.
In view of the disposition of this application I propose on other grounds, it is not necessary to deal with number 8 in the detail that might other wise have been required. This alleged excess of jurisdiction rests on two bases.
The prolixity of the Board's decision results, perhaps inevitably, in ambiguity. One of the things EPA had done, which the Board found to have been an unfair labour practice, was to confer " permanent status on the replacements hired during the lawful strike who originated from out side the bargaining unit" (Case, page 616). It is, as the Board recognized (Case, page 645), entirely legal, under the Canada Labour Code, for an
employer who has been struck to carry on the business, if it can, by hiring replacements for the striking employees.
I see no reviewable error if, as I trust, the Board intended the adjective "permanent" only to com prehend the terms of the replacement pilots' employment it found would give them preference over the striking pilots after the strike. If, however, "permanent" was used in its ordinary meaning, as the antonym of "temporary", it is a different matter. It is not inconceivable that the Board had the latter intention. For example, addressing the issue (Case, page 669), the Board says:
The hiring of those replacement pilots is based upon the entering into an individual contract of employment. If it is for a temporary term terminating on the same day that the strike is brought to conclusion, this does not create any problem.
I should think it would be for Parliament, not the Board, to mandate that the only replacements a struck employer can legally engage are strike- breakers.
The Board, in Parts X and XI of its decision (Case, pages 692-707), purports to import into Canadian labour law the concept of a strike, which had begun as an economic strike (Case, page 704), being converted into an unfair labour practices strike from its inception (Case, page 706). The purpose of this lengthy exercise is not clear. Noth ing, not otherwise held to have been an unfair labour practice, was found to have been one because the strike was deemed to have been con verted into an unfair labour practices strike from its beginning. It was an exercise in pure tautology and, therefore, entirely obiter dicta. Assuming that the concept expounded in Parts X and XI can, in some circumstances, have a practical application, the question whether or not its incorporation into the law of Canada is within the Board's jurisdic tion should be dealt with when those circum stances arise.
It is convenient now to deal with the question of the record, number 5. The affidavits of Farley,
Kaufer and Payne all address the refusal of the Board to permit the proceedings to be recorded. Of them, only Kaufer was present April 18. As to the sittings March 28 and 29, it is necessary to refer only to the Payne affidavit. She is a shorthand reporter frequently employed by the Supreme Court of Newfoundland in examinations for dis covery. She was engaged by EPA to record the proceedings. On March 28, she recorded the fol lowing statement by the Chairman:
... in due course, no recording of the hearing is going to be allowed. It is the policy of this Board not to have recordings of its hearings ....
As to the April sittings, Kaufer, one of EPA's counsel, deposes, with respect to Louise Vachon, a secretary employed by EPA, that the Chairman "informed the parties that any notes taken by Vachon could not ever be used in any court" and, after noticing that Vachon was using a tape recorder to assist her, the Chairman called counsel to the bench and stated:
... that he had ruled in St. John's that no stenography or recording of the hearing would be allowed, and that he was directing the parties to stop any recording of the proceedings.
That all transpired during the first hour of the sitting of April 18. I am satisfied that the Board prevented EPA from making a verbatim record of the proceedings by any practical means whatso ever.
The Board's policy vis-à-vis the recording of its proceedings was explained at length in Canadian Merchant Service Guild v. Canadian Pacific Limited. 4 The Board had theretofore traditionally recorded its proceedings. The reason for the policy change appears to have been twofold. A verbatim record was, in its view, unnecessary once its deci sions were no longer subject to judicial review on the grounds of error in law or perverse error in finding facts. For numerous reasons, verbatim transcription was seen as inhibiting the Board in its fulfilment of its mission as "a forum for labour relations principals—employees, employers and unions—not a court or forum for lawyers". It is to
4 [1980] 3 Can LRBR 87, at pp. 91 ff.
be remarked that the Board conducts many sorts of hearings, not just the sort in issue here. The rationale of the policy may be more plausible when applied to some sorts than to others.
It is a fair conclusion to be drawn from its reasons that the Board had determined that it could do its job better if those before it were discouraged from recourse to the Court. Parlia ment had already agreed. It had limited the grounds of judicial review to denial of natural justice and issues of jurisdiction. The Board, at pages 95-96 of the report, continued:
For the same reasons we have decided not to allow one party to have recording facilities at a hearing. To do so will reintroduce, on a selected basis, the atmosphere we seek to eliminate by discontinuing recording and act contrary to the purposes we seek to achieve. Although we see and our experience has shown us little advantage during the conduct of the hearing a record ing may be of some advantage afterward. Otherwise why would a party want it? That advantage could be in written propagan da surrounding a dispute, or to play edited versions of the proceedings on radio or television, or to prepare future wit nesses where there has been an exclusion of witnesses or adjournment, or for other reasons within the imagination of parties. The Board will not allow its proceedings and mediative efforts to be open to this potential for compromise.
