HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-1392.Giberson et al.92-05-25OPSEU. (Giberson et al)
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Grievor
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of the Attorney General)
Employer
BEFORE: J. Samuels .Vice-Chairperson
M. Lyons Member
F. Collict Member
FOR THE
GRIEVOR
T. Hadwen
Counsel
Cavalluzzo, Hayes & Shilton
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR TNB
BNPWYBR
G. Gledhill
Staff Relations Consultant
Ministry of the Attorney General
HEARING April 30, 1991
April 30, 1992
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The grievors are five of the six salaried Sheriffs Officers in the
Toronto Region. They are classified as Sheriffs Officer 2 and they claim
that they are improperly classified. They ask for an Order that an
appropriate classification be developed to cover their positions.
There are also several fee-for-service officers, whose work is very
similar to the grievors’. They have recently been found by the Public
Service Relations Tribunal to be members of the Public Service, and their
compensation is now under negotiation.
By and large, the grievors’ work consists of enforcing a wide range
of Court orders and writs.
About 70% of their time is taken up with the enforcement of Writs
of Seizure and Sale. The Courts issue these writs in favor of judgment
creditors, and the Court orders the Sheriff to enforce the collection of
monies owing to the creditor. The grievors will speak with judgment
debtors to try to arrange payment, assess the value of the debtor’s assets for
purposes of seizure and sale, seize such assets as they think appropriate,
arrange sale of the assets and payment of sufficient proceeds to answer the
creditor’s claim and the Sheriffs costs of the process.
Other significant orders which they enfome are:
l “Jane and John Doe Orders” which anise where a plaintiff claims
that his/her copyright or trademark is being violated and the
Court orders that unknown defendants cease and desist this
violation, and authorizes the Sheriff to seize any goods which
violate the copyright or trademark. Par instance, the grievors
have been asked to search out the persons and property involved
in a violation of the Cattier label (watches and other objects
labeled as “Cartier”, but not manufactured or licenced by
Cartier); and they have been asked to search out the persons and
property involved in the sale of souvenirs bearing the name and
symbol. of a rock group, when the rock group had not given a
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licence for. hese souvenirs. Enforcement of these orders has
involved the grievors in investigation (including posing in plain-
clothing as prospective customers), tracking down the source of
goods, and seizure of property.
l Injunctions, where the Court orders that someone cease doing
some act or to permit some act to be done, For instance, the
grievors were ordered out a number of times to keep the Court-
ordered peace in .front of Dr. Morgenthaler’s abortion clinic,
when pro-choice and anti-abortion groups gathered, creating a
potentially explosive situation. During one period, one or more
of the grievors was on the scene every day.
And the grievors were required to attend at a Sikh temple, where
opposing factions claimed possession of the place and the Court
ordered that possession he given to one faction. The grievors
were there to help in the enforcement of the order and to keep the
peace. They would call on the police if additional officers were
required.
l “Anton Piller Orders”, where the court grants aninterlocutory
order to enable a plaintiffs solicitor to search the defendant’s
documents and property and seize certain materials related to the
matter before the Court. These orders are granted to prevent the
loss of evidence necessary to the determination of the case. The
grievors will attend at the defendant’s premises to keep the peace
and to assist in enforcement of the Court’s order.
The grievors are “peace officers” under the Criminal Code and
provincial offences legislation, and they have the power of arrest. They
wear uniforms which make them look very much like police officers,
except that they do not bear firearms. They carry night-sticks. They have
two-way radios, which are equipped with an emergency call feature (if the
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officer pulls a grenade-like pin, a signal is relayed to the Sheriffs dispatch
office that the officer is in trouble).
The grievers’ claim arises from the fact that their work has changed
over the last fifteen years. The work now involves more emphasis on their
role as “peace officers” than it did before. It is only in the later years that
they were involved in the enforcement of “Jane and John Doe Orders”,
“Anton Piller Orders”, or Injunctions which took them into situations like
the Morgenthaler clinic or the Sikh temple. Their day-to-day operations
have become more like policing than was the case ten or fifteen years ago.
It is for this reason that their clothing was changed from plain clothes to
the type of uniform and equipment they wear and carry now. This change
in appearance came about after a grievance was filed in 1986, alleging that
the Ministry was not taking reasonable measures for the health and safety
of the officers. Now the grievors arrive on the scene looking like persons
in authority.
The grievors say, and management agrees, that their work has
become more difficult because debtors and others are .more litigious now.
