Docket: IMM-1673-13
Citation:
2014 FC 506
Ottawa, Ontario, May 27,
2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Harrington
BETWEEN:
|
EUGENIUSZ
KOZLOWSKI
DAWID GRZESKIEWICZ
MALGORZATA KOZLOWSKA
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
Mr. and Mrs. Kozlowski and their nephew Dawid, over
whom they have custody, are Polish citizens of Roma origin. They have sought
asylum here as they say they fear persecution by skinheads should they be
returned to Poland. A member of the Refugee Protection Division [RPD] of the
Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada dismissed their application. He held
they were not to be believed and might not even be who they claim to be.
However, he purportedly left credibility aside and determined that, in any
event, adequate state protection was available to them in Poland. This is the judicial review of that decision.
[2]
The Member made a number of errors in his
findings of fact, errors on the face of the record. Counsel for the Minister
submits that these errors were not determinative and, in any event, the
analysis of state protection stands up to judicial scrutiny.
[3]
I disagree. Many of the findings which pertain
to credibility arise from confusion in the mind of the Member. He got some
things right during the hearing, but said quite the reverse in his decision. He
also raised a point in his decision which he had not put to Mr. Kozlowski
during the hearing. This smacks of procedural unfairness.
[4]
With respect to state protection, his suspect
findings on credibility permeated his analysis. While there may well be
adequate state protection in Poland, one would not know it from the Member’s
analysis as he applied the wrong test.
[5]
Consequently, this application for judicial review
shall be granted and the matter shall be referred back to another Member of the
RPD for redetermination.
I.
Standard of Review
[6]
The standard of review on findings of fact is
reasonableness. Although assessment of state protection is a mixed finding of
fact and law, it is also subject to review on the reasonableness standard.
Section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act should be kept in mind.
Subsection 4 provides that this Court may grant relief if satisfied, among other
things, that the Tribunal: “…failed to observe a
principle of natural justice, procedural fairness” or “…based its decision or order on an erroneous finding of
fact…without regard for the material before it.”
II.
The Facts
[7]
Some care had to be exercised in ascertaining
the facts. On marriage, Mr. Kozlowski took the surname of his wife.
Consequently, the surname of his two brothers, who figure in this application,
Adam and Robert, is different. The transcript of the hearing shows that the
Member had got it right, but in his reasons for decision got it wrong. This
error had to greatly influence the Member’s thinking with respect to
credibility.
[8]
Mr. Kozlowski’s brothers, Adam and Robert, were
twins. Robert is alive. Adam is dead. Adam, not Robert, was the father of Dawid.
[9]
Robert’s medical information was produced. The
transcript shows that it was produced to show what had happened to a similarly
placed individual. The medical reports indicate personal injury, which may have
been caused by skinheads. However, the Member thought these reports were
produced to show that Robert was dead.
[10]
Dawid’s medical report indicates that his father
is Piotr. This was one of the factors which led the Member to conclude that he
was not satisfied as to the identity of the claimants. However, the applicants
were not questioned with respect to the medical report. There may well be an
innocent explanation. Perhaps Piotr is a patronym. It is a principle of
procedural fairness that one cannot undermine the credibility of a witness by
not questioning him on a document which is in the record. This is consistent
with the principle set out more than a century ago by the House of Lords in Browne
v Dunn (1893) 6 R 67.
[11]
One of the events which caused the family to
leave Poland was an attempted rape on Mrs. Kozlowska. The Member referred
to her testimony. However, she did not testify at all!
[12]
I cannot segregate the Member’s findings of lack
of credibility from the errors in his own mind, and so have to hold that the
decision on this issue is unreasonable.
III.
State Protection
[13]
The Member should have considered Robert’s
medical reports as possibly supporting the proposition that the applicants
would face persecution if returned to Poland because of what happened to a
similarly situated individual.
[14]
The Member said that Mrs. Kozlowska should have
reported the attempted rape to the police. She did not. However, he did not
take into account gender sensitivities.
[15]
While there may well be adequate state
protection available to the Kozlowskis should they return to Poland, one would not know it from the Member’s analysis. He focused on steps taken by the Polish
government to improve the daily life of its Roma citizens. This is most
commendable, but it is not the issue before the Court. The issue is state
protection and there was no adequate analysis in that record.
JUDGMENT
FOR REASONS GIVEN;
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The application for judicial review is granted.
2.
The decision of the Refugee Protection Division
[RPD] of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, dated January 30, 2013,
in file numbers TB1-20929, TB1-20930 and TB1-20939, is quashed.
3.
The matter is referred back to another Member of
the RPD for redetermination.
4.
There is no serious question of general
importance to certify.
“Sean Harrington”