An obvious reason a party might want a record, not mentioned, is to facilitate pursuit of its remain ing right to judicial review.
A verbatim record would unquestionably have made easier the fulfilment by this Court of its duty. However, the refusal to permit EPA to make a verbatim record was not, per se, a denial of natural justice even though intended, inter alia, to make more difficult the pursuit of its remedy in this Court. Applicable as it was to both parties in this dispute, indeed to all parties in all disputes generally, implementation of the policy cannot be found to have been procedurally unfair to EPA. The refusal does, however, expose the Board to having issues of natural justice determined on
evidence as to what happened led by the parties, while it cannot, itself, be heard on the subject unless it elects to file affidavits and offer their deponents for cross-examination.
I turn now to the alleged denials of natural justice numbered 1 and 2. There are undisputed facts as to the conduct of the resumed hearing April 18 to 21.
a. At its outset, April 18, EPA raised an inscription in law and CALPA asked to have the evidence apply, as relevant, to all five complaints.
b. Rulings on both and argument on the inscription were deferred and the Board proceeded to receive evidence on the CALPA complaint under s. 184(1)(a).
c. CALPA completed its evidence on that complaint late in the afternoon of April 19.
d. The evidence of one EPA witness was completed April 20. The second EPA witness, CALPA'S president who had been called by subpoena duces tecum, was unable to identify certain docu ments and his testimony was suspended. A third EPA witness had been testifying about 20 minutes when the hearing adjourned for the day.
e. When the hearing reconvened at 9:00 a.m., April 21, the third EPA witness resumed the stand but had not begun to testify when the public hearing was suspended and the Board called counsel to an in camera meeting.
f. When the public hearing resumed, after 11:00 a.m.,
(i) the parties submitted and the Board received, or made provision to submit and receive, all the remaining documen tary evidence by agreement.
(ii) the Board ruled that it would accept the evidence there- tofore received in respect of the one complaint as evidence in the other four.
(iii) the Board announced that it would hear argument after the lunch recess and then recessed for lunch. Argument on inscription in law was specifically mentioned by the Chair man, who explained the concept.
g. There were, at the recess, EPA witnesses, including the witness in the box, present and available to testify. (It appears that the need to resume examination of CALPA'S president had been obviated by the agreement on documentary evidence.)
h. After lunch, EPA'S counsel argued first.
i. After hearing argument in the afternoon, the Board recessed.
j. Following the recess April 21, the Board did not resume the public hearings nor receive further evidence from the parties, except the documents as had been agreed, nor receive further argument prior to rendering its decision on the merits of all five complaints.
What is disputed is whether EPA was denied opportunities (1) to complete its evidence on CAL- PA's paragraph 184(1)(a) complaint; (2) to present evidence at all, beyond the common evi dence, on the remaining complaints, including its own; and (3) to argue anything but the inscription in law.
Young, the deponent of CALPA's affidavit is not a lawyer. He was present throughout the public hearing but did not attend the in camera meeting April 21. Farley and Kaufer, deponents of EPA affidavits, are lawyers. Kaufer was present April 18; Farley was not but was otherwise present throughout and did attend the in camera meeting. I think the evidence of Farley and Kaufer must be preferred to Young's in all instances of disagree ment as to the legal significance of what occurred. CALPA had lawyers present throughout who could have given the Court evidence if it disputed theirs on such points.
