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Decision Information

Decision Content

A-596-87
Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited, Nordair Inc., Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd. and Pacific Western Airlines Ltd. and Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited carrying on business as Canadian Airlines International (Applicants)
v.
Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association, Canadian Airline Flight Attendants' Association (now Canadian Union of Public Employees—Airline Division), International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Teamsters Local Union 1999, Lignes Aériennes A+ (Nordair Métro), Propair Inc., Québecair, Québecair Inter, Québec Aviation Ltée, Conifair Inc., Gestion Conifair Inc., Nolisair International Inc., (Nationair), Avi- tair Inc., Placements CMI Inc., Canadian Airline Dispatchers' Association, CPAL-MEC, EPA - MEC, PWA-MEC, Nordair-MEC, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employees, R. M. Sparks, G. A. Moore, D. R. Windealt, C. O. Ferguson, R. N. Clark, J. Bateman and Attorney General for Canada (Respondents)
A-598-87
Québecair—Air Québec carrying on business as Québecair, Québec Aviation Ltée carrying on business as Québecair Inter, Conifair Inc., Ges- tion Conifair Inc., Lignes Aériennes A+ Inc. carrying on business as Nordair Métro (Appel- lants)
v.
Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association, Canadian Air Line Flight Attendants' Association (now Canadian Union of Public Employees—Airline Division), International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Teamsters Local Union 1999 (Respondents)
and
Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited, Canadian Airlines International, Nordair Inc., Propair Inc., Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd., Nolisair Inter national Inc. carrying on business as Nationair, Canadian Air Line Dispatchers' Association, CPAL-MEC, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employees, Nordair-MEC, EPA -MEC, PWA-MEC, R. M. Sparks, G. H. Moore, D. R. Windeatt, C. G. Ferguson, R. N. Clark, J. Bate- man, Avitair Inc., Placements C.M.I. Inc. and Attorney General of Canada (Mis -en-cause)
A-608-87
Nolisair International Inc. carrying on business as Nationair (Applicant)
v.
Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association, Canadian Airline Flight Attendants' Association (now Canadian Union of Public Employees—Airline Division), International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Teamsters Local Union 1999 (Respondents)
and
Québecair—Air Québec carrying on business as Québecair, Québec Aviation Ltée carrying on business as Québecair Inter, Conifair Inc., Ges- tion Conifair Inc., Lignes Aériennes A+ Inc. carrying on business as Nordair Métro, Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited, Canadian Airlines International, Nordair Inc., Propair Inc., Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd., Canadian Air Line Dis patchers' Association, CPAL-MEC, Brotherhood of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employees, Nor- dair-MEC, EPA -MEC, PWA-MEC, R. M. Sparks, G. H. Moore, D. R. Windeatt, C. G. Ferguson R. N. Clark, J. Bateman, Avitair Inc., Placements C.M.I. Inc. and Attorney General of Canada (Mis -en-cause)
INDEXED AS: CANADIAN PACIFIC AIR LINES LTD. v.
C.A.L.P.A.
Court of Appeal, Hugessen, Lacombe and Desjar- dins JJ.—Montréal, January 22; Ottawa, January 28, 1988.
Judicial review — Applications to review — Canada Labour Relations Board order to file materials prior to hearing application to amend certification — Motions to quash s. 28 applications dismissed — Order to produce documents judi cial act — Order specifically subject to s. 28 review as rendered in course of proceedings — "Decisions" and "orders" distinguished — Meaning of "order" in s. 28 — Order made pursuant to Board's powers under Code, s. 118(a) and (f — Legal rights and obligations flowing from order.
Federal Court jurisdiction — Appeal Division — Applica tion to review Canada Labour Relations Board order to file materials prior to hearing application to amend certification — S. 28 jurisdiction not limited to review of things done by tribunal at specific stage of proceedings.
Practice — Parties — Standing — Canada Labour Rela tions Board denied standing in hearing of motion to set aside its order — Contrary to public interest to allow tribunal to take sides in court battle between parties to proceeding before it.
