HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012-1308.Marshall et al.13-05-13 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2012-1308, 2012-1309, 2012-1310
UNION#2012-0517-0044, 2012-0517-0045, 2012-0517-0046
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Marshall et al) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Randi H. Abramsky Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION David Wright
Ryder Wright Blair & Holmes LLP
Barristers and Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER Peter Dailleboust
Ministry of Government Services
Labour Practice Group
Counsel
HEARING April 22, 2013.
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Decision
[1] The Employer seeks to introduce into evidence inmate statements made in connection
with an investigation by the Ministry and the Correctional Investigation and Security Unit
(CISU) in regard to an alleged assault on an inmate by a Correctional Officer. As a result of that
investigation, the Correctional Officer who is alleged to have struck the inmate was discharged
and two other Correctional Officers who allegedly witnessed the event, but did not disclose that
during the investigation, were terminated. These disciplinary actions were grieved and the
grievances are presently before the Board. The Union opposes the Employer’s request.
[2] Specifically, the Employer seeks to introduce the witness statements of inmate Anthony
Taylor – the person allegedly struck – as well as the statements of other inmates who were in the
area at the time. The Employer recognizes that the statements are hearsay, but seeks to introduce
the statements for the truth of the matters asserted under the “principled” or “flexible” approach
to the hearsay rule set out in R. v. Khan [1990] 2 S.C.R. 531. The Employer submits that the
statements meet the tests of necessity and reliability, as established by the Supreme Court of
Canada. In the alternative, the Employer submits that the statements may be admitted into
evidence on the basis of Section 48(12)(f) of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, which permits an
arbitrator “to accept the oral or written evidence as the arbitrator or the arbitration board, as the
case may be, in its discretion considers proper, whether admissible in a court of law or not.”
Facts
[3] On December 6, 2011, an inmate in the immigration wing of the Toronto West Detention
Centre (TWDC), Anthony Taylor, alleged that a “Sikh” Correctional Officer had struck him
across the face during a strip search. An initial Occurrence Report was written by Inmate Taylor
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on December 6, 2011, and he was interviewed by Security Managers at the TWDC on December
13 and by CISU investigators on December 15, 2011. Mr. Taylor was deported to Trinidad in
2012 and his whereabouts are unknown. The Employer also seeks to introduce written
statements given to Security Managers at TWDC on December 15, 2011 by the following
inmates: Serguei Kouchner (deported and whereabouts unknown); Yitzhak Melchek (living in
Montreal); Arshad Muhammad, detained at Toronto West Detention Centre; Sergey Azarin
(deported to the Ukraine in 2011), Salah Dabah (living in Mississauga). Mr. Kouchner’s
statement was taken in his native language and translated on December 15, 2011. Verbal
statements were also provided to CISU investigators on January 5, 2012 by Inmate Andre Lewis
(deported and whereabouts unknown), Azarin, Kouchner, Melchek, and Muhammad, which the
Employer also wants to have admitted into evidence.
[4] Occurrence Reports are not written “under oath”, nor were the verbal statements given to
the Security Managers or the CSIU investigators. There is no evidence that any consequences
for lying were explained to the inmates. There was no opportunity for cross-examination, or
questioning by the grievors or their representatives. The evidence is unclear whether the inmates
had any opportunity to discuss among themselves what allegedly occurred to Inmate Taylor
during the strip search.
Reasons for Decision
[5] Having carefully considered the submissions of counsel and the case law provided, I
conclude that the Employer did not establish either necessity or reliability sufficient to warrant
an exception to the hearsay rule under R. v. Khan, supra, and the case law that follows that
decision. I do, however, find that the statements and interviews, even though hearsay, may be
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admitted into the record, under Section 48(12)(f) of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, and the
parties may argue what weight, if any, should be accorded to those statements at the conclusion
of the case.
A. The “Principled” or “Flexible Approach” under R. v. Khan
[6] In R. v. Khan, supra, the Supreme Court of Canada adopted a “flexible approach” to the
admission of hearsay evidence, provided that two general requirements were met: necessity and
reliability. That case involved the alleged sexual assault of a three and a half year old child by
her doctor. The child was not permitted to testify and the Crown sought to introduce a statement
that the child made to her mother very shortly after the alleged incident – that he said “open your
mouth”, and “put his birdie in my mouth, shook it and peed in my mouth.” A semen stain was
found on the child’s clothes. The trial judge ruled the statement inadmissible because it did not
fall within any of the recognized exceptions to the hearsay rule. The Supreme Court of Canada
determined that although the trial judge correctly determined that the statement did not fall
within the “spontaneous declaration” exception to the hearsay rule, it adopted a “more flexible
approach, rooted in the principle and the policy underlying the hearsay rule rather than the
strictures of traditional exceptions.”
