Judgments

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A-18-82
Minister of National Revenue (Applicant)
v.
Alexander Visan (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Urie J., Lalande and McQuaid D.JJ.—Toronto, November 2, 1982; Ottawa, January 5, 1983.
Judicial review — Applications to review — Unemployment insurance — Minister seeks to have reviewed and, in part, set aside decision of Umpire reversing determination that respondent not in insurable employment during relevant period — Respondent receiving long-term disability benefits from insurer under employment contract — Questions whether respondent in "excepted employment" under Regulations and whether Regulations ultra vires or repugnant to regulation- making power — Application allowed — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ss. 3(1),(2) (as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 1), 4(1),(3)(h) (as am. by S.C. 1978-79, c. 7, s. 2), 4(5), 31(2), 75(3), 94 — Unemployment Insurance Regulations, SOR/55-392, s. 54 (as enacted by SOR/78-809, s. 1 and SOR/79-168, s. 1).
This is a section 28 application to review and set aside part of an Umpire's decision allowing an appeal from the Minister's determination that respondent was not in insurable employment for the period September 28, 1978 to January 31, 1980.
Due to prolonged illness, the respondent was unable to teach and received long-term disability benefits from an insurance company for the relevant period, pursuant to coverage provided under his contract of employment. No premiums were paid to the Unemployment Insurance Commission. Upon retirement, the respondent was denied special severance benefits on the basis that he was not in "insurable employment" during the period he received disability payments. He appealed to an Umpire who ruled that the employment contract provided for those payments and that the administrative function of the insurance company in making the payments did not result in turning the money into other than income. The Minister argues that the respondent is caught by the Regulation which excepts employment when a person works less than 20 hours a week, or is not in receipt of remuneration, or who receives remuneration from other than an employer. The respondent argues that the Regulation is ultra vires and repugnant and inconsistent with the provisions granting the power to make regulations. It was conceded by the Minister that the Regulation was not in force for the period September 28, 1978 to December 31, 1978.
Held, the application is allowed. In determining whether employment is insurable, one must first ascertain if it is except ed employment as subsection 3(1) demands; subsection 3(2) defines excepted employment and includes employment except ed by regulation under section 4, notably paragraph 54(1)(a).
That Regulation is intra vires as it does not enlarge the class of persons in excluded employment under subsections 3(2) and 4(3), but limits the ambit of class to which exception appli cable; restrictions respecting remuneration and its source also fall under the scope of regulation-making power when para graph 4(3)(h) and subsection 4(5) are read together. The respondent's payments are not remuneration for not made by employer and are not in return for services rendered.
Per Lalande D.J. dissenting: The respondent's contract pro vided that the employer would contribute the entire cost of a disability plan. Regulation 54(1)(a) is ultra vires for in pur porting to except from employment persons receiving earnings from other than an employer, it goes beyond the authority of the Commission to make regulations under paragraph 4(3)(h) keeping in mind the definition of insurable employment in subsection 3(1). Subsection 4(5) only gives the Commission leeway in manner of exercising regulation-making power and does not enlarge the scope or materia of the power.
CASE JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
The Queen v. The Postmaster General (1876), 1 Q.B.D. 658.
COUNSEL:
R. E. Taylor and I. S. MacGregor for
applicant.
M. Green for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
applicant.
Golden, Levinson, Toronto, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is an application under section 28 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, to review and, in part, to set aside the decision of the Umpire appointed pursuant to the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ("the Act"), whereby he allowed the appeal of the respondent from a deter mination of the Minister made under subsection 75(3) of the Act that the respondent was not in insurable employment within the meaning of the Act during the period commencing September 28, 1978 and terminating January 31, 1980. The facts, which are not in dispute, follow.
The respondent, during the relevant period of time had been employed by the Niagara South Board of Education ("the Board") under a con tract of employment signed with the then Thorold and District High School Board of Education in September of 1968. The respondent became ill in 1977 but continued to receive his regular salary until February 3, 1978 which was the expiry date for his entitlement to sick leave with pay. As at that date his annual salary was $25,973 but, there after, he received no further monies from the Board.
