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Legal Center
Canadian Judicial Opinions Regarding
the Sikh Religious Identity
Bhinder v. Canadian National Railway
Co.
K.S.
Bhinder and the Canadian Human Rights
Commission, appellants;
and
Canadian National Railway Company, respondent;
and
Attorney General of Canada, Manitoba Human Rights Commission,
Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission, Alberta Human Rights
Commission and Canadian Association for the Mentally Retarded,
interveners.
[1985]
2 S.C.R. 561
[1985] S.C.J. No. 75
File No.: 17694.
Supreme
Court of Canada
1985:
January 30 / 1985: December 17.
Present:
Dickson C.J. and Beetz, Estey, McIntyre,
Chouinard, Lamer and Wilson JJ.
ON APPEAL
FROM THE FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
Civil rights Employment General work rule
Rule conflicting with religious tenet of employee
Employee dismissed for non-compliance with rule
Whether or not work rule creating discriminatory practice
with respect to employee contrary to Canadian Human Rights
Act Canadian Human Rights Act, 1976-77 (Can.), c.
33, ss. 2, 3, 7, 10, 14(a).
CN
introduced a work rule that all employees wear a hard hat
at a particular work site. Bhinder, a Sikh employee, refused
to comply because his religion did not allow the wearing
of headgear other than the turban. Bhinder's employment
ceased since the company refused to make exceptions to the
rule and Bhinder refused to accept other work not requiring
a hard hat. The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal found CN
had engaged in a discriminatory practice and ordered reinstatement
and compensation for loss of salary. The Federal Court of
Appeal, on a s. 28 application, set aside that decision
and referred the matter back for disposition on the basis
that the work rule was not a discriminatory practice. At
issue here was whether or not the hard hat rule was a bona
fide occupational requirement, and if so, the effect [page562]
to be given s. 14(a) of the Canadian Human Rights Act.
Held
(Dickson C.J. and Lamer J. dissenting): The appeal should
be dismissed.
Per
Estey, McIntyre and Chouinard JJ.: The hard hat rule was
a bona fide occupational requirement which met the Etobicoke
test: one honestly imposed in the interest of the performance
of the work with all reasonable dispatch, safety and economy
and not for extraneous reasons aimed at defeating the Code.
The test does not vary with the special characteristics
and circumstances of the complainant. A working condition
does not lose its character as a bona fide occupational
requirement because it may be discriminatory. Rather, as
a bona fide occupational requirement, it may permit consequential
discrimination, if any. Since s. 14(a) of the Canadian Human
Rights Act clearly states that no discriminatory practice
exists where a bona fide occupational requirement is established,
applying such a requirement to each individual with varying
results would rob the requirement of its character as an
occupational requirement and would ignore the plain language
of the section. There was no duty to accommodate since s.
14(a) declared no discriminatory practice where a bona fide
occupational requirement existed.
Per
Beetz and Wilson JJ.: If the bona fides of an occupational
requirement is to be assessed in relation to each employee,
s. 14(a) is effectively read out of the Act since, absent
the section, an employer is obliged to accommodate the individual
up to the point of undue hardship even if the requirement
is a bona fide occupational one.
The
purpose of s. 14(a) is to make the requirement of the job
prevail over the requirement of the employee. It negates
any duty to accommodate by stating that the imposition of
a genuine job-related requirement is not a discriminatory
practice.
The
legislature, by narrowing the scope of what constitutes
a "discriminatory practice", has permitted genuine
job-related requirements to stand even if they have the
effect of disqualifying some persons for those jobs. Section
14(a) does not conflict with the avowed purpose of the Act
which is to prevent "discriminatory practices".
Per
Dickson C.J. and Lamer J., dissenting: Section 14(a) of
the Canadian Human Rights Act was not intended to obliterate
the duty to accommodate and, in [page563] doing so, diminish
seriously protection of the individual from adverse effect
discrimination in the Act. The purpose of the Act is to
eradicate discriminatory effects and any interpretation
of s. 14(a) which would significantly undermine the effectiveness
of the Act in curbing adverse effect discrimination is contrary
to the express and implied purposes of the Act. Such reduction
of the protection of the individual from adverse effect
discrimination under the Act would require clear and explicit
words to that effect. The words of s. 14(a) do not suffice.
The
words "occupational requirement" refer to a requirement
manifestly related to the occupation as a whole. The qualifying
words "bona fide" require an employer to justify
the imposition of an occupational requirement on a particular
individual when such imposition has discriminatory effects
on the individual. A requirement which is prima facie discriminatory
against an individual, even if occupational, is not bona
fide for the purposes of s. 14(a) if its application to
the individual is not reasonably necessary in the sense
that undue hardship would result on the part of the employer
if an exception or substitution were to be allowed on the
part of the individual affected.
The
test of a bona fide occupational qualification set out in
Ontario Human Rights Commission v. Borough of Etobicoke
does not exclude an interpretation of bona fide occupational
requirement that the discriminatory impact of an occupational
requirement on an individual be taken into account. The
Etobicoke test left open the question of whether the assessment
of reasonable necessity was to be considered in respect
of the necessity of the general requirement or the necessity
of applying the general requirement to an individual upon
whom it would have a discriminatory effect. The Tribunal,
therefore, was consistent with the Etobicoke test and with
the words of s. 14(a), when it decided that a bona fide
occupational requirement (1) was to be assessed in respect
of the particular circumstances surrounding the complaint
and (2) included a duty to accommodate on the part of the
employer.
The
Tribunal effectively, and correctly, held that federal legislation
is inoperative to the extent that it conflicts with the
Canadian Human Rights Act. The Canada Labour Code and its
regulations do not create an exception to the Canadian Human
Rights Act. Where the two Acts conflict, the matter is governed
by the Canadian Human Rights Act. The wearing of safety
helmets by Sikhs, which has a prima facie discriminatory
effect, is therefore governed by the Canadian Human Rights
Act and not the Canada Labour Code. Even if [page564] the
safety helmet policy were necessary under the Canada Labour
Code and Regulations, that policy is not ipso facto a bona
fide occupational requirement for the purpose of the Canadian
Human Rights Act. The Tribunal could therefore order the
employer to grant an employee an exemption because the general
policy did not meet the requirements of s. 14(a).
This
Court should not disturb the Tribunal's findings of fact
concerning the safety factors incident to not wearing a
safety helmet. Nor should this Court disturb the conclusion
reached by the Tribunal that respondent would not be subject
to undue hardship if it were to exempt Mr. Bhinder from
the safety helmet rule.
