HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-2459.Phillips.94-01-06
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1111 SETTLEMENT .
REGLEMENT
_ BOARD DES GRIEFS
80 DUNDAS STREET WEST SUITE 2100 TORONTO ONTARIO, M5G IZ8 TELEPHONE ITELt:PHONE (416) 326- 388
180 RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 2100 TORONTO (ONTARIO) M5G lZ8 FACSIfAILE TELECOPJE (416) 326- 1396
2459/92
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
CUPE (Phillips)
Grievor
and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Housing)
,
Employer
BEFORE: S. stewart Vice-Chairperson
M. Lyons j Member
D. Montrose I Member
FOR THE R. Carnovale
GRIEVOR National Representative
PUPE Local 767
FOR THE K. Billings
EMPLOYER Counsel
Miller, Thompson
Barristers & Solicitors
HEARING: October 29, 1993
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DECISION
The grievor, Mr E Phillips, is employed as a labourer
in the maintenance department of the Metro Toronto Housing
Authority. The union claims that Mr Phillips was improperly
denied paid sick leave pursuant to Article 19 of the Collective
Agreement for Monday, January 27, 1992 and requests that the
Employer be directed to pay Mr. Phillips sick leave for that day.
It is the position of the Employer that Mr. Phillips is not
entitled to be paid sick leave for the day as his absence was due
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to a "hangover" which was characterized as a pre-meditated, self-
inflicted condition which does not properly entitle Mr Phillips
to obtain paid sick leave.
It was cott~on ground that the issue of Mr. Phillips'
-- absence on January 27, 1992 was the subj~ct of a telephone
conversation between him and Ms. P. Baird, a support clerk, on
Friday, January 24, 1992. Ms.. Baird is not a member of
management. She is a member of OPSEU and was subpoenaed to
attend at the hearing.
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Mr. Phillips testified that while he was at work on
January 24 he felt ill. He was unsure as to the exact nature of
the illness but believed that it was a headache that he was
suffering from. However, he was able to complete his day of
work. Mr Phillips stated that during that day he telephoned the
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office at which time he spoke to Ms Baird. Mr. Phillips'
evidence was that he told Ms Baird that he was not feeling well
and that if he was feeling that way on Monday, January 27, he
would not be in. Mr. Phillips stated that he also told Ms. Baird
that he would be attending a "function" on the weekend. Ms.
Baird testified that Mr. Phillips made no reference to feeling
ill on the date of their conversation Ms Baird's evidence was
that Mr. Phillips told her that he was calling to report that he
would not be in the following Monday due to iilness. Ms. Baird
stated that she asked Mr. Phillips how he could know in advance
that he would be ill and that he responded that he would be
attending a wedding and that he wout-d have a "hangover" which
would prevent him from being able to work on Monday. Ms. Baird
suggested that he take a vacation day but Mr. Phillips maintained
that he wished to take a sick day on Monday. Ms. Baird left a
.. message about the call for Mr. Harrison, Mr Phillips'
supervisor.
It was also common ground that there was a further
telephone conversation between Mr. Phillips and Ms. Baird on the
morninq o~ Monday, January 27, 1992. Mr. Phillips testified that
he told Ms. Baird that he would not be in to work that day
because he had too much to drink over the weekend. Ms. Baird had
a similar recollection of the conversation She stated that Mr.
Phillips told her that he was reporting sick and that he was
unable to work because he had a hangover.
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Mr. Phillips testified that he attended a wedding on
Sunday, January 26, and that h~ had "a lot" to drink He was
somewhat vague about his symptoms on Monday, but stated that he
was "not feeling well" and that he was not capable of safely
operating the equipment he is required to run as part of his
duties as a labourer. Mr Phillips testified that he is not an
alcoholic.
Mr. Phillips was not paid sick leave for the day. The
day was treated as an unpaid leave of absence. Although Mr.
Phillips did not see a doctor on the day of his absence, he
offered to provide a doctor's certificate to his supervisor. The
offer was rejected.
The relevant provisions of the Collective Agreement are
the following:
ARTICLE 19 - SICK LEAVE
19.01 sick leave credits are established for the purpose of
providing for the employee during periods of absence
due to illness, injury or properly certified quarantine,
and are not available to an employee for absence caused
by any other reason.
