HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-0103.McKenna.80-11-18Between:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under The
CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE GARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
Mr. Jack McKenna
And
Ministry of Transportation & Communications
Before: Professor K. P. Swan - Vice-Chairman
Mrs. M. Gibb Member
Mr. J. Smith Member
For the Grievor:
Mr. G. Richards Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
For the Employer:
Mr. N. H. Pettifor
Staff Relations Supervisor, Personnel Branch
Ministry of Transportation & Communications
Hearinq:
Suite 2100
180 Dundas Street West
Toronto, Ontario
September 23rd, 1980
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Cl9681 s.c.R.:~~, the Supreme Court of Canada quashed an arbitration award
which had'ordered an employer to dismiss an employee at the instance of
the union on the basis'of a union security clause. The order was included
in the award after a hearing of.a union grievance relating to the proper
interpretation of a dues check-off provision which the individual employee
had been resisting. The Court held that the requirements of natural
justice in such a case militated against the issuing of such an order
unless the employee affected receive due notice of the proceedings and
be given the opportunity to be present and represented by counsel, and to
participate by calling evidence and cross-examining witnesses. Another
case decided by the Ontario Court of Appeal at about the same time,
Re Bradley a&Ottawa Professional Fire Fighters Association (1967),
63 D.L.R. (zd) 376, was referred to and approved by the Supreme Court
in Roogendoorn. In the Bradley case the arbitrator, while dealing with a
policy grievance alleging that certain promotions had been improperly
made,! had revoked five of the six contested promotions without notice
to the employees affected of the possibility that such a result might
occur. The Court of Appeal quashed the arbitrator's award. In’Hoqwdoorn,
Mr. Justice Hall, for the majority of the Supreme Court, referred to
these cases as follows:
In both cases the issue was whether an employee
whose status was being affected by the hearing
was entitled to be represented in his own right
as distinct from being represented by the union
which was taking a position adverse to his
interests.
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It.seems to us that strictures which apply to private sector
arbitration should apply to statutory bodies like our Board with all
the more force; indeed, this Board has already recognized the
principle established in Bradley and Hoogendoorn. On the .
administrative side, the Board's forms for Notice of Hearing make
special reference to the,necessity for notice to affected third
/ parties. As to the status of persons entitled to standing during the
course of the hearing itself, see Re'Doherty and Ministry of Health,
43/76. But the claim of an individual employee to standing depends
upon the demonstration of an interest adverse to that being advanced
by.the union and directly affected by the proceedings.
As it happens, there are peculiar facts in this case which
make the position of Mr. Weir not unlike that of the successful
applicant in a disputed promotion decision which the union seeks
to overturn at arbitration. He was also an applicant for the job
which was awarded to the grievor, and he was ranked just behind,the
grievor.in qualifications for the job; that is why he came to be
selected to fill the position following the dismissal.
Nevertheless, we have come to the conclusion that a person
appointed to fill the position of a dismissed employee has no consequent
right to participate in the hearing of a grievance relating to the
justness of that discharge. Reinstatemqnt of the discharged employee
may, of course, affect the incumbent of the former position, but that
does not create a situation where the union takes "a position adverse
to his interests". There may be cases where special circumstances
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are sufficient to raise a particular interest which can only be vindicated
by giving "party" status to the incumbent. In this case, for example,
there is only one Mobile Auger Operator job in the Northern Region, and
the case for standing is thus augumented by the fact that, if the grievor
is reinstated, the incumbent's employment will be at the very least
dislocated. The Union points out that the collective'agreement may
include some protections for the incumbent and that the arbitral juris-
prudence may also offer precedents which will protect him, As these
matters are not now before the Board but may someday be, we consider
that the less we say about such speculative matters, the better. It
suffices to say that Mr. Weir has no special knowledge of nor role in
the events precipitating the dismissal , and the issue of the justice of
the discharge is not one in which he is involved except in a peripheral
ww. His personal views on whether he should retain his job in preference
to the grievor cannot in any way influence our deliberations on whether
the Employer had just cause to discharge the grievor. In this case
therefore, and in probably the vast majority of dismissal cases, the
incumbent cannot assert a right to participate in the hearing.
