Docket: IMM-1545-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1419
Ottawa, Ontario, December 30, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Gleeson
BETWEEN:
|
HUBI MOHAMED
HAMZE YUSUF
KHALID MAHBUUB
HUDAYFI AHMED
AHLAM AHMED
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
Hubi Mohammed, the principal applicant, is the
mother of four minor children, the other applicants named in this application. Ms.
Mohamed claims she is a member of the Mahdiban clan and that she is a citizen
of Somalia who has fled as she fears the terrorist group Al Shabaab.
[2]
The Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada denied the applicants’ claim for
protection on the basis that they had failed to establish their personal and
national identities. They appealed the negative decision to the Refugee Appeal
Division [RAD] and sought to place new evidence before the RAD to support the
identity claim. The RAD determined that the proposed new evidence did not satisfy
the requirements of section 110(4) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, [IRPA] and was therefore inadmissible. The RAD also
denied a request for an oral hearing and dismissed the appeal.
[3]
The applicants seek to set aside the RAD’s
decision and ask this Court to return the matter for redetermination by a
differently constituted panel. In written submissions the applicants argued
that the RAD erred: (1) by failing to consider and address the errors the
applicants alleged the RPD had made in considering their claim contrary to its
obligation to conduct a fresh assessment of the claim; (2) by deferring to the
RPD’s credibility findings; and (3) by refusing to admit the applicants’ new
evidence.
[4]
This application raises the following issues:
A.
Was the RAD decision not to admit new evidence
unreasonable?
B.
Was it unreasonable for the RAD to defer to the
RPD’s credibility findings and not address each of the points raised on appeal?
[5]
I am of the view that the RAD’s decision was
reasonable. The application is dismissed for the reasons that follow.
II.
Standard of Review
[6]
The applicants rely on Chamberlain v Canada
(Attorney General), 2012 FC 1027 [Chamberlain] to argue that the RAD
is owed no deference in respect of its failure to address the alleged errors
raised on appeal. I disagree. Chamberlain involves the review of an
adjudicator’s decision under the Public Service Labour Relations Act (S.C.
2003, c. 22, s. 2), where it was alleged the adjudicator had failed to address
an issue raised in a grievance. The applicant in that case advanced the
position that a correctness standard of review applied. After undertaking a
detailed review of the applicable statutory framework and the relevant
jurisprudence, Justice Mary Gleason concluded that a reasonableness standard of
review applied (Chamberlain at paras 45 and 46).
[7]
The statutory framework applicable in Chamberlain
is not applicable here. However, the conclusion that the reasonableness
standard of review applies is consistent with the jurisprudence relevant to the
review of decisions of the RAD. The RAD’s determination of questions relating
to the admission of new evidence, findings relating to identity and credibility
and the application of a legal test or standard are to be reviewed on a reasonableness
standard (Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Singh, 2016
FCA 96 [Singh FCA] at para 29; Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, [2008] 1
SCR 190 at para 47 [Dunsmuir]).
III.
Analysis
A.
Was the RAD decision not to admit new evidence
unreasonable?
[8]
The applicants argue that in considering the new
evidence the RAD failed to address Ms. Mohamed’s explanation for the new
evidence – that she thought she had placed sufficient identity evidence before
the RPD. Instead the applicants argue the RAD focused on the availability of
the evidence thereby rendering the decision unreasonable. I disagree.
[9]
The RAD undertook a review of section 110(4) of
the IRPA and the jurisprudence in considering the new evidence. The RAD noted
that section 110(4) provides that new evidence will only be admitted where that
evidence: (1) arose after the rejection of the claim; (2) was not reasonably
available to the applicant; or (3) was reasonably available to the applicant but
he/she could not reasonably have been expected in the circumstances to have
presented the evidence. The RAD also noted that to be admissible, new evidence
must also be credible, material and relevant. While the RAD did not have the
benefit of the recent Federal Court of Appeal decision in Singh, the
principles that guided its analysis in this case accord with that decision (Singh
FCA at paras 54 and 65).
[10]
The RAD then considered each piece of new
evidence. Contrary to the applicants’ submissions, the RAD acknowledged the
explanation that the applicants felt one identity witness would be sufficient
before the RPD, but rejected this as simply unreasonable.
[11]
It is trite to note that a claimant has the onus
of establishing identity on the balance of probabilities (Keita v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2001 FCT 187 at para 3). The RAD noted that the
applicants were represented by experienced counsel and also noted that at least
some of the new evidence, was readily available to the applicants. The RAD also
identified concerns about the materiality and the relevance of the new evidence
provided by Ms. Mohamed’s mother.
[12]
New evidence is not to be admitted “… to complete a deficient record submitted before the RPD”
(Singh FCA at para 54). It must meet the newness requirements of section
110(4) of the IRPA. In this case, the RAD did not fail to “come to grips with the explanation provided” rather
the RAD determined that the new evidence simply did not meet the requirement of
the IRPA and was therefore inadmissible. This conclusion was based on a
detailed assessment of the evidence and clearly articulated reasons. The
decision was reasonably available to the RAD.
B.
Was it unreasonable for the RAD to defer to the
RPD’s credibility findings and not address each of the points raised on appeal?
[13]
The applicants rely on Chamberlain to
argue that the RAD erred in failing to address the arguments raised by them.
Again, I disagree.
[14]
The RAD’s denial is based on the failure of Ms.
Mohamed to establish who she is and where she is from. As noted above, the claimant
has the onus of establishing identity. The RPD and the RAD both recognized this
burden. The RPD and the RAD were alive to the challenges of obtaining identity documents
from Somalia and assessed the identity evidence the applicants placed before
the RPD. The RAD in turn recognized that its role was to conduct its own
assessment of the evidence but that it was in a position to recognize and
respect the credibility findings of the RPD where it had a particular advantage
in reaching these conclusions. This approach accords with the manner in which
the RAD is to conduct an appeal as set out by the Federal Court of Appeal in Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Huruglica, 2016 FCA 9.
[15]
The RAD did not err in concluding that the RPD’s
credibility findings were supported by the evidence and affording deference to
those findings.
[16]
With respect to the issues advanced on appeal,
it is evident that the RAD reviewed the identity evidence and the credibility
concerns that the RPD identified. The RAD was not required to address every
argument or issue raised on appeal (Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union
v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62at para 16).
[17]
In addressing the evidence of the identity
witness, the applicants submit that the RAD mischaracterized or misunderstood
the evidence when describing it as “inconsistent”
with the evidence of Ms. Mohamed. Ms. Mohamed’s evidence was that the witness
had recognized her. This however, was not the witness’s evidence. The witness
instead testified that he did not recognize her when he saw her in Ethiopia. The
evidence was not consistent and it was reasonable for the RAD to describe it as
it did in the decision.
[18]
Having independently considered the identity
evidence placed before the RPD, the RAD reached the conclusion that the applicants
had failed to establish their identity on a balance of probabilities. Having reached
this conclusion, the RAD was not required to consider arguments unrelated to
the identity evidence (Rahal v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2012 FC 319 at para 47 and Singh v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 184 at para 7).
[19]
The RAD addressed the applicants’ arguments as
they related to the identity evidence and reasonably demonstrated deference to
the RPD’s credibility findings.
IV.
Conclusion
[20]
I am of the opinion that the RAD’s decision
demonstrates the attributes of justifiability, transparency and intelligibility.
It falls within the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible
in respect of the facts and law (Dunsmuir at para 47).
[21]
The parties have not identified a question of
general importance, and none arises.