Federal Court of Appeal Decisions

Decision Information

Decision Content

Date: 20191030


Docket: A-295-19

Citation: 2019 FCA 271

Present:  GLEASON J.A.

BETWEEN:

L’ASSOCIATION DES EMPLOYEURS MARITIMES

L’ADMINISTRATION PORTUAIRE DE MONTRÉAL

LA FÉDÉRATION MARITIME DU CANADA

Applicants

and

LE SYNDICAT DES DÉBARDEURS, SECTION LOCALE 375 DU SYNDICAT CANADIEN DE LA FONCTION PUBLIQUE

L’ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONALE DES DÉBARDEURS

LA CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE DE L’EST DE MONTRÉAL

LE CONSEIL DU PATRONAT DU QUÉBEC

LA FÉDÉRATION DES CHAMBRES DE COMMERCE DU QUÉBEC

Respondents

Dealt with in writing without appearance of parties.

Order delivered at Ottawa, Ontario, on October 30, 2019.

REASONS FOR ORDER BY:

GLEASON J.A.

 


Date: 20191030


Docket: A-295-19

Citation: 2019 FCA 271

Present:  GLEASON J.A.

BETWEEN:

L’ASSOCIATION DES EMPLOYEURS MARITIMES

L’ADMINISTRATION PORTUAIRE DE MONTRÉAL

LA FÉDÉRATION MARITIME DU CANADA

Applicants

and

LE SYNDICAT DES DÉBARDEURS, SECTION LOCALE 375 DU SYNDICAT CANADIEN DE LA FONCTION PUBLIQUE

L’ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONALE DES DÉBARDEURS

LA CHAMBRE DE COMMERCE DE L’EST DE MONTRÉAL

LE CONSEIL DU PATRONAT DU QUÉBEC

LA FÉDÉRATION DES CHAMBRES DE COMMERCE DU QUÉBEC

Respondents

REASONS FOR ORDER

GLEASON J.A.

[1]  The applicants seek an order staying proceedings before the Canada Industrial Relations Board (the CIRB or the Board) in the context of ongoing Board hearings into the applicants’ maintenance of activities application under section 87.4 of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. L-2 (the Code). In that application, the applicants seek to have the work done in the Port of Montreal by the members of the respondent, Local 375 of the C.U.P.E. Longshoremen’s Union (Local 375), declared to be necessary to prevent an immediate and serious danger to the safety or health of the public. Such a declaration would have the effect of preventing members of Local 375 from engaging in a legal strike under Part I of the Code. Were such a declaration made, the Board would typically direct another means of settling the collective agreement between Local 375 and the applicant Maritime Employers’ Association, such as providing for interest arbitration to settle the terms of the collective agreement.

[2]  The applicants seek a stay of the Board’s proceedings in their section 87.4 application until this Court decides their application for judicial review of the August 21, 2019 decision of the CIRB. In that decision, the Board dismissed the applicants’ request that one of the members of the Board panel hearing the maintenance of activities application recuse himself due to an alleged reasonable apprehension of bias flowing from certain comments, actions and gestures made, in particular, during two of the several days of hearing before the Board.

[3]  The Board has held over twenty days of hearings in the section 87.4 application and is currently in the process of hearing closing arguments in the application.

[4]  In the context of this stay application, the parties filed materials in accordance with the schedule set out in my August 27, 2019 Direction, which set out time limits for the filing of responding materials by the respondents and of reply materials by the applicants. Pursuant to the September 23, 2019 Direction of my colleague, Justice de Montigny, the applicants were permitted to include an additional affidavit in their reply materials.

[5]  By Direction dated October 22, 2019, I determined that the applicants’ stay motion would be decided based on the parties’ written materials as scheduling a hearing date within the appropriate timeframe proved impossible given prior commitments of certain counsel.

[6]  By letter dated October 23, 2019, Local 375 advised that it intended to refer to certain affidavits and exhibits contained in three volumes of materials enclosed with the letter. These three volumes have been filed by Local 375 in the context of the underlying application for judicial review of the CIRB’s August 21, 2019 decision. Counsel for the applicants wrote to the Court the same day to object to the admissibility of these additional materials on this motion, taking the position that their filing violates the timeframes set out in my August 27, 2019 Direction as well as the time limits for filing motion materials contained in the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106.

[7]  I agree with the applicants that these additional materials are not admissible as they were not filed within the timeframes that were set out in my August 27, 2019 Direction. Thus, I will not consider these additional volumes.

[8]  Turning to the merits of the stay application, to be entitled to a stay, the applicants must satisfy the tripartite test set out in RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 311 which requires they establish that their underlying application for judicial review raises a serious issue, that they would suffer irreparable harm if their stay were refused and that the balance of convenience favours granting the stay.

