Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-993-90 A-222-91
Joseph Orelien and Marie Aurelien (Applicants) v.
The Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: OREL/ENV. CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOYMENT AND IMMIGRATION) (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Stone JJ.A.—Winnipeg, November 6 and 7; Ottawa, Nov- ember 22, 1991.
Immigration — Refugee status — Applicants found by adju dicator and Refugee Division member to have no credible basis for Convention refugee claims — Departure notices issued, not complied with — Deportation orders made after second inquiry — Applicants' arguments based on Charter, Bill of Rights, international law and merits of case — Scheme of Immigration Act, ss. 46(2), 46.01 analysed — Burden of proof as to credible basis on claimant — First and second level hearings distinguished — Charter, s. 7, Bill of Rights, s. 2(e) not offended by Immigration Act, s. 46(2) — Failure of tribunal to refer to matters required to consider by s. 46.01(6).
The applicants, both Haitians, were subject to departure notices after they had been found by an adjudicator and Refu gee Division member to have no credible basis for their claims to be Convention refugees. Having disobeyed the departure notices, another inquiry was held and they were found ineligi ble to have new Convention refugee claims dealt with; depor tation orders were made. These decisions and orders gave rise to applications under the Federal Court Act, section 28 to review the no credible evidence finding and to set aside the deportation orders. Whether the deportation orders were lawful depends on the legality of the departure notices which, in turn, depends on the legality of the initial determination that there was no credible evidence upon which the Refugee Division could find them to be Convention refugees. The applicants' arguments were based on: 1) the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Canadian Bill of Rights 2) international law and 3) the merits of the case.
Held, the applications should be allowed.
1) Either paragraph 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights or section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is engaged when a person claims to be a Convention refugee. The applicants argued that these provisions were infringed on five different grounds: i) the participation of an adjudicator, ii) the adversarial role of the case presenting officer, iii) the burden of proof, iv) the denial of credible basis and v) the adequacy of judicial review.
i) It was argued that adjudicators, being immigration judges, tend to view refugee claimants as a threat to the integrity of the scheme of the Immigration Act. The preliminary determination by an adjudicator that, but for the claim to be a Convention refugee, a person would not be entitled to enter or remain in Canada does not prejudge the validity of the refugee claim. Institutional partiality on the part of the adjudicator is not inherent in the scheme of the Act. There was no evidence to support the allegation of institutional bias. The recognition of the right of genuine Convention refugees to remain in Canada is as much part and parcel of the scheme of the Act as anything else adjudicators may be called upon to decide. ii) Paragraph 200 of the Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Deter mining Refugee Status, which says that the examiner must gain the confidence of the applicant, does not contemplate an adver sarial screening process. It is the claimant's counsel not the case presenting officer who, in the scheme of the Act, is called upon to gain the claimant's confidence and assist in putting the case forward. There is nothing inherently offensive to funda mental justice in an adversarial proceeding. The adversarial role of the case presenting officer at the credible basis hearing does not impair any right accorded a refugee claimant by sec tion 7 of the Charter or paragraph 2(e) of the Bill of Rights. iii) According to the Act, subsection 46(2), the claimant must prove that his claim is eligible for determination by the Refu gee Division and has a credible basis. The applicants submitted that such requirement is a denial of fundamental justice. How ever, they failed to make a distinction between first and second level hearings. At the second level hearing, where the issue is whether or not the claimant is, in fact, a Convention refugee, there is a weighing of evidence by the Refugee Division and room for the benefit of the doubt. But all the first level panel is entitled to do is determine whether there is any credible evi dence upon which the Refugee Division, at the second level, might determine the claimant to be a Convention Refugee. There is no weighing of conflicting evidence at that stage and no room for benefit of the doubt. Neither the Charter nor Bill of Rights are offended by subsection 46(2) of the Act. iv) The argument that because a no credible basis determination denies the claimant the right to remain in Canada pending judicial review, this amounts to a denial of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of natural justice is not really an attack on the power of the first level tribunal to find no credi ble basis; it is an attack on the potential consequences of such a finding. The adjudicator correctly decided that he had no authority to direct that the applicants be allowed to remain in Canada pending judicial review. Whether execution of a deportation order ought to be stayed for that purpose is a ques tion for the Court. There is no merit in the argument that the
power of the first level tribunal to find no credible or trustwor thy evidence upon which the Refugee Division might find a claimant to be a Convention refugee and the consequent power of the adjudicator to order deportation offend either section 7 of the Charter or paragraph 2(e) of the Bill of Rights. v) Under paragraph 28(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act, this Court is enti tled to set aside a decision finding no credible basis only if the tribunal based its decision on an erroneous finding of fact and made the finding in a perverse or capricious manner or without regard for the material before it. The applicants' submission that this is too narrow a basis of judicial review to satisfy the requirements of fundamental justice is not relevant to any issue before the Court in either of the applications herein.
