Date:
20120625
Docket:
T-421-12
Citation:
2012 FC 808
Toronto, Ontario, June 25, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
BETWEEN:
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YI ZHANG
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of the Pensions Appeal
Board (PAB Board) made by the Honourable Mr. Justice Douglas Rutherford,
Vice-Chairman, dated the 29th of September, 2011. In that decision,
the Applicant YI ZHANG was ordered to provide her consent as to the provision
of certain medical information and submit to an independent medical examination
within 30 days, failing which her appeal respecting the dismissal of an appeal
from a refusal to provide disability benefits to her under the Canada Pension
Plan Act (CPPA).
[2]
I
accept and adopt as accurate the summary of the facts as set our in paragraphs
2 to 7 of Justice Rutherford’s Reasons. In brief, the Applicant YI ZHANG applied
for Canada Pension Plan (CPP) benefits on the basis that she had been treated
for cancer, which left her with pain and limitations. The Decision of the
Review Tribunal dated August 17, 2008, which forms part of the Record before
me, at paragraphs 16 and 28, indicates that at least before mid 2003 the
Applicant was receiving acupuncture and massage treatments and ingesting
Chinese medicines, and that she was receiving some sort of psychological
treatment. The Applicant refused to share her medical records in this regard.
[3]
In
early 2007, the Applicant signed and submitted a consent form authorizing
various third parties, including medical persons and institutions, to disclose
relevant information to the government. That consent expired, and in December
2009 the Applicant was asked to sign a further consent and to consent to an
independent medical examination (IMC). She has refused or neglected to do so
despite numerous reminder letters sent to her and her husband.
[4]
It
should be pointed out that the Applicant’s husband represented her at earlier
hearings and in the preparation of the written material filed with this Court.
Her husband was at the Applicant’s side during the hearing before me. The
Applicant represented herself and spoke before me, largely reading from a
prepared text. The Applicant seemed to be quite confused and had limited
ability in the English language. Her husband was better skilled in English, but
was also confused as to legal matters.
[5]
The
Applicant’s arguments can be summarized as follows:
a. The
consent that she signed in 2007 has exhausted the Minister’s authority to
require a new or further consent;
b. She
is now over 65 years of age and is no longer subject to CPP;
c. The
Minister’s Counsel kept changing their position in the matter.
[6]
As
to the first point, subsections 68(1)(a) and 68(2) of the Canada Pension Plan
Regulations, C.R.C., c. 385, clearly authorize the Minister to require that a
person seeking CPP benefits provide medical information and submit to medical
examination “from time to time”.
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68.
(1) Where an applicant claims that he or some other person is disabled within
the meaning of the Act, he shall supply the Minister with the following
information in respect of the person whose disability is to be determined:
(a)
a report of any physical or mental disability including
(i)
the nature, extent and prognosis of the disability,
(ii)
the findings upon which the diagnosis and prognosis were made,
(iii)
any limitation resulting from the disability, and
(iv)
any other pertinent information, including recommendations for further
diagnostic work or treatment, that may be relevant;
…
68.
(2) In addition to the requirements of subsection (1), a person whose
disability is to be or has been determined pursuant to the Act may be
required from time to time by the Minister
(a)
to supply a statement of his occupation and earnings for any period; and
(b)
to undergo such special examinations and to supply such reports as the
Minister deems necessary for the purpose of determining the disability of
that person.
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68.
(1) Quand un requérant allègue que lui-même ou une autre personne est
invalide au sens de la Loi, il doit fournir au ministre les renseignements
suivants sur la personne dont l’invalidité est à déterminer :
a)
un rapport sur toute invalidité physique ou mentale indiquant les éléments
suivants
(i)
la nature, l’étendue et le pronostic de l’invalidité,
(ii)
les constatations sur lesquelles se fondent le diagnostic et le pronostic,
(iii)
toute incapacité résultant de l’invalidité,
(iv)
tout autre renseignement qui pourrait être approprié, y compris les
recommandations concernant le traitement ou les examens additionnels;
…
68.
