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T-2620-76
Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Anti-Inflation Board, Jean-Luc Pépin, David Chapman, Claude Castonguay, Jack Biddell, Wil- liam Ladyman and Harold Renouf (Respondents)
Trial Division, Addy J.—Ottawa, July 21 and 26, 1976.
Practice—Application for injunction restraining respondents from requesting Administrator under Anti-Inflation Act from acting on an arbitral award rendered by Public Service Staff Relations Board—Administrator acting in judicial capacity Administrator must decide whether he has jurisdiction Applicant seeking to restrain reference to a tribunal No precedent—Restraint would be inequitable and Court would be usurping function of a tribunal in deciding whether or not it has jurisdiction.
Application for injunction restraining respondents from asking the Administrator under the Anti-Inflation Act to inter fere with an arbitral award rendered by the Public Service Staff Relations Board. Motion was argued at the same time as the application by the same applicant relying on the same evidence and arguments for a writ of mandamus against the Treasury Board in the same matter. (See [1977] 1 F.C. 304.)
Held, the motion is dismissed. Both parties agree that the Anti-Inflation Board exercising its powers under section 12 of the Anti-Inflation Act is not acting in a judicial capacity and the proper procedure to restrain the respondents is by way of injunction. However, the Administrator in exercising his powers under sections 17, 18, 19 and 20 is acting in a judicial capacity and one must assume that a tribunal will, especially in consid ering whether it has jurisdiction, conform to the law. If there is no jurisdiction, the matter will end there; if there is, the injunction sought should not be granted by this Court. There is no precedent for any court restraining a person from addressing himself to a tribunal and it would not only be inequitable but also contrary to law for this Court to grant the injunction applied for and thereby usurp a function of the tribunal.
APPLICATION for injunction.
COUNSEL:
•
G. Henderson, Q.C., for applicant. G. W. Ainslie, Q.C., for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
ADDY J.: The present application is for an injunction pursuant to section 18(a) of the Federal Court Act to restrain the respondents from requesting the Administrator acting under the Anti-Inflation Act' from considering, hearing, or in any way acting on an arbitral award rendered on the 13th of April, 1976 by the Public Service Staff Relations Board.
The motion was argued at the same time as another application by the same applicant against the Treasury Board and its members for a writ of mandamus involving the same matters. (Refer [ 1977] 1 F.C. 304.)
Counsel relied on the same evidence in both motions and largely on the same arguments in so far as the merits were concerned as well as some of the preliminary objections. Rather than repeat the facts here I refer to my reasons in the mandamus motion (supra) for the summary of the facts.
Both counsel agreed that the Anti-Inflation Board, in exercising its powers under section 12 of the Anti-Inflation Act, is not deciding anything or determining any rights and is not acting as a tribunal or in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity and, therefore, the proper procedure available to restrain the respondents is by way of injunction and not by prohibition. I am of the same view.
On the other hand, when one considers the type of investigation carried out by the Administrator under section 17 and his investigative powers con tained in sections 18 and 19, and, following his decision, his powers to prohibit a person from contravening the guidelines under section 20 and of requiring a person to pay monies to Her Majes ty in the right of Canada, he is without the slight est doubt acting in a judicial capacity and is most definitely finally determining rights.
As in the case of the above-mentioned applica tion for mandamus, the main argument of the applicant in the present motion is that the Anti
1 S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 75.
Inflation Board has no longer power to inquire into, and the Administrator under the Anti-Infla tion Act has no power to determine, vary or affect, the award of the Arbitrator under the Public Service Staff Relations Act 2 , which award has, since the 12th of July, 1976, become final.
One is not entitled to assume in advance that a tribunal will arrive at an illegal decision and espe cially at an erroneous interpretation of its own jurisdiction; on the contrary, one must assume that it will conform to the law. The Administrator under the Anti-Inflation Act, as in the case of every other tribunal, before dealing with the merits of the matter before him not only possesses the required jurisdiction to determine whether he has jurisdiction in any particular case, but is under a strict legal duty to do so. If the view of the counsel for the applicant is the correct one, then, one must assume that the Administrator will decline juris diction and the matter will end there. If it is not, then the injunction should never be granted by this Court at all.
In effect, what the applicant is requesting is that certain persons or a body constituted by the respondents be restrained from referring a matter to a tribunal. I have never heard, nor has counsel for the applicant been able to refer me to any precedent where any person was ever restrained by a court from addressing himself to another tri bunal, much less one which has jurisdiction to deal with the subject-matter. In this respect, I was invited by counsel for the applicant to be innova tive, create a new precedent and grant the injunc tion since, according to him, our law had now evolved to the extent that this is the proper and equitable thing to do in the present circumstances. I completely reject this submission, for, on the contrary, if the law is developing in any direction at all, in so far as the question of accessibility of tribunals is concerned, it is towards making them ever more accessible to an ever-increasing number of people on ever-expanding grounds.
It would not only be inequitable, and an injunc tion should never be granted when it would be inequitable to do so, but, in my view, it would be contrary to law for this Court to use the equitable process of injunction to restrain anybody from
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. P-35, as amended.
recourse to a tribunal even on the grounds that that particular tribunal might not possess jurisdic tion for, as previously stated, one must necessarily presume that, where a tribunal does not possess jurisdiction, it will in fact come to that conclusion. That function should not be usurped by this Court. There is no question here of harassment or abuse of process.
On this ground alone, the motion will be dis missed but I wish to emphasize that I am not, in coming to this conclusion, finding or even indirect ly suggesting or implying in any way that the Administrator under the Anti-Inflation Act would not in fact possess jurisdiction to take what action he might deem appropriate under the Anti-Infla tion Guidelines 3 , notwithstanding the arbitral award under the Public Service Staff Relations Act. On the contrary, I am deliberately refraining from dealing with the merits; I consider it this Court's legal duty to dismiss the motion on the above-mentioned fundamental ground for objec tion and I feel that, under the circumstances, it would be preferable that any tribunal which might be called upon to deal with the merits of this current and important issue in the near future, not be faced with what in effect would be rank obiter dicta on my part.
I am also refraining from coming to any finding on the other procedural and substantive objections raised by the respondents since it appears so evi dent to me that the application must in any event fail for the reasons I have stated.
There will be an order dismissing this motion with costs.
3 SOR/76-1.
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