2) The credible basis hearing is said to violate Canada's obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention, Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions and a customary norm of tempo rary refuge. Those international instruments and laws have the force of domestic law in Canada and can be enforced in the courts of Canada at the suit of a private individual. However, the duty or intention to execute a deportation order which would breach those laws does not in any way colour the pro cess, under the Immigration Act, by which a person from a country like Haiti may be determined not to have a credible basis for a claim to be a Convention refugee or the making of a deportation order consequent to that finding. These issues are not questions with which the first level tribunal or the adjudi cator alone in making their decisions and orders nor this Court in reviewing them can be concerned.
3) The applicants argued that the tribunal misunderstood their argument and insisted that all Haitians outside Haiti have a credible basis for claiming to be refugees. It is not axiomatic that nationals of a country who have escaped that country may not have a well founded fear of persecution by reason of their nationality should they be returned. There is ample evidence as to conditions in Haiti on the record. The tribunal did not refer at all to the matters which paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection 46.01(6) required it to consider. Given the tribunal's misstate ment of the argument based on nationality, it must not be assumed that the evidence was considered properly. There is nothing to distinguish the applicants' claim to be persecuted by reason of membership in that particular social group of poor and disadvantaged people from their claim to be persecuted by
reason of Haitian nationality itself. The first level tribunal did err in approaching the applicants' claim on the merits as it did.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canadian Bill of Rights, R.S.C., 1985, Appendix III, s. 2(e).
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44], s. 7.
Canadian Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33. Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, ss. 28, 52. Geneva Conventions Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. G-3, s. 2 (as
am. by S.C. 1990, c. 14, s. 1).
Immigration Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-2, ss. 46(1),(2) (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (4th Supp.), c. 28, s. 14), 46.01, 46.02 (as am. idem).
Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52.
United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refu gees, July 28, 1951, [1969] Can. T.S. No. 6.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED:
Singh et al. v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177; (1985), 17 D.L.R. (4th) 422; 12 Admin. L.R. 137; 14 C.R.R. 13; 58 N.R. 1; Danson v. Ontario (Attorney General), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 1086; (1990), 73 D.L.R. (4th) 686; 43 C.P.C. (2d) 165; 112 N.R. 362; Leung v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immi gration) (1990), 74 D.L.R. (4th) 313; 12 Imm. L.R. (2d) 43 (F.C.A.); R. v. Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309; (1987), 44 D.L.R. (4th) 193; 37 C.C.C. (3d) 1; 61 C.R. (3d) 1; 80 N.R. 161.
CONSIDERED:
MacBain v. Lederman, [1985] 1 F.C. 856; (1985), 22 D.L.R. (4th) 119; 16 Admin. L.R. 109; 6 C.H.R.R. D/3064; 85 CLLC 17,023; 18 C.R.R. 165; 62 N.R. 117 (C.A.); Canadian Council of Churches v. Canada, [1990] 2 F.C. 534; (1990), 106 N.R. 61 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Valente v. The Queen et al., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 673; (1985), 52 O.R. (2d) 779; 24 D.L.R. (4th) 161; 23 C.C.C. (3d) 193; 49 C.R. (3d) 97; 19 C.R.R. 354; 37 M.V.R. 9; 64 N.R. 1; 14 O.A.C. 79; Mohammad v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1989] 2 F.C. 363; (1988), 55 D.L.R. (4th) 321; 21 F.T.R. 240 (note); 91 N.R. 121 (C.A.).
