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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1992-2260.Martin.95-10-24 '\ ., ONTARIO EMPLOYES DE LA COURONNE CROWN EMPLOYEES DEL'ONTARIO 1111 GRIEVANCE COMMISSION DE ~ SETTLEMENT REGLEMENT BOARD DES GRIEFS 180 DUNDAS STREET WEST SUITE 2100, TORONTO. ONTARIO. M5G lZ8 TELEPHONEIT~LEPHONE: (416) 326-1388 180, RUE DUNDAS OUEST BUREAU 2100, TORONTO (ONTARIO) M5G lZ8 FACSIMILEIT~LECOPIE (416) 326-1396 GSB # 2260/92 OPSEU # 92G393 IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION Under THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT Before THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD BETWEEN OPSEU (Martin) Grievor - and - The Crown in Right of Ontario (Ministry of Correctional services) Employer BEFORE S. Kaufman Vice-Chairperson FOR THE M Bevan GRIEVOR Grievance Officer ontario Public service Employees Union FOR THE J Benedict EMPLOYER Manager, Staff Relations & Compensation Ministry of the Solicitor General & Correctional services HEARING September 29, 1995 " . 1 INTERIM DECISION This decision concerns a preliminary objection to the grievance of Joanne Martin, dated September 8, 1992. Ms. Martin was a classified CO at the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre in London Ontario. She resigned her employment on November 5, 1991 and grieves that she did so under duress and a misapprehension of the employer's policy, which misappre- hension, she alleges, was induced by the conduct of the em- ployer. She therefore characterizes her resignation as wrongful dismissal. The objection of the employer is that the grievance was brought out of the time limits in Art. 27 of the collective agreement and that timeliness was raised at the reply to the second stage of the grievance, dated October 27, 1992 (Ex. S) . It points to a delay of 10 months from the date of resignation to the date of the grievance and a further 2-year delay before the matter was scheduled for hearing, and that 4 years have passed from the date of the grievance to the date of the initial hearing. The Employer's Submissions: Keeling, 45/78 (Prichard) is authority for the proposi- tion that the Art. 27 time limits do not apply to grievance launched under s. 18 of the Crown Employees Collective Bar- gainin9 Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.SO, hereinafter referred to as "the old CECBA", The grievor was employed under the old CECBA and filed her grievance under it. Although strict time limits do not apply to dismissals, ther~ was a one-day delay in Keelin9, and in this case there is a 10 month delay. A lO-month delay is inherently prejudicial, and the further de- lay after the grievance was filed was even more prejudicial. There was no reasonable excuse for the delay, and the delay was not a trivial matter. 2 Employers are expected to dispose of disciplinary matters in a timely fashion in order to avoid terrorizing employees and employers cannot leave the employee in a state of constant suspense. By the same token, employees cannot keep their employers in suspense to to whether they will grieve a perceived wrong. There must be finality to enable the employer to conduct its business and fill vacancies. Ten months is an unreasonable delay. Clements, 1l2/80 (Prichard), Viegas, 384 & 414/88 (Devlin), and Gembora, 930/89, (with an acknowledgment that this case was not "on target") Boldt, 221/90 (Verity) and Bertrand, 1998/93, 2005/93, 2415/90, (Mikus) were submitted in support of the employer's position. Sufficient evidence of prejudice can be found from" the date of resignation, the date of the grievance, and the date of bringing it forward. It is unlikely that the employer will have a fair hearing. The grievance should therefore be dismissed. The Union's Submissions: The union is not the cause of the delay which occurred after the grievance was filed. Following the October 27, 1992 reply to Stage 2 of the grievance, the union wrote to the GSB on November 2, 1992 (Ex. 6) and requested a hearing. A pre-hearing was held in January of 1993. A hearing was scheduled for May 10, 1993, but was adjourned due to the una- vailability of a panel on that date. On July 14, 1993, the union wrote to the GSB (Ex. 7), advised of the reason for the adjournment on May 10, 1993, and requested that the hearing be rescheduled as soon as possible. As no hearing date had been scheduled by March 29, 1994, the union wrote again to the GSB requested the rescheduling of the hearing. The delay was one of 10 months from the date of the grievor's resigna- tion on November 5, 1991 until the date of her grievance on September 8, 1992. I j, I 3 ., ! i The grievor had been a C02 for 13 years. In October of 1991 she was approached by an investigator as to whether she was co-habiting with a female ex-inmate. She initially de- nied everything at a meeting. Later that day she called the investigator and acknowledged to him that she was co-habiting with a female ex-inmate. She answered his questions