HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-1353.McColgan.01-10-30 Decision
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EMPWYES DE LA COURONNE
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DES GRIEFS
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IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Defore
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Liquor Board Employees' Union
(McColgan)
Grievor
-and-
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)
Employer
DEFORE
BraID Herlich
Vice-Chair
FOR THE GRIEVOR
Graham Williamson
Counsel
Koskie Minsky
Barristers & Solicitors
FOR THE EMPLOYER
Myfanwy Marshall
Counsel
Liquor Control Board of Ontario
HEARING
October 16, 2001.
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AWARD
The grievor claims that the employer has violated the collective agreement by
refusing to grant him the bereavement leave to which he claims he was entitled under
Article 17 of the collective agreement.
There were no preliminary issues and no dispute that I have the jurisdiction to
hear and determine this matter.
Further, there were no factual disputes which separated the parties. The case turns
on a narrow interpretive issue arising out of the collective agreement and the simple
agreed facts.
The grievor recently suffered the passmg of his great-grandmother and
accordingly made application for bereavement leave under the collective agreement
which provides as follows:
17.1 An employee shall be allowed three (3) consecutive days of leave
of absence with pay, inclusive of the day ofthe funeral in the event
of the death of a member of his/her immediate family and such
leave shall not be charged against attendance credits.
17.2 For the purpose of this Article, "immediate family" shall include
the employee's spouse, mother, father, mother-in-law, fatherwin-
law, son, daughter, brother, sister, brother-in-law, sister"in"law,
sonwinwlaw, daughter-in-law, grandparents, spouse's grandparents,
grandchild, ward or guardian.
The employer denied the claim on the basis that the death of a great-grandparent
does not give rise to any entitlement to bereavement leave under the collective
agreement. That was the only basis for the denial and it was agreed, for example, that had
the grievor suffered the loss of a grandparent in circumstances otherwise identical to the
ones in issue, his entitlement to bereavement leave would have been undisputed.
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The positions of the parties are quite clear and straightforward. From the
employer's perspective, the absence of any explicit mention of great-grandparents in the
collective agreement determines the case. The parties have set out the familial
relationships to which a right to bereavement leave adheres. They have not included 01'
contemplated great-grandparents. There is thus no such entitlement in the event of the
death of such a family member.
The union's position is only slightly more complex. Its argument is twofold, but
each prong rests on the urging that I adopt the broad and purposive interpretive approach
embraced by many arbitrators dealing with issues related to bereavement leave. First, the
union asserts that the collective agreement definition of "immediate family" is not
exhaustive. Thus, while great-grandparent is not explicitly included in the list provided,
neither is it excluded. It is therefore still open to me to include great-grandparent within
the realm of relations contemplated by "immediate family". Secondly, and perhaps more
simply, I ought to conclude that a great-grandparent is a type of grandparent and
therefore is explicitly included in the collective agreement by virtue of the reference to
the latter.
The parties referred me to a number of cases in support of their respective
positions: Re Dominion Glass Co. LId. and United Glass And Ceramic Workers, Local
235 (1973), 4 L.A.C. (2d) 345 (Johnston); Re Beer Precast Concrete Ltd. and Labourers'
International Union, Local 506 (1984), 15 L.A.C. (3d) 107 (Swan); Re North Cariboo
Forest Labour Relations Association and International Woodworkers of America, Local
1-424 (1985), 19 L.A.C. (3d) 115 (Hope); Re Associated Freezers of Canada and
Teamsters Union, Local 419 (1987), 33 L.A.C. (3d) 79 (Kilgour); Re Montfort Hospital
and Ontario Nurses' Association (1992), 28 L.A.c. (4th) 325 (M.G. Picher); Re
Freshwater Fish Marketing COJ1Joration and United Steelworkers of America, Local 561
(1995), 49 L.A.C. (4th) 139 (J.M. Chapman); Canadian Union of Postal Workers and
Canada Post Cm1), , [1996J C.L.A.D. No. 618 (T, Jolliffe); Re Times-Colonist and
Communications Workers (~r America, Local 14003 (1997), 67 L.A.C. (4th) 340
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(Germaine); Re Holyrood Manor and Hospital Employees' Union (1999), 80 L.A.C,
(4th) 200 (Laing); and Council of Northern Interior Forest Employment Relations v,
Industrial Wood and Allied Workers Union of Canada, [2000] B.C.C.A.A.A. No. 137
(Munroe).
I have reviewed and considered all of these decisions in coming to my conclusion.
The "broad purposive" approach the union urges has its genesis in the earliest of
the cases filed with me. In Dominion Glass arbitrator Johnston offered the following in a
passage (at p.353) which has been embraced in many subsequent decisions:
.. ,the purpose of bereavement leave is to provide an employee with time
off without loss of pay to gather together with relatives at a time of
personal tragedy for mutual comfort, to assist in making arrangements for
the funeral of the deceased and for the immediate and after care of the
deceased's survivors, and to enable the employee to bear his grief
privately without immediate exposure to the comparative harshness of his
working environment... [WJeighing the equities, the value of bereavement
leave to the employee is usually high coming at an unexpected time when
personal trauma is severe and the claims of family are pressing whereas
the detriment to the employer, while significant in terms of alterations to
work force schedules, is not overwhelming in terms of costs 01' production
interruptions 01' frequency of occurrence.
