HomeMy WebLinkAbout2014-4400.Ryan.17-06-29 Decision
Crown Employees Grievance Settlement Board Suite 600 180 Dundas St. West Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Tel. (416) 326-1388 Fax (416) 326-1396
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#2014-4400 UNION#2015-0228-0002
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN Ontario Public Service Employees Union (Ryan) Union - and - The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Attorney General) Employer BEFORE Nimal Dissanayake Vice-Chair
FOR THE UNION Seung Chi Ontario Public Service Employees Union Grievance Officer
FOR THE EMPLOYER Roslyn Baichoo Treasury Board Secretariat Legal Services Branch Counsel
HEARING April 26, May 19, June 14 & 16, September 23, 2016; January 20 & 27, April 13, May 16, 2017
- 2 -
Decision
[1] The grievor, Mr. Michael Ryan has grieved his discharge on January 6, 2015
from the position of Court Services Officer (“CSO”) he had held from March 17,
2014. The letter of discharge signed by Ms. Marion Marrone, Manager Court
Operations reads:
This letter is a follow up to the allegation meeting which was held
on December 23rd, 2014 with you, your Bargaining Unit
representative, Perry Cappadocia and myself. Joan Zammit was also in attendance to take notes. The purpose of that meeting was to discuss the allegation that on
December 6th, 2014 you displayed unprofessional and disrespectful
behaviour by yelling and swearing at a co-worker. During the allegation meeting you admitted that you did swear at your coworker in the back hallway, not in the courtroom. During our
meeting you expressed no remorse for your actions and failed to
appreciate that this behaviour was inappropriate in any way. Indeed, you were originally evasive and did not readily take responsibility for the actions in question, instead arguing about how the allegations were worded and where the incident in question
took place.
You indicated that you feel that your behaviour was justified as you believed your coworker had provoked you in previous conversations. You also commented that your behaviour was
appropriate as this coworker “comes from that kind of background”,
indicating your belief that she would only understand you if you were verbally abusive to her. After carefully reviewing all of the information obtained during the
investigation as well as your responses to the above-noted
allegations and the additional documentation you provided to me, it is my conclusion that the above-noted allegations have been substantiated. Behaviour of this kind is unprofessional, disrespectful and is incompatible with the values required of
employees of the Ontario Public Service and the Ministry of the
Attorney General. Having given full consideration to the facts, your employment history and all other circumstances and mitigating factors, I have
concluded that your actions are just cause for discipline.
- 3 -
In deliberating on an appropriate penalty for the substantiated allegation, I have taken into consideration the seriousness of the substantiated allegations, your responses during the allegations meeting, the mitigating factors presented by you, and your 9
months of service. With due consideration to the available information and given the serious nature of your actions I have concluded that your actions are just cause for dismissal, Accordingly, by the authority delegated
to me under Section 44 of the Public Service of Ontario Act, I hereby dismiss your for cause in accordance with section 35 of the
Act, effective January 6th, 2015. You have the right to grieve your dismissal.
[2] The onus is on the employer to establish the grounds on which it disciplined an
employee. It is also recognized that an employer is required to justify the penalty
imposed on the same grounds it relied on when it actually disciplined the
employee. The employer is not allowed to enlarge the grounds by adding new
allegations or changing the characterization of the facts it relied on. Aerocide
Dispensers Ltd., (1965), 15 L.A.C. 416 (Laskin).
[3] In the present case, there was disagreement between the parties as to the
grounds which the employer relied upon at the time it decided to discharge the
grievor. The parties agree that the allegation set out in the letter of discharge
that the grievor “displayed unprofessional and disrespectful behaviour by yelling
and swearing at a co-worker” on December 6, 2014 (hereinafter “the December
6th incident”) is a ground the employer relied upon at the time the decision was
made. The employer, however, takes the position that the grievor’s conduct
during the allegation meeting, and documentation he submitted in response to
the allegation relating to the December 6th incident, were also grounds it relied on
in imposing the sanction of discharge. The union disagrees.
[4] The Board prefers the union’s position based on the testimony of Ms. Marrone,
viewed in light of what she wrote in the letter of discharge. The letter states
“After carefully reviewing all of the information obtained during the investigation
as well as your responses to the above-noted allegations and the additional
- 4 -
documentation you provided to me, it is my conclusion that the above-noted
allegations have been substantiated.” It is evident from this language that Ms.
Marrone relied on the grievor’s conduct at the allegation meeting and the
additional documentation he submitted in reaching the conclusion that the
“above-noted allegations” are substantiated, and not as separate allegations of
culpable conduct. The “above-noted allegations” are about yelling and swearing
at a co-worker on December 6, 2014. The conduct at the allegation meeting and
the subsequently filed documentation had to do with alleged failure by the grievor
to cooperate at the allegation meeting and derogatory “name calling” by the
grievor in reference to a number of his co-workers. Surely if these were
considered to be separate allegations of misconduct, the letter of discharge
would at least have made reference to those allegations, particularly the “name
calling” of co-workers, as it did with regard to the allegation of “yelling and
swearing at a co-worker”. While the letter does refer to the grievor’s reference to
“the background” of a co-worker, that is part of Ms. Marrone’s description of his
response in defence to the allegations relating to the December 6th incident,
along with reference to his alleged evasiveness and his questioning of the
wording of the letter of allegation. Moreover, in cross-examination, union counsel
referred to the grievor’s first written submission and put to Ms. Marrone directly,
“You did not discipline him for writing that. Her answer was “No. That was his
information in response to the allegation. If it came from nowhere it may have
been different”.
[5] There is no question, based on the discharge letter and Ms. Marrone’s testimony,
that she was very troubled by what she viewed as the grievor’s refusal to accept
any responsibility for his conduct on December 6th. She felt that instead, he
failed to cooperate at the meeting and responded with name calling. It is equally
clear that this caused Ms. Marrone to determine that discharge of the grievor was
warranted. While those played a major role in the determination of the level of
discipline, they were not treated as separate allegations which gave rise to
discipline.
- 5 -
The December 6th incident
EMPLOYER EVIDENCE
The employer relies on two exchanges the grievor allegedly had on December 6,
2014. The first involved the grievor and Mr. Gordon Handisyde, also a CSO. Mr.
Handisyde subsequently advised the CSO Supervisor, Ms. Winsome Allen about
this exchange, and was instructed to provide a written statement. Mr.
Handisyde’s version of what occurred was set out in an e-mail dated December
17, 2014 to Ms. Allen, as follows:
Winsome: On the day of Dec. 6th I was working Jury PM. I went to the courtroom
in order to find out at what time the jury would be needing supper as they were
watching a 1½ hr. video. When I entered the courtroom (in session) I noticed that Mike was sitting at the side of the dais instead of at the back door. There was 10 or 12 people in the body of the court and no one to keep an eye on them. I left the court room and when the jury went back into the jury room I mentioned
to Mike that he should have been at the back door and not beside the dais. I was
using this point as a training issue for his knowledge. He immediately turned very red faced and was visibly upset and he snapped at me and said I shouldn’t be saying anything as I didn’t know all the facts. He said the justice had told him to sit at the front with her as she had some copying for
him to do. And that he knew everything about his job.
I didn’t want to carry on with this as I knew he was mad so I turned and left. It is my understanding that more happened after I left but I can’t confirm this.
[6] Mr. Handisyde testified that he did not hear the grievor swear or use profanity
during or after his encounter on December 6, 2014. Ms. Macchia testified that at
the time of the exchange between the grievor and Mr. Handisyde in the hallway
outside court room 305, she and Ms. Rennie were seated about five feet from
them. She was asked whether she heard the grievor explain to Mr. Handisyde
that the judge had asked him to sit at the front because she had some
photocopying for him to do, and told Mr. Handisyde that he should get his facts
right. Ms. Macchia replied that all she heard was the grievor repeatedly saying,
“Fuck Gord and fuck Julian”. (It is agreed that “Julian” was the court registrar
assigned to the trial in court room 305 that day). She testified that at the time Mr.
