Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-319-76
Northern Telecom Limited (formerly Northern Electric Company Limited) (Applicant)
v.
Communications Workers of Canada (Respond- ent)
and
David P. Thompson et al. (Intervenors)
and
Canada Labour Relations Board (Tribunal)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Pratte J. and MacKay D.J. — Toronto, January 25 and 26, 1977.
Judicial review — Union certification — Application to set aside Canada Labour Relations Board certificate — Whether Board acted ultra vires — Whether Board erred in law or in fact — Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, ss. 2, 108, 118(1)(p) and 126(1) (as amended by S.C. 1972, c. 18) — The British North America Act, ss. 91 and 92(10).
Applicant claims that Canada Labour Relations Board had no jurisdiction to order that the respondent be certified as a bargaining agent because the evidence before it did not disclose that the persons involved fell into any of the categories men tioned in paragraph (10) of section 92 of The British North America Act. The applicant also alleges that in making its decision the Board erred in law in assessing the majority status of the respondent and also erred in not holding that the members of the unit certified were persons performing manage ment functions.
Held, the application is dismissed. The allegation that the Board acted ultra vires is based on the assumption that it is a condition precedent to the exercise of its functions that the Board have before it evidence that the facts are such as to enable it to make findings of fact giving it jurisdiction to grant an application for certification. The question whether an order falls within the ambit of a tribunal's authority does not depend on what the tribunal finds with regard to jurisdictional facts; if the facts are such as to give a tribunal jurisdiction, an order made within the ambit of that jurisdiction is valid even if there was no evidence of such facts before the tribunal when it made its order. Section 118(1)(p) of the Canada Labour Code gives the Board power to decide questions in a proceeding "before it" but does not give it power to decide whether a case is lawfully "before it".
As to the allegations of errors by the Board, even if they must be satisfied that the majority of the employees in the unit wish to have the trade union represent them as of the date of
certification, no evidence has been adduced to show that it did not satisfy itself on this point. There is also no persuasive evidence that the Board made any error in reaching its conclu sion that the members of the unit certified were not persons "who perform management functions".
Empire Stevedoring Company Ltd. v. International Long- shoremen's and Warehousemen's Union Ship and Dock Foremen, Local 514 [1974] 2 F.C. 742, applied.
APPLICATION for judicial review. COUNSEL:
Paul F. Renault, Q.C., and Robert Monette
for applicant.
Aubrey E. Golden and Maurice A. Green for
respondent.
No one appearing for intervenors.
M. Huart for Tribunal.
SOLICITORS:
Ogilvy, Cope, Porteous, Montgomery, Renault, Clarke & Kirkpatrick, Montreal, for applicant.
Golden, Levinson, Toronto, for respondent. Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson, Win- nipeg, for intervenors.
Canada Labour Relations Board for Tribunal.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
JACKETT C.J.: This is a section 28 application to set aside an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board certifying a bargaining agent under Part V of the Canada Labour Code.
The first ground upon which the applicant, by this section 28 application, seeks to have the cer tification order referred to therein set aside, is, in effect, that the Board acted beyond its jurisdiction in making that order. We indicated to counsel for the respondent that we did not require to hear them with regard thereto.
In effect, this ground was based on the conten tion that the evidence before the Board did not disclose "that the Applicant and the persons cov ered by the proceedings, nor their Works and/or
Undertaking fall into any of the categories con tained in Section 91 of the British North America Act nor in any of the categories mentioned in Paragraph 10 of Section 92 of the said British North America Act."' See section 108 of the Canada Labour Code, as amended by chapter 18 of the Statutes of 1972 and section 2 of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1.
The contention was based on the assumption that it is a condition precedent to the exercise by the Board of its jurisdiction to grant an application for certification that it have before it evidence establishing that the facts are such as to enable it to make findings of facts giving it jurisdiction to grant the application. I do not accept that assump tion. In my view, the question whether an order falls within the ambit of a tribunal's authority, in the absence of special authority vested in it to determine itself the facts giving it jurisdiction, does not depend on what the tribunal finds with regard to jurisdictional facts nor upon what evi dence, if any, was before the tribunal of such jurisdictional facts. If the facts, as made to appear to a reviewing court, are such as to give a tribunal jurisdiction, an order made within the ambit of that jurisdiction must be found to be valid even if there were no evidence of such facts before the tribunal when it made the order. Conversely, if the facts, as made to appear to a reviewing court, are such as to show that the tribunal had no jurisdic tion to make an order, the order must be found to be a nullity even though, when the tribunal made the order, it had evidence before it that appeared to establish facts that would have given it jurisdic tion to make the order.
When, therefore, an applicant seeks to have a reviewing court set aside an order as having been made outside the scope of its jurisdiction, the onus is on the applicant to ensure that evidence of the facts necessary to support the application is before the Court. (Whether a reviewing court could, in the absence of agreement, act on evidence that was put before the tribunal, if the question had been in fact treated as being in issue before the tribunal, need not be considered at this time because the jurisdictional facts were not put in issue before the
' See paragraphs 7 and 10 of the applicant's memorandum in this Court.
