Date:
20120912
Docket: IMM-7805-11
Citation: 2012 FC1076
Ottawa, Ontario, September 12, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
BETWEEN:
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JOZSEF MOLNAR,
JOZSEFNE MOLNAR (A.K.A. JOSEFNE MARIA MOLNAR), KATALIN MOLNAR, GEZA MOLNAR,
JOSZEF MOLNAR
(A.K.A. JOZSEF
MOLNAR),
RAMONA MOLNAR,
ILONA BERKI
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Applicants
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Robert Israel Blanshay brings a motion, pursuant
to Rule 369 of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, seeking leave to
intervene in this application for judicial review, as provided for in Rule
109. For the reasons that follow, the motion is granted, on terms.
Preliminary
Issue
[2]
Mr. Blanshay has sworn an affidavit in support
of his motion. The materials filed in support of the motion reflect that they
have been filed by Mr. Blanshay of the firm of Blanshay and Lewis as solicitors
for the proposed intervener.
[3]
The Applicants submit that the motion does not
comply with Rule 82 because the proposed intervener is both affiant and counsel
on the motion. Rule 82 provides as follows: “Except with leave of the Court,
a solicitor shall not depose to an affidavit and present argument to the Court
based on that affidavit.”
[4]
Given the unique circumstances underlying this motion,
the Court grants Mr. Blanshay leave to file his own affidavit and act as
counsel solely for the purposes of this Rule 369 motion. The Court considers
that the following support the granting of such leave.
[5]
First, Mr. Blanshay, in his Notice of Motion,
specifically advises that if his motion is granted, then he shall retain
independent counsel.
[6]
Second, he would have been permitted to file his
own affidavit and file representations on his own behalf as a proposed party
acting in person, regardless of the fact that he also happens to be a barrister
and solicitor.
[7]
Third, this is a motion made in writing and not
one heard in open Court and there was no request made by either the Applicants
or the Respondent to cross-examine Mr. Blanshay on his affidavit. As a
consequence, any feared conflict, of the sort described in Pluri Vox
Media Corp v Canada (Minister of National Revenue), 2012 FCA 18 [Pluri
Vox Media Corp], has not arisen to date.
[8]
Fourth, as is noted by Mr. Blanshay in his
Reply, the matter at hand does not deal, other than indirectly, with the “main
issues” in the application and the Court accepts his statement that those main
issues “have intentionally not been placed within the proposed intervener’s
affidavit.”
[9]
Fifth, the Court agrees with the submission of
Mr. Blanshay that in “sane modern procedure” one ought generally to turn a
blind eye to procedural irregularities unless there is some evidence of
prejudice to the party attacking the affidavit. There is no suggestion here of
any prejudice suffered.
[10]
Lastly, the Court has had regard to the decision
of the Court of Appeal in Pluri Vox Media Corp wherein Justice
Stratas noted that the Court must, on an application for leave under Rule 82, be
alert to the concern of an unacceptable conflict that may arise when a lawyer
acts on a motion both as a witness on controversial matters of fact and as an
advocate as well as be alert to whether the evidence can be supplied by a
person other than the lawyer. Here, any conflict will arise only if Mr.
Blanshay is granted intervener status and he has undertaken to obtain
independent counsel if his motion is granted. Further, and critically, only
Mr. Blanshay has first hand knowledge of the relevant matters attested to in
his affidavit.
[11]
For all of these reasons, Mr. Blanshay is
granted leave under Rule 82 to both depose his own affidavit and act as counsel
for himself on this motion.
Background
[12]
The main application is to review and set aside
the decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee
Board (RPD) denying the Applicants refugee protection. The records on the
application and the motion reveal that there are outstanding complaints filed
with the LSUC regarding the conduct of Mr. Blanshay and Martin Francis Selliah
Nagendra (aka Sam Nagendra), an immigration consultant. Accordingly, in light
of these outstanding matters, it is appropriate that the facts be limited to
those truly necessary for the purposes of this motion.
[13]
Mr. Blanshay practices immigration and refugee
law in the City of Toronto. He is certified by the Law Society of Upper Canada
(LSUC) as a Specialist in Immigration and Refugee Law. He formerly represented
the Applicants in their claim for refugee protection before the RPD. The RPD
dismissed their claim for protection and the Applicants have been granted leave
from this Court to judicially review that decision.
[14]
Mr. Blanshay was retained after the Applicants’
claim for protection had been prepared by Mr. Nagendra. Mr. Blanshay describes
Mr. Nagendra as a “former, trusted colleague and friend” who occupied an office
in Mr. Blanshay’s law firm. There was apparently a falling out between them in
November 2010 and Mr. Blanshay “decided to terminate all association with Mr.
