Date: 20070326
Docket: IMM-822-06
Citation: 2007 FC 320
Ottawa, Ontario, March 26, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
MARIA
DEL ROSARIO
FLORES CARRILLO
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
Ms. Maria Flores Carrillo claims that she is afraid of being
murdered by her former common-law spouse in Mexico. She says that she tried to
get help from Mexican police, but that her efforts only made things worse. Her
spouse found out that she had made a complaint to police and beat her severely.
His brother was a police officer.
[2]
Ms. Flores Carrillo sought refugee protection in Canada in 2004. A panel
of the Immigration and Refugee Board dismissed her claim because it doubted her
version of events and concluded that she had failed to show that state
protection was unavailable to her in Mexico. Ms. Flores Carrillo argues that
the Board erred in its treatment of her evidence and in its analysis of the
issue of state protection. She asks for a new hearing.
[3]
I agree that the Board erred and will allow this application for
judicial review.
I. Issues
[4]
Given my conclusion that the Board erred in law in its analysis
of the issue of state protection, I need not address the credibility issue.
II. Analysis
(a) The Board’s
decision
[5]
The Board noted that Mexico is a democracy and, therefore, can be presumed to provide
protection to its citizens. Further, Mexico has put in place various measures to deal with domestic violence –
legislation, law enforcement, legal services, shelters for abused women, and
health services. The Board found that Ms. Flores Carrillo had not made a
determined effort to obtain state protection, having only approached the police
once during four years of abuse.
[6]
The Board went on to conclude on the evidence before it that Ms.
Flores Carrillo had not established that, “within the preponderance of
probability category, the state of Mexico would not be reasonably forthcoming
with serious efforts to protect the claimant if she was to return to Mexico and
approach the state for protection”. It relied on the decision of Justice
Marshall Rothstein (sitting as applications judge) in Xue v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1728 (T.D.)
(QL), in which he held that refugee claimants must satisfy, “for purposes of
rebutting a presumption of state protection, the burden of a higher degree of
probability commensurate with the clear and convincing requirement in Ward”
(citing Canada (Attorney General) v. Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689).
[7]
Ms. Flores Carrillo argues that the Board erred
in its approach to the issue of state protection and, as a result, failed to
analyze the documentary evidence before it suggesting that state protection for
victims of domestic violence is seriously limited in Mexico.
[8]
The respondent argues that the Board properly
applied the presumption of state protection, and suggests that to impose on the
Board an obligation to analyze the evidence in greater detail would have the
effect of watering down that presumption and defeating the spirit of the Ward
decision.
[9]
To address these arguments, I must go back to
first principles.
(b) The law of
state protection
[10]
State protection is an issue that arises from the very definition of a refugee.
A refugee is a person who has “a well-founded fear of persecution” and is
“unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling” to obtain protection from their
country of nationality (s. 96(a), Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 – see Annex A). The definition contains both
subjective and objective elements: the claimant must actually fear persecution
and that fear must be well-founded.
[11]
The issue of state protection arises within the objective branch of the
definition of a refugee. Simply put, a person’s fear of persecution is not
well-founded if state protection is available. The contrary is also true – a
person’s fear of persecution is well-founded if state protection is unavailable
(see Ward, above at para. 52). Further, the definition of a refugee goes
on to refer explicitly to the person’s inability or unwillingness, out of fear,
to secure state protection. Accordingly, the issue of state protection can
arise in more than one way but, practically speaking, it usually comes up in the
consideration of the well-foundedness of a claim (Zhuravlvev v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 507, at para.
18).
[12]
The question of state protection generally arises only in cases where
the person alleges persecution by persons who are not state agents. In those
cases where the person claims persecution by the state itself, it can usually be
assumed that no state protection is available (Zhuravlvev, above, at
para. 19).
[13]
The burden of proof lies on claimants to show that they meet the
definition of a refugee. To do so, they must prove that they actually fear
persecution and that their fear is “well-founded”. To establish a well-founded
fear, refugee claimants must show that there is a “reasonable chance”, a
“serious possibility” or “more than a mere possibility” that they will be
persecuted if returned to their country of nationality (Adjei v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2
F.C. 680, F.C.J. No. 67 (C.A.) (QL)). (By contrast, a person who claims to be
in danger of being tortured, killed or subjected to cruel and unusual treatment
must establish his or her claim on the balance of probabilities: Li v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 1, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1
(C.A.) (QL)). In respect of particular underlying facts, the claimant shoulders
a burden of proof on the balance of probabilities (Adjei, above, at
para. 5).
[14]
In most situations, decision-makers are entitled
to presume that states are able to protect their citizens (Ward, above).