The respondent qualified for long-term disabili ty benefits effective September 28, 1978 pursuant to coverage provided to employees of the Board by the Continental Life Insurance Company. The benefit to which he became entitled on and after September 28, 1978 amounted to $1,229.65 per month and he continued to receive monthly pay ments of that amount until January 31, 1980. No unemployment insurance premiums were deducted from the above disability payments.
The respondent attained his retirement age of 65 years on January 6, 1980 and submitted a letter of resignation to the Board, which resignation was accepted by it by letter dated January 8, 1980. Subsequently he applied to the Unemployment Insurance Commission for special severance ben efits pursuant to subsection 31(2) of the Act. The Commission, by letter dated February 15, 1980, refused the respondent's application, whereupon he appealed to the Board of Referees pursuant to section 94 of the Act on March 7, 1980. By a majority decision dated April 2, 1980, the Board of Referees returned the case to the Insurance Officer for "further clarification of the insurability of employment in question".
On April 18, 1980 the respondent was informed that, based on the information which he had pro vided, his claim had not been established. How ever, a request for determination of insurability was stated to have been submitted to Revenue Canada, Taxation, for a ruling on the insurability for the long-term disability benefits received by the respondent from the Continental Life Insur ance Company from September 28, 1978 to Janu- ary 31, 1980. It was stated in a letter to the respondent that Revenue Canada, Taxation, had
ruled that the monies were paid by a private carrier effective September 28, 1978 and were not insurable earnings so that there was no change in the initial refusal to pay benefits. The respondent then, within the time limited by paragraph 75(3)(b) of the Act, applied to the Minister of National Revenue for determination of the ques tion as to whether he was in insurable employment with the Niagara South Board of Education during the period that he was in receipt of disabili ty benefits from the Continental Life Insurance Company during the period September 28, 1978 to January 31, 1980. By letter dated October 21, 1980 he was informed by the Minister that:
It has been determined that you were not in insurable employment with the Niagara South Board of Education during the period under review because you had no insurable earnings from the Board on which premiums were to be paid. The disability benefits paid to you by Continental Life were not insurable earnings and no premiums were required to be paid thereon.
On November 10, 1980 the respondent appealed to the Umpire from the foregoing determination of the Minister which appeal was heard by the Umpire on August 25, 1981 and the decision in respect thereof was rendered on November 3, 1981. It is this decision that the applicant herein seeks to have, in part, set aside.
The reasons for judgment of the learned Umpire contained the following passage which sets forth the gist of his reasons:
I am of the opinion that this appeal must be allowed. Sick pay allowances to teachers from the Board's [sic] employing them during periods of illness have been a usual term of their contract of service. There could be no argument that such monies are income of the teacher and as such earnings as that term is used in the Unemployment Insurance Act and that Mr. Visan would be entitled to his Special Severance Benefits.
Some Boards in cases of long illnesses in order to avoid the headaches of administering such payments under such condi tions have decided to transfer this burden to insurance compa nies under what are known as long term disability policies. I am at a loss to appreciate why this unilateral action of a Board from [sic] its own convenience can turn the monies received by the teacher under the policy into something other than income and earnings and thus deprive him of Special Severance Benefits.
It was the contention of the applicant that, with respect to the period commencing January 1, 1979 and terminating January 31, 1980, the learned Umpire erred at law in holding that the respond ent's employment during that period was "insur- able employment" within the meaning of subsec tion 3(1) of the Act. In his submission, by virtue of paragraph 54(1) (a) of the Unemployment Insur ance Regulations, SOR/55-392, as am. by SOR/78-809, s. 1 and SOR/79-168, s. 1, the respondent's employment was excepted from "insurable employment" as that term is defined by subsection 3(1) of the Act. Counsel for the appli cant conceded that for the period commencing September 28, 1978 and terminating December 31, 1978, the respondent was in "insurable employment" within the meaning of the Act. The difference in the entitlement to benefits between the two periods is due, it was said, to the fact that paragraph 54(1)(a) of the Regulations, in the form applicable during the period January 1, 1979 to January 31, 1980, did not become effective until January 1, 1979.
