Docket: IMM-1158-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1386
Ottawa, Ontario, December 15, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan
BETWEEN:
|
FLAMUR VESELAJ
|
BENAZIRE
VESELAJ
|
ARTUR VESELAJ
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is the judicial review of a failed H&C
application. The case fits well within the teachings of Cepeda-Gutierrez v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1425, 157
FTR 35, particularly paragraph 27 [Cepeda-Gutierrez]:
Finally, I must consider whether the Refugee
Division made this erroneous finding of fact “without regard for the material
before it.” In my view, the evidence was so important to the applicant's case
that it can be inferred from the Refugee Division's failure to mention it in
its reasons that the finding of fact was made without regard to it. This
inference is made easier to draw because the Board's reasons dealt with other
items of evidence indicating that a return would not be unduly harsh. The
inclusion of the "boilerplate" assertion that the Board considered
all the evidence before it is not sufficient to prevent this inference from
being drawn, given the importance of the evidence to the applicant's claim.
II.
Background
[2]
The Applicants are from Kosovo. Flamur and
Benazire are husband and wife and have two children, one of whom is Canadian.
[3]
Their refugee claim was denied and leave to
commence a judicial review of that decision was also denied.
[4]
They then submitted an H&C application which
contained the report of a psychologist, Dr. Davis [1st Report]. The
application was later buttressed with a second set of submissions containing a
statutory declaration of Benazire. The declaration described some of the
horrors she witnessed in Kosovo, including genocidal killings, and the
resulting psychological trauma she experienced.
[5]
This second submission contained another report
from Dr. Davis [2nd Report], which focused on Benazire’s psychological
problems. The 2nd Report detailed the potential impact of a return
to her home country given that the trauma and resulting depression and PTSD
arose from her experiences in Kosovo.
[6]
In the H&C decision, the Officer said that
he considered the report of Dr. Davis that indicates that both Applicants
suffer depression and that Benazire suffers from PTSD.
[7]
The Officer deals with the other H&C
criteria but the decision on those matters is less relevant to this judicial
review.
[8]
The Applicants argue:
1.
that the Officer ignored key evidence, being the
second submissions containing the statutory declaration and the 2nd
Report;
2.
if the Officer did see that evidence, he failed
to adequately address it especially as it contradicts his findings; and
3.
if the Officer did address the evidence, he
failed to consider its relevance to the issue of hardship.
The overall result
is an unreasonable decision.
III.
Analysis
[9]
The standard of review was agreed as “reasonableness”.
[10]
The critical issue in this judicial review was
whether crucial information was ignored and if not, whether the decision was
reasonable.
[11]
Again, Cepeda-Gutierrez speaks to the
first matter at paragraph 17:
However, the more important the evidence
that is not mentioned specifically and analyzed in the agency's reasons, the
more willing a court may be to infer from the silence that the agency made an
erroneous finding of fact “without
regard to the evidence”: …
[12]
The Officer never specifically addresses the
statutory declaration or the 2nd Report. The Officer does refer to “the report” in reference to PTSD affecting the wife.
[13]
Despite the fine efforts of Respondent’s counsel
to persuade me that, read in context, “the report”
must be a reference to the 2nd Report, it is not sufficiently clear
that it is.
It
is equally plausible that the reference is to the 1st Report, which also
discusses PTSD (albeit not as extensively as the 2nd Report). On
such a critical matter, a court cannot be left guessing.
[14]
Moreover, there is no real discussion of the
details of the 2nd Report, particularly on areas where the Officer
reached conclusions at odds with the contents of that report. This is suggestive
of little or no focus on critical evidence.
[15]
This finding is sufficient to grant the judicial
review.
[16]
The Respondent says that the Officer did pay
attention to the 2nd Report when he concluded that Benazire had been
able to live with PTSD in relative safety for a few years before coming to
Canada.
[17]
However, this finding was made in the context of
physical risk considerations in the H&C application. The real purport of
the 2nd Report and the related submissions is the psychological risk
of return to the place of psychological trauma. That matter was not assessed
and it ought to have been.
IV.
Conclusion
[18]
Therefore, this judicial review will be granted,
the original decision quashed and the matter remitted to a different officer
for a new determination of the H&C application as may be updated.
[19]
There is no question for certification.