This was a motion to quash applications to set aside an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board, requiring the filing of information concerning the employer companies which was necessary to its investigation into whether to amend certain existing certifications. It was argued that the impugned order was purely administrative, and therefore not required to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis. This was based on a suggestion in a Federal Court, Trial Division decision that an order to produce documents was purely administrative. The second submission was that the order was not a decision or order within the meaning of subsection 28(1) of the Federal Court Act. That argument was based on case law to the effect that section 28 cannot be used to review preliminary or inciden tal "decisions" which a tribunal is not specifically authorized to make by law, but which may be necessary in the course of coming to a final decision. There was also a preliminary issue as to whether the Board had standing with respect to the motion to quash.
Held, the motions should be dismissed.
The Board was without standing as it had no interest in questions relating strictly to the Federal Court's jurisdiction to review the Board's orders. It would be contrary to public interest to allow a tribunal to take sides in a court battle between parties to a proceeding before it.
Since the Trial Division decision relied upon by the appli cants was rendered, the Supreme Court of Canada has held that the exercise of a legal power to compel persons to testify
and to produce documents, even when exercised by administra tive bodies, is a judicial act.
The order in question was rendered "in the course of pro ceedings" and was therefore specifically subject to subsection 28(1) review. Most of the case law referred to in support of the second submission dealt with "decisions", rather than "orders". The Court had often pointed out the distinction and empha sized that different considerations may apply to orders. "Order", in section 28, refers to a ruling which a tribunal is specifically authorized to make, and which takes immediate effect to force the doing or not doing of something. Normally, an order cannot be undone by the final decision of the tribunal which made it. Also, the Supreme Court of Canada had recently emphasized that the Federal Court of Appeal's juris diction under section 28 is not limited to the review of things done by a tribunal at any specific stage of the proceedings: Syndicat des employés de production du Québec et de l'Acadie v. Canada Labour Relations Board et al.
Applying the two-part test stated in Anheuser-Busch, the order was: 1) clearly within the Board's mandate under para graphs 118(a) and (J) of the Labour Code, and 2) was one from which legal rights and obligations flowed. It required immediate compliance. Whatever the ultimate outcome of the proceedings, the applicants were required to do something which, if the order was made without jurisdiction, could never be corrected. Also, if the order was filed with the Court, it would acquire the force of a Court order and section 192 of the Code attaches penal consequences to failure to comply with an order pursuant to paragraph 118(a).
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, ss. 118 (as am. by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1), 119 (as am. idem), 123 (as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 43), 133 (as am. by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1), 144 (as am. idem), 192 (as enacted idem).
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED:
APPLIED:
Northwestern Utilities Ltd. et al. v. City of Edmonton, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 684; Vancouver Wharves Ltd. v. Inter national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, Local 514 (1985), 60 N.R. 118 (F.C.A.); Attorney Gen eral (Que.) and Keable v. Attorney General (Can.) et al., [1979] 1 S.C.R. 218; Commission des droits de la per- sonne v. Attorney General et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 215; Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Carling O'Keefe Breweries of Canada Limited, [1983] 2 F.C. 71 (C.A.); Syndicat des
employés de production du Québec et de l'Acadie v. Canada Labour Relations Board et al., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 412.
REFERRED TO:
Transportaide Inc. v. Canada Labour Relations Board, [1978] 2 F.C. 660 (T.D.); National Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau (No. 2), [1971] F.C. 73 (C.A.); Attorney General of Canada v. Cylien, [1973] F.C. 1166 (C.A.); B.C. Packers Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board, [1973] F.C. 1194 (C.A.); Anti-dumping Act (In re) and in re Danmor Shoe Co. Ltd., [ 1974] 1 F.C. 22 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
R. Bruce Pollock and Frederick R. von Veh, Q.C. for applicants Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited, Nordair Inc., Eastern Provin cial Airways Ltd. and Pacific Western Air lines Ltd. and Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited carrying on business as Canadian Airlines International.
