Docket: IMM-2475-13
Citation:
2014 FC 797
Ottawa, Ontario, August 12, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Roy
BETWEEN:
|
DUSAN KOKY, MILENA KOKYOVA, SARA KOKYOVA, MAXIMILIAN KOKY, LUKAS
KOKY, AND TOMAS KOKY
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
UPON an
application for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division [RPD] dated March 14, 2013, pursuant to section 72 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA];
[2]
AND UPON
considering fully the representations made by counsel for both sides; for the
reasons that follow, and in spite of the able argument presented on behalf of
the applicants, the application for judicial review must be dismissed.
[3]
In a well articulated decision of the RPD, the
application made by Dusan Koky and his wife Milena Kokyova, together with their
four children, for refugee protection, pursuant to sections 96 and 97 of the
IRPA, was rejected. The applicants contend that the RPD was mistaken in
applying incorrectly the law as to state protection and the credibility of the
principal applicants.
[4]
The applicants had centered their attack on the
alleged deficiencies about the state protection that can be afforded to
citizens of Slovakia of Roma ethnicity. They would want for that issue to be
determinative of their judicial review application. However, this Court would
conclude that the applicants have not satisfied their burden of showing that
the finding that adequate state protection was available is unreasonable.
[5]
In essence, the applicants are artfully attempting
to turn the burden that is theirs onto the shoulders of the RPD. By relying on
case law that has found to be unreasonable the conclusion that adequate state
protection was available, they would want for people of Roma ethnicity who are
citizens of Slovakia to be eligible for refugee protection in this country on
that sole basis. It would be for the decision-maker to show, for all intents
and purposes, that adequate state protection for Slovak citizens of Roma
ethnicity is available. In my view, the logic of the law is quite different.
[6]
The applicants have spent a significant amount
of time trying to attack findings made about state protection in this case. The
burden is actually on the applicants on judicial review to show that it was
unreasonable for the RPD to have concluded that the burden on the applicants before
the RPD to rebut the presumption of adequate state protection in Slovakia had not been discharged.
[7]
The RPD found that there was, on this record, a
preponderance of evidence that the Slovak Republic provides adequate state
protection. It was the applicants’ burden to show, by clear and convincing
evidence, the unwillingness or lack of ability to protect them in an adequate
way. They failed before the RPD.
[8]
Instead, the applicants tried to argue on the
judicial review application that it was not necessary to seek meaningful state
protection, relying basically on Canada (Attorney General) v Ward,
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 689:
… Moreover, it would seem to defeat the purpose
of international protection if a claimant would be required to risk his or her
life seeking ineffective protection of a state, merely to demonstrate that
ineffectiveness.
Like Hathaway, I prefer to formulate this
aspect of the test for fear of persecution as follows: only in situations in
which state protection "might reasonably have been forthcoming", will
the claimant's failure to approach the state for protection defeat his claim. Put
another way, the claimant will not meet the definition of "Convention
refugee" where it is objectively unreasonable for the claimant not to have
sought the protection of his home authorities; otherwise, the claimant need not
literally approach the state.
[9]
However, there was not even an attempt to show
that the situation encountered by the applicants could rise to the seriousness
of the circumstances of Mr Ward. I share the view of Mosley J, of this Court,
who stated recently that each case involving state protection turns on its
particular circumstances (Horvath v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 670 [Horvath]). In that particular case, the applicants’
argument seems to have been that since other cases emanating from this Court had
found that judicial review had to be granted with respect to Hungarian Roma, it
must have been that state protection is inadequate. It would have followed, the
argument goes, that the RPD in that case must have been mistaken. The Court
declined to follow that reasoning in Horvath and I would do the same in
this case.
[10]
In my view, such an argument misapprehends the
role of the Court when conducting judicial reviews. The Court is invited to
control the legality of the decision made by the administrative tribunal, not
substitute its assessment of the evidence for that of the tribunal or to
reweigh the evidence. Judicial reviews that may have found state protection
lacking are based on a set of facts presented to the decision-maker in that
case. A court that finds in favour of an applicant does so on the basis of the
evidence before the tribunal, concluding that the evidence does not support a
reasonable finding of adequate state protection. As is now recognized, “certain questions that come before administrative tribunals do
not lend themselves to one specific, particular result” (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190). Thus, a reviewing court does not
intervene, if the review standard is reasonableness, as long as the decision
under review falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes.
[11]
It is clear that the standard of review for
findings on state protection is reasonableness (Horvath, supra).
Since decisions must be examined on a case-by-case basis, unless it is shown
that these applicants are in a situation commensurate with that of Mr Ward in
that now famous case, they had to show on judicial review that the RPD findings
about state protection were unreasonable. One cannot rely exclusively on other
findings of unreasonableness, or for that matter on findings of reasonableness,
in other cases.
[12]
There has not been an attempt by the applicants
to satisfy that burden on the judicial review. No attempt was made to compare
the circumstances of these applicants to the situation described in Ward,
supra. There was no attempt either at showing that the conclusion
reached by the RPD in this case with the evidence presented by the parties was
unreasonable. The position was rather that, given that other cases had found on
judicial review that decisions of the RPD were not unreasonable on the issue of
state protection, these applicants did not have to risk their lives seeking
ineffective protection of the state. On the facts of this case, it cannot be
said that the applicants’ circumstances are similar to those of Mr Ward. Furthermore,
the availability of state protection is to be assessed on the basis of the
evidence before the RPD. It follows that the Court cannot intervene, let alone
weigh again the evidence, something that is not appropriate on judicial review.
[13]
As acknowledged by the applicants, the finding
of state protection is determinative. Nevertheless, the RPD examined carefully
the credibility of the principal applicants and a few comments may be apposite.