AUTHORS CITED
Canada, Immigration and Refugee Board, Refugee Determination—What it is and How it Works.
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Ref ugees. Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refu gees, Geneva, September 1979.
Paciocco, David M. Charter Principles and Proof in Criminal Cases, Toronto: Carswell, 1987.
Perluss, Deborah and Hartman, Joan F. "Temporary Ref uge: Emergence of a Customary Norm" (1986), 26 Virg. il. Int'l Law 551.
COUNSEL:
David Matas for applicants.
Gerald L. Chartier and Brian H. Hay for
respondent.
SOLICITORS:
David Matas, Winnipeg, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respon dent.
The following are the reasons for judgment ren dered in English by
MAHONEY J.A.: The applicants, husband and wife, are Haitians. They were found, by an adjudicator and Refugee Division member, to have no credible basis for their claims to be Convention refugees. Departure notices were issued by the adjudicator. Those are the decisions and orders subject of the section 28 [Fed-
eral Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7] application under file no. A-993-90.
The applicants did not comply with the departure notices. Another inquiry was convened. The appli cants were found ineligible to have new claims to be Convention refugees dealt with and deportation orders were made. Those are the decisions and orders subject of the section 28 application under file no. A- 222-91.
In view of paragraph 46.01(1)(f) of the Immigra tion Act,' the decision at the second inquiry that the applicants were not eligible to have their claims determined is not open to challenge. Whether the deportation orders are lawful depends entirely on whether the departure notices were lawful and that, in turn, depends entirely on the legality of the initial determination that there was no credible evidence upon which the Refugee Division might find them to
be Convention refugees.
The applicants raised below and pursued before us arguments which may conveniently be categorized under three heads: (A) Charter and Bill of Rights arguments; (B) international law arguments and (C) arguments on the particular merits.
The Charter and Bill of Rights arguments all assert that the credible basis hearing mandated by subsec tion 46(1) of the Act does not afford claimants a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of funda mental justice required by paragraph 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix III] and guaranteed by section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitu tion Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44]].
2. Every law of Canada shall, unless it is expressly declared by an Act of the Parliament of Canada that it shall operate not withstanding the Canadian Bill of Rights, be so construed and applied as not to abrogate, abridge or infringe or to authorize the abrogation, abridgement or infringement of any of the rights or freedoms herein recognized and declared, and in par ticular, no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to
1 R.S.C., 1985, c. 1-2, as amended by R.S.C., 1985 (4th Supp.), c. 28, s. 14.
46.01. (1) A person who claims to be a Convention refu gee is not eligible to have the claim determined by the Refu gee Division if
() in the case of a claimant to whom a departure notice has been issued, the claimant has not left Canada or, having left Canada pursuant to the notice, has not been granted law ful permission to be in any other country.
(e) deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in accor dance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of his rights and obligations....
7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accor dance with the principles of fundamental justice.
There is no doubt that one or the other of these provi sions is engaged when a person claims to be a Con vention refugee. 2
It is argued that they are infringed by:
1. the participation of an adjudicator in the credible basis determination;
2. the participation of a case presenting officer in an adversarial role in the credible basis hearing, particu larly the right of that officer to cross-examine claim ants;
3. the imposition on a claimant of the burden of prov ing a credible basis for the claim and, in any event, by the evidential requirement that the credible basis of the claim be established on a balance of probabili ties;
4. the power to deny that any person who claims to be a Convention refugee has a credible basis for that claim;
5. the limitations of sections 28 and 52 of the Federal Court Act 3 on this Court's jurisdiction to interfere with a decision or order.
In an argument made along with that described in paragraph 3 but which spills into the international category, it was urged that the imposition of the onus to prove a credible basis for the claim violated Canada's obligations under the United Nations Con vention Relating to the Status of Refugee and hence the Immigration Act itself as well as the Charter and Bill of Rights.
