Docket: IMM-978-15
Citation: 2015 FC 1224
BETWEEN:
|
JONATHAN
BENJAMIN HERNANDEZ MORENO
GABRIELA
CRAVIOTO FERNANDEZ
VALERIA
HERNANDEZ CRAVIOTO
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION AND THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
|
Respondents
|
JUDGMENT
AND REASONS
ANNIS J.
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to section 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA or the Act] challenging a decision by a Pre-Removal Risk
Assessment officer [the Officer] rejecting the Applicants’ Pre-Removal Risk
Assessment [PRRA] application. The Applicants are seeking to have the decision
set aside and have the matter referred back for redetermination by a different
officer.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, the application is
allowed.
I.
Background
[3]
The Principal Applicant [PA], Jonathan Benjamin
Moreno, and his common-law spouse, Gabriela Cravioto Fernandez and their
daughter, Valeria Hernandez Cravioto are all citizens of Mexico.
[4]
The PA’s common-law spouse and daughter entered
Canada on October 9, 2010. The PA entered Canada on November 29, 2010.
[5]
The Applicants made a refugee claim on January
13, 2011 which was rejected by the Refugee Protection Board [RPD] for lack of
credibility. Leave for judicial review of the RPD’s decision was granted on
February 28, 2012, but the claim was ultimately denied on
May 14, 2012.
[6]
On July 3, 2012, the Applicants’ Humanitarian
and Compassionate grounds application was received by Citizenship and
Immigration Canada [CIC], but it was denied on July 30, 2013.
[7]
On September 18, 2012, the Applicants initiated
their first PRRA application, which was rejected on March 6, 2013. The
Applicants applied for leave to have this decision judicially reviewed, but
withdrew their application when the Minister’s Delegate waived the Applicants’
PRRA waiting period.
[8]
As a result, the second PRRA was initiated on
January 31, 2014 and subsequently denied on January 30, 2015. The Applicants’
second PRRA is the decision currently under judicial review.
II.
Impugned Decision
[9]
The Officer concluded that the Applicants would
not face a risk of persecution, a danger of torture, a risk to life or a risk
of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment in the event of their return to
Mexico.
[10]
The Officer found the Applicants’ medical
evidence to have low probative value in addition to offering little to show a
nexus between the medical conditions and any of the five Convention grounds of
section 96 of the Act.
[11]
Moreover, the Officer found that several of the
articles submitted by the Applicants were irrelevant as they pertained to the
risks associated with journalism in Mexico and did not address the risk
particular to the Applicants.
[12]
The Officer further found that the Applicants
provided insufficient evidence to demonstrate the La Familia Michoacana [LFM]
drug trafficking organisation’s threats towards the PA’s father since
relocating to Cancun. In addition, the fact that the LFM threatened the PA’s
father-in-law in order to obtain information on the whereabouts of the PA and
his family was an indication that the LFM did not have the capabilities to
locate individuals outside the boundaries of their influence.
[13]
Lastly, the Applicants’ country condition
documents indicated that although the LFM operated in parts of Central Mexico
almost half a dozen states were relatively free of violence. The Officer found
that the Applicants could have therefore relocated as there was little evidence
to demonstrate that the LFM’s influence extended outside the boundaries of the
aforementioned region. Based on this finding, the Officer found the Yucantan
and Baja California Sur areas to be suitable Internal Flight Alternative [IFA]
for the Applicants.
I.
Issue
[14]
I find that this application raises the single
issue of whether the PRRA Officer denied the Applicants procedural fairness by
failing to provide them with an opportunity to respond to the issue of an IFA
in Mexico?
II.
Standard of Review
[15]
Procedural fairness issues are reviewed on a
standard of correctness, with some deference owed the decision-maker in the
discretionary elements of their application. As stated in Re: Sound v
Fitness Industry Council of Canada, 2014 FCA 48 at paragraph 39, “administrative
discretion ends where procedural unfairness begins … [and] a reviewing court
must determine for itself on the correctness standard whether that line has
been crossed.” In this matter, where the
issue is whether any procedural fairness was required, the standard of review
is that of correctness.
III.
Analysis
Did the PRRA
Officer err by failing to provide the Applicants with notice of the IFA issue?
[16]
The Applicants submit that the Officer erred by
failing to properly raise the question of IFA before the Applicants and by
failing to afford the Applicants the opportunity to address the question of an
IFA with evidence and argument.
[17]
In Palaguru
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 371 [Palaguru]
Justice Russell concluded that the obligation to provide notice of an IFA
analysis depends on the proceedings prior to the PRRA process. Where a PRRA
officer examines an IFA in new or previously unconsidered locations without
providing reasonable notice to an applicant, the Court determined that this
constitutes a breach of natural justice.
[18]
I am in agreement with this principle inasmuch
as by failing to raise an IFA in previous procedures, an expectation or
reliance interest arises, such that an applicant may conclude that it is not
necessary to consider an IFA when submitting the application. Palaguru obviously
takes precedence over CIC’s Pre-removal Risk Assessment guidelines that
indicate the Officer should consider the issue of an IFA without the
requirement to provide notice to the applicant.
[19]
The facts before me indicate that an IFA was not
considered in previous proceedings. Accordingly, notification should have been
provided so as to provide the Applicants an opportunity to submit evidence on
the issue before the Officer ruled on it.
[20]
I disagree with the Respondent that based on the
Applicant’s submitted evidence an IFA issue was “obviously”
in play. The documents referred to by the Respondent, including the United
States Congressional Research document, do not describe anything “obvious” regarding an IFA in the Applicant’s case.
Very little mention is made in the Applicants’ documents referring to the two
areas flagged by the Officer as possible IFAs. Moreover, the documents bring
forth a secondary consideration that the Applicant is still at risk.
[21]
I also disagree with the Respondent’s submission
that the decision in Navaratnam v Canada (S.G.), 2005 FC 3 applies to
this matter. The Court found in that matter that the Officer’s “reasons indicate that she found that the applicants were
simply not at risk in Sri Lanka.” In this matter the Officer did not
conclude that the Applicants were not at risk in Mexico, which is why she
identified an IFA.
IV.
Conclusion and Certified Question
[22]
The application is allowed and the matter is
directed to be sent back for redetermination by another officer. No questions
are certified for appeal.
[23]
The Applicants’ suggested a question for
certification essentially reprising the Palaguru decision. Given my
decision accepting the principle expressed in this case, there is no basis for
a certified question.