The documents in the
Canada Pension Plan file were found to be relevant and were
ordered to be produced.
|
Rule 63.6 - Order to
Exclude |
In Glinka and Dufferin
Mutual Insurance Company, P01-00002, March 7, 2001, the insurer
argued that Ms. Glinka's agent, Mr. Spiegel, should not be
permitted to represent Ms. Glinka on the appeal. At the
arbitration hearing, Ms. Glinka had sought treatment expenses for
chiropractic, physio and massage therapies. She was awarded a
couple of additional months of treatment, but denied the bulk of
the claim on the basis that she had failed to establish that the
treatments were reasonable and necessary. Moreover, she was
allowed only a portion of her assessment expenses.
Section 23(3) of the Statutory Powers
Procedure Act and Rule 63.6 of the Dispute Resolution Practice
Code allows adjudicators to exclude agents from hearings if it is
found that they are not competent to properly represent the party
or do not understand and comply with the duties and
responsibilities of an advocate or advisor.
Counsel for the insurer urged that an
exclusion order be made on the basis of the arbitrator's comments
with respect to Mr. Spiegel's representation of Ms. Glinka, the
negative comments made about Mr. Spiegel's conduct on a previous
case (Grozdanovsky and Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company,
A99-000289, April 7, 2000) and on the basis of the submissions
filed in support of the appeal, which he suggested showed that Mr.
Spiegel was not competent to act on the appeal.
The arbitrator referred to Codina v.
Law Society of Upper Canada, (1996) O. J. No. 3348, R. v.
Romanowicz (1999), 45 O. R. (3rd) (506) (C. A.), and Practice and
Procedure Before Administrative Tribunals, Macaulay and Sprague
(Carswell) with respect to the issue of the right of adjudicators
to exclude agents from hearings. Ultimately, the arbitrator found
that it would not be appropriate to exclude Mr. Spiegel at that
point in time, but required him to file an acknowledgement, signed
by his client, if he was to continue to act. This requirement
followed the reasons in Romanowicz, in which the Court of Appeal
stated that a trial judge was under a positive duty to ensure that
the decision to use an agent was an informed decision (p. 10). The
acknowledgement was to contain the following
information:
- Mr. Spiegel is not a lawyer;
- Mr. Spiegel is not a member of the
Law Society of Upper Canada and is not subject to the
supervision or discipline of a professional body;
- Mr. Spiegel is not required to
carry insurance. An order for expenses in favour of Dufferin was
made against her at arbitration stage, and as the injured
party she was potentially liable for Dufferin's expenses at the
appeal stage;
- Having been informed of the above
she wanted Mr. Spiegel to act as her agent.
|
S.A.B.S. - 1996 - s. 2 -
"Accident" |
In Mahadan and Cooperators General
Insurance Company, A00-000489, March 15, 2001 it was held that the
applicant was not injured as a result of an "accident" as defined
in s. 2(1) and the claim was dismissed. The applicant had fallen
in his underground parking lot while unloading groceries from the
trunk of his car. He twisted his left ankle and hit his arm on the
trunk as he fell. The arbitrator noted that the present
legislation is stricter than the previous legislation, in that it
restricts accident benefits claims to injuries caused "directly"
by the use and operation of a motor vehicle. Reviewing the facts
of Mr. Mahadan's case, the arbitrator found that his car did not
directly cause his injuries. A crack in the pavement, caused by
construction in the parking lot, was found to be a new and
independent source of his injury.
|
S.A.B.S. - 1994 - s.65 - Independent Medical
Examinations |
In Howard and Guardian Insurance
Company of Canada, A00-000225, March 7, 2001 the applicant
suffered injuries in a motor vehicle accident on April 3, 1996.
Weekly income replacement benefits were paid for approximately
four months post-accident. On April 5, 1999, however, the
applicant reduced her work week. She alleged that this was
attributable to the accident. In response, the insurer scheduled
examinations with an orthopaedic surgeon and a psychologist. The
applicant refused to attend the appointments. At the pre-hearing
teleconference, Guardian made a motion that the hearing be stayed
until the applicant attended the scheduled medical examinations.
Finding that the insurer had discharged its burden of showing that
the scheduled examinations were reasonable, the arbitrator
adjourned the hearing pending Ms. Howard's attendance at the
scheduled examinations, unless the parties agreed otherwise.
Ms. Howard had attended at hospital in
March 2000 and there had been some suggestion made that she should
stop working. Counsel for the insurer, however, was not advised of
the hospitalization until May 2000. The arbitrator found that the
timing of Ms. Howard's hospitalization tended to support the
reasonableness of Guardian's request as it suggested there had
been a change in Ms. Howard's circumstances since mediation and
since the filing of the application for arbitration.
Catherine Zingg