Docket: IMM-1038-14
Citation:
2015 FC 374
Ottawa, Ontario, March 24, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice LeBlanc
BETWEEN:
|
BARRE FARAH GELDON
|
Applicant
|
and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant seeks judicial review of a
decision of the Refugee Appeal Division (RAD) confirming the decision of the
Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada that the Applicant is neither a Convention refugee nor a person in need
of protection within the meaning of sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 (Act).
[2]
The Applicant is a citizen of Somalia. He is a widower and father of three children. His wife died in a car accident in
September of 2011. He arrived in Canada in May 2013 and filed for refugee
protection a few weeks later. His children remained in Somalia.
[3]
The Applicant claims to be a Sunni-Muslim and a
member of a minority group, the Tumaal tribe. He fears persecution from a
radical Islamic fundamentalist group, Al Shabab, for starting a relationship
with a divorced woman following the death of his wife. He says that Al Shabab
came after them for being in an adulterous relationship which caused this woman
to be stoned to death. As this woman was from another tribe, he also fears
reprisals from the members of her tribe who hold him responsible for her
death. Finally, the Applicant alleges having been targeted by Al Shabab in 2010
for owning a video store providing material contrary to their beliefs.
[4]
The RPD rejected the Applicant’s refugee
protection claim after finding he was not credible in a number of respects,
including his membership in the minority Tumaal clan, his reasons for leaving Somalia and his alleged relationship with the divorced woman.
[5]
The Applicant appealed that decision to the RAD.
The issue of concern to the Court at this time is how the RAD defined the
standard of review it should employ in the circumstances of the appeal before
it. The relevant text from the decision on this issue reads as follows:
[41] The appellant has made no
submissions as to the appropriate standard of review the RAD should employ in
the circumstances of this appeal.
[42] When considering such standards
with regard to the judicial review of administrative tribunal determinations,
the Supreme Court of Canada (the SCC) in Dunsmuir held that a standard
of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the
standard of review applicable to a specific issue before a review court is well
settled by past jurisprudence, a reviewing court may adopt that standard of
review. It is when that search proves fruitless that a reviewing court must
undertake a consideration of factors comprising the standard of review
analysis.
[43] The RAD is a new appellate
administrative tribunal about which, to the best of my knowledge, the Federal
Court has yet to comment on the question of what standard of review the RAD
should apply under various circumstances that might come before it.
[44] However, some RAD decisions which,
inter alia, set out detailed analysis establishing standards of review
to be applied by the RAD, have now been made publicly available.
[45] In my assessment, the issues
raised by the appellant in this case concern issues of fact or of mixed fact
and law. The RAD has previously determined that appeals based on such are to
be assessed on a reasonableness standard. I agree with those conclusions and
will apply that standard in this case.
[46] In assessing reasonability, the
Supreme Court of Canada, in Dunsmuir noted in paragraph 47 of its
decision:
In judicial review, reasonableness is
concerned mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process. But it is also concerned
with whether the decision falls within range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[47] The SCC made clear that on
judicial review a court should not lightly interfere with a decision, even when
the decision may not have been the one which the reviewing court would have
reached on its own. As the SCC noted further in its subsequent decision in Khosa:
There may be more than one reasonable
outcome. However, as long as the process and the outcome fit comfortably with
the principles of justification, transparency and intelligibility, it is not
open to a reviewing court to substitute its own view of a preferable outcome.
[6]
At paragraph 104 of its decision, the RAD
concluded that, overall, “the conclusions drawn by the
RPD were reasonable as that word has been interpreted by the SCC in Dunsmuir.”
As a result, the RAD confirmed the RPD determination that the Applicant was not
a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection.
II.
Issue
[7]
The issue to be determined in this case is the
appropriate type of review to be undertaken by the RAD, as required by the Act,
when adjudicating an appeal from an RPD decision.
[8]
Given my answer to that question, it will not be
necessary to decide whether the RAD’s decision on the merits of the case is
open to review.
III.
Analysis
[9]
As the RAD correctly points out, when it issued
its decision in February 2014, this Court had yet to comment on the question of
the type of review the RAD should apply when reviewing a decision from the
RPD. The same is true of the parties when they filed their written
submissions.