Turning to the merits of the discharge, we are satisfied
by the evidence before us that the Employer placed considerable emphasis
on the necessity for a good driving record for applicants for the Mobile
Auger Operator job. The job involves driving a five-ton truck with a
-mounted power auger across the considerable expanse of the Northern
Region. The precise qualifications set out in the competition announcement
only require a "valid Ontario Driver's License Class D. minimum" and :
"successful completion of Ministry Equipment Maintenance and operating
tests to qualify as a Highway Equipment Operator 3,", but the testimony
makes it clear that the testing process under the second of these
qualifications also involves a search of the applicant's driving license
to verify his drivi,ng record.
Whether or not a clean driving record (i.e.: one which
does not reveal any accumulation of "Demerit Points" as those indications
of convictions under the Highway Traffic Act and certain other legislations 1
are defined in. R.R.O. 1970, Regulation 413)is a minimum requirement and
is strictly necessary for employment in the job in question, we certainly
accept from,the evidence that it constituted a material factor to be
considered in-the selection process. All members of the selection board
which recortnnended Mr. McKenna's appointment stressed the importance of
a clean driving record, and all stated that, had they known of the state
of the grievor's record at the time of the interview, they would not
have recommended him. We think, should it be necessary for us to
make a finding, that consideration of a driving record in the course
of selecting a person to drive heavy machinery is perfectly reasonable
for any employer and that, while the present Employer's arguments about
the special public image of the Ministry that not only builds and
maintains highways but also issues driving licenses and administers the
Demerit Point System are persuasive, they add very little to the vital
~interest any employer would~have in such a case as this.
Against that background, we turn to the evidence of, the
alleged misrepresentation. The grievor's driving-record shows a conviction
for failure to come to a full stop at an intersection in 1975 (3 point;),
an accident for which no charge was laid, another conviction for the
same offence in 1977 (3 points) and a speeding conviction in early
1979 .for travelling 141 kmh in a 90 kmh zone (6 points).By the material
time, the first of these convictions had lapsed, and his accumulated point
total was thus 9 points as of January 5, 1979. On January 29, a letter
instructing the grievor to come to an interview with a Driver Improvement
Counsellor was sent to the'grievor, a provided by Regulation.413,
s.10 when a 9 point accumulation has occurred. This interview took
place on February 20, 1979 in the early afternoon. Although no action
was taken concerning his driver's license (the interview is really an
informal "show cause" hearing whether or not the point total should
result in a suspension of the ,driver's license), the Counsellor who
interviewed the grievor discovered that, as we shall see, he had been
selected for a job at the Ministry. It is the uncontested evidence of
the Counsellor, Mr. Harry Molyneaux, that he spent some considerable
time explaining to the grievor his responsibilities at the Ministry to
maintain a good driving record and the possibility of serious employment
consequences if his license were ever suspended.
In the meantime, the grievor had been interviewed for
and had been awarded the Mobile Auger Operator job. His application
had been on file with the Ministry, and he was invited to appear before
a selection board. All of the Employer's witnesses to that Board's
deliberations agree that the grievor was asked if he had a clean driving
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record and that he answered that he did. The griever asserts that he was
only asked what his driving record was like and that he replied only that
it was "good". He explains this answer by stating that he had forgotten
about the 1977 conviction and still intended to contest the speeding
conviction, an intention which was foreclosed when his wife paid the
ticket (presumably thus entering a guilty plea on his behalf) in his
absence and without his knowledge. In any event, he says, he was not
aware of the implications of these matters for his Demerit Point
total. The grievor was ultimately selected for the vacant position
and was to start work on February 26, 1979 subject, it appears, to
successful completion of the tests for Highway Equipment Operator 3
classification.
In the course of the testing, which he passed without
difficulty, the grievor completed a form (Exhibit 10). This form .
is divided into three blocks, the uppermost of which is for a listing
of driving licenses held. The last two blocks are headed, in large
block capitals, "DRIVING AND OPERATING EXPERIENCE" and "PREVIOUS DRIVING
CONVICTIONS OR LICENSE SUSPENSIONS". The experience block is filled out
by the grievor beginning with his driving experience in 1955. Along the
rightiide.is a column headed "Any accidents?" with two sub-columns
to check "Yes" or "No". "No" is checked beside each entry. The
convictions or suspensions block is left entirely blank. In a certificati.on
block headed "I hereby certify the above statements to be complete and
correct" the grievor has filled in the date and his signature. The grievor
disputes the check marks in the "no accidents" column, which he does not
recall inserting, but otherwise admists that he filled out this form. He
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states however, that he did not advert to the importance of the document,
since he had been filling forms and doing tests all day. He agreed that
his driving record had, by this time, been clearly brought to his attention
by the interview with only Mr. Molyneaux a few days before.