truth- fully and said that she was in and continues to be in that relationship. Thereafter Supt. Simpson spoke to the grievor and gave her 3 choices, in view of her admission--to end the relationship, to resign, or to be fired. She resigned as she did not want to be fired. About 2 weeks after the grievor resigned, another female CO was given the same choice, having entered into a personal relationship with a male ex-inmate, and she also chose to resign. However, that CO grieved in a timely manner and the matter was settled in about August of 1992 and she was reinstated on terms. The grievor understood that the policy required the ter- mination of employment of a CO who lives with an ex-inmate. That wasn't the policy. She was mislead as to the policy by the employer, and only learned that it was not a hard and fast policy, but a matter of discretion, when the other CO was reinstated. The facts are in agreement. Supt. Simpson will not dispute them. No documents have been lost. Memories have not faded. witnesses have not moved on. The employer's cases indicate that the employer must show some prejudice. Evidence on the merits should be heard, and if a problem arises in the evidence, the preliminary ob- jection can be argued and ruled upon. In Keeling the deci- sion spoke only of delay which goes to the merits of the case. I The grievor was dismissed under "the old CECBA". As s. 18 applies, there is no question of the time limits. in the collective agreement being mandatory, following the reasoning in Keeling, supra, I I I l ,~ ~ 4 ~ In DiPaola, 51/90 Arbitrator Samuels said that delay could be taken into consideration when hearing the merits. It is not sufficient for the employer to merely claim prejudice. Actual prejudice must be shown. Keeling and DiPaolo should be followed. The board should determine that there would be no prejudice to the employer, and no reason not to hear this case. Prejudice is an issue going to the merits. The grievance should not be dismissed out of hand. The Employer's Reply: Four years have passed and the employer ought not to bear the burden of the delay, as the delay is not the em- ployer's fault. There is sufficient evidence to make a deci- sion. The reason given for the grievor's delay is not an excuse. The union is relying upon a without prejudice set- tlement, which is a highly improper basis for a grievance. The employer did not know of any duress; that will be a mat- ter of major disagreement in the evidence. The duress arises from the settlement and the grievor alleged duress only as a result of the settlement. The delay is inherently prejudicial and the reasoning in the case law does not justify hearing this grievance. Considerations: In Keeling, supra, the board found that the mandatory time limits in the agreement were inconsistent with then s. 17(2) of the old CECBA and could not absolutely preclude the processing of a dismissal grievance. In Clements, supra, at p. 7, the delay was viewed as a matter going to the merits of the case, rather than to the panel's jurisiction. The Clements case dealt with a situa- tion in which the day after a grievor's dismissal, a solici- tor drafted a letter to the employer on behalf of the grie- vor indicating he was grieving his dismissal, which the em- ~I il 5 I i ployer was found not to have received. The board found that the employer was unaware of the grievance's existence until some 14 months after the dismissal, and that the immediate manager, having had reason to believe the matter had been settled, had taken no steps to preserve or prepare manage- ment's case. At p. 10, the board considered whether the case should be dismissed as a result of the prejudicial effect of the 14-month delay. The board viewed the position as raising 2 issues: 1- Had "the delay so prejudiced the proper con- duct of the case that it should be dismissed on the merits?" 2. Was it "appropriate for the Board to make such a ruling without hearing all the evidence the parties may wish to adduce on all aspects of the case". It noted, at p. 10, that "substantial prejudice through delay goes to the merits of the case and can be grounds for dismissing the grievance", and stated that on the evidence it had heard to that point, it had found no such prejudice. At p. 11, it noted that there may be appropriate cases in which to dismiss the case without hearing all the evidence as to the merits, and that that is a discretionary matter which each Board "must exercise ... in light of the facts in each case" . It concluded that on the facts and evidence before it, it should dismiss the grievance on the merits without hearing further evidence, indicating "no amount of evidence which we might hear at this stage could eliminate or outweigh the inherent prejudice done to the employer's position by virtue of the delay", and Although on hearing the evidence we might be temp- ted to believe that we were seeing a fair hearing, we would never be in a position to know with confi- dence the nature of evidence