[14]
The review by a court of the credibility
findings made by an administrative tribunal is to be governed by the standard
of reasonableness. Thus, as for the issue of state protection, it will be the
applicants’ burden to satisfy a Court that the decision rendered is not
reasonable in that it does not fall within the range of possible, acceptable
outcomes.
[15]
Having reviewed the record, it strikes me that
the RPD had ample reasons to find significant credibility gaps. The applicants
tried, without success in my view, to challenge the credibility findings of the
RPD because, they claim, credibility findings may not be made on the basis of a
lack of corroborative documentary evidence.
[16]
It will not be necessary to comment on the old
case law cited by the applicants in support of that proposition. That is
because that was a less than significant issue in this case, the RPD having
already found the applicants not credible. And it was clearly open to the RPD
to so find on this record. Furthermore, I am less than convinced that a lack of
supporting documentation has to be ignored.
[17]
The RPD found that, on its own, the credibility
of the applicants was clearly lacking and that lack of credibility was not
redeemed by documentation, given that there was very little that was offered in
support of the claimants’ story. In fact, it is the version of events that is
implausible, where the credibility of a witness is challenged and documentary or
other corroborative evidence is not offered in support. Indeed, there may be
circumstances in which a reasonable expectation would exist that a claimant would
have in his possession, or would procure, documentary evidence readily
available. An otherwise credible witness is not likely to be impeached by a
lack of corroborative evidence when the story stands on its own. However, the
witness whose version of events is already somewhat implausible will not see
his credibility enhanced by not providing other evidence readily available. In
circumstances like these, the trier of fact may reasonably infer that the
claimant is seeking to hide that which may expose facts unfavourable to the
witness. Such a proposition appears to me to be based on common sense and human
experience. However, as high an authority as Wigmore on Evidence (James
H. Chadbourn, rev, Wigmore on Evidence (Boston: Little, Brown and Company,
1979) vol 2, §285) makes the point vividly:
§285. Failure to produce evidence, as
indicating unfavorable tenor of evidence: (1) In general. The consciousness indicated by conduct may be, not an indefinite
one affecting the weakness of the cause at large, but a specific one concerning
the defects of a particular element in the cause. The failure to bring
before the tribunal some circumstance, document, or witness, when either the
party himself or his opponent claims that the facts would thereby be elucidated,
serves to indicate, as the most natural inference, that the party fears to do
so; and this fear is some evidence that the circumstance or document or
witness, if brought, would have exposed facts unfavorable to the party. These
inferences, to be sure, cannot fairly be made except upon certain conditions;
and they are also open always to explanation by circumstances which make some
other hypothesis a more natural one than the party’s fear of exposure. But the
propriety of such an inference in general is not doubted.
The nonproduction of evidence that would
naturally have been produced by an honest and therefore fearless claimant
permits the inference that its tenor is unfavorable to the party’s cause.
Ever since the case of the Chimney Sweeper’s Jewel, this has been a recognized
principle:
[18]
The same general proposition was endorsed by the
Supreme Court in Lévesque v Comeau et al, [1970] S.C.R. 1010; Pigeon J, for
the majority, wrote:
… She alone could bring before the Court the
evidence of those facts and she failed to do it. In my opinion, the rule to be
applied in such circumstances is that a Court must presume that such evidence
would adversely affect her case. The fact that those witnesses all live in Montreal does not make the rule any less applicable. Appellant Lola Levesque should, if
necessary, have applied for a rogatory commission… [pages 1012-1013]
For another illustration of the rule, see
also Johnston v Murchison, [1995] PEIJ No 23 (QL), 53 ACWS (3d)
786 at para 36.
[19]
Evidently, the use of the failure to produce
evidence must be done with caution. Its weight will vary with different
circumstances. Whether corroborative evidence is available is a question of
fact to be determined in each case and its relative importance must be assessed
with care. Drawing the appropriate inference must also be done reasonably. However,
it would be incorrect in my view to state that the failure to produce evidence cannot
be of use.
[20]
Furthermore, the examination conducted by the
RPD was in no way microscopic or selectively engineered to defeat the claim as
alleged by the applicants. Some statements made by the applicants at their
hearing were central to their claim. However, this part of the story was not
offered originally and it is difficult to argue with the RPD when it concludes
that “I find, on a balance of probabilities, that the
claimants have included this allegation in an attempt to bolster their claim.”
There was nothing microscopic about the examination of that allegation. Indeed,
the RPD found later that “on a balance of probabilities,
that her testimony relating to the contrary, having arisen only after
credibility concerns were indicated to her at the hearing, were forwarded in an
attempt to explain away the numerous discrepancies and omissions central to her
claim.” An examination of the transcripts supports that finding.
[21]
Actually, it was reasonable to find significant
discrepancies between the Personal Information Form [PIF] that was filled out
with the assistance of counsel and the evidence that was given before the RPD.
That made the RPD conclude that, “[b]ased on the totality
of the evidence as it relates to the PIF, I find that the claimants have not
been honest or forthright and I draw a severe negative inference with regards
to their credibility as a result. […] I do not accept that they omitted the
most traumatic and significant events, yet were able to recall other, less
significant, events in some detail.” These findings are in my view
perfectly reasonable.
[22]
The presumption of state protection had to be
rebutted with clear and convincing evidence. That burden was that of the
applicants throughout the process. They did not show on this judicial review
that the findings made by the RPD were unreasonable. The same can be said of
the credibility findings. As a result, the application for judicial review is
dismissed.
[23]
The parties did not suggest that a serious
question of general importance ought to be stated.