Date: 20080528
Docket: IMM-4410-07
Citation: 2008
FC 683
Toronto, Ontario, May 28, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice de Montigny
BETWEEN:
RODRIGUEZ ALONSO, JOSE
FLORENTIN
(a.k.a. RODRIGUEZ ALONSO, JOSE
FLORENTINO)
HERNANDEZ ALONSO, GABRIELA RODRIGUEZ
HERNANDEZ,
JOSE FARID RODRIGUEZ HERNANDEZ,
AISLINN GABRIELA (a.k.a. RODRIGUEZ
HERNANDEZ, AISLINN)
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The
applicants, all citizens of Mexico, claimed a well-founded fear
of persecution at the hands of members of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
(PRI). The principal applicant (“the applicant”) alleged that he was employed
as a press coordinator for the PRI in the state of Mexico from June 2001 to August 2005. When the
former governor of that state sought the nomination as the PRI’s candidate for
president of the Republic of Mexico, the applicant agreed to assist with his
campaign. He was apparently put in charge of preparing information, flyers,
and signs in support of Mr. Arturo Montiel Rojas’ candidacy.
[2]
Mr. Rojas was
later forced to withdraw from the campaign as a result of allegations of wrong
doing. There were reports in the Mexican media that Mr. Rojas was being
investigated for embezzlement of funds, money laundering and illicit
acquisition of very large sums of money, as well as expensive real estate
outside the country. The applicant alleges that Mr. Rojas accused him of
leaking information to the media, and that he began to receive threats as a
result. He contends that he had to quit his job and to flee Mexico because of these threats.
I. The impugned decision
[3]
The Board
determined that the applicant was not a credible witness and rejected the
claim. In its reasons, the Board stated it was not satisfied that the
applicant did in fact work as a press officer for the PRI from 2001 to 2005.
The Board stated it could not be satisfied due to the applicant’s inconsistent
testimony, the lack of corroborative evidence such as employment records, rent
receipts, bank account statements, or utility bills, and the applicant’s lack
of knowledge about press releases and the dates of previous Mexican elections.
II. Issue
[4]
The only
issue to be decided is whether the Board erred in its assessment of the
applicant’s credibility or of the plausibility of the evidence.
III. Standard of review
[5]
There is
no dispute between the parties that issues of credibility must be assessed on a
standard of reasonableness. Such findings, as any finding of fact, can only be
set aside if they were arrived at in a perverse or capricious manner or without
regard to the material before it (Federal Courts Act, R.S., 1985, c.
F-7, s. 18.1(4)(d)). This is consistent with the latest decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada dealing with standard of review in an administrative
law context. In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, the Court found
that questions of fact must be assessed on a standard of reasonableness. This
is quite a deferential standard, which the Court characterized in the following
way (at par. 47):
In judicial review, reasonableness is
concerned mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process. But it is also concerned
with whether the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
IV. Analysis
[6]
The Board
member gave essentially four reasons for coming to his conclusion that the
claimant is not a credible witness: 1) the applicant’s inconsistent evidence as
to being forced to give a “kickback” to his employer; 2) his lack of employment
records; 3) his lack of knowledge as to how press release would be communicated
to the media, and 4) his lack of knowledge of the election process in the state
of Mexico. I will now briefly turn to each of these findings.
[7]
The
applicant’s Personal Information Form (“PIF”) narrative stated that he was paid
in cash to avoid paying income taxes and that for this reason he had no records
of his employment. These details about the applicant were not related to the
threats he allegedly received by the PRI, and appear to have been included in
his narrative as an explanation for his lack of evidence to confirm his
employment.
[8]
At the
hearing, the applicant testified that the cash payment scheme also included a
type of “kick-back” where he would be paid not to go to work and would pay some
of the extra salary back to the employer. None of this information was
included in his PIF narrative. When confronted with the omission the applicant
testified that the details in the narrative only referred to the threats he
allegedly received from the PRI.
[9]
It was
reasonable for the Board to reject the applicant’s explanation as the applicant
began his PIF narrative with an explanation of the nature of his position with
the PRI. Proof that the applicant was in fact employed in the PRI was clearly
a crucial fact to be established in his claim and all relevant details
regarding the nature of his employment should have been disclosed in the PIF
narrative. Indeed, the applicant went as far as amending his initial PIF to
explain that he was paid in cash, without any record, so that he would not have
to report his salary to the income tax. If that information was important
enough to prompt him to amend his PIF, it is difficult to understand why he did
not provide a full explanation and passed over the kickback scheme in silence.
