Two sets of cases before
the Supreme Court of Court, that were recently pleaded and which derive from
Wal-Mart’s closing of its Jonquière store some years ago - Pedneault and Desbiens –
have the potential of becoming a legal tsunami in terms of their impact on
employers!
These cases have morphed
into an allegedly Charter based challenge to what seemed to be an already
clearly established employer right to go out of business at any time and for
any reason – all of this with the possibility of very serious and
unexpected consequences for employers.
These sets of cases may
also determine whether administrative tribunals, like the Quebec Labour
Relations Commission (hereinafter «QLRC»), whose remedial powers are strictly
defined and limited by their enabling statutes, can make use of the far
more extensive remedial powers of Section 49 of the Quebec Charter when and if they find Charter violations and indeed, whether or not they are obliged to
search for alleged violations when the legislature has specifically and
limitatively crafted the questions they are to address, and the remedial powers
that pertain.
To review the facts
quickly – Wal-Mart was unionised at its Jonquière Quebec store, then bargained,
to impasse with the U.F.C.W., known in Quebec as T.U.A.C. On the strength of the Supreme Court’s
judgment in Place des Arts, and the employer’s presumptive
right to go out of business for any reason, that that case clearly
endorses, when the dispute between Wal-Mart and the Union was referred to
compulsory first contract arbitration, Wal-Mart announced the store’s
closing. All applicable legal
provisions that apply to mass terminations were apparently followed to the
letter.
From the record of
the case, it appears Wal-Mart was neither alleged to, nor found to have
negotiated in bad faith, nor to have violated any other specific provision of
the Labour Code in its collective
bargaining.
Its ex-employees or a
substantial number of them, challenged the terminations of employment that
resulted from the closure, claiming that they had been terminated because of
union activities. Given their
proof of union activities, i.e. their union membership and the aforesaid collective
bargaining, they were found to be entitled to the rebuttable presumption that
their termination was in fact due to such union activities, absent proof of
another «cause». Wal-Mart, citing Place des Arts, argued that the causa causans – the proximate and
operating cause of the loss of employment - was the store closure - a cause
that is both «other» than the alleged union activities and recognized as valid
by the Supreme Court.
Place des Arts,
endorsed what former Labour Court Chief Judge Lesage said, in City Pontiac Buick, to the effect that
an employer has the presumptive right to cease being an employer at any
time, and for any reason – even for reasons which might be thought
socially reprehensible – so long as the cessation of activities
was final, definite and genuine Wal-Mart therefore sought dismissal of the
complaints.
In one set of
complaints, Pedneault, the QLRC
dismissed the complaints. Its
decision was sustained in judicial review proceedings and leave appeal to the
Quebec Court of Appeal was refused.
In the other set of
cases, Desbiens, the QLRC found that because the Store Manager, in his testimony,
could not establish Wal-Mart’s ultimate intentions with respect to the multi
year store lease by which it was still bound, that therefore Wal-Mart had left
itself a way to reinter the marketplace, notwithstanding that all that was left
of the store was an empty shell.
In the QLRC’s view therefore, closure merely pretextual –that the
closure was neither final, definite and/or genuine. The Quebec Superior Court refused judicial review, but
the Quebec Court of Appeal reversed.
With leave to appeal to
the Supreme Court having been given in both sets of cases ostensibly on
Charter grounds, to use language near and dear to lovers of hockey, Canada’s
national sport - we are now into sudden death over-time!
As I understand
Appellants position, they argue:
- In Health Services B.C., the Supreme Court held that
the Section 2 (d) right of association found in the Canada Charter, includes the right to collective bargaining. That Section provides:
«2.
[Fundamental freedoms.] Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
[…]
(d) freedom of association.»
- While
that Section 2 (d) only applies to state action, clearly not relevant
here, Section 3 of the Quebec
Charter also speaks of a right of association, allegedly incorporating
a Charter right to collective bargaining but contains no such limitation
in its text, Section 3 of the Quebec Charter provides:
«3.
[Fundamental freedoms] Every person is the possessor of the fundamental
freedoms, including freedom of conscience, freedom of religion, freedom of
opinion, freedom of expression, freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of
association.»
- The terminations resulting from the
Jonquière store’s closing affect Appellants’, Section 3 Quebec Charter Rights, in that they
purportedly interfere with their associational rights to collective
bargaining. Hence the closure
of the store must be deemed abusive, in contravention of Articles 6 and 7
of the Civil Code. Place des Arts notwithstanding, since no one has an absolute
right to anything. Indeed,
pursuant to these actions of the Civil Code, all rights must be exercised
in good faith;
- While the termination may result from a
cause other than union activities, to wit the closure, since the closure
allegedly violates the employees’ Section 3 associational rights to
collective bargaining, such cause cannot be either just or sufficient;
- The QLRC, the Quebec Superior Court and/or
the Quebec Court of Appeal, missed the mark in not scrutinizing the
underlying reason for Wal-Mart’s store closure, in effect, refusing to
exercise jurisdiction. In
particular, there was refusal to exercise jurisdiction, because no account
was taken of the alleged violation of the associational rights to
collective bargaining which Appellants contend derive from Section 3 of
the Quebec Charter.
While the Supreme Court
in Health Services B.C. found that
the associational right of collective bargaining forms part of the freedom of
association, covered by Section 2 d) of the Canada Charter, that Court has not yet interpreted
the right of association set forth at Section 3 of the Quebec Charter, to be of the same effect. Yet there may well be differences to be
taken account of! As Health Services B.C. noted, Section 2
d) of the Canada Charter, addresses state
action and state action alone.
Does this different legislative context in which the same term is used
in the two Charters, in the one addressing only state action and in the other
containing no such limitation, constitute a relevant consideration for
distinguishing Health Services B.C.’s
application in Quebec?
