Docket: IMM-786-17
Citation:
2017 FC 788
Toronto, Ontario, August 25, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Southcott
BETWEEN:
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GYULANE RUSZO
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision of a Senior Immigration Officer [the Officer], dated January 5, 2017,
rejecting the Applicant’s application for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment [PRRA].
[2]
As explained in greater detail below, this
application is allowed, because the Officer’s decision involved concerns about
the credibility or genuineness of documentary evidence offered by the Applicant
in support of her allegations, and the Officer was therefore required to
consider giving the Applicant an oral hearing to afford her an opportunity to
respond to those concerns.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicant, Ms. Gyulane Ruszo, is a
57-year-old female citizen of Hungary. She first entered Canada on a visitor’s
visa on February 22, 2010, and on March 17, 2010, she made a refugee claim,
along with various family members, based on fear of persecution due to their
Roma ethnicity. On May 7, 2012, the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] rejected
the refugee claims of Ms. Ruszo and her family, finding that they failed to
rebut with clear and convincing evidence the presumption of adequate state
protection in Hungary. Ms. Ruszo and her family applied for judicial review of
this decision, leave for which was denied. They were removed from Canada on
February 1, 2013.
[4]
On March 1, 2016, Ms. Ruszo again entered Canada,
this time with different family members (her daughter, son-in-law, grandson and
two granddaughters, one of whom was born when the family was previously in
Canada and is therefore a Canadian citizen). She initiated another refugee
claim and, on March 3, 2016, was deemed ineligible to have her refugee claim
referred to the RPD for consideration, because her claim had already been
rejected by the RPD. On April 7, 2016, Ms. Ruszo and the members of her family
who accompanied her to Canada applied for a PRRA, which was unsuccessful. The Officer’s
decision dated January 5, 2017, refusing Ms. Ruszo’s PRRA application, is the
subject of the present application for judicial review. The rejection of the
family members’ PRRA applications was the subject of a separate decision by the
Officer.
[5]
In the decision under review, the Officer noted
the evidence post-dating the RPD decision but found that Ms. Ruszo had not
provided sufficient objective evidence to establish that, because she is of
Roma ethnic descent, she would be persecuted if returned to Hungary. The
decision also refers to consideration of country condition evidence, but the
Officer found that country conditions in Hungary were similar to those that
existed at the time of the RPD’s rejection of Ms. Ruszo’s refugee claim in May
2012. Having noted the state protection findings in the RPD’s decision, the
Officer also found that the situation in Hungary, in terms of the availability
of state protection, had not changed significantly since May 2012. The Officer
was not satisfied that the Hungarian state would be unable or unwilling to
provide Ms. Ruszo with protection should she require it.
[6]
On July 8, 2016, Ms. Ruszo also initiated an
application for an exemption on humanitarian and compassionate [H&C]
grounds, permitting her to apply for permanent residence from within Canada. The
members of Ms. Ruszo’s family who accompanied her to Canada also sought H&C
relief. On December 28, 2016, Ms. Ruszo’s family received a positive decision
based on the medical condition of her Canadian born granddaughter, Amanda, who
was born with multiple birth defects (hypotonia, congenital hypothyroidism, and
a rare chromosome disorder which resulted in dysmorphic features). Ms. Ruszo’s
application, however, was rejected in a decision dated January 12, 2017. That
decision is the subject of another application for judicial review in Court
file no. IMM-784-17, which was heard concurrently with the present application.
III.
Issues
[7]
The Applicant raises the following issues for
the Court’s consideration:
A.
Whether the Officer breached procedural fairness
by failing to provide notice that the Applicant’s PRRA application would be severed
from those of the members of her family and would be assessed separately;
B.
Whether the Officer erred by failing to conduct
an individualized assessment of the Applicant’s risk;
C.
Whether the Officer erred in the analysis of the
Applicant’s documentary evidence with respect to both risk and state protection;
D.
Whether the Officer erred in failing to provide
an oral hearing to the Applicant.
IV.
Analysis
[8]
My decision to allow this application for
judicial review turns on the fourth issue raised by the Applicant, whether the
Officer erred in failing to provide her an oral hearing. She argues that the
Officer made a veiled credibility finding, requiring the Officer to provide her
an oral hearing to allow her to respond to these concerns. In particular, she
refers to the Officer’s treatment of evidence intended to corroborate her
alleged eviction from her home, along with other Roma, in the so-called “numbered streets” neighbourhood of Miskolc, Hungary.
[9]
The Officer noted that the affidavit sworn by
the Applicant’s daughter indicated that in 2014 the city of Miskolc started
mailing eviction notices to residents of the numbered streets neighbourhood.