[7] The first requirement was that the “reception of the hearsay statement is necessary” –
defined as “reasonably necessary.” (Id. at par. 37). The inadmissibility of the child’s evidence
“might be one basis for a finding of necessity” but there could be others as well such as a
“psychological assessment that testimony in court might be traumatic for the child or harm the
child…” (Id.) The second requirement was “whether the evidence is reliable.” The Court
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determined that the child’s statement to her mother should have been received into evidence,
stating at par. 42
It was necessary, the child’s viva voce evidence having been rejected. It was also reliable. The
child had no motive to falsify her story, which emerged naturally and without prompting.
Moreover, the fact that she could not be expected to have knowledge of such sexual acts
imbues her statement with its own peculiar stamp of reliability. Finally, her statement was
corroborated by real evidence….
[8] The Court cautioned, however that in determining the admissibility of the evidence, “the
judge must have regard to the need to safeguard the interests of the accused.” (Id. at par. 39) In
addition, admissibility did not determine the weight that should be given to the evidence.
Admissibility was “subject always to considerations affecting the weight that should be accorded
to such evidence.” (Id. at par. 41).
[9] This “flexible approach”, based on necessity and reliability, has been followed since the
Court’s decision in R. v. Khan, supra, in R. v. Khelawon [2006] 2 S.C.R. 787 (S.C.C.); R. v.
Smith [1992] 2 S.C.R. 915 (S.C.C.); and Starr v. R., 2000 S.C.C. 40 (S.C.C.). Each case is based
on the Court’s assessment of the two requirements.
[10] In my view, the Court’s decision in R. v. Khelawon, supra, is particularly instructive. In
that case, the manager of a retirement home was alleged to have assaulted and uttered death
threats against a resident “S”. S reported what had occurred to an employee of the retirement
home, who took him to see a doctor and then to the police where S gave a videotaped statement.
The statement was not under oath, but S stated that he understood it was important that he tell the
truth and that he could be charged if he did not tell the truth. A follow-up investigation by the
police revealed four additional resident complaints of assault against the accused. By the time of
the trial, however, four complainants, including S, had died and the fifth was no longer
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competent to testify. At issue was whether the statements provided to the police should have
been admitted into evidence.
[11] The Court started with the premise that hearsay evidence “is presumptively
inadmissible.” Khelawon, supra at par. 59 (emphasis in original). The Court determined that the
traditional rule against hearsay evidence reflects “considerable wisdom and judicial experience”
because it ensures that litigants will generally have the opportunity to confront adverse witnesses
through cross-examination. There is an “assumption that sources of untrustworthiness or
inaccuracy can best be brought to light under the test of cross-examination” and “[i]t is mainly
because of the inability to put hearsay evidence to that test, that it is presumptively
inadmissible.” (Id. at par. 47). The more flexible approach in regard to hearsay was to ensure that
strict adherence to the hearsay rules would not impede justice by excluding evidence that was
necessary and reliable - “to ensure that they [the rules of evidence] facilitate rather than impede
the goals of truth seeking, judicial efficiency and fairness in the adversarial process.” (Id. at par.
59) Trial fairness is important and it encompasses both the defendant’s right to make full answer
and defense, but also society’s interest in having the trial process arrive at the truth. (Id. at par.
48) The Court explained at par. 49:
The broader spectrum of interests encompassed in trial fairness is reflected in the twin
principles of necessity and reliability. The criterion of necessity is founded on society’s
interest in getting at the truth. Because it is not always possible to meet the optimal test of
contemporaneous cross-examination, rather than simply losing the value of the evidence, it
becomes necessary in the interests of justice to consider whether it should nonetheless be
admitted in its hearsay form. The criterion of reliability is about ensuring the integrity of
the trial process. The evidence, though needed, is not admissible unless it is sufficiently
reliable to overcome the dangers arising from the difficulty of testing it. … In some cases,
because of the circumstances in which it came about, the contents of the hearsay statement
may be so reliable that contemporaneous cross-examination of the declarant would add
little if anything to the process. In other cases, the evidence may not be so cogent but the
circumstances will allow for sufficient testing of evidence by means other than
contemporaneous cross-examination. In these circumstances, the admission of the
evidence will rarely undermine trial fairness.
