Date: 20090521
Docket: IMM-4526-08
Citation: 2009 FC 520
OTTAWA, Ontario, May 21, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Max M. Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
JEAN
CLAUDE KABENDE EMANI
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application
for judicial review, pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (the “Act”), of the decision by a
officer of the Immigration and Refugee Board (the “Board”), dated September 19,
2008, refusing the applicant’s request to have his refugee claim reopened.
[2]
The applicant, who is a
citizen of Cameroon, arrived in Canada on September 11, 2007. He filed his claim for refugee protection two
days later.
[3]
The applicant retained
the services of Saintil Law Office to represent him in his claim. His Personal
Information Form (“PIF”) was duly submitted by a Legal Assistant of the Saintil
Law Office on October 11, 2007, with the column for counsel’s contact
information mistakenly left blank.
[4]
Thereafter, the
applicant moved. He advised the Law Office of his legal counsel and the Board
of his new address. Later, the applicant again relocated, informing his counsel
by e-mail of the change. His e-mail, however, ended up in counsel’s “junk
mail” and was never read. Counsel did not, therefore, notify the Board of the
change of address.
[5]
In December 2007, the
applicant contacted Citizenship and Immigration Canada (“CIC”), informing CIC
of his new address and requesting an application for a work permit.
[6]
On April 21, 2008, the
Board mailed the applicant a notice to appear on May 9, 2008 for the purpose of
setting a date for his refugee claim. He did not appear.
[7]
On May 12, 2008, the
applicant was sent a notice to appear on May 23, 2008 at an abandonment
hearing. A further notice was sent on June 19, 2008 asking him to appear on
July 4 for a hearing to allow him to explain why he did had not been present on
May 23. When the applicant again did not appear, his claim was declared
abandoned.
[8]
Neither the applicant
nor his counsel received any of the above notices, because the Board did not
have the applicant’s up-to-date contact information and was not aware that he
had legal representation.
[9]
On September 8, 2008,
the applicant called counsel to inform her of a letter he had received
indicating that there was a removal order in force against him.
[10]
Counsel responded by
bringing an application under Rule 55(1) of the Refugee Protection Division Rules,
SOR/2002-228 (the “Rules”), requesting
that the applicant’s claim be reopened. On September 29, 2008, the application
was denied. It is that decision that is the subject of the present review.
[11]
In a letter dated
September 29, 2008, the Board informed the applicant that his request to have
his claim reopened had been rejected. In brief reasons, the Board wrote:
The claimant was
well aware of his rights and obligations. In particular, the requirement to
notify the Board of any change of address having completed the correct form in
October of 2007. The claimant had counsel when he completed his form, who is
experienced and knowledgeable about the rules and regulations of the rules and
regulations of the Board. Counsel indicates that on two occasions, they have
erred. First, is in not indicating that they were, in fact, counsel of record
on the Personal Information Form, and the second occasion, when a notice of
change of address was sent to counsel via email, which was apparently viewed as
junk mail and never actioned. However, the claimant also erred in not
informing the Board of his new address as he had done previously.
Ultimately, it
is the claimant’s responsibility for the actions counsel for which he retains [sic].
In this claim, the claimant was clearly aware that he had to notify the Board
of his change of address in writing, and failed to do so.
Based on the
material presented, the request for a reopening of his case is dismissed.
After a review
of the file, no issues of natural justice have been found by the member.
[12]
The applicant raises
the following issues:
1.
What is the correct standard of review with
respect to the refusals of the Board to reopen refugee claims?
2.
Whether refusal to open a refugee claim, where
abandonment of the claim was caused solely by the error of the applicant’s
counsel, constitutes a breach of the principles of natural justice?
3.
Whether the applicant acted with due care and
intended to pursue his refugee claim at all times?
4.
Whether the omission to provide the Board with
the applicant’s current address was solely the fault of applicant’s counsel?
5.
Whether the applicant should be made responsible
for the errors of his counsel?
I would summarize the central issue of this claim as follows:
1.
Under the circumstances of this particular case,
did the Board’s refusal to reopen the refugee claim constitute a breach of the
principles of natural justice?