The Officer also acknowledged that, according to the objective country
condition evidence, the mayor of Miskolc and city authorities engaged in the
forced eviction of individuals living in this neighbourhood. However, the
Officer found that the Applicant had failed to provide sufficient objective
evidence to demonstrate that she and her family lived in this neighbourhood and
were forced from their home. In reaching this conclusion, the Officer noted
that neither the Applicant nor her daughter provided a copy of an eviction
notice. Rather, they relied on a letter, with English translation, from the
Roma Nationality Self – Government of County City Miskolc, signed by
Vice-Chairman Ferenc Gulyas.
[10]
The Officer observed that this letter indicated
that the Applicant, her daughter and her daughter’s family “had their home in the ‘numbered street’ of the Miskolc city
Roma Ghetto (5, Sixth Street, Miskolc), which has become the object of ‘slum’
elimination and they have become victim of this process.” The letter
further stated that the applicants were “evicted by the
City authorities, without offering them other housing solution” and not
permitted to “resettle within 50 km area of Miskolc
region, as they are not eligible for health care and social care too”.
[11]
In analyzing this letter, the Officer noted the
following:
A.
In the Background/Declaration provided by the
Applicant in support of her H&C application, she provided her home address
for the relevant time as 33 Szamos Utca, Miskolc, rather than 5, Sixth Street,
Miskolc as set out in Mr. Gulyas’ letter;
B.
It was unclear whether Mr. Gulyas wrote the
letter based on firsthand knowledge of the Applicant’s personal situation or
whether he based the content of the letter on information that was provided to
him;
C.
While the evidence included a translator’s
affidavit for the letter, there was no evidence of the translator’s
accreditation;
D.
The first paragraph of the Hungarian language
original version of the letter consisted of five sentences, while the first
paragraph of the English translation consisted of two sentences;
E.
The English translation included a parenthetical
reference to the Applicant’s family’s address in the numbered streets
neighbourhood, but the Hungarian language original did not;
F.
No postmarked envelope was included with the
letter to confirm that it originated in Miskolc and was sent by the
Vice-Chairman of the Roma Nationality Self – Government of County City Miskolc.
[12]
As a consequence of these observations, and the
resulting inability to verify the letter’s origin or the accuracy of the
translation, the Officer found that it was difficult to assess the reliability
of the source of the information in the letter and therefore gave the letter
very little evidentiary weight.
[13]
As noted above, the Applicant’s position is that
this analysis by the Officer represents a veiled credibility finding. She
submits that the Officer failed to consider that an oral hearing was therefore appropriate
in accordance with s. 167 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [IRPR], which prescribes factors to be considered
in deciding whether an oral hearing of a PRRA is required. Section 113(b) of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c.27 [IRPA] provides
that a hearing may be held if the Minister, on the basis of prescribed factors,
is of the opinion that a hearing is required, and s. 167 of the IRPR prescribes
the applicable factors to be the following:
(a) whether there
is evidence that raises a serious issue of the applicant's credibility and is
related to the factors set out in sections 96 and 97 of the Act;
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a) l’existence d’éléments de preuve relatifs aux éléments
mentionnés aux articles 96 et 97 de la Loi qui soulèvent une question
importante en ce qui concerne la crédibilité du demandeur;
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(b) whether the
evidence is central to the decision with respect to the application for
protection; and
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b) l’importance de ces éléments de preuve pour la prise de la
décision relative à la demande de protection;
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(c) whether the
evidence, if accepted, would justify allowing the application for protection.
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c) la question de savoir si ces éléments de preuve, à supposer
qu’ils soient admis, justifieraient que soit accordée la protection.
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[14]
The Respondent’s position is that the Officer’s
treatment of the letter involved a finding as to its weight and the sufficiency
of evidence, not an assessment of its credibility. The Respondent relies on the
decision of this Court in Ferguson v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2008 FC 1067 [Ferguson], in which Justice Zinn
explained that it is open to a trier of fact to move immediately to an
assessment of weight or probative value of evidence without considering whether
the evidence is credible, because the credibility is irrelevant if the evidence
is to be given little or no weight in any event.
[15]
The Applicant submits that this issue raises
considerations of procedural fairness and is therefore reviewable on the
standard of correctness. However, there is divergent jurisprudence from this
Court on this question in the context of a PRRA. It has been characterized as a
question of procedural fairness, reviewable on a standard of correctness (see Zmari
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2016 FC 132, at paras
10-13). However, there is also substantial authority that the standard
applicable to a PRRA officer’s decision whether to hold an oral hearing is
reasonableness (see Ikeji v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2016 FC 1422, at para 20 [Ikeji]; Sanchez v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 737, at para 4; Ibrahim v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 837, at para 6, citing Bicuku
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 339, at paras
16-20; Ponniah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013
FC 386 at para 24; and Mosavat v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 647, at paras 7-10).