Handisyde had turned and was walking away, and may not have heard the
swearing. Asked how many times the grievor repeated the swearing, she replied
- 6 -
that she did not count, but it was definitely more than twice. Ms. Macchia
testified that at that point she told the grievor “Gord was right”. She did that not
to correct the grievor, but to get the grievor to calm down, and stop the swearing.
However, the grievor got louder and he kept repeating “Fuck fuck”. She was not
sure whether the grievor was directing the swearing at her, but he was looking at
her and not at Ms. Rennie. Ms. Macchia testified that as the grievor was not
stopping the swearing, she got up and moved closer to the grievor. She was
about three feet from him. She moved her hands in an up and down motion, in
an attempt to get the grievor to focus on her and calm down. She did not touch
the grievor, but the grievor said, “Don’t touch me” and took a step back. Then he
pointed a finger at her and said, “And you fuck off”. She responded, “Sorry I am
sorry” and the grievor walked away.
[7] In cross-examination union counsel put to Ms. Macchia, a statement dated
December 17, 2014, Ms. Rennie had submitted to her supervisor, Ms. Allen. He
pointed out that while Ms. Rennie’s statement is very detailed, it makes no
mention at all of hearing the grievor saying “Fuck Gord fuck Julian”. Ms. Macchia
responded that all she could say is that she remembered the grievor repeating
those words, and that she was trying to calm him down.
[8] Ms. Macchia confirmed that when she met with Ms. Allen she related what she
witnessed and heard, and that at her request Ms. Allen wrote down what she
reported. Counsel pointed out that Ms. Macchia’s statement, as recorded by Ms.
Allen, also makes no mention of the grievor saying “Fuck Gord fuck Julian”. Ms.
Macchia replied that what Ms. Allen wrote down does not include all the details
she related, and that Ms. Allen must have summarized what she told her.
[9] Ms. Rennie identified the statement she provided to Ms. Allen and confirmed that
it accurately sets out what she observed on December 6, 2014, except that
“some of the chronology may not be exact”. She testified that she and Ms.
Macchia were seated in the back hallway near the jury room door. The jury was
in the jury room. At the time the grievor and Mr. Handisyde had the exchange
- 7 -
she and Ms. Macchia were behind them. From where she was seated, she could
see the grievor’s face. Asked what she heard, she replied, “Gord said to Mike
that when you are the only CSO in the court room you are to go to the back
door”. Ms. Rennie said, “Mike was a bit upset with Gord. He said you need to
get the facts straight. The judge asked me to sit at the front because she wanted
me to make some photocopies”. She testified that the grievor also told Mr.
Handisyde that he had worked for 8 months as a CSO, that he read the manual
every day and knew his job, and did not need to be told what to do. Then Mr.
Handisyde left. Ms. Rennie testified that she did not hear the grievor say “Fuck
Gord fuck Julian”.
[10] Ms. Rennie testified that right after Mr. Handisyde left, Ms. Macchia told the
grievor, “Gord was right”. She testified that it was shortly after that she heard the
grievor swear. She referred to the following portion of the statement she
submitted:
In the next few minutes the jurors had another question or to elaborate on the one they were asking for. Mike went back up to
chambers with the letter and came back down and went directly into the court room to tell Jullian what Her Honour had requested. (counsel is in the courtroom during this) He came back out in the hall, looked at Marie and myself and said he was going back up to get her. Marie said “You should be using the phone at the front
where the secretaries sit to call down to Julian” she didn’t get to finish what she was explaining to him when he again stood tall and said “I know my job and I am going to the judge first! “fuck you” he took one step back and said “fuck off, don’t touch me, raised his hands up and again said “just fuck off”, his face was beet red.
Marie said “I’m only trying to save you running back and forth. I’m sorry if you think I am being pushy but the phone is up there for us to use so we are not running back and forth”. He said nothing and went up to bring Her Honour down.
[11] Ms. Rennie testified that when Ms. Macchia told the grievor that “there is a phone
right there” if he had to talk to the registrar, it made the grievor angry. She heard
him say “Fuck you” three times to Ms. Macchia. She testified that at the time she
was about 10 feet from the grievor and could see his face. It was very red and
she knew he was very angry. Ms. Rennie was asked if she saw Ms. Macchia
- 8 -
advance towards the grievor as if to hit him or use her hands as if to make
contact with him. She replied “no”, and demonstrated an up and down hand
motion as what she saw. Ms. Rennie was asked by employer counsel whether
she observed Ms. Macchia jumping up and down, pointing her finger at grievor’s
face, and saying why are you so late, when the grievor returned after speaking to
the registrar. Ms. Rennie replied that she did not see or hear any of that. Ms.
Rennie testified that when Ms. Macchia spoke to the grievor, she was “fairly
close” to him, but she was not threatening him. She was trying to be quiet
because the courtroom and the jury room were close by. When the grievor was
swearing at Ms. Macchia he was not “yelling”, but was still loud considering how
close the court room and jury room were.
[12] In cross-examination, Ms. Rennie stated that when she heard the exchange
between Mr. Handisyde and the grievor on December 6th, she was seated 12 to
15 feet from them, and Ms. Macchia was seated close to her. She reiterated that
she did not hear the grievor say “Fuck Gord” or “Fuck Julian”, as Mr. Handisyde
was leaving following the exchange or thereafter. She confirmed that she did
hear Ms. Macchia say to the grievor “Gord was right”, but she was not sure
whether it was before the grievor went up to the judge’s chambers or after he
returned.
[13] Ms. Rennie testified that it was sometime after that comment to the grievor by
Ms. Macchia that the grievor came downstairs after talking to the judge and went
to speak to the registrar. It was at that time the exchange about the telephone
took place. Asked when the grievor swore at Ms. Macchia, she said “She said
Mike you know there is a phone on the 6th floor where secretaries sit. It is there
for CSO’s to use to call down to the court room. So you don’t have to run up and
down. That’s when Mike said “Fuck you” to Maria”.
[14] Ms. Rennie said that at the time the grievor and Ms. Macchia were about 4 feet
apart. Ms. Rennie was 4 to 5 feet from Ms. Macchia. Asked how Ms. Macchia
was moving her hands up and down she said that it was “like in normal
- 9 -
conversation and telling Mike to be quiet”. She testified that the whole exchange
between Ms. Macchia and the grievor lasted about 2 minutes. Counsel
suggested that since she was looking at Macchia’s back, she could not have
seen clearly what Ms. Macchia was doing with her hands. She stated that she
was seated at a slight angle behind Ms. Macchia, not directly behind her. So she
could see her hands. She was “trying to use both arms and trying to keep Mike
calm because he was getting angry”.
[15] Ms. Rennie agreed that there is no policy, and there is nothing in the manual,
requiring that CSO’s use the 6th floor telephone to call the court room, but added
that that is the usual procedure and that the telephone is there for that purpose.
She agreed with the suggestion that while a CSO could use phone, and it may be
better and more efficient to use the phone, there is no requirement that a CSO
“must” use it.
[16] Ms. Rennie agreed that she did not make any notes about the December 6th
incident, and her statement was sent only after Ms. Allen’s request. She stated
that following the incident she deliberately left the grievor and Ms. Macchia alone
in the lunch room to give the grievor an opportunity to apologize to Ms. Macchia.
She agreed that she felt it was safe to do so because despite what had
happened, it was unusual for the grievor to act that way.
[17] The CSO Supervisor, Ms. Winsome Allen testified that she did not work on
Saturday December 6, 2014. She came to work on Monday December 8th and
found a voice-mail left on December 7th by Ms. Macchia that she had “an
exchange of words” at work on December 6th with the grievor. She asked Ms.
