Docket: IMM-2634-14
Citation:
2015 FC 656
Ottawa, Ontario, May 21,
2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
|
Applicant
|
and
|
TIBOR BARI, TIBORNE BARI, NIKOLETTA DOMIN BARI (A.K.A. NIKOLETTA DOMINIKA BARI), TIBOR RAFAEL BARI AND FATIMA AMANDA BARI
|
Respondents
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an application by the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration [the Applicant] under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 for judicial review of a decision
by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Refugee Protection Division
[RPD], rendered orally on March 6, 2014 with written reasons dated March 25,
2014, in which the RPD found that Tibor Bari, Tiborne Bari, Nikoletta Domin
Bari, Tibor Rafael Bari and Fatima Amanda Bari [the Respondents] were
Convention refugees and accepted their claims. The application is granted
because the RPD failed to conduct a state protection analysis in that the
evidence and the conclusion are not connected with a line of reasoning that is
transparent and intelligible.
[2]
Tibor Bari [Mr. Bari] was born on October 29,
1984. His wife, Tiborne Bari [Ms. Bari], was born on September 3, 1983. Their
children, Nikoletta Domin Bari, Tibor Rafael Bari and Fatima Amanda Bari, were
born on September 26, 2000, September 15, 2005 and October 27, 2006
respectively. The Respondents are all citizens of Hungary of Roma ethnicity.
They arrived in Canada on October 19, 2011 and claimed refugee protection on
October 22, 2011. The RPD accepted the Respondents’ claim orally on March 6,
2014. The Applicant applied for leave and judicial review, which was granted on
February 4, 2015.
[3]
The RPD was satisfied as to the Respondents’
identities. The RPD noted that Mr. Bari testified in a straightforward manner,
made no obvious attempts to embellish his claim and provided reasonable
explanations for discrepancies when asked to do so. The RPD noted that Ms. Bari
also testified in a straightforward manner and that there were no obvious
discrepancies in her oral testimony and information found in her narrative. The
RPD found that, overall, the Respondents were credible witnesses.
[4]
The RPD in its brief reasons surveyed
independent documentation and the situation for Romas in Hungary, including some of the human rights problems they face such as discrimination and exclusion,
as well as being subjected to patrolling by right wing extremists. The RPD
found objective evidence to support the Respondents’ subjective fears. The RPD
found that, on cumulative grounds, the Respondents had suffered persecution as
a result of their Roma ethnicity and that there was more than a mere
possibility that they would suffer persecution based on their ethnicity if they
were to return to Hungary. The RPD found the Respondents were Convention
refugees and accepted their claims.
[5]
This matter raises the following issues:
A.
Did the RPD err in its state protection
analysis?
B.
Did the RPD err by failing to assess the
availability of an Internal Flight Alternative?
[6]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a
standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question”.
It is well established that reasonableness is the applicable standard of review
to the RPD’s consideration and treatment of evidence, its findings relating to
state protection and its assessment of the availability of an Internal Flight
Alternative [IFA], as these are questions of mixed fact and law which the RPD
has expertise in: Bari v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 862 at para 19; Ortiz Garzon v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2011 FC 299 at paras 24-25; Goltsberg v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 886 at para 16.
[7]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. 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.
A.
Did the RPD err
in its state protection analysis?
[8]
In my view, the RPD erred in that it failed to
conduct a proper state protection analysis.
[9]
Before reviewing the RPD’s reasons, I wish to
note, as did the Respondents, that in Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’
Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62 at paras
14, 22 [Newfoundland Nurses], the Supreme Court of Canada held that the
adequacy of reasons is not a stand-alone basis for quashing a decision and that
any challenge to the reasoning/result of a decision should therefore be made
within the reasonableness standard of review. In Newfoundland Nurses at
para 16, the Supreme Court explained what is required of a tribunal’s reasons
in order to meet the Dunsmuir criteria:
Reasons may not include all the arguments,
statutory provisions, jurisprudence or other details the reviewing judge would
have preferred, but that does not impugn the validity of either the reasons or
the result under a reasonableness analysis. A decision-maker is not required to
make an explicit finding on each constituent element, however subordinate,
leading to its final conclusion (Service Employees’ International Union,
Local No. 333 v. Nipawin District Staff Nurses Assn., [1975] 1 S.C.R. 382,
at p. 391). In other words, if the reasons allow the reviewing court to
understand why the tribunal made its decision and permit it to determine
whether the conclusion is within the range of acceptable outcomes, the Dunsmuir
criteria are met.
