Docket: IMM-360-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1174
Toronto, Ontario, October 16, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
|
RUIJIAN CHEN
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Ruijian Chen’s claim for refugee protection was
rejected by the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board on credibility grounds. The RPD had several reasons for finding that Mr. Chen
was not at risk in China as a practitioner of Falun Gong, one of which was that
a document purporting to be a Notice of Arrest relating to Mr. Chen’s father
was a fraudulent document.
[2]
The Refugee Appeal Division upheld the RPD’s
finding as to the fraudulent nature of the Notice of Arrest, albeit on a different
basis. Mr. Chen says that this amounted to a new issue being considered by the
RAD, and that it was procedurally unfair for the RAD to find the document to be
fraudulent for a different reason than that cited by the RPD without first
giving him notice of the RAD’s concerns and the chance to address those
concerns.
[3]
The genuineness of the Notice of Arrest was put squarely
into issue by Mr. Chen in his appeal. As a result, the RAD was required to
review the evidence and to come to its own conclusion as to the authenticity of
the document. The genuineness of the document was thus not a “new issue” on the appeal, with the result that the
RAD did not act in a procedurally unfair manner in dismissing the appeal.
I.
Analysis
[4]
Mr. Chen’s argument raises a question of
procedural fairness. Where an issue of procedural fairness arises, the Court’s
task is to determine whether the process followed by the decision-maker
satisfied the level of fairness required in all of the circumstances: see Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para. 43, [2009] 1
S.C.R. 339.
[5]
Two issues were considered by the RPD in
assessing the genuineness of the Notice of Arrest: the fact that the document
cited an inapplicable section of the Criminal Procedure Law of China (CPLC)
as authority for the arrest of Mr. Chen’s father, and the fact that no address
was given for the detention centre at which the father was allegedly being
held.
[6]
The RPD was prepared to accept that the Notice
of Arrest referred to the applicable section of the CPLC under an
earlier version of the law, and that it was possible that the document merely
referred to an out-of-date version of the statute. However, given that Mr. Chen
had testified that the purpose of a Notice of Arrest was to advise family
members of the detention of a relative, the RPD found that the absence of an
address for the detention centre called into question the authenticity of the
document.
[7]
Mr. Chen appealed the RPD’s decision to the RAD,
alleging, amongst other things, that the Refugee Protection Division had erred
in finding that the Notice of Arrest was not genuine. The RAD upheld the RPD’s
finding, albeit on different grounds.
[8]
The RAD found that there was no evidentiary
foundation for the RPD’s finding that a Notice of Arrest would necessarily
include the address of the detention centre where an individual is being held.
However, the RAD disagreed with the RPD that the reference to an incorrect
provision of the CPLC in the Notice of Arrest could be explained by the
Notice being out of date. In coming to this conclusion, the Board noted that
the documentary evidence indicated that the CPLC had been amended in
2012. As a consequence, the RAD found that it was reasonable to assume that all
Notices of Arrest would be have been updated by September of 2013 to refer to
the amended law.
[9]
Mr. Chen does not take issue with the
reasonableness of the RAD’s finding in this regard. What he says is that RAD
denied him procedural fairness by raising and determining a new issue – the
Notice of Arrest’s reference to an inapplicable section of the CPLC –
without providing him with notice that this issue was under consideration and
giving him the opportunity to make submissions on the issue.
[10]
The Supreme Court of Canada addressed the
question of what constitutes a “new issue” on an
appeal in R. v. Mian, 2014 SCC 54, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 689. There the Court
stated that an issue is ‘new’ where “it raises a new
basis for potentially finding error in the decision under appeal beyond the
grounds of appeal as framed by the parties”. The Court went on to
observe that “[g]enuinely new issues are legally and
factually distinct from the grounds of appeal raised by the parties … and
cannot reasonably be said to stem from the issues as framed by the parties”:
at para. 30.
[11]
Although the comments in Mian were made
in the context of a criminal case, the principles established by the Supreme
Court have been applied in immigration proceedings: see for example, Ching
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 725 at para. 71,
[2015] F.C.J. No. 722.
[12]
It is incorrect for Mr. Chen to state that the
only issue before the RAD was whether there was an evidentiary basis for the
RPD’s finding regarding the missing address for the detention centre. Mr.
Chen’s appeal squarely put the authenticity of the Notice of Arrest in issue on
the appeal, and what he was seeking was a finding by the RAD that the Notice of
Arrest was a genuine document. That was the issue that the RAD considered, and
it was not a “new issue” as contemplated by Mian,
as it was not “factually distinct” from the
issue as framed by Mr. Chen, nor can it be said to not reasonably stem from
that issue.
[13]
It should also be noted that this was not a case
where the RAD came up with an entirely new reason for finding the document to
be fraudulent – one that could not have reasonably been anticipated by Mr.
Chen. The RPD made two findings with respect to the Notice of Arrest, and Mr.
Chen should have been aware that the reference to the CPLC would be a
live issue on the appeal.
[14]
The RAD reviewed both of the Board’s findings
relating to the Notice of Arrest, it conducted its own analysis of the
evidence, and it came to its own conclusion as to the significance to the
evidence. This is what Mr. Chen expected the RAD to do in considering the
appeal, and it is the proper role of the RAD: see Huruglica v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799 at paras. 39-55, [2014]
4 F.C.R. 811.
[15]
Finally, I would also note that Mr. Chen has
not, in any event, demonstrated that he was prejudiced by the failure of the
RAD to give him an opportunity to address the issue of the Notice of Arrest’s
reference to an inapplicable section of the CPLC. Mr. Chen asserts that
had he known that the erroneous statutory reference in the Notice of Arrest was
in issue, he would have made submissions as to the notorious failure of the
Chinese police to follow criminal procedures. These submissions had, however,
already been made by him to the RAD, with the result that prejudice resulting
from the lack of notice has not been established.
II.
Conclusion
[16]
For these reasons, the application for judicial
review is dismissed. I agree with the parties that the case is fact-specific,
and does not raise a question for certification.