Tuesday, May 21, 2019
Quebect Court – Employee VS Employer
The appellant city hired a temporary employee through a personnel confidence to work for 6 weeks as a receptionist and then for 18 weeks as a clerk. During the two work duty assignments, the employees wages were determined and compensable by the agency, which submitted an Invoice to the city. The employee performed her work under the direction and supervision of a manager working(a) for the city, The general working conditions, such as hours of work, breaks and statutory holidays, were dictate by the city.If the employee had not been qualified or had experienced problems in adapting, the city would have informed the agency, which would have taken the appropriate action. The respondent union, which holds the certification corroboration for most of the city employees, submitted a request to the office of the labor commissioner general under s. 39 of the Labor Code seeking, inter alai, to have the temporary employee include in the unions bargaining unit.The labor commissioner fou nd that the city was the employees real employer during the two assignments and granted the unions request. On appeal, the Labor Court affirmed the ratiocination. It acknowledged that the agency recruited, assign positions to, evaluated, disciplined and paid the temporary employees, but concluded that the city as the real employer by focusing on the question of which ships company had control everyplace the temporary employees working conditions and the performance of her work.The Labor Court also noted that there was a relationship of intelligent subordination between the city and the employee because the city managers directed and supervised how she did her day-to-day work. The Superior Court dismissed the motion in evocation brought by the city, finding that the Labor Courts decision was not plain unreasonable. The Court of Appeal affirmed that Judgment in a majority decision. Held (Lurkers-Dub J. Assenting) The appeal should be dismissed. Per Lamer C. J. And La Forest, Ign ition and Core J. To determine whether the Labor Courts decision is patently unreasonable, it must be asked whether the decision was based on the evidence adduced and whether the Labor Courts interpretation of the legislative provisions was patently unreasonable. The Labor Code provides a couple of(prenominal) indications of how to determine the real employer in a tripartite relationship, and the definitions of the terms employer and employee found in the Code have had to be see by specialized administrative tribunals.To identify the real employer in a tripartite relationship, a comprehensive approach must be taken. The criterion of legal subordination, which basically encompasses the notion of true(a) control by a party over the employees day-to-day work, and the criterion of Integration Into the a context of collective relations governed by the Labor Code, it is necessary that temporary employees be able to bargain with the party that exercises the greatest control over all as pects of their work?and not only over the supervision of their day-to-day work.Moreover, when there is a certain splitting of the employers identity n the context of a tripartite relationship, a comprehensive approach has the advantage of allowing for a affection of which party has the most control over all aspects of the work on the specific facts of each case. This approach requires a consideration of the factors relevant to the employer-employee relationship, including the selection process, hiring, training, discipline, evaluation, supervision, assignment of duties, remuneration and integration into the business.Here, the Labor Court used a comprehensive approach by not basing its decision solely on the criterion of legal subordination. It certainly gave greater probative value to working conditions and the criterion of legal subordination, but it also considered other factors that define the employer-employee relationship, such as the role of the agency and the city with respe ct to remuneration and discipline, and the specific facts of the employees case. Nor did the Labor Court ignore the agencys role in recruiting, training and evaluating the employee.However, it Justified giving predominant weight to working conditions and the legal subordination test by relying on the ultimate objective of the Labor Code. The purpose of certification is to promote bargaining between the employer and the union in order to determine the employees working conditions. According to the Labor Court, those conditions are essential aspects of an employees experience. The reasoning of the Labor Court, a highly specialized agency that has expertness in labor law and is protected by a privative clause, was not patently unreasonable.The Labor Courts conclusion that the city was the employees employer for the purposes of the Labor Code does not evanesce too patently unreasonable result. The applicability of the city collective agreement to the employee during her assignments doe s not raise any major difficulties. Moreover, although the agency was the employees employer for the purposes of the Act respecting labor standards, no inconsistency can be found in the application of the Code and that Act.Each of the labor statutes has a distinct object and its provisions must be interpreted on the basis of their specific purpose. Moreover, this case relates to provisions of the Labor Code, specifically whether the Labor Courts decision was patently unreasonable, and not to the Act respecting labor standards. The arrangement is not perfect. However, the relationship in question here is not a traditional bipartite relationship, but a tripartite one in which one party is the employee and the other two share the usual attributes of an employer.In such a situation, it is thus natural that labor legislation designed to govern bipartite After an outline of the facts, the legislation and the cases, there is a basis for the Labor Courts decision in the Labor Code and the evidence, and it is therefore not patently unreasonable. Per Lurkers-Dub J. (dissenting) Given the Labor Courts grievous bodily harm and peccadillo Jurisdiction to determine whether an employee should be included in a bargaining unit, as well as the privative clause in the Labor Code, a reviewing court may only intervene if the Labor Courts decision is patently unreasonable.While a high degree of deference is warranted in reviewing the Labor Courts decision, if such a decision fundamentally contradicts the underlying principles and intended outcomes of the enabling legislation and interferes with the effective implementation of other statutes which support and protect employees, intervention by the reviewing court is in order. Here, the Labor Court was asked to interpret the employer-employee relationship within the scope of the Codes regime governing certification and the collective bargaining process in the context of a tripartite arrangement.The modern rule of statutory interpre tation holds, inter alai, that a court must adopt an interpretation that is appropriate in terms of its acceptableness ? namely, the reasonableness of its outcome. Where an administrative tribunal contrives an absurd interpretation, it commits an error of law that warrants Judicial intervention pursuant to any standard of review.
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