HUMAN RIGHTS TRIBUNAL OF ONTARIO
B E T W E E N:
Joshua Insang
Applicant
-and-
Innovative Content Solutions Inc., Controlled Contents Management Inc., Hildeberto Soares and Carlos Canejo
Respondents
INTERIM DECISION
Adjudicator: Leslie Reaume
Indexed as: Insang v. Innovative Content Solutions Inc.
1This Application alleges discrimination with respect to employment contrary to the Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19, as amended (the “Code”).
BACKGROUND
2On August 27, 2015, the Tribunal issued a Notice of Application (“the Notice”) to the respondents in which it directed that a Response must be filed with the Tribunal no later than October 1, 2015. The Notice was sent by regular mail and was not returned to the Tribunal as being undeliverable. The Notice contained the following warning:
If you fail to respond to the Application, the HRTO may deem you to have accepted all of the allegations in the Application, deem you to have waived all rights with respect to further notice or participation in the proceeding, proceed to deal with the Application without further notice to you and decide the matter based only on the material before the HRTO.
3The respondents did not file a Response.
4On October 27, 2015 the Tribunal wrote again to the parties directing that the respondents file a full Response to the Application before November 10, 2015 together with an explanation for the failure to file a Response to date. The letter, sent by mail, again warned the respondents about the consequences of not filing a Response and the respondents' attention was drawn to Rule 5.5 of the Tribunal’s Rules of Procedure which provides:
5.5 Where an Application is delivered to a Respondent who does not respond to the Application, the Tribunal may:
a) deem the Respondent to have accepted all of the allegations in the Application;
b) proceed to deal with the Application without further notice to the Respondent;
c) deem the Respondent to have waived all rights with respect to further notice or participation in the proceeding;
d) decide the matter based only on the material before the Tribunal.
5To date, the respondents have not complied with these directions and have not filed a Response or otherwise communicated with the Tribunal.
DECISION
6In Kearns v. 1327827 Ontario, 2009 HRTO 457, at paras. 11 to 14, the Tribunal set out its approach in circumstances where a respondent fails to file a Response after having been cautioned by the Tribunal about the consequences of not doing so. As the Tribunal noted, after having been provided clear notice of what is required, a respondent who refuses or chooses not to file a Response should not be able to frustrate the objects of the Code, and the applicant’s rights to assert a claim and seek a timely determination of that claim.
7Where no Response is filed, the Tribunal will proceed to determine the Application in the absence of the respondent. In all but the rarest of cases, the Tribunal will deem the respondent to have waived its right to participate in the proceeding and deem the respondent to have accepted all of the allegations set out in the Application.
8I am satisfied that the respondents have received the Notice of Application and the further direction requiring the filing of a Response. The respondents refuse or have chosen not to participate in these proceedings.
ORDER
9For the reasons set out above, I make the following order:
a. The respondents are deemed to have accepted all of the allegations set out in the Application; and
b. The respondents are deemed to have waived all rights to notice or participation in these proceedings.
c. The respondents are not entitled to further notice with respect to the Application.
NEXT STEPS
10The Tribunal went on in Kearns, above, to explain that, for several reasons, it will not generally make a decision based upon the material filed by the applicant without first providing an applicant with an opportunity to indicate whether he or she wishes to file further materials and/or make oral submissions.
11Accordingly, the Tribunal will schedule a one-hour case management conference call to set out a timetable and discuss the following:
a. Does the applicant wish to have an oral hearing or have the Tribunal decide the Application based upon written materials filed?
b. Does the applicant intend to call witnesses? Do these witnesses need to testify in person or can they give their evidence over the telephone, in writing or in some other format?
c. What documents does the applicant intend to rely upon?
d. What are the issues raised in the Application?
e. What remedies is the applicant seeking in the event that the Tribunal finds that the applicant’s rights under the Code were infringed? What evidence does the applicant intend to rely upon in support of these remedies?
f. Does the applicant plan to make any legal submissions or rely on any case law?
12I am not seized of this matter.
Dated at Toronto, this 25^th^ day of November, 2015.
“signed by”
Leslie Reaume
Vice-chair

