August 03, 2016
Employee entitled to overtime pay despite reclassification which removed employee from bargaining unit that paid overtime
Plumadore v. Canada (Attorney General)
267 A.C.W.S. (3d) 348
Federal Court
EMPLOYMENT — Public service — General
Entitlement to overtime pay — Employee had been working in federal public service since 1996 — In January 2008, employee started his current position with employer, which was Department of National Defence — Employee received confirmation twice in 2009 that position had been properly classified and was not excluded from bargaining unit — Employer reclassified position in April 2010 to exclude it from bargaining unit — Reclassification resulted in loss of entitlement to overtime pay — Employee was apparently not made aware of reclassification — Over next several years, employee worked and was paid for significant amount of overtime at request of his supervisor — Employee was apparently not informed that he was not entitled to overtime pay until November 2013, though union dues had not been deducted since June 2010 — Employer demanded repayment of $145,447.88 — Employee unsuccessfully grieved — Employee brought application for judicial review — Application granted; matter remitted for redetermination — Regardless of standard of review, decision was not reasonable — Decision-maker’s reasons did not indicate what facts were accepted and what determinations were made about legal arguments and jurisprudence — Reasons were very brief, reciting basic facts and stating applicable legislation — There was no analysis or discussion of submissions made by parties — Legal arguments made on behalf of employee with respect to estoppel and contractual change were not even mentioned — It was not possible to say decision fell within range of possible, acceptable outcomes defensible on facts and law — In that respect, decision was neither transparent nor intelligible and was therefore unreasonable — Totality of circumstances suggested employee had not known his position had been reclassified — Employee had been asked to work overtime, and he did so — Change in employee’s status was not effective until it was communicated to him — Defence of estoppel was available to employee, and all elements were established — Six-year limitation period in s. 32 of Crown Liability and Proceedings Act (Can.) applied since contract was made and amended in Ontario but breached in Quebec© Copyright Westlaw Canada, Thomson Reuters Canada Limited. All rights reserved.