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The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Attorney General of Canada (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Thurlow J., and Bastin D.J.—Ottawa, December 15, 1972.
Judicial review—Public Service—Whether lawyers in Canadian Transport Commission "employed in confidential capacity'—Finding by Public Service Staff Relations Board—Review of—Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, s. 2, 25.
JUDICIAL review.
J. C. Hanson, Q.C., for applicant.
I. G. Whitehall for respondent.
JACKETT C.J. (orally)—This is an application to this Court under section 28 of the Federal Court Act to review and set aside a decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board dated August 10, 1971, as confirmed by a review of that decision by that Board dated June 13, 1972.
To understand the significance of the deci sion that is the subject matter of this applica tion, it is necessary to examine certain of the provisions of the Public Service Staff Relations Act (hereinafter referred to as "the Act").
Part II of the Act provides for the regulation of collective bargaining and the negotiation of collective agreements in the Public Service of Canada and, for that purpose, provides for cer tification by the Public Service Staff Relations Board (established pursuant to section 11 of the Act) of employee organizations as bargaining agents for employees in bargaining units that have been determined by it to be appropriate for collective bargaining. For the purposes of the Act an "employee" is defined by section 2 of the Act as being a person employed in the Public Service other than certain excepted classes. One of those excepted classes is "(h) a person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity," and that excepted class is more specifically defined by section 2 as follows:
"person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity", means any person who
(a) is employed in a position confidential to the Governor General, a Minister of the Crown, a judge of the Supreme or Exchequer Court of Canada, the deputy head of a department or the chief executive officer of any other portion of the Public Service, or
(b) is employed as a legal officer in the Department of Justice,
and includes any other person employed in the Public Service who in connection with an application for certifica tion of a bargaining agent for a bargaining unit is designated by the Board, or who in any case where a bargaining agent for a bargaining unit has been certified by the Board is designated in prescribed manner by the employer, or by the Board on objection thereto by the bargaining agent, to be a person
(c) who has executive duties and responsibilities in rela tion to the development and administration of govern ment programs,
(d) whose duties include those of a personnel administra tor or who has duties that cause him to be directly involved in the process of collective bargaining on behalf of the employer,
(e) who is required by reason of his duties and respon sibilities to deal formally on behalf of the employer with a grievance presented in accordance with the grievance process provided for by this Act,
(f) who is employed in a position confidential to any person described in paragraph (b), (c), (d) or (e), or
(g) who is not otherwise described in paragraph (c), (d), (e) or W, but who in the opinion of the Board should not be included in a bargaining unit by reason of his duties and responsibilities to the employer; .. .
It will be noted from a study of this latter definition that, in addition to the persons described by paragraphs (a) and (b) of the defi nition, the expression "person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity" includes, in a case where a bargaining unit has been certified by the Board "any other person employed in the Public Service ... who ... is designated in prescribed manner by the employ er, or by the Board on objection thereto by the bargaining agent, to be a person" who falls within paragraph (c), (d), (e), () or (g), and that paragraph () puts in that category a person who is employed in "a position confidential to any person" described in paragraph (b), (c), (d), or (e).
What happened in this case is that, a bargain ing agent having been certified for a bargaining unit, the employer proposed that two lawyers— Messrs. Cuddihy and Norton—who work for the Canadian Transport Commission, be desig nated as persons falling under paragraph (D of the definition of "person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity" (or under section 2(u)(vi) of the Act as it was before the Revised Statutes of 1970), the bargaining agent objected, and the Board then, after an appropri ate investigation and after giving the parties a hearing, delivered a decision on August 10, 1971, by which it designated the two lawyers as persons employed in a managerial or confiden tial capacity under the definition of that expres sion in the Act.
The lawyers in question were designated by the employer as being "confidential to" the Director General of Legal Services, Canadian Transport Commission, who had been previous ly designated as a person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity under para graphs (c) and (e) of the definition.
The relevant part of the Board's decision reads as follows:
5. The term "confidential" is difficult or impossible of exact or precise definition. It seems even less possible to define with precision the relationship described by the phrase "confidential to any person". Such a relationship may be seen to exist under a variety of circumstances and may vary in reference to particular relationships involved. The dictionary meaning of the word "confidential" is of little assistance. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines "confidential" as meaning:
1. Of the nature of confidence; spoken or written in confidence 1773.
2. Betokening private intimacy 1759.
3. Enjoying another's confidence; entrusted with secrets
1805.
