Docket:
IMM-10952-12
Citation: 2013 FC 1158
Ottawa, Ontario, November
14, 2013
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
|
BETWEEN:
|
GIFT TJITANDJEWA KURIJA
by his litigation guardian SHAYNA SINGER
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
1.
Introduction
[1]
Mr. Kurija’s claim for asylum in Canada was rejected by the Immigration and Refugee Board, Refugee Protection Division [RPD]
on May 25, 2012. He applied to have his claim reopened, and this too was
rejected on September 20, 2012. In the present application pursuant to section
72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA],
he contests the decision to refuse to reopen his claim.
[2]
For the reasons which follow, the application is
granted.
2. Factual background
[3]
Gift Tjitandjewa Kurija testifies that he was
born in Namibia on July 15, 1995. Fifteen years and nine months later, he
arrived in Canada on April 29, 2011. His father’s whereabouts are given as
unknown. The applicant’s mother Flowrens Kurija died in 2005 when he was 10.
[4]
The applicant claims that he was targeted as a
witness to a murder. After his location of hiding was disclosed, with the help
of his grandmother he procured an air ticket and in early 2011 fled to Canada. He traveled with a passport indicating that his date of birth was January 20, 1993.
His grandmother and his aunt had instructed him to claim to be 18 years old as
otherwise they said that he would not be allowed to travel alone.
[5]
Upon arrival in Canada, Mr. Kurija continued to
claim to be 18 years old. However, his social worker at Covenant House, where
he was initially housed, did not believe from his appearance that he could be
that old. He eventually admitted his real age to her. He was referred to
Delisle Youth Services in August 2011 and his social worker there, Shayna
Singer, obtained documents from Namibia showing his real date of birth. Ms
Singer was chosen as Mr Kurija’s designated representative before the
Immigration and Refugee Board.
[6]
At the hearing on May 11, 2012, counsel informed
the Board member that Mr Kurija was under 18 and had difficulty understanding
English (although an interpreter had not been requested). However, the Board
member made a finding that Mr Kurija spoke adequate English and a finding that
he was of age based on his passport documents and other evidence, and ordered
the designated representative to leave the proceedings. The Board member found
that Mr Kurija was not a refugee or person in need of protection.
[7]
Mr Kurija then applied to have his claim reopened
on the ground that the hearing had been procedurally unfair.
3. Contested
Decision
[8]
The applicant’s new counsel concluded that
rather than proceed with judicial review Mr Kurija should seek to have his
claim reopened on the basis that he should have been assigned a Designated
Representative pursuant to section 167(2) of the IRPA. In support of his
application for reopening, Mr Kurija provided the following documentation:
(a) An original copy of his Abridged Certificate of
Registration of Birth indicating the place of birth and giving the date of
birth as July 15, 1995. During the hearing, he only had a copy of this
document, as he did not have the original. The Board member accorded no weight
to the document because it was a copy. The original was sent by Mr Kurija’s
aunt and a copy of it was presented to the Board at the reopening hearing. It
has all the appearances of an official document, being on coloured paper
bearing the crest of the Republic of Namibia, in two print colours, with a
certification stamp of the Ministry of Home Affairs, Department of Civil
Affairs dated January 24, 2004 and affirming that it is a true extract from the
birth register. It is dated long before the applicant fled to Canada.
(b) An affidavit by the applicant explaining why he
originally stated that he was 18, based upon instructions from his grandmother.
He also explained how the social worker had attended all of his meetings with
his lawyer and how she had explained to the applicant matters which he found
confusing, emphasizing his trust for her and comfort provided when she was
available. He also testified to his confusion and inability to understand most
of the events occurring during the hearing.
(c) An affidavit by his social worker explaining how she
found out his age and the efforts that she went to so as to obtain
documentation proving his real age. Of some import was the fact that she did
not believe that the applicant was 18 because he looked much younger. She also
testified that she found the Board member to be “extremely aggressive” and
dismissive of what she was saying. She states that she was not given an
opportunity to explain the situation or why she had believed that the applicant
was under 18. In addition she testified to the applicant’s difficulties with
the English language and his ability to understand matters involved in the
legal proceedings, as well as her belief that she could have played a helpful role
as his Designated Representative at the hearing.
(d) Email correspondence between the social worker and the
embassy pre-dating the hearing and demonstrating attempts by the applicant to
obtain proper documentation.
(e) Email correspondence between the social worker and his
aunt. In this correspondence the aunt explains why the applicant’s relatives
told him to lie about his age.
[9]
On September 20, 2012, another Board member
reviewed the initial reasons for decision and noted that the previous decision-maker
had provided reasons for finding on a balance of probabilities that the
applicant was not a minor. The member declined to rely on the new evidence of
the applicant’s date of birth and accompanying evidence. The new Board found
there was insufficient evidence put forth during the original hearing
demonstrating that there had been sufficient inquiries or that the new
information could not have been obtained prior to the first hearing with due
diligence.