Cases
Cited
By the
Majority
Ontario
Human Rights Commission v. Borough of Etobicoke, [1982]
1 S.C.R. 202 applied; Ontario Human Rights Commission and
O'Malley v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536, distinguished.
By the
Minority
Ontario
Human Rights Commission and O'Malley v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd.,
[1975] 2 S.C.R. 536; Ontario Human Rights Commission v.
Borough of Etobicoke, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 202; Winnipeg School
Division No. 1 v. Craton, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 150.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Canada
Electrical Safety Regulations, C.R.C., c. 998.
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, ss. 81(1), (2),
82(1)(a), (b), 84(1)(g).
Canada Protective Clothing and Equipment Regulations, C.R.C.,
c. 1007.
Canadian Human Rights Act, 1976-77 (Can.), c. 33, ss. 2,
3, 7(a), (b), 10(a), (b), 14(a).
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
Motor-Cycle Crash Helmet (Religious Exemption) Act, 1976,
1976 (U.K.), c. 62, s. 1.
Ontario Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1970, c. 318, s. 4(6).
Road Traffic Act 1972, 1972 (U.K.), c. 20.
Workmen's Compensation Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 539.
[page565]
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal, [1983] 2
F.C. 531, allowing an application for judicial review of
a decision of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal finding
discrimination. Appeal dismissed, Dickson C.J. and Lamer
J. dissenting.
Ian
G. Scott, Q.C., and Edward P. Belobaba, for the appellant
K.S. Bhinder.
Russell Juriansz, and James Hendry, for the appellant Canadian
Human Rights Commission.
L.L. Band Q.C., and Kenneth R. Peel, for the respondent.
Eric A. Bowie, Q.C., and Judith McCann, for the intervener
the Attorney General of Canada.
M.C. Woodward, for the interveners Manitoba Human Rights
Commission and Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission.
R.A. Philp, for the intervener Alberta Human Rights Commission.
David Baker, for the intervener Canadian Association for
the Mentally Retarded.
Solicitors for the appellant K.S. Bhinder: Cameron, Brewin
& Scott, Toronto.
Solicitor for the appellant Canadian Human Rights Commission:
Russell G., Juriansz, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the respondent: Lawrence L. Band, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada:
Roger Tassé, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the interveners Manitoba Human Rights Commission
and Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission: Milton C. Woodward,
Saskatoon.
Solicitor for the intervener Alberta Human Rights Commission:
R.G. Philp, Edmonton,
Solicitor for the intervener Canadian Association for the
Mentally Handicapped: David Baker, Toronto.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
reasons of Dickson C.J. and Lamer J. were delivered
by
1 THE
CHIEF JUSTICE (dissenting): This is an appeal from
a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal in which that
Court, pursuant to s. 28 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C.
1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, set aside the decision of a Human
Rights Tribunal appointed under the Canadian Human Rights
Act, 1976-77 (Can.), c. 33). The appeal raises two important
issues: (1) are unintentional and adverse effect discrimination
covered by ss. 7 and 10 of the Canadian Human Rights Act;
and (2) what principles govern application of the "bona
fide occupational requirement" defence in s. 14(a)
of the Act? I have had the advantage of reading McIntyre
J.'s reasons in this appeal and adopt his summary of the
facts and lower court [page566] judgments. I will only supplement
them where necessary for these reasons.
I
The Issues
2 The
main question in this appeal is whether the Tribunal erred
in law or fact, so as to justify interference with its decision
by the Federal Court under s. 28 of the Federal Court Act.
Before addressing the substantive issues raised in this
appeal, I should note as a general principle that reviewing
courts, under s. 28 of the Federal Court Act or otherwise,
must be cautious and sensitive in exercising their powers.
Restraint must be a prevailing factor in judicial review
of the decisions of specialized statutory tribunals if the
intentions and policies of Parliament and the provincial
legislatures in establishing such tribunals are to be respected.
3 In
the present case, the Tribunal found the respondent, Canadian
National Railway Company (CN), to be liable for discrimination
against Mr. Bhinder, one of the appellants, under the Canadian
Human Rights Act. Mr. Bhinder was required to wear a safety
helmet as a condition of employment. If he complied with
this requirement he would be unable to wear a turban and
this would be contrary to fundamental tenets of the Sikh
religion of which he is a member. The Tribunal, in coming
to its conclusion, held that (1) unintentional and adverse
effect discrimination are prohibited under ss. 7 and 10
of the Canadian Human Rights Act; and, (2) the safety helmet
rule was not a bona fide occupational requirement under
s. 14(a) of the Act because CN did not fulfil its duty to
accommodate Mr. Bhinder's religious needs.
4 I
concur with McIntyre J.'s reasons and conclusion on the
question of whether ss. 7 and 10 of the Act prohibit adverse
effect and unintentional discrimination. He adopts the reasoning
expressed in Ontario Human Rights Commission and O'Malley
v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536, [page567] (released
concurrently by this Court) in concluding that the definitions
of discriminatory practices in the Canadian Human Rights
Act, ss. 7 and 10, extend to both unintentional and adverse
effect discrimination. The Tribunal came to the same conclusion
and was, in my opinion, correct.
5 With
respect, I am unable to agree with McIntyre J.'s decision
that the Tribunal erred in law in its interpretation of
the bona fide occupational requirement in s. 14(a) of the
Act. I believe the Tribunal was correct in concluding the
respondent employer had not established the prima facie
discriminatory practice of requiring a Sikh to wear a safety
helmet was based on a bona fide occupational requirement.
II
The Tribunal's
Decision That a Duty to Accommodate is Part of the Bona
Fide Occupational Requirement
6 The
Tribunal began by stating that human rights legislation
is remedial and that the policies of the Act are not to
be compromised or abridged unless by the express language
of legislation. The bona fide exception must be interpreted
narrowly so as not to conflict with the remedial aims of
the Act. The root of the bona fide exception is, according
to the Tribunal, "the ability of an employee to perform
his or her duties", and the definition of what is a
bona fide occupational requirement must be determined on
a case by case basis according to the demands of particular
jobs. A policy which discriminates against an individual
on religious grounds will not, according to the Tribunal,
be a bona fide occupational requirement unless the risks
and costs incurred by the employer in accommodating the
religious requirements of the individual outweigh the individual's
freedom from religious discrimination. Where the practice
of an employee's religious beliefs does not affect his or
her ability to perform the duties of the job, nor jeopardize
the safety of the public or other employees, nor cause undue
hardship to the employer, either in a practical or economic
sense, [page568] then a policy which restricts that practice
is not a bona fide occupational requirement.
7 As
Le Dain J. stated in the Federal Court of Appeal at p. 559,
the Tribunal "applied the principle that an employer
has a duty to accommodate the religious practices of an
employee by an exemption from or substitution for a requirement
if he can do so without undue hardship to his business".
