Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-885-77
Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Public Service Staff Relations Board (Respond- ent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Heald and Urie JJ.—Ottawa, April 26 and 27, 1978.
Judicial review — Public Service — Public Service Staff Relations Board's arbitral powers — Board finding matters not subject to arbitration to be matters not falling within s. 70(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act or prohibitions in balance of s. 70 — Whether or not s. 70(1) contains an exclusive definition of matters that, subject to s. 70 prohibi tions, may be subject of an arbitral award — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, ss. 63, 67, 70(1),(2),(4).
This is a section 28 application to set aside a decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board (acting as an Arbitration Board) whereby the Board decided that certain matters that had been referred to it for arbitration were not within its arbitration jurisdiction and rendered a substantive decision only with regard to other matters that had been referred to it for arbitration. The matters held not subject to arbitration were found by the Board to be matters not falling within section 70(1) of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, or to be matters falling within the prohibitions in the balance of section 70. Applicant argues that section 70(1) does not contain an exclusive definition of the matters that, subject to section 70 prohibitions, may be the subject of "an arbitral award". The contention is that anything that may be part of the subject matter of a "collective agreement" may, subject to the prohibi tions of section 70(2) to (4), be the subject of an arbitral award. If this contention is correct, to the extent that the decision attacked refuses jurisdiction, the decision would be based on an error in law.
Held, the application is dismissed. The Act seems carefully constructed to provide (a) that an arbitral award is limited to matters in dispute specified in the section 63 notice; (b) that the section 63 notice is limited to terms and conditions "that may be embodied in an arbitral award" and (c) that by virtue of section 70(1) "an arbitral award may deal with" the matters therein described. There is no doubt that the statute expressly limits arbitral awards to the matters described in section 70(1). No other matter can be the subject of arbitration under the Act even though it might be included in a collective agreement by agreement of the parties. No different interpretation can be put on the statute having regard to the applicant's submissions.
APPLICATION for judicial review.
COUNSEL:
Muriel I. Wexler for applicant.
John E. McCormick for respondent.
David T. Sgayias for Deputy Attorney Gener
al of Canada.
SOLICITORS:
Legal Counsel for Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, Ottawa, for applicant.
Legal Counsel for Public Service Staff Rela tions Board, Ottawa, for respondent.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Attorney General of Canada.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
JACKETT C.J.: This is a section 28 application to set aside a decision of the Public Service Staff Relations Board (acting as an Arbitration Board) whereby the Board decided, inter alla, that certain matters that had been referred to it for arbitration were not within its arbitration jurisdiction and rendered a substantive decision only with regard to the other matters that had been referred to it for arbitration.
To understand what is raised by the section 28 application, it is necessary to have in mind the relevant part of the Public Service Staff Relations Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35.'
That statute is an "Act respecting employer and employee relations in the Public Service of Cana- da" and the Public Service Staff Relations Board is constituted by sections 11 et seq.
Part II (sections 26 et seq.) deals with collective bargaining and collective agreements. 2 Sections 27 et seq. provide for the certification of bargaining agents for units of employees appropriate for col-
' The relevant provisions are set out in an appendix hereto.
2 A collective agreement is, by definition, an agreement between the employer—Her Majesty—and a bargaining agent "containing provisions respecting terms and conditions of employment and related matters".
lective bargaining. Section 36(1) requires a bar gaining agent for a bargaining unit to elect, in effect, as between
(a) arbitration, and
(b) conciliation,
as the process for resolution of any dispute. Sec tion 50 provides for collective bargaining for the purpose of concluding collective agreements.
Part III (sections 59 et seq.) provides for resolu tion of disputes where the parties have failed to agree on a collective agreement. Where the elec tion under section 36 is for arbitration, sections 63 to 76 apply to the resolution of such a dispute. Sections 60 and 61 provide for the constitution of the Board for arbitration.
