Judgments

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A-1132-84
Douglas Garland (Applicant) v.
Canada Employment and Immigration Commis sion (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Heald and Urie JJ.— Calgary, October 31; Ottawa, November 20, 1985.
Unemployment insurance — Qualifying period — Extension — Application to set aside Umpire's decision "gaol, peniten tiary or other similar institution" in s. 18(2)(b) of Act not including time spent outside prison under temporary absence permit — Temporary absence permit granted on condition applicant reside at and work on parents' farm — Analysis of s. 18(2)(b) in context of entire Act, particularly s. 45, and Regu lations, particularly s. 55 — Attorney General of Canada v. Tanner, [1983] 1 F.C. 389 (C.A.) applied — Application allowed — Applicant not available for employment while subject to temporary absence permit — Applicant just as institutionalized as if confined to prison — Entitled to full benefit of extension under s. 18(2) — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ss. 18(1),(2) (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 31; 1978-79, c. 7, s. 4.1), 45 (as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 17) — Unemployment Insurance Regula tions, C.R.C., c. 1576, s. 55 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
Statutes — Statutory interpretation — Unemployment In surance Act, 1971, s. 18(2)(b) — Intention of Parliament determined from words in Act — Necessary to read statute in entirety to determine if words clear and unambiguous — If no ambiguity, words given ordinary, natural meaning — Common rationale in s. 18(2) situations where individuals not available for employment through circumstances beyond their control — Release under temporary absence permit whereunder restricted to residing at and working on parents' farm within words "confined in any gaol, penitentiary or other similar institu tion" in s. 18(2)(b) — S. 45 of Act and s. 55 of Regulations supporting interpretation of s. 18(2)(b) — Unemployment In surance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ss. 18(1),(2) (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 31; 1978-79, c. 7, s. 4.1), 45 (as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 17) — Unemployment Insurance Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1576, s. 55.
This is an application to set aside the Umpire's decision, reversing the decision of a Board of Referees. The applicant was employed until January, 1982. He was in direct physical custody from January 14, 1982 until September 24, 1982. On September 24, he was released on temporary absence, provided that he reside at and work on his parents' farm. The sentence
was completed on March 24, 1983. The temporary absence permit was subject to conditions, the breach of which would require the applicant to return to prison. For approximately one and one-half months after his release, the applicant was required to return to the prison each night. The applicant applied for unemployment insurance benefits on August 15, 1983. Pursuant to sections 17 and 18(1) of the Act, the applicant was required to have ten or more weeks of insurable employment during the period from August 15, 1982 to August 13, 1983 (the qualifying period). Since the applicant was unemployed from March 24, 1983 until August 13, 1983, the end of his qualifying period, he was credited with only six weeks of insurable employment. The Commission denied his application for benefits on the basis that subsection 18(2) entitled the applicant to an extension of the qualifying period for only those weeks during the qualifying period when he was physically confined to the institution (from August 15, 1982 to September 24, 1982, a period of six weeks). The Commission held that the applicant was not entitled to credit for the time he spent on his parents' farm. The Board of Referees held that the applicant was "confined in a gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution from September 24, 1982 to March 24, 1983" within the meaning of subsection 18(2). The Umpire concluded that the common sense dictionary meaning of "gaol, penitentia ry or other similar institution" would not entitle the applicant to include as qualifying weeks the time he spent on his parents' farm during the qualifying period. The issue is the meaning of paragraph 18(2)(b).
Held (Pratte J. dissenting), the application should be allowed.