In the international law arguments, the credible basis hearing is said to violate Canada's obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention of August 12,
2 Singh et al. v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177.
3 R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7.
1949 and Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions of August 12, 1949, both "approved" by Acts of Parlia ment, 4 and a customary norm of temporary refuge. 5 The arguments, common to all three sources of Canada's international obligations, is that the conse quence of a negative finding by the first level tribunal may result in deportation of a claimant contrary to those obligations. As to the particular merits, it was argued that the tribunal erred in not finding that there was some credible evidence upon which the Refugee Division might find the applicants to be Convention refugees by reason of nationality, membership in a particular social group and political opinion.
A. The Charter and Bill of Rights Arguments 1. Participation of an adjudicator
The gist of this argument is that an adjudicator is an immigration judge, primarily charged with decid ing whether or not persons are admissible to Canada or, if in Canada, should be removed. The thesis is that refugees are a loophole in the system in the sense that, without refugee status, they may not meet crite ria for admission and that, therefore, adjudicators tend to view refugee claimants as a threat to the integrity of the scheme of the Immigration Act. What this boils down to is an allegation of institutional bias founded on the mixture of functions committed to adjudicators.
The respondent argues that this proposition has, by necessary implication, been disposed of by this Court contrary to the applicants' contention. In Mohammad v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigra tion), 6 it was held that the legislative scheme of the Immigration Act, 1976 7 met the test of Valente v. The
4 Geneva Conventions Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. G-3, s. 2, as amended by S.C. 1990, c. 14, s. 1.
5 Perluss and Hartman, "Temporary Refuge: Emergence of a Customary Norm" (1986), Virg. .11. Int'l Law 551.
6 [1989] 2 F.C. 363 (C.A.).
7 S.C. 1976-77, c. 52.
Queen et al., 8 and that adjudicators were independent tribunals within the contemplation of the require ments of section 7 of the Charter. Adjudicators had no role in the refugee determination process under that Act however, in Canadian Council of Churches v. Canada, 9 among the numerous issues was a motion to strike a pleading seeking a declaration of the inva lidity or inoperability of a number of provisions of the present legislative scheme on the ground that
An immigration adjudicator is not independent and impartial, thereby depriving the refugee of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice ....
In striking the pleading, the Court held
This issue, however, has already been decided against the respondent's point of view in Mohammad v. Minister of Employment and Immigration ... This Court cannot reasona bly be asked to reopen the question of the independence of adjudicators a little more than a year after having decided the issue.
While the Court did not, in its reasons, expressly mention the institutional impartiality of adjudicators, it was squarely in issue and, it seems to me, would certainly have been mentioned had it been argued. I do not think it can be safely concluded that the issue has been settled.
An example of a reasonable apprehension of bias, or institutional partiality, as a result of a mixture of functions is found in MacBain v. Lederman, 10 where the Canadian Human Rights Act, 11 as it then stood, authorized the Canadian Human Rights Commission to find a complaint to have been substantiated on the basis of an investigation by a person it had designated and then to designate the composition of the tribunal that would again inquire into the matter, decide whether the complaint was substantiated and, if so, impose penalties and sanctions. The preliminary determination by an adjudicator that, but for the claim to be a Convention refugee, a person would not be entitled to enter or remain in Canada in no way prejudges, nor can it reasonably be seen as prejudg ing, the validity of the refugee claim. Institutional
8 [1985] 2 S.C.R. 673.
9 [1990] 2 F.C. 534 (C.A.), at p. 555.
10 [1985] 1 F.C. 856 (C.A.).
11 S.C. 1976-77, c. 33.
partiality on the part of the adjudicator is not inherent in the scheme of the Act.
There is not an iota of evidence to lend credence to the applicants' basic premise that adjudicators tend to view refugee claimants as a threat to the integrity of the scheme of the Act. There is no reason why they should; the recognition of the right of genuine Con vention refugees to remain in Canada is as much part and parcel of the scheme of the Act as anything else adjudicators may be called upon to decide. It has been held that: 12
In general, any Charter challenge based upon allegations of unconstitutional effects of impugned legislation must be accompanied by admissible evidence of the alleged effects.
The applicants' argument is utterly devoid of eviden- tial and reasonable intellectual foundation.
2. Adversarial role of the case presenting officer
In this argument, the applicants rely particularly on the following sentence from paragraph 200 of the Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determin ing Refugee Status. 13
200.... It will be necessary for the examiner to gain the con fidence of the applicant in order to assist the latter in putting forward his case and in fully explaining his opinions and feel ings.
