HomeMy WebLinkAbout2011-3796.Martin.16-05-03 DecisionCrown Employees
Grievance Settlement
Board
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Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8
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Commission de
règlement des griefs
des employés de la
Couronne
Bureau 600
180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB#2011-3796, 2012-0167
UNION# 2011-0232-0035, 2012-0362-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Martin) Union
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry) Employer
BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Mike Biliski
Koskie Minsky LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Stewart McMahon and Thomas Ayers
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
HEARING
SUBMISSIONS
November 6, December 14, 2015;
January 20, February 23, 2016
April 1, 2016
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Decision
[1] The Board is seized with an individual grievance dated December 12, 2011 filed
by Agriculture Investigator (“AI”), Mr. Michael Martin, and a group grievance dated
February 06, 2012 signed by all seven Agriculture Investigators employed at the
Agriculture Investigation Unit (“AIU”) of the Ministry of Natural Resources. On the
agreement of the parties the two grievances were heard together.
[2] The hearing commenced on September 06, 2013, and continued on sixteen days,
before the union closed its case on September 1, 2015. At that stage, employer
counsel gave notice that the employer was moving for non-suit. The motion for non-suit
was orally argued over five days, and was completed with written submissions in reply
filed in writing by the employer on April 1, 2016. This decision deals with that motion for
non-suit.
[3] Both grievances allege that the employer has failed to comply with its obligations
under article 9.1 of the collective agreement and s. 25(2)(h) of the Ontario Occupational
Health and Safety Act. There is significant background leading up to the filing of the
grievances. It suffices to note that in 2006 all AIs were accorded “conservation officer”
designation. Conservation officers employed by the Ministry had protective equipment
that included pepper spray and side-arm. Therefore, along with their conservation
officer designation, in 2006 AIs were also issued pepper spray and side arms as part of
their protective equipment.
[4] The immediate trigger for the filing of the grievances was the employer’s decision
in February 2012 to revoke the conservation officer designation for AIs. As a result,
they no longer had side-arms or pepper spray as part of their protective equipment. It is
primarily the removal of side-arms and pepper spray that led to the assertion by the
grievors that the employer was in contravention of the collective agreement and the
Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act. However, the union also alleges that the
employer was in violation because it did not do a proper assessment prior to the
removal of the protective equipment from AIs, as to what impact that may have on their
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health and safety; by failing to provide timely training and direction to AIs as to how they
may safely carry out their duties in the absence of that equipment; and by failing to take
reasonable steps to protect their health and safety when working with no side-arms and
pepper spray.
[5] Mr. Martin in his grievance makes the additional allegation that the employer
contravened the Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act and the collective
agreement when he was required to work with no Conservation Officer designation, and
therefore, with no side-arm and pepper spray, during a period in which employer policy
required AIs to be equipped with those, and all other AIs had the conservation officer
designation side-arms and pepper spray.
[6] At the commencement of this proceeding, the union agreed not to put the employer
to an election on calling its own evidence. This was explicitly made conditional on the
agreement that beyond setting out the legal principles applied, the Board would not
provide any reasons in the event the employer’s non-suit motion is dismissed.
[7] The principles governing non-suit are described in Sopinka and Lederman, The
Law of Evidence in Civil Cases (Butterworths, 1974 at p. 521) follows:
An important part of the division of roles between judge and jury is
the assessment of the probative sufficiency of the evidence
adduced by a party to establish his case. If a plaintiff fails to lead
material evidence, he may be faced at the close of his case by a
motion for a non-suit by the defendant. If such a motion is
launched, it is the judge’s function to determine whether any facts
have been established by the plaintiff from which liability, if it is in
issue may be inferred. It is the jury’s duty to say whether, from
those facts when submitted to it, liability ought to be inferred. The
judge, in performing his function, does not decide whether in fact
he believes the evidence. He has to decide whether there is
enough evidence, if left uncontradicted, to satisfy a reasonable
man. He must conclude whether a reasonable jury could find in
the plaintiff’s favour if it believed the evidence given in trial up to
that point. The judge does not decide whether the jury will accept
the evidence, but whether the inference that the plaintiff seeks in
his favour could be drawn from the evidence adduced, if the jury
chose to accept it. This decision of the judge on the sufficiency of
evidence is a question of law; he is not ruling upon the weight or
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the believability of the evidence which is a question of fact.
Because it is a question of law, the judge’s assessment of the
probative sufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence, or the defendant’s
evidence on a counter-claim for that matter, is subject to review by
the Court of Appeal.
[8] In the context of labour arbitration, the Board in Re Southern Alberta Institute of
Technology (1994) 43 L.A.C. (4th) 26] (McFetridge) observed as follows at p. 269:
The question is one of law, not fact, and the judge or board of
arbitration is primarily concerned with the quantity of the evidence
as a matter of law rather than its quality, believability or persuasive
weight which are all questions of fact. Assuming always that the
evidence meets a certain minimum threshold of credibility, a non-
suit motion cannot succeed if the party carrying the burden of proof
has presented some evidence which supports each of the
essential elements of its claim. This evidence will be sufficient
until contradicted or overcome by other evidence. It may be that
the evidence is weak and carries little persuasive weight. A non-
suit, however, cannot succeed where there is some credible
evidence which supports each of the essential elements of the
claim.