Per Heald J. (Urie J. concurring): If the words are clear and unambiguous they must be followed. The statute must be read in its entirety to determine whether or not the words being interpreted are clear and unambiguous. Subsection 18(2) pro vides that an applicant's qualifying period may be extended in certain specified situations. The situations stipulated all envis age a factual scenario in which the applicant is not available for employment through external circumstances beyond his con trol. Parliament has manifested a clear intention to relieve individuals caught in the circumstances therein enumerated from the unfair consequences of those circumstances—namely, ineligibility for benefits. Here, the applicant was unavailable for employment not only when he was physically confined, but also when he was subject to the terms of his temporary absence permit. He was just as institutionalized as if he were confined to a prison. Since the rationale for subsection 18(2) subsisted in this applicant's case for the entire period from January 14, 1982 to March 24, 1983, the applicant is entitled to the full benefit of the extension provided under subsection 18(2). Sec tion 45 provides that a claimant is not entitled to receive benefit for any period during which he is an inmate of any prison or similar institution. Section 55 of the Regulations exempts from the prohibition of section 45 inmates who have been physically released from prison for the purpose of seeking and accepting employment in the community. When subsection 18(2) is con sidered along with section 45 and Regulation 55, it is clear that Parliament intended that the class of individuals described in paragraph 18(2)(b) must include those prisoners who, while not
physically confined, are not available for employment. In Attorney General of Canada v. Tanner, [1983] 1 F.C. 389 (C.A.) it was held that what Regulation 55 contemplated was that the inmate has been granted parole or temporary absence and was not disabled by his incarceration from looking for work. This confirms that since the applicant was not available for employment during his temporary absence, he remained in the class of individuals described in paragraph 18(2)(b).
Per Pratte J. (dissenting): The applicant was not "confined in [a] gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution" within the meaning of paragraph 18(2)(b) when he resided and worked at his parents' farm subject to the temporary absence permit. The farm was not a "gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution".
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
R. v. Mojelski (1968) 65 W.W.R. 565 (Sask. C.A.); Westminster Bank Ltd. v. Zang, [1966] A.C. 182 (H.L.); Attorney-General v. Prince Ernest Augustus of Hanover, [1957] A.C. 436 (H.L.); Attorney General of Canada v. Tanner, [1983] 1 F.C. 389 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Paul Groarke for applicant. Gordon Bourgard for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Gainer, Doyle & Groarke, Calgary, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J. (dissenting): I have read the reasons for judgment prepared by my brother Heald and regret not to be able to share his opinion.
The only question to be resolved is whether the applicant was "confined in [a] gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution" within the meaning of paragraph 18(2)(b) of the Unemployment Insur ance Act, 1971 [S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48 (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 31)], when, after his release from prison under a temporary absence permit, he resided and worked at his parents' farm. In my
opinion, he was not. As I read it, paragraph 18(2)(b) is clear and admits of no other interpreta tion. While I am ready to concede that the appli cant was, in view of the terms of the absence permit, confined in his parents' farm, that farm was clearly not a "gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution".
I would, therefore, dismiss the application.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside the decision of an Umpire appointed pursuant to the provisions of the Unem ployment Insurance Act, 1971, (the Act).
In that decision the Umpire reversed the unani mous decision of a Board of Referees. The relevant facts are not in dispute and may be shortly stated. The applicant was employed by Digitech Ltd., in Calgary from February of 1979 until January of 1982. On January 14, 1982, he was incarcerated in the Calgary Remand Centre, a correctional insti tution operated by the Solicitor General of Alber- ta. He remained there until April 2, 1982, when he was transferred to the Calgary Correctional Centre. On June 25, 1982, he was transferred to the Bow River Correctional Centre where he remained until September 24, 1982. Thus, at all times from January 14, 1982 until September 24, 1982, he remained in direct, physical custody. On September 24, 1982, he was released on temporary absence on "... the specific understanding and condition that he reside at his parents' farm near Crossfield, Alberta and work on that farm for the period of his Temporary Absence." The temporary absence release enabled the applicant to complete his sentence outside the setting of a correctional institution but under the supervision of a probation officer. His sentence was completed on March 24, 1983. The applicant's release on temporary absence was subject to some twelve conditions (Case, page 30). Those conditions required the applicant, inter alia,: to remain until the expiry of the temporary absence under the authority and supervision of a designated Correctional Services
supervisor; to remain in "the immediate designated area" and not leave that area without prior per mission from his supervisor and to report in person to a designated correctional institution or police station on specified dates. Failure to comply with any of the twelve conditions enumerated therein rendered the temporary absence permit null and void and required the applicant to return to a designated correctional institution or to be declared unlawfully at large therefrom.