[9]  The applicants may well have satisfied the first part of this test, given the relatively low bar for establishing a serious issue and certain of the comments made by one of the Board members during the CIRB hearing on June 28, 2019.

[10]  However, the applicants have not established that they will suffer irreparable harm if the requested stay is not issued at this point. As this Court noted in SGT 2000 Inc. v. Union des chauffeurs de camions, hommes d’entrepôts et autres ouvriers, 2000 CanLII 15095 (Fed. C.A.) [SGT], it is highly unusual for a Court to stay labour board proceedings so as to prevent a board from rendering a decision.

[11]  The irreparable harm the applicants allege is tied to the harm they assert they and third parties would suffer if they were subject to an adverse decision made by a panel of the Board, which may be reasonably apprehended as being biased. At this point, it is uncertain whether this harm may come to pass as it is conceivable that the applicants might be successful in their application before the Board. Thus, this stay motion is premature. In somewhat similar circumstances in SGT and in Canadian Human Rights Commission v. Malo, 2003 FCA 466, this Court has denied similar stay motions.

[12]  To counter this concern, the applicants assert that there will be insufficient time between the date of an eventual Board decision on its section 87.4 application and the commencement of a legal strike to obtain a stay of the Board’s decision as Local 375 would be in a legal strike position if the Board were to deny the maintenance of activities application. At such point, Local 375 could issue a 72-hour notice under section 87.2 of the Code and a legal strike could, and according to the applicants likely would, commence in the Port of Montreal following the expiry of such notice.

[13]  I am not convinced that it would be impossible for this Court to entertain a renewed stay application during such 72-hour period. To ensure the timely disposition of a possible further stay application, I will instead adjourn this motion as opposed to dismissing it. Within five days of the date of my order, the applicants may serve and file any additional materials they wish to file in support of their stay motion. The respondents shall have five days from receipt of any additional materials served by the applicants to file any additional responding materials they may wish to file.

[14]  If the Board issues a decision unfavorable to the applicants, and if they wish to maintain their request for a stay, they may make the request for a stay of the Board’s decision by way of letter, enclosing a copy of the Board’s decision, and shall serve and file such letter within 24 hours of receipt of the Board’s decision. Conversely, if the applicants are successful before the Board, they shall simply file a copy of the Board’s decision within 24 hours of receipt. The applicants shall also notify the Judicial Administrator via telephone as soon as possible after release of the Board’s decision. If these deadlines occur on a weekend, the applicants shall contact the duty officer of the Court to arrange for the transmission of the required materials via email.

[15]  The motion will immediately be returned to me for determination after the foregoing materials are filed or, if I am unavailable, to another judge of this Court named by the Chief Justice.

[16]  In the circumstances, it is appropriate that the hearing of the applicants’ underlying application for judicial review in respect of the Board’s August 21, 2019 application be expedited. Within five days of the date of my Order, the parties shall submit an agreed-upon schedule, or failing agreement, their respective positions for completing the remaining steps in this application, with a view to its being set down for hearing during January 2020 in either Ottawa or Montreal.

[17]  Costs incurred to date in this motion shall be settled when the motion is finally determined.

“Mary J.L. Gleason”

J.A.


FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL

NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD


DOCKET:

A-295-19

 

STYLE OF CAUSE:

L’ASSOCIATION DES EMPLOYEURS MARITIMES et al. v. LE SYNDICAT DES DÉBARDEURS, SECTION LOCALE 375 DU SYNDICAT CANADIEN DE LA FONCTION PUBLIQUE et al.

 

MOTION DEALT WITH IN WRITING WITHOUT APPEARANCE OF PARTIES

REASONS FOR ORDER BY:

GLEASON J.A.

 

DATED:

October 30, 2019

 

WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS BY:

Nicola Di lorio

Mélanie Sauriol

 

For The Applicants

(L’Association des employeurs maritimes)

 

Michel Brisebois

 

FOR THE APPLICANTS

(L’Administration portuaire de Montréal)

 

Jean-Denis Boucher

FOR THE APPLICANTS

(La Fédération maritime du Canada)

 

Jacques Lamoureux

Marie-Christine Morin

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

(Le Syndicat des débardeurs, section locale 375 du Syndicat canadien de la fonction publique)

 

Ronald A Pink

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

(L’Association internationale des débardeurs)

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

BCF

Montréal, Québec

 

For The Applicants

(L’Association des employeurs maritimes et L’Administration portuaire de Montréal)

 

Robinson Sheppard Shapiro

Montréal, Québec

FOR THE APPLICANTS

(La Fédération maritime du Canada)

 

Lamoureux Morin Avocats Inc.

Longueuil, Québec

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

(Le Syndicat des débardeurs, section locale 375 du Syndicat canadien de la fonction publique)

 

Pink Larkin

Halifax, Nova Scotia

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

(L’Association internationale des débardeurs)

 

 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.