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A-737-82
Attorney General of Canada (Applicant)
v.
Frank Von Findenigg (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Heald J. and Verchere D.J.—Vancouver, February 14; Ottawa, February 25, 1983.
Unemployment insurance — Jurisdiction of Umpire — Application to review and set aside Umpire's decision reversing Board of Referees and rescinding Commission's rulings — Commission first refusing application to backdate benefits claim for failure to fulfill qualifying conditions — Respondent appealing to Board of Referees — Commission issuing second refusal on ground respondent failed to comply with ss. 53, 54 and 55 of Unemployment Insurance Act — Common ground that Board erred in law in dismissing appeal — Claim for benefits a renewal and subject to conditions in s. 55 including waiver where circumstances so warrant — Umpire's decision set aside — Matter referred back to Umpire to be referred back to Commission for consideration of application to back date claim — Matter having been appealed, second refusal a nullity — Commission not to exercise s. 102 authority to vary or rescind decision after appeal procedure invoked — Power of waiver in s. 55(10) vested only in Commission — Commission not having considered whether circumstances warranted waiver — Implied power of Board to refer matter back to Commis sion to exercise statutory duty in order to finally resolve situation — Umpire acting properly as empowered to give decision Board should have given and to set aside Commis sion's refusal to backdate claim — Umpire erred in not referring matter back to Commission for consideration of waiver of s. 55 requirements — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, ss. 20(2) (rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 33), (4), 41(1), 43(1) (rep. and sub. S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 16), 55(10) (rep. and sub. S.C. 1974-75- 76, c. 80, s. 19), 94, 96 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 56), 102 — Unemployment Insurance Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1576, s. 39.
Application to review and set aside the Umpire's decision which reversed the decision of the Board of Referees and rescinded the rulings of the Unemployment Insurance Commis sion. The respondent applied to the Commission to backdate his claim for benefits. His application was refused because he failed to prove that he fulfilled the qualifying conditions for entitlement to benefit. The Board of Referees dismissed the respondent's appeal because good cause for delay had not been shown. No statutory basis was cited, but the decision was apparently based on subsection 20(4) of the Act and paragraph
39(b) of the Unemployment Insurance Regulations. However, these provisions only apply to an initial claim for benefit and the respondent's claim was a renewal. Before the matter was dealt with by the Board, but after the appeal to the Board had been asserted, the Commission issued a second refusal of the application to backdate, this time correctly referring to it as a renewal claim. Subsection 55(1) of the Act disentitles renewal claimants to benefits unless the Commission exercised its dis cretion pursuant to subsection 55(10) to waive the requirements of section 55. The Umpire set aside the Board's decision to reject the application to backdate and rescinded the rulings of the Commission. Section 96 provides that an Umpire may dismiss an appeal, give the decision that a board of referees should have given, refer the matter back to the board for rehearing or confirm, rescind or vary the decision of the board in whole or in part. The issue is whether the Umpire's disposi tion of the appeal was correct.
Held (Heald J. dissenting in part), the Umpire's decision should be set aside and the matter referred back to him to be referred back to the Commission for consideration of the application to backdate the claim.
Per Thurlow C.J. (Verchere D.J. concurring): The Commis sion's second refusal notice was a nullity because the matter had been appealed and was out of its hands at the time it was issued. Under section 102 the Commission may rescind or alter its decision in certain circumstances. But once the appeal procedure has been invoked, it is too late for the Commission to exercise its authority under that section. Parliament cannot have intended that the Commission would be able to interfere with the respondent's exercise of his statutory rights at any stage of the appeal process. Since the Commission never con sidered whether the circumstances warranted waiver of the section 55 requirements, the Board should have allowed the appeal and referred the matter back to the Commission to perform its statutory function. The power of waiver is vested only in the Commission and when it is invoked by a claimant, it must be exercised by the Commission. It must be exercised fairly. The Act does not define the powers of the Board. By providing for appeals to a board of referees Parliament must have intended to implicitly have authorized the Board to give any decision that is necessary to ensure that the result is in accordance with the law. Where the correct application of the law to the situation is such that the matter cannot be finally resolved until the Commission has properly exercised a power reserved by the statute only for its determination, there is an implication that the Board can and should refer the matter back to the Commission for the exercise of that power. The Umpire properly set aside the decisions of the Board and the Commission, but should have referred the matter back to the Commission for exercise of its statutory duty.