This section 28 application was argued on the basis that from January 14, 1982 until September 24, 1982, the applicant was in direct, physical custody in a correctional institution and that from September 24, 1982 until March 24, 1983, he was physically resident and present at his parents' farm near Crossfield, Alberta. However, there is uncon- tradicted evidence on the record suggesting that for approximately one and one-half months after September 24, 1982, he was required to return to the correctional institution each night (Case, page 24).
On August 15, 1983, an application for unem ployment insurance benefits was filed with the Commission by the applicant. Pursuant to sections 17 and 18(1) [as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 31] of the Act, the applicant, in order to qualify for benefits, was required to have ten or more weeks of insurable employment during the period from August 15, 1982 to August 13, 1983 (the qualify ing period for this applicant). Subsection (2) [as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 31; 1978-79, c. 7, s. 4.1] of section 18 provides:
18....
(2) Where a person proves in such manner as the Commis sion may direct that during any qualifying period mentioned in paragraph (a) of subsection (1) he was not employed in insur- able employment for the reason that he was for any week
(a) incapable of work by reason of any prescribed illness, injury, quarantine or pregnancy,
(b) confined in any gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution,
(c) in attendance at a course of instruction or other program to which he was referred by such authority as the Commis sion may designate, or
(d) in receipt of temporary total workmen's compensation payments for an illness or injury,
that qualifying period shall, for the purposes of this section, be extended by the aggregate of any such weeks.
Since the applicant was unemployed from March 24, 1983 until August 13, 1983, the end of his qualifying period, he was only credited with six weeks out of the total of ten weeks of insurable employment required during the qualifying period and on this basis, the Commission denied his application for benefits. It was the Commission's decision that subsection 18(2) only entitled the applicant to an extension of the qualifying period for those weeks during the qualifying period when he was physically confined to the institution (from August 15, 1982 to September 24, 1982—a period of six weeks). It was the Commission's interpreta tion of subsection 18(2) that the applicant was not entitled to credit for the time he was physically present on his parent's farm, pursuant to the tem porary absence permit referred to supra.
The applicant appealed this decision to a Board of Referees. The Board disagreed with the Com mission's interpretation of subsection 18(2) and held that the applicant was "confined in a gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution from 24 September, 1982 to 24 March, 1983" within the meaning of subsection 18(2). Accordingly, the Board allowed the applicant's appeal to it and ordered that "appropriate recalculations of insur- able weeks" in the applicant's qualifying period should be made.
The Commission then appealed the Board's decision to an Umpire. The Umpire applied the "golden rule" of statutory construction and con cluded that the ordinary common sense dictionary meaning of the phrase "gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution" as employed in subsection 18(2) supra, would not entitle the applicant to include as qualifying weeks the time he spent on his parents' farm during the qualifying period. On
this basis, he allowed the Commission's appeal and reversed the decision of the Board.
Accordingly, the narrow issue to be resolved on this section 28 application is the meaning to be ascribed to paragraph 18(2)(b) as applied to the facts at bar. Put another way, can this applicant, who was released from a correctional institution under a temporary absence permit on condition that he work and reside on his parents' farm, be said to have been confined to a gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution during the period that he was physically present and resident on that farm?