we would have heard in the absence of the delay. It is the inherent im- possibility of restoring that confidence at this stage that makes it appropriate to dismiss the grievance on the merits at this stage. At p. 11, it stated I I ~ - 6 The prejudice arises from the fact that as a result of the Union's failure to file the grievance, the employer was precluded from a full, effective and timely investigation of the discharge with a subse- quent deterioration in the quality of the case that the employer would be able to put forward. This prejudice is not contradicted by Mr. Kyle's testi- mony that he was able to recall the discharge and that documents were still available. At pp. 13-14, it stated The decision in Re Keeling was not an invitation to ignore timeliness consideration, but rather a deci- sion which permits the Board to consider timeliness without being bound by the strict time limits of the collective agreement. In doing so, we must be guided by the established patterns of grievance processing in both the private and public sectors. The delay in the processing of this case was so great that it takes the case outside even the most liberal version of the requirements for a fair hearing. In Viegas, supra, the grievor filed a grievance approxi- mately six years after she had submitted a written resigna- tion and after the employer had refused to permit her to withdraw the resignation. The employer agreed, in spite of its' argument that it would be severely prejudiced if it were required to respond to the grievance, that the board would hear evidence in respect of both the preliminary objection and the merits, and reserve its decision on the objection. The Ministry's key witness as to the grievor's state of mind at the time of her resignation had suffered a stroke which affected his memory. The issue as stated by the Board was whether a fair hearing could be held. It determined that the evidence demonstrated that the Ministry had been substantial- ly prejudiced by the delay and dismissed the grievance. In Gembora, the grievor filed a grievance as to the results of a competition some 7 1/2 months after notification of the results, and alleged that her delay was due to her lack of awareness of her right to grieve on the basis of relative equality. The Board declined to extend the time limits on equitable grounds. I 7 I 1 In Boldt, the grievor filed a grievance some 7 years I I after-the-fact of a 9-year period in which he claimed to have been improperly classified. He died before the grievance was heard. The board found the following sufficient evidence of prejudice: the employer had cleared the grievor's personnel file of most of its contents; oral testimony lead the board to conclude that the witnesses only vaguely recalled the grievor's actual duties and responsibilities as well as the circumstances, date of, and modification of his duties at a certain point; the death of the grievor resulted in the loss to the employer of the opportunity to cross-examine him. The board concluded that the matter was "inarbitrable because of the inordinate delay" in filing the grievance. In Bertrand, supra, the GSB advised the employer in 1991 that the grievor's 1990 grievance had been withdrawn, and the union did not raise that grievance again with the employer until December, 1994. A second grievance was filed in 1991. Another grievance, respecting a rehabilitation programme, was filed about 2 years after the programme ended.. At p. 16, Arbitrator Mikus concluded that on the evidence, the grievor believed that the 1990 grievance was no longer outstanding when she filed the 1991 grievances. She concluded that the 1991 grievances had been resolved by the parties' agreement as to a rehabilitation programme and the employer, not having heard for a period of about 2 years that there was any prob- lem with the rehabiliation programme, had reason to believe the 1991 grievance was settled. As well, the grievor was obliged to respond after she received a letter in April of 1992 advising her she would be declared surplus, to let the employer know she had an objection. Arbitrator Mikus consi- dered the factors in Beckers Milk and Teamsters Union. Local .2i1. (1978) 19 L.A.C. ( 2d) 217 (Burkett)--the reason for the delay, the length of the delay and the nature of the grie- vance, and cited the following from Beckers ...If the offending party satisfies an arbitrator, notwithstanding the delay, that it acted with due I , ~ 8 . diligence, then if there has been no prejudice the arbitrator should exercise his discretion in favour of extending the time-limits. If, however, the of- fending party has been negligent, or is otherwise to blame for the delay, either in whole or in part, the arbitrator must nevertheless consider the se- cond and third factors referred to above in decid- ing if reasonable grounds exist for an extension of time limits. She concluded from the union and grievor's failure to advise the employer promptly at the conclusion of the