[10]
The Board further commented that “one of the
documents suggests that the applicants’ [sic] parents, on his behalf
could have obtained official documents regarding his date of birth from the
Namibia Home Affairs office”. It would appear that the Board was not aware that
the applicant’s mother was deceased and his father’s whereabouts unknown.
[11]
The Board also concluded that it was bound by
the former Rule 55 of the Refugee Protection Division Rules,
SOR/2002-228 [the Rules] to determine whether or not there had been a
“failure to observe a principle of natural justice” by the RPD. It found that
the previous decision-maker had considered the submissions regarding the need
for a designated representative and had found that the applicant was competent
to proceed without one. The applicant had been represented by legal counsel.
Therefore, there had been no failure of procedural fairness, and the request to
reopen the claim was dismissed.
[12]
The Board did not address the application of
section 167(2), although referring to it. It noted that the (former) Rules
at section 15 addressed the circumstances in which the designation of a
representative is required during RPD proceedings.
4. Issues
[13]
The issue is whether the Board’s decision
refusing to reopen the claim was reasonable in light of section 167(2) of the IRPA.
5. Standard of review
[14]
The applicant proposes that correctness is the
applicable standard for this judicial review because it involves both
procedural fairness and a legislated requirement to appoint a designated
representative, a question of pure law. The respondent argues that the
deferential standard of reasonableness applies because the decision being
reviewed is the one to reopen, or not, the claim, and not the decision to
appoint, or not, a designated representative.
[15]
I agree with the respondent to the extent that
in respect of the Board’s decision to reopen a refugee claim the standard is
one of reasonableness. See Boguzinskaite v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 779, at
paras 8-9:
8 The
only issue in this application is whether the Board's decision not to reopen
the refugee
claims was reasonable. The standard of review is reasonableness: Castillo v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2010 FC 1185 and Nguyen v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 133.
9 The
reinstatement of withdrawn refugee claims is dealt with in subsection
53(3) of the Refugee Protection Division Rules,
SOR/2002-228, which provides that the reinstatement must be allowed "if it
is established that there was a failure to observe a principle of natural
justice or if it is otherwise in the interests of justice to allow the
application."
[16]
However, the standard of review relating to the
interpretation of section 167(2) of the IRPA, the objective of which
provision is to ensure procedural fairness in the conduct of refugee
procedures, is one of correctness.
6. Analysis
[17]
I conclude that the Board misdirected itself by
failing to consider the mandatory nature of section 167(2) on the requirement
to determine on the basis of new evidence before it whether the applicant was
under the age of 18 at the time of the first Board hearing. Section 167 reads
as follows:
167. (1) A person who is the subject
of proceedings before any Division of the Board and the Minister may, at
their own expense, be represented by legal or other counsel.
(2) If a
person who is the subject of proceedings is under 18 years of age or unable,
in the opinion of the applicable Division, to appreciate the nature of the
proceedings, the Division shall designate a person to represent the
person.
[Emphasis added]
|
167. (1) L’intéressé qui fait
l’objet de procédures devant une section de la Commission ainsi que le
ministre peuvent se faire représenter, à leurs frais, par un conseiller
juridique ou un autre conseil.
(2) Est
commis d’office un représentant à l’intéressé qui n’a pas dix-huit ans ou
n’est pas, selon la section, en mesure de comprendre la nature de la
procédure.
[Je souligne]
|
[18]
The Federal Court of Appeal in Stumf v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 FCA 148, had occasion to
consider the similar predecessor provision to section 167(2), that being
section 69(4) of the Immigration Act, RSC
1985, c I-2, which read as follows:
69 (4) Where a
person who is the subject of proceedings before the Refugee Division is under
eighteen years of age or is unable, in the opinion of the Division, to
appreciate the nature of the proceedings, the Division shall designate another
person to represent that person in the proceedings.
[19]
The Court of Appeal concluded that the provision
was mandatory and the failure to designate a representative of the minor was an
error that vitiated the decision, requiring it to be set aside, as described at
paragraph 6 of its decision:
[6] It is our view that
subsection 69(4) of the Immigration Act imposes on the Board an
obligation to designate a representative for any refugee claimant who meets the
statutory criteria, and that the obligation arises at the earliest point at
which the Board becomes aware of those facts. In this case, the age of the
minor claimant was apparent from the outset, and the matter of designating a
representative for her should have been considered at least at the point at
which abandonment proceedings were in contemplation, and certainly should have
been done before the motion to re-open the claim was considered. The failure of
the Board to do so was an error that vitiates the decision to refuse the
motion.