Macchia to meet with her. When they met, she took notes as Ms. Macchia
described the incident. Following the meeting, she considered the incident to be
very serious and contacted her manager, Ms. Marion Marrone. She sent an e-
mail to Ms. Rennie requesting that she meet her, but Ms. Rennie replied that she
was already back home and would meet the next day. She spoke to Mr.
Handisyde and asked him to submit a written statement about what transpired.
- 10 -
She believed that it was on the Friday, when the grievor was next at work, that
she directed the grievor to provide a written statement. While she passed on the
information about the incident she received from the various individuals including
written statements to Ms. Marrone, she played no role in the decision to
discharge the grievor.
[18] Ms. Allen confirmed under cross-examination that she made notes on a spiral
bound book as Ms. Macchia related to her what happened on December 6th,
2014. Later, she used those notes and prepared a typed statement. Both her
hand written notes and the typed statement were filed as exhibits. Under cross-
examination she confirmed that neither has any reference to Ms. Macchia
reporting that the grievor stated words to the effect “Fuck Gord fuck Julian”.
[19] Ms. Marrone testified that at the allegation meeting on December 23, 2014, she
commenced by reading the allegation letter dated December 18, 2014 which had
been provided to the grievor, and giving the grievor an opportunity to respond to
the allegation. She testified that significant time was spent going back and forth
with the grievor because the grievor simply kept saying “nothing happened in
courtroom 305”. Finally, the union representative and the grievor went out of the
meeting room. Upon their return it was clarified finally that the incident in fact
took place in the hallway outside court room 305 and not in court room 305 as
the allegation was worded. Then the grievor took the position that he would only
respond to the allegation if Ms. Marrone was prepared to re-word the allegation
letter. She agreed and the meeting proceeded. Ms. Marrone testified that she
felt that the grievor was being obstructive by focussing on a technical detail. She
said that had the grievor simply pointed out immediately that the incident took
place outside the courtroom and not in the courtroom, the time wasted going
back and forth would have been avoided.
[20] Ms. Marrone testified that the grievor admitted at the meeting that he used the
words “fuck off” on December 14, 2014, directed at Ms. Macchia. When she
asked whether he felt it was appropriate to direct those words at a co-worker, the
- 11 -
grievor’s response was to the effect, “Fuck off is not a nice word. But that’s how
you get your point across to someone with that background”.
[21] Ms. Marrone testified at length about two written statements the grievor had
provided in responding to the allegation. They described numerous past
instances where the grievor had been allegedly offended by a number of his co-
workers. Ms. Marrone testified that in describing these instances the grievor
used several derogatory terms to describe his co-workers, including,
“helicoptering”, “Troll”, “Boot Camp Sergeant Major, Type A personality”, “self-
appointed straw bosses”, and “house angel street devil”.
[22] The grievor concluded his second written statement with the following:
What do I want? I am requesting that employees that provisionally take it in their heads to instruct or monitor other employees, be fully
trained in all aspects of adult education, psychology, customer service, critical thinking and soft skills. I request that all employees relate to others with respect and dignity and in a spirit of co-operation that is within the Workplace Violence
Prevention Policy. Also that the Helicoptering, Trolling, Sergeant Major mentality, and hi-jacking of others hours cease immediately. From what I have been told, Winsome ALLEN, Diane CHAPPELL and Joan ZAMMIT are the three supervisory personnel to whom
CSOs report. A spirit of co-operation is extended to other supervisors such as the Sheriff, security and Ontario Court of Justice et al. I look forward to discussing this matter further. I feel this is a
management dilemma. I request an apology for the offensive acts described in the memo. In the alternative, I request your support for me to handle this issue myself, I hold no grudge or animosity towards any person mentioned in this memorandum.
[23] Ms. Marrone testified that at the time she received the grievor’s second written
submission she had not made a decision on what action to take with regard to
Ms. Macchia’s complaint about the grievor’s behaviour. After considering the
grievor’s conduct and comments at the allegation meeting, and his two written
submissions, particularly his derogatory name calling of his co-workers, she
- 12 -
came to the conclusion that the grievor did not have the skills or ability to
continue in his position as a CSO. She testified that the grievor had sworn at a
co-worker using profanity outside the jury room where the jury was deliberating,
and yet did not see he did anything wrong. Considering all of that she decided
that discharge was justified.
[24] In cross-examination, Ms. Marrone agreed that in his 8 to 9 months of
employment as a CSO, the grievor would have worked with some 38 CSOs and
70 court reporters, as well as court registrars and judges, and that prior to the
December 6th incident, she had not received any complaint from any of them
about the grievor’s behaviour. Ms. Marrone reiterated that at the allegation
meeting she felt that the grievor was seizing on a way to avoid responding to the
allegation because of a technicality. She agreed, however, that once the letter
was amended, the grievor responded to the allegation and admitted that he
swore at Ms. Macchia. Union counsel put to Ms. Marrone that the grievor’s
position was that he told Ms. Macchia to “fuck off” because she was getting close
to him and he was afraid she would hit or attack him. Ms. Marrone disagreed
and stated that the grievor’s version was that Ms. Macchia approached him with
her hands moving up and down, after the grievor had pointed his finger and
swore at her, not before the swearing.
[25] Ms. Marrone testified that she reviewed the performance evaluation of the grievor
done by Ms. Allen in September, before deciding to discharge the grievor. She
agreed that the grievor had done well in the performance evaluation, but added
that due to the complete lack of remorse on his part, and his name calling in
responding to the allegation, she was very concerned about the safety of the
grievor’s co-workers “going forward”. She stated that while the grievor claims
that he feared that Ms. Macchia was going to hit him, she found it hard to believe
given all of the information she was aware of, particularly her knowledge about
Ms. Macchia and her physical size compared to the grievor. She reiterated that
the grievor had not raised any concern at all about any of his colleagues. Yet he
“called everyone names” when responding to the allegation he was faced with.
- 13 -
UNION EVIDENCE
[26] The grievor was questioned at length about his two written statements. It
suffices to note that he provided definitions for the terms he used to describe
some of his co-workers, and stated that he used those terms because in his view
they “best described” the individuals concerned.
[27] While the grievor described the whole shift on December 6, 2014 in minute detail,
the relevant testimony is as follows. That day the grievor was assigned to court
room 305 as the lead CSO. The jury wanted to view certain video evidence. The
grievor was the only CSO in the court room. Therefore, he rotated between
sitting at the “back door”, which was the public entrance to the court room, and
sitting to the left of the dais where the judge sat. The judge then asked him to
stay at the dais because the lawyers had documents that had to be photo copied.
He did not want to go back and forth between the front and the back door
because to do that, he would have had to walk in front of the jury box, blocking
the jury’s view of the video. Therefore, he sat at the front as the judge had
instructed. The grievor noticed that at some point Mr. Handisyde came in to the
court room, sat at the back for 3-4 minutes and left. Shortly after the court
adjourned, the grievor escorted the judge to her office. Mr. Handisyde arrived at
that time to get the food order for the jury. The grievor testified that Mr.
Handisyde told him “in his usual troll manner”, “you should be sitting at the back
of the court room”. The grievor replied to the effect, “You don’t know what you
are talking about. Just mind your own business. I know what I am doing”. Mr.
Handisyde took the food order and left.
[28] According to the grievor, around 12:45 p.m. Ms. Macchia informed him that the
jury wanted to go outside for a smoke break. She asked the grievor to guard the
jury room while the jury was outside, and he agreed to do so, but stated that he
first had to inform the court registrar in court room 305 where he would be in
case he needed him. When he went to the court room the registrar was talking
on the telephone. He waited a few minutes and left a note stating where he
would be. When he exited the court room, he saw Ms. Macchia and Ms. Rennie
- 14 -
seated at a table in the hallway. According to the grievor, Ms. Macchia “said in a
loud voice, words to the effect “What took you so long”. Then she started to, the
best way to describe is, “dance”. She was jumping up and down, pointing her
hands to the floor and to the ceiling”. He said, “She was going on about, I took
too long, I was late, and she said “to hell with Julian” or words to that effect.