19.02 Each employee shall be entitled to sick leave allowance
on the following basis:
Sick leave credits shall accumulate at the rate of 1 1/2
days for each month worked after the date of hire. An
employee shall receive no credit in respect of any month
in which he is absent from duty for any reason other
than:
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(i) vacation leave,
(ii) leave of absence with pay,
(iii) lateness that has not resulted in suspension, or
(iv) authorized leave of absence without pay for a period
that does not exceed ten (10) working days in the
month.
19.03 (a) (i) sickness must be substantiated by a doctor's
certificate if the absence is for more than
three (3) consecutive working days; or for each
and every absence if so required by the employer
The notice will specify the reason and the
duration of the requirement and may be extended
upon notification to the Employee. Medical
certificates must be submitted to the employee's
supervisor upon return to work or in accordance
To the extent that there is a discrepancy in the
evidence we prefer the evidence of Ms. Baird. Ms Baird has no
real interest in this matter and her evidence accords with what
we view as the preponderance of probabilities. There was no
reason for Mr. Phillips to call the office to advise that he was
not feeling well if he was able to continue with his work. Ther(3
was no reason to tell Ms. Baird about the "function" that he was
attending on the weekend unless he intended to relate his
anticipated inability to attend at work to that event. The
conclusion that we reach on the evidence before us is that Mr.
Phillips intended to drink alcohol on sunday January 26, to the
extent that he would be suffering its effects on January 27 and
thus would be unable to attend at work. The issue to be
determined is whether he is entitled to sick leave pursuant to
Article 19.01 of the Collective Agreement.
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Mr. Billings referred the Board to two arbitration
awards, Re Government of Province of British Columbia and British
Columbia Government Employees. union, (1990) , 18 L A.C. (4th) 187
(Ladner) and Re Great Atlantic & Pacific Co. of Canada Ltd. and
United Food & Commercial Workers. Local 175 & 633, (1986) 25
L.A.C. (3d) 189 (Hinnegan) In Government of British Columbia
the grievor sought sick leave for two days of absence from work
The collective agreement in that instance provided for payment
where an employee "is unable to work due to illness". The
grievor had been delayed in returning home from a trip 'to Europe,
returning three days later than originally scheduled and arriving
the day before she was scheduled to return to work. The grievor
was off work the following day to recover from jet lag. She
attended at work the following day where she had what was
described as an "unpleasant confrontation" with her supervisor,
at which time sQe became severely upset and went home. The
arbitrator rejected her claim that she was entitled to paid sick
leave ~or these two days.
At pp. 188-189 of the award the arbitrator states as
follows:
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Anyone who has suffered from any extreme form of
jet lag has felt sick or out of health. It is
necessary, however, to determine whether one is
in fact sick and out of health rather than simply
feeling that way. Distinguishing between a disease
and the symptoms of a disease is not a judgment
that can always be made by a layman; in some
circumstances it may require an expert opinion. I
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am not suggesting that it was necessary for the
grievor to attend upon a doctor on March 5th or 6th,
but rather that where there is a difference of
opinion as to whether the symptoms described by a
claimant are evidence of an illness, an expert
opinion, such as from a doctor, may be required
before a reasoned conclusion can be reached about the
issue. Clearly, an employee who is tired because he
or she did not aget to bed early the night before is
not ill. On the other hand, the employee who feels
exactly the same way because that person has mono-
nucleosis is just as clearly ill. An observer of
those two employees may notice no difference. But
clearly one is ill and the other is not. The
difference between them can only be perceived by an
expert.
In the absence of an expert opinion as to whether
the symptoms the Grievor said she was suffering
on March 5th amount to an illnesss, I cannot say
that the uian has discharged the onus that is
upon it. Similarly, I am unable to say that the
symptoms described by the Grievor on March 6th
amount to an illness. It is possible that jet
lag can make one more vulnerable to illness, ~t
I cannot say that what the Grievor described as
her condition on March 6th amounted to an illness.
It seems more likely to me that she was simply
distraught. Emotional illness may in some
circumstances amount to an illness, but in the
absence of expert medical opinion to that effect,
I cannot say that the union has discharged the
burden upon it with respect to its claim for
March 6, 1993.
