HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011-3489.McGrady.13-07-03 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
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Commission de
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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GSB#2011-3489; 2011-3492
UNION#2011-0164-0034; 2012-0164-0001
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(McGrady) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario) Employer
BEFORE Michael Lynk Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Val Patrick
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
FOR THE EMPLOYER Adrienne Couto
Liquor Control Board of Ontario
Counsel
HEARING June 24, 2013
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Decision
I Introduction
[1] Sean McGrady was employed by the Liquor Control Board of Ontario in its London warehouse
from August 2001 until his dismissal in January 2012. His dismissal letter, dated 18 January
2012, alleged that he had violated the LCBO’s policies on discrimination and harassment
prevention and on workplace violation by driving by the home of his supervisor, Ms. Kelly Scott,
on Boxing Day 2011. The Employer took the position that, given Mr. McGrady’s disciplinary
history, his past instances of inappropriate and intimidating behaviour towards Ms. Scott, and his
inability to provide a cogent explanation as to why he was driving by Ms. Scott’s home on
Boxing Day in a secluded London neighbourhood shortly after being issued a 15 day suspension
rising from his behaviour towards her, his intent was to seek out Ms. Scott’s residence in order to
intimidate her and/or to plan some retaliatory action against her. The Union and Mr. McGrady
deny all of these allegations, and are contesting both the 15 day suspension and the dismissal
through the arbitral process.
[2] As a standard procedure in labour arbitration practise, the LCBO assumed the burden of proof in a
discipline hearing, and led its evidence in support of both the 15 day suspension and the dismissal
that it imposed upon Mr. McGrady. At the conclusion of the Employer’s evidence, which lasted
three and a half hearing days, the Union moved a non-suit motion. It maintained that the LCBO
had not met the accepted prima facie standard of proof with regards to the dismissal, and urged
me to accept the motion. (It did not question the sufficiency of the Employer’s evidence
respecting the 15 day suspension.) The LCBO argued that its evidence did satisfy the standard,
and requested the dismissal of the Union’s motion.
II Award
[3] The legal principles that govern the application of a motion for a non-suit have been set out in a
number of rulings at the Grievance Settlement Board and in the general arbitral common law.
The current state of the law on non-suit motions at the Grievance Settlement Board is aptly stated
in three leading decisions: (Ontario (Ministry of Finance) and O.P.S.E.U. (Gauntlett), [2008]
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O.G.S.B.A. No. 133 (Gray); Ontario (Ministry on Transportation) and O.P.S.E.U. (Whan et al),
[2007] O.G.S.B. A. No. 7 (Dissanayake); and Ontario (Ministry of the Attorney General) and
O.P.S.E.U. (Gareh), [2002] O.G.S.B. A. No. 54 (Brown):
[4] In Whan, Vice-Chair Dissanayake laid out the following principles to be considered in a non-suit
motion:
1. The Board will not put the moving party to an election of whether or not to call its own evidence
as a matter of course. The appropriateness of putting the moving party to such an election will be
determined based upon the considerations of expedition and fairness in the particular
circumstances of each case.
2. In a non-suit motion, the standard of proof expected from a responding party is that of a prima
facie case, which is significantly lower than the standard of proof on a balance of probabilities.
3. In determining whether a prima facie case has been made out, the test is whether some evidence
exists to support the claim, which requires an answer or explanation from the other side.
4. In applying the standard of a prima facie case, any conflicts in or doubts about the facts must be
determined in favour of the party responding to the motion.
5. In assessing the existence of a prima facie case, viva voce evidence as well as all documentary
evidence before the Board must be considered.
6. In examining the evidence before it, the Board will not assess the quality, reliability or the
credibility of the evidence.
7. Where a non-suit motion is granted, a written decision with reasons will follow. However, where
a motion is denied, no reasons, oral or written, will be issued
.
[5] In Gauntlett, Vice-Chair Gray, after citing these principles, quoted some useful additional
commentary from Vice-Chair Brown’s 2002 ruling in Gareh:
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The test to be applied is illuminated by the decision in Gareh, 1998-1665 etc. (Brown), where the
parties agreed that:
my task in ruling on a motion for non-suit is not to determine whether the union has proven its
case on the balance of probabilities, at least not in the way I would make that sort of determination
after both sides had closed their cases
and that:
at this stage in the proceedings the credibility of the union’s witnesses should not be
scrutinized and all inferences reasonably supported by direct evidence should be made in
favour of the union and grievor
but disagreed about whether there had to be “sufficient evidence” or merely “some
evidence.” In the course of resolving that dispute Vice-Chair Brown made some useful
observations at pp. 4-7 of his decision about the test and what courts have said about it:
The standard of “sufficient” evidence was adopted by the Ontario Court of Appeal in Hall v.
Pemberton (1974), 5 O.R. (2d) 438, page 439, where the Court quoted with
approval the following passage from Parfitt v. Lawless (1872), 41 L.J.P.&M. 68:
I conceive, therefore, that in discussing whether there is any case
evidence to go to the jury, what the Court has to consider is this, whether,
assuming the evidence to be true, and adding to the direct proof all such
inferences of fact as in the exercise of reasonable intelligence the jury
would be warranted in drawing from it, there is sufficient to support the
issue. (pages 72; emphasis added)
The only reasonable interpretation of “sufficient to support the issue” is adequate to
allow a jury to rule in favour of the party resisting the non-suit. In other words, a judge
ruling on a non-suit motion in a jury trial, assuming witnesses to be credible and making
all reasonable inferences in favour of the party resisting the non-suit, must determine
whether the evidence is “sufficient” in the sense that it could lead a properly instructed
jury to rule in favour of that party.