John T. Keenan and Linda Thayer for respondent Canadian Air Line Pilots' Asso ciation.
Luc Beaulieu and Manon Savard for respond ents Québecair—Air Québec, Québec Avia tion Ltée, Conifair Inc., Gestion Conifair Inc., Lignes Aériennes A+ Inc.
Théodore Goloff for respondent Nolisair International Inc. (Nationair).
Louis Crête for Canada Labour Relations Board.
No one appearing for respondent CPAL- MEC.
SOLICITORS:
Stikeman, Elliott, Toronto, for applicants Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited, Nordair Inc., Eastern Provincial Airways Ltd. and Pacific Western Airlines Ltd. and Canadian Pacific Air Lines Limited carrying on busi ness as Canadian Airlines International.
Gravenor, Keenan, Montréal, for respondent Canadian Air Line Pilots' Association.
Ogilvy, Renault, Montréal, for respondents Québecair—Air Québec, Québec Aviation
Ltée, Conifair Inc., Gestion Conifair Inc., Lignes Aériennes A+ Inc.
Goloff & Boucher, Montréal, for respondent Nolisair International Inc. (Nationair). Clarkson, Tétrault, Montréal for Canada Labour Relations Board.
Jordan & Gall, Vancouver, for respondent CPAL-MEC.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HUGESSEN J.: The respondent Canadian Air Line Pilots Association (CALPA) moves to quash the section 28 applications brought by the appli cants against an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board dated July 13, 1987. The matter originates in proceedings brought by CALPA before the Board pursuant to sections 119 [as am. by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s.l], 133 [as am. idem] and 144 [as am. idem] of the Canada Labour Code.' CALPA sought to have the Board take note of various corporate reorganizations and other arrangements and to declare that they constituted a "sale" of the business or, alternatively, that the affected compa nies constituted a "single employer"; the Board was asked to amend certain existing certifications accordingly. No hearing has as yet been held by the Board on cALPA's application. In the course of investigating the matter prior to holding a hearing, the Board has sought certain information about the employer companies. The order of July 13, 1987 orders the applicants
... to file with the Board by July 31st, 1987, the information and documents listed under their respective names in Appendix `A'...
That is the order which is the subject of the section 28 proceedings which, in their turn, are the subject of the motions to quash.
On the hearing of the motions to quash, counsel for the Board sought to make representations. We indicated that, in our view, this did not seem to be the type of matter in which standing should be granted to the tribunal whose order is under attack. After hearing counsel for the Board on the
' R.S.C. 1970, c. L-l.
question of his right to be heard, we confirmed our preliminary view and denied him standing. If au thority is needed, reference may be had to the judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada in Northwestern Utilities Ltd. et al. v. City of Edmonton, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 684, and the decision of this Court in Vancouver Wharves Ltd. v. Inter national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, Local 514 (1985), 60 N.R. 118. While one may recognize the interest, and therefore the standing, of a tribunal to make representations on the issue of its own jurisdiction in the narrow sense, it can have no such interest in questions relating strictly to the jurisdiction of this Court to review the tribunal's orders. There is a strong public interest to be served in refusing to a tri bunal the right to take sides in a court battle between parties to a proceeding currently pending before it.
In support of the motions to quash, counsel for CALPA takes two points. In the first place, he asserts that the order of July 13, 1987 is a purely administrative order "not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis."
In the second place, he argues that it is not, in any event, a decision or order within the meaning of those terms in subsection 28(1) of the Federal Court Act. 2
The first point may be quickly dealt with. It is based largely on a suggestion in a decision of the Trial Division that an order to produce documents is a purely administrative matter (see Transport- aide Inc. v. Canada Labour Relations Board, [1978] 2 F.C. 660 at page 670). Since that deci sion was rendered, however, it has now been set tled on highest authority that the exercise of a legal power to compel persons to testify and to produce documents, even when exercised by administrative bodies, is a judicial act. (See Attor ney General (Que.) and Keable v. Attorney Gener al (Can.) et al., [1979] 1 S.C.R. 218, at page 225, and Commission des droits de la personne v.
