EMPR210 Module Answers
EMPR210 Module Answers
EMPR210 Module Answers
Self-Assessment Quiz 1
1. What does the term “binding precedent” mean?
Lower courts must decide similar cases in the same way as higher courts in the same
jurisdiction, whether they agree with the decision or not
2. Why have courts decided that employment contracts are distinguishable from
commercial contracts?
Commercial contracts are generally not characterized by an inequality of bargaining
power
3. What is a tort?
A wrongful act committed by one person resulting in harm to another
5. Which of the following types of disputes does the Ontario Labour Relations Board
hear?
Disputes between employers and unionized workers arising from both the collective
agreement and the Employment Standards Act
7. According to the test set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in Sagaz, what is the
single-most important question to answer to determine employment status?
Whose business is it?
10. Which of the following is true regarding those people who do “managerial” work?
Even if they are employees, they may excluded from some or all employment-related
benefits by legislation
17. What is the neo-classical perspective view about human rights legislation?
Human rights legislation is unnecessary because market forces, if left alone, will allocate
resources optimally
18. What does the managerialist perspective share with the neo-classical perspective?
They both believe that regulation of work-life through legislation interferes with the
optimal management of the firm
20. Ellen is a supervisor at Acme Managers Co. She has heard rumblings that the
employees are attempting to form a union. Based upon the following, what is her
likely response?
Given her managerialist viewpoint, Ellen would call a meeting with employees to
review any key concerns that have gone unaddressed
Self-Assessment Quiz 2
1. Are all employment contracts made with minors (those under the age of 18) void?
No. Contracts that are generally to the benefit of the minor may be enforced
2. Which of the following are necessary and sufficient to create a valid employment
contract?
Capacity to contract, intention to contract, and the requisite elements of the contract
11. Can an employer enforce a restrictive covenant if the employee was fired without just
cause?
Yes, as long as the employee was provided with the requisite notice and the covenant is
itself reasonable
12. May an employer rely upon the terms contained in a policy manual introduced on a
new employee’s first day of work?
It depends. If the manual is presented after the beginning of work it represents an
alteration of the contract and must be agreed to by the employee and offer “fresh
consideration”
13. Some implied common law terms are “read into” all employment contracts. Can they
be overridden?
They can be overridden by either express terms or statute since the point of implied
terms is only to fill the holes
15. Which of the following is NOT an implied term regulating the conduct of employees?
The implied duty to refrain from personal use of employer’s asset
19. What was the outcome in Francis v Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce?
The amended contract was unenforceable because the employee did not receive new
consideration
20. Which of the following have the courts held as minimally necessary in order to count
as new consideration?
The consideration may be of any value, however small, as long as it represents some
benefit that the employee would not otherwise have
Self-Assessment Quiz 3
1. Which of the following is not a remedy generally available to human rights tribunals?
The power to award jail time for purposeful and serious violations
6. What is the significance of Central Alberta Dairy Pool v. Alberta (Human Rights
Commission)?
It found that even when a rule is based on legitimate business concerns, an employee
may still require accommodation
7. What grounds, if any, would a job advertisement to work in a daycare that stated that
applicants must be able to lift children up to 40 lbs. most likely violate?
Disability
10. Why is it considered age discrimination to treat persons over the age of 64 differently
from others?
Because every human rights code in Canada removed the upper limit from its definition
of age
11. Which of the following is true with regard to discrimination against those with a
“record of offence”?
Several jurisdictions offer some protection based on record of offences, but how that
protection is defined varies considerably among these jurisdictions
12. Which of the following is the most commonly used defence against a charge of
discrimination?
The bona fide occupational requirement defense
13. What was the significance of British Columbia (Public Service Employee Relations
Commission) v. BCGSEU (“Meiorin”)?
It established that in all cases of discrimination the employer would be required to
attempt an accommodation before they could claim a BFOR defence
14. If a nepotism defence does not exist by statute, for what grounds might an employer
face a claim of discrimination?
Family/Marital Status
17. According to the author what has been the most significant accomplishment of the
duty to accommodate?
It has required employers to proactively ensure that barriers to employees’ equal
participation in the workplace are removed
19. Which among the following might the duty to accommodate impose on employers?
To alter the work conditions of other workers in the search for accommodation
20. When it comes to religious accommodation, must employers provide a paid day off for
religious observance?
No. An employee may be required to use a vacation day or to work an alternative day to
“make up” for the day off.
Self-Assessment Quiz 4
1. What is the court’s general view about the employment relationship?
That work is of central importance to one’s life and that contracts should be
interpreted with employees’ vulnerability in mind
2. Imagine that a fixed-term contract is ended by the employer prior to the date
contracted for. What, if anything, would the employee normally be entitled to?
Damages for lost wages, but not for reasonable notice, since this is normally not
possible under a fixed-term contract
4. Which of the following is NOT, in and of itself, a reason to reject the termination
terms found in an employment contract?
The terms are less provident that what a court would have awarded under a claim of
reasonable notice
1
5. According to Professor Geoffrey England, what is the doctrine of frustration most
concerned with?
Determining who shall bear the burden of the event which frustrated the contract
6. Looking only to the common law, what would be the outcome if it is established
that the cause of frustration of contract is employee illness or disability?
The employer would not be required to provide reasonable notice nor to provide any
accommodation.
7. Which of the following have been held to be the cause of frustration of contract?
A change in the law prohibiting security guards from having criminal records
10. What is the difference between statutory notice (employment standards) and
reasonable notice?