Article 3 of the Quebec Charter predates its federal
counterpart by 7 years. One
cannot, therefore, argue that since Section 3 was borrowed from Section 2 (d)
they must be interpreted in parallel.
There is a further
contextual difference in that there seems to be no equivalent in the Canada Charter of Section 6 of Quebec’s
own Charter. No doubt this is so because Property and Civil Rights lie
exclusively in the Provincial legislative domain as per the Canadian
Constitution. That Section
provides:
«6. Every person has a right to the peaceful
enjoyment and free disposition of his property, except to the extent
provided by law.»
At first blush, Wal-Mart
apparently disposed of or divested itself of its property pursuant to and by
following, to the letter, the legal regime that applies i.e. all the rules
regarding mass-terminations, etc.
How is one therefore to balance the seeming collision of rights that a
decision that collective bargaining is part of the ex-employees rights of
association under Section 3 of the Quebec
Charter and hence somehow violated by the loss of employment that closure
would bring about, and any possible recognition that such closure was in the
exercise of Wal-Mart’s Section 6 Quebec Charter rights?
Is there an argument to
the effect that an employer’s Section 6 rights are even stronger than any
claimed Section 3 rights in that the right to dispose of property to the
extent and in the manner provided by law is legislatively specific,
whereas any alleged associational rights of collective bargaining following
from Section 3 are derivative – the result only of interpretation?
Interestingly, no
reference to Section 6 of the Quebec
Charter appears anywhere in the Place
des Arts judgment. If the Supreme
Court arrived at an employer’s presumptive right to go out of business given,
simply, the very nature of the liberal and democratic economy which Canada
ostensibly is, does Section 6 of the Quebec Charter gives quasi-constitutional
status to that right.
Since both sets of
Wal-Mart cases are now awaiting decision by the Supreme Court, practitioners in
the field are waiting anxiously and with baited breath to see what the outcome
of all of this will be.
Should the Appellants
win, profound impact may be felt by all employers! What types of divestiture or cessation of operations would
be affected? Would, for instance,
a simple exit from business by way of non renewal of a subcontract or the
designation by a franchisor of a new franchisee or sub-contractors, as happened
in U.E.S. vs. Bibeault, attract an alleged Section 3
challenge? Would the timing of the divestiture – before or after a
collective agreement - affect the matter? Alienation of part of an enterprise, permitted by the
Labour Code, may bring not only a change in employer but results in
legislatively sanctioned changes in the collective agreement’s expiry date (See
Section 45.2 (1) L.C.). Would a
win for Appellants open that Section, that was so politically divisive when it
was introduced, to a new Charter challenge? Does the associational right to collective bargaining, if
such exists, pursuant to Section 3 of the Quebec
Charter, end with the signature of a collective agreement? If not, does it continue without end
until certification is revoked?
Remember that Wal-Mart closed the store after it bargained to impasse
but before imposition of a first collective agreement. Health
Services B.C. established that there is no right to either any
particular form of collective bargaining or indeed to any particular result of
collective bargaining.
Other Charter issues
arise in the event of victory by Appelants. Section 49 of the Quebec
Charter provides that any unlawful interference with any right or freedom
recognized by the Charter entitles
the party aggrieved to obtain the cessation of such interference and
compensation for the moral or material prejudice that results. Where the interferences are intentional
the tribunal may as well impose punitive damages. In the case of a claim of illegal termination because of
union activities, (Articles 15 et seq. L.C.), the remedial powers of the QLRC
are set out clearly, definitively and limitatively at Section 15 of the Quebec Labour Code. The Labour
Code was significantly amended in 2002 when the QLRC was created, with no
incorporation, direct or indirect, of Section 49 of the Charter at Section 15.
Can the QLRC appropriate
powers under Section 49 beyond its enabling statute à la McLoed vs. Egan, or Parry
Sound, or is the legislature deemed have to
have addressed this issue in the negative by legislating in the way it did at
Section 15 of the Code. In any case, P.G. du Québec vs. Laplante reviewed in my written materials seems
to have opened a serious breach in Parry
Sound’s application in Quebec.
If the QLRC cannot
extend its remedial powers beyond what is provided for at Section 15, does the
fact that more than three years have passed since the employee terminations
mean that any recourse to the civil courts allegedly pursuant to Section 49 of
the Charter is now prescribed or time barred via the Civil Code? Can recourse to the QLRC via the Section 15 complaints
be viewed as an interruption of prescription or the tolling of any time
bar? If not, is the matter is some
ways moot?
In an early set of cases,
Boutin vs. Wal-Mart, an attempt was
made to get the CRT to order Wal-Mart to reopen the store based allegedly on QLRC’s
remedial powers set out at Sections 118 and 119 of the Labour Code and failed.
Such requested orders were refused on the basis of Place des Arts. Since
Petitioners eventually desisted therefrom are the issues resjudicata? Are these
cases presently before the Supreme Court an attempt to revive and resuscitate
the Boutin case?
In closing, can one
imagine the juridical oddity that might be created if Appellants win. Employers in other Provinces in Canada
could cease operations at will based on Place des Arts, a Quebec case, without having to fear any alleged
violation of any associational right of collective bargaining, because, as the
Supreme Court pointed out in Health
Services B.C., Section 2 d) of the Canada
Charter only affects the state.
On the other hand, employers in Québec, could not avail themselves of
the rights recognized by that same Québec case, notwithstanding their
divestiture rights instantiated in the Quebec
Charter pursuant to Section 6 that I referred to above. To quote Alice in Wonderland, things
could be said to be getting «curiouser and curiouser».
N.B: The
opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author. He alone is responsible for any errors
or omissions.
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