Date: 20071213
Docket: IMM-770-07
Citation: 2007 FC 1310
Ottawa,
Ontario, December 13, 2007
Present:
The Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
BETWEEN:
AZITA
ABDOLLAHZADEH
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application for judicial review, filed pursuant
to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA)
against a decision of a pre-removal risk assessment officer (PRRA
officer), Olivier Perreault, dated January 15, 2007, refusing the
PRRA application of Azita Abdollahzadeh (applicant).
I. Issues
[2]
The
following issues are raised by this application for judicial review:
(1) Did the
PRRA officer err in his assessment of the documents filed by the applicant?
(2) Constitutional
question: Do sections 113 of the IRPA and 167, 168 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (IRPR) infringe
section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Constitution
Act, 1982, being Schedule B of the Canada Act (U.K.), 1982, c.
11 (the Charter) or the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44, reprinted in
R.S.C. 1985, App. III?
As required
by the legislation, the notice of constitutional question was served on the
Attorney General of Canada, the attorneys general of the provinces and the
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration.
[3]
Given the
multitude of questions that the applicant proposed for certification, I am
including them under this heading:
(1)
For the
application of paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA, does the “evidence that
arose after the rejection” include only evidence that postdates the evidence
before the RPD and that substantially differs from this evidence?
(2)
Does the
standard governing the filing of new evidence pursuant to paragraph 113(a)
of the IRPA require the PRRA officer to accept all evidence arising
after the RPD decision, even the evidence normally accessible by the applicant
or the evidence that she probably could have presented at the hearing on the
refugee claim?
(3)
To
determine whether the evidence arose after the refugee claim was dismissed by
the Board and therefore whether it is “new”, is the PRRA officer bound to limit
his assessment to the new facts or new risks or can he also consider other
factors, like the nature of the information, its importance in the matter and
the credibility of its source?
(4)
In light
of paragraphs 3(3)(d) and (f) of the IRPA, is the PRRA officer
prohibited from examining the applicant’s personal evidence, essential to his
refugee claim and establishing that she would be at risk if she were removed,
when this evidence could have, in all likelihood, been filed before the Board?
(5)
Does
paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA breach the principles of natural
justice contemplated under section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms by limiting the evidence admissible to the PRRA?
(6)
Does the
overall effect of the provisions of paragraph 113(b) of the IRPA in
relation to sections 167-168 of the IRPR breach the principles of
fundamental natural justice enshrined by section 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms by limiting a PPRA applicant’s right to be
heard viva voce on questions of fact and credibility?
(7)
Does the
overall effect of paragraphs 113(a) and (b) of the IRPA in
relation to sections 167-168 of the IRPR breach the principles of
fundamental justice enshrined by section 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms by limiting a PRRA applicant’s right to be heard in a
full hearing before an impartial and independent tribunal?
[4]
For the
reasons that follow, the application for judicial review is dismissed and no
question is certified.
II. Factual basis
[5]
The
applicant is a citizen of Iran.
[6]
On
March 2, 2004, the applicant was arrested and detained by the Iranian
authorities for having had an [translation]
“illegitimate affair” with a married man whom she believed was divorced.
[7]
On March
6, 2004, the applicant was released and the matter suspended because of the
intervention of her cousin, Jamshid Abdollahzadeh, a Colonel of Sepah, an
intelligence agency in Iran. In exchange for his help, he had required that the
applicant become his second wife.
[8]
The
applicant used many ploys to put off this forced marriage, while looking for
ways to leave Iran. In the summer of 2004, she filed a temporary resident visa
application to visit her sister in Canada but this application was refused on
June 20, 2004 (she had also applied once before in 2001, which was
refused). On May 26, 2005, the applicant left Iran to join her brother, a
refugee whose claim had been accepted in Austria. The applicant filed for
protection two weeks after she arrived in that country.
