Date: 20090320
Docket: IMM-2944-08
Citation: 2009 FC 296
Ottawa,
Ontario, March 20, 2009
PRESENT: THE CHIEF JUSTICE
BETWEEN:
KULDEEP
SINGH
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1] This is an application
for judicial review of the second decision by the same member of the Refugee
Protection Division (the member) regarding the refugee claim of the applicant.
[2] The first decision,
according to which the applicant was neither a Convention refugee nor a person
in need of protection, was set aside by a judge of the Federal Court. The judge
ordered that the matter be redetermined by the same member. The applicant did
not object to this order. The grounds raised by the applicant in this judicial
review are substantially different from those that he raised in his previous
proceeding.
[3] At
the first refugee hearing
on May 8, 2006, the person who was the applicant’s counsel at the
time informed the member that the applicant had been released from an
immigration detention centre in view of a valid birth certificate. On the basis
of this submission, the member determined that the identity of the applicant
should not be in issue before her.
[4] Before
the second refugee hearing on January 7, 2008, the member had available a
departmental document stating that: [TRANSLATION] “this report is based on the
following
information . . . that subject Kuldeep Singh was released on January
6, 2006, without the CBSA being satisfied as to his identity” [emphasis
added]. This information contradicts what was said on behalf of the applicant
during the first hearing. The record suggests that this document was sent to
the applicant, through his counsel on December 13, 2007 (applicant’s
record, at page 146).
[5] Accordingly, the member
clearly established, very early in the second hearing, that the identity of the
applicant was a live issue in the redetermination process.
[6] The
member also asked the applicant to file the original of his birth certificate
and asked
departmental officials to file the Immigration Division’s decision releasing
the applicant from detention.
[7] The
two documents
were to be submitted following the second hearing. The transcript reveals that
the member noted that the hearing could reconvene [TRANSLATION] “if necessary”
after she had reviewed the documents (tribunal record filed
January 8, 2009, at page 21).
[8] The
applicant’s counsel submitted the original of the birth certificate to the
member on February
5, 2008. The Immigration Division’s decision was forwarded to the Minister
and the applicant on February 28, 2008. The second decision of the
member was handed down on June 3, 2008, without the hearing having
been reconvened.
[9] The
principal argument of the applicant, in this proceeding, is based on procedural
fairness and natural justice. According to the applicant, he had every
expectation that the hearing would be reconvened after the member had reviewed
the two documents.
[10] In my view, this
submission must fail for at least three reasons.
[11] First, the member’s
statements suggesting the possibility of reconvening the hearing were equivocal
and must be interpreted in the context of the transcript in its entirety. The
concession made by the respondent regarding one of the member’s statements is
not, in my respectful opinion, conclusive (tribunal record filed
January 8, 2009, at page 149). The applicant did not request the
continuation of the
hearing when he forwarded the original of his birth certificate on
February 5, 2008. I am satisfied that there was no undertaking to
reconvene the hearing, even if the identity issue was in play.
[12] Second, neither of the
documents filed after the hearing disclosed any new information that is necessarily relevant in this case. The member had before
her a copy of the birth certificate of which the original was provided
post-hearing. The member had previously expressed her doubts regarding the
purported identity documents from India (tribunal record filed
January 8, 2009, at page 21). The Immigration Division’s
decision of January 6, 2006, disclosed no new relevant information.
[13] Third, even if
procedural fairness had been breached, on the grounds that there was an
objective expectation that the hearing would be reconvened, I would choose not
to intervene. The member’s thorough analysis of the lack of credibility of the
applicant, without regard to his identity, is dispositive of the refugee claim.
Furthermore, it has not been shown how a third refugee hearing would add any
useful evidence whatsoever with respect to the identity of the applicant,
approximately four years after his arrival in Canada.
[14] For
the reasons given above,
this application for judicial review must be dismissed. There is no serious
question for certification in this proceeding.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that the application for judicial review is
dismissed.
“Allan Lutfy”
Certified
true translation
Janine
Anderson, Translator
FEDERAL
COURT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-2944-08
STYLE OF
CAUSE: KULDEEP SINGH v. THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING: February 26, 2009
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT: THE CHIEF
JUSTICE
DATED: March 20, 2009
APPEARANCES:
Michel Le Brun
|
FOR
THE APPLICANT
|
Michel Latulipe
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Michel Le Brun
Montréal, Quebec
|
FOR
THE APPLICANT
|
John
H. Sims, Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR
THE RESPONDENT
|