In Re Great Altlantic & Pacific Co. of Canada Ltd., the issue was
whether the grievor was entitled to paid sick leave for an
absence due to a sunburn. The arbitrator concluded that the
grievor was entitled to paid sick leave, on the basis that the
sunburn had come about as a result of the grievor spending a
number of hours playing volleyball in a pool rather than, for
example, lying in the sun intending to acquire a suntan but
instead, getting a sunburn. The Employer had a policy and
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practice of not paying benefits for conditions that were self-
inflicted and the issue as defined by the parties in that case
was whether the sunburn was a self-inflicted condition.
The issue to be determined in this case is whether Mr.
Phillips' condition on January 27, 1992 constituted "illness"
within the meaning of Article 19.01 of the Collective Agreement,
and, accordingly, whether he is entitled to paid sick leave for
that day. While, as Mr. Billings emphasized, Mr. Phillips was
somewhat vague about his symptoms, his evidence was clear that he
had consumed a good deal of alcohol the day previously and that
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he was in no condition to operate the power equipment that he was
required to run as part of his duties. It is our conclusion that
on an objective basis, Mr. Phillips was physically incapacitated
from performing his work on January 27, 1992 While it is clear
that Mr. Phillips intentionally put himself in a position where
he would be incapacitated he was nevertheless incapacitated. In
our view, it is the existence of this objective physical
incapacity that determines illness and hence entitlement to
sickness benefits under the Collective Agreement. We are unable
to accept Mr. Billings' sUbmission that we should follow the
approach taken in Re Government of British Columbia, supra, and
requi~e expert medical evidence to determine this matter in this
case. While there may be some instances in which there is a real
factual issue as to an employee'S incapacity and therefore expert
medical opinion is required to establish incapacity, the case
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before us is not one of those The uncontradicted evide~ce
established incapacity in this instance In our view, the
I distinction that is made in Re Government of British Columbia at
p. 188 between "whether one is in fact sick and out of health
rather than simply feeling that way" is not only a difficult
distinction but one that is inappropriate In our view, under
, if the
the language of the Collective Agreement before us,
employee establishes physical incapacity to perfom his work, as
in this case, he has established illness and thus entitlement to
sick leave. In our view, the situation before the arbitrator in
Re Great Atlantic & Pacific Co. of Canada Ltd., supra, is
distinguishable from the case before us In that case, the issue
that was defined and decided was whether ~he grievor's condition
was properly characterized as self-inflicted and thus, in
accordance with the employer's longstanding pOlicy, disqualified
him from receipt of sick leave benefits. The arbitrator in that
case was no~ called upon to determine the more fundamental issue
of whether the fact that a condition may be characterized as
self-inflicted excludes it from the definition of illness.
To determine whether an incapacity constitutes an
illness on the basis of whether it is self-inflicted creates real
difficulties in application. For example, is lung cancer
excluded from the definition of illness for smokers? Are medical
conditions associated with obesity excluded? In a situation
where a woman knows that a pregnancy will be incapacitating, does
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her incapacity not constitute an illness where she has chosen to
become pregnant? Would a different result follow if her
I pregnancy were accidental? In our view, these examples point out
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the flaws associated with employing the concept of self-
infliction as a basis for determining whether a condition
constitues an illness. The more appropriate test, and the one
that we adopt, is that illness and hence entitlement to sick
leave is established where the objective evidence establishes a
physical (or possibly emotional) inability to perfom work. On
this test, Mr. Phillips is clearly entitled to siCk leave for
January 27, 1992.
Our conclusion in this case should not be construed as
an endorsement or condonation of Mr. Phillips' actions. Mr.
P~illips made a conscious decision to drink alcohol to the extent
that he would be incapacitated and thus unable to attend at work
on January 27, 1992. He was in breach of a fundamental
obligation of an employee. His actions were inappropriate and
might well attract a disciplinary response by an employer.
However, no issue of discipline in connection with this matter
was in issue before us. The only issue for us to decide is
whether Mr. Phillips was ill on the day in question. For the
foregoing reasons it is our conclusion that Mr. Phillips was ill.
Accordingly, he was entitled to sick leave for the day and we so
order We retain jurisdiction in the event that the parties
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experience any difficulties in the implementation of this
decision.
Dated at Toronto, this 6 day of January, 1994
~~1'
s. L stewart - Vice-Chair
,..,--_4>--
,
Lyons
;::~ ~ ~-- ----
0 Montrose - Member