Date: 20080404
Docket: IMM-6519-06
Citation: 2008 FC 447
Ottawa, Ontario, April 4, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
DENNIS MALVEDA
(a.k.a. Dennis M. Malveda)
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application pursuant
to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C. 2001, c. 27 [Act], for judicial review of a
decision of the Refugee Protection Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board
(Board) dated November 16, 2006, (Decision) wherein the Board determined that
the Applicant was not a Convention refugee under section 96 of the Act or a person
in need of protection under section 97 of the Act.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant is a 35-year-old citizen of the Philippines from
Batangas. His claim for refugee protection is based upon his fear of
persecution by the New People’s Army (NPA), a communist rebel group in the Philippines.
[3]
From
1998 to 2005, the Applicant says he was a strong supporter of a former local Mayor
and later Governor of Batangas. He worked for the Governor during election campaigns
in 2001 and 2003. He also worked full-time in a non-political capacity for a
company owned by the Governor.
[4]
In
2005, the Applicant claims that the NPA began to menace him by roaming around
his house and sending threatening letters. He reported the roaming incidents
to the local police and they told him to be careful. The Applicant did not
report the first two of three threatening letters.
[5]
The
Applicant went to the Governor for help and alleges that the Governor told him
to leave the country and offered no viable advice about how to protect himself
in the Philippines.
[6]
The
Applicant arrived in Canada on December 14, 2005.
[7]
In
2005, after the Applicant left the Philippines, his wife received another
threatening letter addressed to him, which she took to the police. The police
informed her that there was nothing they could do because the Applicant had
left the country.
[8]
The
Applicant claimed refugee status in Canada on February 3, 2006.
THE BOARD’S DECISION
[9]
In
its Decision dated November 16, 2006, the Board found the Applicant to be
neither a refugee nor a person in need of protection.
[10]
The
determinative issue in the claim was whether the Applicant had a well-founded
fear of persecution in the Philippines by reason of a
Convention ground, including whether he had rebutted the presumption of state
protection.
[11]
The
Board accepted that the Applicant worked for the Mayor of Batangas, who later
became the Governor, as a part-time advisor, and that he worked on campaigns
during election periods. Further, it accepted that the Applicant worked for one
of the Governor’s private companies as a Marketing Supervisor. But it found
that the Applicant did not hold a high political position even though he was a
strong supporter of the Governor during election times.
[12]
The
Board also believed that the Applicant had found notes on his property
purportedly from members of the NPA. However, the Board did not find it credible
that the Applicant did not go to the authorities with the first two threatening
letters when he resided in the Philippines but that his wife went
with the third letter after he had left the country.
[13]
The
Board did not find it plausible that the Applicant went to the Governor and
advised him of the threatening letters from the NPA but that the Governor only
told him to “cool it” and leave the country, and did not offer any real advice
or assistance in terms of protection.
[14]
Thus,
it was determined that the Applicant did not make any diligent or bona fide
attempts to seek protection in his country of origin before travelling abroad
for asylum.
[15]
The
Board indicated that the Philippines is a functioning
democracy, and therefore the presumption of state protection was applicable.
The Applicant had not approached the authorities and he had not rebutted the
presumption of state protection. The Board also recognized that the NPA was
still “a force” in the Philippines, but found that
adequate state protection would be available to the Applicant.
ISSUES
[16]
The
Applicant raises the following issues:
(1) Did the Board
err in its credibility and implausibility findings?
(2) Did the Board
err in giving more probative weight to the documentary evidence?
(3) Did the Board
err in its analysis by providing inadequate reasons and ignoring relevant
evidence?
REASONS
Standard of
Review
[17]
Recently,
the Supreme Court of Canada has reconsidered the standard of review analysis
applicable to administrative decisions and posited two standards:
reasonableness and correctness (Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir]).
The Supreme Court also provided guidance in determining the appropriate
standard of review in a given case:
FC/CF[…]
questions of fact, discretion and policy as well as questions where the legal
issues cannot be easily separated from the factual issues generally attract a
standard of reasonableness while many legal issues attract a standard of
correctness. Some legal issues, however, attract the more deferential standard
of reasonableness (Dunsmuir at para. 51).
Further, the Supreme Court emphasized that the standard of
review analysis is composed of two steps:
First, courts
ascertain whether the jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory
manner the degree of defence to be accorded with regard to a particular
category of question. Second, where the first inquiry proves unfruitful,
courts must proceed to an analysis of the factors making it possible to
identify the proper standard of review (Dunsmuir at para. 62).
[18]
In the present case, the Applicant attacks the
Board’s implausibility and credibility findings. These findings are highly
factual in nature. In numerous pre-Dunsmuir decisions, this Court has
held that the appropriate standard of review was patent unreasonableness (Soosaipillai v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 FC 1040 at para. 9; Xu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC 1701, [2005] F.C.J. No. 2127 (QL) at para. 5; Asashi
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 102, [2005]
F.C.J. No. 129 (QL) at para. 6; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Elbarnes, 2005 FC 70, [2005] F.C.J. No. 98 (QL) at para.