[16]
The selection of the applicable standard of
review appears to depend on whether the Court in a particular case
characterizes the issue of whether an oral hearing should have been granted as
a matter of procedural fairness, in which case the standard is correctness, or
as involving interpretation of the IRPA, in which case the standard is
reasonableness. In my view, when the issue is whether a PRRA officer should
have granted an oral hearing, the appropriate standard is reasonableness, as
the decision on that issue turns on interpretation and application of the officer’s
governing legislation, i.e. s. 113(b) of the IRPA and s. 167 of the IRPR. At
paragraph 20 of the decision in Ikeji, Justice Strickland held that
reasonableness is the standard of review for questions of veiled credibility
findings and, while noting the divided jurisprudence on the standard of review
applicable to a PRRA officer’s decision respecting an oral hearing, held that
this is also reviewable on the reasonableness standard. Justice Strickland
reached this conclusion because such a decision is made by the officer
considering the requirements of s. 113(b) of IRPA and the factors in s.
167 of IRPR, which involves a question of mixed fact and law.
[17]
I agree with this analysis and consider it to be
applicable to the present case, where the Applicant’s position surrounding the
issue of an oral hearing turns on the argument that the Officer made what
amounts to a veiled credibility finding. In reaching this conclusion, I am
conscious that, in my decision in IMM-784-17, on the judicial review of the
Applicant’s H&C decision, I have followed case law applying the standard of
correctness to a similar issue. The difference is that, unlike in IMM-784-17,
the issue raised here involves application of the Officer’s governing
legislation and therefore deference to the Officer’s consideration of the
s. 167 factors. However, as the impugned decision in the case at hand does
not disclose any consideration by the Officer whether to hold an oral hearing,
there is no particular analysis to which to defer, and therefore little turns
on the selection of different standards of review for this case and for IMM-784-17.
[18]
My conclusion is that the Applicant has
correctly characterized the Officer’s treatment of the letter as involving
credibility concerns. While I accept the legal principles explained in
Ferguson, I do not consider them to assist the Respondent in the case at
hand. There is an element of the Officer’s analysis of the letter which could
be characterized as an assessment of its weight or probative value, i.e. the
uncertainty whether the author wrote the letter based on firsthand knowledge of
the Applicant’s personal situation or whether he based the content of the
letter on information that was provided to him. However, the Officer’s other
observations, as to inconsistencies between the addresses stated in the letter
and in the Applicant’s Background/Declaration, inconsistencies between the
English and Hungarian versions of the letters, and the absence of a postmarked
envelope, represent concerns about the credibility or genuineness of the
evidence. Indeed, the Officer expressly referred to difficulty assessing the
reliability of the source of the information. As noted by Justice Zinn at
paragraph 25 of Ferguson, a finding that evidence is not credible
represents a finding that the source of the evidence is not reliable.
[19]
The Applicant offers various explanations for
the inconsistencies identified by the Officer. However, as these explanations
were not before the Officer, they do not assist the Court in analyzing the
reasonableness of the Officer’s decision. Rather, they support an argument that
the Applicant should have been provided with an opportunity to respond to the
Officer’s concerns with Mr. Gulyas’ letter, such that the Officer could have considered
these explanations and reached a more fully informed conclusion as to the
appropriate treatment of the evidence. The credibility concerns engage the
provisions of s. 113(b) of IRPA and s. 167 of IRPR surrounding the availability
of an oral hearing, and the Officer was required to consider the factors in s.
167 including whether the evidence to which the credibility concerns relates is
central to the decision on the application for protection, including any impact
upon the Officer’s state protection analysis.
[20]
It is therefore unnecessary for the Court to
rule on the other issues raised by the Applicant. I note that, at the hearing
of this application, the Applicant proposed a question for certification for
appeal related to the first issue raised by the Applicant, whether the Officer
breached procedural fairness by failing to provide notice that the Applicant
would be assessed separately from the members of her family. Her proposed
question is as follows:
Is it a breach of procedural fairness for an
officer to sever an application in a manner that raises new issues without
giving an applicant an opportunity to respond to the new issues raised by the
severance?
[21]
As my decision is to allow this application for
judicial review for reasons unrelated to the Officer’s severance of the
Applicant’s PRRA application from that of her family, the proposed question
would not be determinative of an appeal. It is therefore not appropriate for
certification. However, the Applicant is now aware that her family’s H&C
application has been granted and will be able to make any additional
submissions which she considers relevant to her own application as a result of
these circumstances before her application is considered by another PRRA
officer.