The applicants equate the case presenting officer to the examiner and argue that the adversarial role, par ticularly cross-examination, denies the claimant the fundamental justice mandated by the Bill of Rights and Charter. It may be noted that paragraph 200 begins with the following sentence.
200. An examination in depth of the different methods of fact-finding is outside the scope of the present Handbook.
12 Danson v. Ontario (Attorney General), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 1086, at p. 1101.
13 Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Geneva, September, 1979.
It is apparent that paragraph 200 does not contem plate an adversarial screening process.
This Court has held: 14
... at the "credible basis" stage the tribunal is not to make findings of fact but is limited to determining the existence of credible or trustworthy evidence on each of the necessary ele ments of the claim such that the Refugee Division might find the applicant to be a Convention refugee. The primary role of the tribunal is to test the credibility of the evidence; in per forming that role it is entitled to draw such inferences as are necessary for the purpose, as for example by determining that all or part of a witness' story is unreliable because it is implau sible or because the witness has contradicted himself.
It is trite to say that cross-examination is a valuable tool in the ascertainment of truth and assessment of
credibility. Appropriate to the present argument, it has been said: 15
Cross-examination is a means to an end, not an end in itself. It is utilized to assist in demonstrating the extent of the dependability of oral evidence.
The power and duty of the case presenting officer to cross-examine claimants is not to be isolated from other provisions of the Act. Among the mandated attributes of the screening process, a claimant is accorded an oral hearing [section 29], a right to coun sel [subsection 30(1)] and, if need be, to have counsel provided at public expense [subsection 30(2)1, a rea sonable opportunity to present evidence, cross- examine witnesses and make representations [subsec- tion 46(3)] and the tribunal must give reasons for its decision if it is adverse [section 46.02]. A later refer ence to the Handbook will demonstrate that the term "examiner" there appropriately describes different functionaries in the Canadian refugee determination process depending on what they do. It is the claim ant's counsel not the case presenting officer who, in the scheme of the Act, is called upon to gain the claimant's confidence and assist in putting the case forward.
There is obviously nothing inherently offensive to fundamental justice in an adversarial proceeding; if
14 Leung v. Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigra tion) (1990), 74 D.L.R. (4th) 313 (F.C.A.), at p. 314.
15 Paciocco, Charter Principles and Proof in Criminal Cases, Carswell (1987), at p. 289.
there were, our judicial system would long since have ceased to function as it, almost universally, does. The applicants would like a system more favourable to refugee claimants. It was said of a person tried for a criminal offence in R. v. Lyons, t 6
s. 7 of the Charter entitles the appellant to a fair hearing; it does not entitle him to the most favourable procedures that could possibly be imagined.
That may equally be said of refugee claimants. In my opinion, in the scheme of the Act, the adversarial role of the case presenting officer at the credible basis hearing does not impair any right accorded a refugee claimant by section 7 of the Charter or paragraph 2(e) of the Bill of Rights.
3. The burden of proof
The Act provides: 46....
(2) The burden of proving that a claimant is eligible to have the claim determined by the Refugee Division and that the claimant has a credible basis for that claim rests on the claim ant.
46.01...
(6) If the adjudicator or the member of the Refugee Divi sion, after considering the evidence adduced at the inquiry or hearing, including evidence regarding
(a) the record with respect to human rights of the country that the claimant left, or outside of which the claimant remains, by reason of fear of persecution, and
(b) the disposition under this Act or the regulations of claims to be Convention refugees made by other persons who allege fear of persecution in that country,
is of the opinion that there is any credible or trustworthy evi dence on which the Refugee Division might determine the claimant to be a Convention refugee, the adjudicator or member shall determine that the claimant has a credible basis for the claim. [Emphasis added.]
By subsection 46.03(5), if either or both the adjudica tor or member find for the claimant, the claim is referred to the Refugee Division.
16 [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309, at p. 362.
