HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-0001.McGregor.82-07-12 DecisionONTARIO
CROWN EMPLOYEES
GRIEVANCE
SETTLEMENT
BOARD
180 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO. ONTARIO. M5G 1Z8 - SUITE 2100 TELEPHONE! 416/598 - 0688
1/80
(PRELIMINARY DECISION)
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Between:
Before:
OLBEU (Mr. G. McGregor)
and
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
J.F.W. Weatherill Chairman
S. Schachter Member
H.J. Laing Member
Grievor
Employer
For the Grievor:
For the Employer:
Hearing:
A.M. Heisey, Counsel
Blake, Cassels & Graydon
M.P. Moran, Counsel
Hicks, Morley, Hamilton, Stewart & Stone
March 29, 1982
Written arguments submitted on April 8, 16 and 26,
1982.
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The grievance in this matter relates to the discharge
of the grievor, ,effective October 3, 1979.
As is noted in the Adjournment dated November 18, 1981,
the employer has raised a preliminary objection with respect
to the timeliness of these proceedings. Evidence with
respect to that objection was received at the hearing on
March 29, 1982, and written argument thereon was submitted
on the dates noted.
The objection raised by the employer is two-fold. It
is first that the provisions of the grievance procedure
were not followed, and second that there was undue delay
in proceeding to hearing, once the matter had been referred
to arbitration. With respect to the first ground of objection,
article 22 of the collective agreement provides that grievances
in discharge cases may be filed within ten days after the
employee ceases to work. Counsel for the employer acknow-
ledged that the grievance was filed on time. the evidence
before this Board does not, however, indicate what dis-
position, if any, was made of the matter at the second step
of the grievance procedure, that being the step at which
discharge grievances are to be filed. Article 21.5 (b) of
the collective agreement, it may be noted, provides that
if the grievor fails to act within the time limit set out
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in the second step, the grievance will be considered
abandoned., It is to be noted as well, however, that
there is no evidence of any timely objection being raised
to the grievance, prior to the time when it was referred
to arbitration.
Article 21.5 (c) calls for investigation of "second-
step" grievances within fourteen days, and for a decision
in writing to be issued within seven days thereafter. The
evidence before us does not reveal whether or not these
requirements were met. Article 21.5 (e) provides that
failing settlement of the grievance, it may be submitted
to this Board within seven working days following receipt
of the final decision. In fact, the reference to arbi-
tration was received by this Board on January 4, 1980.
It would appear that there was a delay of some six weeks
in submitting the matter to arbitration. That the time
limits set out in the collective agreement in this respect
were not met, is common ground.
It is the employer's position that the failure to meet
the time limits set out in the collective agreement is
fatal to the grievance. The time limits are mandatory,
rather than directory, although there is provision (not
resorted to by the parties in this case) for extension
of time limits by mutual agreement in writing. Reference
has been made to article 21.5 (b), and may also be made
to article 21.8 (a) which provides that no grievance may
be submitted to this Board which has not been properly
carried through the grievance procedure.
Since the grievance was not processed in accordance
with the requirements of the collective agreement, since
those requirements are mandatory, since there has been
no extension of the time limits by the parties, and since
this Board has no jurisdiction (of the sort conferred on
arbitrators, for example, under The Labour Relations Act),
to relieve against the consequences of failure to comply
with time limits, it would have to be concluded, in general,
that the grievance has been "abandoned" (as the collective
agreement provides), and that this Board has no juris-
diction to hear it.
It is the union's position that the employer is
estopped from relying on the procedural provisions of the
collective agreement, by reason of its own past conduct in
violation thereof, and by reason of an oral agreement to
waive time limits. Further, it is argued that regardless
of the provisions of the collective agreement, employees
have a statutory right to arbitration in discharge cases,
in addition to any other rights in the collective agreement.
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That employees cannot be deprived of such a right by
virtue of mandatory time limits in a collective agreement
was established by this Board in the Keeling decision
(45/78).
While the Board has subsequently expressed some
hesitation with respect to the decision in Keeling (see,
for example, Clements (112/80), it has been generally
accepted as established in the Board's jurisprudence.
