Docket: IMM-5037-13
Citation:
2014 FC 1245
Ottawa, Ontario, December 19,
2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
|
BETHEL BAHTA
|
BURUK BINIAM
|
NATHAN BINIAM
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
|
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
ORDER AND REASONS
(Oral Reasons delivered in Toronto on November 18, 2014)
[1]
Bethel Bahta, [the Principle Applicant], and her
two sons, Buruk and Nathan Biniam, collectively [the Applicants] have applied
for judicial review of a decision of the Refugee Appeal Division of the
Immigration and Refugee Board [the RAD] dated July 5, 2013, which dismissed the
Applicants’ appeal from a negative decision of the Refugee Protection Division
of the Immigration and Refugee Board [the Board] dated April 26, 2013. This
application is made pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA].
The Board’s
Decision
[2]
The Board reached alternative conclusions. It
found that the Principle Applicant’s evidence was not credible and it also
found that the Eritrean birth certificates [the Certificates] submitted to
establish the Applicants’ Eritrean identities were false. The Certificates were
deemed to be false because they were laminated and showed no signs of wear and
because the envelope in which they were sent to Canada was not produced. The
Board reached these conclusions without telling the Principle Applicant that
the Certificates appeared too pristine to be credible. Accordingly, the Principle
Applicant was not able to testify about how the Certificates had been stored
and whether or not they had ever been used in Eritrea.
The RAD Decision
[3]
Although it espoused using the reasonableness
standard of review, the RAD did not in fact consider the reasonableness of the
Board’s conclusions about the lack of an envelope and the new appearance of the
Certificates. The RAD also drew no conclusion about the Board’s failure to give
the Principle Applicant an opportunity to address its concerns about the
Certificates. Instead, the RAD considered the Certificates afresh and decided that,
even if they were legitimate, they did not establish the Applicants’ identities
because they included no picture, no finger prints, and no physical
descriptions. In short, the RAD found that nothing connected the Applicants with
the Certificates.
[4]
The RAD noted that when the Applicants made
their refugee claims, no identity documents were provided. As well, it noted
that the Board wrote to the Principle Applicant’s counsel before the hearing
and asked for national identity cards and any other documents which might prove
the Applicants’ identities. The Certificates were produced in response to this
request.
[5]
The RAD refused to consider the further identity
documents offered by the Applicants. There were five such documents, but only
one is now at issue. It is a letter of May 14, 2012 [the Letter] from the Eritrean
Canadian Community Centre of Metropolitan Toronto in which two witnesses [the
Witnesses] attest to the Principle Applicant’s Eritrean identity. Both
Witnesses say that they knew the Principle Applicant as a child in Eritrea and knew her parents as well.
[6]
The RAD considered section 110(4) of the IRPA
and found that because the information in the Letter went back to the principle
Applicant’s childhood, it predated the Board’s hearing. The Principle Applicant
explained that she did not know that the Letter would be needed because the
Certificates had been provided and she expected that they would be accepted as
proof of the Applicants’ identities. She also said that, since she had been
living in a shelter, she had not reached out to the Eritrean community and was
not aware before the Board’s hearing that the Witnesses were in Toronto.
[7]
The RAD noted these explanations but did not
comment on them. It simply concluded that it was reasonable to expect the Principle
Applicant to have provided the Letter when asked by the Board for identity
documents.
[8]
Finally, the RAD decided that it did not need to
deal with credibility since the Applicants had not established their
identities.
[9]
There are two issues:
1)
Did the RAD state and apply the correct standard
of review?
2)
Did the RAD act reasonably when it refused to
accept the Letter?
Issue 1
[10]
As noted above, the RAD stated that it would
apply the reasonableness standard to the Board’s decision, and that it would
show deference to its findings of fact. I agree with Mr. Justice Phelan’s conclusion
in Huruglica v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799, at
paragraph 25 that correctness is the standard of review that should apply on
this issue.
[11]
I have decided that the RAD’s choice of
reasonableness as the standard of review is not correct because it makes no
sense to conclude that Parliament would mandate identical judicial review
proceedings in both the RAD and the Federal Court. Many of my colleagues have
reached similar conclusions, see: Iyamuremye v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 494; Yetna v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 858; Spasoja v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC
913; Alyafi v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 952; Huruglica
v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 799; Singh v
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 1022.
[12]
In Huruglica at paragraph 40, Mr. Justice
Phelan included the following quotation from remarks made in Parliament by The
Honourable Jason Kennedy, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration:
I reiterate that the
bill would also create the new refugee appeal division. The vast majority of claimants
who are coming from countries that do normally produce refugees would for the
first time, if rejected at the refugee protection division, have access to a
full fact-based appeal at the refugee appeal division of the IRB. This is
the first government to have created a full fact-based appeal. [my
emphasis]
[13]
This quotation is found in Hansard, 41st Parliament,
1st Session, No. 90, Tuesday, March 6, 2012, at page 5,874.
[14]
In my view, the Minister’s description of the
appeal process as a “full fact-based appeal” means
that neither judicial review nor the traditional appellate review for “palpable or overriding error” described by Mr. Justice Shore in Alvarez v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014 FC 702, are models
for the RAD in the IRPA.
[15]
The hybrid model for the RAD described by Mr.
Justice Phelan in Huruglica at paragraph 54 appears to me to meet the
requirement for a “full fact-based appeal”. The
RAD appeal is hybrid in the sense that the evidence may be of two types. There
is evidence the RAD may decide to receive which was not before the Board. It is
given a first and fresh assessment. At the same time, the evidence in the
record which was before the Board is reconsidered by the RAD. In each case, the
RAD makes its own independent assessment of the evidence.
[16]
Lastly, it is my conclusion that there is no
deference owed by the RAD to the Board on questions of fact because:
i.
both the Board and the RAD are expert bodies;
and
ii.
there is an appeal as of right on questions of
fact; and
iii.
the Minister’s statement shows that Parliament
intended there to be a “full fact-based appeal”.
[17]
As noted above, the Board actually adopted the
proper approach and independently assessed the Certificates. In my view, it
reached a reasonable, albeit unusual, conclusion when it decided that, even if
valid, the Certificates did not establish the Applicants’ identities because
there is nothing to link the Applicants with the Certificates.
Issue 2
[18]
In my view, it was reasonable for the Applicants
to expect that the Certificates, which are traditional identity documents, would
establish their identities. Given this expectation, they had no reason to
believe that their identities would require further proof by means of a
document such as the Letter. The Board unreasonably failed to consider this
circumstance. The Board also unreasonably failed to appreciate that the Letter
was not available at the hearing before the Board because the Applicant did not
know that the Witnesses were in Toronto. Finally, it was unreasonable to
reject the Letter because the information it contained pre-dated the Board’s
hearing. The salient point is that it was not available to the Applicant.
Certified Question
for Appeal
[19]
The Applicant asked that the question that Mr.
Justice Phelan certified in Huruglica be certified in this case. It
reads as follows: “What is the scope of the Refugee
Appeal Division’s review when considering an appeal of a decision of the
Refugee Protection Division?”
[20]
However, the Respondent submits that, on the
facts of this case, the question is not determinative. I agree because although
the Board stated the wrong test, it did not apply it. Accordingly, the question
will not be certified.