Date: 20150723
Docket: IMM-7033-14
Citation: 2015 FC 896
Ottawa, Ontario, July 23, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Annis
BETWEEN:
|
KATE IFUEKO
OJARIKRE
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant is a citizen of the Republic of Nigeria who alleges that she fears being forced to undergo traditional rites and
female genital mutilation [FGM] at the hands of her husband’s family in Nigeria. The Refugee Protection Division [RPD] rejected the Applicant’s claim for refugee
protection under sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA or the Act], on the basis of
credibility concerns and the availability of state protection. The Refugee
Appeal Division [RAD] upheld the RPD’s decision in accordance with section
111(1)(a) and it is this decision which forms the basis of this judicial
review.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, the application is allowed.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicant was married in Nigeria and during the first years of her marriage, she suffered seven miscarriages. She alleges
that her husband’s family, particularly his sisters, first tried to give her
some traditional medicine to help her bear a child, but after further
miscarriages they came to believe that this was occurring because she was not
circumcised. The Applicant alleges that her relatives were trying to force her
to undergo traditional rites and FGM in order to be purified, despite the fact
that both she and her husband were not in favour of this.
[4]
Knowing that her sisters-in-law were coming to
perform the traditional rites and FGM, the Applicant fled the country. She
first stayed with a cousin in the United Kingdom, but while she was in the UK, she
saw her husband’s uncle, Chief Ojarikre, at a social function. She alleges that
she fears this man and that he is influential in the Nigerian community in
England, so she decided to immediately flee to Canada since she already had a
Temporary Resident Visa.
[5]
The Applicant arrived in Canada on January 15, 2013 and made a claim for protection on January 16, 2013 at the Toronto airport. Her husband still resides in Nigeria and is employed at a bank.
[6]
The RPD heard the Applicant’s claim on March 15,
2013 and April 11, 2013. Her claim for refugee protection was rejected on March
5, 2014, with the RPD finding that she was not credible and therefore it was
not satisfied that she was facing forced FGM in Nigeria.
[7]
The Applicant appealed the negative RPD decision
to the RAD, submitting the following proposed new evidence: (1) a birth
certificate for her daughter born May 14, 2013, (2) a new affidavit from the Applicant’s
husband (dated April 7, 2014), (3) letters from her husband (dated January 30,
2014 June 29, 2014), and (4) the Immigration and Refugee Board Response to
Information Request relating to the risk of FGM to minors (dated July 29,
2010). She submitted that items #1, 2 and 4 related to the risk of FGM in
Nigeria for her daughter, arguing that she could not have been expected to
produce this evidence earlier since she did not know that she would give birth
to a daughter at the time of the RPD hearing and that this is a new risk which
should be considered by the RAD. She argued that item #3 was fresh evidence of
the ongoing harassment and threats of FGM that she continues to face in Nigeria. The RAD rejected this evidence on the basis that it was inadmissible.
[8]
The RAD confirmed the RPD’s decision that the Applicant
is not a Convention refugee or a person in need of protection, but did so on
the basis that she had an internal flight alternative [IFA]. The RAD
acknowledged that while the RPD had questioned the Applicant about the
existence of an IFA, the RPD had made no findings on that issue in its decision.
However, the RAD determined that in its exercise of its statutory authority to
confirm or substitute a decision of the RPD (citing IRPA, s 111(1)(a) and
111(1)(b)), it is not bound by the reasoning of the RPD decision. The RAD found
that this was consistent with the restrictions on remittal outlined in
subsection 111(2) of the Act, which it interpreted as suggesting that “Parliament’s intent was to have the RAD finalize refugee
protection claims where it can do so fairly, including by confirming a determination
on alternative grounds” (RAD Decision at para 18).
[9]
The RAD noted that it had reviewed the
submissions made by the Applicant on the IFA issue before the RPD and that it
was not relying on any of the RPD’s credibility findings, so her evidence would
be assumed to be true for the purpose of assessing the possibility of an IFA.