Section 63 provides that where the parties have been unable to reach agreement on any term or condition of employment "that may be embodied in an arbitral award", either party may request arbitration "in respect of that term or condition of employment". Section 67 provides that "Subject to section 70", the matters in dispute specified inter alia "in the notice under section 63" 3 constitute "the terms of reference of the Board in relation to the request for arbitration" and requires the Board to "render an arbitral award in respect thereof". Section 70(1) provides that "Subject to this sec tion" an arbitral award "may deal with rates of pay, hours of work, leave entitlements, standards of discipline and other terms and conditions of employment directly related thereto". The other subsections of section 70 contain prohibitions against certain classes of matters being dealt with in an arbitral award. Section 74 provides that the "rates of pay, hours of work, leave entitlements, standards of discipline and other terms and condi tions of employment directly related thereto that are the subject of an arbitral award" shall, subject to appropriation of the necessary money, be imple mented within a specified period.
Such is a summary of what seem to me to be the relevant provisions of the statute.
The matters that the Board, by the decision attacked, held were not subject to arbitration were
3 Section 64 provides for a notice by the other party but that is not relevant here.
found by the Board to be matters not falling within section 70(1) or to be matters falling within the prohibitions in the balance of section 70.
The applicant's position is, in effect, as I under stand it, that section 70(1) does not contain an exclusive definition of the matters that, subject to the section 70 prohibitions, may be the subject of "an arbitral award". The contention is that any thing that may be part of the subject matter of a "collective agreement" may, subject to the prohi bitions in subsections (2) to (4) of section 70, be the subject of an arbitral award. If this contention is correct, to the extent that the decision attacked refuses jurisdiction in respect of certain terms or conditions of employment on the ground that they do not fall within the subject matters specifically described in section 70(1), the decision would be based on an error in law.
As I read the Act, the applicant's contention cannot be accepted. The Act seems carefully con structed to provide
(a) that an arbitral award is limited to matters in dispute specified in the section 63 notice 4 (section 67),
(b) that the section 63 notice is limited to terms and conditions "that may be embodied in an arbitral award" [the italics are mine], and
(c) that by virtue of section 70(1) "an arbitral award may deal with" the matters therein described [the italics are mine].
It does not seem to me that there is any doubt that the statute expressly limits arbitral awards to the matters described in section 70(1). I am, therefore, of opinion that no other matter can be the subject of arbitration under the Act even though it might be included in a collective agreement by agree ment of the parties.
4 For present purposes, I am ignoring the possibility of a section 64 notice. As it seems to me, the presence in section 63(1) of the words "that may be embodied in an arbitral award" is quite inconsistent with the view that arbitration is available in respect of any term or condition that might, by agreement, find its way into a "collective agreement".
Having regard to the clear meaning of the provi sions to which I have referred, I am not persuaded that any different interpretation can be put on the statute having regard to the applicant's submis sions based
(a) on the contention that section 70(3) is of no effect unless section 70(1) is read as the appli cant seeks that it be read, and
(b) on a comparison between the subject matter of arbitration under the Act and the subject matter of conciliation and strike under the statute.
In any event, I am not satisfied that those submis sions would constrain one, even if there was an element of ambiguity, to the interpretation of sec tion 70(1) for which the applicant contends.
For the above reasons, I am of opinion that the Board, by the decision that is under attack in these proceedings, did not err in law in acting on the view that section 70(1) provided for a "limited scope of arbitrable issues" and that the section 28 application should, therefore, be dismissed.
APPENDIX
R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35 (as amended)
An Act respecting employer and employee relations in the Public Service of Canada
1. This Act may be cited as the Public Service Staff Rela tions Act.
2. In this Act
"collective agreement" means an agreement in writing entered into under this Act between the employer, on the one hand, and a bargaining agent, on the other hand, containing provi sions respecting terms and conditions of employment and related matters;
"employer" means Her Majesty in right of Canada as repre sented by,
(a) in the case of any portion of the public service of Canada specified in Part I of Schedule I, the Treasury Board, and
(b) in the case of any portion of the public service of Canada specified in Part II of Schedule I, the separate employer concerned;
"process for resolution of a dispute" means either of the following processes for the resolution of a dispute, namely:
(a)- by the referral of the dispute to arbitration, or (b) by the referral thereof to a conciliation board;
PART I
PUBLIC SERVICE STAFF RELATIONS BOARD
11. (1) There shall be a Board to be called the Public Service Staff Relations Board, consisting of a Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, not less than three Deputy Chairmen and such other full-time members and such part-time members as the Governor in Council considers necessary to discharge the responsibilities of the Board.