Nagendra, cease all client referrals from him, and evict him from my firm
premises.”
[15]
The motion record reveals a substantial and
material disagreement between Mr. Blanshay and the Applicants as to the facts
surrounding the professional services rendered to them by Mr. Nagendra, the
quality of those services, the circumstances relating to the change in the Applicants’
representation from Mr. Nagendra to Mr. Blanshay, the services rendered by Mr.
Blanshay, and the quality of those services. Mr. Blanshay seeks to put before
the Court in this application for judicial review, his version of these facts.
[16]
The Memorandum of Argument filed by the Applicants
in their judicial review application sets out four alleged issues. The first
is stated as follows: “Should the decision be set aside because the Applicant [sic]
was incompetently represented and as such the decision breached the principles
of natural justice?” Mr. Blanshay is the counsel who is alleged to have been
incompetent. The detail of the alleged incompetence, which is based upon
affidavits sworn by some of the Applicants, is set out in paragraphs 61 through
67 of their memorandum. The allegations are significant and numerous.
[17]
Mr. Blanshay in his affidavit filed on this
motion vigorously disputes many, if not all of the facts as set out by in the Applicants’
application record upon which they submit he was incompetent. Specifically, he
attests that his “involvement, representation and services have been
significantly misrepresented in order to skew the evidence in [the Applicants’]
favour.” He argues that “This Honourable Court, and all parties, ought to
receive ‘the full picture’ of the Applicants’, immigration history and my
involvement, representation and services to them.”
[18]
The Applicants in their memorandum “accept that
it is in the interests of justice that the Court has before it an affidavit
from the Proposed Intervener.” However, they submit that the proper way to get
that affidavit before the Court is for the Respondent to file it and have
cross-examinations on any additional affidavits. The Respondent, for its part,
has filed a letter stating that “The Respondent consents to the motion of
Robert Israel Blanshay, Barrister and Solicitor, dated August 21, 2012, to
intervene in the above-referenced judicial review application, including his
motion to file affidavits, cross-examine, be served with materials, and for any
necessary adjournment of the judicial review hearing.”
Analysis
[19]
The Applicants submit that Mr. Blanshay has
failed to meet the criteria for intervener status as set out in Canadian
Union of Public Employees v Canadian Airlines International Ltd., [2000]
FCJ No 220 (FCA), para 8, namely:
1)
Is the proposed intervener directly
affected by the outcome?
2)
Does there exist a justiciable issue
and a veritable public interest?
3)
Is there an apparent lack of any other
reasonable or efficient means to submit the question of the Court?
4)
Is the position of the proposed
intervener adequately defended by one of the parties to the case?
5)
Are the interests of justice better
served by the intervention of the proposed third party?
6)
Can the Court hear and decide the cause
on its merits without the proposed intervener?
[20]
The factors above are not cumulative; a proposed
intervener need not meet every one: Boutique Jacob Inc v Paintainer Ltd,
2006 FCA 426, at para 21. However, in this case and based on the specific
facts in the record, I am of the view that all have been met.
[21]
The Applicants accept that the first two
criteria are met.
[22]
The Applicants submit that the third criterion
is not met because:
The appropriate
vehicle to adduce evidence with respect to incompetent counsel is through
evidence filed by the Respondent. In fact, the Respondent has already been
provided with the opportunity to file further affidavits and chose not to do
so.
…
However, although the
time for filing has passed, it is submitted that it is now in the interests of
justice that the Court grant an extension of time to allow the Respondent to
file further affidavits and the Applicants consent to such an order being
issued. Thus there is no need to allow the Proposed Intervener to be granted
intervener status.
[23]
I agree that in the normal course it is for the
two parties to applications for judicial review to file the evidence that is
necessary for justice to be done. In this case, all parties agree that the
evidence that Mr. Blanshay wishes to tender is necessary. It would not be in
the interest of justice that it not be before the Court for its consideration.
However, the Respondent has had an opportunity to file materials and chose not
to include the evidence that Mr. Blanshay proposes to file; nor has it offered
to do so in response to this motion should the Court grant it leave to do so.
It is not for the Court to second-guess the Respondent’s strategy. It is not
for the Court to order a party to file affidavits from third parties that it
chooses not to file. It is for the Court to ensure that justice is done and
seen to be done. In my view, there is no reasonable or efficient method to get
this evidence before the Court other than to grant Mr. Blanshay intervener
status.
[24]
The Applicants submit that the position of Mr.
Blanshay is adequately defended by the Respondent and that he does not require
intervener status. I am unable to agree. I accept the submission of Mr.