[10]
The RAD found that the Applicant had a
reasonable and viable IFA in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Abuja, or “any other major centres in Nigeria” [the proposed
IFAs], finding that, on a balance of probabilities, she and her husband would
likely be able to resume their stated employment or to otherwise support
themselves in those locations. The RAD found there was no serious possibility
that she would be persecuted in the proposed IFA locations for a number of
reasons, including:
- The Applicant did not provide persuasive evidence
that her husband’s family has the influence in Nigeria that she alleges or
the means or interest to locate them and pursue in the proposed IFAs;
- The Applicant and her husband are financially
well-off and can support themselves while they find other employment if
her husband is required to find employment outside the banking sector to
avoid detection by his family;
- The Applicant did not provide persuasive evidence
that her husband’s family would come to know that they were living
elsewhere in Nigeria as she does not inform family members or those known
to them of her presence in the proposed IFAs;
- The problems faced by the Applicant with her
husband’s family were local in nature;
- If the Applicant believed that their jobs were
putting her at risk, on a balance of probabilities, they could change
their jobs to reduce their risk;
- The Applicant did not provide persuasive evidence
that her husband’s family have the ability to influence police actions in
Nigeria or the ability to access the resources of police or any other
authorities in order to locate her elsewhere in Nigeria;
- The proposed IFAs are large cities located at a
substantial distance from the Applicant’s home state; and
- The Applicant did not provide persuasive evidence
that she would have to live in hiding in the proposed IFAs.
[11]
The RAD found that any hardship that might be
encountered by the Applicant arising from her gender will be mitigated by the
fact that she will be accompanied by her husband and that it would be
reasonable for her to adapt to new surroundings and cultural norms and to
secure employment in the proposed IFA locations. The RAD acknowledged that the
country condition documentation notes that most Nigerians depend on their
families for support, but found that other options for establishing support
networks would be available to the Applicant.
III.
Issues
[12]
The following issue arises in this application:
•
Did the RAD err in deciding the application on
different grounds than those considered in the RPD decision?
IV.
Standard of Review
[13]
The issue of whether the RAD could decide the
application on different grounds raises questions of procedural fairness, which
are to be reviewed on the standard of correctness (Mission Institution v
Khela, 2014 SCC 24 at para 79, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 502; Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 at para 43, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339).
V.
Analysis
[14]
At the commencement of the hearing, the Court
raised the issue of whether the RAD erred by deciding the appeal on the basis
of the issue of an IFA. Before the RPD, the parties had led evidence on the IFA
issue and it was fully argued. However, the RPD made no determination
concerning an IFA and its decision was entirely related to credibility.
Accordingly, the IFA issue was not raised by either party in the appeal to the
RAD.
[15]
As this was a new issue raised by the Court, the
parties were given an opportunity to provide the Court written submissions on
the matter and both parties did so. The Respondent argued that the RAD had the
power to decide the case based on an issue not determined by the RPD and not
raised by either party, arguing as follows:
Although the RAD
does not have a duty to do so, when reviewing the RPD record, if the RAD
identifies an error not raised by the appellant, it may set aside the
determination made by the RPD pursuant to section 111 of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) and substitute a determination that,
in its opinion should have been made if it can do so without having to
rehear the evidence that was before the RPD. In this case, the RAD’s finding
flows from the evidence given by the Applicant to the RPD that an IFA is not
available to her in Nigeria, because her husband’s family located her after she
and her husband changed addresses in Lagos, they had been to her parent’s residence
(3 hours from Lagos) and to her sisters’ in Benin City and her husband’s uncle
was present at the party she attended in England…
[Emphasis in original]
[16]
On the other hand, the Applicant submitted that,
as a result of the fact that the RPD did not decide the IFA issue in its
decision, she did not address the existence of an IFA in her memorandum of
argument to the RAD. She argued that this raised an issue of procedural
fairness, citing two recent cases: Jianzhu v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2015 FC 551 [Jianzhu] and Ching v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 725 [Ching].
[17]
At paragraphs 7 and 12 of Jianzhu,
Justice Simpson considered the similar issue of whether the RAD had erred in
raising of its own accord and deciding the issue of the Applicant’s refugee sur
place claim, when the matter had not been been determined by the RPD:
[7] It is
noteworthy that the RPD did not make any findings about a risk to the Applicant
based on her religious practice in Canada [the Sur Place Claim].