Justice La Forest, in Ward, stated for the
Court: “Absent some evidence, the claim should fail, as nations should be
presumed capable of protecting their citizens” (at para. 50). The exception is
where there has been a complete break-down of a state’s apparatus (Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration) v. Villafranca, [1992]
F.C.J. No. 1189 (C.A.) (QL)).
[15]
However, from my reading of the cases, the
concept of the “presumption of state protection” does not mean that there is a
higher burden of proof on claimants in cases involving the question of state
protection. It simply means that, in those cases, claimants must tender reliable
evidence on the point or risk failing to meet the definition of a refugee. In
other words, the presumption is not a special hurdle that refugee claimants
must overcome where the issue of state protection arises – rather, it simply establishes
a starting point for analyzing the well-foundedness of a claim.
[16]
The presumption that Justice
La Forest had in mind was clearly a legal presumption, not a factual one.
There was no underlying fact, proof of which would give rise to the presumption
of state protection. Rather, he stated a rule of law, similar to the
presumption of innocence in criminal cases. This raises the question, which
Justice Rothstein sought to answer in Xue, above, of what burden of
proof falls on refugee claimants to rebut that presumption. In criminal
matters, the burden on the Crown is to supply proof of guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. What burden falls on refugee claimants to rebut the
presumption of state protection?
[17]
In my view, Justice La Forest contemplated
a burden merely to adduce reliable evidence on the point. It is important to
note that Justice La Forest referred to the presumption of state protection
within his discussion of the kind of evidence claimants might present to
satisfy the definition of a refugee in those cases where it was an issue (i.e.
where claimants alleged persecution on the part of persons not associated with
the state). He said that claimants must provide “some evidence” of a
lack of protection – in other words, merely an evidentiary burden. He never
mentions any particular standard of proof, such as a balance of probabilities.
However, he gave examples of where the burden would be met: “For example, a
claimant might advance testimony of similarly situated individuals let down by
the state protection arrangement or the claimant’s testimony of past personal
incidents in which state protection did not materialize” (at para. 50). Claimants
would not have to provide that evidence where it was clear that the state’s
apparatus had completely broken down. In other cases, “it should be assumed
that the state is capable of protecting a claimant” (at para. 50 – emphasis
added).
[18]
In the paragraph following the statements set
out above, Justice La Forest states that “this presumption
increases the burden on the claimant” (at para. 51). Again, however, one must
look at that statement in its context. Justice La Forest had just
referred to a case in which a fugitive from the United States sought refugee
protection in Canada on the
grounds that he feared persecution within the American prison system (Minister
of Employment and Immigration v. Satiacum (1989), 99 N.R. 171
(F.C.A.)). There, the Federal Court of Appeal had held that the United States should be presumed to treat
its prisoners fairly. It said:
In the absence
of exceptional circumstances established by the claimant, it seems to me that
in a Convention refugee hearing . . . Canadian tribunals have to assume a fair
and independent judicial process in the foreign country. In the case of a
non-democratic state, contrary evidence might be forthcoming, but in relation
to a democracy like the United States contrary evidence might have to go to the extent of substantially
impeaching, for example, the jury selection process in the relevant part of the
country, or the independence or fair-mindedness of the judiciary itself. (At p.
176.)
[19]
In my view, when Justice La Forest noted that
the presumption of state protection increased the burden on claimants, he was
merely referring to the reality that a claimant would have a difficult time
showing a lack of state protection in a country that had established elaborate civil
and judicial institutions, such as the United States, as compared to countries
where the state apparatus is more rudimentary. He was not, as I read his
decision, establishing a special standard of proof in relation to state
protection.
[20]
This interpretation is borne out by subsequent
case law in which it has been made clear that a refugee claimant’s evidence
about a lack of state protection must be looked at in the context of the civil
and judicial institutions of the state in question. For example, it will not
always be enough for the claimant simply to show that he or she asked the
police for protection and was turned down. There may have been other remedies
reasonably available (Kadenko v. Canada (Solicitor General) (1996),
143 D.L.R. (4th ) 532 (F.C.A.)). Similarly, evidence of a local
failure to provide protection does not mean that the state as a whole fails to
protect its citizens (Zhuravlvev, above, at para. 31). As mentioned, the
burden falls on claimants to prove underlying facts on a balance of
probabilities. They also shoulder the burden of establishing that they meet the
definition of a refugee. Therefore, in state protection cases, the claimant’s
evidence may, for example, establish that he or she went to the police for
protection and was denied it. The question then is whether that fact is
sufficient to support the well-foundedness of the claim – that is, whether it establishes
that there is a reasonable chance of persecution on return. Obviously, to
answer that question, the claimant’s evidence must be analyzed within the context
of the conditions in his or her state of nationality.
