HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-1978.Tharakan.88-03-15IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCZ SETTLEMENT BOARD
.’
Between OPSEU (‘2. Tharakan)
Grievor
And
The Crown in Right of 0n:ario
(Ministry of Consumer & Commercial Relations)
r
Before
For the Crievol
For the Employer
Hearing December 9, 1987
Employer
B.A. Kirkwood Vice-Chairman
I. Freedman Member
P. Camp Member
M. Cornish
COUnSel
Cornish & Associates
Barristers & Solicitors ”
M. Fleishman
Law Officer
Crown Law Office Civil
Ministry of the Attorney General
INTEKIk DECISIOfi
At the outset of the hearing a pttliminary objection WBS raised by the employer disputing
the Boards jurisdiction. The employer’s counsel objected that the ttrdon referred the grievance to
the Gticvancc Settlemnt Boatd for bearing beyond the mar&&ny tkne limits set out in article 27.4
of the collective agreement Further, that as the ma&tory time limits wem not followed the
gtievancc is withdtawn under the $rovi.siotts of article 27.13 of the cokctive agreement and the
hoard does not have tlte jutkdicrion to hear the argumetq as the boatd does not have any ability to
enlarge its jutisdicbon under article 27.16.
The uniott’s counsel conceded that article 27.14 set out mandatory time limits which the
union had not complied with. However, in the union’s view, the employer had waived its tights to
rely up& the mandatory limits by failing to make this objection subsequent to the union’s request
for a hearing.
The board heard no viva vote evidence. The patties relied solely on the documents which
WacprrsentedtothebosrdasExhibialtoginclusive. lEeseqenceofevetttswhichoccurredby
reviewing the Exhibits prtsGmd aad the submissiorls of the pGttlcs is as follows.
The gtievor tiled a gri~vma on April 23.1986. claiming that he bad not been awarded the
position of “Corporation Information Data Clerk” under competition mtmber CR22/86 which
position was posted on Febrttary 14,1986. and he was tbemf~ seeking the position retroactive to
the date in which the position was med.
A second stage meeting was held on July 2.1986, and on July 8.1986, Mr. ‘fharakan was
advised by the employs rhat the emplOya% dccislon would not be ttsavd
On octoba 8,1986, Joan Read, the admit&&ve ass&rant of the grievance depattment of
Ontario Public Service Employees Union forwarded a letter to the Registrar of the Grievance
Settlement Board aakhg that be gritvana which is prtmtly Mare the board be consolidated with
another grkv~tta. The Rew fonvamed a copy of this r#luesr to thc’Deputy Minister, Ministry
of Consumer and Corporate Relations, on December 31. 1986. Jn nsponse to the Registrar’s
request for comments on the consolidation, the Ministry advised the Rqistrar by letter dated
January 12.1987, that in their view the two grievances were totaJly unrelated and distinct separate
job competitions and the hfinistxy will not agree with the union’s request for consolidation. The
Ministry also stated to the Grievance Settlement Board that it was not prepared to waive the
Page 3
mandatory time limits under the collective agreement and should the union proceed to hearing the
Ministry would ask the board to rule on the preliminary issue prior to hearing the merits. The
Registrar forwarded the, Ministry’s response of January 12. 19817 to Ontario Public Service
Employees Union for their information on Ftbruary 4,1987. On March 2.1987, the union decided
to proceed with this grievance and asked the Registrar of the Grievance SettIement Board by letter
of March 2.1987 to atrange for a heating.
The parties proceeded to mediation in October 1987. Both patties agreed that the employer
did not raise its objection to the jurisdiction of the Board at the mediation to the union, although the
employer stated that it did bring this issue up before the mediator in a session which did not include
the union. The day before the hearing the union’s counsel learned that this ptehminary objection
was being made.
The Board finds that the application which was made by the union on March 2.1987 for a
hearing, was grossly beyond the time limits set out in article 27.4 and the employer was entitled to
successfully~make its objection that the Board would have no jurisdiction because of Article 27.3,
27.13 and 27.16 unless it could be found that the Ministry waived the time limits by its actions and
omissions. 0th~ cases which have come to tlt~ Grievance Settlement Board have applied these
amcles of the collective agreement in the satm manner.