Per Heald J. dissenting in part: The Umpire was correct in reversing the decision of the Board dealing with the Commis sion's first refusal to backdate. Once this decision is set aside, the Commission is in the position of having before it the application to backdate which it is required by law to consider
based on the criteria in section 55 including subsection (10). It is unnecessary to refer the matter back to the Commission. The Umpire erred, however, in rescinding "The rulings of the Commission". The Commission's second refusal was not before the Board because it was a nullity and therefore was not before the Umpire. Also, the lack of detail concerning the powers of the Board in the Act, particularly in section 94, contrasted to the detailed provisions concerning the powers of the Umpire in section 96, raises some question as to the power of the Board to refer matters back to the Commission with directions to per form its statutory function in relation to subsection 55(10).
COUNSEL:
P. Partridge for applicant.
A. H. MacLean for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
Vancouver Community Legal Assistance Society, Vancouver, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J.: This is an application to review and set aside the decision of an Umpire under the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 [S.C. 1970- 71-72, c. 48], which reversed the decision of the Board of Referees and rescinded the rulings of the Commission with respect to the respondent's claim for unemployment insurance benefit.
On the respondent's appeal under section 94 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, the Board of Referees had two matters for its determination. The first was the three weeks' disqualification imposed by the Commission on the respondent under subsections 41(1) and 43 (1) [rep. and sub. S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 80, s. 16] of the Act on the ground that he had lost his, employment by reason of his own misconduct. The Board allowed the appeal and the Commission did not take the matter further. That subject-matter thus disap peared and is not involved in the subsequent pro ceedings on appeal to the Umpire or on the application to this Court.
The second matter which the Board of Referees had before it was the Commission's refusal to
antedate or backdate the respondent's claim so that he could receive benefits from May 25, 1981 when he lost his employment. His application for benefit was not made until June 25, 1981.
In refusing the respondent's application to back date his claim, the Commission had given as its reason that the respondent was not entitled to have his claim for benefit antedated to May 25, 1981 as he had not proven that he fulfilled the qualifying conditions for entitlement to benefit on that date. Subsection 20(4) of the Act and Regulation 39(a) [Unemployment Insurance Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1576] were cited in support.
Not a word was said of this in the observation of the Commission to the Board of Referees or in the Board's decision and it appears to have been com pletely abandoned as a ground of refusal. In its place the Commission urged that it was the respondent's responsibility to file his claim and that good cause for the delay had not been shown.
The Board adopted that position and dismissed the respondent's appeal. No statutory basis was cited but at the argument it appeared to be common ground that the decision was based on subsection 20(4) of the Act and Regulation 39(b). It was also common ground that the reasoning is not tenable since subsection 20(4) and Regulation 39(b) apply only to an initial claim for benefit and the respondent's was not such a claim. It was a renewal claim.
That left, however, the question, which the Board did not address, probably because it was not raised, whether the application to backdate the claim was properly refused and that, as I see it, was the subject-matter of the appeal to the Umpire.
Before the matter had been dealt with by the Board of Referees, but after the respondent's appeal to the Board had been asserted, the Com mission issued, on August 28, 1981, what purport ed to be a second refusal of the application to backdate the claim referring to it this time as a renewal claim and giving as the reason for refusal:
You failed to make your renewal claim for benefit in the prescribed manner in that you failed to make your renewal application on 25 May, 1981 as required by Sections 53, 54, and 55 of the Unemployment Insurance Act and Regulation 145.
As the respondent had had a benefit period established for him in December, 1980, and in the period from May 25, 1981 to June 25, 1981, had not made a claim for benefit, subsection 55(1) would apply to disentitle the respondent from receiving benefit for that period. But the disentitle- ment was subject to waiver by the Commission under subsection 55(10) [rep. and sub. S.C. 1974- 75-76, c. 80, s. 19]. It provides:
55....
(10) The Commission may waive or vary the conditions and requirements of any of the provisions of this section or the regulations whenever in its opinion the circumstances warrant such waiver or variation for the benefit of the claimant in a particular case or class or group of cases.
