Docket: T-957-12
Citation:
2014 FC 650
Ottawa, Ontario, July 3, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Rennie
BETWEEN:
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MARTHA GREIN
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF HUMAN RESOURCES
AND SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
The applicant brings this application for
judicial review to set aside a decision by the Pension Appeals Board (Board or
PAB), which refused the applicant’s leave to appeal a decision of a Review
Tribunal (RT). In the underlying decision, the RT found that the applicant was
not entitled to a survivor’s pension under the Canada Pension Plan (CPP or
Plan) because she was not the common-law partner of the deceased contributor.
The subsequent application for leave to appeal was refused by a PAB Member
because the applicant had not raised an arguable case with respect to her claim
to a survivor’s pension under the Plan. That refusal of leave to appeal is the
decision under review before me. For the reasons that follow I dismiss the
application for judicial review.
I.
Background
[2]
On February 24, 2010, the applicant (Ms. Grein)
applied for a survivor’s pension under the Plan. In her application she
indicated that she and the deceased contributor (Mr. Daneluzzi) began living
together in a common-law relationship on January 27, 2009 and continued to so
cohabit until the time of his death. The respondent Minister denied her
application both initially and upon reconsideration because the applicant was
not in a common law relationship with the deceased contributor.
[3]
The applicant appealed this decision to the RT.
The RT dismissed the applicant’s appeal because she was not the common-law
partner of the deceased contributor, and thus, not entitled to a survivor’s
benefit under the CPP:
[37] The appeal is dismissed. Based upon on the
written and oral evidence, the Tribunal finds that on a balance of
probabilities, the Appellant and the deceased, although spending a considerable
time together, were not in a relationship that fulfils the accepted criteria
for cohabitation for a least a year prior to the death of the deceased. The
Tribunal finds that the Appellant does not meet the definition of “survivor” in
relation to the deceased contributor, under the CPP legislation.
[4]
Finally, the applicant sought leave to appeal
the RT decision to the PAB.
[5]
On April 13, 2012 the PAB refused the
applicant’s application for leave to appeal the RT decision. In his reasons,
the Member wrote:
[3] In Canada (Attorney General) v.
Carroll, 2011 FC 1092, O’Reilly J. explains that an applicant “will raise
an arguable case if she puts forward new or additional evidence (not already
considered by the RT), raises an issue not considered by the RT, or can point
to an error in the RT’s decision.”
[4] Based upon the above comments, I am of the
view that the decision of the Review Tribunal is supported by the evidence and
the applicant does not have an arguable case.
II.
Issues and Standard of Review
[6]
The review of a decision of a PAB Member to
grant or deny leave to appeal involves two issues: whether the correct test was
identified (arguable case); and, secondly, whether that test was adequately
applied. The choice of the legal test is governed by the standard of review of
correctness; its application by that of reasonableness.
[7]
The test for granting leave to appeal is whether
the application raises an “arguable case.” An arguable case is raised if
significant new or additional evidence is adduced with the application or if
the application raises an issue of law or of significant facts not
appropriately considered by the RT in its decision: Callihoo v Canada
(Attorney General) [2000] FCJ No 612 (TD) at paras 15 and 22; Canada
(Attorney General) v Zakaria, 2011 FC 136 at paras 35-36 and 38.
III.
Analysis
[8]
The reasons dismissing leave to appeal are
admittedly scant. They must, however, be considered in light of the record
before the PAB Member, which did not include any new evidence, and the reasons
for decision of the RT.
[9]
In this regard, I note that the essence of the
applicant’s case is that there are a number of evidentiary errors in the RT
decision which give rise to an arguable case. Those errors include evidence
that was not considered, or if considered, given unreasonably little weight,
such that the summary dismissal of the leave application without analysis, give
rise to a reviewable error. More specifically, those errors include the
receipt in evidence of letters from Mr. Daneluzzi’s ex-wife without
cross-examination, the discounting of the significance of the applicant’s trip
with Mr. Daneluzzi to the Maritimes, and the failure to address (1) cellular
records, (2) that Mr. Daneluzzi’s ex-wife had applied for a copy of her
marriage certificate and taken preliminary steps to obtain a divorce, and
(3),that the applicant paid for five of the fifty-two weeks when Mr. Daneluzzi
lived in a hotel.
[10]
Additionally, the applicant points to Stephen
v Stawecki, 2006 CanLII 20225 (ON CA) for the proposition that maintaining
a separate residence does not preclude a finding that the parties are living together
in a conjugal relationship. However, I do not read the decision below as
violating that proposition. The fact that the applicant continued to maintain
her own residence, where she kept her pets, was but one factor in the analysis
of whether a conjugal relationship had been established.
[11]
These evidentiary points, whether viewed
collectively or in isolation, do not suggest the existence of an arguable
case. This is particularly so when situated, as they must, in the broader
legal and factual context including the reasons of the RT.
[12]
To receive survivor benefits under the CPP the
applicant must be either married to the deceased or have been in a common-law
relationship with the deceased. Critically, a common law relationship has, in
section 2(1) of the Canada Pension Plan (RSC, 1985, c C-8), a precise
definition:
[…] in relation to a contributor, means a person who is cohabiting
with the contributor in a conjugal relationship at the relevant time, having
so cohabited with the contributor for a continuous period of at least one
year. For greater certainty, in the case of a contributor’s death, the
“relevant time” means the time of the contributor’s death
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La personne qui, au moment considéré, vit avec un cotisant dans
une relation conjugale depuis au moins un an. Il est entendu que, dans le cas
du décès du cotisant, « moment considéré » s’entend du moment du décès.
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[13]
The applicant and the deceased met in October
2008, and the deceased died in February 2010. It was only on January 27, 2009
that the applicant asserted that they had become good friends and that she
moved into the motel. At best, accepting this evidence on its face, and
excluding all other indicia, there was some evidence of a continuous
relationship for twelve months and two weeks.
[14]
However, in the opinion of the RT, other indicia
of a conjugal relationship were missing. I will not exhaustively enumerate
those findings, except to say that the existence of some evidentiary points
that were not addressed or not given weight does not alone render the decision
unreasonable. Whether an arguable case exists depends not only on the evidence
that the applicant advances, but it must also overcome, or demonstrate a
reasonable prospect of overcoming, the uncontroverted evidence to the contrary
as found by the RT. These facts include the absence of evidence of financial
interdependence, the fact that most of the applicant’s personal belongings
remained at her home and the applicant’s lack of knowledge about key aspects of
the deceased’s background, such as the circumstances of his divorce. In
particular, the RT found aspects of the applicant’s evidence not to be
credible.
[15]
The applicant did not articulate the grounds,
facts and evidence in support of her application that would demonstrate a
reasonable chance of success in an appeal to the PAB. As a consequence, the
applicant is essentially asking this Court to reweigh the evidence as presented
and previously considered by the RT and retry the case in a manner more
favourable to her position. This is not available on judicial review: Giles
v Canada (AG), 2010 FCA 54 at para 6.
[16]
In sum, the conclusion reached that there was no
arguable case, read in the context of the record as a whole, is reasonable.