Docket: IMM-5205-11
Citation: 2012 FC 389
[UNREVISED CERTIFIED
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Montréal, Quebec, April 3, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable
Justice Martineau
BETWEEN:
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FABRICE MATINGOU-TESTIE
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Applicant
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and
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MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The
applicant challenges the legality of a decision of the Refugee Protection
Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board (RPD), refusing his claim for
refugee protection under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC
2001, c 27 (IRPA) because he failed to establish his identity to the RPD’s
satisfaction.
[2]
Proof
of the claimant’s identity to the RPD’s satisfaction is crucial to any refugee protection
claim. In fact, if a claimant fails to establish his identity, the RPD
may draw a negative conclusion as to the credibility of his narrative: DU
v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 61 at paragraph 1; Yang v
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 681 at
paragraph 6.
In the case at bar, the RPD cannot be faulted for denying an adjournment at the hearing, or for ignoring the proofs of identity
submitted by the applicant. And it is this Court’s opinion that this
application for judicial review must be dismissed.
FACTS
[3]
The
applicant is a citizen of the Democratic Republic of Congo. During an incident
in Kinshasa on September 29, 2010, Armand Tungulu, a Congolese human rights
activist, was arrested, beaten and forcibly taken by the police after throwing rocks
at the presidential procession. Armand Tungulu died in detention following his
arrest. The applicant alleges that certain persons who were at the scene
mysteriously disappeared when the police were accused of causing Tungulu’s
death. The applicant claims to have witnessed this violent incident.
[4]
The
applicant alleges that, on October 15, 2010, plain-clothed men went to his home
while he was absent. They came back three times in the ensuing days and told
the applicant’s wife that they were looking for people who could testify about
what had happened to Armand Tungulu. The applicant claims that he was
threatened with death if he did not cooperate with the police. Shortly after
that, he left Kinshasa for a village in Bas-Congo, where he remained until he
left for Canada.
[5]
On
December 5, 2010, the applicant arrived in Canada with an authentic passport
bearing the name Fabrice Milambwe Kabwe and a visitor visa valid until
December 24, 2010. Upon his arrival, he was detained for
identification at Pierre Elliott Trudeau Airport in Montréal. The Vancouver
conference that he was supposed to attend had taken place in September 2010,
two months prior to his arrival in Canada. The applicant showed another travel
order, directing attendance at a Calgary conference held from December 4 to
December 12, 2010. In addition, searches of the applicant’s
luggage revealed that he was also in possession of a French passport, which
bore the name Charles Reynes and was found to have been altered by photo
substitution (computerized notes, and comments from Visitor Records and Record
of Refugee Claim, prepared by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), issued
by the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (the Minister) and
dated May 19, 2011.)
[6]
On
December 17, 2010, the applicant told the immigration authorities that he had
not revealed his true identity to them, and that he had obtained his passport
and visitor visa fraudulently so that he could flee the country. He produced a certificate
of lost identity documents and a driver’s licence issued to Fabrice
Mantingou-Testie, and applied for refugee status in Canada. On the same day,
the CBSA prepared an inadmissibility report in respect of the applicant
and arrested him for identification purposes.
[7]
On
December 8, 2010, the applicant appeared before the Immigration Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board (Immigration Division) for a review of his
detention. The Immigration Division continued his detention because his
various identity documents had to be submitted for an expert analysis requested
by the Minister.
[8]
The
applicant’s detention was continued upon subsequent reviews on December 8,
2010, December 15, 2010, and January 4, 2011. At the latter hearing, the
applicant submitted a judgment in lieu of birth certificate from the Parquet
de grande instance de Kinshasa, and a birth certificate that he managed to
obtain with the help of his family in Congo. However, since a CBSA forgery
analyst had discovered various irregularities in these additional identity
documents, the Minister was still not satisfied of the applicant’s identity.
[9]
On
January 13, 2011, upon an early review, the Immigration Division released the
applicant, having found that the Minister was now satisfied of his identity and
did not have any special concerns that would require a recommendation of continued
detention.
THE CONTESTED DECISION
[10]
The
RPD heard the applicant’s refugee protection claim on June 17, 2011. According
to the decision of June 30, 2011, the only ground for refusing the claim was
the applicant’s failure to establish his identity to the Board’s satisfaction,
notably because of the irregularities already brought to light at the detention
reviews before the Immigration Division.
[11]
Noting
that it was not bound by the Immigration Division’s decision to release the
applicant, and that it had to be satisfied of his identity in order to determine
the merits of his refugee protection claim (Niyongabo
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 363 at
paragraph 24), the RPD assessed the conclusiveness of the documents submitted by
the applicant to establish his identity. In its reasons, the RPD explained why,
in its opinion, the applicant had not met his burden of proof.