Then she moved in to my personal space. Both her hands were open and raised
up”. The grievor demonstrated with hands open and in front of his own face.
The grievor testified, “Then I told her to fuck off in a loud voice. She moved in a
little closer. I told her to fuck off again. Next I felt she was possibly going to do
something. So I said, “Don’t touch me”. I was waiting for her to make her next
move, to see what I should do next. She then apologized three times. She said,
“Mike, I apologize” three times”. She seemed a bit upset. Absolutely yes. Then
she left and turned the corner out of my view”.
[29] The grievor testified that at the allegation meeting on December 23, 2014, when
Ms. Marrone read the allegation letter, he “disagreed with the allegation in
relation to location. It stated the event happened in court room 305. But nothing
happened in court room 305”. Asked why he insisted on changing the allegation
letter, the grievor replied, “Because it was incorrect and not true. I had a
conversation with Perry, (the union representative) during a break and decided
that the error should be corrected before I respond”. When the Board asked the
grievor what the error was, he explained, “the letter stated I was involved in an
event in court room 305. I thought she was confused with someone else’s event
that took place in the court room, because my event was in the hallway. So I
said nothing happened in the court room”.
[30] The grievor was asked by union counsel whether he agreed with the employer’s
decision to terminated him. He replied, “No, I didn’t do anything untoward. I
didn’t do any of the allegations. Maria was the instigator. That’s the person who
should be disciplined”. Asked whether he agreed with the way the employer
handled the situation, the grievor responded, “No. I feel the matter should’ve
- 15 -
been dealt with at a round table discussion where everyone can discuss the
situation and come to a suitable conclusion”.
[31] In cross-examination, the grievor stated that when Ms. Macchia was “dancing”
and saying “you were late” and “to hell with Julian”, she was about 5-7 feet away
from him. Subsequently when she moved into his “personal space”, she was
about 3 feet from him. The closest she got to him was 2½ to 3 feet. Asked why
he then told her to “fuck off”, the first time, he said “I wanted to re-inforce that I
didn’t want her to carry out her intentions whatever they were”. Asked what he
would have done if Ms. Macchia had taken one more step towards him, he said,
“I would’ve grabbed her and put an arm lock around her. I’d use the least force
needed to subdue her”.
[32] Employer counsel referred to the grievor’s testimony about the training he had
received on conflict resolution while working in the police, and asked whether he
believes that telling a colleague to fuck off is an effective way of conflict
resolution. He replied, “Yes. To let them know you are serious. The last thing I
want is physical violence. Since my last day in the police force, this was the first
time I was threatened with physical violence”. He testified that his swearing had
the desired effect because by the time she left, Ms. Macchia had calmed down
“from a 5 to a 2”, and “we didn’t get into a further assault”.
[33] Employer counsel referred to the grievor’s first written statement which was
dated December 15th, 2014. Although no allegation had yet been made against
him relating to the December 6th incident, counsel suggested that he wrote it
because he knew that his behaviour on December 6th was wrong, and because
he was worried about losing his job. The grievor disagreed. His position was that
the statement was meant to be a complaint from him against his co-workers, Ms.
Macchia, Mr. Handisyde, and another individual Ms. L.S. He had verbally made
the complaint to Ms. Allen in her office. Ms. Allen told him that he should handle
personal issues with co-workers on his own. Since no action was taken by
management and the matter was dragging on, he decided to complain formally in
- 16 -
writing. He testified that his written statement had been “in the works” for a while.
He prepared the document on December 9, 2014, but did not get it to Ms. Allen
until December 15th because he missed work due to days off and sickness. He
agreed that he had a fax machine at home, but he wanted to deliver a paper
copy directly to Ms. Allen. He insisted that as of December 9th, he did not have
any suspicion that the employer had received any complaint against him relating
to December 6th.
[34] Counsel asked the grievor, why he read off his first written statement at the
allegation meeting, if it was a complaint unrelated to the allegations against him.
The grievor replied that he did not read off that statement. Counsel put to the
grievor that he read large portions of that document “verbatim” and suggested to
the grievor that he tends not to recall some salient things. The grievor replied,
“It’s been a couple of years. But no. I don’t think so. I read off another
document”.
[35] Counsel put to the grievor that at the allegation meeting he wanted an
opportunity to provide additional information in response to the allegations, Ms.
Marrone agreed, and he provided a second written statement dated December
24, 2014. He agreed. Counsel pointed out that the second statement was the
same as the first, except that he attached his resume to it, and provided
additional information about the courses he had taught, his professional
development and transferable skills, an excerpt from a Human Rights
Commission document and definitions of certain terms. She put to him that the
second statement in large part is a repeat of the first. The grievor replied, “Yes. I
incorporated what I had sent to Ms. Allen. Yes. I wanted to let Ms. Marrone
know I had made the complaint to Ms. Allen since I didn’t know if Ms. Allen had
told her.”
[36] Employer counsel pointed out that in describing the December 6th incident, the
grievor had made no mention at all in either written statement, that he had yelled
or told Ms. Macchia to fuck off, and asked why. The grievor replied that he had
- 17 -
left that out in error, that when he realized the error he prepared an “addendum”
to correct it. Asked if he sent that addendum to the employer, he replied that he
did not, but pointed out that at the allegation meeting he admitted that he swore
at Ms. Macchia.
[37] Employer counsel asked the grievor why he stated in his written statements that
some of his co-worker should attend a workshop “to be sensitized to the proper
use of personal space and haptics”. He replied that people should be made
aware that in Canadian culture touching is not generally acceptable. While it
may be different in Europe and Asia, in Canadian culture there has to be a
comfort space. He stated that on December 6th, Ms. Macchia had moved into his
personal space when talking to him. Asked whether that was not in keeping with
Canadian culture, he replied, “yes. In Canada that’s how we are”, and added
that it is also not sanitary.
[38] The grievor was asked why he added in his second statement, a formal
document which under Ms. Macchia’s name (with her age in brackets) states,
inter alia that she “Did without consent of Michael Ryan apply force intentionally
directly or indirectly”, and “Maria Macchia intended to apply force and it was not
by reflex or carelessly.” The grievor replied that he drafted that in the format
used by the police to lay a charge because it includes all relevant information and
is easy to understand. He answered in the affirmative, when asked whether it is
his position that on December 6th Ms. Macchia applied force on him and
attempted to assault him.
[39] Counsel referred to the grievor’s description of Ms. Macchia’s complaint as
“theatrical”, and asked whether it is his opinion that she should not have
complained about him telling her to fuck off while at work. He replied, “She had
no right to, because she instigated the whole thing, and was in a position to
assault me. I don’t know why or what she was thinking”. When counsel asked,
“So she had no right to be upset or to complain?”, he replied “she can complain
and I have a right to defend myself”.
- 18 -
[40] Under cross-examination, the grievor agreed that he knew that the trial in court
room 305 was the only court in session on December 6, 2014, and that on that
day he had an incident in which he yelled and swore at a co-worker. When
counsel suggested that in those circumstances, he was not being truthful when
he testified that when he read the allegation letter he thought that Ms. Marrone
may be referring to someone else’s incident in the court room, and had no idea
that the allegation was in relation to his swearing at Ms. Macchia. The grievor
replied, “The letter was incorrect. I was concerned what else in the letter was
wrong”. Counsel pointed out that, when he kept repeating that nothing happened
in court room 305, Ms. Marrone asked whether he yelled and swore at a co-
worker anywhere in the court house, he still refused to answer. The grievor’s
response was, “By this time I felt the meeting had turned into an investigation
meeting”. When asked why he did not simply say right at the start that it
happened in the hallway outside courtroom 305 and not in courtroom 305, the
grievor replied that it was not his job to correct Ms. Marrone.