In other words, only if allowing Mr. Bhinder to wear a turban
would have caused undue hardship to the respondent would
the safety helmet requirement have been a bona fide occupational
requirement in respect of its application to Mr. Bhinder.
8 The
Tribunal's interpretation of s. 14(a) of the Canadian Human
Rights Act is one that is, in my opinion, correct in law
and should not be interfered with by this Court. Section
14(a) provides:
14.
It is not a discriminatory practice if
(a)
any refusal, exclusion, expulsion, suspension, limitation,
specification or preference in relation to any employment
is established by an employer to be based on a bona fide
occupational requirement.
In other
words, prima facie discrimination in employment, on the
basis of any of the prohibited grounds as enumerated in
s. 3 of the Act, is not a "discriminatory practice"
for the purpose of the Act if it is based on a bona fide
occupational requirement. Thus, the wider the parameters
of the bona fide occupational requirement, the narrower
the range of prima facie discrimination prohibited by the
Act.
9 The
words "bona fide occupational requirement", in
isolation, are elastic in the sense they are capable of
having more than one meaning. Accordingly, they must be
interpreted and given meaning in their proper context, and
understood in such a way as to be consistent with the broad
purposes of the Act as a whole. The purposes of the Canadian
Human Rights Act are stated in s. 2:
[page569]
2.
The purpose of this Act is to extend the present laws in
Canada to give effect, within the purview of matters coming
within the legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada,
to the following principles:
(a)
every individual should have an equal opportunity with other
individuals to make for himself or herself the life that
he or she is able and wishes to have, consistent with his
or her duties and obligations as a member of society, without
being hindered in or prevented from doing so by discriminatory
practices based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, age, sex or marital status, or conviction for
an offence for which a pardon has been granted or by discriminatory
employment practices based on physical handicap...
In O'Malley,
supra, McIntyre J. said the following with respect to interpretation
of human rights legislation at pp. 546-47:
It
is not, in my view, a sound approach to say that according
to established rules of construction no broader meaning
can be given to the Code than the narrowest interpretation
of the words employed. The accepted rules of construction
are flexible enough to enable the Court to recognize in
the construction of a human rights code the special nature
and purpose of the enactment... and give to it an interpretation
which will advance its broad purposes. Legislation of this
type is of a special nature, not quite constitutional but
certainly more than the ordinary -- and it is for the courts
to seek out its purpose and give it effect.
Interpretation
of s. 14(a) of the Act must be consistent with advancing
the "broad purposes" of the Act as established
in s. 2. In other words, the bona fide occupational requirement
defence must not be given such wide parameters as to defeat
the very purposes of the Act in which it is included.
10 The
interpretation of s. 14(a) by the Tribunal fulfils the mandate
of s. 2. The emphasis of s. 2 is the protection of the individual
from all forms of discrimination. The correct interpretation
of s. 14(a) of the Act is one which ensures the individual
the strongest protection from discrimination possible while
at the same time being "consistent with his or her
duties and obligations as a member of society". The
Tribunal's interpretation, based on an incorporation of
a duty to accommodate into [page570] the bona fide occupational
requirement, is, in my view, consistent with these requirements.
The duty to accommodate, which is so essential an aspect
of human rights law (see O'Malley, supra), is necessary
for ensuring protection of the individual under the Act
from adverse effect discrimination. At the same time the
Tribunal's interpretation of s. 14(a) allows the employer
to justify a policy which is prima facie discriminatory
by demonstrating that the absence of such a policy would
cause undue hardship to his or her business.
11 The
respondent's interpretation of the bona fide occupational
requirement is not, in my view, consistent with the broad
purposes of the Canadian Human Rights Act. According to
the respondent, a requirement is a bona fide occupational
requirement as long as it is "manifestly job related
or justified by business necessity". In other words,
if the requirement is genuinely "occupational"
in a general sense, that ends the inquiry. It is not necessary,
in the respondent's view, to assess the impact of the requirement
upon the individual against whom it discriminates, and to
take reasonable accommodative steps to avoid such discrimination.
12 The
implication of the respondent's interpretation of s. 14(a)
is a negation of the duty to accommodate and it therefore
significantly diminishes the Act's protection from adverse
effect discrimination. On this point I adopt the words of
Le Dain J. [at p. 560] in the Federal Court of Appeal (as
he then was):
...
the duty to accommodate is a necessary aspect of the application
of the exception of bona fide occupational requirement in
a particular case. It is a corollary of the concept of adverse
effect or indirect discrimination that the exception must
be considered in relation to the employee affected; otherwise
the exception could render the concept of indirect discrimination
illusory. It is thus necessary in weighing the various factors,
including the discriminatory effect, in order to determine
whether the requirement is reasonably necessary in relation
to the employee affected, that consideration be given to
whether an exception from or substitution for the requirement
[page571] could be allowed by the employer in the particular
case without undue hardship to his business.
13 I
do not believe Parliament intended s. 14(a) of the Act to
obliterate the duty to accommodate thereby seriously diminishing
the protection from adverse effect discrimination provided
in the Act. It is clear from s. 2 that the purpose of the
Canadian Human Rights Act is to eradicate discriminatory
effects. An interpretation of s. 14(a) which significantly
undermines the effectiveness of the Act in curbing adverse
effect discrimination is thus contrary to the express and
implied purposes of the Act.
14 Such
reduction of the protection of the individual from adverse
effect discrimination under the Act would require clear
and explicit words to that effect. The words of s. 14(a)
of the Act do not suffice. The words "occupational
requirement" mean that the requirement must be manifestly
related to the occupation in which the individual complainant
is engaged. Once it is established that a requirement is
"occupational", however, it must further be established
that it is "bona fide". A requirement which is
prima facie discriminatory against an individual, even if
it is in fact "occupational", is not bona fide
for the purpose of s. 14(a) if its application to the individual
is not reasonably necessary in the sense that undue hardship
on the part of the employer would result if an exception
or substitution for the requirement were allowed in the
case of the individual. In short, while it is true the words
"occupational requirement" refer to a requirement
manifest to the occupation as a whole, the qualifying words
"bona fide" require an employer to justify the
imposition of an occupational requirement on a particular
individual when such imposition has discriminatory effects
on the individual.
15 The
Tribunal's interpretation of s. 14(a) is, in my view, consistent
with the general definition of bona fide occupational requirement
in Ontario Human Rights Commission v. Borough of Etobicoke,
[1982] 1 S.C.R. 202. In that case the Court said, at p.