[12]
First
of all, the driver’s licence provided by the applicant was a false document. The forgery
analyst’s report states that the print quality was poor and that the coats of
arms reproduced thereon contained typographical errors: the word “travail”
on the front of the licence had two t’s, and the same word on the reverse side did
not contain the letter “l”. Moreover, the background printing, which contained
the inscription “République Démocratique du Congo”, was out of
alignment. The applicant told the Court that he had obtained the document
from the transportation bureau and did not how an official document could
contain such errors. The RPD stated that it accorded no probative value to the
licence, especially since the applicant submitted no opposing expert evidence seeking
to demonstrate its authenticity.
[13]
Secondly,
the certificate of lost identity documents produced by the applicant gave an
address in the commune of Saio, whereas the applicant personally testified that
he was living in the commune of Ngiri Ngiri when he obtained the certificate.
The applicant attributed this to a typing error. The RPD accepted the expert
testimony of the forgery analyst, who found that the document contained no
authenticating security characteristics.
[14]
Thirdly,
the birth certificate obtained by the applicant’s family during the applicant’s
detention in December 2010 stated the name Matingou Munder Ondred as the
applicant’s father, giving his date of birth as October 20, 1948. But the
applicant had testified that his father’s name was Matingou Alphonse
Matisse and that his date of birth was September 8, 1948. The applicant
explained that he went to live with his mother’s family following his father’s
death, and that this was why he did not know his father’s family well. He also
explained that he sometimes had a hard time remembering precise dates, but
never the year. The RPD determined that these explanations were unsatisfactory
in view of the circumstances of the case.
[15]
In
addition, the RPD refused to allow an oral application, made by the applicant’s
counsel, for additional time so that the applicant could contact the embassy of
his country, apply for a passport, and tender it in evidence after receiving
it. In its reasons, the RPD stated that, under section106 of the IRPA, where a
refugee claimant “does not possess acceptable documentation establishing
identity”, the RPD must take into account whether he has “provided a reasonable
explanation for the lack of documentation or [has] taken reasonable steps to
obtain the documentation.” In the same vein, the RPD noted that Rule 7 of the Refugee
Protection Division Rules, SOR/2002-228 (RPD Rules) provides: “The claimant must provide acceptable documents establishing
identity and other elements of the claim. A claimant who does not provide
acceptable documents must explain why they were not provided and what steps
were taken to obtain them.”
[16]
The
RPD found that since the applicant was represented by experienced counsel and
was detained for a considerable time due to a lack of documents duly
establishing identity, he should have made reasonable efforts to obtain such
documents for his RPD hearing, especially since he had several months following
his release in January 2011 to make those efforts.
[17]
Lastly,
the RPD found that even though the applicant knew certain specificities of the
Democratic Republic of Congo and therefore might well be a citizen of that
country, he failed to meet his burden to prove his identity. His refugee
protection claim was therefore refused.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[18]
The
parties agree that the assessment of proofs of identity is a question of fact
and is therefore reviewable on a reasonableness standard (Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at paragraphs 45-46 (Khosa); Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paragraph
53 (Dunsmuir)). As for the RPD’s refusal to grant time to enable the
applicant to make efforts to obtain a passport, it is a question of natural
justice that must be reviewed on a correctness standard (Khosa, above, at paragraphs 43-44; Dunsmuir, above, at paragraph 60).
[19]
In
passing, as part of this application for judicial review, the applicant made a
motion to this Court, dated October 20, 2011, to serve and file new evidence
(i.e. his Congolese passport, which he had obtained from the Embassy of Congo).
Prothonotary Morneau denied the request on November 10, 2011, on the basis
that the passport was new evidence which was not available to the RPD when its
decision was made and therefore could not be raised upon judicial review. Moreover,
since the evidence was not aimed at showing a breach of procedural fairness, it
did not meet the requirement established by this Court’s jurisprudence
regarding the exceptional circumstances in which new evidence can be included
in an application for judicial review.
DID
THE RPD ERR IN MAKING FINDINGS OF FACT IN A CAPRICIOUS MANNER, WITHOUT REGARD TO
THE EVIDENCE AND WITHOUT CONSIDERING ALL THE FACTORS RELEVANT TO MAKING ITS
DECISION?
[20]
A
decision under judicial review will be considered reasonable if it falls within
a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law and there is transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process (Dunsmuir, above, at
paragraph 47).