19; Aguebor v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), (1993)
160 N.R. 315 (QL) at 316-317).
[19]
The issue of whether or not the Board ignored
relevant evidence is also a factual inquiry and has been reviewed in the past on
a standard of patent unreasonableness (see Dannett v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1363, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1701 (QL) at
para. 33).
[20]
In light of the decision in Dunsmuir, and
the previous jurisprudence of this Court, I find the standard of review
applicable to these factual questions to be reasonableness. However, when reviewing
a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis
will be concerned with “the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also with] whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law” (Dunsmuir at para. 47). I
would add that regardless of the standard of review analysis applied in the
present case, either pre-Dunsmuir patent unreasonableness, or post-Dunsmuir
reasonableness, my conclusions would be the same.
[21]
Where the adequacy of the Board’s reasons is
called into question, the issue raised is one of procedural fairness (Thomas
v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC
838, [2007] F.C.J. No. 1114 (QL) at para. 14; Adu v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2005 FC 565, [2005] F.C.J. No. 693 (QL) at para. 9). Pursuant
to Canadian Union of Public Employees (C.U.P.E.) v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, [2003] S.C.J. No. 28 (QL) at para. 100, “it
is for the courts, not the Minister, to provide the legal answer to procedural
fairness questions.”
(1) Did the Board
err in its credibility and implausibility findings?
[22]
It
is trite law that credibility findings are the heartland of the Board’s
jurisdiction (R.K.L. v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2003 FCT 116, [2003] F.C.J. No. 162
(QL) at para. 7). Thus, the Board may impugn the credibility of claimants based
upon implausibility findings as long as its reasons are stated in “clear and
unmistakable terms” (Khrystych v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC 498, [2005] F.C.J. No. 624 (QL) at para. 4; R.K.L.,
supra, at para. 9).
[23]
Plausibility findings that are couched in “vague
and general terms” will render defective the Board’s credibility assessment (Hilo
v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [1991] F.C.J. No. 228 (F.C.A.) (QL)).
Thus, “the Board must explain its findings and not merely state that it finds
some particular event or action implausible” (Tuggrh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2005 FC 927, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1158
(QL) at para. 5).
[24]
The
explanation must be based on rationality and common sense and must be
consistent with the documentary evidence (R.K.L., supra, at paras. 10 and 14). As Justice Muldoon asserted in
Valtchev v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2001 FCT 776, [2001] F.C.J. No. 1131 (QL) at para. 7:
[…] plausibility
findings should be made only in the clearest of cases, i.e., if the facts as
presented are outside the realm of what could reasonably be expected, or where
the documentary evidence demonstrates that the events could not have happened
in the manner asserted by the claimant.
[25]
In
cases where the Board bases its credibility findings on “perceived
implausibilities in claimants’ stories rather than on internal inconsistencies
and contradictions in their narratives or their demeanour while testifying” the
duty to fully articulate its reasoning is of particular importance (Leung v.
Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [1994] F.C.J. No. 774 (QL) at para. 15).
This requires “a clear rationalization process supporting the Board’s
inferences” and reference to “relevant evidence which could potentially refute
such conclusions” (Santos v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 937, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1149 (QL)
at para. 15).
[26]
The aforementioned requirement to provide detailed
reasons when making implausibility findings stems from the principle
articulated in Valtchev, supra, at para. 6, and Maldonado v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1980] 2 F.C. 302 (C.A.) at 305, that a refugee claimant’s
allegations are presumed to be true unless there are reasons to doubt that truthfulness.
Thus, there must be cogent reasons not to believe a claimant (Vodics v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 783, [2005]
F.C.J. No. 1000 (QL) at para. 11).
[27]
In the present case, the Board found that the
Applicant “did not make any diligent or bona fide attempt to seek protection in
his country of origin regarding the alleged threatening letters from the NPA
before travelling abroad for asylum” and that the Applicant “failed to rebut”
the presumption of state protection.
[28]
The credibility concerns arose over the reasons
given by the Applicant as to why he had not taken the first two threatening
letters to the police and sought their protection. The Applicant’s explanation
was that he feared that, if he did so, the NPA would be more angry with him.
But the Applicant had earlier gone to the authorities when he saw individuals
roaming around his house, and his wife had taken the third threatening note to
the police after the Applicant had left the country.
[29]
So the reasons given by the Board for doubting that
the Applicant feared to make the NPA more angry were that he had gone to the
police before, and his wife went to the police after he left. The Board
accepted that the Applicant had received the threatening letters.