[41] Counsel pointed out that at the allegation meeting Ms. Marrone asked him
whether he considered that Mr. Handisyde may have been trying to assist him as
part of team work, when he told him that he should sit at the back of the court
room when he is the only CSO there, and he replied that Mr. Handisyde was a
“troll” and just an instigator and meddling. Counsel asked if he still maintains
today that it was appropriate to call a colleague “a troll”. The grievor replied,
“Yes”. Counsel asked the grievor why he had claimed in his second statement
that he had been denied natural justice. He replied it was the error in the
allegation relating to location, which caused him to think whether there was some
mix-up with another incident involving someone else.
[42] Counsel pointed out that in response to the allegations against him, the grievor
had demanded that Ms. Macchia apologize to him and asked, “Apologize for
what?” He replied, “For the jumping up and down and her hand movements I
demonstrated here. Also for some of her untrue statements”. Counsel pointed
out that he had referred to Ms. Macchia “a house angel, street devil”, yelled at
- 19 -
her and told her to “fuck off”, and asked, whether he thinks he should apologize
to her. The grievor replied, “In no way, shape or form. I was doing my job under
my job spec as I am empowered to do”. Asked whether he feels he did “anything
that contributed to this event”, the grievor said, “no”.
[43] Counsel put to the grievor that while Ms. Macchia may have been angry and
upset when told to “fuck off”, she did not respond aggressively. The grievor
disagreed. He said, “Her dancing and hand movements and her moving towards
me like to grab me by my neck”. Asked whether he felt she was going to strangle
him, he replied, “To attempt to strangle”. Asked if he feared for his life, he said, “I
was in fear of being injured”. Counsel asked, “You want this Board to believe
that you believed she was going to attempt to strangle you and you were in
fear?”. He replied, “I can’t read her mind. So I can’t say for 100%. But by her
actions it appeared she was going to choke, push or do something because she
was moving towards me”.
[44] Counsel referred to the grievor’s written statements, where he refers to Ms.
Macchia as a “Boot camp Sergeant Major Type A personality. Best described as
a dysfunctional inadequate person masquerading as a leader with a great need
for power and control over others, usually through a threatening style of
interaction”, and asked why he formed that opinion of her. He replied that Ms.
Macchia had tried that before and it had worked. Counsel pointed out that the
employer witnesses had testified that Ms. Macchia was well respected and there
had been no complaints about her. She asked what information he relied on to
say she had previously engaged in a threatening style of interaction successfully.
The grievor replied, “I go by hearsay and gossip from people I know to be reliable
that this dancing had occurred previously”. Counsel put the grievor that he was
fabricating evidence as he sees fit in order to protect his job. He disagreed.
[45] Counsel pointed out that in his written statements, the grievor had alleged that on
05 December 2014 at some point Ms. Macchia told him to “Fuck off” and asked
to elaborate on the context in which she said that. The grievor replied, “She was
- 20 -
talking about her family. I don’t know if I said something. But she told me to fuck
off.” Counsel suggested that his memory appears not to be clear. “Not totally.
But I did make notes”. Counsel suggested that the grievor was making up this
allegation to explain why he told Ms. Macchia to fuck off. He disagreed.
[46] Counsel asked the grievor whether the grievor’s defence to the allegation was
“unreasonable provocation”. He replied, “yes. She set me up”. Asked to
explain, he said that by all of her actions he had set out in his statements, she
had set out to undermine his job. Asked “For what purpose”, the grievor replied,
“To get me fired, and that’s what happened”.
[47] Counsel put to the grievor that he disliked Ms. Macchia. He replied that he did
not form any opinion about her, and that his concern was about “her actions at
various times”. Counsel put to the grievor that in his written statements he had
expressed the following opinions about Ms. Macchia. That she was undermining
him; that she was provoking him; that she was of an aggressive provocative
demeanor; that she was on a quest for personal power and control; that she was
a person silently appointed as a leader; that she had contributed to a toxic
workplace; that she was an unqualified employee who should not be instructing
other employees; that she was a house angel street devil; that she intended to
apply force on him and not by reflex or carelessly; that she meant her threat to be
taken seriously; that she was physically capable of carrying out her intention; that
she was helicoptering; and that she was engaged in social undermining. The
grievor agreed with each of those suggestions. When the Board sought
clarification as to when he formed these opinions of Ms. Macchia, he replied that
most were formed prior to December 6, 2014. Counsel asked whether his
testimony is that despite all of that, he did not dislike Ms. Macchia. The grievor
replied, “I have no reason to like or dislike her. She did what she did and caused
this whole event and I lost my job over it”.
[48] Counsel referred to the letter of discharge, and asked the grievor whether he
admitted at the allegation meeting that he swore at a co-worker. The grievor
- 21 -
replied, “yes. That I told her to fuck off twice”. Counsel asked if it is correct that
at that meeting he “expressed no remorse for your actions and failed to
appreciate that this behaviour was inappropriate in any way”. The grievor replied
“yes”. Counsel asked whether the grievor now thinks that his behaviour was
inappropriate in any way. The response was, “Not at all. I was defending
myself”. Counsel asked, “So you say you were justified”? The grievor answered,
“Yes. She provoked the whole thing”. Asked “Do you agree your behaviour was
unprofessional?” the grievor replied “Not in these circumstances”.
[49] Employer Submissions
Employer counsel reviewed the testimony of each of the witnesses. She pointed
out that the defence the grievor offered to the employer in responding to the
allegation was that of provocation. Then during his testimony he came up with
self-defence, claiming that he acted in fear of being strangled by Ms. Macchia.
That position is contradicted by Ms. Macchia, who testified that she was moving
her hands, not aggressively, but in an attempt to calm down the grievor. Ms.
Rennie, who witnessed the incident confirmed that Ms. Macchia did not act
aggressively at all. She submitted that the grievor was not a credible witness
and fabricated evidence as he saw fit. She urged the Board to consider which
version has a “ring of truth” in light of all of the evidence.
[50] Counsel pointed out that the grievor has admitted that he told Ms. Macchia to
“fuck off” twice. While the union conceded in its opening statement that the
grievor’s conduct justified some discipline, the grievor did not do that. His
position during testimony was that Ms. Macchia had provoked him, and that
provocation justified his swearing at her. On that basis, he proudly repeated that
he had done nothing wrong and had no reason to apologize or be remorseful. In
fact, he expected Ms. Macchia to apologize to him. Citing case law, employer
counsel submitted that even if the grievor’s testimony relating to the alleged past
instances of provocative behaviour by Ms. Macchia is accepted, such conduct
does not provide him with a defence, because the law is that, to be a defence,
provocation has to be instantaneous. The grievor, to the contrary, had formed a
- 22 -
negative opinion of Ms. Macchia based on his past experiences with her, and
took the opportunity to swear at her on December 6th. She urged the Board to
conclude that Ms. Macchia did nothing on December 6th to provoke the grievor so
as to justify his yelling and swearing.
[51] Counsel submitted that the grievor’s conduct was serious. She urged the Board
to consider that the incident occurred in a court house, and outside the jury room
where a jury was deliberating. She pointed out that the grievor’s position
description as a CSO required him to act respectfully and professionally at work.
Swearing and yelling at a co-worker is not consistent with that requirement.
[52] Counsel conceded that the grievor had no previous discipline. However, that
must be seen in light of the fact that he had been employed with the employer for
only nine months. She submitted that despite the absence of prior discipline, the
grievor exhibited a complete lack of remorse and repeatedly refused to
acknowledge any wrong-doing. Instead, he portrayed himself as the innocent
victim and vilified his co-workers. She submitted that had the grievor admitted
that his behaviour was unacceptable in a timely fashion, “this case could have
gone the other way”. However, given many opportunities to accept responsibility
for his wrongful conduct, he refused. In those circumstances, there is no basis
for optimism that the grievor would not repeat his behaviour if he is reinstated
with a lesser penalty.