rehabilitation programme of the grievor's dissatisfaction with it, that due diligence not was exercised in the processing of the grievan- ces. No reasons were given for the delay and the length of the delay was significant. She acknowledged that there was no evidence of prejudice to the employer, but also indicated that in view of all the facts, the board would not exercise its equitable discretion to extend the time limits, and that to do so would be unfair to the Employer. In DiPaola, supra, the grievor submitted her grievance 22 days after the day her contract was not renewed, rather than the 20 days prescribed by the collective agreement. Ar- bitrator Samuels noted that under s. 18(2)c of thr old CECBA, the grievor had the right to have her grievance "processed in accordance with the procedure for final determination" if it was not finally resolved under the grievance procedure, and that that right was "in addition to any other rights of grie- vance under [the] collective agreement". He indicated that at 30 O.R. (2d) 662, the Ontario Divisional Court upheld the Board's decision in Keeling, supra, that the right to have take a grievance from discipline or dismissal or suspension without just cause to arbitration under s. 18(2)c could not be limited by the .collective agreement's timeliness provi- sions. He noted that in Keeling the Board noted that "any undue delay in filing a grievance could be taken into account during a consideration of the merits of the matter, in parti- cular if the delay resulted in prejudice to the employer". He stated that there was no undue delay which caused preju- , 'I ,1 " ! 9 I . I I dice in the case before him, and denied the preliminary ob- jection. The following emerges from the parties' cases: i I 1- Whether to hear or dismiss a grievance which I is filed beyond the time limits indicated in the collective agreement without hearing evidence is a matter of arbitral discretion. 2. Delay is an issue that can go to the merits of the matters in dispute. 3. The following factors should be considered in determining whether to dismiss or hear this grievance: a) the reason for the delay; b) the length of the delay; c} the nature of the grievance; d) whether the union or grievor has con- ducted itself with due diligence, or has been negligent; e) whether the delay will so prejudice the proper conduct of the case that it should be dismissed. Conclusions: No oral evidence has been lead with respect to either the merits or the preliminary objection. The uncontradicted submission before me is that the grievor views her delay as having been caused by the employer's misrepresentation as to its policy regarding COs co-habiting with ex-inmates. The union resisted the employer's submission that the union's conduct had contributed to the: delay. There is no evidence before me that the grievor or the union did not con- duct themselves with due diligence. The documentary evidence presented indicates that the initial delay in the hearing of this matter arose from the unavailability of a panel and thereafter for reasons of which neither party is aware and j l . '" 10 . which do not appear to have been in the control of either party. The basis of the grievance and facts giving rise to it were presumably made known to the employer by October 26, 1992, the date of the second stage meeting, some 6 weeks after the grievance was submitted. Thereafter, the delay appears to have been attributable to neither party. The nature of the grievance is apparent on the face of the Grievance form, which alleges a forced resignation under duress, and dismissal. The narration of the facts giving rise to those allegations was not disputed. The employer's knowledge of duress may be in dispute. The union's submissions that no documents have been lost, that the relevant witnesses are still available; and that memories have not faded, were not contradicted. There are neither submissions nor evidence that problems are anti- cipated in establishing the relevant facts in this dispute in evidence. On the submissions and documents presented, it is not possible to conclude at this point that the lO- or 11- month delay in having filed the grievance, or the 4 year de- lay in it being heard, is inherently prejudicial to the abi- lity of the parties to have a fair hearing. Such a conclu- sion would be premature. While the total delay of 4 years in bringing the matter to hearing is substantial, and the employer's concerns are not frivolous, this is an appropriate situation in which to reserve on the issues of timeliness and whether the delay has so prejudiced a fair hearing of this dispute until I have heard the evidence on the merits. The preliminary objection is denied at this point, with-. out prejudice to the employer's right to call evidence on the subject and to raise it in argument. I will instruct the board to schedule a hearing into the merits. . ~ ~ ~ 11 Dated at 'ro:contO thiS 24t.b da~ of oet.obe1: t 1995. / /' ,- Susan '0. l:.auf:1\\a ~ice-Chai~ \