[21]
Another of Justice La Forest’s
statements in Ward is often cited as providing support for imposing a
substantial burden of proof on refugee claimants, and it is the phrase that
Justice Rothstein relied on Xue, above. Justice La Forest said
that, unless a state concedes its inability to provide protection (which was
the situation in Ward), claimants must provide “clear and convincing
confirmation of a state’s inability to protect” (at para. 50).
[22]
The words “clear and convincing confirmation”
could be interpreted as creating a standard of proof. They are sometimes used
to refer to a standard of proof greater than a balance of probabilities and
just short of proof beyond a reasonable doubt (see Kenneth S. Brown, ed. McCormick
on Evidence, 6th ed. (St. Paul, Minn.: Thomson West, 2006 at
§340)). However, this is rare. In my view, Justice La Forest could
not have intended to establish such a unique and elevated standard of proof in
relation to state protection without any discussion on the point or any
reference to the prior jurisprudence dealing with the burden of proof in
refugee cases. In particular, he did not refer to the Adjei case, cited
above, in which the Federal Court of Appeal specifically dealt with the burden
of proof on refugee claimants in relation to the objective branch of the
definition of a refugee. In fact, Justice La Forest held
that, since the issue of state protection forms part of that objective aspect,
evidence of a lack of state protection in itself amounts to proof of the
well-foundedness of a refugee claim. He said:
A subjective
fear of persecution combined with state inability to protect the claimant
creates a presumption that the fear is well-founded. (At para. 52.)
[23]
It seems inconsistent with this approach to
require claimants to prove a lack of state protection on an elevated standard
of proof. It also would appear to be inconsistent with the interpretation and
humanitarian purpose of the Refugee Convention (see, e.g. Brian Gorlick, “Common burdens and standards: legal elements
in assessing claims to refugee status” (October 2002); Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner For Refugees, “Note on Burden and Standard of Proof
in Refugee Claims” (16 December 1998) – for complete citations see Annex B). In my view, to meet the objective branch of the definition of a
refugee, the claimant must prove that there is a reasonable chance of
persecution if returned to his or her country of nationality. Accordingly, where
the fear of persecution derives from a lack of state protection, the decision-maker
must simply determine whether the relevant evidence meets that standard. If it
does, then the claimant’s fear is well-founded.
[24]
Once again, I note that the reference to “clear
and convincing confirmation” appears within Justice La Forest’s
discussion of the kind of evidence claimants should be expected to provide to
show an absence of state protection. He is describing the nature of that
evidence, not the burden of proof on claimants. He specifically noted, as
mentioned above, that a description of the treatment of similarly situated
persons or of a past failure to obtain protection would be sufficient.
Claimants have to provide “some evidence”. Obviously, that evidence must be
reliable or else the claimant’s fear of persecution could not be considered to
be objectively “well-founded”. A mere assertion by a refugee claimant that a
state is unable to provide protection would not be enough, which Justice La
Forest made clear in his reference to Satiacum, above. In my view,
looking at his judgment as a whole, the words “clear and convincing” do not
erect a standard of proof; they simply describe the kind of evidence that would
be capable of satisfying the objective branch of the definition of a refugee.
[25]
As mentioned, the words “clear and convincing”
can be used to stipulate a standard of proof. But those, or similar, words can
also be used to describe the evidence that is capable of meeting a particular
standard of proof, quite apart from the standard itself. For example, the
Supreme Court of Canada has held that a requirement to show there are
“reasonable grounds to believe” that a person has committed a crime against
humanity can only be met where there is “compelling and credible information”
to support it: Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 SCC 40, at paras. 114-117. Similarly, it has held that a
decision to detain a permanent resident on a security certificate must be based
on “compelling and credible” evidence: Charkaoui v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 SCC 9, at para. 39. In both cases, the Court made clear that
a relatively low standard of proof, “reasonable grounds to believe” (similar to
the “reasonable chance” standard), could be met only by “compelling and
credible” evidence. Without it, there would be no objective foundation for the
finding in question. Similarly, in my view, without clear and convincing
evidence of a lack of state protection, a claimant will fail to show that his
or her claim is objectively well-founded. However, this should not translate
into a heightened standard of proof. The essential question remains: Has the
claimant established that there is a reasonable chance that he or she will be
persecuted if returned?
[26]
As Justice Denis Pelletier has noted, “the question
of state protection is rarely a yes/no proposition” (Zhuravlvev, above, at
para. 19). Similarly, as Professor Audrey Macklin has stated, the “availability
of state protection can rarely be described in absolutes” (“Refugee Women and
the Imperative of Categories” (1995), 17 Human Rights Quarterly 213, at p.