208:
[page572]
To
be a bona fide occupational qualification and requirement
a limitation, such as a mandatory retirement at a fixed
age, must be imposed honestly, in good faith, and in the
sincerely held belief that such limitation is imposed in
the interests of the adequate performance of the work involved
with all reasonable dispatch, safety and economy, and not
for ulterior or extraneous reasons aimed at objectives which
could defeat the purpose of the Code.
In the
present case there is no question the safety helmet requirement
met this test.
The
Court continued (at p. 208):
In
addition it [the bona fide occupational requirement] must
be related in an objective sense to the performance of the
employment concerned, in that it is reasonably necessary
to assure the efficient and economical performance of the
job without endangering the employee, his fellow employees
and the general public.
As I
understand the latter passage, it does not exclude an interpretation
of bona fide occupational requirement which requires the
discriminatory impact of an occupational requirement on
an individual to be taken into account. The gist of the
passage is that a requirement be "reasonably necessary"
for the efficient, economical and safe performance of the
job. The passage leaves open the question of whether the
assessment of reasonable necessity is to be considered in
respect of the necessity of the general requirement, or
the necessity of applying the general requirement to an
individual upon whom it will have a discriminatory effect.
In the present case, the Tribunal held that application
of an occupational requirement to an individual who suffers
discrimination as a result of such application must be "reasonably
necessary", in the sense that the only alternative
is undue hardship on the part of the employer, before it
qualifies as a bona fide occupational requirement. This
is, in my opinion, consistent with the test in Etobicoke,
supra.
16 To
conclude thus far, the Tribunal did not err in law in holding
the bona fide occupational requirement of s. 14(a) of the
Act (1) must be assessed in respect of the particular circumstances
surrounding the individual complainant and (2) includes
a duty to accommodate on the part of the employer. This
result advances the purposes of the Act and is [page573]
consistent with the words of s. 14(a) as well as the decision
of this Court in Etobicoke, supra.
III
Statutory Obligations of Canadian National with Respect
to the Safety of Employees
17 The
respondent further argues that the Human Rights Tribunal
had no jurisdiction to order an employer to grant an employee
an exemption from wearing a safety helmet in circumstances
where to do so would violate the relevant provisions of
the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, and the Regulations
thereunder. Sections 81 and 82 of the Code provide:
81.(1)
Every person operating or carrying on a federal work, undertaking
or business shall do so in a manner that will not endanger
the safety or health of any person employed thereupon or
in connection therewith.
(2) Every person operating or carrying on a federal work,
undertaking or business shall adopt and carry out reasonable
procedures and techniques designed or intended to prevent
or reduce the risk of employment injury in the operation
or carrying on of the federal work, undertaking or business.
82.(1) Every person employed upon or in connection with
the operation of any federal work, undertaking or business
shall, in the course of his employment,
(a)
take all reasonable and necessary precautions to ensure
his own safety and the safety of his fellow employees; and
(b) at all appropriate times use such devices and wear such
articles of clothing or equipment as are intended for his
protection and furnished to him by his employer, or required
pursuant to this Part to be used or worn by him.
Section
84(1)(g) authorizes the Governor in Council to make regulations
as follows:
84.(1)
Subject to any other Act of the Parliament of Canada and
any regulations thereunder, the Governor in Council may
make regulations for the safety and health of persons employed
upon or in connection with the operation of any federal
work, undertaking or business and for the provision therefor
of safety measures in the operation or use of plants, machinery,
equipment, vehicles, materials, buildings, structures and
premises used or to be used in connection with the operation
of any federal work, undertaking or business and in particular,
[page574] but without restricting the generality of the
foregoing, may make regulations
* * *
(g) prescribing the standards for protective clothing and
equipment to be used by employees and the use of, and the
responsibility for providing, such clothing and equipment.
Pursuant
to s. 84(1)(g) the Governor in Council enacted certain regulations
concerning protective clothing and electrical safety.
18 The
Tribunal determined that federal legislation and regulations
were to be construed and applied in such a way as to be
consistent with the Canadian Human Rights Act. Thus, if
the policy of an employer is discriminatory under the Act,
it will not be rendered non-discriminatory simply by reason
of there being a statutory requirement mandating that policy.
In effect, the Tribunal held that federal legislation is
inoperative to the extent it conflicts with the Canadian
Human Rights Act.
19 The
Tribunal was, in my view, correct in coming to that conclusion.
In Winnipeg School Division No. 1 v. Craton, [1985] 2 S.C.R.
150, this Court came to a similar conclusion with respect
to a provision concerning mandatory retirement. McIntyre
J., writing for the Court, said (at p. 156):
Section
50 of The Public Schools Act of 1980 cannot be considered
a later enactment having the effect of creating an exception
to the provisions of s. 6(1) of The Human Rights Act.
In any event, I am in agreement with Monnin C.J.M. where
he said:
Human
rights legislation is public and fundamental law of general
application. If there is a conflict between this fundamental
law and other specific legislation, unless an exception
is created, the human rights legislation must govern.
This
is in accordance with the views expressed by Lamer J. in
Insurance Corporation of British Columbia v. Heerspink,
[1982] 2 S.C.R. 145. Human rights legislation is of a special
nature and declares public policy regarding matters of general
concern. It is not constitutional in nature in the sense
that it may not be altered, [page575] or amended, or repealed
by the Legislature. It is, however, of such nature that
it may not be altered, amended, or repealed, nor may exceptions
be created to its provisions, save by clear legislative
pronouncement.
20 In
the present appeal, the provisions of the Canada Labour
Code and Regulations thereunder do not create an exception
to the provisions of the Canadian Human Rights Act. The
wearing of safety helmets by Sikhs, a requirement which
has a prima facie discriminatory effect, is a matter governed
by the Canadian Human Rights Act, not the Canada Labour
Code, where the requirements of the two Acts conflict. Thus,
even if the safety helmet policy is necessary under the
Canada Labour Code and Regulations, it does not follow that
the policy is ipso facto a bona fide occupational requirement
for the purpose of the Canadian Human Rights Act. Accordingly,
the Tribunal had jurisdiction to order the employer to grant
Mr. Bhinder an exemption from the safety helmet policy on
the ground the policy did not meet the requirements of s.
14(a) of the Act.
IV
Would Exempting Mr. Bhinder from the Safety Helmet Requirement
Lead to Undue Hardship on the Part of Canadian National?
