BCBusiness

January/February 2022 – The Most Resilient Cities

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2022 BCBUSINESS 27 ISTOCK ( the informer ) C ongratulations! You've just hired a phenomenal VP to grow your business into the U.S. market. But on their first time crossing the border, they're refused entry—decades back, when still in their teens, they were convicted of cannabis posses- sion. The VP has no criminal record now (you checked), and the crime no longer exists in Canada. What are your options? Even without a pot posses- sion skeleton rattling in their closet, your VP could be in trouble. Say they simply answer honestly—as they must—if asked by U.S. Customs and Immigra- tion if they've ever danced with Mary Jane. I mean, why not come clean? It's legal now, right? Plus, they're heading to California, which legalized recreational cannabis in 2016. (I mean, Seth Rogen lives there.) So all good? Um, no. While laws vary from state to state, cannabis also falls under U.S. federal jurisdiction. It's still il- legal, and it's likely the VP will be refused entry. If that happens, you'll both have a problem. Your VP has an employment contract, and they've done nothing wrong. So if no Canadian laws have been broken by your new hire, what can you, as an employer, do? In this case, termination with cause won't fly. But that doesn't mean the employer- employee relationship has to continue, says Vancouver-based lawyer Carman Overholt, who also teaches employment law at UBC Sauder School of Business. "If the job duties really require someone to be able to travel to the U.S.," he says, "and your conviction precludes you from travelling there, then you're not able to perform your duties, and we consider the contract to be at an end." In legal terms, the em- ployment contract would be considered "frustrated." Huh? "'Frustration' really means the parties are not able to perform the bargain that they entered into," Overholt explains. But when invoking frustration, an inability to do the gig isn't the gist. "The legal test is that frustration of contract applies where something unforeseen occurs that renders it radically different from what the parties bargained," Overholt notes. "The threshold for establish- ing frustration is quite high." This scenario opens an ethical and legal can of worms. Aside from pot, there are other reasons why people can be denied entry to the U.S. From holding unacceptable political views to simply being born in the wrong part of the world, certain grounds for inadmissi- bility to the U.S. would be con- sidered flagrant human rights violations if they presented a bar to employment or housing in Canada. For example, during the Trump administration, citizens from several Muslim-majority countries were prevented from entering America. If our fictional VP had recently im- migrated from Syria, and had been singled out for discrimina- tory treatment at the border solely because of national origin—a clear violation of Ca- nadian and B.C. human rights codes—would the employer still be able to use "frustration" as a defence? "It's a very interesting question," says Overholt, who concedes that the issue is com- plex. However, regardless of Canadian law, the fact that, for unanticipated reasons, the em- ployee can't fulfil the contract remains salient. "The reason why they cannot is really be- side the point," he adds. So the Canadian-made contract could be considered frustrated—even if discrimination based on simi- lar criteria would be a human rights code violation here. For the scenario at hand, though, there's a rather dispir- iting takeaway. With the sin- cerest of apologies to Woody Guthrie, when it comes to crossing into the U.S., their land is their land. Fictional scenario. Not in- tended as legal advice. n S H I F T H A P P E N S Cross-Border Stopping Moving one of your people stateside? Their past or present relationship with cannabis could see those plans go to pot by Guy Saddy PUFF PUFF? NO PASS Past possession might spell trouble with U.S. Customs

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