Date: 20080327
Docket: IMM-2505-07
Citation: 2008 FC 381
Ottawa, Ontario, March 27,
2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Dawson
BETWEEN:
HUI MIN LIN
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1] Hui Min Lin is
a 19 year old citizen of the People’s Republic of China (China) who claimed
refugee protection because she says she fears persecution by the Public
Security Bureau (PSB). The Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board (RPD or Board) dismissed Ms. Lin's claim because it found her evidence to
be incredible and implausible. This application for judicial review is allowed
because I find the majority of the Board's credibility findings were made in
reviewable error.
Ms. Lin's Claim
[2] Ms.
Lin testified that, on January 10, 2006, the local government sent a notice to her
father indicating that the family’s land would be confiscated and their home
demolished because the land was needed for a new railway. The notice also
indicated that full compensation would be paid for the land. However, the
actual compensation received was only approximately one quarter of the value of
the land. Complaints regarding the amount of compensation were unsuccessful.
Ms. Lin’s father then joined the Chinese Democratic Party (CDP) because he was
convinced that the government was corrupt.
[3] On
September 2, 2006, agents of the PSB raided a meeting of the CDP that Ms. Lin’s
father was attending. He managed to escape, but remained in hiding.
[4] On
September 3, 2006, a PSB agent came to the family home and questioned Ms. Lin,
her mother, her brother, and her sister. The agent was seeking information
about the whereabouts of Ms. Lin’s father.
[5] On
September 5, 2006, a PSB agent returned to the family home. Ms. Lin was alone
at the time, and she was questioned regarding her father’s whereabouts and
activities. Ms. Lin says that she argued with the PSB agent, saying that the
government was unfair and pushed her father to join another party. Ms. Lin
also says that the PSB agent responded by warning her that she might be
considered an accomplice and should not attempt to flee.
[6] Upon
learning of this exchange with the PSB agent, Ms. Lin’s mother sent her to live
with her aunt.
[7] On September 6, 2006, a PSB agent returned
to the family home and indicated that Ms. Lin was considered to be an
accomplice of her father. The agent ordered Ms. Lin to report to the PSB
office.
[8] Ms.
Lin’s family arranged for her to leave China. Ms. Lin arrived in Canada on
September 20, 2006.
The Decision of the Board
[9] The
RPD wrote:
The claimant’s
narrative concerning the loss of family land, the inadequate compensation and
the unwillingness of governments at a number of levels to respond to her
father’s demand for compensation increase was supported by numerous
corroborative documents. There is no reason to doubt the truthfulness of the
claimant’s narrative in this regard.
Although the Chinese
Democratic Party (CDP) is virtually non-existent in China as a result of
government repression and because no corroborative evidence was disclosed by
the claimant, the narrative of her father’s decision to join the party, the
alleged raid on a party meeting, her father’s escape and his need to go into
hiding, cannot be rebutted by any evidence available to the panel. However,
the relationship of the claimant to her father’s alleged troubles, and her
alleged pursuit by agents of the PSB has not been supported by either
documentary or oral evidence. [footnote omitted]
[10] The
Board went on to make two principal implausibility findings:
(1)
First, the RPD concluded that it was reasonable to expect that the PSB
would have arrested Ms. Lin on its second visit on September 5, 2006, if its
officers believed, as Ms. Lin testified, that she might be an accomplice. In
this regard, the RPD noted that the PSB had a well-earned reputation for
arresting persons believed to be involved in illegal activities. The RPD also
noted that Ms. Lin had provided no corroborating evidence to support her claim.
(2)
Second, the RPD concluded that the PSB’s lack of interest in Ms. Lin’s
other family members seriously undermined her allegation that she was being
pursued by the PSB. The RPD noted that all the members of Ms. Lin’s family had
been interviewed by the PSB, that they all responded that they did not know the
whereabouts of Ms. Lin’s father, and that nothing had happened to them. The
RPD also noted that the documentary evidence indicated that Chinese authorities
sometimes arrested and harassed relatives of persons being pursued for illegal
activities.
