Date: 20080911
Docket: IMM-525-08
Citation: 2008
FC 1020
Toronto, Ontario,
September 11, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Campbell
BETWEEN:
DECA IGNATHA LESMOND (a.k.a.
Lesmond, Ignatha Deca)
KERDEJHA MARISSA EDOLE (a.k.a. Edole,
Kerdejha Mariss)
(by her litigation guardian Deca Ignatha
Lesmond)
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The
present Application concerns the principal applicant (Applicant), a citizen of St. Lucia, who claims refugee
protection on the ground of fear of gender based persecution should she be
required to return to St.
Lucia. The
Refugee Protection Division (RPD) rejected the Applicants’ claim. For the
reasons which follow, I find that the decision is in fundamental reviewable
error.
[2]
There are
two factually based findings which require the RPD’s decision to be set aside:
a negative inference drawn against the Applicant because of the perception that
the Applicant’s claim was late-filed; and there is insufficient persuasive
evidence to substantiate the Applicant’s fear of return to St. Lucia.
[3]
The
negative inference conclusion is based on the following uncontested facts: the
Applicant and her daughter, and her partner who is the father of the child,
came to Canada in May 2001 and November 2000 respectively on short term visitor
visas and overstayed; while in Canada the partner was violent against the
Applicant, and as a result was arrested in 2003 and placed on a protection
order; the ex-partner was deported to St. Lucia in March 2006 as a failed
refugee claimant; and, on learning of the deportation and the fact that her
ex-partner blamed her for the deportation, the Applicant applied for refugee
protection in August 2006 in fear of her forced return to St. Lucia. The
Applicant claims refugee protection on the basis of subjective fear that,
should she return to St.
Lucia, she would
suffer further violence at the hands of her ex-partner.
[4]
The RPD’s
negative inference conclusion reads as follows:
In my opinion, this finding is erroneous. The Applicant’s
un-refuted evidence is that she did not claim refugee protection until 2006
when she realized the prospect that she might be deported to St. Lucia, and,
therefore, would face the risk of violence from the ex-partner who was already
there and blaming her for his deportation. It is obvious that, until that time,
there was no reason for her to claim refugee protection. It is also obvious
that the RPD missed this essential element of the Applicant’s claim for
protection in drawing a fundamentally important adverse inference. In my
opinion, this finding constitutes a reviewable error.
[5]
The
finding that the Applicant has supplied insufficient evidence to substantiate
her subjective and objective fear of persecution should she be required to
return to St. Lucia is as follows:
The panel acknowledges that the test is
forward-looking. When analyzing the claimant’s situation in the context of her
past problems, the panel finds, on a balance of probabilities, that her
ex-common law spouse did abuse her physically in St. Lucia before they came to Canada and accepts that he abused
her in Canada, where she was able to get a
protection order against him. The panel finds that the claimant has not
provided persuasive evidence that there is a serious possibility or a
reasonable change that he would continue to abuse her if she were to return to St. Lucia just because he was deported
when he was not determined to be a refugee. The principal claimant in this claim
was not part of his claim; she has not seen him or spoken to him since 2003,
and has had no knowledge of his life in over three years. The panel is
cognizant of the fact that the principal claimant’s mother alleged that she has
seen the principal claimant’s ex-common law spouse in St. Lucia, that he is
occasionally seen drinking and that she alleged that if the principal claimant
were to return to St. Lucia, he would get her because he blames here for their
break-up, and the fact that he was deported to St. Lucia. The panel
notes that the claimant has no intention of resuming their relationship and
that her ex-common law spouse abided by the terms of the protection order in Canada. The panel finds that, if the
panel were incorrect and the claimant were to encounter any problems from her
ex-common law spouse, there is adequate state protection available to the
principal claimant and her daughter in St. Lucia, including the option of
obtaining a protection order against her ex-common law spouse in St. Lucia.
[Emphasis added]
(Decision, p. 5)
[6]
In my
opinion this statement is internally inconsistent to the point of exposing a
fundamental misapprehension of the evidence which constitutes a reviewable
error.
[7]
In the
statement the RPD accepts that: the ex-partner is an abuser; he is in St.
Lucia; the Applicant faces return to St. Lucia,
and the abuser is threatening to “get her” if she returns to St. Lucia. In the face of this evidence
there is no substantiation for the RPD’s finding that “the claimant has not
provided persuasive evidence that there is serious possibility or a reasonable
chance that he would continue to abuse her if she were to return to St. Lucia
just because he was deported when he was not determined to be a refugee”.
ORDER
Accordingly, I set aside the
decision under review and refer the matter back for redetermination before a
differently constituted panel.
There is no question to
certify.
“Douglas R. Campbell”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-525-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: DECA IGNATHA LESMOND (a.k.a.
Lesmond, Ignatha Deca) KERDEJHA MARISSA EDOLE (a.k.a. Edole, Kerdejha Mariss)
(by her litigation guardian Deca Ignatha Lesmond) v. THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND
IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: September 9, 2008
REASONS FOR ORDER
AND ORDER: CAMPBELL J.
DATED: September 11, 2008
APPEARANCES:
|
Ms. Carole Simone Dahan
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
|
Mr. David Joseph
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
|
Carole Simone Dahan
Barrister and Solicitor
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
|
JOHN H. SIMS, Q.C.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|