Date: 20100729
Docket: IMM-3902-09
IMM-4413-09
Citation: 2010 FC 792
Ottawa, Ontario, July 29,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
JOSE
LUIS AYALA ALVAREZ
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Overview
[1]
Mr. Jose
Luis Ayala Alvarez fled El
Salvador in 2008
and claimed refugee protection in Canada.
He claims that he was attacked and tortured by a gang he refused to join.
[2]
Mr. Ayala
Alvarez applied for legal aid to help him with his refugee claim and the Legal
Services Society (LSS) of British
Columbia granted
his request. Subsequently, the LSS cancelled his legal aid certificate, but
invited Mr. Ayala Alvarez to re-apply after he received his notice to appear
before the Immigration and Refugee Board. The Board sent his notice to appear
on April 24, 2009, setting a hearing date of May 22, 2009. He went back to the
LSS which approved his application for legal aid on May 13, 2009. Since the
hearing was only 9 days away and his lawyer was not available, Mr. Ayala
Alvarez requested an adjournment. The Board denied his request.
[3]
In any
case, Mr. Ayala Alvarez appeared before the Board on May 22, 2009 without
counsel. Just prior to the hearing, he discussed the possibility of an
adjournment with the Refugee Protection Officer (RPO) and a representative of
the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR). Both conversations
were recorded. In the latter, the UNHCR representative suggested that Mr.
Ayala Alvarez request an adjournment from the Board directly. It was clear that
Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s skills in English were rudimentary and that his vision was
impaired.
[4]
However,
when the presiding member entered the room, Mr. Ayala Alvarez became nervous
and failed to request an adjournment. The hearing proceeded with the assistance
of an interpreter. In the end, the Board dismissed Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s
application.
[5]
Mr. Ayala
Alvarez challenges both the Board’s decision refusing his request for an
adjournment and its decision denying him refugee protection. In respect of the
former, the question is whether the Board considered the relevant factors
before denying the adjournment. In respect of the latter, the question is
whether Mr. Ayala Alvarez had a fair hearing before the Board. For the reasons
that follow, I have concluded that the Board failed to consider the relevant
factors and that the hearing was unfair. Therefore, I must allow these
applications for judicial review and order a new hearing.
II. Issues
[6]
There are
two issues:
- Was the Board’s decision refusing an
adjournment reasonable?
- Was the hearing before the Board
unfair?
(a) Factual Background
[7]
On May 13,
2009, Mr. Ayala Alvarez requested a postponement of his hearing given that his
lawyer was not available until September 2009. The Board responded by
dismissing his application, noting that Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s application was
filed a year earlier and that he had been given sufficient time to prepare for
his hearing.
[8]
Just
before the hearing, the RPO asked Mr. Ayala Alvarez if he would be pursuing his
request for an adjournment. The RPO confirmed that Mr. Ayala Alvarez had
secured legal aid. The RPO then approached the UNHCR representative and asked
her if she would be assisting Mr. Ayala Alvarez at the hearing. He hoped that
she would. However, she stated that she was merely monitoring the proceedings.
The UNHCR representative suggested to Mr. Ayala Alvarez that he would be
disadvantaged by proceeding without counsel, especially because of his visual
disability, and that he should ask for an adjournment.
[9]
However, as
mentioned, nothing more was said on the subject.
[10]
The Board
rejected Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s claim mainly because it disbelieved his evidence.
(1) Was the Board’s decision
refusing an adjournment reasonable?
[11]
Under
Rule 48(4) of the Refugee
Protection Division Rules, SOR/2002-228, the
Board must consider numerous factors in deciding whether to grant an
adjournment (see Annex A). They include:
• when the request was made;
• how much time the applicant had to
prepare for the hearing;
• the efforts made by the applicant to
proceed;
• whether the applicant has counsel;
• whether there were previous delays;
• whether the hearing date was
peremptory;
• whether an unreasonable delay or
injustice would be caused; and
• the nature and complexity of the
matter to be heard.
[12]
In
dismissing Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s application, the Board seemed to rely solely on
the fact that the Mr. Ayala Alvarez had sufficient time to prepare for the
hearing. It would have been aware, surely, of other pertinent factors, such as
the complexity of the claim, the unavailability of counsel, the absence of
previous delays, the circumstances surrounding the position taken by the LSS,
and the short time frame between the request to appear and the date of the
hearing. However, it did not appear to consider these circumstances.
[13]
On the
facts of this case, I conclude that the decision refusing an adjournment was
unreasonable.
(2) Was the hearing before the
Board unfair?
[14]
The Minister
argues that because the Board never received a direct request from Mr. Ayala
Alvarez for an adjournment, the ensuing hearing was not unfair to him. He
points out that there is no absolute right to counsel in immigration
proceedings (Austria v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 423).
[15]
In my
view, in the circumstances of this case, proceeding in the absence of counsel
resulted in unfairness to Mr. Ayala Alvarez. The Board relied on a substantial
body of documentary evidence that was entirely in English. While Mr. Ayala
Alvarez had the assistance of an interpreter and was given an opportunity to
look over the documents before the hearing, he could not have absorbed their
content or prepared any response to them without further time and assistance.
[16]
Further,
it was clear that Mr. Ayala Alvarez had a visual disability that made it even
more difficult for him to understand and respond to the documentary evidence on
which the Board relied. It also made it difficult for him to follow the
proceedings. Both the RPO and the UNHCR representative were aware of Mr. Ayala
Alvarez’s circumstances and were concerned about his capacity to proceed. But
their concern for his predicament did not cause them to suggest to the Board
that proceeding in the absence of counsel might prejudice him.
[17]
Mr. Ayala
Alvarez was entitled to a fair hearing before the Board. Under the
circumstances, I am not satisfied that he received one.
IV. Conclusion and Disposition
[18]
The
Board’s refusal to grant Mr. Ayala Alvarez’s request for an adjournment was
unreasonable. In addition, its decision to proceed in the absence of counsel
was unfair. Accordingly, I must allow this application for judicial review and
order a new hearing before a different panel of the Board. Neither party proposed
a question of general importance for me to certify, and none is stated.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT IS
that:
1.
The
application for judicial review is allowed. A new hearing before a different
panel is ordered;
2.
No
question of general importance is stated.
“James
W. O’Reilly”
Annex