(2) En plus des exigences du paragraphe (1), une personne dont l’invalidité
reste à déterminer ou a été déterminée en vertu de la Loi, peut être requise
à l’occasion par le ministre
a)
de fournir une déclaration de ses emplois ou de ses gains pour n’importe
quelle période; et
b)
de se soumettre à tout examen spécial et de fournir tout rapport que le
ministre estimera nécessaire en vue de déterminer l’invalidité de cette
personne.
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[7]
I
agree with Justice Rutherford in his determination of this issue as set out at
paragraphs 6, 7, and 8 of his Reasons. Having regard to any standard of review
his decision was both correct and reasonable. It is entirely appropriate for
the Minister to require further consent and an independent medical examination:
[6] On April 1, 2011, the Minister’s Medical
Expertise Division wrote again to the Appellant and her husband/representative
requesting the information and consents, again enclosing the requested
documents and a stamped return envelope. When no response was received by July
22, 2011, counsel for the Minister filed this motion.
[7] Evidently the Appellant has had a change
of mind and has reversed the position taken before the Board last March 3.
Following the filing of this motion, the Appellant’s husband/representative
filed a 17 page response dated August 8, 2001. In it he reviewed in great
detail the history of Yi Zhang’s claim for benefits and the various levels of
consideration. Boiled down to its essential point, Mr. Jinshu Xu contends that
the Minister has already exercised the authority to obtain medical information
about the Appellant. He refers to the documents she filled out and filed with her
initial application and argues that the Minister determined her claim adversely
to her and that is the end of the Minister’s role. The subsequent
determinations are by the Review Tribunal and by this Board and the Minister
cannot now draw on the regulatory provisions requiring further information. In
fact, Mr. Jinshu Xu goes so far as to characterize the ongoing attempts by the
Minister’s Medical Expertise Division to obtain information and consents from
the Appellant as ‘procedurally unfair, erroneous in law, deceptive and fraud’.
[8] I do not accept the arguments Mr. Jinshu
Xu makes. I think the Minister has the authority to require the information and
the independent medical examination being sought. The fact that similar
information and consents were given previously at the initial stage of the
claim does not mean that as the claim moves through the successive stages of
review, more current information cannot be sought. The consents given
originally were time limited on their face and have expired. The information
furnished in earlier stages is necessarily dated, and the newer and current
developments in the physical and mental health of a claimant for disability
benefits may well shed light on whether the claimant was, at the relevant time
when she met the minimum contributory criteria [‘minimum qualifying period’ or
‘MQP’ as it is usually referred to] suffering from a ‘severe and prolonged’
disability.
[8]
The
Applicant’s next submission made in oral argument is that she is now over 65
years of age and is no longer subject to CPP regulation. This argument
overlooks the fact that the Applicant is still seeking benefits under the CPP,
at least for a period before she was 65 years of age. Before she reached 65
years of age, she should have provided a fresh consent and submitted to an
independent medical examination. Even after age 65, if she wants the benefits
that she is seeking, she must provide the consent. Release of medical records
is appropriate and, even now, a medical examination may be appropriate.
[9]
The
third issue raised by the Applicant is that the Minister kept changing Counsel
and its legal position in the matter. I find no evidence at all as to any
inappropriate behaviour by the Minister or the Minister’s Counsel in the
Record.
[10]
It
is abundantly clear that the Applicant is quite confused as to the legal
aspects of this matter and would have benefited greatly from proper legal
advice, had that advice been followed.
[11]
The
Applicant in her written Memorandum made frequent allegations, highlighted in
bold type, as to fraud allegedly committed by the Minister. No fraudulent
activity appears in the Record before me, nor has the Applicant in any way been
able to support such an allegation. Normally, serious cost consequences follow
where a party has alleged fraud, then been unable to prove it. Here the Counsel
for the Minister has graciously agreed that costs not exceed $500.00.
[12]
The
Application will be dismissed, with costs to the Respondent, should the Crown
seek to recover them, fixed at $500.00.
JUDGMENT
FOR
THE REASONS PROVIDED:
THIS
COURT ADJUDGES that:
1.
The
Application is dismissed; and
2.
The
Respondent is entitled to costs, should they seek to recover them, fixed in the
sum of $500.00.
“Roger T.
Hughes”