Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-3159-75
Albin Achorner (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Montreal, January 31; Ottawa, February 9, 1977.
Public Service — Practice Action for wrongful dismissal
— Motion to strike out statement of claim — Onus of proof Dismissal pursuant to s. 27 of Public Service Employment Act — Whether grievance procedure provided for by Public Service Staff Relations Act could or should have been fol
lowed Public Service Employment Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32, ss. 24 and 27 — Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, s. 90(1)(a)(i)— Federal Court Rule 419.
Plaintiff was dismissed from Post Office employment pursu ant to section 27 of the Public Service Employment Act for alleged abandonment of position. Plaintiff alleges that he failed to return to work because he was awaiting a reply to a letter he sent to his superiors expressing fear for his safety and asking to be advised as to when he could resume his duties. Defendant, on bringing a motion to strike out the statement of claim, claims that she was entitled to dismiss the plaintiff by virtue of section 24 of the Act and that in any event the plaintiff should have availed himself of the grievance procedures provided for by section 90(1)(a)(i) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act.
Held, the motion is dismissed. In deciding whether or not a statement of claim discloses a reasonable cause of action, it must be assumed that the facts it alleges are true; any doubt as to these facts should be resolved by the Trial Judge. The defendant cannot invoke section 24 because it was not by virtue of this section that the plaintiff's employment was terminated. And there is some doubt as to whether the grievance procedure provided for by the Public Service Staff Relations Act was available to the plaintiff, since he was not being dismissed as a disciplinary measure but because he had allegedly abandoned his position, which he denies.
Wright v. Public Service Staff Relations Board [1973] F.C. 765, applied. Hopson v. The Queen [1966] Ex.C.R. 608; Zamulinski v. The Queen [1956-60] Ex.C.R. 175 and Peck v. The Queen [1964] Ex.C.R. 966, distinguished.
MOTION to strike out statement of claim. COUNSEL:
Cyril E. Schwisberg, Q. C., for plaintiff. R. Cousineau for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Schwisberg, Golt & Benson, Montreal, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
WALSH J.: This is a motion made pursuant to Rule 419 by defendant for an order striking out plaintiff's pleadings on the ground that the said pleadings do not disclose a reasonable cause of action. Plaintiff filed an original statement of claim on September 9, 1975, alleging that after having been a regular employee of the Canada Post Office since 1961 he was released from his employment by letter dated August 15, 1972, writ ten by H. Vallée, acting Director of the Montreal Metropolitan District, pursuant to section 27 of the Public Service Employment Act' because of the alleged abandonment of his position. As a result of failing to join the union and refusing to participate in an illegal strike in 1965, he alleges that he was attacked on June 4 or 5, 1966, by about 200 men who beat him up breaking his nose and his teeth so that he required hospital treat ment. As a result of this he was transferred to the Registration Unit at the Montreal Central Post Office in July 1966 and worked there for five years. In 1971 his hours were suddenly changed and he was allegedly subjected to other harass- ments and threats on the new night shift to which he had been posted which came to a head on May 26, 1972, when he was ordered by Mr. R. Dage- nais to close the mail for certain flights before the time at which they were supposed to be closed—in other words to deliberately slow down his work so that it would be possible to accuse him of not accomplishing it properly. He was subjected to further threats when leaving work so in conse quence did not report on May 27, 1972, but wrote a letter explaining his fear for his safety and asking his superintendent to advise him of the date on which he could resume work. He wrote a further letter on May 29, 1972, to Mr. L. Duro- cher, the Director of the Montreal Metropolitan District, enclosing a copy of the letter which he had written to his superintendent, Mr. St. Cyr, but received no acknowledgment to either letter, the first communication being August 15, 1972, when
' R.S.C. 1970, c. P-32.
Mr. Vallée notified him of his release from employment under section 27 of the Public Service Employment Act which reads as follows:
27. An employee who is absent from duty for a period of one week or more, otherwise than for reasons over which, in the opinion of the deputy head, the employee has no control or otherwise than as authorized or provided for by or under the authority of an Act of Parliament, may by an appropriate instrument in writing to the Commission be declared by the deputy head to have abandoned the position he occupied, and thereupon the employee ceases to be an employee.