Counsel for the respondent contended that sec tion 54 of the Unemployment Insurance Regula tions enacted by SOR/79-168 was not validly passed pursuant to paragraph 4(3)(h) of the Act and is consequently ultra vires. He also argued that section 54 is repugnant to and inconsistent with paragraph 3(1)(a) of the Act.
The relevant subsections of the Act are subsec tions 3(1) and 3(2) which read as follows:
3. (1) Insurable- employment is employment that is not included in excepted employment and is
(a) employment in Canada by one or more employers, under any express or implied contract of service or apprenticeship, written or oral, whether the earnings of the employed person are received from the employer or some other person and whether the earnings are calculated by time or by the piece, or partly by time and partly by the piece, or otherwise;
(b) employment in Canada as described in paragraph (a) under Her Majesty in right of Canada;
(c) service in the Canadian Forces or in any police force;
(d) employment included in insurable employment by regula tion under section 4; and
(e) employment in Canada of an individual as sponsor of a project under programs designed primarily to create employ ment and conducted by the government of Canada pursuant to any Act of Parliament.
(2) Excepted employment is
(a) employment of a person who is sixty-five years of age or over;
(b) employment of a casual nature other than for the purpose of the employer's trade or business;
(c) employment of a person by his spouse;
(d) employment where the employee is a dependant of the employer;
(e) employment in Canada under Her Majesty in right of a province;
(J) employment in Canada by the government of a country other than Canada or of any political subdivision thereof;
(g) employment in Canada by an international organization;
(h) employment that constitutes an exchange of work or services; and
(i) employment included in excepted employment by regula tion under section 4.
Subsection 4(1) empowers the Commission, with the approval of the Governor in Council, to make regulations for including in insurable employment various kinds of employment. Subsec tion 4(3) empowers the Commission, with the approval of the Governor in Council, to make regulations excepting from insurable employment various types of employment. Paragraph (h) is the clause relied upon by the applicant as his authority for claiming that section 54 of the Regulations is intra vires. Paragraph 4(3)(h) reads as follows:
4....
(3) The Commission may, with the approval of the Governor in Council, make regulations for excepting from insurable employment
(h) any employment with an employer in which persons are employed for less than twenty hours in a week or in which the earnings of persons are less than thirty per cent of the maximum weekly insurable earnings.
It is common ground that the history of the enactment of subsection 54(1) of the Regulations, as set out in the applicant's memorandum of argu ment, is as follows:
By SOR/78-809, Section 54 of the Unemployment Insurance Regulations, P.C. 1955-1491, as amended was revoked and an amended Section 54 substituted therefor, pursuant to para graph 4(3)(f) of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, which became effective January 1, 1979, subsection (1) of which read as follows:
54. (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3) the employment with an employer in any week of a person,
(a) whose earnings are calculated in whole or in part on a time-worked or fixed-salary basis and who is employed and remunerated for less than twenty hours by his employer, or
(b) whose earnings are calculated on a basis other than that described in paragraph (a) and whose cash earnings from that employer are less than thirty per cent of the maximum weekly insurable earnings,
is excepted from insurable employment.
By SOR/79-168, the said amended Section 54 was revoked and an amended Section 54 substituted therefor, pursuant to paragraph 4(3)(h) of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, effective February 19, 1979, identical to Section 54 of the said Regulations passed pursuant to the said SOR/78-809.
Section 54 of the Unemployment Insurance Regulations is renumbered Section 13 of the said Regulations in the Con solidated Regulations of Canada, 1978, Chapter 1576, as amended, which consolidation came into force August 15, 1979 by virtue of SI/79-13 [sic] passed pursuant to the Statute Revision Act, 1974-75-76, c. 20.
It is also common ground that subsection 54(1) as quoted above, was the applicable provision during the period January 1, 1979 to January 31, 1980 although it has since been amended effective January 1, 1981.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that, on the facts of this case, the respondent fell squarely within the purview of paragraph 54(1)(a) of the Regulations in that, although he was under con tract with the Niagara South Board of Education during the period in issue herein, he was a person whose earnings were calculated on a fixed-salary basis and who was employed and remunerated for less than 20 hours per week by his employer. As a result, it was said, his employment was excepted from insurable employment and he was not, there fore, entitled to the special severance benefits which he claimed.
