Friday, June 17, 2016

Superior Court Declines to Follow Trites v. Renin Corp

Three years ago, the Superior Court of Justice released its decision in the case of Trites v. Renin Corp, where an employee claimed to have been dismissed or constructively dismissed by the imposition of a temporary layoff.

In a statement which made the entire employment law bar do a collective double-take, Justice Moore held that:
there is no room remaining at law for a common law finding of constructive dismissal in circumstances where a temporary layoff has been rolled out in accordance with the terms of the ESA.
I have come to refer to this proposition as the "Trites proposition".  I argued at the time that the Trites proposition is wrong, and will not largely be followed, because it's obiter (in that Justice Moore concluded in any event that the temporary layoff had not been rolled out in accordance with the ESA), inconsistent with established and binding jurisprudence, and fundamentally rooted in a misinterpretation of the Employment Standards Act.  The widely-accepted status quo, before Trites, was that a temporary layoff would constitute a constructive dismissal unless the employer could demonstrate an express or implied term in the employment contract authorizing such a layoff.

I've had to argue about Trites in court since then:  I argued a motion for summary judgment on such a case last year.  I think the judge, who generally sits in the family court, was happy to be able to conclude that there was a constructive dismissal without needing to resolve the Trites question, in an unreported decision this past January.

But I'm not the only one who's been arguing about it.  In 2014, Deputy Judge Hagan declined to follow it in the case of Wiens v. Davert Tools (my commentary here).  As a Small Claims Court decision, it has little precedent value, but nonetheless it was striking that the Small Claims Court declined to follow an ostensibly binding precedent:  To do so, Deputy Judge Hagan concluded (as I had previously argued) that the Trites proposition is obiter, and therefore not binding, and inconsistent with the rulings of higher courts.

Until recently, however, Trites hadn't been expressly considered by any other Superior Court judges.  Which brings us to the recent case of Michalski v. CIMA Canada, in which Justice James expressly rejected the Trites proposition.

Justice James reviewed the Stolze and Chen cases (see my first linked entry above), as well as McLean v. The Raywal Limited Partnership, as well as the text "Employment Law in Canada", and concluded that these were out of step with Trites.
To the extent that the decision of Moore J. in Trites stands for the proposition that the common law conditions precedent to a lawful layoff have been completely displaced by the ESA, I respectfully disagree.
Commentary

While this can't be said to finally resolve the question for once and for all, I would suggest that the results in Michalski and Wiens bring into focus my earlier caution that employers should not place reliance upon the Trites decision.

When I was arguing against following Trites in court last year, it was a tricky argument.  A contention that a recent decision of the Superior Court was wrongly decided on the law is not a submission to make lightly.  I needed to make the argument, with significant and detailed appeal to the authorities with which Trites was inconsistent, and an indepth examination of the intellectual framework of the Employment Standards Act.  Even then, I was happy to be able to add to my factum the corroborating viewpoint of Deputy Judge Hagan, as an example of an independent judicial officer coming to the same conclusions about Trites that I was making on behalf of my client.

Now, that will be even easier.  With a Superior Court decision that expressly rejects Trites, providing authorities for the position, I expect that it will be much easier to deliver future arguments that Trites was bad law, to the point that I expect most employer counsel will advise their clients that the Trites argument is a long shot - making many such files much easier to settle.

So the lesson to employers is simple:  If you want the right to temporarily lay off your employees, put it in the written contract.

Other Issues Surrounding Temporary Layoffs

There's another tidbit of useful commentary in the Michalski decision, as well.  Quite often, employers facing a temporary layoff constructive dismissal allegation are taken by surprise, as some employers (including large national employers) have been routinely using layoffs to control costs for a lengthy period of time:  "I've been doing this for decades, and this employee knew it!"

Quite often, in these cases, I see employers attempting to rely on the long-standing practice as supporting a contention that the ability to lay off becomes an implied term of the employment contract.  (There are contexts in which this is the case.  The onsite construction industry comes to mind.)  In dealing with such an argument, Justice James noted:  "Standing alone, it is difficult to see how the layoff of one worker can result in a unilateral amendment of the employment contracts of other workers."  Only in cases where the right to layoff is "notorious, even obvious, from the facts of a particular situation" will it be found to be an implied term.

Of course, this doesn't head on address the other variation of that argument we sometimes see, of acquiescence to temporary layoffs: there are scenarios where an employer may have temporarily laid off an employee in the past, and the employee did not raise an objection at that time, and then takes a constructive dismissal position in response to a subsequent temporary layoff.  (Personally, I regard this as a difficult argument, most of the time, requiring a fairly particular factual matrix, for a number of reasons.)

There's also another variation in cases where an employee takes a constructive dismissal position after a lengthy layoff, or even after being recalled.  Andrew Monkhouse recently litigated such a case, Kurt v. Idera, at the Divisional Court, and it was sent back down to the motions court.  The employee in that case responded to a recall notice, over six months after the layoff, with a letter indicating that he took the position he had been constructively dismissed.

I find this variation to be challenging, as well:  On the more fundamental principles of constructive dismissal law, the employee has the option (or sometimes the obligation) of 'trying out' the changed terms and conditions of employment for a reasonable period of time.  If your employer changes your employment conditions, and you try it out for just long enough to conclude, "You know, this really doesn't work for me", then you're not blocked from taking a constructive dismissal position.  On the other hand, if you continue with the changed employment conditions for a much longer period of time, you'll be said to have accepted the change.  This is the root of the acquiescence argument here.

Yet it's difficult to apply this concept to temporary layoffs at all, and moreso to a single continuous temporary layoff:  The image of acquiescence is that the employee is going into work and doing his job under the modified conditions.  Even with multiple temporary layoffs, that's a tough pitch, because when the employee does report back to work, it's presumably under the same terms and conditions as before.  But with a single lengthy temporary layoff, and particularly for one of an indeterminate length, it seems inherently difficult to suggest that the employee has to make that assessment before knowing just how long the temporary layoff will be.  Maybe I'm prepared to acquiesce to a one week layoff, but not to a 12-week layoff.  Seems reasonable that I might hit a point where I say, "Hey, this isn't right" and want to seek recourse for an ongoing breach of contract.  Yet the longer the temporary layoff has gone on, the less likely it is to be a constructive dismissal?  Seems a little off.

*****

This blog is not intended to and does not provide legal advice to any person in respect of any particular legal issue, and does not create a solicitor-client relationship with any readers, but rather provides general legal information. If you have a legal issue or possible legal issue, contact a lawyer.

The author is a lawyer practicing in Newmarket, primarily in the areas of labour and employment law and civil litigation. If you need legal assistance, please contact him for information on available services and billing.

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