In that case the arbitrator went on, using what was described as a broad
interpretation of the collective agreement, to conclude that the gl'ievor's spouse's
sibling's spouse was the grievor's brother-in-law for the purposes of bereavement leave
entitlement.
The broad purposive approach of the Dominion Glass case finds its counterpoint
in the following passage from the Montfort Hospital case (at p. 334):
This board does not reject 01' diminish the importance of the li[b Jeral
and purposive approach to bereavement leave provisions espoused by
counsel for the union. In considering the lIse of sllch an approach,
however, it is important to recognize that it has bcen resorted to, for the
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most part, by boards of arbitration in those cases where the language of a
bereavement clause, on its face, is equally susceptible of two
interpretations...In every case, however, the starting point must be the
language of the collective agreement under consideration. Where a
bereavement leave provision is reasonably specific in its language, it is not
open to a board of arbitration to depart from the intention of the parties to
fashion a purposive interpretation that extends beyond what they agreed.
Thus, in that case, where the collective agreement provided an exhaustive
definition of "immediate family" which identified grandparent but not a spouse's
grandparent, the death of the latter was found to not give rise to bereavement leave
entitlement.
Of course, the cases referred to each deal with particular facts measured against
the specific language of the collective agreement there in issue. And while there are many
similarities in the issues or types of issues as well as collective agreement language
considered, none of these cases produces the particular matrix of fact and language with
which we are currently concerned. In that context, rather than reviewing each of them in
detail, I prefer to offer a more general description of some of the analytical tools which
emerge from these cases.
It is perhaps most useful to identify some of the various axes of deliberation
arbitrators have traversed in their considerations.
Of course, first and foremost is a characterization of the language of the collective
agreement. Broadly speaking, the collective agreement language in these cases falls into
three categories.
In the first and most specific, bereavement leave is provided in the case of the
death of certain named classes of persons (as in the Beer Precast case). In such a case,
arbitrators are loath to depart from the specificity of the agreement and to conclude, for
example, that the collective agreement term "grandparent" ought to be read to include the
cmploycc's spousc's grandparcnt.
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In the second category of cases, the collective agreement contemplates
bereavement leave entitlement in the event of the death of a member of a group of
persons, typically described as the "immediate family". The agreement will then go on to
explicitly and specifically define the members of that group. In these cases arbitrators
have demonstrated some reluctance (see the Montfort, Freshwater Fish, Canada Post,
and Council of Northern Interior cases) when it comes to reading the identified and
enumerated members of the immediate family or, indeed, the very concept of "immediate
family" in a liberal fashion. But that reticence is by no means uniform - for even in these
situations some arbitrators have still applied a liberal approach (see the North Cariboo
and Associated Freezers cases).
The final category differs from the second in but one material respect. The
collective agreement definition of "immediate family" is presented in inclusive rather
than exhaustive terms, Rather than phrases typical of the preceding category: "immediate
family means..." or "immediate family is defined as..." one finds wording such as:
"immediate family includes...". In this type of case arbitrators may feel less constrained
and not strictly or literally limited to the list that follows, particularly where the relation
in question might otherwise be seen to be a member of the "immediate family".
Of the cases referred to above, but a single one (Holyrood Manor) examined
language of the third type. (Although, in at least one case, Freshwater Fish, the absence
of inclusive language was identified as significant in the analysis.)
There can be no question that (notwithstanding the use of the word "shall" in the
phrase "shall include") the language we are considering falls most squarely into the third
category.
Perhaps another axis which defines some of the inquiry in the cases pertains to the
essential interpretive function the arbitrator is seen to be performing, The analysis may
differ depending upon whethcr the excrcise is seen as one to determine the scope of a
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patticular relation (e.g. whether a reference to grandparent ought to include a spouse's
grandparent - a question which appears to have arisen with some frequency in the listed
cases) or whether it is the scope of meaning and breadth to be attributed to "immediate
family" which is central to the inquiry, Where the interpretive inquiry focuses on the
meaning of a specific identified relation, the analysis is, of necessity, more restrained
than when it is the meaning of a larger cumulative category such as "immediate family"
which is at issue.
Also of note in the cases reviewed is the frequency with which the issue involves
whether bereavement leave entitlement ought to be "extended'J beyond the obvious and
clearly identified family relations to include the loss of relations in positions "akin'J to
traditional lines of consanguinity set out in the agreement. (Should references to
grandparents be taken to include a spouses grandparents? Does brother-in-law extend to
include a spouseJs sister's husband? Is the mother of a common law spouse a mother-in-
law? Do grandchildren/grandparents/parents-in-Iaw include their "step" counterparts?)