There is less simple compliance with the demands of the Sheriffs Officers
than there used to be. And there is now a greater apprehension of the
possibility of assault on a Sheriffs Officer. We mention these points, but,
in our view, these changes do not have much significance when it comes to
determining the grievors’ classification. Their responsibilities and day-to-
day duties do not change merely because it is more difficult to get the job
done. However, the greater difficulty and. stress involved in the
performance of the work may be a matter to be taken into account when
salaries are negotiated.
The class standard for Sheriffs Officer 2 reads as follows:
This class covers positions of employees
who execute Writs of Fi Fa, and perform other
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functions connected with the Sheriffs Office, such
as escorting pnsoners, serving legal documents
pertaining to civil and criminal litigation, serving
Notices of Arrest of Vessel and reading Injunction
to Union Officials, etc,. These employees work
with little supervision. They receive documents
from the Sheriffs Office set priorities and time of
visits, interview defendants in Writs of Fi Fa to
determine whether full or partial payment can be
made to satisfy judgement and expenses, decide
whether parties possess goods and chattels suitable
for seizure, seize goods and arrange removal to a
pre-determined location, serve Notices to Vacate
and evict tenants where notice has been ignored.
In addition, they prepare reports on
execution of Writs and Orders and arrange
meetings between defendants, plaintiffs and their
Solicitors. They may be required to apprehend
persons in execution of a Sheriffs Warrent (sic)
or conduct public auctions for the sale of seized
goods. They also communicate with legal firms to
exchange or obtain further information.
These employees spend at least 70% of their
time fin the execution of Writs of Fi Fa with at
least 25% of this time involving Seizures,
Evictions, Sheriffs Sales. Because of the nature of
the work, this frequently takes place after normal
working hours.
SKILLS AND KNOWLEDGE NEEDED:
These employees require persistance (sic)
and patience, and need to use considerable
initiative and judgement in the performance of
their duties. Maturity, stability and the ability to
deal effectively and firmly with people are
essential. Because of the possibility of physical
assault, they need to be in good physical condition
and able to withstand unusual provocation.
Are the grievor’s properly classified as Sheriffs Officer 2?
In our view, they are not. The standard does not capture a very
significant element of the grievor’s current duties and responsibilities-
their role as “peace officers” pure and simple. When they enforce a “John
and Jane Doe Order”, they are called on to perform a level of investigation
which is signifuxntly different from the type of writs and orders .which
were contemplated when the standard was written in July 1971. when the
grievors attend at the Morgenthaler Clinic or the Sikh temple, they are
called on to act as “peace officers” in a way which was not contemplated
and does not appear in the standard :for Sheriffs Officer 2. And these tasks
are significant to their work.
It may be that they still spend 70% of their time enforcing Writs of
Seizure and Sale, but these other duties and responsibilities are not
marginal. These other matters are now part of the core of the grievors’
work.
The grievors go about their daily business every working minute as
“peace officers” -dressed and equipped appropriately to handle the
situations in which they find themselves. It is their range of tasks which is
critical, not merely the fact that they are dressezd like peace officers. This
is a qualitatively different job than it was when the standard was written in
1971.
We order that the Ministry prepare a class standard appropriate for
the grievers, and that this be done within a reasonable time. After the new
standard is written, the parties will negotiate suitable salaries, and we order
that the grievors receive compensation so that they will have been paid
according to the new salary levels from twenty days before their
grievances were filed on June 27, 1990. They should also receive interest
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on any sum which ought to have been paid at a rate of 8% compounded
annually from the date on which the sum ought to have been paid to the
date on which it is paid,
While we leave the writing of the new standard to the Employer, we
have a brief comment to make concerning this. Though we heard no
evidence concerning the work of Sheriffs Officers elsewhere than
Toronto, it may be the case that, in Toronto, these officers face situations
which are quite different from elsewhere. In particular, we have the
feeling that in smaller centres ,there is much less of the type of “peace
officer“ work which is so significant in Toronto-the under-cover
investigation involved with “John and Jane Doe Orders” and the peace-
keeping at the Morgenthaler Clinic~and the Sikh temple. If our feeling is
correct, then it may be useful to write the new standard so that it applies
only to Sheriffs Officers in Toronto, or, in large centres with similar
problems.
We will remain seized to deal with any matters arising out of our
orders.
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Done at London, Ontario, this 2 5th day of nay
, 1992.