266). It would be extremely onerous to place on refugee claimants the burden of
proving a definitive absence of state protection. After all, refugees “are generally
persons who fled with little else than what they could carry in their arms” and
their “knowledge may not extend beyond their own experience and that of others
who are similarly placed” (Zhuravlvev, at para. 24). The effect of imposing
such a high burden of proof might be to require claimants in some cases to
prove a likelihood of persecution, which the Federal Court of Appeal expressly
rejected in Adjei in favour of a requirement that they merely prove a
reasonable chance of persecution. In addition, it could mean that claimants who
had discharged the general burden, by proving a genuine fear and a reasonable
chance of persecution, would be denied refugee protection if they failed to
establish an absence of state protection at a high standard of proof. In other
words, claimants could be denied refugee protection even though they had met
the definition of a refugee. Further, it could result in imposing a higher
burden on persons who allege persecution by non-state agents than on those who
claim to have been persecuted by the state. I see no support for these
propositions in Canadian law.
(c) Application
to this case
[27]
Ms. Flores Carrillo
stated that her common-law spouse began abusing her in 2001. She complained to
police in 2004 after a severe beating, and then hid at a friend’s house. Her
spouse, with the help of his brother, a police officer, found her and beat her
again. She decided to flee to Canada.
[28]
The Board expressed
concern about the claimant’s credibility because of inconsistencies between her
oral testimony and her written narrative. As a result, the Board gave little
weight to her claim to have sought state protection. In particular, it
discounted the significance of a written denunciation against her spouse issued
by the Mexican Attorney General’s Office, which described the details of her
complaint and referred to a medical report supporting her description of her
injuries.
[29]
However, the Board went
on to state that even if Ms. Flores Carrillo’s account was true, she had not
done enough to obtain state protection and had failed to discharge the high burden
of proof on her. In particular, the Board found that Ms. Flores Carrillo had
not “rebutted the presumption of state protection with ‘clear and convincing’
evidence within the ‘preponderance of probability category’”.
[30]
In
light of my discussion of the burden of proof on refugee claimants, I find that
the Board erred in law. In my view, the presumption of state protection falls
away once the claimant has provided reliable evidence of a lack of state
protection. At that point, the Board must determine whether it is satisfied
that the claimant’s case is well-founded. The question is: does the evidence establish
that there is a reasonable chance that the claimant will be persecuted on
return? Accordingly, where state protection is an issue, the Board should ask
itself whether the limitations on the availability of state protection for the
claimant give rise to that reasonable chance of persecution. I do not accept
the respondent’s contention that the presumption of state protection relieves
the Board of the duty to analyze the relevant evidence.
[31]
I
must emphasize that there is more than one way to express the burden and
standard of proof on refugee claimants. It is only where a decision-maker has
imposed a standard that is clearly too high, or has failed to make clear what
standard was applied, that the Court should order a new hearing. Even then, a
new hearing is not necessary if, based on the paucity of evidence supporting
the claimant’s case, the result would inevitably have been the same: Alam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 4, [2005] F.C.J. No. 15 (T.D.) (QL). In this
case, the Board imposed too high a standard and I cannot conclude, based on the
evidence Ms. Flores Carrillo supplied, that the result would necessarily have
been the same had the proper standard been applied.
[32]
I
will entertain any submissions regarding a question for certification that are
provided within ten days of this decision.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT IS
that:
1.
The
application for judicial review is allowed. A new hearing is ordered.
2.
Submissions
regarding a certified question must be filed within ten (10) days of the date
of this judgment.
“James
W. O’Reilly”
Annex “A”
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C. 2001, c. 27
Convention
Refugee
96. A Convention refugee is a person who, by reason
of a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion,
(a) is outside each of their
countries of nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, unwilling
to avail themself of the protection of each of those countries;
|
Loi
sur l'immigration et la protection des réfugiés, L.C. 2001, ch. 27
Définition de « réfugié »
96. A qualité de réfugié au sens de la Convention — le réfugié — la
personne qui, craignant avec raison d’être persécutée du fait de sa race, de
sa religion, de sa nationalité, de son appartenance à un groupe social ou de
ses opinions politiques :
a) soit se trouve hors de tout pays dont elle a la nationalité et
ne peut ou, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de
chacun de ces pays;
|
Annex “B”
Brian Gorlick, “Common burdens and standards: legal elements
in assessing claims to refugee status” (October 2002), online: United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) http://www.unhcr.org/research/RESEARCH/3db7c5a94.pdf
;
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees,
“Note on Burden and Standard of Proof in Refugee Claims” (16 December 1998),
online: Refugee Law Reader, www.refugeelawreader.org/294/Note_on_Burden_and_Standard_of_Proof_in_Refugee_Claims.pdf)