[9]
The
applicant alleged that after she left Iran, her cousin threatened and harassed
her father. Moreover, on June 28, 2005, her sister received an unfriendly
telephone call from the cousin, who wanted to know the whereabouts of the
applicant. Her brother in Austria for his part received a phone call from a
person from the Iranian Embassy looking for the applicant.
[10]
This is
the reason the applicant gave for leaving Austria for Canada. She arrived in
Canada on August 20, 2005, with a false passport and applied for refugee
status in Montréal six days later.
[11]
On
April 12, 2006, the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada determined that the applicant was not a
refugee or a person in need of protection within the meaning of the IRPA. The
RPD, doubting that there was a cousin in Iran or an arrest warrant dated March
2, 2004, noted the delay in leaving Iran and in seeking protection during
her stay in Austria, the absence of documents corroborating her refugee claim
in Austria and the fact that she had not availed herself of the laws in Austria
to ensure her protection from the threats of her cousin. For the RPD, all of these
observations supported its finding that the applicant suffered from a “serious”
lack of credibility and accordingly refused the claim.
[12]
On July
19, 2006, the Federal Court dismissed the application for leave and for
judicial review of the RPD’s decision.
[13]
In
December 2006, the applicant telephoned her mother in Iran, and her mother told
her that she had received a summons to appear before the Iranian court to
answer to the charge involving her illegitimate affair.
[14]
On
December 22, 2006, the applicant filed a PRRA application. This application was
refused on January 15, 2007. This decision is the subject of this judicial
review.
III. The decision under
judicial review
[15]
The PRRA
officer determined that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the
applicant would be at risk of torture, cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment or death if she were removed to Iran or
if she was a member of a group that could be subject to this kind of abuse
and/or treatment. Accordingly, the PRRA application was refused.
[16]
In making
this determination, the PRRA officer reviewed the 36 documents filed by the
applicant, based on which he made several determinations:
[1]
Documents
12 to 36 do not amount to new evidence for the following reasons:
a. Documents 15 to 36 predate the
RPD’s decision refusing the claim and the applicant did not establish that
these documents were not reasonably available or, if they were, that the
applicant could not reasonably have been expected to have filed them at the
time of the refusal;
b. While it was not dated,
document 14 refers to facts predating the applicant’s refugee claim. In fact,
this document deals with granting refugee status to the applicant’s brother in
Austria. This information is not new because it was considered by the RPD, which
did not challenge it (see PIF, question 5). Further, according to the PRRA
officer, the applicant did not explain why this document could not be filed
before the RPD before the decision was made. In any case, this information was
not challenged by the RPD;
c. Document 13, the affidavit of
Afshin Abdollahzadeh, brother of the applicant, dated February 3, 2006,
predating the decision, had been submitted to the RPD and therefore contained
information which had already been filed with it. The PRRA officer did not accept
the applicant’s argument since any challenge involving the weight that the RPD
assigned to these facts is within the jurisdiction of the Federal Court through
a judicial review and not the PRRA officer; and
d. Document 12, the affidavit of
Afshin Abdollahzadeh, dated December 15, 2006, is dated after the RPD
decision. However, the PRRA officer determined that this document contained
only information that predated the refugee claim and it was reasonable to
expect that the applicant would have presented it to the RPD before the
decision was made.