What the applicants allege to be a denial of funda mental justice is the requirement that a claimant establish, on a balance of probabilities, that evidence adduced at the hearing is credible and trustworthy and that the credible and trustworthy evidence might lead the Refugee Division to conclude that the claim ant is a Convention refugee. The applicants here dis tinguish between the burden of adducing evidence and the burden of persuasion. It is the imposition of the latter burden which, they say, denies claimant fundamental justice. As I understand the argument, imposition of the burden of persuasion is tantamount to denying the claimant the benefit of any doubt.
The applicants refer to a publication by the Immi gration and Refugee Board entitled Refugee Determination—What it is and how it works, in which, over the signature of the chairman, it is said [at page 1]:
In each case before the IRB, benefit of the doubt will lie with the refugee claimant.
They find, in paragraphs 203 and 204 of the U.N. Handbook previously cited, support for the proposi tion that for a refugee claimant to be denied the bene fit of the doubt when making a refugee claim is a denial of fundamental justice although paragraph 204 says, in part,
204. The benefit of the doubt should, however, only be given when all available evidence has been obtained and checked and when the examiner is satisfied as to the appli cant's general credibility.
Finally, it is said that it is a violation of the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refu gees defined in subsection 2(1) of the Act and, hence, of the Act itself, as well as a denial of fundamental justice to reject real refugees and return them to dan ger and, it follows, any procedure that tends to that rejection, including imposition of a burden of proof on the claimant, itself violates those instruments.
The policy of the Immigration and Refugee Board cannot, of course, prevail over the express provision of an Act of Parliament even if one were to conclude that credible basis hearings were proceedings under
the jurisdiction of that Board. While it is likewise clear that the United Nations Handbook cannot pre vail over the Act, the Handbook does contemplate the reality that not all who claim to be Convention refu gees really are and recognizes the legitimacy of a screening process to establish the probability of the validity of individual claims. It seems to me one can not be satisfied that evidence is credible or trustwor thy unless satisfied that it is probably so, not just pos sibly so.
The applicants make no distinction between first and second level hearings. At the second level hear ing, where the issue is whether or not the claimant is, in fact, a Convention refugee, there is a weighing of evidence by the Refugee Division and room for bene fit of the doubt. All the first level panel has to do, indeed all it is entitled to do, is determine whether there is any credible evidence upon which the Refu gee Division, at the second level, might determine the claimant to be a Convention refugee.'? There is no weighing of conflicting evidence in that. If there is some credible evidence, no amount of evidence to the contrary can alter that fact. There is no room for ben efit of the doubt. I see no offence to either section 7 of the Charter or paragraph 2(e) of the Bill of Rights in the requirement of subsection 46(2).
4. Denial of a credible basis
It is argued that a finding that there is no credible basis for a refugee claim is unconstitutional. Once the finding is made the adjudicator must proceed to decide whether to issue a departure notice or make a deportation order [subsection 46.02(1)] and do one or the other [section 32]. If a deportation order is made, the Minister is required to execute it "as soon as rea sonably practicable" [section 48] subject only to a 72-hour stay on request to permit the person con cerned to seek leave to apply to this Court for judicial review [paragraph 49(1 )(b)].
17 Leung v. M.E.L, supra.
The argument is that because a determination that a claimant has no credible basis for the claim to be a Convention refugee is a denial of the right to remain in Canada pending judicial review, a negative finding is necessarily a denial of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of natural justice. This is not really an attack on the power of the first level tribunal to find no credible basis; it is an attack on the potential consequences of such a finding. The adjudi cator correctly decided that he had no authority to direct that the applicants be allowed to remain in Canada pending judicial review. Whether execution of a deportation order ought to be stayed for that pur pose is a question for the Court.
The constitutionality of the 72-hour mandatory stay is one of the issues which remains to be dealt with in Canadian Council of Churches v. Canada. 18 Even if it had already been found unconstitutional, that could not taint the legality of any decision or order in issue here: the finding that there is no credi ble basis for the claims to be refugees and the making of departure notices and deportation orders. It could only affect the execution of the order or the necessity of complying with the notice. As a matter of fact, while irrelevant to the issues here, Canada is not now executing deportation orders to Haiti; it has not done so at any time material to these proceedings.