Farley's affidavit and the cross-examination thereon is the only evidence as to the in camera meeting. The cross-examination (pages 8,10 to 9,6) and re-examination (20,3 to 22,23) do not modify the evidence of his affidavit (Case, pages 713 ff., paragraphs 16 to 36). After dealing with the documents and the application of the evidence received to all complaints, the affidavit continues:
22. THAT Mr. Lapointe then declared that the Board had the power to decide when they had heard enough proof to order the parties to argue;
23. THAT Mr. Heenan of Counsel of Applicant, indicated his disagreement with the declaration that the Board had the power to order argument at any time;
24. THAT Mr. Marc Lapointe stated that the Board intended to finish all five complaints by that evening;
25. THAT Mr. Heenan of Counsel of Applicant stated that that would be impossible;
Then, after describing the exchange between Heenan and the Chairman, the affidavit conclud ed, as to the meeting, with:
35. THAT immediately following this statement by Mr. Heenan, Mr. Lapointe stated that the Board was directing the parties to produce what documents they could by consent, and that he was directing them to argue immediately after lunch;
36. THAT at no time during this meeting did the Board ask Counsel for Applicant to declare their client's defense closed or to waive their client's defense or even to seek instructions from their client to close or waive its defense, nor did counsel do so;
EPA ought to have been in no doubt after the in camera meeting that it was expected to argue the merits, not just the inscription in law. The absence from Farley's affidavit of an explicit statement that EPA argued only the inscription and not the merits, a distinction he would clearly have appreciated, is conspicuous, and the inference to be drawn obvious. Considering also Young's detailed list of the subjects covered by EPA in argument, I am entirely satisfied that EPA did argue the merits and that there is no basis in fact for the allegation of denial of natural justice number 1.
It is also clear that the Board, at the in camera meeting, indicated in no uncertain terms its inten tion to receive no further evidence than the docu ments. Accordingly, no inference is to be drawn from the failure of EPA to express its objection when the public hearing resumed. The objection had been emphatically, if unsuccessfully, taken while the Board sat in camera. Farley's affidavit, paragraph 10, also establishes that the Board did disallow questions, while receiving viva voce evi dence on the complaint under paragraph 184(1) (a), on the grounds that they were not relevant to that complaint.
In its reasons, dealing with the complaint under subparagraph 184(3) (a)(vi), the Board (Case, page 666) stated:
CALPA alleged that on March 2, Mr. H. Steele, President of EPA, in an article published in the Globe and Mail, is quoted as having stated: "Mr. Steele said the pilots hired yesterday will remain with Eastern Provincial Airways after the strike is settled and that returning employees may have to wait for jobs to come open." (underlining ours) (para. 60). EPA, in its Reply to this specific allegation, stated: "Respondent denies as drafted paragraph ... 60", adding that "Respondent cannot be held responsible for the statements reported out of context by either the press or complainant (see para. 43 of Reply of Respond ent)." However, at the public hearings no evidence was adduced by EPA, to support the allegation of para. 43 of its Reply.
Early on January 27, as testified to by witness Capt. John- stone, Mr. Harry Steele, the President of EPA, telephoned him. In the course of that conversation, Mr. Steele stated to him: "I have the jobs and the paycheques ... We will continue to fly, we will hire replacement pilots and you may not have a job to come back to." Captain Tanton, another witness, received four telephone calls from Mr. Steele, one of those lasting for more than one hour. In the course of the first of these calls, on January 27, Mr. Steele stated to the witness that he wanted him to be with him. He said that he owned the jobs and called the shots. On February 13, Steele stated to him that the company would hire pilots and "If you want to have a seat you better come back." [The underlining is the Board's. The italics are mine.]
Then, dealing with the paragraph 184(1)(a) com plaint (Case, pages 675-676), it stated:
Captain Tanton testified that, at the occasion of the first telephone call by Harry Steele, President, on January 27, 1983, at 7:30 a.m. from Wabush, the latter stated that "when this is over, there will be no more CALPA at EPA", and that he would "get rid of the bastards". Tanton added that, as a result of this call, he was quite shocked; "it rattled my cage". At the occasion of a second phone call on February 13, -Mr. Steele discussed with him in detail the productivity problems as perceived by the company. Mr. Steele also spoke of the eventu al plans of the company when it would get additional equip ment, that it would hire more pilots and it would be a non union company. Captain W.L. Tuck also received telephone calls from President Steele. The first one occurred on January 27, the first day of the strike. A major portion of the conversa tion was consumed by Mr. Steele, asserting that he was con vinced that the strike of the pilots at EPA was not an action taken by the local boys but had been initiated from CALPA Toronto. During a second phone call by Mr. Steele, on the following Sunday, the president of EPA went into the personali ties involved. He stated to Captain Tuck that he could find no fault with Captains Lacey and Warren, local boys. His view was that "the whole thing is orchestrated from Toronto". According to the witness, Steele then went after Captain Cooke, the president of CALPA. Finally, in that conversation, which lasted nearly one hour, Steele wanted to know from him why, when the Company had given in on the issue of operating the HS/748's in-house, the pilots were not accepting the rest of the package. In a final call in the last days of February (a Tuesday or Wednesday, the witness recalls), Mr. Steele's tone of voice had changed. It was now more direct and, inter alia, he stated to Captain Tuck that he was sick and tired of CALPA and the union, "I cannot deal with them anymore". The witness added that, on the basis of that phone call, he was particularly shaken up and felt that "I would return to work on the basis of that phone call."