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[12] The onus is on the party who seeks to adduce the hearsay evidence to establish both
necessity and reliability, on the balance of probabilities. Khelawon, at par. 47. Further, in
determining admissibility it is “threshold” reliability that must be established, not “ultimate
reliability.” (Id. at par. 50) Quoting from the decision in Re Starr, supra at pars. 215-217, the
Court stated at par. 51: “Threshold reliability is concerned not with whether the statement is true
or not; that is a question of ultimate reliability. Instead, it is concerned with whether or not the
circumstances surrounding the statement itself provide circumstantial guarantees of
trustworthiness.”(emphasis in original).
[13] The Court in Re Khelawon further stated that threshold reliability is usually met in two
different ways. One is “to show that there is no real concern about whether the statement is true
or not because of the circumstances in which it came about.” (Khelawon, par. 62). The other way
“is to show that no real concern arises from the fact that the statement is presented in hearsay
form because, in the circumstances, its truth and accuracy can nonetheless be sufficiently
tested.”(Id. at par. 63) The Court then referred back to the Khan case as an example “where the
reliability requirement was met because the circumstances in which the statement came about
provided sufficient comfort in its truth and accuracy.” (Id. at par. 66) The statement was made
almost immediately after the event, removing any concern about inaccurate memory. The child
had no reason to lie, alleviating any concern about sincerity. The statement was made naturally
and without prompting, so that there was no real danger of the mother influencing the statement.
Further, the event described was one that would normally be outside the experience of a young
child, giving it a “peculiar stamp of reliability.” Lastly, the child’s statement was objectively
confirmed by a semen stain on her clothing.
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[14] Quoting from another decision, R. v. Smith, supra at p. 933, in which the Court admitted
some, but not all, of the statements made during telephone calls that the declarant, a murder
victim, said to her mother shortly before she was killed, the Court stated that the circumstances
under which the statement is made must “substantially negate the possibility that the declarant
was untruthful or mistaken.”
[15] The Court also added, citing R. v.B.(K.G.), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 740, that the Court must be
satisfied that “the statement was not the product of coercion in any form, whether involving
threats, promises, excessively leading questions by the investigator or other person in a position
of authority, or some other forms of investigatory misconduct.” (Khelawon, supra at par. 87). It
also noted that “a witness’s testimony before a preliminary inquiry will satisfy the test for
threshold reliability, since the fact that it was given under oath and subject to contemporaneous
cross-examination in the hearing involving the same parties and mainly the same issues will
provide sufficient guarantees of trustworthiness.” (Id. at par. 91)
[16] Applying these factors to the facts before it, the Court in Khelawon determined that the
hearsay statements of the complainants should not be admitted. While the test of necessity was
met because of the death of S prior to trial, the statement was not deemed sufficiently reliable.
There was no opportunity for cross-examination at the trial or before, since he did not testify at
the preliminary hearing and there was no attempt made to preserve his evidence. There was only
the police video. The statement was not inherently trustworthy as in the child’s statement in
Khan. On the contrary, in the Court’s view, the circumstances raised “a number of serious issues
such that it would be impossible to say that the evidence was unlikely to change under cross-
examination.”(Id. at par. 107). S was elderly and frail and his mental capacity was in issue. His
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injuries were consistent with either an assault or a fall, and there had been earlier complaints of
dizziness, weakness and fatigue. The employee who had assisted him had recently been advised
that she was losing her job, and thus had a motive to discredit the accused. The extent to which
this employee influenced S was in dispute. Finally, S had his own issues with the management of
the retirement home, as revealed in his video statement to the police. The Court stated that “[t]he
absence of an oath and the simple ‘yes’ in answer to the police officer’s question as to whether
he understood that it was important to tell the truth do not given much insight on whether he
truly understood the consequences for Mr. Khelawon of making his statement.” (Id. at par. 107)
In these circumstances, S’s unavailability for cross-examination “posed significant limitations on
the accused’s ability to test the evidence and, in turn, the trier of fact’s ability to properly assess
its worth.”(Id.)
[17] Other judicial decisions explore the issue of necessity. In R. v. Orpin [2002] Docket
C30458 (Ont. C.A.), a witness had moved to the United States and when contacted by the police
stated that she did not want to return to Canada to testify. There was no further attempt to pursue
the matter, and the prosecutor did not explore “the possibility of compelling her testimony by
taking commission evidence.” (Id. at par. 45). The trial judge had admitted her earlier statement
to a professional oversight body on the basis that she had refused to come back to Canada and
was therefore unavailable for trial. The Court of Appeal determined that the witnesses’ “refusal”
to come had not been established, concluding that the evidence only showed that she “did not
want to come and the police officer did not pursue the matter” and there was “no evidence before
the trial judge that her testimony was non-compellable.”
