HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-0097.Worsley, Daigle & Milgate.89-10-10 ONTA RIO EMPL o YES DE LA COURONNE
'"' CROWN EMPLOYEES OE L'ONTARIO · ' ',
GRIfiVANCE C,OMMIOSION DE
SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT
BOARD' DES GRIEFS
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO, oNTARIO. M.SG 1Z8. SUITE2100 TELEPHONE/T~:I..~'PHONE
180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST, TORONTO, (ONTARIO) M~G IZ8- BUREAU 2100 (416) 598-0688
, *. ' 97/89, 98/89, ,256'/89
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION .-
· · Under
THE CROWN E~iPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between
OkBEU~ (Worsley/Daigle/Milgate)
" Grievor - and -
The Crown'in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control of Board)
Employer
Before:
' ' .P. Knopf Vice-Chairperson
· . .. M. Vorster Member
,' G. Milley Member
For the Grievor: E. Mitchell
Counsel
K'oskle & Minsky
Barristers & Solicitors
J. Miles'
President
Ontario Liquor Board
Employees Union
For the Employer: R. Little
Counsel
Hicks Morley Hamilton
Stewart Storie
Barristers & Solicitors
Hearing: July 28, 1989
DECISION
This case involves three grievors and the Union's
dispute with the Employer over the calculation of their
accumulated, seniority. ~All three Grievors are classified as
"casual staff". The p.arties agree that under the collective
agreement, 'the seniority of casual employees is calculated on
the basis of' "hours. worked", Deing~ hours actually worked.
Article 32.5 reads: ~"
For~the purpose:of.Article 32.4, 32.7' and 21.5(D),
the seniority of .a casual employee shall be
calculaLted· from his first day of work of his most
recent date of h£re on the basis of total hours
worked, ~ut no seniority shall accumulate in any
calendar year in which a casual works less than
400 hours. A seniority list of the casual
employees assigned to work unit or department shall
be posted twice .al year.
However, these grie'vors have Dean workinG at the Durham
warehouse facility. In late 1987, a seniority list for the
warehouse was postad creditin9 thes~. three grievors with
hours accumulated while off work On a Workers' Compensation
claim. The next seni6rity list published for the warehouse
did not include, these workers' Compensation hours and the
Employer takes' ~]%a~ position that the grievors' seniority
rights 'should'~only b'e determined in accordance with the
collective agreemen['.'"'.The Union says the Employer is
estopped from relyi~g~.upon the collective agreement and that
the grievors' seniority accumulated under the Durham
Warehouse practice now cannot De ~taken away from them.
There is no real dispute over the relevant facts.
The collective agreement applies province-wide to five
warehouses, 650 stores, and several head office units. The
Durham warehouse opeaed in 1985. It has a permanent staff of
about 150 employees and a casual staff of approximately 24.
The seniority accumulated by the casuals is of great
significance ~to them because it affects their layoff and
recall rights, their entrance to the permanent work force and
-
their preference for job assi§nments. In 'the past, the Union
'-did: hOC directly get seniority 1isCs .l~repa're~ by ~he
-Employer. The" Un[on'received these t'nro~9~ 'me local
stewards. The understandin9 of the: Union President, Don
Miles,-was ~at since [985, the Durham-warehouse was
c'rediting Workers' Compensation time..o~f .towards the
seniority of casuals. Mr. Miles got. this-impression through
workers from the' shop· f. loor and thlrOugh an"unnamed management
person who said that the placement of one pe:son on the
s~niority list would nOt alter while he was absent on a
'Workers' Compensation claim.. However, no one in manaQement
ever directly .said tha~ the warehouse was crediCing Workers'
~ Compensation absences Cowards seniority until the issuance of
a senioriCy list oa ~ovember 30, 1987 which clearly credits
.alll three gri~vors with "earned hours" Jccumulated while
absent on' a WCB claim.
' ' But early in 1988,. the Employer and [he Union me: for
"purposes· of clarifying p~omotion procedures. This involved
the-fixing of senior~ti; lists ia the various ·locations
throughout the Province. The Office of the Director of Human
Resources Administration began generating seniority lists for
all the locations and giving them to the Union to check for
'discrepancies. The uncontradicted evidence of Bill
MacDowell, General Mamager of the Durham war:=.house, is that
all decisiOns involvin9 seniority rights ~hereafter were made
on'the basis of :~e list generated from the Director's
office. This new list did not credi~ amy of the ~rievo~s
with any hours accumulated on Workers' Compensation leave.
