Docket: T-1230-15
Citation:
2016 FC 615
Ottawa, Ontario, June 2, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
|
NORITSSA
KARADEOLIAN
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This application challenges a decision of the Appeal
Division of the Social Security Tribunal [Tribunal] which refused the
Applicant’s leave to appeal from a denial of Canada Pension Plan [CPP]
disability benefits made by the General Division under section 58 of the Department
of Employment and Social Development Act, SC 2005, c 34, [the Act].
I.
Background
[2]
Ms. Karadeolian was injured in a motor
vehicle accident in 1996. According to her submissions, her injuries prevented
an immediate return to work but, by the year 2000, she was employed as a
seamstress. Between 2005 and 2010, she ironed and hung garments, apparently on
a full-time basis. In April 2010, she stopped working due to chronic pain,
headaches, and numbness.
[3]
Ms. Karadeolian applied for CPP disability
benefits in April 2011. Her claim was administratively diminished on October 7,
2011 on the following basis:
We reviewed all the information and
documents in your file including the following reports:
• your
application and your questionnaire
•
your family doctor’s report dated May 11, 2011, and all accompanying
documentation
We recognize that you have identified
limitations resulting from neck and arm pain, anxiety and depression. However,
the following factors were also considered:
•
The information on file indicates you, have a long history of upper
back and arm pain. You have been able to work gainfully with this in the past.
•
There is no evidence on file of any severe orthopaedic or
neurological problem.
•
We recognize you have ongoing complaints of pain. Comprehensive pain
management program was recommended. There is no evidence on file that this has
been done.
While you may not be able to do your usual
work, we have concluded that you should still be able to do some type of work.
Therefore you do not meet the criteria of severe and prolonged.
[4]
Ms. Karadeolian unsuccessfully sought a
reconsideration of the denial of benefits decision and she then brought an
appeal to the General Division. Once again, her claim was denied on the basis
that, notwithstanding her medical limitations, she was capable of being
retrained for “suitable sedentary work”. Her
disability was therefore not “severe” and the
denial of benefits was upheld.
[5]
Ms. Karadeolian then sought leave to appeal
to the Tribunal. She asserted that she was incapable of sedentary work. She
also maintained that the General Division acted unfairly and, with only one
member, was not lawfully constituted.
[6]
The Tribunal dismissed the application because
Ms. Karadeolian failed to identify a ground of appeal that had a “reasonable chance of success”. It is from this
decision that this application for relief is brought.
II.
Analysis
[7]
in Tracey v Canada, 2015 FC 1300, 261
ACWS (3d) 505, Justice Sylvie Roussel discussed the standard of review applicable
to a leave to appeal decision by the Tribunal. For purposes of this
application, I adopt Justice Roussel’s analysis as set out below:
[19] When the SST-AD is determining
whether leave to appeal should be granted or denied, it is interpreting its
home statute. In contrast with the former scheme which was grounded in common
law through jurisprudence, the test to be applied by the SST-AD when
determining leave to appeal is now set out in subsection 58(2) of the DESDA.
Leave to appeal is refused if the SST-AD is satisfied that the appeal has no
reasonable chance of success.
[20] Subsection 58(1) of the DESDA also
enumerates the only grounds upon which an appeal can be brought: 1) the General
Division of the Social Security Tribunal [SST-GD] (previously the RT) failed to
observe a principle of natural justice or otherwise acted beyond or refused to
exercise its jurisdiction; 2) the SST-GD erred in law, whether or not it
appears on the face of the record; and 3) the SST-GD based its decision on an
erroneous finding of fact made in a perverse or capricious manner or without
regard for the material before it.