[2] The PRRA officer did not
comment on document 11, entitled “Excerpt of Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for
Determining Refugee Status [page 21] (September 1979). As the title states, this
document involves the procedure for deciding the refugee claim, not the PRRA;
[3] Documents 1 to 10 date from
before the decision but the PRRA officer did not accept them for the following
reasons:
a. Documents 1 and 2 have minimal
probative value since they were filed by the applicant with the Federal Court
for her application for judicial review of the RPD decision. Both of these
documents contained complementary information that adds very little to the
written submissions;
b. Document 3, a copy of the [translation] “summons to appear” (June
10, 2006) is a document from the Court of Iran in the name of the applicant,
calling her to a hearing on June 17, 2006, to respond to charges of having an
illegitimate affair. The PRRA officer did not assign very much probative value
to this document since it was a photocopy, the authenticity of which could not
be verified. Moreover, the applicant did not provide evidence that this
document came from Iran. Also, its probative value was limited since it refers
to the allegation of an illegitimate affair that the RPD stated lacked
credibility. Finally, the PRRA officer was not satisfied with the explanation
that her cousin’s intervention was the cause of the two-year lapse of time
between her arrest in March 2004, and the filing of the summons to appear
on June 10, 2006;
c. Document 4 is an affidavit of
Afrooz Abdollahzadeh (December 17, 2006), the applicant’s sister. The
PRRA officer determined that most of the information in this affidavit had
preceded the RPD decision and could have been presented well before the moment
of the decision. Accordingly, the PRRA officer did not accept it. He also found
implausible the applicant’s explanation that she had not known that her sister
could testify before the RPD, since the applicant was represented by counsel experienced
in refugee matters. According to the officer, the only new evidence in the
sister’s affidavit reads as follows:
. . . [a]t the beginning of December
2006, my sister Azita called our mother and our mother told Azita that she had
received notice to appear in court for accusations of illegitimate
relationship.[paragraph 15]
The PRRA
officer assigned mitigated probative value to this new information given that
it came from the applicant’s close relative, in this case her sister. Just like
document 3 referred to above, the PRRA officer considered that this new
information had insufficient probative value to establish, on a balance of
probabilities, that there actually was a summons to appear pending against the
applicant alleging that she had an illegitimate affair;
d. Documents 5 to 10 deal with
objective documentary evidence bearing on human rights conditions and more
specifically the status of women in Iran, we must recognize that according to
the PRRA officer, none of these documents corroborate the personal facts of the
applicant’s allegations. Moreover, these documents do not establish that the
applicant is at risk as she claims. Finally, the PRRA officer determined that,
even though this objective documentary evidence is from after the RPD decision,
it describes an identical situation and does not bring anything new to the
status of women in Iran at the time of the RPD decision; and
e. In the context of the analysis
of document 8 entitled “Letter from the Association des femmes iraniennes de
Montréal (“AFIM”) (undated)”, the PRRA officer noted that this document did not
confirm that the AFIM is perceived as an opposition group by the Iranian
authorities. Even though document 8 confirms the applicant’s membership in
this group, there are no details regarding the nature of the applicant’s
activities within this group. The PRRA officer pointed out that according to a
document published by the Fédération des femmes du Québec (FFQ), the AFIM is an
[translation] “independent
organization for educating, promoting and integrating Iranian women into Quebec
society.”
[17]
Accordingly,
the PRRA officer, while having observed that facts as presented were similar to
those presented to the RPD with the exception of the summons to appear dated
June 10, 2006, and the applicant’s membership in the Association des
femmes iraniennes de Montréal, determined that the applicant had not
established the basic facts to justify her PRRA application. Referring to
certain judgments of this Court, officer Perreault stated this at page 9 of his
decision:
. . . The IRB previously found that the
applicant did not have a well-founded fear of persecution on the basis of her
gender, and the Federal Court upheld the Board’s conclusions. The words of the
honourable Justice Barnes in Yousef v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2006] FC 864 are applicable to the present case:
It is not the role of the PRRA officer to
re-examine evidence assessed by the Board, and it is not open to the officer
to revisit the Board’s factual and credibility conclusions. It is also not
the duty of the PRRA officer to consider evidence that could have been put to
the Board, but was not. [Emphasis added in the original]
The words of the honourable Justice
Kelen, in Kaybaki v. Canada (Solicitor General), [2004] FC 32, also
apply to the present case:
The PRRA application cannot be allowed to
become a second refugee hearing. The PRRA process is to assess new risk
developments between the hearing and the removal date.
IV. Relevant legislation
[18]
The procedure
for the assessment of a PRRA application is provided at section 113 of the
IRPA. The relevant passages are the following:
Consideration
of application
113.