Yet another statement attributed to Steele in the March 2 newspaper article is recited in connection with the paragraph 148(a) complaint (Case, page 679) and both EPA's failure to contradict it and
Steele's failure to testify are noted. The making of that statement was specifically found to have been an unfair labour practice (Case, page 685).
Steele was present April 21 and EPA intended to call him (Case, page 735). While the Board's decision is not subject to review on the basis of its findings of fact, those findings are to be considered in the context of whether EPA was denied natural justice by being denied a fair opportunity to make out its own case and to answer CALPA's.
The nature of the arrangement made by EPA with the replacement pilots was a central issue before the Board. It is the uncontroverted evidence of Kevin C. Howlett, EPA's Director of Employee Relations, that the Board's findings of fact on that issue are dead wrong and that he was present and was intended to testify. Similarly, the provision of the back-to-work agreement proposed by EPA, identified by the Board as an unfair labour prac tice, was to have been addressed by Captain Walker. He was the witness in the box when the Board decided it had heard enough. Whether its decision would have been different had it heard the evidence referred to in, for example, paragraph 23 of his affidavit (Case, page 731) is not our con cern. That it hear it is. The paragraph states:
23. THAT at the time of the decision of the Board, none of the pilots still on strike were qualified to fly, all of whom have to be requalified after ground school, simulator training, aircraft training and flying under supervision, some of this being con ducted under Ministry of Transport supervision, and taking about a week.
Nothing in the Case leads me to suspect that the proposed evidence of either Howlett or Walker was repetitious or otherwise abusive of the Board's process.
The instances recited are examples. There are others to be found.
I conclude that the alleged denial of natural justice number 2 is well founded. It is evident from the Board's own decision that, on points it con sidered significant, EPA was denied a fair oppor tunity to make out its own case and to answer CALPA's case by the refusal of the Board to receive evidence. It is also evident that EPA was, by the same refusal, denied the opportunity to lead evidence on subjects which the Board specifically found to have been unfair labour practices.
CALPA argues that, even if a denial of natural justice is found, the action taken by the Board to review the decision under section 119 either cured the defect or estopped EPA from complaining of it or both. The section provides:
119. The Board may review, rescind, amend, alter or vary any order or decision made by it, and may rehear any applica tion before making an order in respect of the application.
That provision was considered by this Court in a decisions where it was said [at pages 201-202], by way of obiter dicta, that:
It is quite true that this provision confers on the Board the extraordinary power of reviewing its own decisions. In exercis ing this power, the Board may correct its decisions, especially those which it may have made in disregard of the rules of natural justice; but the mere existence of this power does not have the effect of validating these decisions and of placing them beyond the power of review of the court under s. 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act.
Here, the Board did not correct its decision; it offered to review it and gave the parties the oppor tunity to make representations and call evidence to that end. That offer, at the stage of the proceed ings in this section 28 application it was made, did not have the effect of validating the decision nor estopping EPA from pursuing its right to its judi cial review any more than did the mere existence of the Board's power to review. The correction of a decision with a view to obviating a denial of natu ral justice may prove difficult in practice once the Board has communicated it. A section 28 applica tion must, by subsection 28(2), have been filed within 10 days of the Board's first communication of its decision to the aggrieved party and the Court
5 St. Lawrence Seaway Authority et al. v. Canada Labour Relations Board et al. (1979), 31 N.R. 196 (F.C.A.).
is, by subsection 28(5), required to dispose of it expeditiously. While the Board's rescission of a decision might render a section 28 application moot, an offer to review the decision does not.
I see no alternative but to quash the decision entirely notwithstanding the considerable invest ment of the Board and parties in the proceedings.
The decision runs to just over 94 typed foolscap pages. It is eloquent and, in places, impassioned. In view of the vehemence with which the decision has been expressed, it would be most unwise for the same members of the Board to undertake any rehearing of the complaints and I would direct that the panel rehearing them not include any of those members.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
COWAN D.J. (dissenting): I have read the rea sons for judgment of Mahoney J., and agree with his reasoning on the points raised on behalf of the applicant, EPA, with the exception of those relat ing to the alleged action in excess of jurisdiction on the part of the Board and to the alleged failure of the Board to observe a principle of natural justice.