-..
The cases of w and McIsaac. Grievance Settlement Board, #742/83 and 24/84 and the
Lg& case, Grievance Settlement Board #377/8, clearly support the proposition that the time limits
set out in Article 27.3 are mandanny, and by virtue of Article 27.13 the grievance would thereby be
considered to be withdrawtt if it has not been processed within those mandatory time limits. The
Board does not have the jurisdiction under Articlt 27.16 to enlarge the time limits. However,
contracting parties themselves may waive the mandatory time liits in the collective agreement
&t&s~R, Grievance Settlement Board, #1483/84 (G. Brent)). This can be done either by
express agreement OT as Gail Brent states in that awatd, at page 5:
“By the action of the “innocent” party in failing to object to the
pmadural lnegultitity in a timly fashiop. we believe thataieag
210 of Q
Palmer correctly summan ‘zed the situation when he wrote the
following:
Like estoppek “waiver is a legal banin to the exercise
of the tights in a particular case, emcted by the conduct of (sic) words of the parties”. Conduct which has been
held to amount to a waiver includes: allowing a
grievance to go through the grievance procedure;
failure to object at the first opportunity to the grievance
Page 4
procedure;... and an attempt to settle the grievance.
Waiver can also be by verbal agreement. The right to
object at a later stage can be retained by a statement to
that effect at the first opportunity qr by a timely
objection, even though it is not raised again until the
hearing.
Generally, waiver arises therefore where it is
clearly indicated that one of the parties does not intend
to invoke the procedural provisions of the collective
agnement. There is no need for detrimental reliance
by the other party...The onus of establishing waiver is
on the party alleging it”.
Thereby, the issue is whether or not the “innocent party”, the employer, acted in such a
manner to lead the union to believe that the objection was waived.
In the McNamara case, Grievance Settlement Board, #272/81, grievances were filed several
months after the time limit and it was clear that the union had failed to comply with the fifteen day
requirement & the collecdve agrsment Tote employer did not notify the R&istmr that it was taking
the position that the grievances were inarbitral because of the faila to comply with the time limits
and discussed the grievance as an “alive” grievance in the context of the mediation. The union
counsel did not become awE, until the day before hearing that this objection was going to be made.
The Board held, after considering & V.S.W. and s ‘v’
(1970) 22 L.A.C. (2~3) 125 Brown, that where the &fect was apparent on its face and the employer
failed to raise,the objection until the hearing, the defect is waived
In the case before this Board, the defect was apparent and the employer conveyed its
objection to the Registrar at its earliest opportunity, but it did not convey its objection to the union
directly until the date before the hearing. By not saying or communicating any objection to the
union after the employer became aware that the grievance was beiig ptccessed for a hearing and
then by participating in the mediation process again without communicating its objections to the
union, the employer is acting in such a manner as to take the next step in the grievance and lead the
union to believe that there was no objection to the arbitrabiity of this grievance. If the employer
had intended to resolve the merits of this case, without waiving its right to raise its objection, the
objection should have been raised prior to the mediation and an agreement reached between the
parties that the mediation was occurring “without prejudice” to the Ministry raising the time limit
objection at the hearing.
t :. . .
However, therefore as the employer failed to notify’the union as soon as the employer
found out that the grievance was being processed and by participating in the mediation again
without malting an objection, the Board finds that the employer waived the objection to the time
limits which would otherwise have been available to successfully argue that the Board had no
The board finds that the union was able to establish that the employer did waive the time
limits by its actions and omissioniand that the employer failed to show that its objection to the
jurisdiction was made in a timely fashion.
Therefore as the board has jurisdiction to hear this matter, the p&es will be contacted to
resume the hearing.
Dated at Toronto, this’ “~5i3i DAY of MARC?! , 1988.
1.
I. FREEDMAN, MFXBER~