As the Commission's refusal to backdate the respondent's claim was under appeal when the notice of August 28, 1981 was issued, the matter was out of the Commission's hands and the notice was therefore, in my opinion, a nullity. I take this view notwithstanding section 102 of the Act. It provides:
102. The Commission, a board of referees or the umpire may in respect of any decision given in any particular claim for benefit rescind or amend the decision on the presentation of new facts or on being satisfied that the decision was given without knowledge of, or was based on a mistake as to, some material fact.
Under this section the Commission has author ity to rescind or amend a decision it has made if new facts have been presented or if the decision was based on ignorance or mistake of a material fact. Nothing in the present situation indicates that any new fact had been presented or that the Commission did not know of or based the refusal that was under appeal on any mistake as to a material fact. But apart from that once the appeal procedure had been invoked it was, as it seems to me, too late for the Commission to exercise its authority under section 102. The section does not expressly put any time limit on the exercise of the power but it seems to me that any other interpreta tion would enable the Commission at any stage, whether the matter was before the Board or the Umpire or before this Court for review under
section 28 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10], to intervene and interfere with the exercise by the claimant of his statutory rights as well as with the proper exercise by the Board, the Umpire and the Court of their functions. It would also lead to the conclusion that the Board of Referees could similarly interfere with the pro ceedings on an appeal to the Umpire and that the Umpire could change his decision while it is the subject of review in the Court. I do not think such could have been Parliament's intention.
To return to the situation that was before the Board of Referees in the present case, it is appar ent from the reasons assigned by the Commission in its refusal of August 17, 1981 and from its observation to the Board of Referees that before the respondent's application to antedate his claim was refused the Commission had never given it consideration under subsection 55(10) or formu lated any opinion whether the circumstances of the respondent's failure to make his claim warranted waiver or variation under subsection 55(10) of the requirements of subsections 55(1) to 55(9).
In this situation the judgment of the Board of Referees, in my opinion, ought to have allowed the respondent's appeal and set aside the refusal of his application to backdate his claim. Further, as the Board could not exercise the authority of the Commission under subsection 55(10), it should have referred the matter back to the Commission to carry out its function under that subsection.
I pause to note at this point that in my opinion in the situation that was before them the Board of Referees had authority to refer back to the Com mission the question whether the circumstances warranted waiver under subsection 55(10) of the statutory requirements which stood in the way of the respondent's claim. The power to waive under subsection 55(10) is vested only in the Commission and when it is invoked by a claimant it must be exercised by the Commission. It must be exercised by that body having regard to the circumstances of the particular case and it goes without saying that it must be exercised fairly and not arbitrarily.
On an appeal from the Commission's decision under subsection 55(10) to waive or not to waive the Board of Referees has, as I read the legislation, no authority to substitute its own view as to wheth er any of the requirements of subsections 55(1) to (9) should be waived. But in the course of hearing an appeal it may become apparent that the case calls for the exercise of the authority of the Com mission to decide whether or not to waive and that the Commission has erroneously refused the claim ant's request without considering the matter either at all or as it ought to have done under subsection 55(10).
In such a situation what course is open to the Board? The Board is established under section 91 and it appears from the scheme of the statute that it is intended to be a tribunal for the hearing of appeals from decisions of the Commission on the rights of claimants to the benefits they claim. But the only provisions of the Act purporting to deal with its jurisdiction and powers, apart from section 102, to which I have already adverted, is section 94. It provides:
94. (1) The claimant or an employer of the claimant may at any time within thirty days from the day on which a decision of the Commission is communicated to him, or within such fur ther time as the Commission may in any particular case for special reasons allow, appeal to the board of referees in the manner prescribed.
(2) A decision of a board of referees shall be recorded in writing and shall include a statement of the findings of the board on questions of fact material to the decision.