PART II
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AND COLLECTIVE AGREEMENTS
36. (1) Subject to subsection 37(2), every bargaining agent for a bargaining unit shall, in such manner as may be pre scribed, specify which of either of the processes described in the definition "process for resolution of a dispute" in section 2 shall be the process for resolution of any dispute to which it may be a party in respect of that bargaining unit.
50. Where notice to bargain collectively has been given, the bargaining agent and the officers designated to represent the employer shall, without delay, but in any case within twenty days after the notice was given or within such further time as the parties may agree, meet and commence to bargain collec tively in good faith and make every reasonable effort to con clude a collective agreement.
56. ...
(2) No collective agreement shall provide, directly or in directly, for the alteration or elimination of any existing term or condition of employment or the establishment of any new term or condition of employment,
(a) the alteration or elimination of which or the establish ment of which, as the case may be, would require or have the effect of requiring the enactment or amendment of any legislation by Parliament, except for the purpose of appro priating moneys required for its implementation, or
(b) that has been or may be, as the case may be, established pursuant to any Act specified in Schedule III.
PART III
PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES
59. Where the employer and the bargaining agent for a bargaining unit have bargained collectively in good faith with a
view to concluding a collective agreement but have failed to reach agreement,
(a) if the process for resolution of a dispute applicable to the bargaining unit is by the referral thereof to arbitration, sections 63 to 76 apply to the resolution of the dispute; and
(b) if the process for resolution of a dispute applicable to the bargaining unit is by the referral thereof to a conciliation board, sections 77 to 89 apply to the resolution of the dispute.
63. (1) Where the parties to collective bargaining have bar gained collectively in good faith with a view to concluding a collective'agreement but have been unable to reach agreement on any term or condition of employment of employees in the relevant bargaining unit that may be embodied in an arbitral award, either party may, by notice in writing to the Secretary of the Board given
(a) at any time, where no collective agreement has been entered into by the parties and no request for arbitration has been made by either party since the commencement of the bargaining, or
(b) not later than seven days after any collective agreement is entered into by the parties, in any other case,
request arbitration in respect of that term or condition of employment.
67. (1) Subject to section 70, the matters in dispute speci fied in the notice under section 63 and in any notice under section 64 constitute the terms of reference of the Board in relation to the request for arbitration, and the Board shall, after considering the matters in dispute together with any other matter that the Board considers necessarily incidental to the resolution of the matters in dispute, render an arbitral award in respect thereof.
70. (1) Subject to this section, an arbitral award may deal with rates of pay, hours of work, leave entitlements, standards of discipline and other terms and conditions of employment directly related thereto.
(2) Subsection 56(2) applies, mutatis mutandis, in relation to an arbitral award.
(3) No arbitral award shall deal with the standards, proce dures or processes governing the appointment, appraisal, pro motion, demotion, transfer, lay-off or release of employees, or with any term or condition of employment of employees that was not a subject of negotiation between the parties during the period before arbitration was requested in respect thereof.
(4) An arbitral award shall deal only with terms and condi tions of employment of employees in the bargaining unit in respect of which the request for arbitration was made.
74. The rates of pay, hours of work, leave entitlements, standards of discipline and other terms and conditions of employment directly related thereto that are the subject of an arbitral award shall, subject to the appropriation by or under the authority of Parliament of any moneys that may be required by the employer therefor, be implemented by the parties within a period of ninety days from the date on and
from which it becomes binding on the parties or within such longer period as, on application to the Board by either party, appears reasonable to the Board.
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HEALD J. concurred.
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URIE J. concurred.
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