Consideration of an application for protection shall be as follows:
(a)
an applicant whose claim to refugee protection has been rejected may present
only new evidence that arose after the rejection or was not reasonably
available, or that the applicant could not reasonably have been expected in
the circumstances to have presented, at the time of the rejection;
(b)
a hearing may be held if the Minister, on the basis of prescribed factors, is
of the opinion that a hearing is required;
|
Examen
de la demande
113.
Il est disposé de la demande comme il suit:
a)
le demandeur d’asile débouté ne peut présenter que des éléments de preuve
survenus depuis le rejet ou qui n’étaient alors pas normalement accessibles
ou, s’ils l’étaient, qu’il n’était pas raisonnable, dans les circonstances,
de s’attendre à ce qu’il les ait présentés au moment du rejet;
b)
une audience peut être tenue si le ministre l’estime requis compte tenu des
facteurs réglementaires;
|
[19]
Section 167
of the IRPR sets out the factors to be considered for the application of
paragraph 113(b).
Hearing
— prescribed factors
167.
For the purpose of determining whether a hearing is required under paragraph
113(b) of the Act, the factors are the following:
(a)
whether there is evidence that raises a serious issue of the applicant’s
credibility and is related to the factors set out in sections 96 and 97 of
the Act;
(b)
whether the evidence is central to the decision with respect to the
application for protection; and
(c)
whether the evidence, if accepted, would justify allowing the application for
protection.
|
Facteurs
pour la tenue d’une audience
167.
Pour l’application de l’alinéa 113(b) de la Loi, les facteurs ci-après
servent à décider si la tenue d’une audience est requise:
a)
l’existence d’éléments de preuve relatifs aux éléments mentionnés aux
articles 96 et 97 de la Loi qui soulèvent une question importante en ce qui
concerne la crédibilité du demandeur;
b)
l’importance de ces éléments de preuve pour la prise de la décision relative
à la demande de protection;
c)
la question de savoir si ces éléments de preuve, à supposer qu’ils soient
admis, justifieraient que soit accordée la protection.
|
[20]
Section 168 states the
following:
168. A hearing is subject to the following provisions:
(a) notice shall be provided to the applicant of
the time and place of the hearing and the issues of fact that will be raised
at the hearing;
(b) the hearing is restricted to matters relating
to the issues of fact stated in the notice, unless the officer conducting the
hearing considers that other issues of fact have been raised by statements
made by the applicant during the hearing;
(c) the applicant must respond to the questions
posed by the officer and may be assisted for that purpose, at their own
expense, by a barrister or solicitor or other counsel; and
(d) any evidence of a person other than the
applicant must be in writing and the officer may question the person for the
purpose of verifying the evidence provided.
|
168. Si une audience est requise, les règles suivantes
s’appliquent:
a) un avis qui indique les date, heure et lieu de
l’audience et mentionne les questions de fait qui y seront soulevées est
envoyé au demandeur;
b) l’audience ne porte que sur les points relatifs aux
questions de fait mentionnées dans l’avis, à moins que l’agent qui tient
l’audience n’estime que les déclarations du demandeur faites à l’audience
soulèvent d’autres questions de fait;
c) le demandeur doit répondre aux questions posées par
l’agent et peut, à cette fin, être assisté, à ses frais, par un avocat ou un
autre conseil;
d) la déposition d’un tiers doit être produite par écrit et
l’agent peut interroger ce dernier pour vérifier l’information fournie.