The word "confidence" is defined as meaning:
The mental attitude of trusting in or relying on; firm trust,
reliance, faith.
If we were to apply these definitions literally, the result would be that so many public servants would be subject to designation that the collective bargaining features of the Act would cease to have any real significance as an instrument for regulating the relations between the Employer and mem bers of the Public Service.
6. At this stage, we cannot go beyond some very broad general statements of principle and these statements are not to be taken as being exhaustive by any means. It appears to us that Parliament must have intended head (vi) to apply at least in the following circumstances:
(i) Where the duties of a position occupied by a person described in heads (ii) to (v) of section 2(u) are so onerous that he is compelled to delegate to another a significant portion of his duties of the type that constitute the basis for his having been designated or of the type that warrant a finding that he is a person described in heads (ii) to (v) of section 2(u) and where the duties so delegated require skill, judgment, trust and confidence;
(ii) Where the services rendered by the person alleged to be confidential are of such a nature that the person designated or described under heads (ii) to (v) of section 2(u) would normally have to rely to a substantial extent on the "confidential" person to perform them, having regard to modern technology and office organization.
The second type of confidential person just described would include, inter alia, a person performing secretarial duties of a requisite kind for a person designated or described under heads (ii) to (v) of section 2(u) and related to the duties that constitute the basis for his having been designated or described. There may appear to be a lack of definition in what we have said; this is inherent in the difficult process we face constantly in determining which persons are "confidential".
7. Having regard to the evidence contained in the reports of the examiner, we find that Messrs. Cuddihy and Norton are persons who are employed in positions confidential, in the sense of that term as set out above, to Mr. Fortier, a person designated as a person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity under head (iii) of section 2(u) of the Act. They are accordingly designated as persons employed in a managerial or confidential capacity under section 2(u) of the Act.
It is also appropriate to mention at this point that under the heading "Basic Rights and Prohi bitions" section 8 of the Act provides that "No person who is employed in a managerial or confidential capacity, whether or not he is acting on behalf of the employer, shall partici pate in or interfere with the formation or administration of au employee organization or the representation of employees by such an organization."
Finally, it should be mentioned that, by letter dated September 7, 1971, the applicant request ed the Board to review its decision of August 10, 1971, under section 25 of the Act, which reads as follows:
25. The Board may review, rescind, amend, alter or vary any decision or order made by it, or may rehear any application before making an order in respect thereof, except that any rights acquired by virtue of any decision or order that is so reviewed, rescinded, amended, altered or varied shall not be altered or extinguished with effect from a day earlier than the day on which such review, rescission, amendment, alteration or variation is made.
The letter requesting the review reads as follows:
Pursuant to Section 25 of the Public Service Staff Rela tions Act, I am hereby requesting the Public Service Staff Relations Board to review its decision of August 10th, 1971 (File 172-2-56), in which it decided that Mr. M.J. Cuddihy and Mr. N.C. Norton are persons employed in a position confidential to Mr. J.M. Fortier, within the meaning of Section 2(u) (vi) of the Act.
In paragraph 7 of its decision, the Board stated the following:
Having regard to the evidence contained in the reports of the examiner, we find that Messrs. Cuddihy and Norton are persons who are employed in positions confidential, in the sense of that term as set out above, to Mr. Fortier, a person designated as a person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity under head (iii) of section 2(u) of the Act.
On a careful examination of the Examiner's report and his supplementary report, the Institute can find no evidence which would bring Messrs. Cuddihy and Norton within the scope of Section 2(u) (vi) of the Act, as interpreted by the Board in paragraph 6 of its decision. The only references in the Examiner's report or supplementary report to the rela tionship between Mr. Cuddihy and Mr. Fortier are con tained in paragraphs 8, 10, 11 of the report, and in the Institute's submission these references indicate neither
(i) that Mr. Fortier's duties are so onerous that he is compelled to delegate to Mr. Cuddihy a significant por tion of his executive duties and responsibilities in relation to the administration and development of government programs;
nor
(ii) that the services rendered by Mr. Cuddihy are of such a nature, having regard to modern technology and office organization, that Mr. Fortier would normally have to rely to a substantial extent on Mr. Cuddihy to perform the duties which led to his own exclusion.