[30]
As reasons for doubting the Applicant’s
credibility on this point, the Board’s position is unreasonable to me. I just
don’t see how the Applicant’s wife’s approaching the police with the third note
after he left the country suggests in any way that the Applicant did not fear
making the NPA angry while he was in the country. And I do not see how the
Applicant’s approaching the police earlier meant that he did not fear the NPA
once the threats to his life were crystallized by the threatening notes and the
Applicant realized what he was actually facing.
[31]
The Board was certainly right to be concerned
with the issue of why the Applicant did not go to the police, but the reasons
it gives for rejecting his answer are not adequate and, in my view, are
unreasonable.
[32]
The Board’s finding on implausibility is equally
perplexing to me:
The panel does not find it plausible that
the claimant went to the Governor and advised him of the threatening letters
from the NPA and that the Governor only told him to cool it and leave the country
but did not offer any concrete advice or tell the claimant who to contact in
terms of protection.
[33]
Bearing
in mind that an attempt was later made on the Governor’s own life and that some
of his personnel were killed in the attack, I see nothing inherently
implausible about advice to the Applicant to get out of the country. The
Governor’s response is equally compatible with a conclusion that there was
nothing that could be done to protect the Applicant, so he had better leave.
The Board is simply speculating here, without any real evidentiary base.
[34]
So
it may be that the Applicant had no acceptable reason for not going to the
police with the letters and for leaving the country without asking for
protection, but in my view the Board presents no acceptable reasons for
rejecting his explanations. I have to conclude that this part of the Decision
is unreasonable.
(2)
Did the Board err by giving greater probative value to the
documentary evidence?
[35]
The
Applicant submits that the Board committed a reviewable error when it assigned
greater probative value to the documentary evidence than to the Applicant’s
testimony, citing specifically the following passage from the Board’s Decision:
The panel assigns far greater probative
value to the documentary evidence than to the testimony of the claimant with
regard to the availability of state protection in the Philippines. In this regard, the panel takes
guidance from the case law in Edomsky, which stands for the
proposition that the board can prefer objective documentary evidence to the
subjective testimony of the claimants. The documentary evidence cited herein
is drawn from a variety of reliable and independent sources, none of whom can
have any vested interest in whether or not the claimants are determined to be
Convention refugees. To that extent they are free of bias.
[36]
I
note that it is indeed open to the Board to prefer documentary evidence to a
claimant’s testimony (Edomsky v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No. 1311 (QL) at para. 10; Zhou v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1994] F.C.J. No. 1087 (F.C.A.) (QL) at
para. 1); however, a cautious approach is warranted when so doing.
[37]
As
this Court has indicated in several decisions, blanket statements that
documentary evidence is to be preferred to the claimant’s oral testimony as
being more objective and disinterested in the outcome of the hearing are
problematic. Indeed, such statements are
[…] tantamount to stating that
documentary evidence should always be preferred to that of a refugee claimant’s
because the latter is interested in the outcome of the hearing. If permitted
such reasoning would always defeat a claimant’s evidence.” (Coitinho v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
2004 FC 1037, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1269 (QL) at para.7).
Were the principle
behind such blanket statements correct, the evidentiary burden imposed upon
claimants would be raised to a near insurmountable level.
[38]
Further,
such unqualified statements appear to negate, if not reverse, the presumption
of truthfulness of a claimant’s testimony established in Maldonado, supra
(see Kosta v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005
FC 994, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1233 (QL) at paras. 28-35). In the absence of
additional grounds, preferring documentary evidence to that of the claimant
based solely on the fact that it emanates from the claimant constitutes
a reviewable error. Thus, the Board must indicate why there is a “reason to
doubt” the claimant’s testimony and prefer the documentary evidence.
[39]
In
the Decision in this case, there is no attempt to raise and discuss what the
Applicant actually said on this issue, or to identify those aspects of the
documentary evidence that should be preferred, and why they are to be
preferred, and there is no attempt to deal with aspects of the documentary
evidence that might support the Applicant’s position. All we have is a blanket
dismissal that explains nothing. In my view, this is not adequate in the
circumstances and this aspect of its Decision contains a reviewable error.
(3)
Did
the Board err by ignoring relevant documentary evidence and failing to provide
adequate reasons?
[40]
The
Applicant contends that the Board failed to provide adequate reasons and
ignored relevant documentary evidence in its analysis of the availability and
effectiveness of state protection. Thus, the relevant issue is whether, in
making its state protection determination, the Board
[…] set out its findings of fact and the
principle evidence on which those findings were based. The reasons must
address the major points in issue. The reasoning process followed by the
decision maker must be set out and must reflect consideration of the main
relevant factors. (Via Rail Canada Inc. v. National Transportation Agency
(C.A.), [2001] 2 F.C. 25, [2000] F.C.J. No. 1685 (QL) at para. 22.)