The facts in the instant case produce an anoma lous and unjust result if the Umpire is correct in his interpretation of paragraph 18(2)(b). Counsel for the Commission conceded that if the applicant had remained in a correctional institution for the balance of his sentence—that is, from September 24, 1982 until March 24, 1983, he would have clearly been eligible for unemployment insurance benefits. However, because of his early physical release on a temporary absence permit and not withstanding the many restrictive conditions imposed upon him, he is not so eligible. Although the record before us contains no information relat ing to the basis upon which the applicant was granted temporary absence, it is a fair inference that he was so treated because of his trustworthi ness and good conduct as an inmate. It seems absurd that he should be penalized in such circumstances.
What then is the proper approach to the inter pretation of the phrase "confined in any gaol, penitentiary or similar institution" as used in para graph 18(2)(b) of the Act? Dr. Driedger, in Con struction of Statutes, 2nd Edition, states at page 87:
Today there is only one principle or approach, namely, the words of an Act are to be read in their entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament.
Chief Justice Culliton in the R. v. Mojelski case ((1968) 65 W.W.R. 565 (Sask. C.A.), at page
570) stated the same principle in more specific terms. It was his opinion that if there is no ambiguity, uncertainty or conflict with any other provision of the statute under review and provided that there is no repugnance to the general purview of the statute, the Court must give the words used in the enactment their ordinary and natural mean ing. Lord Reid in Westminster Bank Ltd. v. Zang, ([1966] A.C. 182 (H.L.), at page 222) stated the principle in the following manner:
But no principle of interpretation of statutes is more firmly settled than the rule that the court must deduce the intention of Parliament from the words used in the Act. If those words are in any way ambiguous—if they are reasonably capable of more than one meaning—or if the provision in question is contradict ed by or is incompatible with any other provision in the Act, then the court may depart from the natural meaning of the words in question. But beyond that we cannot go.
As we have seen, the jurisprudence establishes that if the words are clear and unambiguous they must be followed. However, it is necessary to read the statute containing the words in issue in its entirety as an initial step. Only after that has been done can it be determined with any precision whether or not the words being interpreted are clear and unambiguous. This concept was well stated by Viscount Simonds in the Attorney-General v. Prince Ernest Augustus of Hanover case ([1957] A.C. 436 (H.L.), at page 463) where he said:
... it must often be difficult to say that any terms are clear and unambiguous until they have been studied in their context. That is not to say that the warning is to be disregarded against creating or imagining an ambiguity ... It means only that the elementary rule must be observed that no one should profess to understand any part of a statute or of any other document before he has read the whole of it. Until he has done so he is not entitled to say that it or any part of it is clear and unambiguous.
I proceed now to a consideration of the scheme of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, in so far as it pertains to the factual situation in this case having regard to the canons of statutory interpre tation enunciated supra. Part II of the Act is entitled UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE BENEFITS and encompasses sections 16 to 58 inclusive of the Act. As noted earlier herein, sections 17 and 18 (1) required the applicant to have ten or more weeks of insurable employment in his qualifying period. "Qualifying period" is defined in subsection (1) of
section 18 and on these facts the qualifying period was from August 15, 1982 to August 13, 1983. Subsection (2) of section 18 provides that an appli cant's qualifying period may be extended in cer tain specified situations. The situations detailed in paragraphs (a), (b), (e) and (d) have a common rationale. They all envisage a factual scenario in which the applicant is not available for employ ment through external circumstances beyond his control. Paragraph (a) refers to illness, injury, quarantine or pregnancy. Paragraph (d) relates to a job-related illness or injury. Paragraph (c) deals with unavailability because of required attendance at an approved course of instruction. Paragraph (b), the provision here in issue, addresses those who are confined in a penal institution and thus unavailable for insurable employment. By the enactment of subsection 18(2), Parliament has, in my view, manifested a clear intention to relieve the individuals caught in the circumstances therein enumerated from the unfair consequences of those circumstances—namely, ineligibility for benefits. The method chosen by Parliament in subsection (2) to prevent such an unjust result, is to provide for an extension of the qualifying period in such circumstances. In the case at bar, this applicant was unavailable for employment not only for the period from January 14, 1982 to September 24, 1982, when he was physically confined but also during the period from September 24, 1982 to March 24, 1983 when he was equally unavailable for employment because of the specific terms of his temporary absence permit. Furthermore, on any fair appreciation of the word "institution" in its present context, the applicant was just as insti tutionalized on the facts of this case as if he were confined to a building built for the purpose of confining prisoners. Thus, in my view, since the rationale for subsection (2), as above stated, sub sisted in this applicant's case for the entire period beginning on January 14, 1982 and ending on March 24, 1983, I conclude that the applicant is entitled to the full benefit of the extension pro vided under subsection (2). Furthermore, I think this conclusion is fortified by a consideration of section 45 [as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 17] of the Act and section 55 of the Regulations [Unemployment Insurance Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1576]. Section 45 provides:
45. Except under section 31, a claimant is not entitled to receive benefit for any period during which
(a) he is an inmate of any prison or similar institution; or
(b) he is not in Canada,
except as may otherwise be prescribed.