I have not been persuaded that there is any merit in what is relevant here, namely the argument that the power of the first level tribunal to find that there is no credible or trustworthy evidence upon which the Ref ugee Division might find a claimant to be a Conven tion refugee and the consequent power of the adjudi cator to order deportation offend either section 7 of the Charter or paragraph 2(e) of the Bill of Rights.
18 [1990] 2 F.C. 534 (C.A.), at p. 561.
5. Adequacy of judicial review
If the Court concludes that the tribunal finding no credible basis for a refugee claim made an error in a finding of fact, paragraph 28(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act permits this Court to set aside the decision only if the tribunal (1) based its decision on that find ing and (2) made the finding in a perverse or capri cious manner or without regard for the material before it. Further, if the Court concludes the tribunal erred in any of the ways contemplated by subsection 28(1), by paragraph 52(c) of the Federal Court Act, it can only set aside the decision or set it aside and remit the matter to tribunal for reconsideration with directions. It cannot make the decision it thinks the tribunal ought to have made although, from a practi cal point of view, its directions may be so precise as to dictate the result of the reconsideration. The appli cants submit that this is too narrow a basis of judicial review to satisfy the requirements of fundamental justice, at least in the case of refugee claimants, and that what is required is a right to appeal which would allow the Court to substitute its view of the case for that of the tribunal if it considers the decision below to be unreasonable.
As with the constitutionality of the 72-hour statu tory stay, I fail to see how this submission is relevant to any issue before the Court in either of the present section 28 applications. The sufficiency of the provi sion Parliament has made for their judicial review was not a matter to be taken into account by the adju dicator alone or with the Refugee Division member in making any of the decisions or orders subject of this review. If it is insufficient that cannot be a basis for setting any of them aside; it can only be a basis for excusing from or preventing compliance.
B. The International Law Arguments
I see no need to summarize the international law arguments. I accept, for purposes of those arguments, that to return a person to Haiti in the circumstances that presently exist and have existed at relevant times
would violate Canada's obligations under the Fourth Geneva Convention, the Second Protocol and a cus tomary norm of international law prohibiting the for cible repatriation of foreign nationals who have fled generalized violence and other threats to their lives and security arising out of internal armed conflict within their state of nationality. I also accept, for pur poses of the arguments, that those international instruments and laws have the force of domestic law in Canada and can be enforced in the courts of Canada at the suit of a private individual. What I can not accept, however, is that the duty or intention to execute a deportation order which, if executed, would breach those laws in any way colours the process, under the Immigration Act, by which a person from such a country may be determined not to have a cred ible basis for a claim to be a Convention refugee or the making of a deportation order consequent to that finding.
These issues, like the constitutional sufficiency of the provision Parliament has made for judicial review and the 72-hour stay, are not questions with which the first level tribunal or the adjudicator alone in making their decisions and orders nor this Court in reviewing them can be concerned. To say that they are not relevant to those decisions and orders is not, of course, to denigrate their importance. It would be a grave, and I hope justiciable, matter indeed if Canada were to execute deportation orders in circumstances which breached obligations under international law and put the life, liberty or security of persons in peril.
C. The Merits
A Convention refugee is relevantly defined as
... any person who
(a) by reason of a well-founded fear of persecution for rea sons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particu lar social group or political opinion,
(i) is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, by reason of that fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country...
but does not include any person to whom the Convention does not apply pursuant to section E or F of Article 1 thereof, which sections are set out in the schedule to this Act.
We are not here concerned with race or religion.
It is submitted that all Haitians have a credible basis for claiming to be Convention refugees because they are Haitians. The tribunal held
... it would be absurd to accept the proposition of your coun sel that all Haitians are refugees, since this would offer interna tional protection to both the victims and the perpetrators of the crimes, and from whom you are seeking protection.
The applicants say that the tribunal misunderstood their argument. They did not submit that all Haitians are refugees but that all Haitians outside Haiti have a credible basis for claiming to be refugees. They say further that, as a result of its misapprehension, the tri bunal addressed the second level question: are the applicants refugees, rather than the first level ques tion: is there any credible or trustworthy evidence upon which they might be found to be refugees? They also note that the possibility of what was seen as leading to absurdity is actually preempted by the Convention refugee definition which excludes per sons to whom section F of Article l of the Conven tion applies. Section F provides:
Article I
F. The provisions of this Convention shall not apply to any person with respect to whom there are serious reasons for con sidering that:
(a) he has committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity, as defined in the international instruments drawn up to make provision in respect of such crimes;
(b) he has committed a serious non-political crime outside the country of refuge prior to his admission to that country as a refugee;
(c) he has been guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.