While it was not disputed that he could not and did not work for 20 hours per week during the period in question because he was physically dis abled, it was also said that, in any event, the payments which he received did not constitute remuneration for this employment within the meaning of Regulation 54(1)(a) but were, rather, long-term disability benefits. Furthermore, even if it were considered that he was remunerated for 20 hours per week, he was not remunerated by his employer as required by the Regulation but received the disability benefits from a third party, the Continental Life Insurance Company.
With regard to those submissions, counsel for the respondent argued that paragraph 3(1)(a), supra, defines "insurable employment" as "employment that is not included in excepted employment" and is, inter alia, where "the earn ings of the employed person are received from the employer or some other person ...". Therefore, in so far as paragraph 54(1)(a) supra, is concerned, by referring only to a person "... who is employed and remunerated for less than twenty hours by his employer" (emphasis added) it purports to except from insurable employment, employment where the earnings are received from a person other than his employer. As a result, counsel argued, it is ultra vires because it is repugnant to and inconsist ent with paragraph 3(1)(a) of the Act in that it excludes earnings received from "some other person".
In my opinion the short answer to the contention of the respondent is that in determining whether or not a particular employment is "insurable" it must first be ascertained whether or not it is "excepted employment". That this is the correct approach flows from the opening words of subsection 3(1), namely, "Insurable employment is employment that is [a] not included in excepted employment and [b] is ..." (emphasis and identification letters added for clarity). Reference then must be made to subsection (2) which defines "Excepted employ ment". Paragraphs (a) to (h) except specific forms of employment while (i) excepts "employment included in excepted employment by regulation under section 4". Regulation 54(1)(a) having been enacted pursuant to section 4, it cannot, as I see it, be said to be repugnant to or inconsistent with paragraph 3(1)(a) because resort cannot be had to that paragraph until the "excepted employment" is ascertained. In other words, the Regulation is determinative of the characterization of a particu lar type of employment. It is only when that has been ascertained that one turns to paragraph 3(1)(a). Regulation 54(1)(a), thus, is not ultra vires, in my opinion, on the ground of the alleged repugnancy and inconsistency with paragraph 3(1)(a).
In the alternative, counsel for the respondent argued that since Regulation 54(1)(a) purports to except from insurable employment "the employ-
ment with an employer in any week of a person, whose earnings are calculated in whole or in part on a time-worked or fixed-salary basis and who is employed and remunerated for less than twenty hours [per week] by his employer ...", it is ultra vires because it imposes additional conditions on what employment is excepted from insurable employment, namely, that the person be remuner ated for less than twenty hours by his employer. Such conditions, he argued, were not contemplated in the regulation-making power granted by para graph 4(3)(h) which makes no reference to remu neration or its source.
The purpose of Regulation 54 is to define those persons who, in addition to those specifically referred to in subsections 3(2) and 4(3) as being excepted from insurable employment, shall be excluded from entitlement to unemployment insur ance benefits. One of the classes of persons is set out in paragraph 54(1)(a) of the Regulation, namely, all those persons who are employed for less than 20 hours per week. That class, of course, was entitled to be specifically excepted by regula tion on the authority of paragraph 4(3)(h). What Regulation 54(1)(a) has done is to further restrict the class of persons not entitled to unemployment insurance benefits to those persons, not only who are employed for less than 20 hours, but who are remunerated for less than 20 hours. In other words, it does not enlarge the class of persons in excepted employment but limits the ambit of the class to which the exception is applicable. The authority for the Governor in Council to so restrict the application of paragraph 4(3)(h) arises, as I see it, from subsection 4(5) of the Act. It reads:
4....
(5) A regulation made under this section may be conditional or unconditional, qualified or unqualified, and may be general or restricted to a specified area, a person or a group or class of persons.