The standard of “sufficient” evidence was again applied by the Court of Appeal in Re Gallant and
Roman Catholic Separate School Board of District of Sudbury (1985) 56 O.R. (2d) 160:
In dealing with such a motion, a judge must decide whether sufficient prima facie
evidence has been presented by the applicant. At this stage, the plaintiff [opposing the
motion] is entitled to have the facts interpreted in the manner which is most favourable to
him or her: Hall v. Pemberton ... (page 167; emphasis added)
In advocating a lower standard of “some evidence,” counsel for the union relies upon
the decision of the Divisional Court in Ontario v. OPSEU (Cahoon), (1990), 37 O.A.C.
218 quashing a decision of the Grievance Settlement Board which had allowed a motion for a non-
suit brought by the union in that case. The Court wrote:
The Board began by setting out its understanding of a non-suit. While it
held that a prima facie case had not been made out, its reasons make it
clear that it believed a prima facie case had to be established on the
balance of probabilities. This is, of course, incorrect. .... The standard of
proof on a non-suit is that of a prima facie case, not a case on the balance
of probabilities. If a prima facie case has been shown a non-suit must not
be granted. It is erroneous to determine a non-suit on the basis of the
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higher onus of the balance of probabilities. A prima facie case is no more
than a case for the defendant to answer.
...
A motion for non-suit in modern practice is made by the defendant,
contending that the trier of fact should not proceed to evaluate the
evidence in the normal way, but should dismiss the action. The defendant
must satisfy the trial judge that the evidence is such that no jury acting
judicially could find in favour of the plaintiff. The decision of the judge in
both jury and non-jury actions is a question of law. Sopinka, The Trial of
An Action, p. 124 (Butterworths).
The “normal way” in a civil action would be on the balance of probabilities. Where a
judge is sitting with a jury, the issue is whether there is some evidence to support the
claim. If there is, the case goes to the jury. If there is none, it does not. (emphasis added)
The Divisional Court’s comment that a motion for non-suit should be dismissed if there is “some
evidence to support the claim” must be interpreted in the context of the immediately preceding
passage from Sopinka’s The Trial of an Action saying the issue to be determined by the judge is
whether “no jury acting judicially could find in favour of the plaintiff.” Based upon the Divisional
Court’s apparent approval of this passage, I understand the Court’s reference to “some evidence to
support the claim” to mean evidence which could lead a jury (or some other trier of fact) to rule in
favour of the party opposing the motion, if the trier of fact found that party’s witnesses to be
credible and made all reasonable inferences in its favour. This standard is no different in substance
than the test of “sufficient” evidence utilized by the Court of Appeal in the Hall and Gallant cases.
In the case at hand, I must decide the motion for non-suit as well as serve as the trier of fact. At
this stage, my task is to determine whether the evidence presented could be sufficient to lead me to
rule in favour of the union, if I assumed its witnesses to be credible and drew in its favour all
inferences reasonably supported by direct evidence.
It is not logically possibly to make this determination without taking into account the applicable
standard of proof which is on the balance of probabilities. The question to be decided is whether I
could rule that the union has proven its case on the balance of probabilities, if its witnesses are
believed and it is granted the benefit of all reasonable inferences. The decision-making process on
a motion for non-suit cannot ignore the standard of proof, but this process entails an application of
that standard which differs markedly from the way it would be applied after both parties had
closed their case. At that point, in determining whether the union had proven its case on the
balance of probabilities, I would scrutinize the credibility of witnesses, and I would not draw
inferences so as to resolve doubts in favour of the union, because the benefit of doubt should not
be granted to the party bearing the onus of proof.
[6] Vice-Chair Gray then went on to apply the “sufficient evidence” test in the case of circumstantial
evidence, and ruled against the motion for a non-suit.
[7] In addition to the above-mentioned decisions, the parties also relied upon the following non-suit
rulings from the G.S.B., which I have read and considered: Liquor Control Board of Ontario and
O.P.S.E.U. (Thompson), [2012] O.G.S.B.A. No. 155 (Brown); Ontario (Ministry of Children and
Youth Services) and O.P.S.E.U. (Gill), [2012] O.G.S.B.A. No. 100 (Harris); Ontario (Ministry of
Revenue) and O.P.S.E.U. (Allin), [2010] O.G.S.B.A. No. 125 (Dissanayake); Ontario (Ministry
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of Transportation) and O.P.S.E.U. (McCormick), [2010] O.G.S.B.A. No. 185 (Stephens); and
Ontario (Ministry of Finance) and O.P.S.E.U. (O’Connor), [2008] O.G.S.B.A. No. 19 (Lynk).
[8] As well, the parties submitted to me a number of arbitral cases on harassment, intimidation and
threats. I will not cite them here, but I have carefully reviewed all of them in the course of
deciding this motion.
[9] Applying the “sufficient evidence” standard to the evidence led in this case, I have decided to
dismiss the Union’s motion for a non-suit. I am satisfied that the evidence entered by the
employer is sufficient to prove its case on the prevailing standard. However, as I stated to the
parties when delivering my bottom-line decision orally to them, this ruling does not foreshadow
my ultimate decision on the dismissal grievance, one way or the other, as the standard of proof to
be applied at the end of the case will be distinctly different.
[10] This matter shall continue on the dates already determined by the Board and the parties.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 3nd day of July 2013.
Michael Lynk, Vice-Chair