Blanshay that counsel for the Respondent does not and cannot act as the
advocate for Mr. Blanshay in the sense that he will be provided with a “full
and meaningful way of defending himself against the Applicants’ [alleged] false
allegations.” The situation where counsel is alleged to have been incompetent
is unique in that the allegations are a direct attack on a barrister and
solicitor whose good name, reputation, and practice may suffer if the allegations
are not fully defended in the public process of a court proceeding.
Accordingly, I find that the fourth criterion has been satisfied.
[25]
I am also of the view, in these circumstances,
that the interest of justice is best served by permitting the proposed
intervener to participate in the application fully in the issues that directly affect
him. He should be permitted to file his own affidavit and that of the
interpreter he employed when dealing with the Applicants. He must also be
permitted the right to cross-examine the Applicants on their evidence as to
their dealings and him, and he must also be permitted to make submissions at
the hearing on the issues that directly affect him.
[26]
Lastly, I am satisfied that as the record
currently stands, it is not possible for the Court to hear and decide
the case on its merits with any confidence that justice will be done. The proposed
intervener is a necessary party to this litigation given the issue raised by
the Applicants as to his competence. The Applicants, Mr. Blanshay and his
interpreter are the only parties with direct knowledge of their interactions,
discussions, and instruction. That evidence is essential, in my view, given
the allegation that the Applicants’ evidence regarding Mr. Blanshay may have
been tailored to provide support for their application.
[27]
Accordingly the proposed intervener will be granted standing in
this application, on the terms set out in the Order.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that:
1.
The motion is granted, Robert Israel Blanshay (the Intervener) is
granted intervener status upon the following basis:
(i)
The Intervener shall be represented by counsel who is not a partner or
member of the law firm Blanshay and Lewis;
(ii)
The Intervener is permitted to bring evidence and make arguments on the
issue of whether the Applicants were incompetently represented, resulting in a
breach of natural justice that vitiates the determination of the Refugee
Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board (the Intervener’s
Issue);
(iii)
On or before September 26, 2012 the Applicants and the Respondent shall
serve the Intervener with all materials each has filed in this application to
date, and the Respondent shall serve the Intervener with a copy of the
Certified Tribunal Record;
(iv)
The Intervener is granted leave to file an application record on or
before October 3, 2012, including supporting affidavits from:
a.
Robert Israel Blanshay concerning all information, details and
circumstances regarding his past representation of the Applicants, together
with any other material relevant to the Intervener’s Issue; and
b.
Brigitta Mahl, the Intervener’s interpreter/translator with whom the
Intervener worked with the Applicants, concerning all information, details and
circumstances regarding her interpretation and translation services for the Applicants;
(v)
The Applicants and the Respondent are granted leave to serve and file on
or before October 10, 2012 further affidavits, if any, in response to the
affidavits filed by the Intervener;
(vi)
The Intervener is granted leave to cross-examine on any affidavit
already served and filed by the Applicants in support of this application and
on any new affidavit filed by the Applicants or Respondent pursuant to
paragraph 1(v), above;
(vii)
The Applicants and Respondent are granted leave to cross-examine on any
new affidavits served and filed by either of them pursuant to paragraph 1(v),
above;
(viii)
The Applicants and the Respondent are granted leave to cross-examine on
any affidavits served and filed by the Intervener filed pursuant to paragraph
1(iv);
(ix)
Cross-examinations, if any, on affidavits shall be completed on or
before October 19, 2012;
(x)
The Applicants’ further memorandum of argument, if any, shall be served
and filed on or before November 2, 2012;
(xi)
The Respondent’s and Intervener’s further memoranda of argument, if any,
shall be served and filed no later than November 16, 2012;
(xii)
The transcript of the cross-examinations, if any, shall be filed on or
before November 16, 2012;
2.
The hearing of this application currently scheduled to be heard on
Tuesday,
September 25,
2012, at the Federal Court, 180 Queen Street West, in the City of Toronto, Province of Ontario, is hereby adjourned;
3.
The style of cause is amended as follows:
JOZSEF MOLNAR, JOZSEFNE MOLNAR
(A.K.A.
JOSEFNE MARIA MOLNAR), KATALIN MOLNAR,
GEZA MOLNAR,
JOSZEF MOLNAR (A.K.A. JOZSEF MOLNAR),
RAMONA
MOLNAR, ILONA BERKI
Applicants
and
THE
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
and
ROBERT
ISRAEL BLANSHAY
Intervener
4.
The hearing of this application for judicial review is hereby fixed for Tuesday,
January 29, 2013,
to commence at 11:00 a.m. at the Federal Court, 180 Queen Street West, in the
City of Toronto, Province of Ontario, for a duration not exceeding
two (2) hours.
"Russel W. Zinn"