[Emphasis added]
[20]
I am aware that the case has not been applied
for its wider principle on the basis of the distinguishing fact that the age of
the minor claimant was apparent to the Board. However, it has been noted in
several cases that this Court has adopted a strict interpretation of the
Board’s obligations and that failure to designate a representative for a minor
has consistently resulted in an order for a new hearing or redetermination. See
generally Vashee v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 1104; Duale v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2004 FC 150 [Duale].
[21]
I am similarly aware that there are cases that
conclude there may be circumstances under which the failure to appoint a
designated representative will not vitiate the underlying decision. See for
example Singh v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006
FC 134, where Justice Noël concluded that the failure to appoint such a
representative will not always be fatal to the RPD decision, stating as follows
at paragraph 34 of his reasons:
[34] […] In the
case at bar, I do not think the RPD's decision is vitiated, in view of the
following facts:
- The applicant was
17 years and 10 months at the time of the hearing, 16 years and 5 months at the
time he completed his PIF, and he was at all times able to understand the
proceedings that were in progress;
- A representative
was assigned to him before the hearing and he was allowed to meet with a social
worker on the eve of the hearing;
- The
improbabilities in his story are too numerous and significant to conclude that
the RPD decision is vitiated because he had not yet reached the age of 18.
In view of the
circumstances of this case, I do not think it is necessary to overturn the RPD
decision. However, I do stress the importance of compliance with subsection
167(2) of the IRPA and the Guidelines, as this Court has stated many times.
[22]
With the greatest respect for my colleagues’
views on this issue, it is my opinion that section 167(2) is a mandatory
provision, without exceptions, which allows no derogation by the effect of
extraneous circumstances that might mitigate its requirements. I conclude that
Parliament’s intention was to enact what I would describe as a “bright line”
fundamental fairness provision, relating to a widely recognized concern about
the capacity of minors to interact with a legal system tasked with determining
their rights. Similar expressions of legislative concern pertaining to the
capacity to properly defend the rights of minors or the assignment of liability
for their conduct using 18 as a bright line age-boundary are found in various
versions in a wide number of legal contexts in Canadian law, be it in criminal,
contract, or family law.
[23]
I place the proper representation of young
immigrant claimants in refugee proceedings on the same plane as concerns over
bias of a decision-maker. By this I mean that it is a “knock-out” issue
requiring the decision to be set aside, and furthermore an issue on which new
evidence is admissible after the fact for the purpose of determining the
partiality of the decision-maker, or in this case, the age of the claimant.
[24]
By analogy to the situation where concerns
develop relating to the bias of the decision-maker, the issue of the ability
of the minor to fully participate in the proceedings is of the same
fundamental significance. Be it in relation to understanding the proceedings,
or in relation to properly communicating the applicant’s thoughts, views and
directions to his lawyer or the Board, the appointment of the representative
has a fundamental impact on the fairness of the proceeding themselves. The
impact of its absence cannot be second-guessed after the fact, because one
cannot tell what the outcome would have been with the insertion of an informed
and pro-active representative to ensure that the client fully participated in
the proceedings. Where minors are concerned, there is also an apprehension of
unfairness if they are not fully engaged in the process.
[25]
Moreover, while I recognize that regulations
cannot be employed in order to interpret statutes, I nonetheless note that the
current section 20 of the Refugee Protection Division Rules,
SOR/2012-256, which replaced section 15 of the Rules which were before
the Board in this case, would support a more strict approach to the application
of the mandatory rule of the Designated Representative. The duties assigned to
this person are described as follows:
(10) The responsibilities of a designated representative include
(a) deciding
whether to retain counsel and, if counsel is retained, instructing counsel or
assisting the represented person in instructing counsel;
(b) making
decisions regarding the claim or application or assisting the represented
person in making those decisions;
(c) informing
the represented person about the various stages and procedures in the
processing of their case;
(d) assisting
in gathering evidence to support the represented person’s case and in
providing evidence and, if necessary, being a witness at the hearing;
(e) protecting
the interests of the represented person and putting forward the best possible
case to the Division;
(f) informing
and consulting the represented person to the extent possible when making
decisions about the case; and
(g) filing and perfecting an
appeal to the Refugee Appeal Division, if required.
|
(10) Les responsabilités d’un représentant désigné sont
notamment les suivantes :
a) décider s’il y a lieu de retenir
les services d’un conseil et, le cas échéant, donner à celui-ci des
directives, ou aider la personne représentée à lui donner des directives;
b) prendre des décisions concernant la
demande d’asile ou toute autre demande ou aider la personne représentée à
prendre de telles décisions;
c) informer la personne représentée
des diverses étapes et procédures dans le traitement de son cas;
d) aider la personne représentée à
réunir et à transmettre les éléments de preuve à l’appui de son cas et, au
besoin, témoigner à l’audience;
e) protéger les intérêts de la
personne représentée et présenter les meilleurs arguments possibles à l’appui
de son cas devant la Section;
f) informer et consulter, dans la
mesure du possible, la personne représentée lorsqu’il prend des décisions
relativement à l’affaire;
g) interjeter
et mettre en état un appel devant la Section d’appel des réfugiés, si
nécessaire.
|
[26]
Similarly, section 20(7) of the current Rules
also confirms the bright line aspect of the protections afforded young persons,
by their termination on the minor becoming an adult.