[13]
The following
provisions of the Rules are relevant to this proceeding:
55. (1) A claimant or the Minister may make an
application to the Division to reopen a claim for refugee protection that has
been decided or abandoned.
…
(4) The Division must allow
the application if it is established that there was a failure to observe a
principle of natural justice.
[…]
58. (1) A claim may be declared abandoned, without giving
the claimant an opportunity to explain why the claim should not be declared
abandoned, if
(a) the Division has
not received the claimant’s contact information and their Personal
Information Form within 28 days after the claimant received the form; and
(b) the Minister and
the claimant’s counsel, if any, do not have the claimant’s contact
information.
(2) In
every other case, the Division must give the claimant an opportunity to
explain why the claim should not be declared abandoned. The Division must
give this opportunity
(a) immediately, if
the claimant is present at the hearing and the Division considers that it is
fair to do so; or
(b) in any other case,
by way of a special hearing after notifying the claimant in writing.
(3) The
Division must consider, in deciding if the claim should be declared
abandoned, the explanations given by the claimant at the hearing and any
other relevant information, including the fact that the claimant is ready to
start or continue the proceedings.
(4) If the Division decides
not to declare the claim abandoned, it must start or continue the proceedings
without delay.
|
55. (1) Le demandeur d’asile ou le
ministre peut demander à la Section de rouvrir toute demande d’asile qui a
fait l’objet d’une décision ou d’un désistement.
…
(4) La Section accueille la demande sur preuve du manquement à un
principe de justice naturelle.
[…]
58. (1) La Section peut prononcer le
désistement d’une demande d’asile sans donner au demandeur d’asile la
possibilité d’expliquer pourquoi le désistement ne devrait pas être prononcé
si, à la fois :
a) elle n’a reçu ni les coordonnées, ni le formulaire sur les
renseignements personnels du demandeur d’asile dans les vingt-huit jours
suivant la date à laquelle ce dernier a reçu le formulaire;
b) ni le ministre, ni le conseil du demandeur d’asile, le cas
échéant, ne connaissent ces coordonnées.
(2) Dans tout autre cas, la Section
donne au demandeur d’asile la possibilité d’expliquer pourquoi le désistement
ne devrait pas être prononcé. Elle lui donne cette possibilité :
a) sur-le-champ, dans le cas où il est présent à l’audience et où
la Section juge qu’il est équitable de le faire;
b) dans le cas contraire, au cours d’une audience spéciale dont la
Section l’a avisé par écrit.
(3) Pour décider si elle prononce
le désistement, la Section prend en considération les explications données
par le demandeur d’asile à l’audience et tout autre élément pertinent,
notamment le fait que le demandeur d’asile est prêt à commencer ou à
poursuivre l’affaire.
(4) Si la Section décide de ne pas prononcer le désistement, elle
commence ou poursuit l’affaire sans délai.
|
[14]
This application
concerns a question of procedural fairness, and therefore will be reviewed on a
standard of correctness (Hamzai v. Canada (M.C.I.), [2006] F.C.J. No.
1408, 2006 FC 1108, at para. 15).
[15]
At paragraphs 11, 12
and 13 of his affidavit, Josue Jacquelin,
Law Clerk at the applicant’s counsel’s firm, sets out what I take to be the crux
of the applicant’s submission:
I am hereby appealing to the
Board not to prejudice Mr. Jean-Claude Kabende Emani as the Board’s inability
to contact him was through no fault of his but ours.
Our Law office takes full
responsibility for the omission to provide our contact information as the
claimant’s counsel and failure to receive the claimant’s e-mail regarding his
contact information.
We hereby request that Mr.
Jean-Claude Kabende Emani’s claim be re-opened as he had no intention
whatsoever of ever abandoning his refugee claim in Canada. Failure to re-open
his refugee claim/application will make the claimant suffer irreparable harm
and untold hardship that would unfairly render his statusless in Canada.
[16]
For the following
reasons, I am prepared to grant this application.
[17]
According to subsection 55(4) of the Rules, an
application to re-open a refugee claim must be allowed “if it is
established that there was a failure to observe a principle of natural justice”.