Statutory notice is legislated minimum whereas reasonable notice is determined by a
common law test.
15. What is the main consequence that flows from establishing cause for dismissal?
The employer is not required to provide notice
16. Which two things must be established before an employee can be summarily
dismissed?
The employer must establish that the employee did the things for which she stands
accused and that these things were serious enough to merit being summarily dismissed.
17. From where we get the doctrine “progressive discipline” and what does it mean?
It was developed by labour arbitrators in the context of the unionized workplace and
refers to the application of progressively more serious discipline in order to correct
performance problems
Self-Assessment Quiz 5
1. What is “Constructive Dismissal”?
It refers to a type of dismissal wherein the employer breaches the terms of the
contract resulting in the employee quitting
3. Which of the following most often gives rise to claims of constructive dismissal?
Changes to job duties and compensation
6. Why is it more difficult to get damages under the Honda than the Wallace
approach?
Because with the Honda approach one must prove that one suffered harm as a result
of the bad actions of the employer and not just prove the bad actions of the
employer
11. Which of the following actions violates the Charter guarantee of equality?
A college will not accommodate its religious employees even though it is easy to do
so
14. Why does the author say that minimum wage legislation is difficult to understand?
Because there are many legislated and regulated exceptions to the legislated
minimum
15. What concerns did unions have regarding minimum wage laws?
That they would create downward pressure on wages and contribute to decreased
unionization
16. What characteristics are relevant to the determination of “substantially similar”
work?
Skill, effort, responsibility, and work conditions
18. What general effect did the Great Depression have upon working-time legislation?
It had the effect of slowing the momentum toward working-time regulation
19. In general, do mass terminations require a greater statutory notice period than do
individual terminations?
Generally, they require a greater statutory notice period
20. What is the difference between severance pay and termination pay?
Severance pay is in addition to termination pay, and usually targets longer-term
employees
Self-Assessment Quiz 6
5. Which of the following does not represent a criterion that needs to be satisfied in
order to have a patent issued?
Educational
6. What is the common law rule that emerged in Techform Products Ltd. v. Wolda?
That employees are presumed to own their inventions
11. Under what condition does PIPEDA apply to provincially regulated workplaces?
When the provinces have established substantially similar privacy regulation
12. What process does PIPEDA set up for those who believe that their privacy rights
have been violated?
They may go to a privacy commissioner who can issue recommendations but not a
binding decision
13. What does the author suggest that future challenges in the federal sector to
collection and disclosure of personal information should focus on?
The reasonableness of the requests
15. Which of the following has not been recognized in Canadian law as a dimension of
privacy?
Relational privacy
17. In Jones v. Tsige what standard did the court set for when the tort of intrusion upon
seclusion would be applied?
When the intrusion would be found “highly offensive” to a reasonable person
18. In Colwell v. Cornerstone Properties Inc., why did the employee win her suit for
constructive dismissal when she quit after learning that her employer had installed
a video camera above her desk?
Because of the implied contract term for both employees and employers to treat the
other with good faith
19. What was the significance of Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of
Canada, Local 30 v. Irving Pulp & Paper, Ltd.?
The court determined that random alcohol testing was a violation of the workers'
dignity and privacy and was subject to high justificatory standards
Module questions
1. Stare decisis is the obligation of courts to follow past decisions of courts at a higher level
2. A nonunionized worker was terminated. She should speak to her union to grieve the
matter? FALSE
3. An individual what must have the capacity what to enter into a contract
4. A Jamal entered into a contract with his employer, Eastern Ontario Furnace. The
contract stated that the contract will be completed when Jamal had installed 100
furnaces in the homes of clients. What type of contract have Jamal and the employer
entered into? fixed task.
5. The parol evidence rule states that the court will look exclusively at the terms of the
contract for interpretation.
6. Sumitra was employed for two years as a consultant. After a year of employment her
employer asked her to sign a new contract that included a non-competition agreement.
Sumitra signed the contract. Later that year she was approached by a competitor. Is the
new contract lead to be enforceable? No, there was a lack of mutual consideration.
7. A test for firefighter applicants required male and female applicants to run five
kilometres in 24 minutes. This an example of indirect discrimination.
8. John was looking to hire a full-time nanny babysitter for his three energetic active sons.
He placed a job advertisement on a website dated male caregiver preferred. Does this
discrimination qualify for an exception? No, he's hiring a caretaker for healthy children.
9. The court will never consider a termination clause in a fixed term contract
unenforceable. FALSE
10. The courts cap the notice period of non-managerial employees at 12 months – FALSE
11. An employee was notified that the employer was undergoing restructuring and the
employee’s position was eliminated. She was reassignment to a position that had a
location change and pay decrease. This change amounts to constructive dismissal –
False?
12. Compensatory damages are awarded to compensate for lost wages.
13. Administrative tribunals are used, instead of the traditional court system, to decide
employment related issues because the courts: are back-logged and lack expertise
14. Emilia worked 48 hours last week. Hourly wage is $15 According to the ESA what
compensation is she entitled to? She must be paid 1.5 times her wage for any hours
exceeding 44 hours. (15 x 1.5)(4 hours) + (44 hours) (15) = 750
15. An employer may assign the designated vacation time to an employee: Anytime so
long as the parties agree to vacation assignment that are taken in less than a week’s
time period.
16. The test advanced in Jones v. Tsige states:1) The conduct was unintentional (including
recklessness), 2)The invasion took place into the plaintiffs’ private affairs or concerns
without lawful justification 3)The invasion was highly offensive. - FALSE