I am unable to agree with the proposition that the Board acted in excess of its jurisdiction when it found that EPA committed an unfair labour prac tice, within the meaning of that phrase as used in sections 184(3)(a)(vi) and 184(3)(c), when, "as reflected in clause 12 of the Return to Work Agreement, it conferred permanent status on the replacements hired during the lawful strike ... from outside the bargaining unit".
Even if it is assumed for the purpose of argu ment that the Board erred in making that finding, such an error would, in my opinion, be an error in law in the course of making a decision which the Board had jurisdiction to make and, as such, is excluded from judicial review by this Court by the provisions of section 122 of the Canada Labour Code.
In addition, in my opinion, the finding in ques tion was not one made by the Board in order to base its jurisdiction on that finding. The jurisdic tion of the Board is founded on three complaints made by CALPA that EPA had committed unfair labour practices.
Section 187 of the Code authorizes the making of such complaints and section 188 imposes on the Board, in the circumstances of the present case, the duty to hear and determine the complaints.
Section 189 provides that where, under section 188, the Board determines that a party to a com plaint has failed to comply with the relevant sec tions of the Code the Board may, by order, require the party to comply with the relevant sections and the Board is given wide powers to make orders to enforce compliance.
The finding of the Board which is attacked is not the only finding of unfair labour practices on the part of EPA made by the Board. The order of the Board sets out eight additional findings of unfair labour practices and breaches of sections 148(a), 184(1)(a), 184(3)(a)(vi) and 184(3)(b) and (c), and the order of the Board was based on those findings as well as on the specific finding as to the permanence of employment of the replace ments hired during the strike from outside the bargaining unit.
It should be kept in mind that the finding in question is not a finding that the conferring of permanent status on the replacement pilots would itself be an unfair labour practice. The finding is that EPA committed an unfair labour practice when "as reflected in clause 12 of the Return to Work Agreement, it conferred permanent status on the replacements".
The provisions of the Return to Work Agree ment and, in particular, those of clause 12 are dealt with by the Board in its decision of May 27, 1983. (Case, pages 652-655.) The Board found that some of these provisions were most unusual and vitally affected the job security of employees who engaged in the strike. These provided that all pilots on strike would be placed on lay-off; that the laid-off pilots would only be recalled to work when vacant positions became available; that for a
period of sixty days they could be recalled out of seniority; that the collective agreement would not apply to striking pilots in recall and that they would be barred from filing grievances on recall for a period of sixty days and, in particular, that "the provisions of the Collective Agreement regarding seniority shall not affect the status and base location of any pilot, who was already on active flying duty, or who had commenced, or been scheduled to commence training on the date of the signing of this Return to Work Agreement".
The Board then continued in its decision (Case, page 654) as follows:
The provisions described above would have the effect of providing super-seniority or, for practical purposes, permanent employment for employees in the bargaining unit who con tinued to work during the strike or crossed the picket line and were working or available for work at the end of the strike. It also provided the same superior conditions for new employees hired during the strike and even for any employees who had never worked in the bargaining unit but were in training or scheduled to report for training when the strike terminated.
Clearly, the employer had entered into individual contracts of employment with certain individuals, guaranteeing them preferential treatment over striking employees on the condition that they did not engage in the strike or, more specifically, provided they were not participating in the strike on its termi nation, which is of the nature of the notorious "yellow dog" contracts, forbidden by Section 184(3)(b) of the Code.
In my opinion the Board acted within its juris diction in making the finding in question to the effect that the granting of permanent status to the replacement pilots in the circumstances of the case and with the discriminatory effect on the striking pilots flowing therefrom and from the provisions of the Return to Work Agreement constituted an unfair labour practice, contrary to the relevant sections of the Code.
While, for the purpose of argument, I have assumed that the Board erred in making that finding, I am not convinced that it did, in fact, err.
For the foregoing reasons I am of the opinion that the Board did not act beyond its jurisdiction
in making the decision and order dated May 27, 1983.
With regard to the allegation that the Board failed to observe a principle of natural justice it is submitted that EPA was denied the opportunity to complete its evidence on the CALPA complaint under paragraph 184(1)(a) and to present any evidence at all, beyond the common evidence, on the remaining complaints, including its own.