[53] Union submissions
Union counsel reiterated the concession he made in opening that the employer
had just cause to discipline the grievor, and that the only issue is whether the
penalty of discharge was appropriate. It was the union’s position that in all of the
circumstances, discharge was excessive. Union counsel made submissions to
the effect that the employer did not discipline the grievor for his “name calling” in
the two written statements, or his conduct at the allegation meeting and that the
employer is not entitled to rely on those as grounds for discipline. He reviewed
the evidence in relation to the exchange between Mr. Handisyde and the grievor
- 23 -
on December 6th. He argued that during that exchange the grievor did not
engage in any culpable behaviour. The allegation that after Ms. Handisyde left
the grievor made a comment to the effect “Fuck Gord, fuck Julian”, is made only
by Ms. Macchia. The grievor denied making any such comment. At the time Ms.
Macchia and Ms. Rennie were seated at a table within an arm’s reach of each
other. Mr. Handisyde had left and did not testify that he heard that comment.
Ms. Rennie also testified that she did not hear such a comment. The union
submitted that if such an unusual profane comment was repeated at least twice
as Ms. Macchia claims, Ms. Rennie would recall that. He also pointed out that
when Ms. Macchia reported the incident to Ms. Allen on December 8th, she made
no mention of this serious allegation. Ms. Allen’s notes nor the statement she
prepared based on the notes refers to it. Counsel urged the Board to find that
this allegation is not substantiated.
[54] Counsel asked the Board to consider what led the grievor to yell and swear at
Ms. Macchia. When the grievor returned from the court room, the grievor was
confronted by Ms. Macchia asking why he was so late. She was jumping up and
down with her hands up. That was when the grievor told her to fuck off. Then
Ms. Macchia moved closer, still with her hands up. The grievor pointed a finger
at her, took a step back and said, “Fuck off. Don’t touch me”. Counsel argued
that the fact that the grievor took a step back and that he said “don’t touch me” is
consistent with the grievor’s testimony that he feared that Ms. Macchia would “hit
or at least touch” him. Therefore, in determining the quantum of discipline, the
fact that he acted in response to Ms. Macchia’s aggressive behaviour should be
considered as a mitigating factor. It was submitted further that other than the
December 6th incident, there is no evidence of yelling or swearing by the grievor.
In fact, Ms. Rennie testified that she was surprised by the grievor’s conduct
because she knew him to be respectful and professional.
[55] The union also submitted that discharge of the grievor should not be upheld
because the employer’s investigation into the complaint lodged by Ms. Macchia
was biased. It was submitted that Ms. Marrone who had known Ms. Macchia for
- 24 -
only 2½ years and had not directly supervised her. She testified that she knew
Ms. Macchia to be well respected and always helpful and “motherly” to her co-
workers. In believing Ms. Macchia’s assertions, Ms. Marrone relied on her
preconceived positive opinion of Ms. Macchia, and did not believe the grievor’s
explanation that he had reacted to aggressive behaviour by her.
[56] Secondly, the union submitted that Ms. Allen’s investigation of the incident was
biased. Counsel pointed to an e-mail Ms. Allen wrote to Human Resources staff
where she states that the grievor should apologize to Ms. Macchia. It was
argued that as soon as the complaint was received Ms. Allen had pre-judged that
the grievor was guilty. Counsel also pointed out that Ms. Allen promptly
contacted Mr. Handisyde and Ms. Rennie to get their statements, but did not
contact the grievor until later.
[57] Counsel argued that Ms. Marrone’s testimony that she was concerned that the
safety of the grievor’s co-workers would be at risk if the grievor is allowed to
continue working because he might repeat his conduct or “do worse”, is not
supported by the evidence. The grievor had never yelled, acted aggressively or
engaged in any swearing before or after the December 6th incident. Ms. Rennie
had deliberately left the grievor and Ms. Macchia alone right after the swearing
incident, hoping that the grievor would apologize to Ms. Macchia. She testified
that she was not concerned about Ms. Macchia’s safety when she did that.
[58] Union counsel conceded that two factors operate against reinstatement. First,
the grievor had only 9 months of service. Second, he failed to take any
responsibility or show any remorse for his misconduct. However, he disagreed
with employer counsel’s submission that corrective discipline is not appropriate in
the circumstances. He argued that the Board should reinstate the grievor and
substitute a lesser, but still serious, penalty, including any conditions the Board
may deem necessary. Pointing out that “no one had previously told the grievor
that this type of conduct is inappropriate”, he argued that such a penalty would
- 25 -
send a strong message to the grievor that his conduct was not acceptable and
should not be repeated.
DECISION
[59] In any discipline case the Board is required to first determine whether the
employer had just cause to impose any discipline on the grievor, and if the
determination is in the affirmative, proceed to decide whether the particular
discipline imposed was appropriate in all of the circumstances. Although the
union has conceded the first issue, for the Board to determine the second issue it
is necessary to examine the nature of the culpable conduct which gave rise to
just cause. The Board has determined that the grievor was not disciplined for the
content of the two written statements he submitted in response to the allegation
letter or his conduct at the allegation meeting. He was discipline for his behaviour
on December 6th. The written statements and the grievor’s conduct at the
meeting influenced Ms. Marrone’s decision that he was not suitable to continue
as a CSO, and that the appropriate discipline is termination.
[60] The parties spent significant time leading evidence as to whether the grievor was
justified in sitting at the front of the court room, whether Mr. Handisyde was
entitled, as a co-worker, to tell the grievor that he should have been sitting at the
back of the court room, whether Ms. Macchia acted within her authority when she
told the grievor that he should use the telephone upstairs rather than running up
and down the stairs, and that Mr. Handisyde was right. Substantial evidence was
also led about the provisions of the Policy and Procedure Handbook and the
employer’s policy and expectations on these issues. The Board does not find it
necessary or useful to review that evidence. Assuming, without finding, that the
grievor was right, and that his co-workers had stepped outside the boundaries of
their authority, that does not make the grievor’s alleged responses appropriate.
The Board will address below whether the grievor’s conduct is excused and
justified on the basis of a defence of provocation. However, short of that, while
the co-workers’ conduct may well have been annoying and offensive to him, the
grievor was not entitled to take the law into his own hands as he did, in
- 26 -
addressing his concerns. No workplace can function if governed by the law of
the jungle. This is even more so in a court house. If an employee is offended by
the behaviour of a co-worker and wants that behaviour to stop, he/she could tell
the co-worker in a calm and civil manner that he/she did not appreciate that
behaviour and ask that it stop. If he/she does not wish to do so, the proper
course of action is to bring the concern to the attention of management, and
request that management take steps to address it. If management fails to act
and the employee is of the view that any of his collective agreement or statutory
rights have been compromised, he/she has the right to grieve. What he/she is
not entitled to do is address his concern by yelling and swearing at the co-worker
using profanity.
[61] Turning then to the first alleged culpable behaviour, namely that the grievor
stated “Fuck Gord, fuck Julian” as Mr. Handisyde left, the Board agrees with
union counsel that this allegation is not substantiated. At the time of this alleged
statement, there were three individuals present. Ms. Macchia and Ms. Rennie
were seated at a table close to each other. The grievor was approximately ten
feet away. The grievor vehemently denied that he made the statement. Ms.
Rennie testified that she did not hear such a statement by the grievor. The only
evidence that he did make that statement came from Ms. Macchia. Employer
counsel suggested that Ms. Rennie either did not hear the comment or does not
recall it. The Board disagrees. Ms. Rennie was seated right beside Ms. Macchia
and would have heard it if Ms. Macchia heard the comment at least twice, as she
testified. The evidence is that it is not common to hear in a court house a CSO
use the “f” word in reference to another CSO or a court registrar”. Ms. Rennie
was focussed on the exchange that was going on between the grievor, Ms.
