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T-4761-76
Télévision St -François Inc. (CKSH-TV) and Télévision St-Maurice Inc. (CKTM-TV) (Appli- cants)
v.
Canada Labour Relations Board and National Association of Broadcast Employees and Techni cians (NABET) (Respondents)
Trial Division, Dubé J.—Montreal, January 17; Ottawa, January 21, 1977.
Jurisdiction Application for writ of prohibition Powers of Canada Labour Relations Board in relation to proceedings under Part V of Canada Labour Code Applica tion of s. 122 of the Code Canada Labour Code, Part V,
S.C. 1972, c. 18, ss. 117, 118, 119, 122, 133 Canada Labour Relations Board Regulations SOR/73-205, ss. 3, 26, 32, 33 Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18(b), 28.
Applicants seek a writ of prohibition forbidding the respond ent Board from taking any action with respect to its file No. 560-15 concerning their application for a review, pursuant to section 119 of the Canada Labour Code, of a ruling that the second respondent was to be certified as a bargaining agent for all their employees. A verbal decision rejecting their application for a review was followed by a notice from the Board stating that it had decided to consider the applicants' position under section 133 of the Code separately and that a new file was to be opened containing copies of documents in file No. 530-139 that were relevant to the section 133 ruling. Applicants claim that the Board has no jurisdiction to initiate hearings and can not convert an application pursuant to section 119 of the Code into a hearing pursuant to section 133.
Held, the application is dismissed. As the proceedings of the Board are within its jurisdiction pursuant to powers conferred on it by the Code, no relief is provided for in section 18(b) of the Federal Court Act and the privative clause contained in section 122(2) of the Code prohibits the Court from restraining such proceedings.
B.C. Packers Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board [ 1973] F.C. 1194, applied. B.C. Packers Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board [1974] 2 F.C. 913, distinguished.
APPLICATION for writ of prohibition. COUNSEL:
T. Goloff for applicants.
M. Robert for respondent Canada Labour
Relations Board.
R. Cleary for respondent National Associa
tion of Broadcast Employees and Technicians.
SOLICITORS:
Massicotte, Sullivan, Lagacé & Goloff, Montreal, for applicants.
Robert, Dansereau, Barré, Marchessault & Thibeault, Montreal, for respondent Canada Labour Relations Board.
Trudel, Nadeau, Létourneau, Lesage & Cleary, Montreal, for respondent National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians.
The following is the English version of the reasons for order rendered by
DUBS J.: This is an application for the issue of a writ of prohibition forbidding respondent, the Canada Labour Relations Board (hereinafter referred to as the Board), to hold any hearing or take any action with respect to its file No. 560-15 concerning the applicants.
The affidavit supporting the application states that on October 15, 1975 applicant, Télévision St -François Inc. (CKSH-TV), sent the Board an application for review pursuant to section 119 of the Canada Labour Code, asking the Board to review its order of August 22, 1975 and to rule that respondent, the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET), is certified as a bargaining agent for a unit includ ing all the employees of CKSH-TV, with the exclusion of certain persons. On June 25, 1976 the Board delivered at its meeting a verbal decision rejecting the said application for exclusion and confirming the aforementioned order of August 22.
On October 25, 1976 the Board sent applicants a notice, the first paragraph of which is contained below:
[TRANSLATION] Please note that the Board has, on its own initiative, decided to deal with the question of a declaration under section 133 of the Canada Labour Code (Part V— Industrial Relations) separately from application for review No. 530-139 affecting the aforementioned parties. It has accordingly ordered that a specific file be set up for this case and that copies of documents in file No. 530-139, concerning the application of section 133, be placed therein. [The underlin ing is mine.]
Applicants allege that the Board has no jurisdic tion to call hearings and has no legal authority
with respect to applicants, since the said Board may not, when an application is submitted under section 119 of the Code (application for exclu sion), divert the inquiry toward an order pursuant to section 133 (constituting a single employer). The two sections of the Code read as follows:
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.
133. Where, in the opinion of the Board, associated or related federal works, undertakings or businesses are operated by two or more'employers, having common control or direction, the Board may, after affording to the employers a reasonable opportunity to make representations, by order, declare that for all purposes of this Part the employers and the federal works, undertakings and businesses operated by them that are speci fied in the order are, respectively, a single employer and a single federal work, undertaking or business.
Before considering the merits of this application, the Court must determine whether the Trial Divi sion has jurisdiction in this area, in view of the prohibition of subsection 122(2) of the Code:
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 section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
(2) Subject to subsection (1), no order shall be made, pro cess entered or proceeding taken in any court, whether by way of injunction, certiorari, prohibition, quo warranto or other wise, to question, review, prohibit or restrain the Board in any of its proceedings under this Part.
It is therefore certain that if applicants were challenging an "order" or a "decision" of the Board, the Trial Division would not have jurisdic tion. However, applicants are not challenging a decision or an order, but are asking the Court to prohibit the proceedings of the Board, although subsection 122(2) prohibits any court from issuing a writ of prohibition against any proceedings of the Board under Part V of the Code, entitled INDUS TRIAL RELATIONS. The Court must therefore determine in the case at bar whether the proceed ings of the Board were within its jurisdiction. If so, the Court cannot, of course, intervene.