The hearing before the Board began on the morning of April 18, 1983, and three days had been scheduled for completion of the hearing of evidence and the argument on behalf of the par ties, CALPA and EPA. On April 19 and 20 the hearing continued until late in the evening and, on the evening of April 20, the Chairman of the Board stated that the Board would finish the hearing by the end of the day on April 21, an additional fourth day having been scheduled. All CALPA's witnesses had been heard with respect to the first complaint of CALPA and three witnesses had been called on behalf of EPA, the last of whom had been giving evidence for approximately twenty minutes when the hearing adjourned at 10:40 p.m. on April 20.
Captain Lacey, one of the CALPA witnesses, had been cross-examined by EPA counsel for nine hours. On at least one occasion the Chairman reminded EPA counsel that some of the questions were repetitious and on a number of occasions he mentioned the limitations of time set by the Board. When the hearing reconvened on April 21 at 9 a.m. there was a discussion about exhibits and the Board held an in camera meeting with counsel. The proceedings at that meeting are described in the affidavit of Farley and in his cross-examina tion on that affidavit. There is no other record of what happened at that meeting and it must be accepted that the Chairman stated that the Board had the power to decide when it had heard enough proof to order the parties to argue; that the Board intended to finish all five complaints by that evening; that EPA counsel stated that this would be impossible; that the Chairman stated that the Board was directing the parties to produce what documents they could by consent and that he was directing them to argue immediately after lunch, and that at no time during that meeting, or during
the public hearing, did the Board ask EPA counsel to declare his client's case closed.
The parties then met and agreed to the admis sion in evidence as exhibits of a considerable number of documents. The Board reconvened the public hearing after 11 a.m. and it is clear that all available documentary evidence with respect to all complaints was then placed before the Board by the parties. The Board stated that it would accept the evidence already given in respect of the first CALPA complaint as evidence in the other four complaints and that it would hear argument after the lunch recess which then took place.
Counsel for EPA did not at any time in the public hearing on the morning of April 21 object to the action of the Board in stating that it would hear no further oral evidence, nor did he state that EPA had additional witnesses which it was propos ing to call to give evidence.
An affidavit of Ronald Young, Director of Industrial Relations of CALPA, was produced on this section 28 application. Young was not present at the in camera meeting of April 21, but was present during the public hearing sessions of the Board. His affidavit states, in part, as follows:
9. THAT On the evening of April 20th, Chairman Lapointe asked Mr. Heenan if he could give the Board some indication of how many more witnesses he would be calling to which Mr. Heenan responded that he had one long and one short witness.
10. THAT the Chairman suggested that due to the lateness of the evening, the short witness be called.
11. THAT Mr. Heenan stated that this witness was not available that evening.
12. THAT Chairman Lapointe suggested that Mr. Heenan therefore proceed with the long witness.
13. THAT this witness was Captain Chester Walker.
14. THAT the short witness was never identified by Mr. Heenan.
15. THAT Mr. Harry Steele was present the morning of April 21st and that no request was ever made on that day by Mr. Heenan for permission to examine Mr. Harry Steele or any other witness.
16. THAT on the evening of April 20th, Mr. Heenan did put Captain Chester Walker on the witness stand.
17. THAT during his examination in chief of Captain Walker, Mr. Heenan was reminded more than once by Chairman Lapointe who told him that he was going over evidence which was already before the Board.
18. THAT from at least the morning of the 19th of April until the very last day of hearings, Chairman Lapointe repeatedly cautioned both counsel that the hearings would be finished within the times set down, originally scheduled to be completed on the 20th of April, and subsequently extended to the 21st of April, and that they would be well advised to produce all their evidence without delaying the proceedings.
19. THAT to my knowledge, at no time during these hearings did counsel for EPA or CALPA ever request or demand addition al time or opportunity to call other witnesses.
20. THAT to my understanding all the evidence which was being adduced by both counsel from the start to the finish of the hearings was accepted as proof before the Board on all five complaints.
21. THAT on the morning of April 21st, during the testimony of Chester Walker, Chairman Lapointe asked the parties to meet privately with the Chairman.
22. THAT I was not present at those meetings.
23. THAT when those meetings were completed, counsel for CALPA asked myself and a number of other people to help review any pertinent evidence not yet submitted by CALPA.
24. THAT this evidence was necessary in order to complete our proof on all complaints.
25. THAT it was my understanding that counsel and repre sentatives for EPA were simultaneously involved in this same process of reviewing its evidence to finalize their case.
26. THAT upon our return to the public hearing room before lunch, the Chairman ascertained from both counsel that all pertinent evidence was now before the Board.