2 R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10.
Attorney General et al., [ 1982] 1 S.C.R. 215, at page 221).
Counsel's second submission is based on this Court's well-known jurisprudence to the effect that section 28 cannot be used for the purpose of reviewing preliminary or incidental "decisions" which a tribunal is not specifically authorized to make by law but which it may be required to come to in the course of the proceedings leading to the final decision. (See National Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau (No. 2), [1971] F.C. 73 (C.A.); Attor ney General of Canada v. Cylien, [1973] F.C. 1166 (C.A.); B.C. Packers Ltd. v. Canada Labour Relations Board, [1973] F.C. 1194 (C.A.); Anti- dumping Act (In re) and in re Danmor Shoe Co. Ltd., [1974] 1 F.C. 22 (C.A.)). A frequently quoted summary of that jurisprudence is contained in the reasons of my brother Heald J. in Anheus- er-Busch, Inc. v. Carling O'Keefe Breweries of Canada Limited, [1983] 2 F.C. 71, (C.A.), at page 75:
That jurisprudence is to the effect that the Federal Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to review under section 28 only final orders or decisions—that is final in the sense that the decision or order in issue is the one that the tribunal has been mandated to make and is a decision from which legal rights or obligations flow. This jurisprudence makes it clear that the Court will not review the myriad of decisions or orders customarily rendered on matters which normally arise in the course of a proceeding prior to that final decision.
While not in any way detracting from the force and authority of those decisions, I am of the view that they do not control the outcome of these proceedings so as to oblige us to quash the section 28 applications. On the contrary, in my opinion the present case constitutes a classic exam ple of the type of order rendered "in the course of proceedings" which is specifically made subject to review by the words of subsection 28(1).
In the first place, I note that virtually all of the early jurisprudence referred to above dealt with "decisions" (which may have taken the form of declarations or rulings) rather than with "orders". In most cases, the Court was careful to point out
the distinction and to emphasize that "different considerations may be applicable" to order. 3
As I understand it, the word "order", when read in the context of section 28 of the Federal Court Act, refers to a ruling which a tribunal is specifi cally authorized to make by statute and which takes immediate effect to force the doing or not doing of something by somebody. In the normal course of things, an order cannot be undone or corrected by the final decision of the tribunal which has made it. In this respect, it is in sharp contrast to the types of "decisions" dealt with in' the cited cases.
Secondly, it appears to me that the Supreme Court of Canada has recently emphasized that the jurisdiction of this Court under section 28 is not, in principle, limited to the review of things done by a tribunal at any specific stage of its study of the question before it. I find, with respect, the words of Beetz J. speaking for the Court in Syndicat des employés de production du Québec et de l'Acadie v. Canada Labour Relations Board et al., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 412, at pages 428-439, to be particularly instructive:
It seems to me that if jurisdictional error includes error as to the initial jurisdiction of an administrative tribunal initiating a hearing and its power to resolve by a declaration the question submitted to it, a fortiori it covers provisions which confer on it the power to add to its final decision orders arising out of the hearing and intended to give effect to its declarations by injunctions and other means of redress such as those in paras. (a) to (d) of s. 182. I do not see how it is logical to limit the possibility that an administrative tribunal may make a jurisdic tional error to the initial stage, if the tribunal could err and exceed its jurisdiction with impunity at the stage of the conclu sion which constitutes the outcome of its hearing and is its ultimate purpose.
The same is generally true, in my view, for errors relating to the executory, if not declaratory powers which the Board exercis-s during a hearing, like that of questioning witnesses, requiring the production of documents, entering an employer's premises and so on, conferred on it by s. 118 of the Code. Wide as these powers may be, they do not include, for example, giving the Board the right to punish for contempt. This power continues to belong to the Federal Court, as provided in s. 123 regarding registration of the Board's orders or decisions, exclu sive of the reasons therefor, in the Federal Court. That section expressly refers to s. 28 of the Federal Court Act, and main tains it in effect. Section 123 therefore a i ssunles by implication that a jurisdictional error may be committed at any stage of a hearing held by the Board.