|
V. Analysis
Standard of review
[21]
As it was
pointed out in the recent decision in Colindres v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No. 959, 2007 FC 717,
at paragraph 13, Madam Justice Eleanor Dawson, in Kandiah
v. Canada (Solicitor General), 2005 FC 1057, examines the appropriate standard
of review for the decisions of PRRA officers and at paragraph 6, she
determines as follows:
As to the appropriate standard of review
to be applied to a decision of a PRRA officer, in Kim v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005]
F.C.J. No. 540, Mr. Justice Mosley, after conducting a pragmatic and functional
analysis, concluded “the appropriate standard of review for questions of fact
should generally be patent unreasonableness, for questions of mixed law and
fact, reasonableness simpliciter, and for questions of law,
correctness”. Mr. Justice Mosley also endorsed the finding of Mr. Justice
Martineau in Figurado v. Canada (Solicitor General), [2005] F.C.J. No. 458, that the appropriate
standard of review for the decision of a PRRA officer is reasonableness simpliciter
when the decision is considered “globally and as a whole”. This jurisprudence
was followed by Madam Justice Layden-Stevenson in Nadarajah v. Canada (Solicitor General), [2005]
F.C.J. No. 895 at paragraph 13. For the reasons given by my colleagues, I
accept this to be an accurate statement of the applicable standard of review.
[22]
In the
context of this matter, the applicant alleged that the PRRA officer erred in
determining the probative value of the documents filed by the applicant. This
issue requires an analysis of the decision as a whole and therefore the
reasonableness standard applies.
[23]
With
regard to the constitutional question, it will be answered by referring to the
usual rules of interpretation of law while taking into account the objectives
of the relevant provisions, the vocabulary used by Parliament to convey the
objectives and the scope of the vocabulary in the context of the legislation
under review. The constitutional question goes to the very heart of the PRRA
officer’s jurisdiction, his role, while taking into account the principles of
natural justice applicable in such a situation.
(1) Did the
PRRA officer err in his assessment of the new documents filed?
[24]
The
applicant filed 36 documents in support of her PRRA application. She alleged
that the PRRA officer erred in assessing the probative value to be assigned to
each of the 36 documents. The applicant also argued that her PRRA application
was also based on new evidence establishing the truthfulness of the facts
presented before the IRB as well as on new facts that established risks that
date from after the IRB decision. I do not agree with this position.
[25]
In a
judgment (Raza et al v. MCI et al, 2006 FC 1385, at paragraph 22)
where the facts are in part similar to this situation, Mr. Justice Mosley
described the new information in the following manner:
It must be
recalled that the role of the PRRA officer is not to revisit the Board’s
factual and credibility conclusions but to consider the present situation. In
assessing “new information” it is not just the date of the document that is
important, but whether the information is significant or significantly
different than the information previously provided: Selliah,
above at para. 38. Where “recent” information (i.e. information that post-dates
the original decision) merely echoes information previously submitted, it is
unlikely to result in a finding that country conditions have changed. The
question is whether there is anything of “substance” that is new: Yousef, above at para.27.
[26]
Very
recently, the Court of Appeal rendered a judgment following the certification
of two questions by Mosley J. in regard to section 113 of the IRPA
(see Raza et al. v. MCI, 2007 FCA 385). Madam Justice Sharlow, on
behalf of the Court, dismissed the appeal, adopted the reasoning of
Mosley J. (see paragraph 16) and commented on the content of
section 113 of the IRPA (see paragraph 13). She took the time to
state once again that PRRA procedure is not an appeal or an application for
review of the RPD decision given that Parliament clearly intended to limit the
evidence presentable in the context of such a procedure (see
paragraph 12).
[27]
What
Parliament does not want is to have the PRRA application become a disguised
second refugee claim. By limiting the evidence to new information for a refused
refugee claimant’s PRRA application, it is clearly indicated that the intended
objective is to analyze the application for protection taking into
consideration the situation after the RPD decision, all subject to certain
adaptations regarding some earlier evidence according to the wording of
section 113 of the IRPA and the interpretation given by Sharlow J. and
Mosley J.
