Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-327-86
Marc-Andre Belanger (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
and
Jean-Hugues BĂ©langer (Intervenor)
INDEXED As: BELANGER V. M.N.R.
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Marceau and Hugessen JJ.—Québec, March 18; Ottawa, March 26, 1987.
Unemployment insurance — Insurable employment — Meaning of "excepted employment" in s. 3(2)(b) of Act — Application to set aside Tax Court decision holding appli cant's employment excepted under s. 3(2)(b) — Applicant farmer periodically employed as lumberjack by agronomist brother — Application allowed — Tax Court erred in holding "employment of casual nature" referring to employer's work — Employment must meet two conditions in s. 3(2)(b) — Nature of employment not determined by reference to either employer or employee but by meaning both contracting parties give to contractual relationship — Necessary to consider all surrounding circumstances — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ss. 2 (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 26), 3(2)(b) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
This is an applicatioh to set aside a decision of the Tax Court of Canada, holding that the applicant's employment was excepted from insurable employment under paragraph 3(2)(b) of the Act. The applicant is a farmer, but also an experienced lumberjack. His brother, an agronomist, owns a woodlot, which he bought for eventual resale. The applicant was employed by his brother, two years in succession from March to October and from August to October, to clean and cut wood. The Tax Court held that "employment of a casual nature" refers to the employer's, and not the employee's, work. Since the employer was an agronomist by trade, the applicant's employment was held to be of a casual nature other than for the purpose of the employer's trade.
Held, the application should be allowed.
Paragraph 3(2)(b) has two parts. To be excepted, the employment must be "casual" and be "other than for the purpose of the employer's trade or business." The exception is stated first, followed by the qualification to the exception. It is the employment which must meet the two conditions stated. The definition of employment does not refer to the occupation or trade or the purpose of the work. Casual employment within the meaning of paragraph 3(2)(b) can only be employment which exhibits no continuity, regularity or periodic recurrence, and that employment may be casual even though the services rendered are connected with the employee's trade (it is not the
occupation which is in question), and may not be casual even though it is unconnected with the employer's professional activ ity or business (the two conditions stand independently of each other).
What is involved is employment, which results from a con tractual relationship between two parties. The nature of the employment should not be determined by reference to one of the two parties only, but by the meaning which the two contracting parties give to their contractual relationship. All the circumstances surrounding the establishment, continuation and termination of the contractual relationship must be con sidered. In the event of a misunderstanding, the employee's impression should prevail, provided it is based on objective evidence. The most telling evidence will be from the employer and his present and future needs, since it is the employer who created the employment and only he can define it.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
CONSIDERED:
Aspirot et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, U.I. 25 A-H (NR 324) (P.A.B.); Minister of National Revenue v. Gagné, U.I. 35 F (NR 356) (P.A.B.).
REFERRED TO:
Minister of National Revenue v. Poirier et al., U.I. 27-29 (NR 352) (P.A.B.); Gauthier v. Minister of National Revenue, U.I. 31 (NR 378) (P.A.B.); Minister of Na tional Revenue v. Safer et al., U.I. 39-40 (NR 462) (P.A.B.); Minister of National Revenue v. Ouellet, U.I. 45C (NR 496) (P.A.B.).
COUNSEL:
Louis Robillard for appellant. Pierre Cossette for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Lebel, Pelletier, Rioux, Bossé & Associés, Rivière -du-Loup, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment rendered by
MARCEAU J.: The decision challenged by this application to set aside under section 28 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] was made by a Deputy Judge of the Tax Court of Canada pursuant to the Unemployment Insu rance Act, 1971 [S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48]. By that decision, which affirmed an earlier opinion of the respondent Minister, the Judge found that the employment held by the applicant for a time was
excepted from insurable employment under para graph 3(2)(b) of the Act, which reads as follows:
3....