The restrictions imposed by Regulation 54(1)(a) fall within the scope of the regulation-making power when paragraph 4(3)(h) and subsection 4(5) are read together, in my opinion, and this
ground of attack on the validity of the Regulation therefore fails.
Responding to applicant counsel's contention that the payments received by the respondent did not constitute remuneration but were long-term disability benefits, counsel for the respondent argued that, assuming the validity of the Regula tion, the payments by the Continental Life Insur ance Company were in fact remuneration paid by the respondent's employer because they flowed from the employment relationship which required services to have been rendered before liability for payment occurred.
In testing the validity of this submission, the words "by his employer" ought not to be ignored or severed from the paragraph as urged by counsel for the applicant. Even if it were proper to do so, it is not, in my view, necessary. What is required is to determine the meaning of the word "remunerated" in the context in which it is used in the Regulation. The Shorter Oxford English Dic tionary, 3rd edition, defines "remunerate" and "remuneration" as follows:
... 1. trans. To repay, requite, make some return for (services, etc.). 2. To reward (a person); to pay (a person) for services rendered or work done .... Hence Remuneration, reward, recompense, repayment; payment, pay.
From the definition it can be seen, I think, that the character of the payment is determined by its nature. Applying that test to the payments made to the respondent, it is clear that they were not made for services rendered but, in a sense, were the opposite of payments of that kind, viz., to compensate the respondent, in part, for the loss of payments for services which he would have ren dered had he not been prevented from doing so by his disability. As was said in The Queen v. The Postmaster General,' "remuneration ... means a quid pro quo. If a man gives his services, whatever consideration he gets for giving his services seems to me a remuneration for them." The disability payments made to the respondent in this case, as I view them, cannot be characterized as remunera tion within the meaning of the Regulation.
' (1876), 1 Q.B.D. 658 at p. 663.
Support for this conclusion is derived from the record. It discloses that the employer assumed no responsibility for further payments to the respond ent after his sick leave had run out. The Board's insurer (Continental) did not view the payments as remuneration as evidenced by the fact that it made no deductions from the monthly disability pay ments for unemployment insurance premiums. It would appear, then, that neither the Board nor the insurer viewed the payments as insurable earnings. I do not regard the fact that the respondent's employment contract appeared to have remained in force as determinative of the character of the payments by the Continental Life Insurance Com pany. The insurance contract does not form part of the record so that the characterization of the payments has to be derived from the other facts which do appear as part thereof. From these I conclude that they do not constitute remuneration within the meaning of the Regulation for the reasons which I have given. The respondent's endeavour to support the decision of the Umpire must, therefore, fail.
From the foregoing it is apparent that the learned Umpire erred in his decision so that the section 28 application must be allowed. The deci sion of the Umpire should be set aside and the matter should be referred back to the Umpire for disposition consistent with these reasons.
MCQUAID D.J. concurred.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
LALANDE D.J. (dissenting): Mr. Justice Urie has reviewed the record, statutory provisions and submissions in this application under section 28. I need add only that it was a term of respondent's contract of employment that the employer con tributed the entire cost of the Long-Term Disabili ty Plan.
In my view, subsection 54(1) of the Unemploy ment Insurance Regulations, in so far as it pur-
ports to except from insurable employment the employment of a person whose earnings are received from some person other than his employ er, goes beyond the authority of the Commission to make regulations concerning excepted employ ment.
That authority must come from paragraph 4(3)(h) of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, and I do not see it there bearing in mind the meaning of insurable employment set out in sub section 3(1).
With respect I do not agree that subsection 4(5) of the Act cures this ultra vires operation of Regulation 54(1) and allows it to clash with para graph 3(1)(a) of the Act. Subsection 4(5) gives leeway to the Commission in the manner it may exercise its power to make regulations (by impos ing conditions, qualifications, restrictions as to area or persons), but the scope or materia of the power itself is not enlarged.
Respondent's employment, not having been val idly excepted, fell within the meaning of insurable employment.
The fact that no premiums were paid in respect of what respondent received has no consequence upon his claim to the special severance benefit under subsection 31(2) of the Act.
I would therefore dismiss the application.
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