[28]
Bearing in
mind what is stated above regarding paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA
and the Raza judgment (supra) of the Court of Appeal, I note that
the PRRA officer took the time to analyze the documentation submitted in
support of the PRRA application and that he explained in detail his findings in
regard to its probative value (the credibility of the evidence, while
considering the source and the circumstances surrounding the existence of the
information, its trustworthiness, its element of novelty and its high degree of
importance). He did so by taking into consideration not only the date of the
information but also the aspect of novelty or lack thereof with reference to
the evidence before the RPD, the RPD’s findings and whether or not the
information was available at the time of the RPD hearing as well as whether or
not it was reasonable to expect that she present this information to the RPD.
An analysis such as this satisfies the standards contained under paragraph 113(a)
of the IRPA and the Court has no reason to intervene because the PRRA officer’s
decision was reasonable. Officer Perreault considered the relevant information
and he made the appropriate determinations considering the circumstances of the
matter.
[29]
I would
add, as it had been mentioned in Colindres, supra, in circumstances
similar to this case, that the fact that the applicant disagrees with the
findings of the PRRA officer does not render the PRRA officer’s decision
unreasonable. In my opinion, the applicant in her submissions is in reality
asking the Court to substitute its assessment of the evidence for the
assessment made by the officer. This is not the Court’s role at this stage of
the applicant’s file (Gonzalez v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2006] F.C.J. No. 1592, 2006 FC 1274 at
paragraph 17; Maruthapillai v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 761 at paragraph 13).
(2) Constitutional question: do sections 113
of the IRPA and 167 of the IRPR infringe section 7 of the Charter or
the Canadian Bill of Rights?
[30]
The
applicant raises three points which, in her opinion, challenge the
constitutional validity of section 113 of the IRPA and of section 167
of the IRPR:
-
The
restrictions regarding the admissibility of the new information provided at
paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA violate the rules of fundamental
justice and fairness of section 7 of the Charter;
-
The limits
justifying a viva voce hearing provided at paragraph 113(b) of
the IRPA and at section 167 of the IRPR are contrary to the principles of
fundamental justice protected by section 7 of the Charter;
-
Section 113
of the IRPA and sections 167 and 168 of the IRPR are unconstitutional because
they prevent the applicant from being heard before an independent and impartial
tribunal for her refugee claim;
[31]
The Court
has no judicial obligation to respond to constitutional questions when the
matter does not justify it (see Moysa v. Alberta [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1572,
where the Supreme Court states that it is not bound by such questions when they
are formulated in the context of an appeal). As worded, the questions do not
appear to raise a situation requiring a complex solution. Second, they have
been answered in large part in the case law as we will see. Thirdly, the rules
of interpretation of laws and the administrative law are the appropriate tools
for answering these questions and not necessarily the Charter. Fourth, the
texts of law under review are clear. Fifth, the facts of this matter and the
PRRA decision are not confusing. For all of these reasons, the Court has the
justification necessary to not answer the questions. However, for the simple
purpose of clarification, the Court shall answer those questions succinctly.
[32]
According
to the applicant, paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA breaches the principles
of fundamental justice and fairness protected by section 7 of the Charter
and the Canadian Bill of Rights given that it limits the evidence
admissible for the purposes of a PRRA application to information that is new
after the refusal of the refugee claim by the RPD or rather to information that
was not reasonably available or, if it was, that she could not reasonably have
been expected, under the circumstances, to have presented it to the RPD. The
applicant claims that the limits on the evidence have an impact on the right to
life, liberty and security of asylum seekers and that they do not respect the
principles of fundamental justice protected by section 7 of the Charter.
[33]
A review
of paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA suggests that the PRRA application
is offered to claimants who have been refused refugee status i.e. claimants
whose refugee claims were analyzed, reviewed and decided by the RPD after a
hearing where witnesses were heard and/or evidence was submitted by the
applicant who had the burden of establishing that he or she met the
requirements established by sections 96 and 97 of the IRPA.