Regulation 55 is entitled Inmates of an Institution and reads:
55. A claimant who is an inmate of a prison or similar institution and has been granted parole, partial parole or temporary absence, or a certificate of availability for the purpose of seeking and accepting employment in the commu nity, is not disentitled from receiving benefit by reason only of section 45 of the Act.
It should be noted that section 45 of the Act applied to "an inmate of any prison or similar institution". (Emphasis added.) Regulation 55 modifies the effect of section 45 if two conditions are met:
1. the claimant is on some form of temporary release, and
2. he is not prevented from looking for work.
I would observe, initially, that section 45 and Regulation 55 use the word "inmate" in a prison or similar institution whereas subsection 18(2) refers to a person "confined" to a gaol, penitentia ry or other similar institution. Regulation 55 exempts from the prohibition of section 45, those inmates who have been physically released from prison for the purpose of seeking and accepting employment in the community. When subsection 18(2) is considered along with section 45 and Regulation 55, it is clear to me that Parliament intended that the class of individuals described in paragraph 18(2)(b) must necessarily include those prisoners who, while not still remaining in physical confinement, are nevertheless still within the class since they are not yet available for employment. This applicant comes within that class, in my view.
This Court had the occasion to consider the correct interpretation to be given section 45 of the Act and section 55 of the Regulations in the case
of Attorney General of Canada v. Tanner, [1983] 1 F.C. 389 (C.A.). At page 391, Chief Justice Thurlow said:
The evidence referred to by the Board is not in the record before the Court but it seems clear that the question which the Board addressed was that of whether the respondent was available for work and that the Board found that he was available. The Board does not appear to have addressed or answered the question posed by Regulation 55; that is to say, whether the respondent had been granted temporary absence from prison within the meaning of the Regulation. If they did, it seems that they treated the availability of a temporary absence permit to work as equivalent to a "temporary absence" within the meaning of the Regulation.
In so doing, we think the Board erred in law. In our view, what Regulation 55 contemplates is that the inmate has been granted parole or temporary absence and is not disabled by his incarceration from looking for work. The Regulation also pro vides that an inmate who may still be in custody but who has been granted a certificate of availability for the purpose of seeking and accepting employment in the community will not be disentitled by section 45 of the Act from receiving benefits. The Board did not find either that the respondent had been granted a temporary absence permit or a certificate and it is common ground that he remained in prison. [Emphasis added.]
This view of the matter confirms my conclusion expressed supra, that since this applicant was not available for employment during the period of his temporary absence, he must be considered to have remained in the class of individuals described in paragraph 18(2)(b) during that period.
For these reasons, I conclude that the decision of the Board of Referees was correct and that the Umpire erred in law in reversing the Board's deci sion. I would allow the section 28 application, set aside the decision of the Umpire and refer the matter back to an Umpire to be dealt with on the basis that the applicant was confined in a gaol, penitentiary or other similar institution from Sep- tember 24, 1982 to March 24, 1983.
URIE J.: I agree.
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