[10]
That said, in my opinion, the RPD does not meet
the criteria established by the Supreme Court of Canada in both Dunsmuir
and Newfoundland Nurses in that its reasons do not allow me to
understand why it made its decision respecting state protection, nor do they
permit me to determine whether its conclusion falls within the range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law.
[11]
In the present case, the RPD failed in its duty
to consider and determine the issue of state protection. It failed to remind
itself of or to anywhere state the legal test for state protection. It failed
to remind itself and likewise failed to state anywhere even the presumption of
state protection. It failed to state that the Respondents were under a legal
duty to rebut the presumption of state protection with clear and convincing
evidence. The decision lacks both an analysis and a finding on the issue of
clear and convincing evidence. It failed to make any kind of assessment as to
where on the scale of country conditions Hungary should be placed, be it
functioning democracy or otherwise. Moreover, the RPD failed to decide what
specific onus the Respondents were required to meet, and it failed to say what
onus, if any, the RPD found the Respondents had met to displace the legal
presumption.
[12]
While the RPD identified state protection as an
issue and announced in a heading that it would examine state protection, the
RPD in fact never made any state protection finding whatsoever. In the result,
I am at a loss as to how it came to a conclusion on state protection, and indeed
there is nothing in the reasons to show that the RPD came to a conclusion on
state protection at all.
[13]
The Respondents argued that the RPD considered
all the right factors, and that while the legal tests were absent, the
substance was all there. I fail to see how the substance was all there if there
was no decision on the issue of state protection, let alone an analysis of the
facts against the applicable core state protection principles and required legal
findings.
[14]
As Justice Rennie (as he then was) stated in Andrade
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 436 at para 28:
[28] The Board must actually analyse
the evidence it references and consider how that evidence relates to the issue
of state protection. It is insufficient to merely summarize large volumes of
evidence and then state a conclusion that state protection is adequate. The
evidence and the conclusion must be connected with a line of reasoning that is
transparent and intelligible.
In this case, the RPD merely summarized a
relatively small amount of information and found the claims for refugee
protection established without saying anything about state protection.
[15]
The legal requirement on the RPD to analyse the
evidence it refers to and consider how that evidence relates to the issue of
state protection was also dealt with in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Balogh, 2014 FC 932. The following passage, and in
particular paragraphs 27 to 29, apply to the case at bar:
[27] […] It is not evident from the RPD’s reasons that
it turned its mind to key issues such as how the respondents rebutted the
presumption of state protection with clear and convincing evidence. This is
because the RPD did not reference any basis for its conclusion; the RPD simply
stated it had concluded that the respondents “have rebutted the presumption of
protection in their personal circumstances”.
[28] There is no doubt that the RPD recited a great deal
of relevant law in connection with the doctrine of state protection. However,
the critical failure was to leap from that legal summary to the conclusion that
the presumption of state protection was rebutted. It is simply not possible for
this Court to determine how that result was obtained. This is not a case where
the Court can fill in the dots. Rather it is a case where there are no dots to
fill in.
[29] It is not the duty of this Court is to review the
(conflicting) evidence on State protection and make its own determination. This
is judicial review, not a hearing de novo. Given the very serious
deficiency in these reasons, I am compelled to conclude that this decision does
not meet the tests of Dunsmuir and Newfoundland Nurses. There is
an analytical vacuum in that the reasons lack the necessary elements of
justification, transparency and intelligibility.
[16]
In summary, these reasons do not allow this
reviewing Court to understand why the RPD made this particular decision, nor do
they permit this Court to determine whether the RPD’s conclusion falls within
the range of acceptable outcomes as set out in Dunsmuir. The decision
must therefore be set aside and re-determined.
B.
Did the RPD err
by failing to assess the availability of an Internal Flight Alternative?
[17]
It is not necessary to deal with the other
issues raised by the Applicant.
[18]
Neither party proposed a question to certify,
and none arises.