About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

2 Hum. Rts. Dig. 1 (2001)

handle is hein.journals/hurtsdg2 and id is 1 raw text is: VOLUME 2 NUMBER 1

HumJan Rarts                2g
j:Janar 2001T

Decisions Noted

Marital Status Includes Identity
of  Spouse  ....................1
No Remedy for Discrimination by
Band  Council  .................3
Grievance Process Justifies Dismissal
of Com plaint  ................. 4
Accommodation of Sikh Practice
Would Cause Undue Hardship. . . . 5
Decision on Bipolar Disorder
O verturned  ..................6
Commission Can Reconsider
C om plaint  ...................7
Race Complaint Returned to
Com m ission  .................. 7
WCB Act Does Not Replace Human
Rights  Code  .................. 8
Commission Cannot Proceed
without Complainant ........... 8
Requests for Medical Information
Not Harassment ............... 9
Disclosure of Government
Documents Ordered  ........... 9
Commission Failed to Disclose
Docum ents.................. 10
No Discrimination on the Basis
of  Race .....................10
Inside Page ................. 2
Briefly Noted  ..... ........11
Ordering.....................12

FAMILY STATUS - employment ter-
minated for parent - employment termi-
nated for spouse - family status defini-
tion includes marriage to a particular
person - EXEMPTIONS - marital status
- DISCRIMINATION -definition ofdis-
crimination - identification with pro-
tected group - HUMAN RIGHTS - na-
ture and purpose of human     rights
legislation
INTERPRETATION OF STATUTES - case
law as an aid to interpretation - defini-
tion of family status and marital status
- rules of construction - plain meaning
rule-APPEALS AND JUDICIAL REVIEW
- error of law in interpreting legislation
The Ontario Court of Appeal set aside a de-
cision of the Ontario Court, General Divi-
sion (1999), 34 C.H.R.R. D/344, and re-
stored a Board of Inquiry ruling (sub nom.
A. v. B.) (1996), 30 C.H.R.R. D/246, re-
garding discrimination based on marital
and family status.
Mr. A., an employee  Harm     at
with a record of twenty-  the idlmfty
six years of service, was
fired. His employers,  sIsc o
Mr. B. and Mr. C. were   constitute)
his wife's brothers. In
September 1990, after  based onm
many years of therapy,  Stat s. In his
Mr. A.'s daughter re-
membered that it was
her uncle, Mr. B., who  T-Zlte fll
had sexually assaulted   YW(a' m
her as a child. Mr. A.'s
wife and daughter con-
fronted Mr. B. and ac-   hisspousea
cused him of sexual
abuse. When Mr. A. subsequently reported
for work, he was fired by Mr. B. Mr. A. filed
a human rights complaint alleging that his
termination  constituted  discrimination
based on marital and family status.

The Board of Inquiry found that the sole
reason for A.'s termination was the fact
that his daughter had made allegations of
sexual abuse against her uncle. The Board
concluded that at the time of the termina-
tion A. had given B. no cause for concern
about his loyalty or their continuing com-
patibility in the work setting. The Board
found that A. was discriminated against
because of marital and family status.
The Divisional Court overturned this de-
cision, finding that discrimination on the
basis of marital and family status does not
include discrimination because of the iden-
tity of the person to whom one is married
or with whom one is in a familial relation-
ship. Mr. A., the Divisional Court found,
was not a member of a disadvantaged
group of husbands or fathers. In fact, he
was fired because of the personal animosity
of his employer, and this did not constitute
discrimination within the meaning of the
Code.
However, the Ontario Court of Appeal
rejected this conclusion.
cil ecauc of    The Court of Appeal
(Qlduc tofl    looked to the broader
reasoning in Brossard
r    1ee cal   c. Quebec (Comm. des
rimIII uin v   droits de la personne)
(1989), 10  C.H.R.R.
D/5515 (S.C.C.) and
s    was not    determined that harms
rirrzosyit~t   attracted because of
the identity or conduct
A.'slississa, of a spouse or family
Iv basedon      member can constitute
discrimination based on
marital and family sta-
dl   g    au~kl~ tus. In this case it was
not just personal ani-
mosity that resulted in Mr. A. 's dismissal, it
was animosity based on the identity and
conduct of his spouse and daughter.

continued on page 3

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most