HomeMy WebLinkAboutP-2017-0258.Potter.19-03-08 Decision
Public Service
Grievance Board
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Commission des
griefs de la fonction
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Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
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PSGB# P-2017-0258
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE PUBLIC SERVICE OF ONTARIO ACT
Before
THE PUBLIC SERVICE GRIEVANCE BOARD
BETWEEN
Potter Complainant
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The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services) Employer
BEFORE Andrew Tremayne Vice-Chair
FOR THE
COMPLAINANT
Jessica Greenwood
Raven, Cameron, Ballantyne &
Yazbeck LLP
Counsel
FOR THE EMPLOYER Jonathan Rabinovitch
Treasury Board Secretariat
Legal Services Branch
Counsel
SUBMISSIONS January 22 and February 1, 2019
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DECISION
[1] Mr. Potter’s employment was terminated on March 9, 2017 after an
investigation into an incident that occurred at the Quinte Detention Centre on
December 24, 2015. In a decision dated October 2, 2018, the Board found that the
penalty of discharge for his role in the incident was excessive. The employer was
directed to reinstate Mr. Potter and to pay him compensation from the date six
months after his discharge until he was reinstated. In effect, the Board substituted a
six–month unpaid suspension for his termination.
[2] The parties agree that Mr. Potter made reasonable efforts to mitigate his
damages prior to his reinstatement and that he earned some income from alternate
sources. He also incurred legal fees in connection with the litigation of his complaint
that are in excess of the amount of that income. The parties disagree about how, if
at all, the legal fees should be treated when the total amount of compensation is
calculated.
[3] Very briefly stated, counsel for Mr. Potter takes the position that his earnings
from alternate sources should not be deducted from the compensation to be paid to
him by the employer, on the basis that his legal fees exceed the amount earned from
his mitigation efforts. Having been reinstated, Mr. Potter should not be any better or
worse off (aside from the 6 month suspension) than if he had not been discharged,
and he should be allowed to put his earnings from alternate sources towards his
legal fees rather than have them deducted from the compensation which is to be
paid to him by the employer.
[4] Counsel for the employer disagrees, and argues that this is simply a disguised
effort to persuade the Board to award legal costs to Mr. Potter, something that the
Board has declined to do in all but the most exceptional circumstances. Awards of
costs have been reserved for the most egregious examples of employer misconduct,
which is not the case here.
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[5] For the reasons set out below, I find that it would not be appropriate in this case
to apply the amount earned by Mr. Potter in mitigation of his damages towards his
legal fees. In other words, the Board’s usual approach should be followed, and his
legal costs should not be taken into account when his earnings from alternate
sources are deducted from the amount of compensation to be paid to him by the
employer.
The Parties’ Submissions
[6] Mr. Potter argues that this is not an attempt to obtain an award of costs.
Rather, this is an appropriate application of the basic principles of the duty to
mitigate: a successful party should be put in as good a position as they would have
been if the employer had not terminated their employment, subject to the
qualification that the successful party is expected to take steps to avoid losses (or
“run up” their damages). This is the general approach endorsed by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Red Deer College v. Michaels, 1975 CanLII 15 (SCC). In this
case, the employer should not benefit from Mr. Potter’s mitigation efforts while at the
same time expecting him to absorb the costs of litigation. Mr. Potter should first be
allowed to apply his mitigation income towards his legal fees. Any remaining
income, or surplus, should be offset against the retroactive pay coming from the
employer. This accords with the basic principles of mitigation and more closely puts
Mr. Potter in the same situation he would have been in but for the termination of his
employment.
[7] Mr. Potter also submits that the Federal Court of Appeal has endorsed the
principle that an arbitrator’s power to award equitable relief under the Canada
Labour Code, R.S.C. 1985 includes the power to award costs. The Court has also
noted that an award of retroactive compensation which is gained at some
considerable expense to the employee does not have the effect of making the
employee whole (Banca Nazionale Del Lavoro of Canada Ltd. v. Lee-Shanok
(F.C.A.), [1988] F.C.J. No. 594). This and the decision in Wolf Lake First Nation v.
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Young, [1997] F.C.J. No. 514 speak to that fact that legal costs effectively reduce
the compensation for lost remuneration, which should be avoided.
[8] To summarize, Mr. Potter is not asking for an award of legal costs; he is asking
that the Board recognize the reality of the situation, namely that Mr. Potter incurred
significant costs in advancing his complaint and having his discharge rescinded.
The Employer's approach, where they reap the benefits of Mr. Potter's mitigation
efforts while the legal costs that he incurred as a result of the discharge are ignored,
is not a fair and balanced approach.
[9] The employer submits that the issue of whether costs should be ordered has
been litigated at the Board many times. The Board has said that while costs are
generally awarded to successful parties in Court, they are not normally awarded by
administrative tribunals or arbitrations of employment matters in Ontario, either
based on jurisdiction or as matter of practice. This was first stated in Cardoza v.
Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services) P-2009-1510 and then
reiterated in Wallace v. Ontario (Community Safety and Correctional Services), 2015
CanLII 32427.
[10] The employer conceded that although there is support in the arbitral
jurisprudence for the principle that expenses incurred in mitigation of damages can
be offset, those expenses must be directly connected to the efforts to obtain
alternate employment. Legal costs related to the litigation of a claim for
reinstatement are treated separately and are not considered to be part of the
mitigation efforts.