However, the Union was never formally notified that the
Employer had changed its position wi th regarJ ~o the
senlority of the Durham casuals.
But this change in position significantlf affected
~he three grievors. The seniority list posted in December of
1988 only credited hours actually worked. All three 9rievors
have had significant absences due to Workers' Compensation
injuries. Prior to December of i988, Mr. Worsley had been
listed' as second on the seniority list. However, he was
called in to see the Shipping Manager at that time and was
told 'that the warehouse's "practice" had changed and that he
w0ul-d now be 26th on the list. Similarly, in January of
~'989, Ms. Daigle not'iced she was not on the recall list at
'the'same level as other employees who had been hired with
her. She was told that this was because the Employer was now
"going by. tn~ contract" and. only crediting hours worked for
seniority. Ms.. Milgate's recall in early 1989 was also
adversely affected because she was not credited with luer time
off.on a WCB injury..
:' "'This whole issue was addressed by the parties in
their~Dargaining, for the 1989-1990 contract. In October of
1988,.~ the Union p~esented a proposal to the Employer to. the
effect that time off on Workers' Compensation absences and
maternity leave for 'casual employees should be credited
'towards seniority. This right already existed for the
permanent staff. 'But the Employer would not agree to the
proposal for casuals. The negotiations resulted in a new
collective agreement with a term running from January 1, 1989
to December 31, 1990 and with the wording of Article 32.5 as
· ci'ted ;~Dove remaining in tact.
-.'' Counsel for the Union argued that the evidence
". established that a practice existed at tae Durham warehouse
whereby Workers' Compensation time was counted for seniority
throughout the 1987 and the 1988 collective agre-~ment. Thus,
"it"was said that the practice should prevail on the basis of
'an estoppel created by t~e Employer. It was argued that
because management unilaterally composed and posted the
. seniority list, established the practice and then advised
employees'of the change of the %)ractice, the grounds for
estoppel had' been created. Counsel stressed the importance
of seniority.~jto_'the'~employees and t~at it affects promotions,
recalls, layoffs, and job 'preference. Thus, it was said that
there'was a..great deal of reliance Dy the individuals and a
Great deal of expectation created when t~he Employer be~an to
credit WorKers' Compensation absences for 6asual employees..
It was argu,~d that the es.toppel bound the Employer until the
commencement of the 1'98.9-'1990 collective agreement. Thus, we
were' asked to make a declaration to ensure that the seniority
which could have.accumulated to tne grievors up to
December 31, 19a9 De credited to them. In the alternative,
it was argued that the practice could be considered to De so
· widespread tna~ all the employees at the Durham facility
sho~uld he"credited with seniority accumulated during Workers'
Compensation absences up to December 31, 1988. Counsel
referred' us to the following cases: Re R. HuDer and Co.
(Canada) Ltd. (1976), 11 L.A.C. 309 (Shime); Ford Motor Co.
of Canada Ltd. (I983),. 13 L.A.C. (3d) 38 (Kennedy); Steinberg.
Inc. (1985), 20 L.A.C. (3d) 289 (Foisy); and Toronto
Hospitial for the Treatment of Tuberculosis (1~70), 22 L.A.C.
11'9 (Brown).
In response, the Employer aruued that the doctrine of
estoppel should not De applied here. The Board was raminded
that the concept of s~=niority deals with competin~ rights
between employees. It was said t_hat the Employer's actions
should not De allowed to De used to allow some employees to
assert ri~hts ov-=r o~hers. In the alternative, it was said
that even if estoppel could De applieJ here, it is not an
appropriate cas~ because the evidence does not establish a
long-standln9 and consistent practice which is necessary for
the application of the doctrine. It was ar.~ued that if the
evidence of t_~is case formed the foundation for an estoppel,
it would mean that every variation created by a local
administration over a province-wide agreement could create an
estoepel. ~his would undermine collective bargaining.