27. THAT at that time the Chairman did tell the parties that in the Board's view all pertinent evidence had been elicited and that the Board felt that they were in possession of all relevant facts in all five complaints.
28. THAT both counsel confirmed to the Chairman their agreement as to the submission of final exhibits and that the Chairman then regarded proof as having been closed.
29. THAT both parties were then instructed to return after lunch for the presentation of their summations on all matters before the Board.
30. THAT there was no objection from either counsel to proceeding in this manner.
After referring in detail to the argument of EPA counsel in the afternoon of April 21 the affidavit continues:
37. THAT throughout the above arguments Counsel for EPA never requested, demanded or otherwise indicated an expecta tion or a desire to continue with other witnesses or evidence.
38. THAT it was apparent throughout the Hearing that the complaints would be disposed of by the 21st of April.
39. THAT it was absolutely clear on the morning of the 21st of April that the Board regarded itself as having a clear picture of all the facts relevant to all five complaints before it.
40. THAT there was no doubt before, during or after summa tion by both Counsel, that evidence and argument was com pleted on all complaints and that the Board would indeed issue its Decision on that basis.
Young was cross-examined extensively on his affidavit and repeated his statements to the effect that, at the resumption of the public hearing some time after 11 a.m. on April 21, the Chairman of the Board asked counsel for the parties if there was an agreement as to all the evidence and all the exhibits on all the complaints, and stated that the Board was in possession of all the facts in all the complaints and further, that he was satisfied that the evidence was in. (Transcript of cross-examina tion of Young, pages 48-49; 51-53.)
The Board produced as part of the Case and as a document forming part of its records in the file a public hearing report (Case, pages 609-611) which states that it was prepared by S. Chartrand with respect to the hearing held on April 18-21, 1983. It bears the initials of a clerk "S.C." and of the Chairman "M.L.", the Chairman of the Board at the hearing being Marc Lapointe, Q.C. The report is not otherwise verified by affidavit or otherwise and the date of its preparation is not stated. The report contains the following statements (Case, page 611) with regard to the proceedings of April 21:
April 21, 1983
The hearing reconvened at 9.25 a.m. and as more objections continued as to the relevance of evidence to the file under consideration the hearing recessed for the Board to meet with the representatives of the parties. The representatives of the parties again requested that the evidence adduced in one case be joined to include all cases as evidence in the three CALPA complaints and the two EPA complaints. The Board met pri vately following which it informed the parties that it would agree to their request in view of the great amount of evidence which had already been introduced by both parties and which could not but have pertinency in all complaints. The Board also suggested that if the parties could see their way clear to making a stipulation as to the balance of the evidence remaining to complete all files, it could greatly reduce the time needed to complete the evidence of both sides in all five cases.
Counsel for the parties then met separately and reported back to the Board (still recessed) that they had agreed to a stipula tion of all additional evidence. Exhibits 57 to 63 were filed on behalf of EPA and exhibits 64 to 66 were filed on behalf of CALPA. Counsel for EPA stated that if pilots working for Austin Airways were called to testify they would state that they had indeed received copies of exhibit 27. That stipulation was agreed to on behalf of CALPA.
The Board reconvened the public hearing and formally granted the request of the parties to join the five applications and to place all evidence adduced on all five files. The Board also asked counsel to confirm their agreement as to additional evidence to be added to all files to complete evidence. Upon this confirmation by counsel the Board recited the list of additional exhibits. The stipulation concerning Austin Airways pilots who would testify that they had received exhibit 27 was made publicly by counsel for CALPA. The evidence having been completed the Board announced that it would recess for lunch following which it would hear the argument of the parties.
When the Board reconvened after lunch the parties submitted their arguments on the preliminary objections and on the merits of all applications. On the conclusion of the argument the Board said it would render its decisions as soon as possible. Representatives of the parties thanked the Board and indicated that they would file jurisprudence. Mr. Heenan also indicated that he would file material which he had agreed to provide during the course of the hearing concerning the date of the CALPA Board of Directors approval of the strike at EPA. Mr. LaPointe [sic] said the Board would allow it to be filed no later than April 22nd, 1983, with a copy to Mr. Heenan and reserving Mr. Heenan's right to make representations on that issue if necessary.
While it may be said that the hearing report is not formally proved and may be considered to be self-serving, it does state that the parties, at the resumption of the public hearing sometime after 11 a.m. on April 21, confirmed their agreement as to additional evidence to be added to all files to complete evidence. This is consistent with the statements made by Young in his affidavit and on cross-examination on this point.