I also note from a reading of the transcript that the applicant was incapable
to explain what would be the advantage for the PRI to proceed in that way. As
a result, it was open to the Board to hold this omission to be material and
detrimental to his credibility.
[10]
With
respect to the lack of employment record, a review of the evidence indicates
that the Board gave the applicant many opportunities to prove that he had been
employed as a press officer with the PRI. The only supporting evidence the
applicant could produce to corroborate his story was a PRI identification
card. Since that card did not feature any date of issue or expiry and did not
specify what the applicant’s position at the party was, the Board was rightly
concerned about the genuineness of that card. Quite apart from the fact that
the applicant’s explanation as to the absence of a date on the card was not
entirely clear, he was unable to provide any further evidence of his
employment, official or otherwise. His explanation as to why he could not seek
a letter from a colleague or from a journalist substantiating his story was far
from convincing, and he did not substantiate the harm these people would be
facing as a result of merely stating that they had in fact worked with the
applicant. As this Court repeatedly found in past cases, a lack of documentary
corroboration can be taken into consideration when assessing credibility,
especially when an applicant makes no effort to obtain such corroborating
evidence: Quichindo v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] F.C.J. No. 463, 2002
FCT 350, at par. 28; Bin c. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2001] F.C.J. No. 1717, 2001 FCT 1246, at par. 21; Syed
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] F.C.J. No.
357, at par. 17.
[11]
The third
reason given by the Board to question the applicant’s credibility does not
strike me as being reasonable. It rests essentially on the fact that the
applicant was unable to provide any list of media contacts he used in his role
as a press officer, and that getting press releases out to the media by mail and
by phone would be inefficient and too slow. But this is discounting the
applicant’s explanation that any list of email addresses, phone numbers and
contacts were kept in the office, presumably on his computer, and that the word
“mail” is currently used in Spanish to refer to emails. These explanations are
perfectly reasonable and plausible, and the Board member erred in rejecting
them. It is true that as a result of counsel’s interjection with evidence
respecting what “mail” meant in his own experience, the applicant has
effectively been asked a leading question by his counsel and has been precluded
from providing his own explanation to the Board. But that was no reason to
dismiss the explanation, which was corroborated before me in an affidavit from a
professional translator and interpreter from Spanish to English. Having said
this, I do not believe this error was material to the decision.
[12]
Finally,
the Board member relied on the applicant’s lack of knowledge of the electoral
process to impeach his credibility. Not only was the applicant mistaken as to
the date of the last election for governor in the state of Mexico, confusing it with the date
of the presidential election, but he also characterized the campaign of Mr.
Rojas as a presidential campaign when in fact he was running to be the official
candidate of the PRI in the presidential election. While these errors might
be understandable if made by an ordinary person on the street, they are more
difficult to explain when made by a person such as the applicant who, by reason
of his alleged position and responsibility in the PRI, should have had a more
sophisticated grasp of the electoral process in his country.
[13]
For all of
the above reasons, I am of the view that the findings of the Board regarding the
credibility and plausibility of the evidence were reasonably open to it on the
record. Despite the few errors made by the Board with respect to the
applicant’s lack of knowledge as to how press releases would be communicated to
the media, I believe there was an evidentiary foundation capable of supporting
the Board’s credibility finding in this case. To borrow from Dunsmuir,
the conclusion of the Board was within the range of acceptable and rational
solutions which are defensible in light of the facts that were presented to it.
[14]
Accordingly,
this application for judicial review is dismissed. No questions of general
importance were submitted by counsel, and none will be certified.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial
review is dismissed. No questions of general importance were submitted by
counsel, and none will be certified.
"Yves
de Montigny"
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-4410-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: RODRIGUEZ ALONSO, JOSE FLORENTIN
(a.k.a. RODRIGUEZ ALONSO, JOSE
FLORENTINO)
HERNANDEZ ALONSO, GABRIELA RODRIGUEZ
HERNANDEZ, JOSE FARID RODRIGUEZ HERNANDEZ, AISLINN GABRIELA (a.k.a. RODRIGUEZ
HERNANDEZ, AISLINN)
v. THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: May
27, 2008
REASONS FOR ORDER
AND ORDER: de Montigny J.
DATED: May
28, 2008
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Mordechai
Wasserman
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Mr. Manuel
Mendelzon
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Mr. Mordechai
Wasserman
Barrister
& Solicitor
Lasalle, Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|