(7) The designation of a representative
for a person who is under 18 years of age ends when the person reaches 18 years
of age unless that representative has also been designated because the person
is unable to appreciate the nature of the proceedings.
|
(7) La désignation d’un représentant
pour une personne âgée de moins de dix-huit ans prend fin lorsque celle-ci atteint
cet âge, à moins que ce représentant ait également été désigné pour elle
parce qu’elle n’est pas en mesure de comprendre la nature de la procédure.
|
[27]
I therefore conclude that section 167(2) speaks
in mandatory terms without exceptions or limitations, as a direction to Board
members not to engage in, for instance, analysis of whether the claimant is
nearing the age of 18, being represented by a lawyer, or has given testimony
which may raise credibility issues, as rationales excusing the need to appoint
a Designated Representative. Given that such determinations can only be
overturned on a deferential standard of review of reasonableness, such an
interpretation of the provision would significantly debilitate its purpose, as
it has in this case.
[28]
Nor do I see this as too onerous a requirement
to impose on the RPD. In this instance the Designated Representative was
present and was in a position to assist the applicant and the Board. Rather
than making an adverse credibility finding to the effect that the applicant had
provided a false birth certificate, a finding which colours all of the Board’s
decision and which appears to be incorrect in light of the additional evidence,
why should the Board not exercise its discretion liberally and permit the
social worker to remain and assist the claimant?
[29]
Section 167(2) being a mandatory statutorily
directed fundamental fairness provision, the reopening Board misdirected itself
in failing to consider whatever evidence was introduced before it to determine
whether the applicant was a minor at the time he appeared before the RPD. In
the present case, therefore, it misdirected itself not only in failing to give
consideration to the section 167(2) factors in its decision, but also in not
considering the highly probative new evidence produced to support the
applicant’s submission that he was a minor at the time of the hearing.
[30]
Moreover, on the point of the insufficiency of
effort to obtain evidence, which is the crux of the reopening Board’s decision,
it is just because the claimant was a minor that it is not possible to
attribute blame or negative credibility findings for failures to procure
evidence establishing that he was under 18 years of age. Section 167(2) is
based upon a recognition that a minor in the extraordinary circumstances of
participating in proceedings regarding his or her own refugee claim lacks
sufficient capacity to participate fully without special assistance and
guidance from a Designated Representative, to whom this task is assigned by the
Rules. That is why the statute imposes on the Board the necessity to
appoint a Designated Representative to ensure that a minor can properly
participate in the proceedings and not be blamed for failures such as not
procuring evidence or even making untruthful statements if in an appropriate
context such as flying to Canada on the necessary false pretence of being 18
years old.
[31]
The reopening Board should have assessed not merely
the record before the tribunal but all of the evidence old and new, in order to
determine whether the applicant was a minor. Having made a finding on the
applicant’s age, it needed to pronounce on the correctness of the first Board’s
finding, rather than pronouncing on whether that finding had been reasonable in
light of the evidence available at the original hearing.
[32]
Even if I am wrong in my characterization of the
mandatory character of section 167(2) of the IRPA, in the present case I
conclude that the designated representative would have been able to assist the
applicant in understanding the questions put to him, advocate for him when he
appeared confused, and point out the language difficulties, thus providing
assistance to the Board. Credibility was the major issue at the hearing, and
the social worker, who was to be the designated representative, would have been
able to present relevant testimony about her conversations with the applicant’s
aunt and grandmother which would have supported his claim.
[33]
I find that I am in a similar situation as
Justice Dawson, in Duale, above, where at para 20, she allowed a similar
application of an under aged refugee decision on the basis that she could not "safely
conclude that the failure to appoint a designated representative could not have
had an adverse effect on the outcome of the claim."
8. Conclusion
[34]
The application is granted and the file is
remitted to a new member of the Immigration and Refugee Board for
reconsideration, which should consider the additional evidence filed at the
reopening hearing, to determine whether the applicant was a minor at the date
of the hearing. If an affirmative decision is made, a new hearing should be
directed before a different Board member with a Designated Representative
appointed for the applicant at that hearing in accordance with section 167(2)
of the IRPA despite his being 18 years of age or older.