[10]
However, the Court has now had the opportunity
to decide on this issue and to certify questions for the Federal Court of Appeal
to answer. In so doing, the Court has systematically rejected the position
taken by the RAD which has consistently been, as is the case here, that its
role is to review the decisions of the RPD on a reasonableness standard of review,
as this standard has been defined in Dunsmuir, above. The Court has
arrived at that result whether it has reviewed the RAD’s position on this issue
on the standard of correctness or on the standard of reasonableness (Iyamuremye
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 494; Triastcin
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 975; Akuffo
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1063; Alvarez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 702; Eng
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 711; Njeukam
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 859; Yetna
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 858; Spasoja
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 913; Huruglica
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799; Diarra
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1009; Guardado
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 953; Alyafi
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 952; Djossou
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1080).
[11]
On December 19, 2014, in Aloulou c Canada (Ministre de la Citoyenneté et de l’Immigration),2014 CF 1236, I expressed the view that
the RAD’s position regarding its role as an appellate statutory body offended
what Parliament intended that role to be and was, as a result, not legally defensible.
I summarized, at paragraph 52 of that decision, what appears to me to be the
consensus developed among the judges of this Court as to the justification for
rejecting the approach advocated by the RAD:
- To conceive the standard of review to be applied by the RAD as being
similar to the reasonableness standard used in the context of judicial review
of decisions from administrative tribunals, amounts to a mere duplication
of the role of the RAD and that of the Court;
- Such duplication is incompatible with the responsibilities and
powers that Parliament vested in the RAD, making it a specialized administrative
tribunal, especially considering the decision-making and reformatory powers
vested in the RAD, which are broader in scope than those normally
applicable in the context of judicial review;
- Such duplication is also antithetical to the presumption that by
creating the RAD, Parliament intended to establish a means to review RPD
decisions that is different from what already exists;
- Nothing in the Hansard supports the idea that the RAD was intended to
play a role that is confined to reviewing the decisions of the RPD on the
basis of a deferential standard of review such as the reasonableness
standard; and
- Finally, the approach taken by the RAD ignores the substantial
differences between an appeal and a judicial review. In this regard, it
trivialized the concept of standard of review which, in the perspective of
the doctrine of the separation of powers, is inherent to the relationship
between the Executive and Judiciary branches of government, and not,
strictly speaking, to the relationship between two bodies of the same
branch of government, as is the case with the RPD and the RAD.
[12]
As my colleague Justice Yvan Roy, pointed out in Spasoja, above, the
Act, when read as a whole, does not suggest that the RAD must show deference to
the decisions of the RPD within the meaning of the reasonableness standard. Rather,
it suggests the opposite:
The second observation is that the legislative scheme, viewed
as a whole, does not at all suggest deference within the meaning of the
reasonableness standard. To the contrary, the Act instructs the RAD to examine
the record of proceedings before the RPD while admitting additional evidence,
in the prescribed circumstances. The English version of subsection 111(1)
specifically states "[a]fter considering the appeal" before stating
the possible outcomes for the RAD. There is no question of owing deference: the
determination is confirmed or a new determination is substituted. If there was
an error of fact or law, or mixed fact and law, but the RAD cannot confirm or
substitute its determination without a new hearing to reassess the evidence
before the RPD, the matter is referred back. I fail to see where deference,
arising from the reasonableness standard, fits into that scheme considered as a
whole.
(Spasoja, at para 20)
[13]
In Djossou, above, Justice Luc Martineau expressed the view that
the objective Parliament was pursuing in creating the RAD was two-fold: first,
it was to create an administrative tribunal with equal expertise in the area of
refugee protection than that of the RPD so as to be in a position to correct
the errors the RPD might have committed by proceeding, given that expertise, to
a “complete review of questions of
fact, law and mixed law and fact”; second, it was to ensure consistency
in the decision-making process by establishing, through the decisions of the
RAD, uniformity in the Immigration and Refugee Board’s jurisprudence respecting
refugee protection (Djossou, at para 41 and 86; Aloulou, above at
para 59).
[14]
As I indicated in Aloulou, I fully agree with that characterization
of Parliament’s intent in creating the RAD. Unless the Federal Court of Appeal
or the Supreme Court of Canada eventually rule otherwise, an appeal before the
RAD shall therefore involve a “complete review” of the questions of fact, law
and mixed law and fact raised in the appeal. In other words, an appeal before
the RAD is intended to be a “full
fact-based appeal”, not just another form of judicial review (Singh
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2014 FC 1022, at para
54).