[34]
As
mentioned earlier, the PRRA application stage must not be a forum where the
procedure before the RPD is repeated once again. This is not what Parliament
intended. The purpose of an application for protection is to assess the claim
after the RPD has refused the claimant’s refugee claim. From there, the purpose
is to limit the evidence submitted to new information in accordance with
paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA except for the evidence that was not
reasonably available at the time of the RPD hearing or again, if it was, that
it could not reasonably have been expected in the circumstances to have been
submitted to the RPD; the new information must come from new developments in
regard to, for example, the situation in the country for removal, a change in
the applicant’s personal situation, etc…
[35]
It is
evident that the application for protection contemplates life, liberty and
security of the applicant. Overall, the procedure provided by the IRPA
according to the steps (the refugee claim and the RPD decision, the application
for protection, the ultimate application to the removal officer) is indicative
of concern for the principles of natural justice and fairness. Considering all
of the IRPA procedure and the application for protection step, limiting the
PPRA applications to new information under paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA
does not breach the principles of justice and fairness guaranteed by the
Charter.
[36]
As for the
second point of the question, the applicant submits that paragraph 113(b)
of the IRPA and section 167 of the IRPR limiting the right to be heard viva
voce under certain very limited circumstances, breaches the right to be
heard viva voce by the PRRA officer when the life, liberty and security
of the person are in play, thereby breaching the rights protected under
section 7 of the Charter.
[37]
Paragraph
113(b) of the IRPA states clearly and precisely that the PRRA officer
has no obligation to call a hearing, subject to what is provided in the
regulations. This, at section 167 of the IRPR, opens the door to holding
a hearing when the evidence relating to sections 96 and 97 of the
IRPA raise an important question regarding the applicant’s credibility. This
evidence must be significant for the PRRA decision to the point that if this
evidence is admitted it will have a determinative impact on the decision.
[38]
With that
said, it is important to note that the right to a hearing is not an absolute
right. Parliament decides whether a procedure will include a hearing. It did
so when the IRPA was enacted.
[39]
It is also
important to note that the PRRA procedure enables an interested party to make
all the appropriate submissions in writing. This matter is proof of that. The
PRRA officer reviews the application while taking into consideration the
information as presented.
[40]
Indeed,
the Supreme Court in Suresh v. Canada (MCI), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3,
stated that a hearing was not automatic when the case of a person facing
removal to a country where the person was at risk of being tortured was under
review and that the provisions of the IRPA satisfied the principles of natural
justice guaranteed by section 7 of the Charter. Our Court, applying this
approach to PRRA procedure, decided that section 113 of the IRPA and
section 167 of the IRPR, while not conferring a hearing in every case, are
consistent with the principles of fundamental justice and that they do not
breach the fundamental rights provided under section 7 of the Charter (see
Sylla v. Canada (MCI), 2004 FC 475, at paragraph 6 and Iboude v.
Canada (MCI), 2005 FC 1316, at paragraphs 12 and 13).
[41]
I make the
same finding. For these reasons, section 113 of the IRPA and section 167
of the IRPR are consistent with the principles of natural justice protected by
section 7 of the Charter.
[42]
The third
part of the question is to the effect that sections 113 of the IRPA
and 167 and 168 of the IRPR are unconstitutional because they provide
that the contemplated party will not be heard by an independent and impartial
tribunal. All that the applicant states in support of this point is that the
rights of this person are defined by an officer of Citizenship and Immigration
Canada and that this breaches the rules of independence and impartiality.
[43]
In
response, I will repeat what was said in Colindres, supra, and
note that the Federal Court of Appeal already settled this question in Say
v. Solicitor General of Canada, [2005] F.C.J. No. 2079, 2005
FCA 422. In this decision, the Federal Court of Appeal confirmed the
decision of Mr. Justice Gibson, finding that PRRA officers are
independent and impartial. It is important to note that the Supreme Court
refused the application for leave in that matter (see Say v. Canada
(Solicitor General), [2006] S.C.C.A. No.49). Consequently, I make the same
finding.