[21]
The
applicant submits that although the RPD is not bound by the Immigration
Division’s decision, it nonetheless failed to take account of the totality of
the evidence, because it failed to consider that the Minister, in view of all
the Immigration Division’s decisions upon the applicant’s detention reviews, had
declared himself satisfied of the applicant’s identity before the applicant could
be released.
[22]
The
applicant submits that it was not enough for the RPD simply to state that it
was not bound by the Minister’s apparent satisfaction of the applicant’s
identity. He submits that the RPD also had to consider the reasons for the
applicant’s release, namely, that the Immigration Division officer could have
consulted the applicant’s profile on social networks such as Facebook and
LinkedIn, especially since the RPD’s evidentiary disclosure included the
transcript of the Immigration Division hearing. However, the Court finds that
the transcripts in question make no reference to the applicant’s online
profiles. Rather, it was the applicant’s counsel who attested to this fact before
the RPD (tribunal record, transcript of hearing at page 49).
[23]
Relying
on the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Cepeda-Gutierrez
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] FCJ No 1425 at
paragraph 17 (Cepeda-Gutierrez), the applicant argues that the RPD made a reviewable
error in failing to mention, in its reasons for decision, that the Minister had
earlier proclaimed himself satisfied of the applicant’s identity:
However, the more important the evidence
that is not mentioned specifically and analyzed in the agency’s reasons, the
more willing a court may be to infer from the silence that the agency made an
erroneous finding of fact “without regard to the evidence”: Bains v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1993), 63 F.T.R. 312
(F.C.T.D.). In other words, the agency’s burden of explanation increases with
the relevance of the evidence in question to the disputed facts. Thus, a
blanket statement that the agency has considered all the evidence will not
suffice when the evidence omitted from any discussion in the reasons appears
squarely to contradict the agency’s finding of fact. Moreover, when the agency
refers in some detail to evidence supporting its finding, but is silent on
evidence pointing to the opposite conclusion, it may be easier to infer that
the agency overlooked the contradictory evidence when making its finding of
fact.
[24]
The
respondent contends that, firstly, neither the Immigration Division’s last detention
review, nor the remainder of the tribunal’s record, contain the reasons the
Minister declared himself satisfied of the applicant’s identity for the
purposes of his release. Accordingly, the respondent submits that the
applicant’s assertion, in his affidavit, that this opinion resulted from the
Facebook and LinkedIn profiles, constitutes new evidence which was not before
the RPD, and which the RPD was not required to mention in its reasons.
[25]
Secondly,
the respondent submits that the establishment of identity for the purpose of ending
a refugee claimant’s detention must be distinguished from the establishment of identity
for the purpose of assessing the merits of a refugee claimant’s protection claim.
The respondent submits that, upon reviewing a detention, the Minister is simply
issuing an opinion and is not making any formal decision binding on the RPD.
Moreover, the Immigration Division is not making a determination with respect
to the identity of a detained individual when it continues the individual’s
detention or orders his release under section 54 and subsection 57(1) of the
IRPA. One of the deciding factors is the evidence of the Minister’s efforts to
establish the identity of the foreign national (subsection 58(1) of the IRPA).
[26]
Lastly,
the respondent submits that the reason the Minister filed a notice of
intervention in the RPD, dated May 24, 2011, containing a copy of the notes
entered by the officers in the Field Operations Support System and a copy of
the forgery analyst’s report on the applicant’s identity documents, is that the
Minister was not yet totally satisfied of the applicant’s identity for the
purposes of his refugee protection claim. Therefore, the applicant should have
expected the question of identity to be argued anew before the RPD.
[27]
This
Court agrees with the respondent. The RPD’s duty to provide explanations is incontestably
tied to the relevance of the evidence that the decision-maker omitted from
discussion in its decision. In this case, the Minister’s position upon the
applicant’s release after several weeks of detention is not binding on the RPD,
and the RPD must be satisfied of the identity of a refugee claimant before
assessing his claim for protection. Moreover, it is the RPD that is tasked with
assessing the probative value of any identity document submitted by a refugee
claimant.
[28]
Even
if we assume for a moment that a person’s Facebook and LinkedIn profiles are
somewhat relevant in establishing his identity — a debatable assumption — the
applicant cannot fault the RPD for failing to mention those profiles in its decision,
given the numerous irregularities with his other identity documents. Moreover,
one cannot disregard the fact that neither the basis on which the Minister
declared himself satisfied with the applicant’s identity, nor the reasons the
Immigration Division was satisfied of his identity, were part of the evidence placed
before the RPD. The applicant now asserts that his online profiles were
spontaneous evidence and were therefore a credible basis on which the
Immigration Division could be satisfied of his identity. But if the applicant
is, as he claims, in agreement that the RPD was not bound by the Immigration
Division’s decision or by the Minister’s opinion, he should have submitted his
Facebook and LinkedIn profiles as evidence so the RPD could determine their
probative value; he must now assume the consequences of his inaction.
