HomeMy WebLinkAbout1987-2443.Jones.89-04-10 DecisionONTARIO EMPLOYCS DE LA COURONNE
CROWN EMPLOYEES DE L'ONTARIO
GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE
SETTLEMENT RÈGLEMENT
BOARD DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, ONTARIO. M5G 1Z8- SUITE 2100
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO) M5G 128 - BUREAU2100
TELEPHONE/TÉLÉPHONE
(416) 598-0688
2443/87 to 2447/87
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EWPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
OPSEU (Jones)
Grievor - and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community and Social Services)
Employer
Before:
APPEARING FOR
THE GRIEVOR:
APPEARING FOR '
THE EMPLOYER:
HEARING:
J. Forbes-Roberts - Vice-Chairperson
I.J. Thomson - #ember
M.F. O'Toole - Member
A. Ryder
Counsel
Gowling & Henderson
Barristers & Solicitors
R.J. Anderson
Senior Solicitor
Legal Services Branch
Ministry of Community and Social Services
June 3, 1988
August 16, 17, 1988
October 11, 1988
November 17, 1988
The grievor, Mr. Ronald Jones is employed with the Ministry
of Community and Social Services ("the Employern) as a Parental
Support Worker (”P.S.W.” . He has worked in the Employer's
Income Maintenance Programme for approximately twenty (20) years,
and barring the instant matters has apparently had a clean
record. He has before this Board five (5) grievances all dealing
with disciplinary penalties handed out to him from October 9,
1987 to January 19,1988. They are as follows:
October 9, 1987 - written reprimand
October 14, 1987 - written reprimand
January 11, 1988 - one day suspension
January 13, 1988 - three day suspension
January 19, 1988 - five day suspension
A single issue, though not a single set of facts forms the basis
of the dispute between the Employer and the grievor.
It is the Employer's contention that the grievor refused to
perform his assigned duties. It is the grievor's position that
the Employer ordered him to perform at worst an illegal and at
best an immoral act.
The facts are as follows.
A P.S.W. helps social assistance recipients to enforce
support orders, This may involve negotiating agreements to pay,
enforcing court ordered support payments, and/or collecting
payments which are in arrears. Prior to 11387 the P.S.W. assisted
the custodial parent who was seeking to enforce an agreement or
order by helping to complete the documents and affidavit mater-
ials which would be put before the court. Central vas Form 35
Request For Enforcement (see Appendix A). The P.S.W. helped the
custodial parent complete this affidavit and then commissioned
her* sworn signature.
Arrears were ascertained based on information from the
creditor, sometimes from the debtor, and by examining the court
ledgers.
Hovever prior to 1987 the P.S.W. was not limited to this
clerical function. The sources of information used to ascertain
the amount of arrears were recognized as potentially less than
accurate. The court ledgers were sometimes incomplete ox out of
date. The creditor sometimes did not know if she had received
out of court payments, or their amounts. Sometimes the debtor
- * Evidence was heard that the vast majority of custodial parents
seeking to enforce orders are mothers. For simplicity we vi11
usc the female pronoun throughout.
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could not be found and therefore could not give his side of the
past payments story.
Recognition of this potential inherent inaccuracy vas
granted in two (2) ways. First, in paragraph 4 of form 35
following "The order is in default in the amount of $ ...”, the
P.S.W. was permitted to add the phrase “as per the court ledger".
There was thus no suggestion that the affidavit's deponent or the
commissioning P.S.W. had performed any calculations themselves,
but rather were simply relying on the courts’ information.
Indeed in extreme cases the P.S.W. vas permitted to insert the
phrase "amount of arrears unknown" and the judge would then
simply deem the amount owing.
As part and parcel of this system the P.S.W. vas granted
standing before the court. He or she could thus flag for the
judge any “guesstimates” in the affidavit or supporting materials
and leave it to the bench to make a final determination.