Nevertheless, although the topic was not raised by the principal Applicant on
the appeal, the RAD independently evaluated the Sur Place Claim.
It examined the record and relied on the RPD’s credibility findings to
conclude that the Applicant did not have a Sur Place Claim.
…
[12] In my view, the RAD lacked
jurisdiction to independently decide the Sur Place Claim. The RAD did
not cite any authority for taking this step, and section 111(1)(b) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [the IRPA] does not apply because
there was no RPD decision to set aside. In these circumstances, since it felt
that the issue ought to have been decided, the RAD should have referred the Sur
Place Claim back to the RPD for a decision. Given that it did not take this
approach, the RAD’s decision was unreasonable.
[18]
To similar effect was the decision of Justice
Kane in Ching,, wherein she applied the Supreme Court of Canada decision
of R v Mian, 2014 SCC 54, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 689 [Mian]. The Court in Mian,
in the context of a criminal law matter, noted that generally when the
appellate court raises a new issue, the parties must be notified and given the
opportunity to respond to the new issue.
[19]
As mentioned in the present case, the Applicant’s
appeal documents before the RAD only dealt with the issue of the reasonableness
of the RPD’s conclusions concerning credibility. In support of her appeal, the Applicant
also submitted new evidence on the issue of credibility in accordance with the requirements
of subsection 110(4) of the IRPA.
[20]
The Court is in agreement with the Applicant’s submissions
that the RAD does not possess the jurisdiction to consider an issue that,
although fully canvassed before the RPD, was not relied upon in its decision
and therefore was not the subject matter of the Applicant’s appeal.
[21]
In addition to the arguments raised in the Jianzhu
and Ching decisions, the Court notes that by raising an issue not
determined by the RPD and that was not the subject matter of an appeal by
either party, the RAD infringed the Applicant’s statutory procedural rights.
The Applicant is deprived of her statutory right under subsection 110(4) to
submit further evidence with respect to the new issue raised by the RAD,
because she was not aware that the issue would be the subject of the RAD
decision.
[22]
I also adopt and apply the reasoning of the Jianzhu
and Ching decisions that there is a failure of procedural fairness when
the RAD raises a new issue without first providing the parties with an opportunity
to file new documentary evidence and submissions on the point, because it
deprives the parties of an opportunity to make submissions to the RAD on the issue
that it considers to be determinative of the matter. In this case, the Applicant
obviously could not make submissions on an issue that she was not aware of and
which she only learned about upon receipt of the RAD’s decision.
[23]
If the RAD wishes to consider the IFA issue, it
was incumbent upon it to advise the parties of its intention to do so and to provide
an opportunity for them to submit new evidence and submissions on the issue.
[24]
I find that this issue is determinative of the
application, so there is no need to discuss the other issues raised by the
Applicant regarding the reasonableness of the RAD’s assessment of the IFA.
VI.
Certified Questions
[25]
The Respondent proposed the following question
for certification:
•
Does the RAD have the authority to confirm or
substitute a determination of the RPD by making a decision on an issue which
was raised and canvassed, but not decided by the RPD, without giving further
notice to the appellant?
[26]
The Court is not prepared to certify the
question proposed by the Respondent. With this decision, there will now be
three decisions of the Federal Court unanimously concluding that the RAD may
not raise a new issue not determined by the RPD without providing further
notice to the appellant.
[27]
Moreover, neither of the two decisions relied
upon in this matter made reference to the requirement pursuant to section
110(4) to provide an opportunity to parties to file new documentary evidence
and submissions on a RAD. In my view, the nullifying of this right by the RAD
proceeding to raise a new issue without notice to the parties is a complete
answer to the proposed question.
VII.
Conclusion
[28]
The application is allowed. The decision of the
RAD is set aside and is to be re-determined by another panel. No question is
certified for appeal pursuant to subsection 74(d) of the IRPA.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the application is allowed, with the matter being returned to
another panel of the RAD for reconsideration, and that no questions are to be
certified for appeal.
"Peter Annis"