[15]
Here, by reviewing the RPD’s decision in this case through Dunsmuir’s
reasonableness standard of review, the RAD stood on the wrong foot and, in so
doing, deprived the Applicant access to the appeal process Parliament created
to the benefit of failed refugee claimants. As the Applicant’s counsel
indicated at the hearing, this error is dispositive of the present judicial
review application.
[16]
The RAD’s decision in this case raises another area of concern; that of
the interpretation of subsection 110(4) of the Act regarding the admissibility
of new evidence submitted by the Applicant on his clanship affiliation. The
RAD took the view that given their “near
identical wording”, subsection 110(4) was to be interpreted alike
to section 113, which governs the admissibility of new evidence in the context
of Pre-Removal Risk Assessments (PRRA) and that the Federal Courts’
jurisprudence regarding that provision of the Act was relevant in this regard
as it provided “important guidance
with respect to the interpretation of subsection 110(4).”
[17]
Again, the RAD adopted that approach prior to this Court being engaged
on this issue. In Singh, above, which was issued on October 28, 2014, Justice
Jocelyne Gagné ruled that it was unreasonable for the RAD to strictly apply the
section 113 jurisprudence in interpreting subsection 110(4) as this approach
failed in two respects. First, it failed to appreciate the differences in the
respective roles of the RAD and of a PRRA officer, one being a
quasi-judicial body acting as an appellate tribunal of the RPD decisions, the
other having no appeal role with regards to these decisions and no
quasi-judicial functions (Singh, above at
para 49-50 and 57). Second, it failed to appreciate
Parliament’s intention in creating the RAD which was to give a “full-fact based appeal” to failed refugee claimants (Singh,
above at para 54).
[18]
As a result, it was important, according to Justice
Gagné, that the criteria regarding the admissibility of evidence in the context
of a request made under subsection 110(4) of the Act, be sufficiently flexible
to ensure that such claimants have access to a “full-fact
based appeal”, as intended by Parliament, especially considering the
strict timelines a claimant now faces for initially submitting evidence before
the RPD (Singh, above at para 55).
[19]
Commenting on the seminal section 113 authority of Raza
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385, Justice
Gagné further wrote, at paragraph 56 of her reasons for judgment, that:
In Raza, Justice Sharlow distinguishes
between the express and the implicit questions raised by paragraph 113(a) of
the Act and specifically states that the four implied questions (credibility,
relevance, newness and materiality) find their source in the purpose of
paragraph 113(a) within the statutory scheme of the Act relating to refugee
claims and PRRA applications. In my view, they need to be addressed in that
specific context and are not transferable in the context of an appeal before
the RAD.
[20]
Singh was followed in subsequent cases (Djossou, above,
and Khachatourian v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 182),
and the following two questions were certified:
- What standard of review should be applied by this
Court when reviewing the Refugee Appeal Division’s interpretation of
subsection 110(4) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC
2001, c 27?
- In considering the role of a Pre-Removal Risk
Assessment officer and that of the Refugee Appeal Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board, sitting in appeal of a decision of the
Refugee Protection Division, does the test set out in Raza v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385 for the
interpretation of paragraph 113(a) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 apply to its subsection 110(4)?
[21]
I see no reason to depart from Justice Gagné’s reasons in Singh
as to the interplay between subsection 110(4) and section 113 and the
interpretation to be ultimately given to subsection 110(4). The Applicant’s request
under subsection 110(4) for the filing of new evidence as to his clanship
affiliation was an important feature of his appeal before the RAD as it
concerned a key aspect of the RPD’s negative credibility finding. This request
must be assessed in accordance with Justice Gagné’s ruling in Singh and
not, as the RAD did in this case, strictly on the basis of the wording and
jurisprudence of section 113.
[22]
The Applicant’s judicial review application is granted and the matter is
remitted back to a different member for re-determination.
[23]
While the Applicant had a question for certification to
propose if his application for judicial review was dismissed, the Respondent
had none. No question will therefore be certified although, it is worth
mentioning that, questions relating to the issue of the appropriate type of review to be undertaken by the RAD, as required
by the Act, when adjudicating an appeal from an RPD decision, have, to
date, been certified in at least five cases (Huruglica, Triastcin,
Yetna, Akuffo and Spasoja above).
[24]
Ultimately, the Federal Court of Appeal will provide its views on
this important issue.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The application for judicial review is granted.
2.
The decision of the Refugee Appeal Division of the Immigration and
Refugee Board of Canada, dated February 6, 2014, is set aside
and the matter is remitted back to a different member for re-determination.
3.
No question is certified.
"René LeBlanc"