Further, it was said that there was no evidence of
i'.: detrimental reliance by the Union, only by the individual
· Grievors. On the issue of remedy, it was arGue~ that the
only r~.medy which should De considered would be one which
· would De l~mited to these three 9rievors because the
: Grievance was not filed as a policy grievance. The Board was
': referred tO the following cases: Treasury Board (Post Office
:Department) and Provencher (1978) 20 L.A.C. (2d) 440;
3 Me croDoli tan '~oronto Association for the Mentall~ Retarded
(1983), 9 L.A.C. (3d) 58 (LanGille); R. Hube$ Co. (Canada)
.. Ltd. (.1977), 14 L.A.C. (2d) 231 (Weatherill);
Consolidated-Bathurst Inc~ Bathurst Division (1985),
19 L.A.C. (3d) 231 (Kuttner); M_or~ica Walker and Ministry of
the Solicitor Gene.ra__~l, GSB File 635/85, decision dated June
.. 30, 1987; Metropolitan Toronto Civic~Em_Rlo_~e__es Union, Local
43 Canadian Union of Public Emplo_yees and Municisali_ty~q~
Metropolitan £oronto et al. (1985), 50 O.R. (2d) 618; and
~ Maritime Teleqr_a~h & Telephone Co. Ltd. (1983), 12 L.A.C.
-~ (3d) 90 (Outhouse).
The Decision
· The Union's case is based entir.~ly on the doctrine of
~ estoppel. The Union concedes that ~he rights it is claiming
for these three Grievors do not exist under the collective
agreement. Instead, the Union asserts that the practice of
:' t~e Employer is such that, havin9 conferred a b~neflt upon
': these grievors, it cannot now take those seniority benefits
: away. However, there is grave d~fficulty in applying the
doctrine of estoppel by practice to the case at hand.
First of- all, seniority rights involve relative
claims between employees to privileges available on the basis
of defined length of service. But the concept of estoppel
:
!
'app-lies. between the two parties to the collective aqremeent,
beinG .the Union and t~e Employer. The ability o~ an Employer'
to' confer' rights upon one group of employees, to the
detriment of another Group of employees, simply Dy
conduct or practice has been seriously questioned by
r Mr. Weatherill 1~1 Re ~{uber Co., su~, at pa§e 233, whera he
wrote;
Se'niority rights, however, while asserted in
grievances against an employer, necessarily involce
'.' th~ assertion of superior rights to those of other
'~ employees. It is difficult to see how an issue
decided on Grounds of estoppel as between two
employees can be said to create a res ~udicata
affecting the interests of others. '-"The Company
cannot, we think, be held to have given the ~rievor
rights not contemplated by the collective
agreement, to the detriment of other employees.
In essence, t~e Huber case seems to question the propriety of
-using a doctrine of fairness such as estoppel between the
parties in order to adversely affect the individual rights of
employe_~s which have vested' under the language of
collective agreement.
With that in mind, it is also helpful to review the
t~orough analysis of the arbitral jurisprudence in the
Consolidated _Ba_thurst case, supra at page 241 regarding
doctrine of estoppel and its application to labour rela~ions~'
From this extensive body of jurisprudence can
De drawn several baslc propositions. First the
doctrine can only properly apply where there is in
existence some contractual or other legal
relationship. ?hat a collective bargaining
r~la~lonship, even absent a collective agreement,
can fulfil that requirement cannot now Oe disputed.
Secondly, the words or conduct from which I t is
said that the estoppel springs must be clear and
unamoiGuous if the inference is to be drawn that
legal relations were intended to be affected. A
Gloss on this doctrine has been accepted by many
arbitrators, namely, tNat silence or acquiescence
can in some circumstances fulfil the requirement of
clear and unambiguous conduct: see Re Consolidated-
Bathurst _Pac_k_aGi_n~ Lt__d., [(19~2), 6 L.A.C. (3d) 30
(MacDowell)] at p. 40, as well as the Ci_t_~_o__f
Penticton case [(1978), 18 L.A.C. (2d) 307].
Finally, it is said that to found an estoppel there
must be detrimental reliancce. T~e entire
principle is infused with that spirit of justice,
equity and fair play which lies at the heart of our
legal system. But the doctrine is only to De
applied where appropriate and it has been said that
it "is not something which an arbitrator should
seize upon to justify the imposition of an
individualized, . intuitive and ill-defined brand of
justice": Re Pacific Forest Products Ltd. [(1983),
14 L.A.C. (3-~) 151 (Munroe)], at page 1611 Such
misuse risks deDasin~ those verf principles of
justice, equity and fair play which the doctrine
has been fashioned to buttress.