21 The
Tribunal found the respondent would not be subject to undue
hardship if it exempted Mr. Bhinder from the safety helmet
requirement. The respondent could not, therefore, successfully
invoke the bona fide occupational requirement defence. The
Tribunal began with the proposition that "the mere
fact that an employees' [sic] religion causes some imposition
on an employer does not automatically justify discrimination
on that basis. The employer must show that the accommodation
of the employees' religious beliefs or practices would cause
it undue hardship". It continued: "In the case
before this Tribunal, there is little evidence that any
hardship will fall on Canadian National Railway if it accommodates
Mr. Bhinder's religious beliefs, at least from a practical
[page576] point of view. There are no administrative difficulties
foreseeable if Mr. Bhinder were to continue working without
a hard hat".
22 The
Tribunal based its decision on a number of findings of fact
concerning the potential consequences of Mr. Bhinder not
wearing a safety helmet. These are summarized as follows:
1. There
was no shortage of maintenance electricians;
2. Mr. Bhinder was not a unique or specialized employee;
3. The respondent's safety policy would not be jeopardized
by giving Mr. Bhinder an exemption;
4. Mr. Bhinder was willing to relocate to a post where a
safety helmet was not necessary, though he was not willing
to assume duties other than those of a maintenance electrician;
5. Mr. Bhinder was able to perform effectively and efficiently
without a safety helmet;
6. Neither Mr. Bhinder's fellow employees, nor the general
public would be injured by Mr. Bhinder's failure to wear
a safety helmet;
7. The risk of injury to Mr. Bhinder if he did not wear
a safety helmet was negligible.
23 Interference
with the Tribunal's findings of fact is authorized only
if, pursuant to s. 28(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act, the
Tribunal "based its decision or order on an erroneous
finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious
manner or without regard for the material before it".
The respondent submits that the Tribunal's finding that
the increased risk to Mr. Bhinder, if he did not wear a
safety helmet, was negligible, is not supported by the evidence
and is, indeed, contrary to some of the evidence. I agree
with Le Dain J. in the Federal Court that, even assuming
the Tribunal erred on this point, the error was not of the
kind described in s. 28(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act.
As a general rule, a reviewing court should be extremely
hesitant to disturb the findings of fact of a tribunal.
Tribunals have the benefit of being able [page577] to assess
the credibility of witnesses and other factors which are
not apparent on reviewing transcripts of the evidence. Even
assuming arguendo that the Tribunal erred in assessing the
safety factor, I do not believe such error was "made
in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard for
the material before [the Tribunal]". This Court should
not disturb the Tribunal's findings of fact.
24 With
respect to the financial hardship of Canadian National in
the event of an injury to Mr. Bhinder as a result of his
not wearing a safety helmet, the Tribunal concluded the
potential additional costs of an exemption from its safety
helmet policy in favour of the complainant, and Sikhs in
general, was de minimis and, therefore, did not constitute
undue hardship. According to the Tribunal:
The
Respondent is a Schedule 2 employer under the Workmen's
Compensation Act, that is, it pays compensation directly
to its injured employees, and as such, if an employee's
risk of injury is increased, the likelihood of receiving
compensation correspondingly increases, and as a result,
the employer's liability to pay compensation consequentially
increases. Thus, the potential costs to the Respondent,
if Mr. Bhinder is granted an exemption from the hard hat
policy, are not de minimis in a quantitative sense. However,
in our view, given the size and nature of schedule 2 employers,
such costs are de minimis to such employers.
The
Tribunal continued that, even if the added costs were not
de minimis, the risk to Mr. Bhinder if he did not wear a
safety helmet was inherent to his employment since the alternative
to that risk would have been a denial of religious freedom.
The policy behind the worker's compensation scheme is to
ensure that liability for risk inherent to employment is
borne by employers. Such liability would not, therefore,
have constituted undue hardship on the part of the respondent.
[page578]
25 This
Court should not disturb the Tribunal's findings on the
question of potential financial hardship as a result of
Mr. Bhinder's not wearing a safety helmet. The Tribunal
did not, in my view, err in law or in fact, for the purpose
of s. 28 of the Federal Court Act, in finding the potential
increase in the cost of worker's compensation to the respondent
was, for an employer the size of Canadian National, de minimis
and therefore not unduly hard on the employer. As the basis
of the Tribunal's decision was the finding that the cost
of exempting Mr. Bhinder from the safety helmet policy was
de minimis, it is not, in my view, necessary to review the
Tribunal's understanding of the law assuming the cost was
not de minimis.
26 As
a general rule, this Court should be reluctant to interfere
with a Tribunal's understanding of "undue hardship"
for the purpose of determining if the bona fide occupational
requirement has been satisfied unless there is a clear error
of law or an erroneous finding of fact which satisfies s.
28(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act. I agree with Le Dain
J. in the Federal Court of Appeal, at pp. 561-562:
...
the Court should not lightly interfere with what is essentially
a question of human rights policy in the application of
the principles or criteria which Human Rights Tribunals
have developed as a distinct body of jurisprudence in what
is a relatively new field.
These
words are germane with respect to the Tribunal's decision
that the respondent would not suffer undue financial hardship
if Mr. Bhinder was exempted from the hard hat rule. On all
of the evidence, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that
exempting Mr. Bhinder from the safety helmet requirement
would not impose undue hardship on the respondent. Therefore,
the failure to accommodate Mr. Bhinder by allowing him to
work without a safety helmet meant that the respondent could
not rely on the bona fide occupational requirement defence.
In coming to this decision the Tribunal did not error in
law or fact in such a way as to [page579] justify interference
with its decision by a reviewing court.
V
Conclusion
27 The
safety helmet policy of the respondent is not a bona fide
occupational requirement in respect of its application to
Mr. Bhinder. Accordingly, this appeal should be allowed
with costs throughout and the order of the Human Rights
Tribunal restored.
The
reasons of Beetz and Wilson JJ. were delivered by
28 WILSON
J.: I have had the benefit of the reasons of both
McIntyre J. and Dickson C.J. and the difference between
them, it seems to me, hinges on the meaning to be given
to the phrase bona fide in s. 14(a) of the Act. If bona
fide is used in the section simply to mean a genuine occupational
requirement, i.e., that the wearing of a hard hat is as
an objective factual matter a requirement for the appellant's
job, then it seems to me that the Tribunal implicitly found
that it was. The Tribunal, however, and Dickson C.J. agrees,
found that that was not what the legislature intended by
bona fide. It intended that the bona fides of an occupational
requirement be assessed in relation to each employee. The
same occupational requirement might be bona fide vis-a-vis
X but not vis-a-vis Y. By taking this approach the same
result can, of course, be reached as if the section were
not in the Act at all since, absent the section, the employer
is obliged to accommodate the individual employee up to
the point of undue hardship even if the requirement is a
bona fide occupational one: see Ontario Human Rights Commission
and O'Malley v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536
(judgment delivered concurrent herewith). If the employer
fails to do so, it is discriminating under the Act. The
Tribunal finds that, if it fails to do so, its occupational
requirement is not bona fide vis-a-vis [page580] that employee
within the meaning of s. 14(a).