The Divisional Court has made it clear that the standard to be applied is lower
than the standard of balance of probabilities. Thus in Ontario v. OPSEU
(Cahoon), (1990), 37 O.A.C. 218 in squashing a decision of the Grievance
Settlement Board which had allowed a motion for non-suit, the Court wrote:
The board began by setting out its understanding of 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 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
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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.
[9] It is now clearly established that the standard applied in assessing the evidence in
determining a non-suit motion is considerably lower than the usual standard in civil
matters, i.e. “on a balance of probabilities”. See, Cahoon Ont. Div. Ct. (supra). While
some authorities have stated that the plaintiff must have adduced “sufficient evidence”,
others such as Cahoon (supra) have used the phrase “some evidence”. This Board has
reasoned that there is no substantial difference between the two terms. Thus in Re
Gareh, 1665/98 (Brown), the Board reviewed the decision of the Divisional Court in
Cahoon (supra) and wrote at p. 6 as follows:
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 case.
[10] Vice-Chair Brown went on to state:
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 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 possible 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
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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.
[11] In a decision released on March 05, 2015, the Board in Re Bharti, 2013-2789
(Anderson) refined and summarized the principles applied by it in determining non-suit
motions as follows at para. 8:
[8] There is no dispute between the parties as to the principles
applicable to a non-suit motion. Reference was made to:
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Vingar) v Ontario
(Health and Long-Term Care) 2014 CanLII 30275 (ON GSB),
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Allin) v. Ontario
(Ministry of Revenue), 2010 CanLII 38781 (ON GSB), and
Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Thompson) v. Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario), 2012 CanLII 67531 (ON
GSB). The applicable principles may be summarized as follows:
i 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.
ii In a non-suit motion, the issue is whether the party responding to
the motion has made out a prima facie case.
iii In determining whether a prima facie case has been made out,
the test is whether the evidence presented by the party
responding to the motion is sufficient to allow the Board to rule
that it has proven its case on a balance of probabilities, if the
board assumed its witnesses to be credible and drew in its
favour all inferences reasonably supported by direct evidence.
No weight, however, should be given to the evidence of a
witness on a point about which he or she has given contradictory
accounts. (See Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Gareh) v. Ontario (Ministry of the Attorney General). 2002
CanLII 45791 (ON GSB) at paragraphs 8-10.
iv. In assessing the existence of a prima facie case, viva voce
evidence as well as all documentary evidence before the Board
must be considered.
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v. 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.
[12] At paragraphs 9-10, the Board observed:
[9] The union states that a non-suit motion is not the time to test the
quality, reliability or credibility of the evidence. Accordingly, the
Union asserts, I am required to assume that everything the
Grievor said is true for the purposes of this motion. With respect,
the second proposition does not follow from the first. The mere
fact that the Grievor testified as to something does not make it
admissible evidence which must be assumed to be true. Of
particular application to this case, as will become apparent
below, I am not required to accept as evidence hearsay
statements or opinions offered by the Grievor.
[10] Further, I agree with the Employer that the mere fact that the
Grievor asserts something is true, for example that the Sabbath
is on Tuesday, does not make it so for the purposes of a non-suit
motion. In Nash v. Ontario (1995), 1995 CanLII 2934 (ON CA)
27 O.R. (3d) 1 the Ontario Court of Appeal held that for the
purposes of determining whether or not a plaintiff`s pleadings
made out a prima facie case, alleged facts that were patently
ridiculous or incapable of proof need not be accepted as true.
Surely no less a standard should be applied on a non-suit
motion, where the responding party has not simply plead a case
but lead all evidence it asserts is necessary in order to prove its
case.
[11] A distinction must also be made between facts and conclusions
of fact. A false conclusion is not rendered true, for the purposes
of a non-suit motion, simply because the Grievor has adopted
that conclusion as his evidence. Similarly, a conclusion stated in
the nature of a bald allegation in the absence of detailed
evidence in support has no probative value: see Guarantee Co.
of North America v. Gordon Capital Corporation (1999), 1999
CanLII 664 (SCC), 178 D.L.R. (4th) a (S.C.C.) at paragraph 31
discussing the sufficiency of evidence submitted on a motion for
summary judgement.
[13] My task is to determine whether to grant or deny the non-suit motion by applying
the principles established in the authorities reviewed above. Upon consideration of the
voluminous evidence adduced during the union`s case, the legal principles established
in the case law, and the extensive submissions of the respective counsel, it is my
conclusion that the employer`s motion must be denied with respect to both grievances.
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In accordance with the Board`s practice and the explicit agreement of the parties, no
reasons for that conclusion are set out herein.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 3rd day of May 2016.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice Chair