In Clements, it was recognized that where issues of statu-
tory interpretation arise (as opposed to issues of collec-
tive agreement interpretation), the Board might relax
somewhat its standard of review in reconsidering previous
decisions. It may well be, particularly in the light of
certain decisions of the courts which have been issued
since Keeling was decided, that the Board's interpretation
of section 18 of The Crown Employees Collective Bargaining
Act should be reconsidered. The provision in a collective
agreement of procedural provisions, such as time limits,
governing the exercise of a right should not be read, we
think, as contrary to the statutory establishment of
that right.
In the instant case, while we consider that a
timely objection by the employer would have been effec-
tive, there was in fact no objection raised with respect
to the procedures taken in this matter until March 28, 1980,
nearly three months after the matter had been referred
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other management response to the grievance at any stage.
The objection raised on March 38, 1980, was raised with
respect to a large number of grievances, listed in an
attachment to the letter of objection. With respect to
the instant case at least, the objection was not raised
in timely fashion.
Failure to comply with mandatory time limits is a
procedural irregulatity which can be waived: Palmer,
Collective Agreement Arbitration in Canada, p. 165.
Evidence that there was a waiver in this case is revealed
in several aspects of this matter: the matter was allowed
to go through the grievance procedure; there was a failure
to object at the first opportunity; and there was a sub-
stantial lack of compliance with the grievance procedure
on both sides. Waiver may be found in such circumstances:
Palmer, at p. 164 and cases cited. As to the last-mentioned
aspect, the evidence is clear that for some time there had
been no reference to time limits by either party. Then
in June, 1979, the employer wrote the union advising that
although time limits had been waived for some time,
grievances thereafter received would be required to be
processed in accordance with time limits except as agreed
in individual cases. Later, on July 6, 1979, the employer
wrote the union to advise that time limits would be waived
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for the following three week period. The union had
responded to the first letter by a policy of strict
compliance with time limits, which policy it relaxed
upon receipt of the second letter.
After the expiry of the three-week period referred
to in the letter of July 6, 1979, the union did not
revert to strict compliance. There is some evidence,
conflicting, to the effect that this was because of an
oral agreement made between the union's legal admini-
strator and the employer's staff relations officer. We
make no finding as to that. Even without there being
any explicit agreement, the fact is (on the evidence
before us) that there was neither compliance with nor
insistence' upon the time limits set out in the collective
agreement. Grievances were filed and dealt with. Many
were referred to arbitration. Not until March, 1980,
was objection raised. Insofar as it applied to the
instant case at least, that objection was, we find,
untimely.
For the foregoing reasons we do not accept the
first ground of objection raised by the employer. The
second ground of objection is that there was an undue
delay in proceeding to a hearing before this Board. In
part, delays in scheduling hearings of matters which
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had been referred to the Board for arbitration were due,
at the material 'times, to the large backlog of cases
which had built up. Delay attributable to the tribunal's
caseload would not, of course, be a proper ground for
denying aparty its right to a hearing. To some extent,
however, delays in hearing particular cases may be atti-
buted to the union, in that it advanced cases as ready for
hearing, without necessarily having regard to the order
in which they had been filed. That is, some cases were
regarded as more important than others. This procedure
was one of which all concerned were aware. In the instant
case, no claim is made for compensation. In one sense,
then, it may be considered, perhaps especially from the
employer's point of view, as having somewhat less importance
than certain other cases. However this may be, there was
no objection raised by the employer with respect to this
procedure. It was, in our view, appropriate to the circum-
stances which then obtained. We do not consider, in these
circumstances, that dely in scheduling the matter for
hearing constitutes a ground for refusing to proceed.
Accordingly, this second ground of objection also fails.
For the foregoing reasons, it is our conclusion that
the matter is arbitrable. The Registrar is directed to list
the matter for hearing on the merits. It may be that the
9
matter will then be heard by a panel of the Board
differently constituted.
DATED at Toronto, Ontario this 12th day of July, 1982.
J.F.W. Weatherill . Chairman.
"I concur
S. Schachter Member
,v440,
H.J. Laing Member
in the result"