IndeedJ all but one of the cases cited fall into this category which might be
generally described as one where evolving notions of expanded traditional families
(increasingly seen and accepted by society at large to include the "in-lawJ\ "common-
lawJ' and "step" relationships) need to be reconciled with collective agreement language
of varying degrees of exhaustive specificity. The only case filed before me which did not
fall into this general category (Canada Post) involved, curiously enough, a claim that a
collective agreement reference to "grandparent" ought to include great-grandparent. In
that case, the claim was rejected because the collective agreement contained a specific
and exhaustive definition of "immediate family" which included grandparent but not
great-grandparent.
It is within this general arbitral context that the meanmg of the collective
agreement language in the instant case must be assessed.
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First, I must reject the union's second argument i.e. that great-grandparent ought
to be seen as simply included within the term grandparent. The employer referred to the
OJ.ford Dicfionmy's succinct definition of the term "grandparenf' as: "parent of one's
father or mother", Grandparent simply cannot be seen, by everyday definition, to include
great-grandparent. If that were the case, a reference to aunt (of which there is none in the
current collective agreement - a point to which I shall return) would have to be taken to
include a great-aunt, a result which is at least equally less than obvious.
I find the union's other argument, however, to be much more compelling and,
ultimately, for the reasons which follow, persuasive.
If we follow the lines of inquiry identified earlier, we see that we are not dealing
with the first 01' the second category but with the third. The collective agreement does not
identify specific classes 01' give an exhaustive definition of the term "family" or
"immediate family". Rather, it invokes the general term and then defines it in a fairly
detailed but not exhaustive fashion.
The resulting issue is therefore not whether "grandparent" includes "great-
grandparent" but rather whether a great-grandparent is a member of the "immediate
family". For two reasons, I have concluded that it is.
First, I note that the parties have themselves taken an approach to the term
"immediate family" that lacks a certain immediacy. While it perhaps comes as no
sll1'pl'ise that the parties did not refer to any dictionary definitions of the term, it is clear
that their concept of "immediate family" is not restricted, for example, to one's nuclear
family.
Second, but related to the first point, the parties have taken a fairly expansive
approach to the phrase at the "horizontal" level. Included within the listed classes are
persons whose claim to be members of the "immediate family" might be described as
otherwise somewhat dubiolls when compared to persons whose proximity would be
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marked by clearer lines of consanguinity. To include all of the various "in-law" versions
of parents, children, siblings and grandparents while excluding the employee's own direct
blood Hascendants" or; for that matter, descendants; is, it seems to me, counter~intuitive.
Put somewhat differently, I have some difficulty imagining that if the parties had turned
their minds directly to the question of great-grandparents at the bargaining table - after
having agreed to grandparents-in-Iaw - that the answer would not have been obvious.
The absence of "great-grandparents" is, in my view, more likely a reflection of the
chances of its occurrence than it is of the parties' intention. With the already impressive
list of inclusions, the need to exclude a relationship that includes a direct parent/child
dimension - even to the extent of prior ancestors (or subsequent direct progeny) - is not
obvious to me,
Thus, in light of the case that the patties have themselves constructed, and my
understanding of the significance of such relationships - which is only magnified by the
chance of their occurrence - I have no hesitation in including a great-grandparent within
an employee's immediate family.
III coming to this conclusion, it should be obvious that I have not ignored the
employer's assertion that the union here seeks to "expand" the definition of Himmediate
family" "vertically" to include members of a generation more removed. While there are
grains of truth to this submission, I note that it was presented to distinguish those
plentiful cases where arguments have been advanced to "extend" the definition
"horizontally" to include "in-laws", "step" and other legal relations, [ am not persuaded
that distinction assists the employer's case. For the cases sought to be distinguished are,
without exception, efforts to include relations otherwise lacking in consanguinity. In the
present case, we are considering immediate though derivative relations of parent/child
consanguinity,
I also note Il1 concluding that the instant collective agreement does not
specifically identify aunts, uncles OJ' cousins as members of the "immediate family".
Though J am not asked to dctermine that question, I merely observe that while similAr
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arguments might be marshalled to supp0l1 their inclusion, the degree of direct
consanguinity entailed in such a relationship could easily be distinguished from the
relation of a parent, grandparent or even great-grandparent.
For all of the foregoing reasons, I am satisfied that "immediate family" within the
meaning of the collective agreement includes a great-grandparent. The grievance must
therefore be and hereby is allowed.
The grievor is entitled to full compensation for any and all losses occasioned by
the employer's breach in refusing the requested bereavement leave. In its opening
statement, the employer indicated that there might be an issue as to what the appropriate
remedy might be. However, as that issue was not seriously pursued in argument, I shall
leave it to the parties to detelmine and shall remain seized in the event they are unable to
do so.
Dated at Toronto, this 30th day of October, 2001.
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Bram Herlich, Vice-Chairperson.