29 With
respect, I do not think it is open to us under the statute
to give the words bona fide a meaning which would have the
effect of nullifying a provision which says that an employer
will not be guilty of a discriminatory practice if the requirement
he attaches to the job is a genuine requirement of that
job. The purpose of s. 14(a) seems to me to be to make the
requirement of the job prevail over the requirement of the
employee. It negates any duty to accommodate by stating
that it is not a discriminatory practice. I agree with McIntyre
J. that discrimination is per se victim related but the
occupational requirement is job related. This is, I believe,
why s. 14(a) provides that a genuine occupational requirement
is not a discriminatory practice as opposed to making it
a defence to a charge of discrimination which would enable
the employer to establish that he had discharged his duty
to accommodate the particular complainant up to the point
of undue hardship.
30 The
legislature, in my view, by narrowing the scope of what
constitutes discrimination has permitted genuine job-related
requirements to stand even if they have the effect of disqualifying
some persons for those jobs. This was a policy choice it
was free to make under the Act and, in my opinion, it has
done so in a way which creates no conflict with the avowed
purposes of the Act referred to by the Chief Justice. Section
2(a) of the Act makes it quite clear that what will not
be tolerated under the Act are "discriminatory practices".
The legislature has specifically provided in s. 14(a) that
the attachment of a bona fide occupational requirement to
a job is not a discriminatory practice. I do not believe
it is open to the courts to query its wisdom in this regard.
31 For
these and the reasons given by my colleague, McIntyre J.,
I would dispose of the appeal as suggested by him.
[page581]
The
judgment of Estey, McIntyre and Chouinard JJ. was delivered
by
32 McINTYRE
J.: This is an appeal by K.S. Bhinder and the Canadian
Human Rights Commission against a judgment of the Federal
Court of Appeal, [1983] 2 F.C. 531, dated April 13, 1983,
which set aside a decision of a Human Rights Tribunal under
the Canadian Human Rights Act, 1976-77 (Can.), c. 33. In
the Tribunal's decision the Canadian National Railway Company
(CN) was held to have discriminated against the appellant,
Bhinder, upon the ground of religion in requiring him, contrary
to the tenets of his religion, to wear a safety helmet (hard
hat) as a condition of employment.
33 Bhinder
became an employee of CN in April, 1974. He worked for more
than four years as a maintenance electrician in its Toronto
coach yard servicing the turbo train between the hours of
11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. The CN announced on November 30,
1978 that with effect from December 1, 1978 all employees
in the Toronto coach yard would be required to wear a hard
hat when at work. Bhinder, a Sikh forbidden by his religion
to wear anything on his head except a turban, refused to
wear the hard hat. He was informed in a letter, dated December
5, 1978, from the general foreman that there could be no
exceptions to the hard hat rule, that he would be required
to comply and wear a hard hat commencing December 6, 1978,
and that he would not be permitted to work if he did not
do so. He was not prepared to work in any capacity other
than that of an electrician and there were no positions
open for electricians in which the wearing of a hard hat
was not required. His employment with the CN ceased on December
5, 1978.
34 Bhinder
filed a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission
on December 7, 1978. The Commission appointed a Human Rights
Tribunal on October 3, 1979 (Professor Peter Cumming, Mary
Eberts, and Joan Wallace). Hearings lasting several days
were held in December, 1979. Extensive evidence, including
that of experts, was heard and submissions were made. The
Tribunal delivered its decision on September 22, 1981. It
[page582] concluded that CN had engaged in a discriminatory
practice, contrary to the provisions of the Canadian Human
Rights Act (the Act), and it awarded Bhinder compensation
for loss of salary in the amount of $14,500 and ordered
his reinstatement, if he so wished, in his former employment
as a maintenance electrician with an exemption from the
hard hat requirement and with the seniority and pay which
would have been applicable to him if he had continued in
his employment after December 5, 1978. CN, the respondent
in this Court, applied under the provisions of s. 28 of
the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, to
the Federal Court of Appeal for judicial review and to set
aside the Tribunal's decision. On April 13, 1983 the Federal
Court of Appeal (Heald and Le Dain JJ., Kelly D.J. (Le Dain
J. dissenting)) allowed the s. 28 application, set aside
the decision of the Tribunal, and referred the matter back
to the Tribunal for a disposition on the basis that CN's
requirement regarding the wearing of a hard hat by Bhinder
while at work in the Toronto coach yard was not a discriminatory
practice within the meaning of the Canadian Human Rights
Act.
35 The
appeal to this Court is pursuant to leave granted June 6,
1983. On the hearing of the appeal interventions were allowed
to the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission, the Alberta
Human Rights Commission, the Canadian Association for the
Mentally Retarded and the Coalition of Provincial Organizations
of the Handicapped, and the Canadian Jewish Congress, all
of which filed factums in support of the appellants. The
Attorney General of Canada also intervened and supported
the respondent's position.
36 Reference
is necessary to certain provisions of the Canadian Human
Rights Act. The Act is aimed at the elimination of discriminatory
practices and its purpose is outlined in s. 2, which provides:
PURPOSE
OF ACT
2. The purpose of this Act is to extend the present laws
in Canada to give effect, within the purview of matters
coming within the legislative authority of the Parliament
of Canada, to the following principles:
[page583]
(a)
every individual should have an equal opportunity with other
individuals to make for himself or herself the life that
he or she is able and wishes to have, consistent with his
or her duties and obligations as a member of society, without
being hindered in or prevented from doing so by discriminatory
practices based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, age, sex or marital status, or conviction for
an offence for which a pardon has been granted or by discriminatory
employment practices based on physical handicap; and
(b) the privacy of individuals and their right of access
to records containing personal information concerning them
by any purpose including the purpose of ensuring accuracy
and completeness should be protected to the greatest extent
consistent with the public interest.
Section
3 lists the prohibited grounds of discrimination in these
words:
3.
For all purposes of this Act, race, national or ethnic origin,
colour, religion, age, sex, marital status, conviction for
which a pardon has been granted and, in matters related
to employment, physical handicap, are prohibited grounds
of discrimination.
The
complaint under review here is founded under ss. 7 and 10
of the Act.
7.
It is a discriminatory practice, directly or indirectly,
(a)
to refuse to employ or continue to employ any individual,
or
(b) in the course of employment, to differentiate adversely
in relation to an employee,
on
a prohibited ground of discrimination.
