Date: 20080918
Docket: IMM-989-08
Citation: 2008 FC 1043
OTTAWA, Ontario, September 18,
2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Max M. Teitelbaum
BETWEEN:
DA HUA LIAO
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant seeks judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division (RPD), dated January 18, 2008, that he is neither a Convention refugee
nor a person in need of protection.
[2]
Mr.
Liao is a Chinese citizen who claims to fear persecution at the hands of the
Public Safety Bureau (PSB) due to his membership in an underground Christian
church. He asserts that he joined the church on March 27, 2005 and was a regular
attendee. He states that he was able to escape a raid by the PSB on May 21,
2006 because he was acting as lookout at the time. Two church members were allegedly
arrested and the applicant went into hiding. He fled China and arrived
in Canada on June 15,
2006, making a claim for refugee protection shortly thereafter.
[3]
The
RPD accepted that Mr. Liao was a citizen of China but found
his story not to be credible on the basis of implausibilities and
inconsistencies between the applicant’s personal information form (PIF) and his
testimony. The Board member found that the applicant was not a member of an
underground church and that the authorities were not seeking him.
[4]
The
applicant asserts that the RPD came to unreasonable conclusions on the basis of
the evidence before it or on a misapprehension of that evidence.
[5]
I
accept that the standard of reasonableness described in Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, is to be applied, for the purposes of judicial review of findings
of fact.
[6]
The
applicant points to a number of specific findings in the Panel’s decision which
he asserts are based on a misapprehension of the facts of his case. These
include the reasons he provided for refusing to practice his Christianity at
the churches registered with the government, which were that those churches put
the Communist party first, not that their members were required to pledge
loyalty to the party first as opposed to God, as described by the Panel member
in the decision. The applicant submits that this misapprehension on the part
of the Panel results in a fatal error as the applicant’s right to practice his
religion openly and freely forms a mutually exclusive basis for his claim.
[7]
The
applicant also questions the negative inferences drawn by the RPD from his leaving
certain details out of his PIF, claiming that he believed he could provide the
additional evidence at the hearing. He submits that neither the second visit
of the police to his house nor his follow-up phone call to verify whether the
car which caused him to warn his colleagues was, in fact, a PSB vehicle was an
event which caused him to make his refugee claim. The negative inference drawn
by the Panel from his failure to include these details on his PIF was therefore
erroneous. The Panel member should also have accepted the applicant’s evidence
that he believed he could provide these details at the hearing.
[8]
The
respondent counters that the Court should show due deference to the expertise
of the RPD and that the applicant simply failed to establish his claim to the
satisfaction of the Board. The respondent holds that the conclusion drawn by
the Board was one open to it and within the range of reasonable answers
available. Given the many reasons on which the Panel found the applicant not
to be credible, no single factor was determinative. The respondent submits
that even if the RPD was in error in its conclusion that the applicant could
worship at a government church, this finding is not central to the ultimate
decision that the applicant was not a member of an underground church which was
raided by the PSB. The respondent argues, however, that it was not so much an
error of the RPD as a failure of the applicant to meet his onus of establishing
his claim.
[9]
The
respondent also asserts that the RPD is permitted to consider the failure of an
applicant to mention all important facts of his or her claim in the PIF, which
goes to credibility. This is especially true where the applicant’s explanation
for the omission was contradictory, as in the instant case, where the applicant
said first that he did not include the details because he forgot them then that
he thought his could give more detailed evidence in his oral testimony.
[10]
I
agree with the respondent that there are no findings in the decision of the RPD
which are perverse, capricious or based on a misapprehension of the evidence before
it. The applicant asks this Court to reweigh the evidence and come to an
opposite conclusion. This is a judicial review, not an appeal. The decision
of the RPD was open to it on the evidence before it and I am satisfied that the
Court should not intervene.
[11]
I
would also note that the Panel found that it could not accept that the claimant
would be prevented from practicing his religion should he be returned to China as the only
evidence which was provided to that effect was “third-hand hearsay evidence”.
The applicant claimed to have been told about the practices of the registered
churches by members of the underground church to which he claimed to belong,
but had not done any independent investigation on his own. The Panel member
was free to prefer the documentary evidence to the unsupported allegations of
the claimant.
[12]
The
applicant has pointed to specific passages within the documentary evidence which
run contrary to the Panel member’s finding, but it is trite law that a tribunal
is presumed to have considered all the evidence before it absent significant
indicia that this is not the case. I do not see that the passage highlighted
by the applicant, which refers to doctrinal restrictions on the leaders of
registered churches in China, is a full answer to the finding of the Panel that
he would be prevented from practicing Christianity in China. I do not
agree with the applicant that the Panel’s decision is based on a
misapprehension of the facts.
[13]
The
application for judicial review is denied. No question was submitted for
certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that the application for
judicial review is dismissed.
"Max M. Teitelbaum"
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-989-08
STYLE OF CAUSE: Da
Hua Liao v. The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: September
2, 2008
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: TEITELBAUM D.J.
DATED: September
18, 2008
APPEARANCES:
Shelly Levine
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Eleanor Elstub
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Levine
Associates
Toronto,
Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|