In the event, the grievor's actual driving record came to
light some two weeks later, when the offprint of his record finally reached
the Region offices. Meetings were convened, and the grievor was invited
to explain why he had not mentioned his record on the two earlier
occasions when an opportunity arose. According to the management witnesses,.
he was able to offer no satisfactory explanation, nor even an excuse. He
himself says that he advanced the same explanation on that occasion as we
have recorded above.In the end, a decision was taken, and implemented, to
discharge the grievor from his position.
In his own testimony, the grievor spent some time attempting
to minimize the seriousness of the infractions appearing on his Driving
Record. In our view, this evidence is irrelevant.' His license was in
jeopardy, at the material time, of being subject to a discretionary
suspension. Any further infraction, however minor, would have increased
the possibility considerably. A serious infraction costing 6 points
would have resulted in a mandatory suspension.. On April 24, 1979, the
danger would have subsided somewhat by the lapse of the 1977 3-point
conviction, but it would not have disappeared entirely. In the circumstances,
these were factors which the Employer was entitled to consider for any
,driving job; the evidence is that the crew which accompanied the mobile
auger would be particularly dependent on the grievor's ability to drive
and.thus particularly susceptible were he to lose his license temporarily.
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As to the nature of the misrepresentations, they occurred
at two critical junctures - when he was being assessed in competition
with other aP!JliCantS for selection and when he was being tested for the
Ministry's Highway Equipment Operator 3 permit, a requirement for
employment; they thus directly induced the Employer to hire the
grievor. On the other hand, no,direct warning of the consequences
of misrepresentation was given on either occasion, although a
general duty to be honest and reasonably forthcoming about material
factors can, we think, be inferred.
Finally, as to the relationship between the parties and
the Employer's conduct, there is little to assist the grievor. He
had virtually no seniority, the misrepresentation was promptly
discovered and quickly acted upon and it was clearly the sole reason
for the discharge.. On the basis of all of the Gould ?hrmfacturiny
test factors, therefore, the grievance in this case presents little
to support it.
One further matter remains. Does it matter whether the
misrepresentation was intentional or innocent, and if so, was the
grievor's.conduct deliberate and thus culpable? Some arbitrators
have held that even an innocent misrepresentation may, if i~t relates
to matters affecting an employee's ability to do the job, be grounds
for discharge: see Re Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers, Iocal 9-670
and Millhaven Fibres Ltd. (1971), 22 L.A.C. 160 (Curtis): Re Douglas
Aircraft co. of Canada Ltd. and United Automobile Workers, Local 1967
(19731, 2 Z.A.C. (Zd) 147 (Simmons) (where the proposition is obiter);
Re Budd Automotive Co. of Canada Ltd. and United Automobile Workers,
.mcal 1451 (19741, 6 L.A.C. (Zd) 311 (Brandt). We take the view that
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"(10) The materiality of that falsifl'cation or matter
or offence concealed to the work performed.
(11) Special considerations such as a sensitive
employment position.
It is also of significance that few if any of the
cases indicate that the passing of the probationary
period bars the company from taking action. The
theory behind that view se.ems to be that where a
matter is hidden the employer my not have an
opportunity of conducCriny an investigation into the
situation where the grievor has concealed or falsi-
fied his record he cannot then take advantage of
his own wrongdoing and the hiding of relevant faults
by compelling the, company to invtistigate matters about
which it had no knowledge.
The list is clearly, given the ~generality of item (111,
not intended to be exhaustive, nor will every factor be instructive in
.every case. It provides, however, a useful framework for analysis of the
case before us.
Here the factor misrepresented (we choose a term not
necessarily implying deliberate lying for the moment) clearly went to
the central job function for which the grievor was hired. Only one
factor was misrepresented, but that factor was directly related to the
grievor's qualifications and at least indirectly related to his on-going
ability to perform his job. The Employer's witnesses have testified, and we
accept, that the grievor would not have been hired had his driving record
been known at the time of,the selection board interviews. Thus all of
the factors relating to the materiality of the misrepresentations weigh
heavily against the grievor.
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It may be that, presented with his explanations, the Employer might have
waived the grievor's driving record in favour of his other undoubtedly
impressive qualifications and experience. Unfortunately, the Employer
never had an opportunity to make such a decision.
Thus the critical question here is only whether the
suppression of the actual state of the grievor's driving record, however
it may have been explainable as trivial , constituted grounds for discharge.
This Board has already dealt with the general question of falsification
of employment records in Re Spiers and'Ministry of Natural Resources,
181/78. In that decision a panel chaired by Professor J.R.S. Prichard
adop,ted the multi-,faceted test set out in Re ~Gould Manufacturing of
Canada Ltd; ad United Steelworkers (1972), 1 L.A.C. (2d) 314 (Shine).
The test is stated by Mr. Shime at.page 317:
A review of those cases indicates that not
every falsification of an employment application
constitutes just cause for discharge. The
relevant factors are as follows:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(‘3)
(7)
(8)
(9)
The nature and character of the falsification
and the matter or offence concealed.
The number of matters concealed.
The date when the falsified or concealed
matter occurred in relation to the
signing bf the employment application.
Any warnings contained on the employment
application.
Whether the revelation of the matter or
offence concealed would have resulted
in the employer not hiring the indivi&al.
The time that has elapsed between the
signing of the false application form
and the date of discovery.
Whether the employer acted promptly upon
learning of the falsification of the
employment record..
The seniority of the qrievor.
Whether the griever was in fact discharged
for the falsification.
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it is inappropriate to assist "litmus paper" tests into this area of
the law, where a variety of influences may act upon a decision to
include or not include something in an employment application. Material-
ity is not sufficient reason to make every innocent misrepresentation
grounds for discharge. On the other hand, the employee's state of
mind at the time of the misrepresentation is another factor to be
considered in the assessment of the wrongfulness of the conduct.
Here the misrepresentation we accept, was central to the
job function to be performed; the grievor literally got the job because
his driving record was concealed. 'Thus there is a heavy dose of
materiality to be overweighed by the grievor's assertion of innocence.
Moreover, that assertion rings rather hollow.
On the first'occasion, if we accept the Employer's version,
the grievor said that he had a clean driving record when he had been
stopped for.a very serious speeding offence less than two months before
and when he was waiting.to contest it in court. Even if he had
reasonably forgotten the three year old earlier offence, it would seem
reasonable to expect him to recall the speeding ticket and give some
'explanation. His own evidence is that he only replied that his record
was "OK", presumably a relative rather than an absolute assurance of
a good driving record. Even on this 'version, some explanation of the
sp.ceding charge was required of someone applying for a driving job.
Even if we give the benefit of the doubt to the grievor
on that occasion, however, the completion of the form on February 26,
.
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1979 is not so readily explained. The form is very simple, straightforward
and unadorned; there is no scope for misunderstanding the large letters
and the three blocks for information. The signature certification states
that the information is affirmed to be both complete and correct, and
appears immediately underneath the place for convictions to be noted.
At.this time, the grievor was on his own admission entirely aware of
the nature of his record, of the danger to. his license and of his new
employer's attitude towards driving records. It is extemely difficult
to believe that, in the circumstances, his failure to fill in this
part of the form was anything but a deliberate misrepresentation or
wilful blindness to its importance.
In all the circumstances, the critical materiality
of the misrepresentation and the strong evidence of calculation on the
grievor's part are sufficient to convince us that the discharge was,
for all the reasons stated above, entirely justified.
In our view, this is not a case in which to consider the
mitigation of the penalty imposed. The offence goes to the root of
the employment relationship, and actually procured the establishment
of the relationship. The Union advanced this Board's decision in
Re Maw and Ministry of Transportation and Communications, l/75, a CaSe
which also involved concealment of a driving record. The difference in
those two cases is, of course, the long service of Mr. Maw before the
conduct, probably more serious even than that complained of in this case,
which occasioned the discipline. Here there are simply no grounds on
Dated at Toronto, Ontario this 18th day of November, 1980.
&
Professor K. P. Swan Vice-Chairman
I concur
Mrs. M. Gibb Member
I concur
Mr. J. Smith Member