10. It is a discriminatory practice for an employer or an
employee organization
(a)
to establish or pursue a policy or practice, or
(b) to enter into an agreement affecting recruitment, referral,
hiring, promotion, training, apprenticeship, transfer or
any other matter relating to employment or prospective employment,
that
deprives or tends to deprive an individual or class of individuals
of any employment opportunities on a prohibited ground of
discrimination.
Of particular
importance in this case is s. 14(a) which provides:
14.
It is not a discriminatory practice if
[page584]
(a)
any refusal, exclusion, expulsion, suspension, limitation,
specification or preference in relation to any employment
is established by an employer to be based on a bona fide
occupational requirement;
Other
statutory provisions, particularly ss. 81, 82 and 84(1)(g)
of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1, and certain
regulations under the Canada Protective Clothing and Equipment
Regulations C.R.C., c. 1007, and the Canada Electrical Safety
Regulations, C.R.C., c. 998, were referred to in support
of an argument that the hard hat rule had the force of law.
In the view I take of this case it is not necessary to reproduce
them here nor deal further with that argument.
37 The
Tribunal found that CN adopted its hard hat rule without
any discriminatory intent against Sikhs or others and that
Bhinder, in refusing to comply, was honestly following the
dictates of his religion. It also found that while the rule
was equally applicable to all employees, it had a discriminatory
effect upon Bhinder because compliance demanded from him
a compromise of his religious principles. Non-Sikh employees
were not so affected. Bhinder had therefore shown a prima
facie case of discrimination. The Tribunal went on to find,
that as far as Bhinder was concerned, the hard hat rule
was not a bona fide occupational requirement under s. 14(a)
of the Act and that, accordingly, CN was under a duty to
accommodate Bhinder's position, short of undue hardship
in its business operations, and concluded that no undue
hardship had been shown. Despite these findings it found
that Bhinder, if exempted from the rule, would face a greater
likelihood of injury -- though only slightly greater --
than if he complied. However, since no greater danger would
be caused to others because of his non-compliance, any decision
to accept greater risk should be left to Bhinder himself.
It was recognized that an exception for Bhinder would mean
exemptions for all Sikhs and that greater cost to CN, as
a Schedule 2 employer under the Workmen's Compensation Act,
R.S.O. 1980, c. 539, would result and, it was said, that
would not be undue hardship but merely [page585] a part
of the expense of employment covered by workmen's compensation.
38 In
allowing CN's appeal, the majority of the Court of Appeal,
per Heald J., held that only intentional discrimination
is forbidden by the Act. The hard hat rule, since it is
equally applicable to all employees, is not discriminatory.
Any different effect it might have upon Bhinder is incidental,
unintended, and cannot constitute discrimination under s.
7 or s. 10 of the Act. The rule is a bona fide occupational
requirement under s. 14(a) of the Act in accordance with
the test enunciated in Ontario Human Rights Commission v.
Borough of Etobicoke, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 202. Furthermore,
the concept of a duty to accommodate is not provided for
in the Act and cannot be implied.
39 Le
Dain J. dissented. He concluded that s. 10, but not s. 7,
of the Act prohibits adverse effect discrimination. He held
as well that the findings of fact of the Tribunal could
not be described as having been made "in a perverse
or capricious manner or without regard to the material before
it." They were therefore unreviewable by the Federal
Court of Appeal under s. 28 of the Federal Court Act. He
also expressed the view that the court should not lightly
interfere in questions of human rights policy developed
by human rights tribunals in a relatively new field.
40 In
this Court the appellants contended that the Court of Appeal
was in error in limiting the scope of the Act to intentional
discrimination, that the concept of a bona fide occupational
requirement under s. 14(a) should be considered on an individual
basis, and that it was not, in so far as it related to Bhinder,
a bona fide occupational [page586] requirement. It was also
contended that it was an error to say that no duty to accommodate
existed.
41 In
the case of the Ontario Human Rights Commission and O'Malley
v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536, in which judgment
is given concurrently with this case, we were confronted
with a case under The Ontario Human Rights Code, R.S.O.
1970, c. 318, which dealt with the same issues that are
raised here. Because of the similarity in aims and purposes
of The Ontario Human Rights Code and the Canadian Human
Rights Act, I adopt the reasoning expressed in O'Malley
and conclude that the definitions of discriminatory practices
in the Canadian Human Rights Act, ss. 7 and 10, extend to
both unintentional and adverse effect discrimination. The
facts in this case and in that of O'Malley are identical
in principle and the only significant difference between
the two governing statutes as far as this case is concerned
is the presence of s. 14(a) in the Canadian Human Rights
Act creating the bona fide occupational requirement defence.
The fundamental point then on which this case must turn
is the question of whether the hard hat rule is a bona fide
occupational requirement and, if so, what effect must be
given to s. 14(a) of the Act? Section 14(a) is reproduced
again for ease of reference:
14.
It is not a discriminatory practice if
(a)
any refusal, exclusion, expulsion, suspension, limitation,
specification or preference in relation to any employment
is established by an employer to be based on a bona fide
occupational requirement.
The
concept of a bona fide occupational requirement has been
considered in this Court in Ontario Human Rights Commission
v. Borough of Etobicoke, supra, and the test is stated in
these words, at p. 208:
To
be a bona fide occupational qualification and requirement
a limitation, such as a mandatory retirement at a fixed
age, must be imposed honestly, in good faith, and in the
sincerely held belief that such limitation is imposed in
the interests of the adequate performance of the work involved
with all reasonable dispatch, [page587] safety and economy,
and not for ulterior or extraneous reasons aimed at objectives
which could defeat the purpose of the Code. In addition
it must be related in an objective sense to the performance
of the employment concerned, in that it is reasonably necessary
to assure the efficient and economical performance of the
job without endangering the employee, his fellow employees
and the general public.
It should
be noted that the Etobicoke case arose under The Ontario
Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1970, c. 318, since amended. That
statute referred in s. 4(6) to "a bona fide occupational
qualification and requirement", while s. 14(a) of the
Canadian Human Rights Act refers only to "a bona fide
occupational requirement". It was not argued in this
Court that there was any significant difference between
a "requirement" and a "qualification".
While I would prefer to refrain from any detailed discussion
of this point, I am satisfied that the word "requirement"
used in s. 14(a), although it may be less encompassing than
the word "qualification", clearly covers the hard
hat rule adopted by CN. I am therefore of the opinion that
the Etobicoke test is applicable in the case at bar. Indeed,
none of the parties quarrelled with the test. The appellants
contended that it could apply, but argued that it should
be applied on an individual basis as each case arises, so
that what would satisfy the test of a bona fide requirement
would vary depending upon the separate characteristics of
the individual complainant and the special circumstances
of the case he presented. The respondent CN argued that
the requirement was a general occupational one and that
the test had been met.