For the above reasons, the Institute requests the Board to review its decision relating to Messrs. Cuddihy and Norton, as it contends that these employees should not be excluded from the Law Group bargaining unit.
On June 13, 1972, the Board delivered a deci sion reading as follows:
The Board has given careful consideration to the request of the Bargaining Agent that the Board review its decision
of August 10, 1971, in this matter as well as to the represen tations of the Bargaining Agent in support of that request. The Board confirms its decision of August 10, 1971.
The sole attack on the decision of August 10, 1971, set out in the applicant's Memorandum in this Court is that it was based "on an erroneous finding of fact made in a perverse and capri cious manner without regard for the material before it" in that the material before the Board contained no evidence which could bring the two lawyers in question within the ambit of paragraph (f) of the definition of "person employed in a managerial or confidential capacity" as interpreted by the Board in its decision.
The Board's decision of June 13, 1972, con firming its earlier decision is also attacked by the applicant's Memorandum by paragraphs 3 and 4 thereof which read, omitting the authori ties cited, as follows:
3. (a) The decision by the Public Service Staff Relations Board of June 13th, 1972, being a confirmation by review of its earlier decision of August 10th, 1971, should be viewed as a revival or restatement or reiteration of its earlier decision. Accordingly, this Review requested by the Applicant before this Court can call into question the August 10th, 1971 decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board, as well as, its decision of June 13th, 1972.
(b) The Public Service Staff Relations Board in its deci sion of June 13th, 1972, should have made a complete and thorough review of its August 10th, 1971, decision and this was or should have been, therefore, a new consideration of all the material and evidence that entered into the mind of the said Board in 1971 together with any representations, material or evidence reviewed or considered by the said Board in making its decision of June 13th, 1972.
4. It was a denial of natural justice by the Public Service Staff Relations Board to close their minds to the representa tions made by the Applicant and not make an entire review of their 1971 decision.
In so far as the attack on the decision of August 10, 1971 is concerned, as it appears to me, on a study of the Case and Memoranda, a sufficient basis for the Board's decision is to be found in the following portions of the report of the examiner on which the decision was based:
The witness acts under the general direction of the Director General of Legal Services and provides legal advice to the Commission and to various committees such as the Com-
mittee on the Railway Transport, the Air Transport Com mittee and the Water Transport Committee.
The witness is in daily contact with the Director General of Legal Services and he said that he had a full exchange of views with his Director.
According to the witness, when he is assigned to work as counsel for a committee, he gives his advice and opinions directly to the committee, even though he may from time to time discuss certain legal points with his Director before so doing. The same is true in respect of assignments which require him to deal with the President, Vice-President, and the Secretary of the Canadian Transport Commission.
A certain knowledge of government organiza tion and of the duties of a lawyer employed to give legal advice may be assumed on the part of the Public Service Staff Relations Board. Its work is such that it must be constantly familiar izing itself with such matters and it would be an unnecessary and a useless exercise to spell such matters out on the record of each proceeding that comes before it. When a portion of the government service has a legal adviser, in the nature of things, his services are provided on a confidential basis, and, when it has a legal branch, the responsibility of the director of that branch is to provide such services, and to dis charge that responsibility he must have the help of lawyers whose services must be provided to him or as directed by him on a confidential basis.' If such a lawyer is not in a confidential position in relation to the director of his branch, or as the statute puts it, "confidential to" the director, I have difficulty to conceive, on the basis of my experience, of any person in the Public Service who is "confidential to" any other person in the Public Service.
With reference to the attack on the decision in response to the request for a review of the original decision, I am at a loss to appreciate the complaint. There was no request for an oppor tunity to present new evidence or further argu ment. The letter of request asked that the Board reconsider the matter and spelled out quite clearly what reconsideration it wanted. The Board, after giving careful consideration to the request "as well as the representations ... in support of the request", confirmed its decision. The Board did exactly what was requested of it
and I do not see any ground for complaint. In saying this, I do not wish to be taken as accept ing any suggestion that the Board is under an obligation to exercise its powers to "rehear" any application or to "review" a decision or order immediately after it has taken its original action except where some valid reason for its doing so has been made out by the person asking it to do so.
In my view, the application must be dismissed.
* * *
THURLOW J. and BASTIN D. J. concurred.
I This is, undoubtedly, why legal officers of the Depart ment of Justice were excluded as a class.
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