(2) Excepted employment is
(b) employment of a casual nature other than for the purpose of the employer's trade or business;
It can quickly be seen from consulting the case reports dealing with unemployment insurance that this provision of paragraph 3(2)(b) of the Act has been and is still being discussed in many decisions not only of umpires about also of the Pension Appeals Board, the tribunal which until recently exercised final appellate jurisdiction in cases involving the determination of whether employ ment was insurable. This is not unduly surprising, as the exception provided by the provision could not fail to be regularly sought. However, it is a little harder to understand why the rule is still frequently misunderstood and at times clearly mis construed, after so many attempts at clarification have been made in applying it to all kinds of practical situations. Reading the decisions and the leading cases certainly does not provide a full answer as to the meaning to be given to the word "casual", and in particular, it leaves the impres sion of a conflict and uncertainty between the idea that whether employment is casual is to be deter mined in reference to the employer and its profes sional activity (see Minister of National Revenue v. Poirier et al., U.I. 27-29 [NR 352] (P.A.B.); Minister of National Revenue v. Gagné, U.I. 35F [NR 356] (P.A.B.); Gauthier v. Minister of Na tional Revenue, U.I. 31 [NR 378] (P.A.B.); Aspi- rot et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, U.I. 25 A-H [NR 324] (P.A.B.); Minister of National Revenue v. Sater et al., U.I. 39-40 [NR 462] (P.A.B.)) and the idea that, on the contrary, it is to be determined by reference to the employee and his trade or usual occupation (the leading case in this regard is the decision of the Pension Appeals Board in 1982 in Minister of National Revenue v. Ouellet, U.I. 45C [NR 496] (P.A.B.)). This is the first time that this Court, which did not become the appellate tribunal in this area until 1983, has been called upon to take a position on the meaning and scope of the exception contained in the provi sion, and it is perhaps desirable for it to attempt in this regard to dispel certain ambiguities which can
be seen to underly most of the cases. In any event, I will attempt so far as I can to explain my approach as clearly as possible.
As always in a matter involving interpretation, everything will depend on a careful analysis of the provision itself from the standpoint of logic and grammar. Three conclusions emerge from such an analysis. First, it can be seen that though the proposition in which the exception is defined is stated as a single characteristic, it breaks down into two parts, each involving a condition: to be excepted, the employment must first be "casual" and second, be "other than for the purpose of the employer's trade or business." It can be seen, then, that while these two conditions are to be applied together, they must nonetheless be checked sepa rately and to some extent independently of each other, contrary to what might be indicated by a provision reading, for example, "of a casual nature because it is other than for the purposes of the employer's trade or business"; what is stated first here is an exception, casual employment, and then a qualification to the exception, casual employ ment other than for the purposes of the employer's trade or business. Finally, it should be borne clear ly in mind that it is the employment which must meet the two conditions stated, a word which according to the definition in section 2 [as am. by 1976-77, c. 54, s. 26] of the Act, "means the act of employing or the state of being employed": no mention is made of the occupation or trade or the purpose of the work. Bearing in mind these basic conclusions from a simple analysis of the provision, and remembering the purpose of the exceptions in subsection 3(2) of the Act, which is manifestly to prevent misuse of the system by shifting it away from its primary concern of protecting the employee against the loss of his livelihood, it can readily be concluded that casual employment within the meaning of this provision can only be employment which exhibits no continuity, regulari ty or periodic recurrence, and that employment may be casual even though the services rendered are connected with the employee's trade (it is not the occupation which is in question), and may not be casual even though it is unconnected with the
employer's professional activity or business (the two conditions stand independently of each other).