42 The
appellant has established a prima facie case of discrimination.
The onus therefore has passed to the respondent to show
that the hard hat rule is a bona fide occupational requirement.
From a reading of the reasons for decision of the Tribunal
it appears that the test was met. Specifically, the Tribunal
found that the hard hat rule was not a bona fide occupational
requirement as far as it related to Bhinder and, in consequence,
to other Sikhs. In this, they were accepting the appellant's
individual case approach. It is, however, clear from the
reasons and the references made by the Tribunal to the evidence
that it was of the view that, [page588] as far as the rule
applied to non-Sikhs, it was a bona fide occupational requirement.
It was agreed that CN adopted the rule for genuine business
reasons with no intent to offend the principles of the Act.
The Tribunal found that the rule was useful, that it was
reasonable in that it promoted safety by reducing the risk
of injury and, specifically, that the risk faced by Bhinder
in wearing a turban rather than a hard hat was increased,
though by a very small amount. The only conclusion that
can be drawn from the reasons for decision is that, but
for its special application to Bhinder, the hard hat rule
was found to be a bona fide occupational requirement. Indeed,
it would be difficult on the facts to reach any other conclusion.
43 Where
a bona fide occupational requirement is established by an
employer there is little difficulty with the application
of s. 14(a). Here, however, we are faced with a finding
-- at least so far as one employee goes -- that a working
condition is not a bona fide occupational requirement. We
must consider then whether such an individual application
of a bona fide occupational requirement is permissible or
possible. The words of the statute speak of an "occupational
requirement". This must refer to a requirement for
the occupation, not a requirement limited to an individual.
It must apply to all members of the employee group concerned
because it is a requirement of general application concerning
the safety of employees. The employee must meet the requirement
in order to hold the employment. It is, by its nature, not
susceptible to individual application. The Tribunal sought
to show that the requirement must be reasonable, and no
objection would be taken to that, but it went on to conclude
that no requirement which had the effect of discriminating
on the basis of religion could be reasonable. This, in effect,
was to say that the hard hat rule could not be a bona fide
occupational requirement because it discriminated. This,
in my view, is not an acceptable conclusion. A condition
of employment does not lose its character as a bona fide
occupational requirement [page589] because it may be discriminatory.
Rather, if a working condition is established as a bona
fide occupational requirement, the consequential discrimination,
if any, is permitted -- or, probably more accurately --
is not considered under s. 14(a) as being discriminatory.
44 It
was said in Etobicoke that the rule under The Ontario Human
Rights Code was non-discrimination, while the exception
was discrimination. This is equally true of the Canadian
Human Rights Act. The Tribunal was of the opinion that a
liberal interpretation should be applied to the provisions
prohibiting discrimination and a narrow interpretation to
the exceptions. Accepting this as correct, it is nevertheless
to be observed that where s. 14(a) applies, the subsection
in the clearest and most precise terms says that where the
bona fide occupational requirement is established, it is
not a discriminatory practice. To conclude then that an
otherwise established bona fide occupational requirement
could have no application to one employee, because of the
special characteristics of that employee, is not to give
s. 14(a) a narrow interpretation; it is simply to ignore
its plain language. To apply a bona fide occupational requirement
to each individual with varying results, depending on individual
differences, is to rob it of its character as an occupational
requirement and to render meaningless the clear provisions
of s. 14(a). In my view, it was error in law for the Tribunal,
having found that the bona fide occupational requirement
existed, to exempt the appellant from its scope.
45 It
follows from the above that I disagree with the majority
of the Court of Appeal in their finding that the Canadian
Human Rights Act extends only to intentional discrimination.
I am of the view for the reasons expressed above that the
Act also comprehends unintentional and adverse effect discrimination.
I am, however, in agreement with the majority of the Court
of Appeal that there was error in law in the Board's determination
of the bona fide occupational requirement question and the
application of s. 14(a). I therefore dismiss the [page590]
appeal and send the matter back to the Tribunal for resolution
in accordance with these reasons.
46 I
cannot, however, leave this case, without further reference
to the case of O'Malley. On facts for all purposes identical
to those at bar, Mrs. O'Malley has received protection from
the religious discrimination against which she complained
and Bhinder has not. The difference in the two cases results
from the difference in the two statutes. The Ontario Human
Rights Code in force in the O'Malley case prohibited religious
discrimination but contained no bona fide occupational requirement
for the employer. The Canadian Human Rights Act contains
a similar prohibition, but in s. 14(a) is set out in the
clearest terms the bona fide occupational requirement defence.
As I have already said, no exercise in construction can
get around the intractable words of s. 14(a) and Bhinder's
appeal must accordingly fail. It follows as well from the
foregoing that there cannot be any consideration in this
case of the duty to accommodate referred to in O'Malley
and contended for by the appellants. The duty to accommodate
will arise in such a case as O'Malley, where there is adverse
effect discrimination on the basis of religion and where
there is no bona fide occupational requirement defence.
The duty to accommodate is a duty imposed on the employer
to take reasonable steps short of undue hardship to accommodate
the religious practices of the employee when the employee
has suffered or will suffer discrimination from a working
rule or condition. The bona fide occupational requirement
defence set out in s. 14(a) leaves no room for any such
duty for, by its clear terms where the bona fide occupational
requirement exists, no discriminatory practice has occurred.
As framed in the Canadian Human Rights Act, the bona fide
occupational requirement defence when established forecloses
any duty to accommodate.
47 In
Great Britain, similar problems arose under the provisions
of the Road Traffic Act 1972, 1972 [page591] (U.K.), c.
20, which required the wearing of protective head gear while
riding motor cycles. The position of the Sikh, who for religious
reasons may not wear anything but a turban on his head,
was met by the passage of the Motor Cycle Crash Helmet (Religious
Exemption) Act, 1976, 1976, (U.K.), c. 62, which provided
in s. 1:
1.
In section 32 of the Road Traffic Act 1972 there shall be
inserted after subsection 2 the following new sub-sections;--
"(2A)
a requirement imposed by regulations under the section (whenever
made) shall not apply to any follower of the Sikh religion
while he is wearing a turban."
Whether
a statutory change to create a similar exemption for application
in the work place is desirable in Canada is not a matter
for this Court, and it is my opinion that this Court may
not create such an exemption judicially. I would therefore
dispose of this appeal as indicated above. This is not a
case for an award of costs.
Appeal
dismissed, DICKSON C.J. and LAMER J. dissenting.
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