It is not necessary for the purpose of the present motion to go in further detail into his very lengthy statement of claim or his attempts to secure redress by communication with members of Parlia ment and the Postmaster General, nor his claim for loss of all the salary which he could have anticipated earning to pensionable age, and loss of pension.
Defendant first made a motion for the determi nation of a question of law seeking an answer to the question of whether plaintiffs action was barred by prescription. This motion was dismissed in the Trial Division and the judgment was appealed to the Court of Appeal 2 . After reviewing the statement of claim Chief Justice Jackett con cluded that two options were opened to defendant, the first being to seek a determination as to wheth er it disclosed any cause of action during the course of which the question of prescription would be raised, or second to allow the matter to proceed to discovery to clarify the facts in which event the statement of claim might be varied. He then stated [at page 646]:
... the first thing that strikes me is that a reading of the statement of claim (which the appellant has chosen as the subject matter for the decision of the single question of law proposed) leaves me in substantial doubt as to what the respondent's cause of action, if any, is; and I am conscious of the fact that, if the matter is otherwise left to run its course, a cause of action may ultimately emerge that is not apparent from a mere reading of the statement of claim and that may be reflected in an amended statement of claim. This being so, it does not seem ,to me that it is "expedient" to set down the proposed question of law at this stage.
In due course plaintiff submitted an amended declaration and statement of claim giving more detail considering his alleged cause of action and
2 [1977] 1 F.C. 641.
the present motion is now made to strike it out in its entirety.
In deciding such a motion the Court must pro ceed on the basis that all the allegations in the statement of claim must be presumed to be true and then decide whether, conceding this, this gives a cause of action. The jurisprudence is clear that if there is any doubt the decision should be left to the Trial Judge who should be given an opportunity to hear the evidence. Applying this principle to the facts of the present case it would appear that plaintiff was very badly treated and in fact lost his employment because he refused to go along with the union and participate in an illegal strike and the inability or unwillingness of his superiors to guarantee his protection against the threats and violence he had suffered and had good reason to anticipate would continue without such protection. As his counsel argued, he was released as a matter of expedience and because of a desire of his supe riors not to provoke the union in any way which might cause further trouble in what was already a highly inflammatory situation existing in the Montreal Post Office; in other words, he was an innocent party sacrificed in order to purchase labour peace.
If this is the case, as plaintiff alleges, he might well have been justified in contending that his absence from duty for a period of one week or more was as a result of reasons over which he had no control and that his employers were not justi fied in availing themselves of section 27 of the Act to declare that he had abandoned the position he occupied and therefore ceased to be an employee.
The question which causes most concern at this stage of the proceedings however is not whether he may have a valid action on the merits when all the facts are made known, which certainly cannot be determined without the action proceeding to trial, but whether the present proceedings constitute an appropriate method by virtue of which he is en titled to seek redress.
Defendant refers to section 24 of the Act which reads as follows:
24. The tenure of office of an employee is during the pleas ure of Her Majesty, subject to this and any other Act and the regulations thereunder and, unless some other period of employment is specified, for an indeterminate period.
I do not believe that this section can properly be invoked however since it was not by virtue of this section of the Act that his employment was ter minated. No Order in Council was passed provid ing for his dismissal as in the case of Hopson v. The Queen 3 .
The case of Zamulinski v. The Queen'', while holding that no right of damages accrued to an employee dismissed since he held his employment only at the pleasure of the Crown, nevertheless directed attention to a section of the Regulations giving him a right to present his case to a senior officer of the department nominated by a deputy head and be heard before he is dismissed, and since he had been deprived of this right he was awarded nominal damages of $500.
A similar finding was made by my brother Cattanach J. in the case of Peck v. The Queens but in that case no damages were allowed because the plaintiff had been given an adequate opportu nity to present her side of the case prior to dismissal.