Analysis and Findings
[11] First, I turn briefly to the submission that the Federal Courts have endorsed the
principle that an arbitrator’s power to award equitable relief includes the power to
award costs under the Canada Labour Code. The adjudicator's jurisdiction in
respect of remedies is provided for in subsection 242.(4) of the Code:
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(4) Where an adjudicator decides pursuant to subsection (3) that a person has
been unjustly dismissed, the adjudicator may, by order, require the employer
who dismissed the person to
(a) pay the person compensation not exceeding the amount of money that
is equivalent to the remuneration that would, but for the dismissal, have
been paid by the employer to the person;
(b) reinstate the person in his employ; and
(c) do any other like thing that it is equitable to require the employer to do in
order to remedy or counteract any consequence of the dismissal.
[12] In Banca Nazionale Del Lavoro of Canada Ltd. and Wolf Lake First Nation the
Federal Courts specifically identified the adjudicator’s broad powers in subsection
242.(4)(c) to order an employer to “do any other like thing that it is equitable to
require the employer to do in order to remedy or counteract any consequence of the
dismissal” as the source of the adjudicator’s power to award legal costs. Neither the
Public Service of Ontario Act nor Regulation 378/07 from which this Board derives
its jurisdiction and powers have similar language so this point is of little assistance to
the Board.
[13] Second, in Cardoza, the complainant argued that he had been forced to leave a
poisoned workplace, although he had returned to work by the time the matter came
before the Board. The issue was therefore whether the employer had breached his
contract of employment during the sequence of events preceding his return. The
Board upheld his complaint, finding that the employer had breached its duty of
fairness to Mr. Cardoza. Counsel in Cardoza also urged the Board to award costs as
part of a “make whole” remedy. It was argued that both the complainant and his
counsel had tried to avoid litigation, but that unnecessary delays and intransigence
by the employer had created a situation where there was no viable option other than
to litigate the matter.
[14] The Board addressed the question of remedy, including whether to award
costs, and dealt squarely with the matter of the complainant’s mitigation efforts at
paragraph 141 of its decision:
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Costs are generally awarded to the successful party in Court actions, but have
not generally been awarded by administrative tribunals or arbitrators in
employment matters in Ontario, either on the basis of lack of jurisdiction, or as
a matter of practice. A practice which does not award costs as a matter of
course has the feature that unsuccessful grievors and applicants do not
generally face the prospect of paying the legal costs of the successful party,
something that makes administrative tribunals more accessible than the
Courts. Although the decisions in Callaghan and Girling v. Ontario (Ministry of
the Solicitor General and Correctional Services), 2002 CanLII 45638 (ON
PSGB) P/0013/98 are examples of cases where the Board has awarded costs,
more recent cases have not done so, including Charlton, where the Board
reiterated that awards of cost would be reserved for the most egregious
examples of employer misconduct.
[15] I accept that the argument in Cardoza with respect to legal costs was not
advanced in precisely the same way as it has been framed by counsel for Mr. Potter;
namely that the Board should look at legal costs as part of the overall examination of
mitigation efforts and not as a separate item. Nevertheless, the Board in Cardoza
rejected virtually the same argument that is being made here, namely that if a
complainant has a significant legal bill to pay, he is not “made whole” and that costs
should be ordered as part of a “make-whole” remedy. The Board also accepted that
although much could have been done by the employer in responding to Mr.
Cardoza’s situation that would have made litigation unnecessary, it was not a case
of egregious misconduct. For that and other reasons, the Board declined to award
costs. No allegation of similar conduct on the part of the employer is being made by
Mr. Potter.
[16] Despite the relatively small number of decisions by the Board that have directly
addressed the issue of legal costs, the approach has been clear and consistent.
That is, awards of cost are be reserved for the most egregious examples of
employer misconduct. While the Board is not necessarily obliged to follow prior
decisions, it is generally accepted that where the issue is similar, an earlier decision
should be followed for the sake of consistency and predictability. As a result, even
accepting that the application of the Board’s established practice with respect to the
treatment of legal costs results in a monetary shortfall for Mr. Potter and that he will
not be in exactly the same position he would have been (apart from the 6 month
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unpaid suspension) if his employment had never been terminated, it would not be
appropriate for the Board to award costs in the circumstances of this case.
[17] The excerpt from Cardoza set out above also highlights another very important
consideration: legal costs are different from damages. Courts (and parties to a
Court action) treat them quite separately, and they are subject to very different
considerations.
[18] The principles of mitigation of damages in the employment context, and as set
out in Red Deer College and elsewhere, come down to the proposition that the
employer should not be responsible for avoidable losses. Costs generally “follow the
cause” although other considerations have been introduced, including but not limited
to: the encouragement of settlement, the prevention of frivolous or vexatious
litigation, and the discouragement of unnecessary steps in proceedings. In the
Province of Ontario, costs can be assessed, but they are usually fixed at the
discretion of the Court, and a number of factors may be taken into account. The
current system uses three scales: partial indemnity, substantial indemnity, and full
indemnity. All this to say that legal costs and mitigation are separate categories:
they are two very different things and each is subject to very different legal
considerations.
[19] The remedy requested by counsel for Mr. Potter would blur the very clear
distinction between these two categories. The compelling policy and other reasons
for not doing so have been amply articulated by the Board in its previous awards and
by the employer in this matter.
[20] In all these circumstances, the Board declines to award costs.
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 8th day of March, 2019.
“Andrew Tremayne”
_____________________
Andrew Tremayne, Vice-Chair