In B.C. Packers v. Canada Labour Relations Board', the Court of Appeal referred to section 122 of the Code in the following terms, at page 1198:
If section 122(2) prevents the use of other types of proceedings with respect to the Board's exercise of its jurisdiction it is because Parliament has made clear by that subsection that the day-to-day exercise by the Board of its authority to conduct the proceedings before it is not to be called in question or hampered by proceedings of that nature, though its decisions affecting the rights of parties before it are to be reviewable under section 28 of the Federal Court Act. We express no opinion as to whether section 122(2) has any application to prevent proceedings in a case where the Board purports to exercise a jurisdiction that has not been conferred on it.
My brother Addy J. expressed an opinion on the subject in B.C. Packers Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board 2 at page 921:
In my view, there is nothing extraordinary in this privative clause contained in the Canada Labour Code.
There are numerous decisions of common law courts of the highest jurisdiction over many years which have held that courts of superior jurisdiction possessing powers of prohibition and entrusted with the duty of supervising tribunals of inferior jurisdiction, have not only the jurisdiction but the duty to exercise those powers notwithstanding privative clauses of this nature where the application is based on a complete lack of jurisdiction on the part of the tribunal of inferior jurisdiction to deal with the matter with which it purports to deal. These decisions are based on the very logical assumption that where Parliament has set up a tribunal to deal with certain matters it would be completely illogical to assume that, by the mere fact of inserting a privative clause in the Act constituting the tribunal and outlining its jurisdiction, Parliament also intended to authorize the tribunal to deal with matters with which Parliament had not deemed fit to entrust it or to exercise jurisdiction over persons not covered by the Act of Parliament, or to engage in an illegal and unauthorized hearing.
Addy J. ordered the issue of a writ of prohibi tion against the Board, and also ruled that the Board was "a federal board, commission or tribu nal" against which relief might be granted under section 18(b) of the Federal Court Act. The Board's lack of jurisdiction was based on the fact that the labour contract governing the fishermen fell within provincial authority. An appeal against this decision was dismissed by the Court of Appeal.'
[1973] F.C. 1194.
2 [1974] 2 F.C. 913.
3 [1976] 1 F.C. 375.
The specific question in the case at bar is wheth er the Board has the power proprio motu, as stated in its aforementioned letter, to decide "on its own initiative ... to deal with the question of a declara tion under section 133 of the Code", when dealing with an application for exclusion under section 119.
The powers and functions of the Board are defined in sections 117 and 118 of the Code. Under section 117, the Board has the power to make regulations of general application respecting, inter alia:
117. The Board may make regulations of general application
respecting
(a) the establishment of rules of procedure for its hearings;
(f) the hearing or determination of any application, com plaint, question, dispute or difference that may be made or referred to the Board;
(o) such other matters and things as may be incidental or conducive to the proper performance of the duties of the Board under this Part.
The Canada Labour Relations Board Regula tions (SOR/73 - 205, April 10, 1973) prescribe, inter alia:
3. Every proceeding before the Board shall be commenced by the filing with the Board of an application in writing.
26. No proceeding before the Board is invalid by reason only of a defect in form or a technical irregularity.
32. An application to' the Board under section 119 of the Code requesting it to review, rescind, amend, alter or vary any order or decision made by it shall be dated and shall contain the following:
33. Where associated or related federal works, undertakings or businesses are operated by two or more employers having common control or direction and a question arises as to whether or not they should be declared for all purposes of the Code to be a single employer and a single federal work, undertaking or business, an application under section 133 of the Code shall be dated and shall'contain the following:
Under section 118 of the Code, the Board has, in relation to any proceeding before it, power
(a) to summon and enforce the attendance of witnesses and compel them to give oral or written evidence on oath and to produce such documents and things as the Board deems
requisite to the full investigation and consideration of any matter within its jurisdiction that is before the Board in the proceeding;
(p) to decide for all purposes of this Part any question that may arise in the proceeding, including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, any question as to whether
(i) a person is an employer or employee,
(ii) a person performs management functions or is employed in a confidential capacity in matters relating to industrial relations,
(iii) a person is a member of a trade union,
(iv) an organization or association is an employers' organ ization, a trade union or a council of trade unions,
(v) a group of employees is a unit appropriate for collec tive bargaining,
(vi) a collective agreement has been entered into,
(vii) any person or organization is a party to or bound by a collective agreement, and
(viii) a collective agreement is in operation.
Furthermore, under section 119 the Board may review, rescind, amend, alter or vary any order or decision made by it. Section 121 allows the Board to 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.
It should be pointed out that section 119 of the Code states that the Board may rehear any application and that section 32 of the Regulations lays down the application procedure. Section 33 of the Regulations also prescribes a procedure for an application made under section 133 of the Code. However, section 133 does not require that the Board consider an application, but stipulates that "where, in the opinion of the Board ... the Board may ...".
This Court must accordingly conclude that the Board may, on its own initiative, after giving the employers a reasonable opportunity to make representations, declare that these employers respectively constitute a single employer. As the proceedings of the Board are pursuant to the powers conferred on it by the Code, the privative clause contained in section 122(2) of the Code forbids any court to restrain such proceedings by prohibition.
If, further to its inquiries and hearings, the Board decides that the two applicants are respec tively a single employer for the purposes of section
133 of the Code, and if the applicants wish to question such a decision, they must comply with section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
ORDER
The application is dismissed with costs.
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