[21] In my view, the determination of
whether an application for leave to appeal has a reasonable chance of success
clearly falls within the expertise of the SST-AD, whose ultimate
responsibility, if leave is granted, will be to decide the merits of the
appeal, which will be reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. As stated in Atkinson
v Canada (Attorney General) 2014 FCA 187 at para 31 of the decision:
[31] In my view, the differences
between the SST and the PAB’s structure, membership and mandate do not diminish
the need to apply a deferential standard in reviewing the SST’s decisions. One
of the SST’s mandates is to interpret and apply the CPP and it will encounter
this legislation regularly in the course of exercising its functions. Moreover,
subsection 64(2) of the DESDA also restricts the type of questions of law or
fact that the Tribunal may decide with respect to the CPP, presumably in order
to better ensure that the SST is only addressing issues that fall within its
expertise. These factors suggest that Parliament intended for the SST to be
afforded deference by our Court, as it has greater expertise in interpreting
and applying the CPP.
[22] Given that the ultimate decision
on appeal is reviewable on a standard of reasonableness, the determination of
whether leave to appeal should be granted or denied should also be subject to
the same standard of review. Furthermore, I note that in subsection 58(2) of
DESDA, Parliament left it to the SST-AD to be “satisfied” that the appeal has a
reasonable chance of success. This wording, in my view, further supports the
argument that deference should be afforded to the SST-AD’s determination of
whether leave should be granted.
[23] Finally, I find that the
presumption that the standard of review is reasonableness has not been
rebutted. The legal questions raised when the SST-AD is applying its home
statute in determining whether an appeal has a reasonable chance of success, do
not fall within the categories of questions to which the correctness standard
of review applies, as set out in Alberta Teachers, cited above.
[8]
It is apparent that the Tribunal applied the
correct standard of a “reasonable chance of success”
to the question before it. It also reasonably disposed of the grounds advanced
in Ms. Karadeolian’s application for leave. In particular, it found
nothing to support the argument that the dismissal of her claim was made
unfairly or that the panel was unlawfully constituted. The Tribunal’s
assessment of the medical and disability record was then described in the
following way:
[8] Finally, the Applicant set out
some of her physical limitations. The General Division decision described the
Applicant’s limitations and considered them in reaching its decision. The repetition
of this information is not a ground of appeal under section 58 of the Department
of Employment and Social Development Act. If the particular limitations set
out in the Application Requesting Leave to Appeal to the Appeal Division were
not specifically presented at the General Division hearing, their presentation
at this time is not a ground of appeal that has a reasonable chance of success
on appeal. Section 58 of the Act sets out the only grounds of appeal that can
be considered. The presentation of new evidence is not a ground of appeal that
is listed.
[9]
In oral argument Ms. Karadeolian’s counsel
argued that the Tribunal erred by failing to look more deeply into the medical
records to identify potential evidentiary errors which might be successfully
exploited on appeal. Some allowance was necessary to account for Ms. Karadeolian’s
limited education and lack of legal sophistication. The difficulty with this argument
is that nothing in the nature of a potential evidentiary error was brought
forward to the Tribunal by Ms. Karadeolian or to the Court by her counsel.
[10]
I do agree that the Tribunal must be wary of
mechanistically applying the language of section 58 of the Act when it performs
its gatekeeping function. It should not be trapped by the precise grounds for
appeal advanced by a self-represented party like Ms. Karadeolian. In cases
like this, the Tribunal should examine the medical evidence and compare it to
the decision under consideration. If important evidence has been arguably
overlooked or possibly misconstrued, leave to appeal should ordinarily be
granted notwithstanding the presence of technical deficiencies in the
application for leave.
[11]
In this case, the General Division thoroughly
reviewed Ms. Karadeolian’s medical records and found very little support for
the assertion she was wholly incapable of working. Indeed, the medical reports
appear to have largely ignored the issue of Ms. Karadeolian’s employability. In
the context of the record presented to the Tribunal, there was nothing to
support an argument that the General Division had ignored or misconstrued material
evidence or otherwise erred in its evidentiary assessment. To put it bluntly,
Ms. Karadeolian’s case for a severe and prolonged disability was weak and
unconvincing and both the General Division and Tribunal decisions were
reasonable.
[12]
For the foregoing reasons, this application is
dismissed. Appropriately, the Respondent is not seeking costs and none are
awarded.