HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2016-1318.VanMilligen.17-05-19 Decision
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Grievance Board
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Commission des
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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PSGB#2016-1318
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
VanMilligen Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Treasury Board Secretariat) Employer
BEFORE Reva Devins Vice Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Andrew Camman
Polishuk Camman & Steele
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Jonathan Rabinovitch
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
CONFERENCE CALL May 1, 2017
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Decision
[1] The parties entered into Minutes of Settlement (MOS) on November 3, 2016 as a
full and final settlement of Ms. VanMilligen’s complaint that she was improperly
dismissed from her employment. She now seeks a direction that she be paid a
revised amount to reflect the current salary for her former position.
Background and Context
[2] Ms. VanMilligen was dismissed from her employment on August 8, 2016 and she
submitted a complaint shortly thereafter challenging her dismissal. Mediation at the
Board on November 3, 2016 resulted in signed MOS. The terms of the settlement
were subject to a strict confidentiality clause and the parties agreed that this
decision would offer minimal details of the agreement, except as required to
explain my decision.
[3] The relevant provisions are as follows:
a. Paragraph 1 provides that the Employer will continue to pay Ms.
VanMilligen “her annual salary of $89,247.00” for a defined period of
time.
b. Paragraph 3 provides that “The Complainant agrees that she is not
eligible for any further payments or compensation from the Employer of
any type or kind whatsoever other than as described in paragraph 1
herein.”
c. Paragraph17 provides that I will retain jurisdiction to “interpret and
implement” the MOS.
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[4] Approximately one month after the MOS was executed Ms. VanMilligen learned
that the job class for her former position was awarded a pay increase retroactive to
April 1, 2016. She received payment for the retroactive period that pre-dated her
dismissal, but was eventually advised that she would not receive the increase for
the period covered by the MOS.
The Parties’ Arguments
[5] Mr. Camman, counsel for the Complainant, contacted the Board and requested an
Order that Ms. VanMilligen be paid at the new rate for the entire period referred to
in paragraph 1 of the MOS. He took the position that such an order was in the
“spirit of the settlement and good faith”. In his submission, the negotiations
focussed on the appropriate length of the notice period, not the amount of the
salary. If the parties had turned their mind to the possibility of a pay increase during
the negotiated notice period, Mr. Camman suggested that they would have agreed
that Ms. VanMilligen should be paid at the current rate for her position.
[6] The Employer submitted that regardless of what Ms. VanMilligen and her counsel
contemplated, the total dollar value was what the Employer negotiated: both the
amount of the annual salary and the length of the notice period were taken into
account in arriving at an acceptable settlement. In the Employer’s submission,
paragraph 3 of the MOS clearly addresses this issue wherein the parties agreed
that the Complainant would not be eligible for any further compensation, of any
kind. Lastly, the Employer took the position that the Board did not have any
equitable jurisdiction to amend the terms of the MOS.
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[7] Mr. Camman was offered an extended opportunity to provide reply submissions, in
particular with respect to the Board’s jurisdiction to provide the remedy sought. He
did not make any further submissions and indicated that he was content to have a
decision issued on the basis of the submissions that he had already made.
Analysis and Conclusion
[8] Having considered the submissions of the parties, I have determined that I neither
have the jurisdiction to substitute a revised salary nor am I persuaded that it would
be appropriate to do so.
[9] My jurisdiction to review the terms of the MOS is limited to issues of interpretation
and implementation. Mr. Camman has been candid in acknowledging that he is
essentially asking me to assume equitable jurisdiction to grant relief that would
reflect the spirit of the agreement, even though that conflicts with the plain
language and express terms that the parties drafted. He was unable to provide any
cases to support his assertion and I have no hesitation in finding that I do not have
any equitable jurisdiction to amend the terms of the MOS.
[10] This Board has consistently found that, absent duress, which is not suggested in
this case, it is the Board’s duty to enforce the clear terms of negotiated settlements:
Younger and The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of the Environment) (O’Neil)
PSGB#P-2006-2457. To allow a settlement to be re-opened or revised would
seriously undermine the final and binding nature of settlement agreements and is
inconsistent with ensuring that parties can have confidence in the finality of their
negotiated settlement agreements.
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[11] Although I appreciate Ms. VanMilligen’s disappointment, she is only entitled to what
was negotiated at the time of settlement. The parties in this case agreed to very
specific terms. They agreed that Ms. VanMilligen would be paid her “annual salary
of $89,247” for a period of time and that she was “not eligible for any further
payments or compensation from the Employer of any type or kind”. On a plain
reading of the agreement, there is no room for an interpretation that would require
the Employer to pay the Complainant an amount in excess of the sum that was
expressly included.
[12] I have no reason to doubt that Mr. Camman and Ms. VanMilligen were focussed on
the length of the notice period and not the amount of the annual salary during
settlement discussions. However, I also accept the Employer’s submission that it
was concerned with its’ overall liability, which was determined by both the length of
the notice period and the annual salary rate. However the parties determined that
this was an acceptable resolution, it is the terms of the agreement that ultimately
governs the parties’ entitlements. In this case they agreed that payments would be
based on a defined annual salary of $89,247.00 and that there were no further
entitlements, of any kind.
[13] In light of my limited jurisdiction and the fundamental need to respect the terms of
final settlements, as they are negotiated, the Complainant’s motion is dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 19th day of May 2017.
Reva Devins, Vice-Chair