In the case of Rao v. Secretary of State for India 6 a somewhat similar section to section 24 provided that the employee held office during Her Majesty's pleasure. The headnote of the report states:
The terms of s. 96B assure that the tenure of office, though at pleasure, will not be subject to capricious or arbitrary action, but will be regulated by the rules, which are manifold in number, most minute in particularity and all capable of change, but there was no right in the appellant, enforceable by action, to hold his office in accordance with those rules, and he could therefore be dismissed notwithstanding the failure to observe the procedure prescribed by them.
Sect. 96B and the rules make provision for the redress of grievances by administrative process.
There seems to be some question in the present case, however, as to whether in the circumstances in which he was held to have abandoned his employment by the application of section 27 of the Act he could have secured any redress by adminis trative process. Defendant states he should have proceeded by way of the grievance procedure pro vided in sections 90 and following of the Public
3 [1966] Ex.C.R. 608. [1956-60] Ex.C.R. 175.
5 [1964] Ex.C.R. 966.
6 [1937] A.C. 248.
Service Staff Relations Act 7 . Section 90(1)(a)(i) reads as follows:
90. (1) Where any employee feels himself to be aggrieved
(a) by the interpretation or application in respect of him of (i) a provision of a statute, or of a regulation, by-law, direction or other instrument made or issued by the employer, dealing with terms and conditions of employment
in respect of which no administrative procedure for redress is provided in or under an Act of Parliament, he is entitled. subject to subsection (2), to present the grievance at each of the levels, up to and including the final level, in the grievance process provided for by this Act.
Defendant contends that the application of section 27 implies the application to plaintiff of the provi sions of section 90 of the Public Service Staff Relations Act and that the plaintiff, if he was not satisfied, should have presented a grievance rather than communicating with various officials in the Post Office Department including the Postmaster General, with his member of Parliament, and with others in his attempts to secure redress, and that having failed to avail himself of this he is not entitled to bring the present proceedings.
There would seem to be some doubt, however, as to whether the grievance procedure was open to plaintiff in the present circumstances. He was not being dismissed for any disciplinary measure and in fact quite to the contrary he wished to be able to carry on his work in accordance with the regula tions and to resist orders of his superiors to partici pate in illegal slow-downs with a view to delaying the delivery of the mails. He asked his supervisor to provide protection for him and said he could not resume his work until he had some such assurance. Instead of this, section 27 was applied in his case and he was held to have abandoned his employ ment because, in the absence of such assurances, he had not resumed his work. There was no ques tion of his having been dismissed for disciplinary reasons which. would clearly give rise to grievance procedures. This question was gone into in some detail by the Court of Appeal in the case of Wright v. Public Service Staff Relations Board'. In that case Chief Justice Jackett carefully analyzed the provisions of the sections of the Public Service
' R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35. e [1973] F.C. 765.
Staff Relations Act relating to grievances and of the Public Service Employment Act. While in that case he was dealing with the right to final adjudi cation by an adjudicator and not with the right to present a grievance, he listed the various sections of the Public Service Employment Act by virtue of which a person may become separated from employment in the Public Service, including among them of course section 27 which was applied in the present case. At page 778 he states:
It is worthy of note that each of these ways of terminating employment may give rise to possible disputes as to whether the necessary things have in fact been done and may give rise to possible disputes as to the effect of the law. It is only, however, in the case of "disciplinary action resulting in discharge" that the appropriate method of determining the dispute is reference to adjudication.
While I am of the view that it might have been more prudent for plaintiff to have sought redress by grievance procedure, it is at least arguable that it might have been held that such procedure was not available to him in connection with a decision made under section 27 of the Act that he had abandoned his employment, which contention he strongly denies. I can find nothing in either Act nor have I been referred to any jurisprudence with the possible exception of the Rao case (supra) to the effect that recourse to the Courts is denied to a party who has alternative procedure by way of grievance open to him. Under the circumstances there is at least sufficient indication in plaintiff's amended statement of claim that he may well have a valid and enforceable cause of action against defendant to justify allowing the action to proceed on the merits so that defendant will have an opportunity to plead thereto and the Trial Judge can decide after full presentation of the facts by both parties.
The motion to strike the statement of claim is therefore dismissed with costs.
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