Docket: IMM-2048-19
Citation: 2020 FC 260
Ottawa, Ontario, February 24, 2020
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell
BETWEEN:
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STELLA MBULA-KOLELA
JAELLE KERENE TSHIENDA KALALA ONDO NOIYA LILYA NTANGA KALALA ONDO
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Applicants
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And
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
On September 16, 2016, Stella Mbula-Kolela [the principal Applicant] and her two (2) minor daughters arrived at the Fort Erie, Ontario border crossing with passports from Gabon. In their refugee application, they alleged to have fled from the Democratic Republic of the Congo [DRC] because they faced risks, based upon religion and political opinion, as contemplated by sections 96 and 97 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA]. The Refugee Protection Division [RPD] rejected the Applicants’ refugee claim, finding that they were neither refugees nor persons in need of protection because they had not established their identity as DRC nationals. The RPD concluded they were Gabonese nationals. In Mbula-Kolela v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 1018 this Court dismissed their application for judicial review of the RPD decision.
[2]
On March 29, 2018, the Applicants applied for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment [PRRA] pursuant to s. 112(1) of the IRPA. In support of their application, they submitted the following: (1) a statutory declaration from the principal Applicant’s mother, Colette Bilonga Kolela mother], who is a Canadian citizen residing in Toronto, Ontario; (2) letters from the principal Applicant’s spouse, her uncle, her friend, her pastor and members of the Congolese community attesting to her Congolese identity; and (3) documentary evidence in the form of a US Department of State Report on Gabon and an RPD Response to Information Request on the risk of returnees to the DRC.
[3]
The PRRA Officer admitted the new evidence pursuant to paragraph 113(a) of the IRPA but gave it no weight.
[4]
At the close of the oral hearing held on November 28, 2019, I advised the parties that I would grant the application for judicial review, and that the reasons would follow. I requested further submissions with respect to the appropriate remedy. These are my reasons, including my disposition of the issue of the appropriate remedy.
II.
Decision under Review
[5]
In commenting upon the decision under review, I will only refer to those parts that are crucial to my decision. The thrust of the principal Applicant’s position is that her Gabonese passport is fraudulent, that she is a citizen of the DRC and that she will face persecution if returned to that country. Because of her unlawful status in Gabon, she fears a return to that country as well. Despite numerous documents purporting to prove the principal Applicant is a citizen of the DRC, most notably her mother’s statutory declaration attesting to her birth in the DRC, the PRRA Officer concluded she did not prove her identity as a citizen of the DRC. I would note here that Canadian authorities concluded the principal Applicant’s mother, a Canadian citizen, was truthful in her own application for refugee status and, furthermore, Canadian authorities concluded the principal Applicant was truthful when she entered Canada and stated that her mother is a Canadian citizen who resides here. Had the Canada Border Services Agency officers not believed the Applicant, they would have denied her entry at the time based upon the Safe Third Country Agreement between Canada and the United States of America.
[6]
The mother’s statutory declaration deposes, among other matters, that she is the mother of the principal Applicant; that the principal Applicant was born in Kinshasa, RDC on March 14, 1982; that the principal Applicant is a citizen of the DRC and no other country; and that she, the mother, made a successful refugee claim in Canada in 1997.
[7]
The PRRA Officer also concluded that a hearing was not required since the Applicants had failed to establish the three factors enumerated in section 167 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [Regulations]. He did not analyse, nor make any mention of, those three factors.
III.
Relevant Provisions
[8]
The relevant provisions are section 96, subsection 97(1), and paragraphs 113(a) and 113(b) of the IRPA, as well as section 167 of the Regulations. They are set out in the attached Schedule.
IV.
Issues
Did the PRRA Officer unreasonably assign no weight to the statutory declaration of the principal Applicant’s mother?
Did the PRRA Officer commit a reviewable error by failing to provide reasons for refusing to hold an oral hearing?
V.
Analysis
A.
Did the PRRA Officer unreasonably assign no weight to the statutory declaration of the principal Applicant’s mother?
[9]
The PRRA Officer’s assessment of the evidence is to be reviewed on a reasonableness standard (Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Vavilov, 2019 SCC 65; Nwabueze v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 323 at para 7, citing Haq v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FC 370 at para 15 and Nguyen v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 59 at para 4).
[10]
In addition to the requirements of s. 113(a) of the IRPA, jurisprudence holds that evidence is considered “new”
pursuant to this section if it (i) proves the current state of affairs in the country of removal or an event that occurred or a circumstance that arose after the hearing before the RPD; (ii) proves a fact that was unknown to the refugee claimant at the time of the RPD hearing; or (iii) contradicts a finding of fact by the RPD (including a credibility finding) (Chen v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 565 at para 12, 480 FTR 62, citing Raza v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 FCA 385 at para 13, 289 DLR (4th) 675 [Raza]).
[11]
The Applicant contends the PRRA Officer afforded the mother’s evidence no weight on the sole basis that she is an interested party. The Applicant contends such an approach fails to follow this Court’s precedents. With respect, the Applicant overstates her position. Here, the PRRA Officer’s notes state that the statutory declaration was not only from an interested party, but also failed to provide any new information about the principal Applicant’s identity. He therefore did not rely solely on the fact that it originated from an interested party. That said, I am of the view the PRRA Officer committed reviewable error when he concluded the statutory declaration did not provide any new information. The declaration, and some of the other evidence admitted by the Officer, contradicts the finding of facts made by the Officer regarding citizenship. The PRRA Officer, having admitted that “new” evidence, was required to engage with it fully, particularly where the contradiction is plainly obvious. He failed to do so. In my view, the PRRA Officer erred in this regard.
B.
Did the PRRA Officer commit a reviewable error by failing to provide reasons for refusing to hold an oral hearing?