[44]
Given the
negative finding on each of the three points raised by the constitutional
question, I therefore determine in response to this question that sections 113
of the IRPA and 167 of the IRPR do not breach the principles of natural
justice guaranteed by section 7 of the Charter.
The questions proposed for certification
purposes
[45]
With
questions 1, 2 and 3 aside, the respondent objects to the certification of
questions 4, 5, 6 and 7.
[46]
Given the
reasons of this decision and the recent decision of the Federal Court of Appeal
in Raza, supra, where the Court addressed two questions certified
by Mr. Justice Mosley in the same matter, proposed questions 1 and 2
need not be certified.
[47]
As for
question 3, the Court notes that it was already answered in the judgment of the
Court of Appeal in Raza, supra.
[48]
Question 4
will not be certified. The reference to paragraphs 3(3)(d) and (f)
of the IRPA is noted on simple review of the proposed question. In her
submissions, her constitutional question and her arguments, the applicant did
not rely on these paragraphs. Therefore, the respondent did not have the
opportunity to make his arguments on this subject.
[49]
With
regard to questions 5, 6 and 7, they will not be certified. The fact that one
part raises a Charter issue does not make it so important that the questions
must be certified. The facts of the matter under review, the decision of
officer Perreault, the case law, including that of the Supreme Court, respond
adequately to the judicial review before us. There is nothing sufficiently
important therein to justify the certification of these questions.
[50]
Sections 113
of the IRPA and 167 and 168 of the IRPR are not ambiguous texts and
normally would not require an extensive overview to explain their contents.
Further, the procedure and the steps provided in the IRPA show concern and
preoccupation for ensuring that the applicant is heard before different levels,
but not to the point of doubling the respective tasks of each of them.
Overall, as well as when taking into account each of these levels, the IRPA
procedure is consistent with the principles of natural justice and the rights
conferred by section 7 of the Charter.
[51]
More
specifically, question 5 will not be certified given the reasons contained
herein. In short, the question of the interpretation of paragraph 113(a)
of the IRPA is not ambiguous. The case law (including the even more recent case
law of the Federal Court of Appeal in Raza, supra) already gives ample
guidelines regarding the interpretation to be made as well as the objective
contemplated by the PRRA process. The rules of interpretation of laws and of
administrative law are the tools for understanding paragraph 113(a)
of the IRPA as the reasons of this decision establish.
[52]
With
respect to question 6, once against this question cannot be certified for the
reasons given in this judgment. Succinctly, the right to a hearing is not an
absolute right. The Supreme Court has already ruled on this subject while
addressing different situations (involving PRRA procedure) created by the IRPA
(see Suresh, supra, and Baker v. Canada (MCI) 2 S.C.R. 817, at
paragraph 11). These are situations that in general are similar to a
refugee claim. Further, our Court has applied these principles to PRRA
procedure.
[53]
Question 7
cannot be certified. The applicant’s submissions and arguments (except the
additional submissions) are limited to the issue without unnecessary
elaboration. Further, the case law has already decided the issue of
impartiality and independence in favour of maintaining the PRRA procedure (see Say,
supra, and Satiacum v. MCI [1985] 2 FC 430).
[54]
Considering
the foregoing reasons, the application for judicial review is dismissed and no
question will be certified.
JUDGMENT
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT ORDERS AS
FOLLOWS:
-
The
application for judicial is dismissed.
-
No
question will be certified.
“Simon
Noël”
Certified true
translation
Kelley A. Harvey, BCL,
LLB
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-770-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: AZITA
ADBOLLAHZADEH
and MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION (MCI) et al.
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal, Quebec,
DATE OF HEARING: September 25, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
DATE OF REASONS: December 13, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Johanne Doyon FOR
THE APPLICANT
Christine Bernard FOR
THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Doyon & Associés FOR
THE APPLICANT
Montréal, Quebec,
John Sims, QC FOR
THE RESPONDENT
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
Montréal, Quebec,