The reason the ambiguities to which I have referred have always persisted is undoubtedly because in dealing with specific cases tribunals have moved away from the fundamental analysis of the provision. In fact, however, it should be noted that these ambiguities originate in the very first decisions of the Pension Appeals Board, two decisions which were rendered on the same day and which are constantly referred to, those of Aspirot et al. and Gagné, supra. Both cases con cerned carpenters who had worked on the building of single-family homes for different individuals in various occupations, and while one of the two umpires hearing an initial group of cases regarded the employments as casual, the other who heard another group of cases thought that this was not true for persons who were carpenters by trade. The Board upheld the position of the first umpire, but in rejecting the view of the second it observed that what should be considered was not the employee but the employer's occupation and profession. The notion that whether employment was casual should be determined by reference to either the employer or the employee persisted, probably because it appeared to offer a readily applicable rule; as we have seen, however, it distorts the legislation.
What is involved is the employment, and employment results from a contractual relation ship between two parties: there is no reason to think that the nature of an employment should be determined by reference to one of the two parties only, the employer or the employee. It is the meaning which the two contracting parties give to their contractual relationship which makes the employment something stable, which can continue to exist or at least be renewed at regular intervals, and on which the employee can rely, or on the other hand something ephemeral, transitory, merely casual. It is only by considering all the circumstances surrounding the establishment, con tinuation and termination of the contractual rela tionship that it will be possible to decide on the meaning which the parties give to their relation ship. Some constants may exist. Thus, I think that in the event of a misunderstanding between the parties as to the nature of their relationship, it is
the employee's impression which should prevail, provided it is based on objective evidence, as in that case he was really relying on the employment and to this extent merits the protection which the system can offer. It is also clear that the most telling objective evidence will be from the employ er and its present and future needs, for it is the employer who created the employment and only he could define it. Apart from these few constants, however, everything depends on weighing the cir cumstances and on the conclusions drawn from the evidence. The process may at times be very cum bersome, but it must be gone through in all cases, and I know of no formula which can simplify it. That is my view of the matter.
Naturally, I must rule on the validity of the decision rendered in the case at bar in terms of what appears to me to be the scope of this excep tion created by paragraph 3(2)(b) of the Act. The situation disclosed by the evidence is straightfor ward and typical. The applicant is a farmer, who raises beef cattle, but also an experienced lumber jack. His brother, an agronomist, owns a woodlot which he bought for eventual resale. The applicant was employed by his brother, two years in succes sion, from March 14 to October 21, 1983 and from August 13 to October 26, 1984, to clean and cut wood affected by a budworm infestation on the woodlot. The gist of the Judge's decision reads as follows:
According to the decision in Aspirot and MNR and Robert Gagné and MNR and others cited, employment of a casual nature refers to the employer's and not the employee's work....
... Jean-Hugues BĂ©langer, an agronomist by trade ... worked the woodlot on occasion and in exceptional circumstances, such as a budworm infestation.
Thus, the appellant's employment was of a casual nature other than for the purpose of Jean-Hugues BĂ©langer's trade. In fact, as mentioned earlier, the employer was an agronomist by trade, who was employed by the federal government. That was his trade and he had no business. This employment, which consist ed mainly in logging and clearing the land, was quite different from that of an agronomist, which was the employer's trade....
For all these reasons, the appellant's employment with his employer, Jean-Hugues BĂ©langer, was employment excepted from insurable employment since it was employment of a casual nature other than for the purpose of the employer's trade, within the meaning of section 3(2)(b) of the Unemploy ment Insurance Act, 1971.
It is clear that the approach taken by the Judge in weighing the facts does not correspond to the views I stated above. In my opinion it indicates a misunderstanding of what casual employment is within the meaning of paragraph 3(2)(b) of the Act. It is undoubtedly quite possible that the employment here is in fact casual in the proper sense, but it is not the function of this Court to weigh the facts at first instance, at least when a difficulty of this kind exists: that is for the judge of fact to do.
I would accordingly allow the application, set aside the subject decision and refer the matter back to the Tax Court of Canada to be again decided by it, considering whether on the basis of the evidence in the record or any other evidence which may be provided if it is thought proper to reopen the hearing, the exception in paragraph 3(2)(b) as above interpreted should be applied.
PRATTE J.: I concur. HUGESSEN J.: I concur.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.