Handisyde and Ms. Macchia. It is extremely unlikely that Ms. Rennie would
forget such an usual occurrence either.
[62] More significantly, the evidence is that Ms. Macchia met with her supervisor, Ms.
Allen, and related in detail her version of what occurred on December 6, 2014.
Ms. Allen took notes of what she related to her, and based on those notes,
- 27 -
prepared what amounted to Ms. Macchia’s complaint. There is no reference
whatsoever in Mr. Allen’s notes or the complaint she prepared, that Ms. Macchia
mentioned to her the alleged swearing by the grievor in reference to “Gord or
Julian”. Ms. Macchia, during her testimony stated that while what Ms. Allen had
written down was generally an accurate description of what she related, she had
left out some detail. The Board does not consider the statement imputed to the
grievor to be a “detail” which Ms. Allen may have edited out. Indeed, employer
counsel did not attempt to elicit testimony from Ms. Allen that Ms. Macchia did in
fact relate the alleged statement although it is not reflected in what she
documented.
[63] Therefore, that leaves the Board with the allegation, which is admitted by the
union, and the grievor, that the grievor yelled and swore at Ms. Macchia. There
is some discrepancy in the evidence as to exactly how many times the grievor
swore at Ms. Macchia. It is also not clear as to whether the grievor swore in
response to her telling him that “Gord was right” as Ms. Macchia testified, or in
response to Ms. Macchia “dancing up and down etc.”, claiming that that the
grievor had been late returning from the court room, as the grievor testified. It is
unnecessary for the Board to resolve that conflict, because in its view, the extent
of the culpability, and the merit of the grievor’s claim to a defence of provocation
and/or self-defence, are not materially affected by those differences. The Board
will assume, without finding, that on those issues, the grievor’s evidence is
correct.
[64] The Board first turns to the issue of provocation. In advancing provocation as
justification and/or mitigation for the grievor’s yelling and swearing at Ms.
Macchia on December 6th, the union relies on (1) five past incidents of interaction
between Ms. Macchia and the grievor, and (2) Ms. Macchia’s behaviour on
December 6th. For the present purposes, the Board will assume, without finding,
that the following past incidents took place as alleged by the grievor, except the
alleged incident on December 5, 2014, which will be addressed later in the
decision.
- 28 -
[65] While the grievor described the past incidents in detail, the gist of the alleged
provocative conduct by Ms. Macchia is as follows:
- On November 2014, while the grievor was assigned to, and performing, two
jobs simultaneously, Ms. Macchia “came into court room 212 and in a loud
animated frenzy complete with finger pointing gesticulations demanded that I call
Winsome to complain about doing both jobs, as CSO with the judge and CSO on
the rear door. She also stated that I was making others look bad by walking too
fast to the photocopier from the Registrar. She stated that I was taking work
away from others and that some of the older CSOs could not walk as fast. She
also said that the Registrars can do their own photocopying. In a forceful manner
using her hand to mimic a telephone she repeatedly stated in a loud voice,
“phone Winsome now”. My response was that I had no complaint to make. I told
her that if she had a complaint to make then to make it herself”.
- On November 25, 2014, the grievor was in Ms. Allen’s office
discussing a complaint he had about another co-worker, when Ms.
Macchia “burst in” and interrupted. Ms. Allen commented that “Maria is so
funny” and was chatting and laughing with Ms. Macchia”.
- On November 27, 2014 (tentative date) the grievor was checking identification
for members of the jury in the jury room. Ms. Macchia burst in and shouted,
“Stop socializing and wasting time. We need the first five at the rear court room
door right now”.
- At another point in time she told me that my position as Lead CSO is called
Top Dog. “We call it that but I’m not letting you be Top Dog”, she told me. This
indicates to me that her mission is a wilful attempt to invalidate or discredit my
abilities as a CSO. I find this offensive.
- On 05 December 2014 at some point she told me to “Fuck off”. Why? I don’t
know. She made sporadic comments throughout the span of 05/06 December
2014 that included stories about her family, statements about not enough hours
of work, also statements about getting rid of the older CSO’s so the younger
ones can get more money. This I found offensive and certainly contrary to the
Ontario Human Rights Act respecting age and AGEISM.
- 29 -
[66] It is to be noted that the grievor had not raised any of these past incidents prior to
December 6, 2014. During his testimony, the grievor attempted to characterize
his first statement as his complaint that had been “in the works for a while”, and
not a response to the allegations against him. He pointed out that he submitted it
on December 15th, but became aware that a complaint had been lodged against
him only when he received the allegation letter dated December 18, 2014. The
Board does not accept that testimony. It is clear that the grievor commenced
drafting the statement on December 9, 2014, just 3 days after the December 6th
incident. It is improbable that it was mere coincidence that the grievor suddenly
decided to make a complaint about past incidents at that time. It is more likely
that he realized that he may be in trouble for his swearing at Ms. Macchia,
conduct also witnessed by Ms. Rennie, and decided to develop a defence. The
grievor submitted a second written statement the day following the allegation
meeting. He admitted that this was additional information he provided in
response to the allegations against him. Interestingly, he included his first
statement as part of that response. This supports the conclusion that his first
statement was pre-emptive action on his part in anticipation of a complaint from
Ms. Macchia against him.
[67] The alleged past incidents or Ms. Macchia’s alleged behaviour on December 6th
cannot operate to completely excuse the grievor’s swearing at Ms. Macchia in
the court house. As the authors Brown & Beatty in Canadian Labour Arbitration
write at 7:4412, “Although provocation is a factor arbitrators have considered in
many cases, it can almost never completely exonerate an employee”.
[68] Therefore, the issue is whether there was provocation that would operate as a
mitigating factor in all of the circumstances. As already stated, particularly in a
unionized environment, where a co-worker does something offensive or irritating
towards another, the latter has recourse to address that. He/she cannot resort to
self-help to correct the co-worker by lashing out with profane swearing in the
workplace. Therefore, the behaviour of Ms. Macchia on December 6th, even as
described by the grievor, was not so serious as to provoke the grievor into the
- 30 -
extreme reaction he exhibited. The past incidents obviously irritated the grievor.
He felt that Ms. Macchia was interfering with how he was doing his job and acting
as if she was his superior. Even if he was reasonable in feeling that way, rather
than addressing his concern through the proper channels, over a period of time
he formed a very negative opinion of Ms. Macchia. When on December 6th, she
told him about using the phone and that Mr. Handisyde was correct about the
requirement to sit at the back of the court, that was the last straw for him. He lost
control of his temper and lashed out.
[69] If the evidence establishes that the grievor swore and yelled at Ms. Macchia to
stop a possible physical assault, that certainly would have constituted a valid
defense. In fact, it may have been a rare situation where the provocation would
fully exonerate the grievor. However, the Board concludes that this claim by the
grievor that he acted out of fear of being strangled or otherwise assaulted by Ms.
Macchia was a complete fabrication he came up with “on the fly” during his
testimony. If the grievor had honestly believed that he was in any kind of
physical danger as he claimed in testimony, that would have been his strongest
defense. Particularly with his experience in the police, he would have known
that. Yet he makes no mention in either of his written statements in response to
the allegation that he acted in self-defence when he swore at Ms. Macchia. Nor
did union counsel raise such a defence in his opening statement. Moreover, the
grievor’s own evidence was that he told Ms. Macchia to “fuck off” twice. The first
time Ms. Macchia was some 5 to 7 feet from him. Then she began to move
towards him, and he repeated the swear words. It is not believable that the
grievor felt that he was in any physical danger when he swore the first time, when
Ms. Macchia was not even within touching distance.
[70] For all of those reasons, the Board does not find that there was provocation that
would operate to exonerate the grievor, or to mitigate the seriousness of his
misconduct. There is also no evidence to support a claim for self-defence. The
Board considers the misconduct to be serious, particularly considering that it
- 31 -
happened in a court house. The Board must then consider whether there are
any mitigatory factors that apply.