In 1987 the Support and Custody Order Enforcement Act
(”S.C.O.E.A.”) came into effect. Following the enactment of this
legislation changes occured in the grievor's function and in the
enforcement procedure itself. P.S.W.’s began using what vas known
as a S.C.O.E.A. filing package. Part of this package vas Form
35A Statement of Arrears (see Appendix B) which replaced Form 35.
It remained the P.S.W.'s function to assist the creditor in
collecting the financial information necessary to file this form,
and to commission her svorn signature. However there ended the
similarity between Form 35 and Form 351. In using Form 35A the
P.S.W. vas not permitted to insert in paragraph 4 the qualifying
phrase "as per court ledger" or "amount of arrears unknown".
Instead an exact; figure had to be sworn as due and owing by the
debtor. Indeed the exact statement of arrears had to be broken
down precisely in Schedule A on a month by month basis. The
creditor had to swear both these statements and the P.S.W. had to
commission her signature. In addition the P.S.W. could no longer
appear in court to clarify ambiguities or "guesstimates".
S.C.O.E.A. also made provision for assignment of support
orders to the Ministry. In those cases the P.S.W. vas expected
to svear to the statement of arrears himself in an effort to
realise on default orders.
Unfortunately the new legislation and forms did not improve
the sources or quality of information upon which the forms were
completed. Court ledgers were still often out of date, the
creditor still often didn't know if unrecorded monies had been
paid to her, and the debtor vas still often not available to tell
his side of the story. Nevertheless under S.C.O.E.A. the grievor
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vas being asked to personally swear to or to advise a client to
Swear to the accuracy of information gathered from these sources.
It is over this issue that the Employer and the grievor came
to an impasse,
client was
uncertain of the amounts owing and they could not be reliably
ascertained he refused to advise the client to sign the
Form 35 nor would he commission her signature. In the case of an
assignment to the Ministry in which the grievor was uncertain of
the amounts would not personally swear the Form 35A or
attendant Schedule A. Both acts prevented filing of the-
S.C.O.E.A. packages.
Under this new regime if the grievor knew that a
owing he
The Employer took the position that there was no difference
between Forms 35 and 35A, and thus the grievor's refusal to
complete the S.C.O.E.A. packages constituted an improper refusal
of a legitimate work assignment. and therefore was insubordina-
tion.
The grievor took the position that to swear or to counsel
the swearing of a false affidavit vas illegal and could leave him
open to criminal or civil liability,
By way of clarification it was agreed that the grievor
completed approximately eighty (80) per cent of the S.C.O.E.A.
cases assigned to him, It was only when he was unsure of certain
information that he refused to act as commissioner or deponent on
an affidavit. This apparently amounted to three (3) files,
Taylor, Bressette and Desbiens.
Beginning with the Taylor file the grievor attempted to make
his concerns understood to his supervisor, Mr. Peter Lowery.
This was done both verbally and in writing. We do not find that
Mr. Lowery ever particularly took the grievor's concerns serious-
ly nor that he attempted to respond to them in a meaningful way.
By letter dated October 2, 1987 the grievor outlined to Mr.
Lowery the nature of his concerns, highlighting the issue of Form
35A. He requested a written response. This came in the form of
Appendix C. We hardly find Appendix C responsive to Mr. Jones'
concerns.
It became clear from Mr. Lowery's oral testimony that he
believed the Form 35A only represented a statement which had to
be true to the best of the deponent's ability and based on the
available information. This quite obviously begs the question of
what to do when the information is available. Indeed one of
the Employer's own witnesses, Ms, M. A. Moretta conceded that if
one could not stipulate the amount owing or in arrears one could not swear or commission a Form 35A, the exact position consis-
tently held by the grievor.
The grievor ultimately was assessed two (2) written warnings
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and a one (1) day suspension for his refusal to complete the
Taylor file. He susbsequently received a three (3) day suspen-
sion for refusing to file a Form 35A in the Bressette file, and a
five (5) day suspension for refusing to file one in the Desbiens
file. all were over the exact concern highlighted in his October
2, 1987 letter to Lowery.