One has only to recall the recent history of Cambo- dia to recognize that possibility of widespread perse cution of its general population by a national regime. With respect, it is not axiomatic that nationals of a country who have escaped that country may not have a well founded fear of persecution by reason of their nationality should they be returned. There is ample evidence as to conditions in Haiti on the record. There is evidence as to the treatment of Haitians who have been forcibly repatriated by the United States. Its trustworthiness has not been questioned. It is for the Refugee Determination Division, not the screen ing hearing, to weigh that evidence and decide whether it supports the objective element of the applicants' claim.
In its relatively brief "reasons for decision on cred ible basis", 19 the tribunal did not refer at all to the matters which paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection 46.01(6) expressly required it to consider. While that is by no means conclusive that the evidence, of which there was plenty, was not considered, it is somewhat surprising in the case of Haitian claimants. Given the tribunal's misstatement of the argument based on nationality, I think it unsafe to assume that the evi dence was considered properly.
The social group in which the applicants claim membership is the poor and disadvantaged people of Haiti. The tribunal noted that the documentary evi dence established that the Haitian population is sub stantially poor and disadvantaged. The applicants did not address this argument in their memorandum of points of argument although their counsel did refer to it in passing in oral argument. If I understand the tri bunal correctly, I am inclined to agree with it on this point: there is nothing to distinguish the applicants' claim to be persecuted by reason of membership in
19 Session of September 6, 1990. Case, p. 150, 1.23 to p. 152, 1.8. These reasons dealt with the merits; the Charter and Bill of Rights and international law arguments had been dis missed at an earlier session.
that particular social group from their claim to be per secuted by reason of Haitian nationality itself.
As to political opinion, the only basis for that claim would, again, appear to be entirely dependent on their fear of returning to Haiti because of the treat ment they might incur. The applicants attested to no political views or activities or past harassment because of political opinions. Rather, as stated in their memorandum, they rely on documentary evi dence which, they say, "shows that the Government of Haiti views those who resist return to Haiti as opposed to the Government and persecutes them for that reason." This, like the claim based on member ship in the social group of the poor and disadvan taged, seems on the evidence to be no more than a restatement of the claim based on nationality.
The tribunal found significant the fact that the applicants had applied to Canada for immigrant visas before leaving Haiti. That may be relevant to a sec ond level determination weighing the evidence and deciding whether a person really is outside and unwilling to return to his or her country of nationality because of fear of persecution. It does seem to me that a desire to emigrate and fear of persecution in one's country can hardly be mutually exclusive. If one can depart the place where one fears persecution by lawful emigration, that would seem an eminently satisfactory resolution. That a person has sought to emigrate strikes me as a feeble basis for questioning the credibility of that person's evidence of fear of persecution at home.
The applicants had a number of other complaints about the tribunal's reasons which, in view of the dis position I would make of their applications, need not be dealt with. In conclusion, I see either no merit or no relevance in the arguments based on the Charter and the Bill of Rights and I see no relevance in the arguments based on international law. I do, however, find that the first level tribunal did err in approaching the applicants' claim on the merits as it did.
I would, therefore, allow both section 28 applica tions. As to file no. A-993-90, I would set aside the finding, made September 6, 1990, by adjudicator K. D. Fussey and Refugee Board member R. Rushowy that there was no credible or trustworthy evidence upon which the Refugee Division might find the applicants to be Convention refugees and the ensuing departure notices given, to the applicants by adjudicator K. D. Fussey October 1, 1990, and remit the matter to the tribunal for reconsideration in a manner not inconsistent with these reasons. As to file no. A-222-91, I would set aside the deportation orders dated December 28, 1990, made against the applicants by adjudicator Lyle Moffatt.
HEALD J.A.: I agree. STONE J.A.: I agree.
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