[29]
In
conclusion on this point, the
RPD did not, to paraphrase the words of Justice Evans in Cepeda-Gutierrez,
omit evidence from
discussion which appeared squarely to contradict its finding; and its decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and law.
DID THE RPD’S REFUSAL TO GRANT ADDITIONAL
TIME TO FILE IDENTITY DOCUMENTS AFTER THE HEARING RESULT IN A BREACH OF NATURAL
JUSTICE?
[30]
The
applicant argues that the RPD did not properly exercise its discretion at the
hearing when it refused to grant him additional time, because it failed
consider the probative value of the evidence that he wished to add to his
record, namely, a future passport that was not yet in his possession.
[31]
The
applicant relies on Rule 30 of the RPD Rules:
30. A party who does not provide a
document as required by rule 29 may not use the document at the hearing
unless allowed by the Division. In deciding whether to allow its use, the
Division must consider any relevant factors, including
(a) the document’s relevance
and probative value;
(b) any new evidence it brings
to the hearing; and
(c) whether the party, with reasonable effort, could
have provided the document as required by rule 29.
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30. La
partie qui ne transmet pas un document selon la règle 29 ne peut utiliser
celui-ci à l’audience, sauf autorisation de la Section. Pour décider si elle
autorise l’utilisation du document à l’audience, la Section prend en
considération tout élément pertinent. Elle examine notamment :
a) la
pertinence et la valeur probante du document;
b) toute
preuve nouvelle qu’il apporte;
c) si la partie aurait pu, en
faisant des efforts raisonnables, le transmettre selon la règle 29.
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[32]
After
careful examination of the RPD’s record and the parties’ representations, this
Court is not satisfied that the tribunal made a reviewable error in dismissing
the applicant’s application for an adjournment or additional time. It is well
settled that, as a general rule, the RPD, like any other administrative
tribunal, has the discretion to allow or dismiss an application for an
adjournment to submit new evidence, provided it complies with applicable principles
of procedural fairness. And it is worth noting that the use of the word
“including” in Rule 30 shows that the relevant factors which the RPD can
consider are not limited to the factors listed in the rule, and may vary
according to the circumstances of each case.
[33]
Hence,
in Mercado v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 289 at
paragraphs 38-41, the Court held that the RPD could reasonably consider the
fact that a claimant who failed to obtain the necessary documents prior to the
hearing was represented by experienced counsel; the time available to the
claimant to prepare; the reasonable efforts that could objectively be expected
on the claimant’s part; the explanation given for the claimant’s failure to
produce the required documents; and the possibility that new evidence might mitigate
the problems which had already been already observed in the claimant’s evidence
and which affected his credibility.
[34]
In
this case, based on a reading of the hearing transcript, I find that the RPD
considered the tardiness of the application; the time available to the
applicant to obtain other identity documents and the absence of any efforts
already undertaken to do so; the fact that the applicant was represented by the
same lawyer since the commencement of the process and during his detention for
identification; and the rules concerning the filing of identity documents prior
to RPD hearings. In this Court’s opinion, these factors were reasonably
assessed, and the dismissal of the applicant’s oral application at the hearing
was well founded in fact and law. As noted earlier, the written reasons for the
impugned decision also discuss the applicant’s lengthy detention, the lack of
reasonable effort to obtain valid identity documents despite the fact that
several months had elapsed since the applicant’s release, and the fact that he
was represented by experienced counsel throughout this period.
[35]
At
the risk of repeating myself, it is my opinion that these factors were relevant
and decisive. Once again, the factors set out in Rule 30 are not exhaustive,
and the RPD was under no obligation to state all of them in its written
reasons. The fact that it did not expressly take into account the probative
value of a passport that the applicant had just decided to make efforts to
obtain does not change this conclusion. I also wish to specify that the case
law cited by the applicant is clearly distinguishable from this case. In all
those decisions, there was a failure to assess relevant factors, including the factors
set out in Rule 30 of the RPD Rules, and the refugee protection claim was
refused solely on the basis that it was made late, or on evidence of little
relevance such as the voluminous nature of the documents submitted for filing: Khan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1351 at paragraph 7; Ahmmed v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 1433 at paragraph 9; SEB v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 791 at paragraph 25; Ayalogu v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 380 at
paragraph 4).