It is also clear from subsection 58(1) that a claim may be declared abandoned
where the Board has not received the claimant’s contact information and PIF
within 28 days of the claimant receiving the form and where the Minister and
claimant’s counsel do not have the claimant’s contact information.
[18]
In the present case, there is no dispute that the applicant submitted
his PIF in a timely manner. The PIF included his contact information at the
time. The problem is that the Board was not informed when the applicant
changed his address for the second time, due to errors on the part of counsel.
Nonetheless, the fact that the applicant’s PIF was duly submitted to the Board
removes him from the purview of subsection 58(2) and brings him within 58(3).
This latter provision requires that “in every other case” the Board “must give
the claimant an opportunity to explain why the claim should not be declared
abandoned”.
[19]
The Board did all it could, under the circumstances, to give the
applicant his right to be heard under subsection 58(3). It cannot be faulted in
this regard. The fact remains, however, that the applicant did not have a
meaningful opportunity to explain why his claim should not be declared
abandoned because neither he nor his counsel received the notices sent by the
Board.
[20]
The jurisprudence appears to be clear that the central
consideration in regard to abandonment proceedings is whether the applicant’s
conduct amounts to an expression of his intention to diligently prosecute his
claim (Ahamad v. Canada(M.C.I.) (T.D.), [2000] 3 F.C. 109, [2000] F.C.J.
no. 289, at para. 32). When presented with the application to have the claim
re-opened, the Board was furnished for the first time with information
explaining the applicant’s failure to appear, and demonstrating that it was due
solely to administrative errors on the part of his counsel. In rejecting the
application to reopen his claim, the Board failed to consider evidence before
it of the applicant’s conduct demonstrating his intention to earnestly pursue
his claim. I am satisfied that the Board erred in seeing only part of the
picture and neglecting this central consideration (Albarracin v. Canada
(M.C.I.), [2008] F.C.J. No. 1425, at para. 4).
[21]
The facts in Andreoli v. Canada (M.C.I.), [2004] F.C.J.
No. 1349, 2004 FC 111, are not unlike those before me. In Andreoli, as
here, the applicants were not themselves negligent but instead had trusted a
representative who bore all responsibility for the procedural error. Justice
Harrington, after citing Ahamad, supra, wrote at paragraph 16:
In order to assess a case such as this, it is
absolutely paramount to opt for a contextual approach and to avoid the mire of
procedural dogma. I refer to the words of the Honourable Mr. Justice Pigeon in
Hamel v. Brunette, [1977] 1 S.C.R. 147, 156, where he very aptly wrote
that “procedure [should] be the servant of justice and not its mistress”.
[22]
In Medawatte v. Canada (Minister for Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), [2005] F.C.J. No. 1672, 2005 FC 1374,
another decision by Justice Harrington, the following is set out at paragraph
10:
There is a great deal of jurisprudence in these
matters to the effect that a party must suffer the consequences of his or her
own counsel. I subscribe to that view. If a case has been poorly prepared; if
relevant jurisprudence was not brought to the attention of the Court in a civil
case; if there was a bad choice in witness selection, the consequences fall on
that party. Is there a difference, however, between malfeasance and
non-feasance? In this case, it is not a question of lawyer doing something
poorly. He did not do something he should have done. […]
[23]
In this case, the evidence supports the applicant’s contention
that he did not intend to abandon his claim. Due to the acknowledged
administrative oversights of his counsel, he was denied an opportunity to
explain the circumstances of his failure to appear. The Board, in dismissing
his application to re-open the claim, failed to consider the most central
criterion and the applicant was deprived of a hearing of his claim on the
merits.
[24]
No
question of general importance has been submitted for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that this application for
judicial review is allowed and the matter is returned for a new hearing before
a different officer in accordance with the above reasons.
"Max M. Teitelbaum"
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-4526-08
STYLE OF CAUSE: JEAN
CALUDE KABENDE EMANI v. MCI
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: May
14, 2009
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: TEITELBAUM
D.J.
DATED: May
21, 2009
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Kweku
Ackaah-Boafo
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Ms. Laoura
Christodoulides
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Kweku
Ackaah-Boafo
Barrister
& Solicitor
North York, Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|