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[18] Similarly, in R. v. O’Connor [2002] Docket C30841 (Ont. C.A.), the Court overturned a
trial judge’s decision to admit hearsay evidence on the basis that the witness, as an American
citizen, was not a compellable witness. Even though the appellant had conceded “necessity”, the
Court had “serious reservations” about that, stating at par. 57:
It is not sufficient for the Crown to simply show that a witness is not compellable because he
or she is out of the jurisdiction, to satisfy the necessity requirement. Efforts should be made to
pursue other options (teleconferencing or taking commission evidence are two) before one
reaches the conclusion that admitting evidence by way of hearsay statement is necessary.
Necessity cannot be equated with the unavailability of a witness. Rather, it must be shown
that hearsay is the only available means of putting the evidence before the court. [citations
omitted].
[19] Applying all of these factors to the instant matter, I conclude that the Employer has not
established, on the balance of probabilities, that the tests of necessity or reliability have been
met. In terms of Mr. Taylor, there was no evidence concerning efforts that have been made to
locate him in Trinidad, or if he is willing to testify by videoconference or commission. I accept
that it would be inappropriate for the Employer to bring Mr. Taylor back to Canada for this
hearing, but there is no evidence that attempts were made to determine if his testimony could be
obtained through alternative means. The same is true for the other inmates who have been
deported from Canada. Finally, I note that one of the inmates is in Montreal and two are in
Ontario. The evidence does not establish the necessity for relying on their statements.
[20] Similarly, the evidence does not establish, on the balance of probabilities, that the written
and verbal statements of the inmates are sufficiently reliable to admit them for the truth of their
content, without the ability of the Union to cross-examine them. The statements were not under
oath. There is no indication that any consequences for lying were explained to them. There is no
ability to observe demeanor. There was no opportunity for the grievors, or their representatives,
to cross-examine the inmates on their recollection, vantage point, or potential motives to
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embellish or fabricate. There is no ability to determine whether anyone influenced their
recollection of the events that day. Under these circumstances “it would be impossible to say that
the evidence was unlikely to change under cross-examination.” Admission of the statements for
the truth of their content would therefore pose a significant limitation on the grievors’ ability to
test the evidence and, in turn, on this Board’s ability to properly assess its worth.
[21] Consequently, for these reasons, I conclude that the written and verbal statements cannot
be entered into evidence for the truth of their content under the “flexible approach” set out in R.
v. Khan, supra.
B. Admission under Section 48(12)(f) of the Labour Relations Act
[22] Nevertheless, the statements are admissible in this arbitration hearing. Under Section
48(12)(f) of the Ontario Labour Relations Act, I have the authority to admit relevant evidence,
even if it might not be accepted in a court of law. This includes hearsay evidence. Re OPSEU
(Gillis et al.) and Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, GSB No. 2003-1520
(Abramsky); Re OPSEU (Bijowski) and Community Safety and Correctional Services, 2012
CanLII 67538 (Dissanayake); Re West Fraser Electro/Mechanical Ltd. and C.E.P.U, Local
1133(Dan Hunt Grievance), unreported decision dated Sept. 6, 2009(Coleman); Re Canada
(Attorney General) and Basra (2010), 190 L.A.C. (4th) 97 (Fed. C.A.); Re Hunter Drums Ltd.
and U.S.W.A., Local 6868 (2000) CLB 12569 (Dissanayake); Re Girvin and Consumers Gas Co.
(1973), 40 D.L.R. (3d) 509 (Ont. Div. Ct.).
[23] The written and verbal inmate statements form part of the investigation record upon
which Superintendent O’Connell’s decision to discharge the grievors was based. Under the case
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law cited above, they are clearly relevant and may be considered. The parties, at the end of the
hearing, may argue what weight, if any, should be placed on these statements.
Conclusion:
For all the reasons set out above, I conclude:
1. The written and verbal statements made by the inmates are admissible under Section
48(12)(f) of the Labour Relations Act, but they are hearsay.
2. They are not admissible for the truth of their content under the “flexible approach”
outlined by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Khan.
3. The Employer did not establish, on the balance of probabilities, that the statements meet
the required standards of “necessity” or “reliability.”
Dated at Toronto this 13th day of May 2013.
Randi H. Abramsky, Vice-Chair