The Employer called evidence as to what actions the grievor
could have taken to acquire financial information sufficient to
satisfy his conscience vis a vis the Form 35A declaration. Union
counsel quite correctly pointed out that information was neither
sought out nor certainly not in the Employer's mind at the time
the discipline was imposed and is thus irrelevant. The narrow
issue becomes did the Employer have just cause to impose disci-
pline on the grievor?
We find that it did not. The S.C.O.E.A. filing package is
Under the title put out by the Ministry of the Attorney General.
Instructions on Haw To Complete Statement of Arrears it states:
be absolutely accurate in stating the amounts You list
The Statement of Arrears is sworn under oath. You must
as not ha ving been paid Every payment which has not
been made must be identified individually.
(emphasis added)
The grievor was left in a very unpallatable position. His
supervisor*s instructions and those contained in the very package
he was being ordered to complete were at odds. The latter only
confirmed the grievor's belief that to follow the former vas to
perform or to counsel an illegal act, and to ignore the dictates
of his own conscience.
The Employer sought to invoke the "obey now, grieve later
doctrine, In the event of a subsequent civil or criminal action
one wonders what .defence this would leave available to the
grievor. (Fortunately this Board does not have to determine if
fear of one's supervisor is sufficient to constitute the defence
of necessity.)
We do not find this an approriate case for the aforemen-
tioned doctrine. We do not believe that the grievor's potential
liability could be cured by subsequent recourse to the grievance
procedure. Knowingly swearing an untrue affidavit is not a
breach of the collective agreement, but rather a breach of a
statute. Further we find that the Employer's orders to commission
and/or swear the Statements of Arrears in the Taylor, Bressette
and Desbiens cases were unreasonable and unfair in the circum-
stances. Indeed given the clear instructions in the S.C.O.E.A.
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filing package there is a strong argument that Mr. Lowery was
giving orders vhich were impossible for the grievor to follow.
The grievances are hereby allowed. All references to the
October 9, 1987, October 14, 1987, January 11, 1988, January 13,
1988 and January 13, 1988 disciplinary actions are to be expunged
from the grievors record and he is to be made whole for any monetary loss flowing. from their imposition. The Board will
remain seized in the event of any difficulty in the implementa-
tion of this award.
Dated at Toronto this 10th day of April, 1989.
t/
J. Forbes-Roberts, Vice-Chairperson
T.J. Thomson, Member
le
Request for Entorcernent
Form 35 Court fiel no.
at
Creditor
full name
I J
I the undersigned, make oath and say:
1. I seek to enforce the following order attach copy)
Date of order Court
2. The order is king enforced for the benefit of
Full name(s1
Court file no.
Relationship to creditor
3. I authorize the court to receive, record and pay out tome or my assignee all sums payable under the order, including costs.
4. The order is not in default.
or
The order is in default in the amount of S as of today.
5.
6.
7.
I request that the order be enforced against the debtor now/and automatically upon my future default, bv mans of a
notice of default requiring the debtor to file a statement of financial information, appear before the court to explain under
oath the default up to the date of that appearance and to pay into court the costs of the proceeding, incurred by me or
those acting on my behalf.
I also request that the debtor submit to an examination of assests and means if so directed by the clerk of the court.
request the court to, consider enforcement of this order by ordering any or all of the remedies set forth in the Family
Law Reform Act, induding imprisonment, as may seem appropriate to the court.
Provincial Court Statement of Arreat
(Family Division)
It On1arm
address
Creditor
Full name
1
portal code)
I, the undersigned, make oath and say:
Debtor
Full name
Address for service (srrset 6 number, municipality,
portal codcl
1. I am ?he creditor under the following - 0 order
Date of order bun
0 agreement filed with the court
Date of agreement Date filed
&4ttach copy of order/agreement)
2. The following amounts due under the ordedagreement have not been paid:
Date payment due Amount due Date paid
Court file no.
bun file no.
Amount paid Arreers
Total Arrears $
Total interest to date calculated at %
Sworn before at the of
in the of
Signature
This form is ro be signed before a lawyer, justice of
the mace, not;ry public or commissioner for raking
chis - day of ,19-.
A mmrnirsroner, etc.
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