[12]
The PRRA Officer provided the following reasons for refusing to hold an oral hearing: “As the three factors set out in section 167 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations are not met, indeed, there is no reason for holding one”.
Pursuant to section 167 of the Regulations, in the context of a PRRA, the factors to consider for holding an oral hearing are the following:
(a) whether there is evidence that raises a serious issue of the applicant’s credibility and is related to the factors set out in sections 96 and 97 of the Act;
(b) whether the evidence is central to the decision with respect to the application for protection; and
(c) whether the evidence, if accepted, would justify allowing the application for protection.
All of these factors must be present. The regulation reads conjunctively (Gjoka v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2018 FC 292 at para 18, citing Majali v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2017 FC 275 at para 29, 51 Imm LR (4th) 321, Strachn v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 984 at para 34, 416 FTR 312 (Eng) and Ullah v Canada (Citizenship & Immigration), 2011 FC 221 at para 25, 385 FTR 91).
[13]
Following Vavilov at paras 95-98, it is clear that courts cannot supplant reasons or conclude a decision is reasonable by undertaking their own analysis of the evidence. Robust review entails a review of the pathway to a decision based upon the standards of justification, transparency, and intelligibility. None of these qualities is evident in the PRRA Officer’s refusal to hold an oral hearing.
[14]
In addition to the question of reasonableness, I note that in Montesinos Hidalgo v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 1334 at paras 21-23, 6 Imm LR (4th) 5, this Court found that a PRRA Officer breached the Applicant’s procedural fairness rights by failing to provide reasons for not holding an oral hearing. See also, Plata Vasquez v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2019 FC 279 at para 12, where this Court stated that failure to provide reasons could, standing alone, justify allowing a judicial review application.
[15]
Whether the failure to provide reasons for the refusal to hold a hearing renders the decision unreasonable or constitutes a breach of procedural fairness is of no moment. Regardless of the academic debate, the PRRA Officer erred.
[16]
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, in this case the Applicants specifically requested an oral hearing. The PRRA Officer specifically stated in his reasons that there was no request for an oral hearing. This clearly demonstrates the Officer did not consider, even if by inadvertence, the submissions made by the Applicants on the issue of an oral hearing.
[17]
Based upon the accumulation of these errors, I conclude the decision cannot stand.
VI.
Remedy
[18]
As indicated earlier in these reasons, I advised the parties at the conclusion of the oral hearing that I would appreciate further submissions regarding the appropriate remedy. Toward that end, I asked for their views about whether I should remit the matter for redetermination before a different PRRA Officer, without any instructions, or, whether I should remit the matter with directions that the new PRRA Officer hold a hearing. Both counsel provided very helpful submissions within the time requested by the Court.
[19]
The law with respect to the circumstances under which courts may provide instructions to administrative tribunals regarding the manner in which they exercise their powers has recently been restated in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Tennant, 2019 FCA 206, 436 DLR (4th) 155. The Federal Court of Appeal instructs that such a remedy is available where, on the facts and the law, “there is only one lawful response, or one reasonable conclusion, open to the administrative decision-maker, so that no useful purpose would be served if the decision-maker were to re-determine the matter”
(at para 72). Vavilov also speaks to this issue. At paragraph 142, the majority states that there may be cases where it is futile to remit a matter for redetermination because the outcome is inevitable. I have already passed that threshold; I am remitting the matter back. The only issue is whether I usurp the future PRRA Officer’s discretion to hold a hearing by directing him or her to do so. In making this determination, I am satisfied I should apply the same test as enunciated by the Supreme Court; namely, is it inevitable that a future PRRA Officer would direct the holding of a hearing?
[20]
After careful consideration of the whole of the material before me, I cannot conclude that the decision to hold a hearing would be inevitable. I say this for one simple reason: a future PRRA Officer may not agree that the same new evidence admitted by the PRRA Officer in this case is admissible. A different PRRA Officer may determine that the Applicants’ “new”
evidence does not satisfy the criteria set out in s. 113(a) of the IRPA and the jurisprudence. Without knowing which new evidence will be admitted, it is impossible for the Court to put itself in the place of a future PRRA Officer for purposes of applying the factors enumerated in s. 167 of the Regulations. In my view, it would be inappropriate for the Court, at this time, to make conclusions regarding which evidence meets the test set out in s. 113(a) of the IRPA and the factors set out in Raza. That responsibility rests with the PRRA Officer, subject, of course, to an application for leave to seek judicial review.
VII.
Conclusion
[21]
The application for judicial review is allowed without costs. The matter is remitted to another PRRA Officer for redetermination. Neither party proposed a question for certification, and none appears from the record. It follows that no question is certified for consideration by the Federal Court of Appeal.
JUDGMENT in IMM-2048-19
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
The application for judicial review is granted and the matter is remitted to a different Pre-Removal Risk Assessment Officer;
No question is certified for consideration by the Federal Court of Appeal; and
There is no order of costs.
« B. Richard Bell »
Judge
ANNEX
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FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET:
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IMM-2048-19
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STYLE OF CAUSE:
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STELLA MBULA-KOLELA, JAELLE KERENE TSHIENDA KALALA ONDO, NOIYA LILYA NTANGA KALALA ONDO v THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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PLACE OF HEARING:
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Toronto, Ontario
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DATE OF HEARING:
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November 28, 2019
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT:
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BELL J.
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DATED:
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FEBRUARY 24, 2020
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APPEARANCES:
Ronald Shacter
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For The Applicants
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Nadine Silverman
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For The Respondent
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Silcoff, Shacter
Toronto, Ontario
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For The Applicants
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Attorney General for Canada
Toronto, Ontario
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For The Respondent
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