[36]
Nor is this Court convinced that counsel for the applicant
was taken by surprise at the hearing because the RPD had reservations about her
client’s identity. The evidence adduced at the hearing by the refugee protection
officer and the Minister and by the applicant himself, together with the fact
that, upon his arrival in Canada, the applicant was detained for identification
purposes for several weeks, makes such an assertion unlikely. Moreover, the Notice
to Appear, sent to the applicant on April 27, 2011, makes direct reference to Rule
7 of the RPD Rules: documents establishing a refugee claimant’s identity must
be submitted at the beginning of the hearing before the RPD, and if the
claimant does not have the required identity documents in his possession, he
must explain why, and what steps he took to obtain them.
[37]
The
applicant also argues that the RPD failed to consider the factors relevant to
the granting of additional time after a hearing, as set forth in Rule 37(3) of
the RPD Rules:
37. (1) A party who wants to
provide a document as evidence after a hearing must make an application to
the Division.
(2) The party must attach a copy of
the document to the application. The application must be made under rule 44,
but the party is not required to give evidence in an affidavit or statutory
declaration.
(3) In deciding the application,
the Division must consider any relevant factors, including:
(a) the document’s relevance
and probative value;
(b) any new evidence it brings
to the proceedings; and
(c) whether the party, with reasonable effort, could
have provided the document as required by rule 29.
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37. (1) Pour
transmettre, après l’audience, un document à la Section pour qu’elle
l’admette en preuve, la partie en fait la demande à la Section.
(2) La partie
fait sa demande selon la règle 44 et y joint une copie du document, mais elle
n’a pas à y joindre d’affidavit ou de déclaration solennelle.
(3) Pour
statuer sur la demande, la Section prend en considération tout élément
pertinent. Elle examine notamment :
a) la
pertinence et la valeur probante du document;
b) toute
preuve nouvelle qu’il apporte;
c) si la partie aurait pu, en
faisant des efforts raisonnables, le transmettre selon la règle 29.
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[38]
Specifically,
the day after the hearing, the applicant made a written application to the RPD
for additional time, confirming that he had undertaken the efforts necessary to
obtain a passport. The applicant alleges that, as a condition of obtaining
his passport, he needed to obtain a certificate of citizenship, which was
issued to him on June 20, 2011, and that he then had to defer his appointment
at the embassy until July 5, 2011, because he did not have the funds
necessary to get to Ottawa and pay the fee for processing his passport
application.
[39]
On
June 29, 2011, counsel for the applicant received a call from the RPD,
notifying him that his application for additional time to file a passport had
been dismissed. It should be noted once again that the RPD’s written reasons
are dated June 30, 2011.
[40]
In
fact, the RPD never received a copy of the applicant’s passport.
On July 18, 2011, after its written reasons were issued, the RPD
gave the applicant back the documents that had been filed with the registry,
including the originals of the receipt acknowledgment and the receipt issued by
the Embassy of the Democratic Republic of Congo in connection with the efforts
made to obtain a passport.
[41]
Upon
the request of counsel for the applicant, the RPD provided written reasons for its
refusal on September 2, 2011. The letter in question stated that the
application was dismissed because the applicant, with reasonable effort, could
have provided his passport before the hearing date (Rule 37(3)(c)
of the RPD Rules); because the applicant had been detained to establish his
identity; and because the establishment of a refugee protection claimant’s
identity is essential to any protection claim.
[42]
Lastly,
the applicant is convinced that the RPD did not have the slightest [translation] “open-mindedness” with
regard to his application for an extension of time, and did not give the
application serious consideration. In response, respondent argues that the
RPD could reasonably dismiss the applicant’s application because, in the
absence of a copy of the passport, the request did not meet one of the
fundamental requirements of Rule 37(2) of the RPD Rules. To this the applicant
replies that it would favour his cause if the RPD, in its written reasons
issued on September 2, 2011, applied a rule that was inapplicable.
[43]
I
agree with the respondent that in the absence of an application duly made under
Rule 44 of the RPD Rules (i.e. including a copy of the document to be
submitted as evidence), and in light of the particular circumstances of this
case, the RPD did not have a legal duty to deal with the application.
Nonetheless, it considered the application and replied in writing. There was no
breach of the principles of natural justice. The courts have held that it is
only when the applicant has complied with all the requirements of Rule 37 that
the RPD must expressly consider the application in its reasons: Nagulesan v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC
1382 at paragraphs 16-17; Howlader v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 817 at paragraphs 3-4. Consequently, I find that
the reference to Rule 37 in the RPD’s reasons dismissing an application for an
extension of time that was not in conformity with the RPD Rules does not cause
the decision to be reviewable.
[44]
For
all these reasons, this application for judicial review is dismissed. No
question of general importance was proposed by the parties for certification,
and none will be certified.