Nowhere is there any provision defining what powers are exercisable by the Board in disposing of an appeal that has been asserted to it. In particular there is nothing similar to section 96 [rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 56] which outlines and confers a variety of powers that are exercisable by an Umpire on an appeal to him from the Board. I do not think, however, that the absence of such a provision can be taken as meaning that the Board has no powers to exercise. Parliament, in providing for appeals to such a Board, in my opinion, must be taken to have intended to confer an effective right of appeal and implicitly to have authorized the Board to give any decision that in the circum stances of the case before it is necessary to ensure that the result is in accordance with the law. Where that result follows from the facts before the
Board, the Board, in my opinion, can and must give judgment accordingly. But where, as here, the correct application of the law to the situation is such that the matter cannot be finally resolved until the Commission has properly exercised a power reserved by the statute only for its determi nation it seems to me to be necessarily implied that the Board can and should refer the matter back to the Commission for the exercise by it of that power.
I come now to the situation on the appeal to the Umpire. In the course of his reasons after describ ing the confusion that resulted from changing reasons and two notices of refusal, the learned Umpire said:
It is obvious to me confusion has been created by the issue of the two Notices of Refusal. The claimant, as a layman, could not really know which one, or perhaps both, were going to be dealt with by the Board of Referees. As one can see from them, they are completely different in terms; completely different issues, and evidence, are involved.
As I earlier pointed out, the first notice (the one which the Board of Referees apparently directed their minds to) is in itself confusing, in respect of the section of the Act and the particular subparagraph of the Regulation it refers to.
I had first considered whether the proper thing to do would be to refer this whole matter back to the same Board of Referees, or perhaps to another Board, for re-hearing. I decided against that. I decided in favour of allowing this appeal: of setting aside the decision of the Board of Referees, and the decision of the Commission, including the second Notice of Refusal.
This whole matter has been outstanding for over a year. If a re-hearing were directed, it could well be the matter could take another year, or more, before its ultimate resolution.
That would, to my mind, be unfair to the claimant. There is no point of principle involved in this case. My decision is confined to the peculiar facts of this appeal.
As I see it, the present decision of the Board of Referees is wrong in law. They did not address their minds to Regulation 39(a) which deals with questions of qualification. Not of delay in making a claim. In addition, there were two contradictory Notices of Refusal, outstanding in respect of the claimant's claim and his appeal. That seems, to me, to have created an error of law. The legal errors were not created by the Board of Referees. They emerged from the confusion in respect of the Notices of Refusal which I have already described.
The decision of the Board of Referees is reversed. The rulings of the Commission are rescinded.
Under section 96 of the Act an Umpire
96.... may decide any question of law or fact that is necessary for the disposition of any appeal taken pursuant to section 95 and may dismiss the appeal, give the decision that the board of referees should have given, refer the matter back to the board of referees for rehearing or re-determination in accordance with such directions as he considers appropriate or confirm, rescind or vary the decision of the board of referees in whole or in part.
In the view I take of the matter the decision of the Board of Referees to dismiss the respondent's appeal for the reason assigned by the Board was wrong in law and was properly set aside by the Umpire. As the Umpire was empowered to give the decision that the Board of Referees should have given he was also right in setting aside—(he used the word "rescinded" which I think means the same thing)—the refusal by the Commission of the respondent's application to backdate his claim. With respect, however, and despite the very persuasive reasons of the learned Umpire for declining to refer the matter back, I am of the opinion that to leave the matter there does not entitle the respondent to benefit for the period in question or to waiver under subsection 55(10) of the requirements of subsections 55(1) to (9). I am of the opinion, therefore, that the Umpire should have gone further, as I think the Board of Referees ought to have done, and referred the matter back to the Commission for performance of its statutory function to consider the respondent's application to backdate his claim under subsection 55(10). I would, therefore, set aside his decision and refer the matter back to him for disposal of the respond ent's appeal on that basis.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HEALD J. (dissenting in part): This is a section 28 application seeking to review and set aside the decision of an Umpire appointed pursuant to the provisions of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971. There were originally two decisions by the Unemployment Insurance Commission affecting this applicant [i.e., Von Findenigg, sometimes referred to in this judgment as "respondent" or "claimant"]. The first decision, dated August 10, 1981, was one which disqualified the applicant from receiving benefits for three weeks on the
basis that he had lost his employment by reason of his own misconduct. The authority for this dis qualification was said to be pursuant to the provi sions of sections 41 and 43 of the Act. The second decision, dated August 17, 1981 arose out of the applicant's claim to antedate his claim for benefit to May 25, 1981, due to the fact that the claim was not made until June 25, 1981. This decision of the Commission rejected the application to ante date pursuant to the provisions of subsection 20(4) of the Act and Regulation 39(a). On August 21, 1981, the applicant appealed both decisions to a Board of Referees. On August 28, 1981, the Com mission purported to issue a second notice of refus al in respect of the applicant's request to antedate his claim for benefits. The basis for this refusal was entirely different from that given in the first notice of refusal (the August 17, 1981 notice referred to supra). The Board of Referees heard the appeals from both decisions orally on Septem- ber 22, 1981. The applicant's appeal was allowed in respect of the section 41 disqualification for misconduct but was dismissed in respect of the claim for antedating. The applicant then appealed the antedating matter to an Umpire. Thus the decision of the Board of Referees in respect of the section 41 disqualification was not in issue before the Umpire, nor is it in issue before us and the Referee's decision therein stands as a valid and subsisting disposition of that issue in favour of this applicant.