It is to be noted that EPA did not, at the resumption of the public hearing, object to the action of the Board in closing off the taking of further oral evidence. Counsel for EPA had object ed at the in camera meeting and stated that he had further witnesses to be called, but he did not repeat that objection at the public hearing. I would have expected him to object and ask that his
objection be noted by the Board for the record if he did not, in fact, agree that all necessary evi dence, documentary and oral, was before the Board with respect to all the complaints after the parties had produced the additional exhibits fol lowing the morning recess. The person who pre pared the hearing report referred to above was, apparently, careful to note a number of objections made from time to time by counsel.
There is no affidavit from Mr. Harry Steele, President of EPA, setting out in detail the kind of evidence he would have given if called to give evidence or denying the making of statements attributed to him in the documents produced and in the oral evidence given before the Board.
Kevin C. Howlett made an affidavit taking issue with certain of the Board's findings as to the contracts of employment with the replacement pilots and said that he was to testify before the Board that at no time during the strike did EPA offer to change the seniority of any of the striking or new pilots; that the employment form used for pilots hired after March 1, 1983, was the same form used for all new employees of EPA, except senior management; that while the Board, in its decision, made reference to individual contracts of employment with the new pilots for a term extend ing beyond the date of termination of the strike, as a matter of fact only the standard forms were signed with the new pilots and that at no time during the strike did EPA threaten to fire or change the seniority of any striking pilot.
However, the Board had before it the Return to Work Agreement, which it interpreted as contain ing provisions which gave the new pilots the right to remain in other jobs after the end of the strike, on terms which affected the seniority rights of the pilots who were on strike when the strike ended. The contracts of employment may well have been in the usual form, for a hiring for an indefinite period, but that is not inconsistent with the Board's findings. If the form of the contracts entered into by EPA with the new pilots was considered by it to be significant, there was ample
opportunity during the four days of hearing to produce them as exhibits. They would speak for themselves when considered in the light of the other evidence before the Board.
Captain Chester Walker, Vice-President Opera tions and Maintenance of EPA, completed an affidavit and stated inter alla:
22. THAT I would have testified that it was taking over three weeks to train newly hired skilled pilots to fly on our airline, and to be certified by the Ministry of Transport, before the pilot could be released for line flying during the strike.
23. THAT at the time of the decision of the Board, none of the pilots still on strike were qualified to fly, all of whom have to be requalified after ground school, simulator training, aircraft training and flying under supervision, some of this being con ducted under Ministry of Transport supervision, and taking about a week.
These paragraphs raise questions which do not appear to be relevant to the matters before the Board. No one raised any question before the Board, or before the Court, as to the necessity of requalification of pilots after a lengthy lay-off in order to meet Department of Transport require ments, but that does not affect the findings of the Board that the striking pilots, even after any necessary requalification, were to be placed at a disadvantage as compared with the replacement pilots and as compared with their positions prior to the strike.
Having regard to the whole of the evidence I am not convinced that EPA was not given a fair hearing and an adequate opportunity to present its case before the Board, or that the Board failed to observe a principle of natural justice.
After the filing of the section 28 application the Board invited the parties to appear before the Board and take part in a review by the Board of its May 27, 1983, decision and order, including the submission of any relevant additional evidence or argument. CALPA appeared and offered no addi tional pertinent evidence and EPA appeared as a matter of courtesy to the Board but declined to adduce any additional evidence or argument on the ground that since judical review proceedings had
been taken by it EPA objected to a reopening of the hearing.
It seems clear that the existence of the power in the Board under section 119 of the Code to review its own decision does not have the effect of validat ing that decision or of placing that decision beyond the power of review of the Court under paragraph 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act. In my view, however, the fact that the applicant, EPA, is com plaining that the Board did not, in April 1983, afford it the opportunity of presenting all the evidence it had available to it; that the Board offered a rehearing on August 2 and 3, 1983, in order that any relevant additional evidence might be adduced by the parties; and that EPA refused to participate in that rehearing and to adduce additional evidence, lends support to the conclu sion that on April 21, 1983, it really did not have any relevant additional evidence to adduce before the Board and was content to rely upon what it thought was the weakness in law of CALPA's case and the absence of power in the Board to grant the kind of relief sought by CALPA, whatever the state of the evidence might be.
For the foregoing reasons I would dismiss the paragraph 28(1)(a) application of EPA.
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