As with all
administrative tribunals, the Board is under an obligation to provide reasons
that are adequate in the circumstances.
[41]
However,
when assessing the adequacy of reasons, those reasons “must not be held to a
standard of perfection or read microscopically” (Thomas at para. 35; Andryanov
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FC 186, [2007]
F.C.J. No. 272 (QL) at para. 21; Liang v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2003 FC 1501, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1904 (QL) at para. 42). As
the Federal Court of Appeal asserted in Ragupathy v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration, 2006 FCA 151, [2006] F.C.J. No. 654 (F.C.A.)
(QL) at para. 15:
[…] a reviewing court should be realistic
in determining if a tribunal’s reasons meet the legal standard of adequacy.
Reasons should be read in their entirety, not parsed closely, clause-by-clause,
for possible errors or omissions; they should be read with a view to understanding,
not puzzling over every possible inconsistency, ambiguity or infelicity of
expression.
Thus, in assessing the
adequacy of the reasons provided, a reviewing Court must look to the overall
reasoning process contained in a decision.
[42]
A
related consideration is whether or not relevant evidence was ignored in the
Board’s assessment. Indeed, while the failure to analyse relevant evidence
suggests an erroneous finding of fact, it also impugns the adequacy of the
reasons provided.
[43]
There
is a presumption that the Board considered all documentary evidence that was
before it (Florea v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration), [1993] F.C.J. No. 598 (F.C.A.) (QL) at para. 1). Thus,
the fact that the Board has not mentioned some of the documentary evidence is
not fatal to the Decision (Hassan v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1992] F.C.J. No. 946 (F.C.A.) (QL)).
[44]
However,
as Justice Evans stated in Cepeda-Gutierrez v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No. 1425 (QL) at para. 15,
an erroneous finding of fact can be inferred from a failure of an
administrative board to “mention in its reasons some evidence before it that
was relevant to the finding, and pointed to a different conclusion from that
reached by the agency.”
[45]
Similarly,
as I stated in Simpson v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2006 FC 970, [2006] F.C.J. No. 1224 (QL) at para. 44:
While it is true that there is a
presumption that the Board considered all the evidence, and there is no need to
mention all the documentary evidence that was before it, where there is
important material evidence on the record that contradicts the factual finding
of the Board, [it] must provide reasons why the contradictory evidence was not
considered relevant or trustworthy […]
[46]
Specifically,
in the context of state protection, I find the words of Justice Layden-Stevenson
to be particularly helpful on the facts before me in this case:
The
question of effective state protection was identified as the central issue.
Where evidence that relates to a central issue is submitted, the burden of
explanation increases for the board when it assigns little or no weight to that
evidence or when it prefers specific documentary evidence over other
documentary evidence. Here, there is virtually no indication that the RPD
considered the Applicants' documentary evidence or the submissions of their
counsel in relation to the issue of state protection. The Applicants were
entitled to know that the board had not ignored these matters. A general
statement that all of the evidence was considered, in the circumstances, does
not suffice. (Castillo v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2004 FC
56, [2004] F.C.J. No. 43 (QL) at para. 9)
Thus, the burden of
explanation increases with the relevance of the evidence to the central issues
before the Board.
[47]
In
the present case, the Board cited one piece of documentary evidence: the U.S.
Department of State Country Report on Human Rights Practices, March 8, 2006. Thus,
it would appear that the Board relied upon the US Department of State report as
at least one element supporting its conclusions. However, I see no indication
of how or why that report supports the Board’s findings. Aside from stating
that the Philippines is a democratic republic and that the government generally
respects the human rights of its citizens, the majority of the report goes on
to discuss the strength of the NPA and the weaknesses of the state in providing
protection.
[48]
While
it may have been open to the Board to arrive at its conclusion based on the
documentary evidence, some kind of meaningful analysis is necessary for the
reasons to be considered adequate. It is clear that in cases of state
protection, the claimant bears a burden of proof directly
proportional to the level of democracy in the state in question (Kadenko v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1996] 143 D.L.R. (4th) 532, [1996] F.C.J. No. 1376 (F.C.A.)
at page 534; Hinzman v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2007 FCA 171, [2007] F.C.J. No. 584 (F.C.A.) (QL) at para. 57). However,
this does not relieve the Board of its obligation to provide clear and adequate
reasons indicating why that burden was not met. In the present case, the Board
failed in this regard.
[49]
For
the reasons given, I find that the Board made reviewable errors on all three
points raised by the Applicant and this matter must be returned for
reconsideration.
[50]
Counsel
are requested to serve and file any submissions with respect to certification
of a question of general importance within seven days of receipt of these
Reasons for Judgment. Each party will have a further period of three days to
serve and file any reply to the submission of the opposite party Following
that, a Judgment will be issued.
“James Russell”