Counsel for both parties agreed that the provi sions of subsection 20(4)' and Regulation 39 do not apply to the facts in this case because the benefit period as described in section 20 was estab lished in the case of this applicant on December 15, 1980, when he had made a previous claim for benefits to the Abbotsford, B.C. office. According ly, subsection 20(4) has no application because subject claim was not his "initial claim for bene fit" within the benefit period established for him
' Said subsection 20(4) reads as follows:
20....
(4) When a claimant makes an initial claim for benefit on a day later than the day he was first qualified to make the claim and shows good cause for his delay, the claim may, subject to prescribed conditions, be regarded as having been made on a day earlier than the day on which it was actually made.
when he made his claim on December 15, 1980. 2
It is also common ground that the proper statu tory basis for refusing the applicant's claim for antedating would be sections 53, 54 and 55 of the Act, along with Regulation 145. These statutory provisions formed the basis for the refusal notice sent out by the Commission on August 28, 1981 and referred to supra. However, two difficulties are raised by the two sets of reasons given by the Commission for refusing the application to ante date: firstly, when the second refusal notice was issued the matter was already under appeal and out of the Commission's hands, and, secondly, the criteria upon which to base a decision whether or not to waive under subsection 55(10) are quite different from those applicable under subsection 20(4) and Regulation 39. Under the latter provi sions, the claimant would have had to establish that on May 25, 1981 he was qualified to receive benefits and that from May 25, 1981 to June 25, 1981 he had good cause for his delay in making his claim. On the other hand, under section 55 of the Act, the criterion enabling the Commission to antedate an application is set out in subsection (10) of section 55. That subsection provides:
55....
(10) The Commission may waive or vary the conditions and requirements of any of the provisions of this section or the regulations whenever in its opinion the circumstances warrant such waiver or variation for the benefit of the claimant in a particular case or class or group of cases.
It will thus be seen that the Commission under that subsection, when faced with an application to antedate, is required to decide whether "the cir cumstances warrant such waiver".
I am satisfied from this record that the Commis sion, in dealing with this application to antedate, made its decision to refuse the application on the basis of subsection 20(4) of the Act and section 39 of the Regulations.
2 Pursuant to subsection 20(2) [rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 54, s. 33], the length of the benefit period here was fifty-two weeks dating from December 15, 1980.
The appeal to the Board of Referees proceeded on that basis and was dealt with by the Board on that basis. There was nothing on the record to show that the August 28, 1981 notice was ever sent to the applicant. The claimant's letter of appeal to the Board of Referees is dated August 21, 1981 and refers only to the grounds given in the August 17, 1981 notice. The Board dealt with the matter on the basis of subsection 20(4) and Regulation 39(a). Before the Umpire, it is also clear that the legality of the refusal to antedate was argued and dealt with on the basis of subsec tion 20(4) and Regulation 39(a). The Umpire refers to the notice of August 28, 1981 as follows:
This Notice of Refusal did not purport to cancel or replace the earlier Notice of Refusal. It was a document out of the blue.