In particular, at page 244 of the same case, Arbitrator
Kuttner reviews the use of estoppel based on past practice:
... to found an estoppel on past practice it is
necessary to establish the existence of a
long-standing and consistent practice in
circumstances comparable to that in which it is
alleged the estoppel arises. In CN/CP
Telecommunications, [1981] 4 L.A.C. (3d) 205],a
practice of some-~0 years' standing was said to
give rise to an estoppel; in Re Pacific Forest
Products, su~r_~a, one of 21 years' standing was said
to give rise to an estoppel; in the City of Toronto
case, [1967] 18 L.A.C. 273] the practice was of
some 17 years' standing. In addition, in t~ose
cases where past practice has been successfully
emplofed to found an estoppel, it has been one
consistent, clear and unambiguous and comparable to
the very circumstances at issue.
We must now apply these principles to the facts at
hand. Taking t~e Union's evidence at its best, it can
establish that at one location in the Province, the ~mployer
was willing to recognize seniority in a way that varies from
the collective agreement and which wor~s to the benefit of
these three Grievors. Again, taken at its ~>est, the Union's
evidence could suggest that this began as early as 1985. But
that evidence does not withstand the test of reliability that
we must impose to found a case for estoppel. The evidence of
the practice from 1985 to 1987 is based upon the Union
· President's belief 'as~ to how seniority was being applied and
upon the belief of some of the grievors. But it is not based
upon any direct representation made by management and not
upon any evidence of actual decisions taken by management on
that undersanding. 'the evidence does clearly shows a
seniority list published' in November of 1987 that varies from
the collective agreement. But there is no evidence that this
list was used by management to decide all seniority-based
decisions such as promotion or recall. While some of the
Union witnesses believed this to be so, and we do not.doubt
the honesty of their belief, the evidence was simply
insufficient to prove the proposition. For a claim of
estoppel to succeed on the basis of past practice, the onus
is on the Union to persuade us that there has been a
"long-standing consistent practice". On the evidence before
us we cannot conclude the practice of recognizing WCB
absences for seniority was long-standing at the Durham
warehouse. We are only certain as of 1987 and only for a few
months. Nor was it proven to be consistent at that location
and/or consistent with the multitude of other locations in
the province.
Finally, as stated above, we need to be shown some
element of detrimental reliance in order to apply the
doctrine of estoppel. It is not sufficient that the
individual grievors will be ha~med if the doctrine is not
recognized or that they relied upon it themselves. See
Monica Walker and Ministry of the Solicitor General, s_.u_pr~a.
We must De shown that the Union relied to its detriment in
its dealinqs with the Employer because it was le~ to believe
that the Employer would not revert to the strict provisions
of the collective agreement at Durham. However, nothin9 in
the Union's evidence suggested that the Union was.led to
conduct itself in any such way or that it felt it did not
need to clarify the position. On tt%e contrary, even though
the Union said it believed that the Durham warehouse may' be
recognizing Workers' Compensation' absences, the evidence
shows that the Union was aware that the position at Durham
may not create any enforceable rights. This is clearly shown
by the evidence that the Union negotiators ta~)leJ a proposal
in October of 1988 which sought to have seniority of casuals
accrue during Workers' Compensation absences. The tabling of
the proposal is essentially a recognition that the r~Ghts
were not there previously. Thus, the evidence does not
suggest any' detrimental reliance by the Union.
Finally, what we essentially have he£e ss a
province-wide operation where a seniotity list was issued in
one location which incorrectly credited Workers' Compensation
absences towards seniority. There is no evidence that the
Union relied o~ this mistake o~ practice in any of its
dealings with the Employer. There is not sufficient evidence
to e.sLablish that the Employer applied this local practice
over a long period of time or that'it applied it
consistently. If we were to apply the doctrine and hold the
Employer to its mistake, seniority positions calculated on
the basis of the collective agreement for the rest of the
local union would De significantly affected. Estoppel is a
doctrine of fairness, Ir'is a discretionary principle.
cannot De applied here, Given the fact of no Union
detrimental reliance and insufficient evidence of consistent
practice. But even if we a~e wronG about that, it would not
be appropriate on the facts of this case to allow three
employees ~o ~enefit from the Employer's mistake at the
expense of the other employees who have accumulated seniority
in accordance with the parties' mutual understanding of the
collective agreement. To do otherwise would De to in~ite
employers to try to establish preferential treatment to
favourite employees through a course of conduct and thus
divide the bargaining unit.
Therefore,. for ali these reasons, we cannot allow r, he
gr].evance t:O succeed.'
DA'rED at: Toronr-o On~;ario ~;hi.s 10th da~ o~ Ocg0ber,.
' '~. "' ', P. KnoBf - VSce-Cfi~Person
,...~ _
.. G. Milley - Member