3 See, notably, Danmor Shôe, supra, footnote 5, at page 30; see also B.C. Packers, suprqjootnote 1, at page 1199.
Additionally, as I have already indicated, s. 28(1)(a) of the Federal Court Act does not apply to the error as such, but quite apart from any error, to the excess of jurisdiction or refusal to exercise it, that is, the exercise by an administrative tribunal of a power denied to it by the Act or the refusal to exercise a power imposed on it by the Act. Section 28(1)(a) does not distinguish between types of excess of power, the stages of the hearing at which they occur and the circumstances causing them. It applies to any excess of power. There is therefore no reason to make a distinction where s. 28(1)(a) makes none, between on the one hand excess of jurisdiction ratione materiae committed at the beginning of a hearing, whether or not resulting from an error, and on the other, an error made during the hearing or in the conclusion of a hearing and the corrective orders attached to it, despite the fact that the administrative tribunal has jurisdiction ratione materiae. [Emphasis added.]
I return to the words of Heald J. in Anheuser- Busch, supra. They pose two questions:
1. Is the order attacked "one that the tribunal has been mandated to make"?
2. Is it one "from which legal rights and obliga tions flow"?
In my view, both questions call for a clearly affirmative answer in the present proceedings.
The Board's order, in its very terms, asserts that it is made pursuant to the powers conferred on the Board by paragraphs (a) and (f) of section 118 [as am. by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1]. This is a purported exercise of a jurisdiction conferred by the statute and thus normally subject to jurisdictional review by this Court.
With regard to the second question, there can equally be no doubt. The Board's order, by its terms, requires immediate compliance. Whatever may be the ultimate outcome of the proceedings before the Board, the persons to whom the order is directed will have been obliged to do something which, if the order was jnade without jurisdiction, can never be corrected. In addition the order, if filed with the Trial Division of the Court pursuant to section 123 [as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 27, s. 43] of the Code, would thereby acquire the force and effect of an order of this Court, rendering
non-compliance subject to contempt proceedings. 4
Finally, in this respect reference may be made to section 192 [as enacted by S.C. 1972, c. 18, s. 1] of the Code, which attaches independent penal consequences to failure to comply with certain orders such as this one purported to have been made pursuant to paragraph 118(a).
Before concluding, I wish only to add that I am fully conscious of the policy considerations which have dictated and continue to dictate a cautious approach by this Court to the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction at intermediate stages of proceedings before the affected tribunal. The ends of justice are not served if parties who do not wish to proceed before the tribunal have available to them simple instruments of frustration and delay. This Court has always demonstrated its sensitivity to the problem and its willingness to expedite any matter where that seems necessary. While the Court can and will act on its own initiative in some cases, the parties directly concerned are normally in a far better position to bring the Court's atten tion to cases where an expeditious hearing is indicated. In the present case, the section 28 pro ceedings have been pending since July 1987. With out in any way wishing to prejudge the matter, I would have thought that the materials necessary for the resolution of the issues on the merits of the applications would be relatively few in number and easily assembled. A motion for directions regard ing the composition of the case, a timetable for the exchange of factums and a date for hearing would have better employed the time of counsel and would almost surely have resulted in the matter being disposed of by final judgment long before now. While time already lost cannot be regained, such a motion would still seem to me to be indicated.
For the reasons given, I would dismiss the motions to quash.
LACOMBE J.: I agree. DESJARDINS J.: I agree.
^ The material produced with these motions indicates that a request was actually made to the Board to file its order with the Court pursuant to section 123. At the hearing counsel indicated that no such filing had yet taken place; nothing, however, prevents it from being done at some future date.
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