He then proceeded to set aside the decision of the Board wherein it rejected the application to ante date. I agree with that portion of the Umpire's decision. However, I do not agree with the remain der of his decision wherein he purported to rescind "The rulings of the Commission". I think he was there referring to the reasons given by the Com mission for its decision of August 17, 1981 and its so-called "decision" of August 28, 1981. In so far as the reasons for the August 17, 1981 decision are concerned, there is no need for an order rescinding those reasons since the effect of dismissing this appeal from the Umpire to the extent that it reverses the decision of the Board of Referees is to nullify the Commission's decision of August 17, 1981 and that, in my view, is the correct result for the reasons expressed supra. In so far as the so-called "decision" of August 28, 1981 is con cerned, I agree with counsel for the applicant that since that decision was not before the Board of Referees nor dealt with by it, it was therefore not before the Umpire. Accordingly, the Umpire was, in my view, without jurisdiction to rescind the so-called "decision" of August 28, 1981.
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal from the Umpire's decision in so far as he reversed the decision of the Board of Referees dealing with the Commission's decision of August 17, 1981. I would allow the appeal from that portion of the Umpire's decision wherein he rescinded "The rul ings of the Commission" and set aside that portion of his decision.
I should add that while the relief proposed by the Chief Justice in his reasons represents a practi cal solution to the rather difficult problems raised by this application, I am not prepared to concur in the form of judgment which he proposes because I have considerable doubt as to the power of the Board of Referees to refer the matter back to the Commission with instructions that it perform its statutory function to consider the respondent's application to backdate his claim under subsection 55(10). I think that the practical effect of dismiss ing the appeal from the Umpire's decision in so far as he reversed the decision of the Board of Referees dealing with the Commission's decision of August 17, 1981 would be to nullify that deci sion by the Commission. In my view that is the proper result and was the result which counsel for the applicant sought to achieve, if I understood him correctly. Once the Commission's decision of August 17, 1981 is set aside, it seems to me that the Commission is in the position of having before it the applicant's application to antedate which it is required by law to consider anew based on the criteria set out in subsection 55(10) supra. Should it fail to do so, I think a legal remedy would then be open to the respondent to compel the Commis sion to perform its statutory duty, likely by pro ceedings in the Trial Division of this Court. For these reasons, it is my opinion that an order for referral back to the Commission is unnecessary in these circumstances.
My concern about the power of the Board of Referees to refer the matter back to the Commis sion is based on my appreciation of the scheme of the statute. The only section of the Act dealing with appeals to the Board of Referees is section 94. That section merely provides for appeals from decisions of the Commission and stipulates that the Board's decision shall be in writing which must include a statement of the Board's findings on questions of fact material to the decision. This lack of detail concerning the powers of a board of referees is in marked contrast to the powers of the Umpire as set out in considerable detail in section 96 of the Act. Accordingly, I do not agree that it can be inferred that the Board of Referees has the inherent or incidental power to refer matters back to the Commission with specific instructions as to what the Commission must do in respect of a
particular matter. It is clear that Parliament has given the Umpire such wide powers by section 96 of the Act. In my opinion, for the Board of Referees to have similar powers, it would be neces sary for Parliament to have spoken in a somewhat similar and specific vein.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
VERCHERE D.J.: This is an application under section 28 to review and set aside the decision of the Umpire appointed here under the provisions of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971. The cir cumstances which led up to the appeal to him and his disposition of it are set out in the judgments of my learned colleagues which I have had the privi lege of reading, and there is, therefore, no need for me to review the facts or to comment on the respondent's appeal to the Board of Referees against the Commission's decision to disqualify him for three weeks for alleged misconduct.
Further, like both my learned colleagues, I would, with respect and for the reasons given by them, sustain the Umpire's decision to allow the respondent's appeal from the decision of the Board made September 22, 1981, in so far as it supported the Commission's refusal to antedate his claim to May 25, 1981, from its filing date of June 25, 1981. The only question then is how to ensure that the respondent can and will get the benefit of that decision, that is to say, whether, on the one hand the Umpire's decision should be set aside because it failed to go far enough and the matter then referred back to him with a direction that he in turn refer it back to the Commission for its con sideration of the claim in the light of the provisions of subsection 55(10) of the Act, or, on the other, to leave it to the respondent to take further proceed ings to compel the Commission to reconsider the antedating claim.
The former course commends itself to me as the one to be followed here. I respectfully agree with the reasons given for his conclusions by the learned Chief Justice, and I accordingly concur in the form of the order outlined by him.
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