Board although the applicant reserved the right to challenge jurisdiction at a later stage.)
It follows that, in this case, for the applicant to succeed on the jurisdiction point, there must be evidence before this Court upon which this Court can decide that the certification order was outside the scope of the Board's jurisdiction, and it also follows that in this case the onus was on the applicant to ensure that such facts were made to appear before this Court. The applicant did not seek to adduce any evidence on the point in this Court and abstained from putting the matter in issue before the Board. There is, therefore, no evidence upon which this Court can find that the Board acted beyond its jurisdiction.
I have not overlooked the reference by counsel for the applicant to section 118(1)(p) and section 108 of the Canada Labour Code. In my view, section 118(1)(p) gives the Board power to decide any question arising in a proceeding that is "before it" but does not give the Board power to decide whether a particular case is lawfully "before it". It cannot, therefore, be regarded as impliedly making such a decision by the Board a condition precedent to the exercise by the Board of its jurisdiction to make a certification order.
I have not, moreover, overlooked the existence of evidence put before the Board in connection with the issues that were raised before the Board from which, taken by itself, some conclusions might be drawn with regard to the nature of that part of the applicant's business operations that are involved in this matter. In my view, in the absence of agreement that such evidence reveals an accu rate picture of such operations from a jurisdiction al point of view, it having been led before the Board in respect of entirely different issues, it cannot be used by this Court, as a reviewing court, to make findings of fact on the jurisdictional ques tion. In my view, such a use of evidence led with reference to one issue with which a hearing is concerned to make findings on an issue with which the hearing was not concerned is not, in the absence of agreement or other special circum-
stances, sound. 2 It might be added that, in my view, the facts raise a very difficult question from a jurisdictional and constitutional point of view, upon which this Court should not make a pro nouncement in the absence of a full exploration of the facts relating to the jurisdictional and constitu tional question as such. 3
There is a second ground put forward by the applicant in respect of which counsel for the respondent were not called on. This ground is set out in the applicant's memo as follows:
21. In making its decision and order, the Board also erred in law in assessing the majority status, if any, of the Respondent at the time of the filing of the application for certification and not at the time of its decision which occurred exactly two (2) years later, and more than a year after the final hearing;
This ground is based on the contention that the Canada Labour Code requires, as a condition precedent to making a certification order (section 126(1)), that the Board be satisfied that a majori ty of the employees in the unit wish to have the trade union represent them as of the time that it makes its certification order and not as of the time that the application for that order was made. Assuming, without deciding, that that contention is sound, I am of the view that the applicant has not shown that the certification order should be set aside on this ground. Whatever be the time as of which the wishes of the majority must be ascer tained, it is common ground that the decision must be based on facts that precede that time. It is true that the only material relevant to the question as to the employees' wishes of which mention is made in the record is based on facts that preceded the
2 This is illustrated in this very case by the fact that the applicant bases itself in part on an allegation that the Board took into account facts established in another proceeding where the jurisdictional question with which we are concerned was litigated, which facts were not apparently established before the Board. In my view, it was quite appropriate for the Board to take other proceedings into account in deciding what position it would take with regard to the question whether it should proceed on the assumption that it had jurisdiction. That is quite a different matter from exercising a jurisdiction (that it did not have) to decide whether it had jurisdiction to make the certifi cation order.
3 Evidence concerning facts that were not being decided by the tribunal but are relevant to jurisdictional or other questions that were not before the Board but are raised by the section 28 application could have been added to the case in this Court under Rule 1404(2).
application and it is also true that there was a lapse of over two years before the certification order was made. On the other hand, there is nothing to show that the Board did not take into consideration any changes that were brought to its attention and no application was made to the Board to make any inquiry as to the possibility of other changes. 4 While a lapse of more than two years seems like a long time, the matter was one, among many, with which the Board had to concern itself; and there is no basis upon which, in my view, this Court can conclude that this particular lapse of time was such as to establish that the certification order was the result of a view as to the requirement of section 126 other than that contended for by the applicant.
With regard to the final question, namely: whether the Board erred in not holding that the members of the unit certified by the order of the Board under attack are persons "who perform management functions", I have not been persuad ed that, having regard to the views expressed in this Court in Empire Stevedoring Company Ltd. v. International Longshoremen's and Warehouse- men's Union Ship and Dock Foremen, Local 514, 5 the Board made any error of principle in reaching its conclusion.
I am of the view, therefore, that the section 28 application should be dismissed.
* * *
PRATTE J. concurred.
* * *
MACKAY D.J. concurred.
4 I this connection, it is to be noted that the mathematical calculation contained in the applicant's memorandum in this Court depends, in part, upon information that was not in the record of what was before the Board.
5 [1974] 2 F.C. 742.
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