[71] The grievor, by any standard, is a short service employee. At the time of his
discharge he had been employed only for approximately 9 months. In that period
he had received no discipline. Union counsel admitted that the grievor’s conduct
towards Ms. Macchia was inappropriate, and justified a disciplinary response
from the employer. Counsel also conceded that the grievor failed to take any
responsibility for his misconduct and showed no remorse. He acknowledged that
this would be a concern to the Board in considering the union’s request for
reinstatement. Nevertheless, union counsel submitted that the Board is still able
to apply corrective discipline considering that this is a first offense. He stated
that such a substituted penalty would send a strong message to the grievor that
his behaviour was not acceptable.
[72] In Re Walker Exhausts, 2012 CANLII 42290 (ONLA), in discussing a grievance
challenging termination, arbitrator Owen Gray at paragraph 27 wrote:
Like the union’s representative, I would hope that anyone in the grievor’s circumstances could be induced to reform by a lengthy suspension. Hope is not enough, however. I am obliged to weigh the evidence to deduce, as best I can, what one might expect from this grievor in future. On the evidence before me I
am not persuaded that the risk of a similar or more serious incident is sufficiently
low that the grievor’s former co-workers, supervisors and employer should be exposed to that risk.
[73] Despite the Board’s finding that the grievor’s misconduct was serious, had the
grievor taken some responsibility for his behaviour, and given some basis to
believe that he would not repeat his offensive conduct, there would have been
merit in the union’s submission requesting reinstatement with a lesser, but still
serious penalty. Given his discipline free record, the Board would have been
inclined to give him “another chance” as union counsel requested. However, in
this case, like arbitrator Gray in Re Walker Exhausts, (supra), I am not at all
persuaded that “the risk of a similar or more serious incident is sufficiently low
- 32 -
that the grievor’s former co-workers, supervisors and employer should be
exposed to that risk”.
[74] At para. 25, arbitrator Gray wrote:
One of the factors arbitrators consider in cases of this sort is whether the grievor has expressed remorse for his misconduct to those adversely affected by it and, if so, how promptly and apparently genuinely that was done. One looks for recognition by the grievor that his wrongdoing has adversely affected others
as well as himself and that he had some concern about, or at least understanding of, the impact it had on those others. Implicit in this is a rational belief that early and genuine expression of remorse for his wrongdoing is some evidence that a penchant for such wrongdoing is not characteristic of the grievor.
[75] There is no evidence that swearing and/or profanity is a characteristic of the
grievor. To the contrary, the evidence is that, except for the incident on
December 6, 2014, he had been polite and professional. Therefore, if he had
acknowledged the inappropriateness of his conduct that on the day in question,
and given some indication that it would not happen again, the Board would have
been very inclined to accept that as a very strong mitigatory factor in favour of
substituting a lesser penalty. However, to the Board’s amazement, that was not
forthcoming from the grievor. In the preponderance of cases of this sort, the
issue is whether the grievor’s admission of wrong-doing, apology or show of
remorse was prompt and genuine. Earlier that happens, greater the indication
that the grievor is genuinely remorseful, and greater the chance that he/she
would not re-offend. In many cases the admission of wrongdoing is made for the
first time during testimony at arbitration. Then there is a concern that the
admission may not be genuine, and that it is simply an attempt to save his/her
job.
[76] In the present case, the grievor not only failed to show any remorse promptly, he
continued to insist throughout his testimony that he had done nothing wrong by
yelling and swearing at a co-worker while at work in a court house. He
considered it to be an appropriate and effective method of dealing with a co-
worker like Ms. Macchia, who tells him how to do his job. He took the position
- 33 -
that he had no reason to regret what he did, and required no training on how to
handle these situations in a more appropriate manner. To the contrary, he stated
that the target of his yelling and swearing, Ms. Macchia, owed him an apology.
She required training, not he. He was present when union counsel in his opening
statement conceded that the grievor deserved some discipline, and that the
union only takes issue with the severity of the penalty. The grievor, however,
directly contradicted that position taken by the union which was reasonable and
consistent with arbitral jurisprudence. This is an extreme case, something I had
not seen in over thirty years of adjudicating, where the grievor in effect expressed
to the employer and to the Board, that if a similar situation arises in the future, he
would act in exactly the same manner as he did on December 6, 2014.
[77] The Board has a further concern that militates against the reinstatement of the
grievor. That is his untruthfulness with the employer, as well as with the Board. I
review below some examples.
- At the allegation meeting he refused to respond to the allegation. It is clear
that while the allegation letter stated that the incident took place “in court room
305”, it actually occurred in the hallway outside that courtroom. At first, he
testified that he had a right to have a factually accurate allegation before he had
any obligation to answer to it. Thus he offered a technical or legal reason for his
refusal to respond. However, later in his cross-examination, he came up with a
different explanation. He stated that he did not answer the employer’s questions
because he thought that the employer had “mixed up” a different incident of
swearing by some other employee. The allegation letter clearly set out the date
of the alleged incident. The evidence is that the only trial held in the court house
on that day, was the one the grievor had been assigned to. The letter was about
an alleged yelling and swearing at a co-worker. The Board finds despite the error
about the exact location, that the grievor clearly knew that the allegation letter
was about the incident he was involved in that day outside court room 305.
When employer counsel cross-examined him as to why he did not simply tell the
employer that the incident was outside courtroom 305 and not in the courtroom,
he fabricated an explanation to justify his failure to cooperate.
- 34 -
- In his second written submission to the employer, the grievor claimed that Ms.
Macchia “applied force” on him. During his testimony, he stated that he feared
that Ms. Macchia was approaching him to strangle him, and that he yelled and
swore at her in an attempt to stop her from doing that. This is a position the
grievor had not advanced during his examination in chief. The evidence is clear
that Ms. Macchia did not at any time come into contact with, or even touch, the
grievor. The grievor himself did not testify that Ms. Macchia at any time touched
him. Therefore, his claim that Ms. Macchia applied force on him is clearly untrue.
- The grievor submitted two written statements, which the Board found to have
been made in response to the allegation letter. In those, the grievor claims that
on December 5, 2014, the day before the incident, Ms. Macchia told him to “fuck
off”. When asked in cross-examination for the context in which she said that, he
said he could not recall. When pressed, he could only say that “I might have said
something”. It is highly improbable that Ms. Macchia, or anyone for that matter,
would tell a co-worker to “fuck off” unless there had been some altercation or
disagreement. If such an unusual event occurred, there would have to be a
context in which it took place and the grievor would recall that. Ms. Macchia
testified that she had never said “fuck off” to the grievor or to anyone else. The
Board concludes that this is another example of the grievor fabricating evidence
to justify and explain his misconduct.
[78] By all accounts the grievor is an intelligent, competent and dedicated worker. He
could, and likely would have been an asset to the employer given his past
education, training and experience. It is therefore very regrettable that he chose
to take the position as he did. The grievor’s workplace was a court house. As a
CSO, an important part of his position was to ensure that those attending the
court house behave in a manner appropriate for maintaining the dignity of a court
of law. In the CSO position description, one of the purposes of the position is
said to be “maintaining court decorum”. One of the duties of a CSO is
“Maintaining Court decorum at all times”. His own conduct on December 06,
2014 is completely antithetical to this expectation. Of greater concern is his
continuing belief and assertion that he did nothing untoward by swearing and
- 35 -
yelling at a co-worker who behaved in a manner he found to be offensive and
irritating. He failed to give any indication that he has, even at the time he
testified, understood that what he did was inappropriate.
[79] It would be inappropriate, and indeed irresponsible, for the Board to reinstate the
grievor in the particular circumstances of this case. Accordingly the grievance is
hereby dismissed.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 29th day of June 2017.
Nimal Dissanayake, Vice-Chair