Standard of Review
[11] This
case was argued before the Supreme Court of Canada released its reasons in Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9. Thus, the Court has not had the
benefit of submissions as to whether the appropriate standard of review to be
applied to the RPD's credibility findings is that set out in paragraph 18.1(4)(d)
of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, or is reasonableness, or
whether the two standards are similar in this context.
[12] For
the purpose of this application, I am satisfied that the majority of the RPD's
credibility findings do not withstand scrutiny, even if reviewed on the
standard of "perverse or capricious manner or without regard for the
material before it."
[13] It
follows that I need not decide this issue at this time.
Application of the Standard
of Review to the Board's Decision
[14] It
is settled law that the RPD cannot disbelieve sworn testimony when there exists
no valid reason to doubt its truthfulness. The RPD errs when it finds an
applicant to be incredible simply because he or she is not able to provide
documentary evidence corroborating their claim. See, for example, Ahortor
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1993), 65
F.T.R. 137 (T.D.) at paragraph 45.
[15] Bearing
those principles in mind, the two paragraphs of the RPD's analysis quoted above
are troubling because they demonstrate that Ms. Lin's testimony about the
expropriation of the land and the inadequate compensation was accepted because
it was corroborated. Her testimony about her father's response was accepted
because it could not be rebutted. However, Ms. Lin's testimony about her
own difficulties was rejected because it was not corroborated.
[16] This
articulation of the RPD’s reasons shows that it erred in law with respect to
the treatment of Ms. Lin's evidence.
[17] Turning
to the Board’s first implausibility finding, given the documentary evidence
about the brutality of the PSB and its resort to arbitrary arrest and
detention, this finding was supported by the evidence and therefore was open to
the Board.
[18] However,
the Board's second inference - that the PSB's lack of interest in Ms. Lin's
family members undermined her claim - missed the important point that she was
the only member of the family who spoke out against the government and was
considered to be her father's accomplice. Further, the evidence did not
establish that, in all cases, relatives of persons being pursued by the PSB
were harassed. This implausibility finding was not supported by the evidence
and is therefore perverse, capricious, and unreasonable.
[19] The
RPD went on to suggest, albeit in passing, that, after Ms. Lin's mother
chastised her for speaking out to the PSB, she and her mother could have gone
to the PSB to explain that Ms. Lin's comments were simply a reflection of a
daughter's loyalty to her father and her family's unhappiness about the loss of
their land.
[20] With
respect, this observation ignores the evidence before the Board regarding the
reputation of the PSB. It is difficult to understand how the RPD could
reasonably expect this type of behaviour. At the time, Ms. Lin was a 17½ year
old girl with the equivalent of a grade 8 education. The PSB was a security
force known to coerce victims, take persons into custody without due cause, and
mentally and physically abuse victims and perpetrators.
Conclusion
[21] As
a result of the RPD's error of law with respect to its treatment of Ms. Lin’s
evidence and its flawed implausibility finding, the application for judicial
review is allowed.
[22] Counsel
posed no question for certification, and I agree that no question arises on
this record.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1. The application for judicial review is allowed and the
decision of the Refugee Protection Division dated June 6, 2007, is hereby set
aside.
2. The matter is remitted to the Refugee Protection Division for
redetermination by a differently constituted panel in accordance with these
reasons.
“Eleanor
R. Dawson”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-2505-07
STYLE
OF CAUSE: HUI
MIN LIN v.THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF HEARING: TORONTO, ONTARIO
DATE OF HEARING: MARCH 5, 2008
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: DAWSON, J.
DATED: MARCH 27, 2008
APPEARANCES:
DIANE COULTHARD FOR
THE APPLICANT
BERNARD ASSAN FOR
THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
DIANE COULTHARD FOR
THE APPLICANT
BARRISTER AND
SOLICITOR
TORONTO, ONTARIO
JOHN H. SIMS, Q.C. FOR
THE RESPONDENT
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA